Afghanistan losing fight against swine flu, says health ministerNovember 11th, 2009 KABUL - Afghanistan appears to be losing the fight against swine flu, as many parts of the country remain fairly unsanitary. Kabul, which currently is the center of Afghanistan's H1N1 outbreak, has over 450 confirmed cases.
New device may minimise loss of lives in disaster zonesNovember 9th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Researchers have developed a device that could become a godsend for paramedics and may help save many lives in disaster zones. The very first task of paramedics at the site of a terror attack or a collision is to assess who needs immediate care.
Afghan public health ministry reports 11 swine flu deaths, hundreds of troops battling virusNovember 9th, 2009 more images
more images11 Afghans die of swine flu, troops sufferingKABUL — Swine flu has left 11 people dead in Afghanistan, where hundreds of Afghan and international troops are battling the disease and facing a rising militant insurgency. The Afghan Ministry of Public Health reported Monday that 710 of the 779 cases of the flu in the nation have been among military personnel.
Britain is European capital for online "legal highs" synthetic drug tradeNovember 6th, 2009 BRUSSELS - Britain has emerged as the European capital for online synthetic drug trading, the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) has warned. Britain-based websites account for 42 percent trade of "legal highs" or "synthetic cannabinoid's" in Europe, providing safe havens to the suppliers of "Spice", "Smoke" or "Sense" and other controversial products.
Brit girl (now man) wants breast removal surgery to join Army as a man!October 30th, 2009 LONDON - A British girl, now transformed to Nicholas Darroch, wants to undergo a breast removal surgery so that she can join the Army and fight in Afghanistan as a man. Formerly known as Siobhan Darroch, Nicholas Darroch aged 21, has already spent 1,000 pounds for hormone treatment in a bid to become "Nicholas".
Democrats push public health insurance option in new billOctober 30th, 2009 more images
more imagesWASHINGTON - Top House Democrats have upped the ante over President Barack Obama's healthcare reform with a new sweeping legislation that includes a highly controversial public health insurance option. The nearly 2,000-page bill - a combination of three versions passed by House committees - unveiled Thursday would cost $894 billion over 10 years to extend insurance coverage to 36 million uncovered Americans, according to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
Britain's worst mother faces jail termOctober 23rd, 2009 LONDON - A 22-year-old single mother, branded Britain's worst mum, left her four children - all aged under five - home alone while she went on a 24-hour drink and drugs binge, a court heard. Worried neighbours contacted police after seeing the woman's eldest child, a four-year-old girl, hanging out of a window crying: 'Where's mummy?'
The mother drank a bottle of wine and snorted cocaine with friends after putting her daughters, aged three and four, and their brothers, aged one and three months, to bed, reports The Sun.
Social factors inhibit immunisation in India: ReportOctober 21st, 2009 WASHINGTON - Even as a record 106 million infants were vaccinated last year against life-threatening diseases, nearly 24 million babies went without full protection with social factors inhibiting immunization in India, according to a new global health assessment. To get the full round of first-year vaccinations to children in the poorest countries will take another $1 billion a year, said a report released Wednesday by the World Health Organisation (WHO), Unicef and the World Bank.
Former BBC producer opens up about drug abuse in mediaOctober 21st, 2009 LONDON - A former BBC producer has opened up on the use of drugs in the media industry, especially by television and radio stars. Sarah Graham, who worked for BBC Radio 5, Children's BBC and Channel 4's The Big Breakfast, told Home Affairs Select Committee hearing on the cocaine trade that the people in the industry who do drugs are often praised for their "off-the-wall" brilliance instead of being reprimanded.
Tunisia first country to prohibit Haj because of swine fluOctober 6th, 2009 TUNIS/CAIRO - Tunisians will not be allowed to travel to Saudi Arabia for the Muslim pilgrimage or Haj because of fears of the H1N1 virus, known also as swine flu, the government announced Tuesday. No other country has yet said it would prevent its citizens from making the pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia in late November for fear they might contract the virus.
Obama pokes fun over racism-linked opposition to his healthcare plansSeptember 22nd, 2009 WASHINGTON - US President Barack Obama has poked fun at suggestions that racism is behind opposition to his health care plans, joking that he had not undergone a miraculous race change since being voted into office. Speaking to American TV host David Letterman on CBS' The Late Show, he deadpanned: "I think it's important to realize that I was actually black before the election."
According to The Times, the audience whooped with laughter at the subversive remark.
State Department investigating death of US employee hired to help train Afghan national policeSeptember 16th, 2009 Drugs suspected in death of Afghanistan contractorWASHINGTON — A U.S. contractor in Afghanistan helping train the national police was found dead last week of a possible drug overdose, just months after his company was reprimanded by the State Department for another worker's drug-related death.
'It was fair to probe Clinton-Lewinsky affair,' says KennedySeptember 15th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Former US Senator Ted Kennedy, who died last month after battling brain cancer, has said the probing of the affair between former President Bill Clinton and former White House intern Monica Lewinsky was fair. "Do I think such inquiry is fair? Absolutely.
Doctors unable to restrain mentally ill from smokingSeptember 10th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Depressed and anxious people are among the heaviest smokers, but doctors seldom insist that they quit, fearing their mental disorders will get out of hand. A researcher has, however, questioned this theory.
Ecuador president's security chief dies of swine fluSeptember 7th, 2009 QUITO - The head of the Ecuadorian presidential security service has died of swine flu after battling with the disease for nearly a month, officials said Monday. Col. John Merino was admitted to Quito Military Hospital Aug 10, with complications from the influenza A (H1N1) virus, also called swine flu.