Wednesday, 13 July 2011

Southern Cross set to shut down and stop running homes

Southern Cross set to shut down and stop running homes

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Care home operator Southern Cross is set to shut down after landlords owning all 752 of its care homes said they wanted to leave the group.

"It is currently envisaged that the existing group will cease to be an operator of homes," the firm said.

Southern Cross added that the landlords were still committed to providing continuity of care to its 31,000 residents.

Trading in the company's shares has been suspended.

The Darlington-based Southern Cross and its landlords and creditors are a month into a four-month restructuring period, which was agreed in crisis talks in June.

The statement said that the details of the restructuring were not yet settled and there was still a possibility of further changes.

It had been expected that some of the landlords would leave the group, leaving Southern Cross operating with between 250 and 400 homes, but now it appears that the group is to disappear altogether.

Analysis

Ministers have been quick to promise that Southern Cross residents will not be turfed out on to the street.

But that does not mean that these vulnerable people are not facing a great deal of uncertainty and, potentially, upheaval.

The hope now is that the group will be broken up into chunks for other providers to take on.

If that happens the new owners may still want to close some of the homes - something that everyone agrees is both distressing and damaging for the health of those involved.

But the Southern Cross developments raise wider questions about the whole sector.

While the problems the group has faced have been linked to its business model, the situation has been further compounded by cuts in fees paid by councils.

Last year alone fees paid by local authorities for state-funded care home residents were cut by about 2.5% once inflation was taken account.

Suffice to say, the squeeze has been felt across the industry - not just by Southern Cross. It is getting increasingly tough to keep services going.

'Regret'

The process began when the UK's biggest care home operator said it was unable to pay its rent bills to its landlords.

The statement said that little or no value would be left for the shareholders.

"We regret the loss of value which shareholders have experienced," Southern Cross chairman Christopher Fisher said.

About 250 of the homes will immediately begin to be transferred to other operators.

The owners of the rest of the homes are still finalising their plans, but they may end up using the existing Southern Cross back-office staff and some of its management.

'Worrying' time

"We anticipate that the period of uncertainty which we have been experiencing will now draw to a close," Mr Fisher added.

But Michelle Mitchell at Age UK, said that despite the promises about continuity of care, "this has been a really worrying few months for Southern Cross residents and their families, with these latest developments only adding to their concern".

Labour MP John Mann called on the government to intervene to make sure that care home residents were not forced to move.

"No resident should be forced to move out of their home and in the big sell-off there must be no cherry picking of the better properties," said Mr Mann, who has four Southern Cross homes in his constituency.

"Government intervention is needed now so that resident needs are put first and to prevent an even greater disaster from unfolding."

Fee question

Martin Green, chief executive of the English Community Care Association, said the collapse of Southern Cross showed there were serious problems with the funding of care in the independent sector.

"I think the Southern Cross issue which has come to a head today, is very much an issue that other providers are facing because of the levels of resource that they have to deliver care on," he told BBC Radio 4's You and Yours programme.

"Fees are a really big issue and we've had several years of nil increases, and of course we've had inflation rates running at 4-5%."

David Rogers, chairman of the Local Government Association's Community Wellbeing Board, said: "Councils take the welfare of care home residents extremely seriously and throughout this process that has always been their priority."

"It's greatly reassuring, and testament to the good work which has been going on behind the scenes and the resilience of the care home system, that a solution has been found which will hopefully avoid major upheaval for the vulnerable people involved."

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Monday, 11 July 2011

“salt is safe to eat”, and that, after years of lecturing, the “health fascists” have been proved wrong.

The Daily Express has today claimed that “salt is safe to eat”, and that, after years of lecturing, the “health fascists” have been proved wrong.

This news is based on asystematic review that combined data from seven earlier studies looking at how reduced-salt diets affected the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), blood pressure and death. The authors of this combined study wanted to examine this because, although there is evidence that reducing salt leads to a reduction in blood pressure, no reviews had directly looked at these outcomes.

Although the studies provided data on nearly 6,500 participants, the researchers found that the number of participants who died or developed outcomes such as heart attacks was low, making it hard to estimate the impact of salt reduction in a meaningful way. The researchers concluded that there is not enough evidence to say with certainty that advising a reduced-salt diet is linked to reductions in death and CVD events, but crucially they have not said that salt reduction has no effect, as the coverage in the Express might suggest.

The review’s authors have called for further high-quality, long-term research to determine conclusively the effects of salt reduction. The NHS’s current advice, that adults should limit their salt intake to 6g a day, remains unchanged.

Where did the story come from?

The study was carried out by researchers from the University of Exeter, the University of Bristol, Florida Atlantic University, the University of East Anglia and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, as part of the Cochrane Collaboration. The study was funded by the UK National Institute for Health Research, as part of the Cochrane Collaboration.

The study was published in the peer-reviewed American Journal of Hypertension.

The findings of this study were overstated by media outlets, with the Daily Express commenting that a pool of 6,489 people from across seven studies was large enough to draw conclusions from. However, although the number of people included in the studies was relatively large, the researchers say that the number of events seen during these trials was too small to detect a reduction in risk with sufficient certainty. In email bulletins from the Cochrane Library, one of the reviewers, Professor Rod Taylor, estimates that data from at least 18,000 individuals would be required before any clear health benefits could be revealed.

What kind of research was this?

This was a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials that had examined the effects that salt-restricted diets have on outcomes including death, heart attacks, blood pressure, angina and stroke.

When conducting a systematic review, researchers pull together and analyse all appropriate studies relating to a particular topic, regardless of their findings. A meta-analysis, which pools the findings of included trials and analyses the data as an aggregate, is used to increase the ability (or “power”) of the study to detect an effect. This ability is improved as the number of participants studied increases. In this instance, the published study included nearly 6,500 participants.

What did the research involve?

The researchers conducted a literature search and included studies for analysis if:

  • The design was a randomised control trial with a follow-up period of at least six months.
  • The intervention being tested was a reduced-salt diet or advised reduced-salt diet.
  • The outcomes of interest included death due to cardiovascular disease (CVD) or any cause of CVD events, such as heart attack, angina, stroke or heart failure, or hospitalisation due to CVD. Data on blood pressure and estimated salt intake were also analysed where available.

The researchers assessed the quality (risk of bias) in each of the selected studies, and analysed the data by pooling the results in several different ways.

Researchers analysed the data in three separate groups, depending on the characteristics of the population under study at the start of the study:

  • people with normal blood pressure
  • people with high blood pressure
  • a mixed population of the two.

The only trial that included a mixed group was carried out in people diagnosed with heart failure who had been hospitalised within the previous month.

Across the seven studies, the treatments offered to the intervention and control groups varied. The interventions included group counselling sessions, advice and information leaflets, dietary counselling and specially prepared meals in which regular table salt was swapped for low-sodium salt. Across the control groups, some received no active behavioural intervention or advice, while others received specially prepared meals containing regular table salt.

What were the basic results?

The analysis included seven trials comprising a total of approximately 6,500 participants. These trials had formed the basis of 39 separate published research papers.

A total of 665 deaths from all causes (including 98 deaths from CVD) and 293 CVD events were reported across the included trials. Data was analysed separately for trials of people with normal blood pressure, high blood pressure and a mix of the two.

Trials of those with normal blood pressure showed:

  • no evidence for a reduction in the number of deaths (from any cause) in the intervention group
  • no evidence of reduction in CVD events in the intervention group
  • weak evidence for an average reduction in systolic blood pressure (maximum pressure exerted with each heart beat) of 1.1 mm Hg in the intervention group compared to control group participants
  • evidence for an average reduction in diastolic blood pressure (pressure exerted while the heart is at rest) of 0.80 mm Hg in the intervention group compared to control group participants
  • evidence for a reduction in estimated salt intake (as measured by changes in urinary sodium levels) of 34.19 mmol a day in the intervention group compared to control group participants, suggesting compliance with the interventions

Trials of those with high blood pressure showed:

  • no evidence for a reduction in the number of deaths (due to any cause) in the intervention group
  • no evidence for a reduction in the number of CVD deaths in the intervention group
  • no evidence of reduction in CVD events in the intervention group
  • evidence for an average reduction in systolic blood pressure (pressure exerted while the heart is beating) of 4.1 mm Hg in the intervention group compared to the control group
  • no evidence for a reduction in diastolic blood pressure (pressure exerted while the heart is at rest) in the intervention group compared to the control group evidence for a reduction in estimated salt intake (as measured by changes in urinary sodium levels) of 39.11 mmol a day in the intervention group compared to control group participants

The single trial looking at people with heart failure, who had either normal or high blood pressure, showed:

  • evidence for an increase in the number of deaths (from any cause) in the intervention group
  • evidence for an average reduction in systolic blood pressure (pressure exerted while the heart is beating) of 4.0 mm Hg in the intervention group compared to the control group
  • no evidence for a reduction in diastolic blood pressure (pressure exerted while the heart is at rest) in the intervention group compared to the control group
  • evidence that estimated salt intake (as measured by changes in urinary sodium levels) reduced by 27.00 mmol a day in the intervention group compared to control group participants

How did the researchers interpret the results?

Researchers concluded that, within the pooled research they analysed, there was no strong evidence that a restricted salt diet reduced death due to any cause, or reduced the number of CVD events in people with normal or high blood pressure. They also say that there was an increase in death due to any cause in people with heart failure who were on a restricted-salt diet.

The researchers say that they found consistent evidence for a reduction in urinary sodium levels, indicating that the participants continued to comply with the salt-restricted diet. However, they do say that this adherence is likely to decline over time.

The researchers also say that the observed reductions in blood pressure (between 1 and 4 mm Hg) would, according to current risk models, generally predict a reduction in death due to CVD by 5% to 20%. However, only two trials included data on CVD death, and the number of events reported was small. This increased the uncertainty surrounding the observed effect.

Researchers say that the small number of events observed across the seven trials is a limitation of their review. More observed events would be needed in order to reduce the uncertainty surrounding the estimated effects of salt reduction. They also say that since most of the participants knew whether they were on a reduced salt or regular salt diet, other lifestyle and dietary behaviours may have simultaneously been taken up by the control group, thus weakening the observed effect.

Conclusion

Performing a systematic review and meta-analysis can increase the statistical power of research on a topic, helping to detect differences in outcomes. However, although the number of individuals pooled in the analysis was large (approximately 6,500 people), the number of events which occurred was relatively small, reducing certainty as to what impact the interventions may have had. One of the study authors has estimated that at least 18,000 participants would need to be analysed in order to identify any effects clearly.

Points to note are that:

  • The reduced-sodium interventions did actually produce the expected positive effect, but the researchers could place little confidence in those measurements due to the relatively small number of events observed.
  • The researchers were not able to detect a clear effect, which is very different from detecting that no effect exists: the review did not find that salt reduction was not beneficial; it found that there was not enough evidence to determine conclusively the effect of salt reduction on death and CVD events.
  • The pooled studies varied quite widely in terms of their size, length of follow-up and intervention methods. Although the researchers have taken steps to analyse how well these differing studies can be pooled, these variations are likely to have had an effect on the accuracy of the results.
  • The studies followed participants for between 6 and 36 months – a relatively short time to observe outcomes such as CVD risk, which is partly determined by health choices made over several years. Although two of the studies also performed additional analyses several years after their original research, five of the studies did not.
  • These researchers were focusing on dietary advice and interventions that reduce salt intake in individuals. There is a well-described relationship between population levels of salt and cardiovascular disease. Small changes in salt at a population level are likely to have an effect on blood pressure and the link between blood pressure and cardiovascular disease is strong. This suggests that although the effect is small, large numbers of people might benefit from population approaches to reducing salt.

As the authors of this review have noted, further research into the long-term effects of a sustained low-salt diet would reduce the uncertainty surrounding the effects of dietary interventions to reduce salt intake.

Links to the headlines

Now salt is safe to eat. Daily Express, July 6 2011

Cutting back on salt 'does not make you healthier' (despite nanny state warnings). Daily Mail, July 6 2011

Links to the science

Taylor RS, Ashton KE, Moxham T et al. Reduced Dietary Salt for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease: A Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials (Cochrane Review). American Journal of Hypertension, 2011 [Awaiting publication

Orangutan genome 'evolved slowly'

Orangutan genome 'evolved slowly'

Orangutan Evolution of the orangutan genome has proceeded more slowly than in other great apes

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Scientists have released a draft sequence of the orangutan genome, revealing intriguing clues to the evolution of great apes and humans.

The work suggests orangutans may be genetically closer to the proposed ancestral great ape than are chimps, gorillas and humans.

Details of the research are outlined in the journal Nature.

Two modern species of orang-utan live on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra respectively; both are under threat.

Of the great apes, the orangutan is the most genetically distant from humans.

Fossil finds show that it once had a wider range across South-East Asia; modern populations are threatened by the destruction of their forest habitat and other human activities such as trapping and selling the juvenile apes as pets.

An international team led by Devin Locke, from the Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis, US, sequenced the full genome of a female Sumatran orangutan named Susie.

With Susie's data as a reference, the researchers took advantage of next-generation sequencing technology to obtain lower resolution data on the genomes of 10 additional orangutans - five from Sumatra and five from Borneo.

The team's analysis reveals that the orangutan genome has experienced a slower rate of evolution than those of other great apes, with fewer rearrangements, duplications and repeats in the sequence.

This suggests their genomes are closer to that of the putative ancestral great ape, researchers say.

The researchers also compared 14,000 human genes with their equivalents in the orangutan, chimpanzee, macaque and dog.

The results suggest that genes involved in visual perception and the metabolism of molecules known as glycolipids have been particularly exposed to natural selection in primates.

Species split

"Changes in lipid metabolism may have played a big part in neurological evolution in primates, as well as being involved in the diversity of diets and life history strategies," said co-author Dr Carolin Kosiol, from the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna.

"Apes, especially orangutans, have slower rates of reproduction and much lower energy usage than other mammals. It would be very valuable to sequence more primate genomes to enable more comparative analysis of this kind and thus help us understand the evolution of primates and our own species."

The results also provide an estimate of when the Sumatran species split from the Bornean species: 400,000 years ago. This is more recent than other studies have suggested.

The data show that the Sumatran orangutan is more genetically diverse than the Bornean species, despite the fact that the Sumatran apes are now fewer in number than their Bornean cousins.

Genetic diversity could be important for conservation efforts, because it can be related to the ability of those populations to stay healthy and adapt to changes in their environment.

There are thought to be some 40,000-50,000 Bornean orangutans left in the wild; the Sumatran orangutan is believed to number only 7,000-7,500 individuals.

Paul.Rincon-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk

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Scientists sequence potato genome

Scientists sequence potato genome

New potatoes The humble spud provides the world's fourth-largest crop

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An international team has uncovered the full DNA sequence of the potato for the first time.

The breakthrough holds out the promise of boosting harvests of one of the world's most important staple crops.

Researchers at the James Hutton Institute in Dundee, which contributed to the work, say it should soon be possible to develop improved varieties of potato much more quickly.

The genome of an organism is a map of how all of its genes are put together.

Each gene controls different aspects of how the organism grows and develops.

Slight changes in these instructions give rise to different varieties.

Each individual has a slightly different version of the DNA sequence for the species.

Professor Iain Gordon, chief executive of the James Hutton Institute, said decoding the potato genome should enable breeders to create varieties which are more nutritious, as well as resistant to pests and diseases.

Colour and flavour

He hopes it will help meet the challenge of feeding the world's soaring population.

The research is far from complete. Analysing the genetic sequence of the plant will take several more years.

At the moment it can take more than 10 years to breed an improved variety.

By locating the genes that control traits like yield, colour, starchiness and flavour, the research should make it possible to develop better spuds much more quickly.

Potatoes provide the world's fourth-largest crop, with an annual, global yield of 330m tonnes.

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Friday, 8 July 2011

Somali elders sought on Saturday to mediate between the U.S. navy and pirates demanding $2 million (1.4 million pounds) and safe passage in exchange f

Reuters) - Somali elders sought on Saturday to mediate between the U.S. navy and pirates demanding $2 million (1.4 million pounds) and safe passage in exchange for the release of an American captain they are holding on a lifeboat in the Indian Ocean.

Pirates preying on the strategic shipping lanes of the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean are holding about 260 hostages.

Following are the latest developments related to the piracy off the coast of Somalia.

April 11 - Pirates on a German ship with 24 foreign hostages returned to the Somali coast after failing to find fellow pirates who are holding American ship captain Richard Phillips captive adrift in a lifeboat in the Indian Ocean with U.S. naval ships closing in.

- Pirates seized a U.S.-owned and Italian-flagged tugboat with 16 crew on board, 10 of them Italian nationals.

- Pirates attacked a 26,000-tonne, Panama-flagged bulk carrier, the MV Anatolia, in the Gulf of Aden but were beaten back by sailors spraying them with water hoses.

April 10 - A French hostage was killed, but his wife, his son and another French couple were freed when French special forces attacked pirates who had seized their yacht off Somalia. Two of the pirates were shot dead.

- Pirates released the Norwegian-owned tanker MT Bow Asir, which was taken at the end of March. The 27-member crew were unharmed. The 23-tonne chemical tanker's operator declined to say whether a ransom was paid, though pirate sources said $2.4 million changed hands.

April 9 - A Spanish warship intercepted a small boat that had pursued a Panama-flagged merchant vessel in the Gulf of Aden. Spanish forces boarded the small boat and let the crew go after checking their registration papers.

(Compiled by the World Des

Wednesday, 6 July 2011

solar activity dip

UK faces more harsh winters in solar activity dip





University of Reading
Satellite image of Britain covered in snow (Image: NEODAAS/University of Dundee/PA)Britain is set to face an increase in harsh winters, with up to one-in-seven gripping the UK with prolonged sub-zero temperatures, a study has suggested.
The projection was based on research that identified how low solar activity affected winter weather patterns.
However, the authors were keen to stress that their findings did not suggest that the region was about to be plunged into a "little ice age".
The findings appear in the journal Environmental Research Letters.
"We could get to the point where one-in-seven winters are very cold, such as we had at the start of last winter and all through the winter before," said co-author Mike Lockwood, professor of space environment physics at the University of Reading.
Using the Central England Temperature (CET) record, the world's longest instrumental data series that stretches back to 1659, the team said that average temperatures during recent winters had been markedly lower than the longer-term average.
"The mean CET for December, January and February for the recent relatively cold winters of 2008/09 and 2009/10 were 3.50C and 2.53C respectively," they wrote.
"Whereas the mean value for the previous 20 winters had been 5.04C.
"The cluster of lower winter temperatures in the UK during the last three years had raised questions about the probability of more similar, or even colder, winters occurring in the future."
Last year, Professor Lockwood and colleagues published a paper that identified a link between fewer sunspots and atmospheric conditions that "blocked" warm westerly winds reaching Europe during winter months, opening the way for cold easterlies from the Arctic and Russia to sweep across the region.
Professor Lockwood, while acknowledging that there were a range of possible meteorological factors that could influence blocking events, said the latest study moved things forward by showing that there was "improvement in the predictive skill" when solar activity was taken into account.
Be prepared
In December 2010, heavy snow and prolonged sub-zero temperatures severely disrupted the UK's transport infrastructure, affecting the Christmas getaway plans of thousands of people.
Traffic in snow storm (Image: PA) Government agencies and local authorities found it difficult to cope with the severe conditions
This prompted Transport Secretary Phillip Hammond to ask his department's chief scientific adviser to assess whether the government should be planning for more severe winters in the future.
Professor Lockwood welcomed Mr Hammond's call for a review, but added a word of caution.
"The key message we are trying to get over here is that past experience is not a good guide here, even recent experience is not a good guide," he told BBC News.
"Taking the averages from over the past 20 or 30 years is not a good way to plan for the future because there may be real systematic shifts.
"We have to do the science to actually understand the combined influence and then draw our conclusions about what level our winter preparedness needs to be over the next 50 years."
'No deep freeze'
Professor Lockwood was keen to point out that his team's paper did not suggest that the UK and mainland Europe was about to be plunged into a "little ice age" as a result of low solar activity, as some media reports had suggested.
Depiction of the 1683 Thames' frost fair (Getty Images) The late 17th Century is often called the Little Ice Age wrongly says Professor Lockwood
The Maunder Minimum, a period of extremely low solar activity that lasted for about half a century from the late 17th Century, has been dubbed by some as the Little Ice Age because Europe experienced an increase in harsh winters, resulting in rivers - such as the Thames - freezing over completely.
Professor Lockwood said it was a "pejorative name" because what happened during the Maunder Minimum "was actually nothing like an ice age at all".
"There were colder winters in Europe. That almost certainly means, from what we understand about the blocking mechanisms that cause them, that there were warmer winters in Greenland," he observed.
"So it was a regional redistribution and not a global phenomenon like an ice age. It was nothing like as cold as a real ice age - either in its global extent or in the temperatures reached.
"The summers were probably warmer if anything, rather than colder as they would be in an ice age."
He added that the Maunder Minimum period was not an uninterrupted series of cold, harsh winters.
Data from the CET showed that the coldest winter since records began was 1683/84 "yet just two year later, right in the middle of the Maunder Minimum, is the fifth warmest winter in the whole record, so this idea that Maunder Minimum winters were unrelentingly cold is wrong".
He explained that a similar pattern could be observed in recent events: "Looking at satellite data, we found that when solar activity was low, there was an increase in the number of blocking events of the jetstream over the Atlantic.
"That led to us getting colder weather in Europe. The same events brought warm air from the tropics to Greenland, so it was getting warmer.
"These blocking events are definitely a regional redistribution, and not like a global ice age."

IVF procedure 'may increase risk of Down's syndrome'

IVF procedure 'may increase risk of Down's syndrome'

Child with Down's syndrome
Down's syndrome is caused by one too many copies of chromosome 21
Drugs used in IVF for older women may increase their risk of having a baby with Down's syndrome, experts say.
Doctors already know that the chance of having a baby with the genetic condition goes up with the age of the mother, especially for those over 35.
Now UK researchers, who looked at 34 couples, think drugs used to kick-start ovaries for IVF in older women disturb the genetic material of the eggs.
Work is now needed to confirm their suspicions, a meeting in Sweden heard.
And they do not yet know the magnitude of risk, but say it could also cause many other genetic conditions, not just Down's.
The findings, presented at the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology's annual conference, come from a UK study of 34 couples undergoing fertility treatment.

“Start Quote

It raises the concern that some of the abnormalities might be treatment-related”
End Quote Mr Stuart Lavery Consultant obstetrician
All of the women in the group were older than 31 and had been given drugs to make their ovaries release eggs ready for their IVF treatment.
When the researchers studied these now fertilised eggs they found some had genetic errors.
These errors could either cause the pregnancy to fail or mean the baby would be born with a genetic disease.
A closer look at 100 of the faulty eggs revealed that many of the errors involved a duplication of coiled genetic material, known as a chromosome.
Often, the error resulted in an extra copy of chromosome 21, which causes Down's syndrome.
But unlike "classic" Down's syndrome which is often seen in the babies of older women who conceive naturally, the pattern of genetic errors leading to Down's in the IVF eggs was different and more complex.
And this led the researchers to believe that it was the fertility treatment that was to blame.
Lead researcher Professor Alan Handyside, director of the London Bridge Fertility, Gynaecology and Genetics Centre, said more research was now needed.

Down's syndrome risk with the mother's age:

  • 20 years - 1 in 1,500
  • 25 years - 1 in 1,300
  • 35 years - 1 in 350
  • 40 years - 1 in 100
  • 45 years - 1 in 30
"This could mean that the stimulation of the ovaries is causing some of these errors. We already know that these fertility drugs can have a similar effect in laboratory studies. But we need more work to confirm our findings."
If more tests back up their suspicions then it would mean that doctors should be more cautious about using these treatments, he said.
The researchers believe their work could also help identify which women might be better off using donor eggs for IVF instead.
Co-investigator Professor Joep Geraedts, of Bonn University in Germany, said: "This in itself is already a big step forward that will aid couples hoping for a healthy pregnancy and birth to be able to achieve one."
UK fertility expert Mr Stuart Lavery said: "There's a huge increase in the number of women undergoing IVF at later ages as people delay the age of starting a family.
"Previously we have always thought that these chromosomal abnormalities were related to the age of the egg.
"What this work shows is that a lot of the chromosomal abnormalities are not those that are conventionally age-related. It raises the concern that some of the abnormalities might be treatment-related.
"It's a little unclear as to whether it's the medication itself that is affecting the egg quality or whether it's the medication that is just forcing the issue and allowing eggs that nature's quality control system would have otherwise excluded, to arise."

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NHS chiefs warn of rising hospital waiting times

NHS chiefs warn of rising hospital waiting times

Hospital waiting room Hospitals are expected to see patients within 18 weeks in England

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Financial problems in the NHS are likely to cause a rise in waiting times in England, health chiefs believe.

Mike Farrar, the head of the NHS Confederation, said the difficulties could even lead to the 18-week limit for elective operations being broken.

He made the warning after feedback from senior NHS managers showed many feared it would get harder for patients to access care in the next 12 months.

But ministers insisted waiting times would remain low.

The NHS is currently meeting the 18-week standard overall.

However, the national figure masks the fact that a growing number of areas are experiencing difficulties.

The latest monthly statistics revealed a third of trusts were in breach of the limit for inpatients - double the number from a year ago.

This research by the NHS Confederation showed many health chiefs expected the situation to get worse.

The group, which represents managers, polled bosses working across the NHS in hospital, mental health and ambulance trusts. Private firms running dedicated NHS clinics were also quizzed.

'Very serious'

They received 287 responses - only a third of the total they polled - but Mr Farrar said it still provided clear evidence of the pressures the NHS was under.

Nine in 10 described the financial situation as very serious with nearly half of them saying it was the worst they had ever seen.

Hospital waiting times

  • Hospitals have to see 90% of patients within 18 weeks
  • The 10% leeway is built in to reflect the fact some people may choose to wait longer or that it may be clinically beneficial to delay treatment
  • The latest figures - from April - showed that nationally 90.5% of inpatients were seen in 18 weeks
  • But when the data was broken down locally a third of areas were in breach of the standards - double the number from April 2010

While most felt this would not harm patient safety or the quality of care over the next year, 53% said patient access could get worse.

The NHS Confederation said this was because of increased rationing of services - there have been reports of restrictions being placed on everything from fertility treatment to hip and knee operations - and longer waiting times for treatment.

Speaking ahead of the NHS Confederation's annual conference which is starting in Manchester on Wednesday, Mr Farrar admitted there was a danger this could compromise the 18-week hospital waiting time limit.

Mike Farrar, the head of the NHS Confederation warns waiting times 'might slip'

"I think there is a risk. That is clearly what people are saying."

His warning comes just a month after David Cameron made a personal pledge to keep waiting times below 18 weeks as part of his drive to allay fears over the NHS reform programme.

Mr Farrar also called on politicians to stop attacking managers and called for them to show more "political courage" by supporting proposals to close hospital units where it was shown to be clinically necessary.

He said he had had experience of cases where MPs said they agreed with plans in private, but then opposed them in public.

"Managers need more support if we are going to deal with the difficulties ahead," he added.

Shadow health secretary John Healey said: "This is further evidence of widespread anxiety in the health service, as financial pressures impact on patient care and we start to see the NHS going backwards again under the Tories."

But Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said waiting times would continue to remain low and stable as promised.

He added: "Ultimately, our modernisation plans will safeguard the future of the NHS, improve care for patients, drive up quality and support doctors and nurses in providing the best possible care for their patients."

Meanwhile, a senior government official has attacked the government's overhaul of the NHS - despite the concessions made last month to water-down some of the proposals.

Sir Roger Boyle, the Department of Health's heart tsar, said the "mega reorganisation" could lead to people in the NHS taking their "eye off the ball" and therefore risk destabilising the service during the tough financial times.

Sir Roger said he was retiring soon partly because of his objection to the changes.

"I feel in my bones that the current plans are not correct."

Tuesday, 5 July 2011

E. coli outbreaks linked to Egypt

E. coli outbreaks linked to Egypt

Fenugreek seeds Egyptian fenugreek seeds have been linked to both outbreaks

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E. coli outbreaks in Germany and France could have come from seeds sourced in Egypt, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control has said.

A report said there was still "much uncertainty", but fenugreek seeds imported in 2009 and 2010 "had been implicated in both outbreaks".

More than 4,000 people were infected during the German outbreak, 48 died.

Investigators traced the source back to a bean sprout farm in Bienenbuettel, Lower Saxony.

The outbreak in Bordeaux affected 15 people and was linked to seeds sold by a firm in the UK - Thompson and Morgan, although it said there was no evidence of a link.

Linked

Both outbreaks involved the rare strain of E. coli known as O104:H4.

The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) said the strain was so rare in humans the outbreaks were unlikely to have been isolated incidents and both were linked to eating sprouting seeds.

Food Standards Agency advice

  • Do not eat sprouted seeds such as alfalfa, mung beans (or bean sprouts) and fenugreek raw
  • Cook sprouted seeds until steaming hot throughout
  • Clean equipment used for sprouting seeds
  • Wash hands after handling seeds intended for planting or sprouting

Further investigations have been trying to determine if the source of the infection was contamination at the sites, or if they had been supplied with contaminated seeds.

The report said the German outbreak had come from seeds imported from Egypt in 2010. The outbreak in Bordeaux was linked to seeds exported in 2009 from Egypt to the UK and then sold to France.

Seeds from the UK company Thompson and Morgan are being tested by the Food Standards Agency.

In a statement the firm said: "We can confirm that our own supplier sourced this Egyptian seed, which was then supplied to us.

"Further, we can confirm that this sprouting seed was then exclusively supplied into the French garden centre market."

The report added there could be more outbreaks of the deadly E. coli as "other batches of potentially contaminated seeds are still available within the European Union and perhaps outside".

The ECDC and the European Food Safety Authority "strongly recommend advising consumers not to grow sprouts for their own consumption and not to eat sprouts or sprouted seeds unless they have been cooked thoroughly" until their investigations are complete.

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Wednesday, 29 June 2011

Auditors criticise EU farm payment system

Auditors criticise EU farm payment system

Farming near Rennes, northern France - file pic A farm near Rennes: France gets the biggest portion of EU agricultural subsidies

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The EU's main audit body says agricultural subsidies - the biggest item in the EU budget - often go to people who do little or no farming.

A new report by the European Court of Auditors complains of deficiencies in the Single Payment Scheme (SPS), which distributed about 29bn euros (£26bn) of subsidies in 2009.

It says payments "have become divorced from current farming conditions".

The EU is considering how to reform its Common Agricultural Policy (CAP).

The auditors have made various recommendations to the European Commission aimed at improving the SPS - the biggest area of spending in the CAP.

They say the SPS ought to direct aid to "active" farmers and provide more balanced funding so that a small number of big landowners no longer get the lion's share.

They also call for clearer definitions of land eligible for subsidies and of farming activities.

The report complains that the 17 EU countries applying the SPS use about 20 different variants of the payment scheme, making it too complex.

Absentee farmers

The SPS does not operate in 10 EU countries, which joined the EU in 2004 and 2007. All 10, except Cyprus, are former communist countries and they use a different system of farm support, called SAPS.

The auditors say the SPS has encouraged farmers to respond better to market demand and has benefited EU agriculture as a whole.

But they say the way the scheme's beneficiaries were defined "permitted persons or entities not, or only marginally, engaged in an agricultural activity to benefit from SPS payments".

In some cases landowners have carried on receiving the payments even though their land is worked by tenant farmers who do not get the subsidy.

In the UK the auditors found some individual beneficiaries receiving up to 1m euros annually or even more in SPS aid without having any agricultural activity on their land.

The report also highlights examples of non-agricultural land qualifying for SPS payments in France, Italy and Spain.

The European Commission has said EU farm spending should no longer be based on previous subsidy levels for farmers.

But the commission believes subsidies are still needed to protect Europe's food supplies and rural diversity. The proposals are contained in an EU blueprint for farming beyond 2013.

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Obesity 'is higher among non-smoking women'

Obesity 'is higher among non-smoking women'

An overweight person walks through Glasgow City centre The study claimed non-smokers were more likely to be obese

Non-smoking woman are more likely to be obese and die of associated illnesses than those who smoke, according to research.

About 8,000 women were recruited to the Renfrew and Paisley study from 1972 to 1976. Of these, 40% had never smoked.

The authors, led by Dr Laurence Gruer from NHS Health Scotland, found 60% of non-smokers were overweight or obese compared with 40% of those who smoked.

The study claimed extra weight acted as a major contributor to premature death.

However, experts stressed that smoking was a "much stronger" risk factor than obesity.

The study of women aged 45 to 64, published in the British Medical Journal, said the highest rate of obesity among non-smokers was found in low income groups.

Almost 70% of women in this category were overweight or obese, according to the research.

Dr Gruer said: "You can certainly assume that if you are obese, you are more likely to die of things like diabetes, heart attacks and strokes."

Start Quote

It goes against the idea that if you live in a poor neighbourhood or came from a working class background, then your health will be worse, regardless”

End Quote Dr Laurence Gruer NHS Health Scotland

Researchers also suggested declining numbers of female smokers over the past few decades may have had a direct impact on obesity levels - with fewer people using cigarettes in an attempt to suppress their appetites.

The study also found that non-smokers from a lower occupational group were no more likely to die early if they lived a healthy lifestyle.

Dr Gruer said: "If you never smoke and you keep your weight within the reasonable limit then even if you earn below average income and live in a more disadvantaged area, you can still expect to live a long and healthy life.

"You are not doomed to die early just because you happen not to have a high income or good job or live in a leafy suburb.

"It goes against the idea that if you live in a poor neighbourhood or came from a working class background, then your health will be worse, regardless."

Prof Johan Mackenbach from the Erasmus Medical Centre in Rotterdam welcomed the study but added: "It is important not to forget that smoking is a much stronger risk factor for mortality than most other risk factors, including obesity."

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