Saturday, July 31, 2010

After Stroke Scans, Patients Face Serious Health Risks

July 31, 2010

After Stroke Scans, Patients Face Serious Health Risks

When Alain Reyes’s hair suddenly fell out in a freakish band circling his head, he was not the only one worried about his health. His co-workers at a shipping company avoided him, and his boss sent him home, fearing he had a contagious disease.
Only later would Mr. Reyes learn what had caused him so much physical and emotional grief: he had received a radiation overdose during a test for a stroke at a hospital in Glendale, Calif.
Other patients getting the procedure, called a CT brain perfusion scan, were being overdosed, too — 37 of them just up the freeway at Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center in Burbank, 269 more at the renowned Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles and dozens more at a hospital in Huntsville, Ala.
The overdoses, which began to emerge late last summer, set off an investigation by the Food and Drug Administration into why patients tested with this complex yet lightly regulated technology were bombarded with excessive radiation. After 10 months, the agency has yet to provide a final report on what it found.
But an examination by The New York Times has found that radiation overdoses were larger and more widespread than previously known, that patients have reported symptoms considerably more serious than losing their hair, and that experts say they may face long-term risks of cancer and brain damage.
The review also offers insight into the way many of the overdoses occurred. While in some cases technicians did not know how to properly administer the test, interviews with hospital officials and a review of public records raise new questions about the role of manufacturers, including how well they design their software and equipment and train those who use them.
The Times found the biggest overdoses at Huntsville Hospital — up to 13 times the amount of radiation generally used in the test.
Officials there said they intentionally used high levels of radiation to get clearer images, according to an inquiry by the company that supplied the scanners, GE Healthcare.
Experts say that is unjustified and potentially dangerous.
“It is absolutely shocking and mind-boggling that this facility would say the doses are acceptable,” said Dr. Rebecca Smith-Bindman, a radiology professor who has testified before Congress about the need for more controls over CT scans. Yet because the hospital said no mistakes were made, regulatory agencies did not investigate.
The F.D.A. was unaware of the magnitude of those overdoses until The Times brought them to the agency’s attention. Now, the agency is considering extending its investigation, according to Dr. Alberto Gutierrez, an F.D.A. official who oversees diagnostic devices.
Patients who received overdoses in Huntsville say that in addition to hair loss, they experienced headaches, memory loss and confusion. But at such high doses, experts say, patients are also at higher risk of brain damage and cancer.
A spokesman for Huntsville Hospital, which now acknowledges that some patients received “elevated” radiation, said officials there would not comment.
Growing Number of Cases
So far, the number of patients nationwide who got higher-than-expected radiation doses exceeds 400 at eight hospitals, six in California alone, according to figures supplied by hospitals, regulators and lawyers representing overdosed patients. A health official in California who played a leading role in uncovering the cases predicts that many more will be found as states intensify their search.
“I cannot believe that this is not occurring in the rest of the country,” said Kathleen Kaufman, head of radiation management for the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health. “That’s why we are so keen on the rest of the states to go look at this.”
The Food and Drug Administration acknowledges, too, that the number does not capture all the overdoses.
The cases come at a time when Americans are receiving more medical radiation than ever before, a result of rapid technological advancements that improve diagnosis but can also do harm when safeguards and oversight fail to keep pace.
Even when done properly, CT brain perfusion scans deliver a large dose of radiation — the equivalent of about 200 X-rays of the skull. But there are no hard standards for how much radiation is too much. The overdoses highlight how little some in the medical profession understand about the operation of these scanning devices and the nature of radiation injuries, as well as the loose requirements for reporting accidents when they are detected.
For a year or more, doctors and hospitals failed to detect the overdoses even though patients continued to report distinctive patterns of hair loss that matched where they had been radiated. After the Food and Drug Administration issued a nationwide alert asking hospitals to check their radiation output on these tests, a few hospitals continued to overdose patients for weeks and in some cases months afterward, according to records and interviews.
Four of the hospitals involved were identified in recent months: the Los Angeles County and University of Southern California Medical Center, where one patient received seven and a half times the amount generally used; Bakersfield Memorial Hospital, where 16 people received up to five and a half times too much; South Lake Hospital in central Florida, where an unknown number of patients received 40 percent more than usual; and an unidentified hospital in San Francisco, government officials said.
None of the overdoses can be attributed to malfunctions of the CT scanners, government officials say.
At Glendale Adventist Medical Center, where Mr. Reyes and nine others were overdosed, employees told state investigators that they consulted with GE last year when instituting a new procedure to get quicker images of blood flow, state records show. But employees still made mistakes.
As a result, hospital officials said, a feature that technicians thought would lower radiation levels actually raised them. Cedars-Sinai gave a similar explanation.
“There was a lot of trust in the manufacturers and trust in the technology that this type of equipment in this day and age would not allow you to get more radiation than was absolutely necessary,” said Robert Marchuck, the Glendale hospital’s vice president of ancillary services.
A GE spokesman, Arvind Gopalratnam, said the way scanners were programmed was “determined by the user and not the manufacturer.” GE, he added, has no record of Glendale seeking its help setting up the new procedure in 2009.
Most of the known overdoses, including the biggest, occurred on scanners made by GE Healthcare. At two hospitals that use Toshiba scanners — Los Angeles County-U.S.C. and South Lake in Florida — officials said the manufacturer suggested machine settings that ultimately produced too much radiation. Representatives of Toshiba agreed to be interviewed in their California office but abruptly canceled.
A dozen overdose victims in California and Alabama said in interviews that the long delay in uncovering the flawed tests had left them struggling to understand what was happening to their health. One patient suspected that the Rogaine he used to stop hair loss was actually causing it. Another patient received steroid injections to stop the hair loss.
Patients said doctors speculated that their temporary hair loss might stem from a variety of causes — stress or a ponytail tied too tight — and that redness and rashes were caused by detergent used to wash bed sheets.
“What is amazing and seems painfully obvious is if someone walks in with a band of hair missing around the entire circumference of their head, you would ask the question: Have you had a CT scan?” said Richard A. Patterson, a Los Angeles lawyer who represents some of the patients. “Not ‘What did you eat for breakfast yesterday that would cause your hair to fall out today?’ ”
The overdoses did not discriminate. Among the victims: a member of Cedars-Sinai’s own board of governors, Ruthe Feldman. Mrs. Feldman says she left the board after learning about the mistake.
The Food and Drug Administration, in trying to assess the scope and cause of the overdoses, has had to rely on state radiation control officials for information. But if Alabama is any indication, the agency is not getting a full picture.
A Huntsville Hospital spokesman, Burr Ingram, said that about 65 possible stroke patients there had been overradiated. Lawyers representing patients say the number of overdoses is closer to 100.
Nonetheless, Alabama officials say the number is actually zero since the state does not define an acceptable dosing level. “No such thing as an overdose,” said James L. McNees, director of the Alabama Office of Radiation Control.
A Hospital’s Low Moment
One day last August, the radiation safety officer at Cedars-Sinai, Donna Early, decided she had to act.
It was a low moment for such an esteemed institution. Patients were being overradiated during CT brain perfusion scans, hospital officials concluded, and it was Ms. Early’s job to tell county health officials.
The genesis of Ms. Early’s alert was an event on the morning of July 4, when a 52-year-old executive producer of films, H. Michael Heuser, arrived in the emergency department with stroke symptoms.
A “code brain” was immediately called, signaling a life-or-death situation. A blood clot in the brain can be dissolved with medicine, but doctors must do it within several hours, before brain cells die from a lack of oxygen. So Mr. Heuser was rushed into a room with several CT scanners, where he underwent one brain perfusion study and at least one more later. A CT perfusion scan, which lasts about 45 seconds, can identify a stroke through a series of blood flow images.
Mr. Heuser did have a stroke, from which he would recover. But other parts of his body inexplicably began to break down.
“I had a full body rash — my whole body, legs, armpits, bottom, my back — with these red welts,” Mr. Heuser said.
It burned and itched. Then clumps of hair began to fall out. “I went completely bald in a perfectly symmetrical 4-inch-wide band that extended from ear to ear all the way around my head,” he recalled. The hospital, he said, responded by offering him a hairpiece.
Finally, a doctor was so struck by the unusual nature of Mr. Heuser’s hair loss that he took a picture. A second patient reported similar hair loss. Eventually, the hospital made the connection, and on Aug. 28, Ms. Early called country health officials, records show. From then on, as the accounting of overdoses at Cedars-Sinai reached 269 over a period of 18 months, Mr. Heuser would be known in government reports simply as “Patient 1.”
To this day, no one at Cedars-Sinai knows who programmed the scanners that delivered the overdoses, officials there say. But in written statements to The Times, hospital officials said they had figured out how they might have occurred.
Normally, the more radiation a CT scan uses, the better the image. But amid concerns that patients are getting more radiation than necessary, the medical community has embraced the idea of using only enough to obtain an image sufficient for diagnosis.
To do that, GE offers a feature on its CT scanner that can automatically adjust the dose according to a patient’s size and body part. It is, a GE manual says, “a technical innovation that significantly reduces radiation dose.”
At Cedars-Sinai and Glendale Adventist, technicians used the automatic feature — rather than a fixed, predetermined radiation level — for their brain perfusion scans.
But a surprise awaited them: when used with certain machine settings that govern image clarity, the automatic feature did not reduce the dose — it raised it.
As a result, patients at Cedars-Sinai received up to eight times as much radiation as necessary, while the 10 overradiated at Glendale received four times as much, state records show.
GE says the hospitals should have known how to safely use the automatic feature. Besides, GE said, the feature had “limited utility” for a perfusion scan because the test targets one specific area of the brain, rather than body parts of varying thickness. In addition, experts say high-clarity images are not needed to track blood flow in the brain.
GE further faulted hospital technologists for failing to notice dosing levels on their treatment screens.
But representatives of both hospitals said GE trainers never fully explained the automatic feature.
In a statement, Cedars-Sinai said that during multiple training visits, GE never mentioned the “counterintuitive” nature of a feature that promises to lower radiation but ends up raising it. The hospital also said user manuals never pointed out that the automatic feature was of limited value for perfusion scans.
A better-designed CT scanner, safety experts say, might have prevented the overdoses by alerting operators, or simply shutting down, when doses reached dangerous levels.
To Mr. Heuser, it is unconscionable that equipment able to deliver such high radiation doses lacks stronger safety features.
“When you are in a car and it backs up, it goes beep, beep, beep,” he said. “If you fill the washing machine up too much, it won’t work. There is no red light that says you are overradiating.”
Manufacturers say they will address some of these issues in newer models.
Form Letter, No Apology
Huntsville Hospital informed patients that they had been overdosed in a two-page form letter that included no apology. The word radiation was mentioned once — in the ninth sentence.
“We have identified a few patients, including you, who received a scan in which the dosage level was elevated,” stated the letter, dated Dec. 11, 2009.
The acknowledgment by hospital officials that 65 people were overradiated has come slowly.
After the California overdoses became public, Huntsville officials reviewed their testing and determined that their use of higher doses to get clearer images was not a mistake and was, in fact, appropriate, according to the GE inspection report. Therefore, they concluded, they had no overdoses.
State and federal officials said they did not investigate Huntsville, because there were no equipment malfunctions or because the dosing decisions were considered part of the practice of medicine. As a result, the only public accounting of the number of overdoses in Huntsville has come from the hospital, not government inspectors.
By contrast, California officials conducted investigations, released inspection reports and have cited at least four hospitals for failing to safely irradiate patients.
Because Huntsville Hospital officials declined to be interviewed, it is unclear how they determined who had been overradiated, when the overdoses started or why patients with sudden hair loss did not arouse more suspicion.
Melissa Faye Adams is one of a number of patients who have yet to be told they were overdosed, even though they have pictures of themselves with the distinctive band of hair loss. More than two years ago, just shy of her 40th birthday, she underwent a stroke test at Huntsville Hospital after developing a headache. Fifteen days later, her hair began falling out and her life began to lurch about in disquieting ways. She still keeps a plastic bag full of her hair marked with that date, 6/15/08. “I panicked,” she said.
It would take another year and a half of worry, of unsatisfying doctor visits, before her hairdresser called one day last December telling her to pick up a copy of the local paper. In the paper, the hairdresser said, was “a picture of a lady who looks just like you.” The woman said she had been overradiated at Huntsville Hospital.
Dr. Lon Raby, a Huntsville dermatologist, also noticed the picture. “I recognized the pattern with it,” Dr. Raby said. “I’ve seen six or eight all in the same time frame.”
Suzanne Sloan, a popular fifth-grade teacher, was one of his patients. She saw the picture, too. “We were screaming,” Ms. Sloan said. “She had the same identical thing.”
Ms. Sloan’s fruitless search for an explanation had taken her to the University of Alabama at Birmingham Hospital, Ochsner Health System in Louisiana and Vanderbilt University in Tennessee. “They had no clue,” she said. “I lost 15 pounds. I couldn’t sleep.”
Ms. Sloan had tried to cover her missing hair using bobby pins. But one day at school, a gust of wind blew and children saw her strip of missing hair. One got sick and vomited, she said. As word of her condition spread, former students flocked to her classroom, some crying. “We heard you were dying,” one said. “Is there something we can do?”
Another patient, an aerospace engineer who says she had a seizure after her scan, said her dermatologist wrote to Huntsville Hospital out of concern for her and another patient with similar symptoms.
“Even after the dermatologist put two and two together and asked Huntsville Hospital to contact me, they never did,” said the engineer, who provided a picture of her hair loss but asked that her name be withheld because of professional reasons.
She said she suffered from memory loss and confusion.
Huntsville Hospital officials said they did not routinely record radiation dose levels before 2009. Mr. Ingram, the spokesman, said the hospital did keep information needed to calculate the dose, but he declined to say whether officials had gone back to determine doses for all patients who had brain perfusion scans.
The form letter Huntsville sent to overdose patients appears to play down the damage that high doses can inflict. The hospital told patients that hair loss and skin redness might occur but would go away. “At this time, we have no recommendations for you to have any follow-up treatment,” the letter said.
Health experts elsewhere have warned of possible eye damage, in addition to the higher risk of cancer and brain damage.
For Dr. Smith-Bindman, a professor at the University of California, San Francisco, the larger question raised by her review of overdose cases, including one in Huntsville, is whether their symptoms actually required such a powerful test in the first place. She also noted that many of the patients were relatively young.
“These tests have really high doses,” she said. “And there’s no system for figuring out who is getting them and why they are getting them.”
Reducing mistakes is important, but the bigger challenge, she said, is to eliminate unnecessary testing.
“Utilization has increased dramatically, and as a society we have not had the time to respond.”
Kristina Rebelo contributed reporting.

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Woman finds cheeseburger in car's gas tank

Woman finds cheeseburger in car's gas tank

Lindsay Lohan reportedly in isolation after hysterical 'fit' - 7-24-10

Lindsay Lohan reportedly in isolation after hysterical 'fit'

Lindsay Lohan has reportedly been placed in isolation following a "hysterical fit."
The 24-year-old actress - who started her sentence at the Century Regional Detention Facility in Lynwood, California on Tuesday - is said to have broken down in tears, screaming at wardens, forcing them to take her away from other inmates.
Newly-released Cheryl Presser, 43, told the Daily Mirror newspaper: "She is in with the killers and she has only been let out for hour-long breaks, and during those she was locked down to a table.
"On Friday, Lindsay got put on lockdown. While some of us got two hours to go to the yard, or the TV room, Lindsay was on total lockdown.
"She had a hysterical fit, crying and yelling so she got put in isolation."
Another former inmate claimed Lindsay was upset because other prisoners had been poking fun at her by calling her "Firecrotch," the nickname she was infamously given by oil heir Brandon Davis.
The source said: "She was just sitting in her cell staring straight ahead. Sometimes wailing, but mostly just sitting.
"Some of the inmates in our ward, some of the tougher ones, were yelling 'fire crotch' at her.
"They just started chanting it at her. Lindsay didn't say nothing. She was crying though."
It is believed the actress was briefly admitted to the nearby Lofts medical center and checked over following the incident.
Cheryl also revealed the "Mean Girls" star has failed to win over other inmates because her constant crying keeps them awake at night.
She said: "The wards are cold and smelly - they stink. The air conditioning is turned up so high that you can't sleep because of the cold. Inmates try and shove the air vents full of toilet paper to stop the air coming out, but it doesn't work.
"Lindsay would lie there shivering all night, crying and trying to cover her face with her hands. Her wailing was keeping everyone awake."
Lindsay is expected to serve less than 14 days of the 90-day sentence she was given for breaching the terms of probation set for her 2007 driving under the influence (DUI) conviction.

Dell tech accused of downloading customer's nude pics

Dell tech accused of downloading customer's nude pics


SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Dell Computers has confirmed a report that one of its outsourced technicians in India downloaded nude pictures from a Sacramento woman's computer during a technical support call.
Tara Fitzgerald, 48, said the incident happened in December 2008 when she authorized Riyaz Shaikh, a Dell certified technician working for Sitel India that provides outsourced technical support, to assume remote control of her Dell computer.

Fitzgerald couldn't find a number of erotic photographs she and her boyfriend had taken and saved to her hard drive, and she sought help from Dell support to find them before her teenage daughter did.
Fitzgerald said she watched as Shaikh found the pictures and downloaded them to the host computer in Mumbai, India. Sixteen nude and semi-nude photographs later turned up on a vulgar website that Shaikh claimed to own.
In a written statement from Dell, spokeswoman Elizabeth Shine confirmed Fitzgerald contacted Dell about the incident last year.
"We investigated the issue, which involved a technical representative at one of Dell's vendors," Shine wrote. "We contacted the vendor about the allegation and can confirm that the representative no longer handles Dell calls. We've been in contact with Ms. Fitzgerald regarding this issue and continue to investigate her claims to best assist in a resolution."
The statement did not say whether Shaikh still works for the vendor, Sitel India.
Fitzgerald said Shaikh also used her Dell Preferred credit card to purchase an $800 Dell computer system for a woman in Tennessee he met through a technical support call.
Fitzgerald said the only response she had received from Dell prior to her going public with her story was an affidavit offering her the opportunity to disavow the unauthorized charge on her credit card. The company had not acknowledged the improper behavior of its outsourced representative, she said.
Fitzgerald produced message logs showing that Shaikh used his official Dell messaging account last year to apologize for the unauthorized charge and to offer repayment. As recently as this week, Shaikh contacted Fitzgerald from his personal account seeking to establish an installment plan.
Fitzgerald said the unauthorized credit card charge is the least of her worries.
"He still has my pictures," she said. "And that scares me."

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Friday, July 30, 2010

Archive for the 'La Coacha' Category - Perez Hilton website

Archive for the 'La Coacha' Category - Perez Hilton website

New York state budget

New York state budget

California state budget

California state budget

Pennsylvania state budget

Pennsylvania state budget

New Jersey May Stop Using Advisers for Bond Sales, Christie's Office Says

New Jersey May Stop Using Advisers for Bond Sales, Christie's Office Says

Chris Christie

Chris Christie, governor of New Jersey, speaks during an interview in New York. Photographer: Jin Lee/Bloomberg
New Jersey, the third-most indebted U.S. state, is considering handling future bond sales without financial advisers, Governor Chris Christie’s office said.
The proposal would put New Jersey in the minority of long- term municipal-bond issuers, based on statistics published by the Bond Buyer newspaper. Seventy-seven percent, or $314 billion, of the $406 billion of debt issued with maturities 13 months or longer had financial advisers, the data show.
Municipal borrowers use outside financial advisers to help determine the best structure and timing for sales and to help prepare presentations to credit-rating firms. Christie’s study of whether state Treasury Department staff should do that work comes four months after his administration questioned $1.2 million in payments the New Jersey Turnpike Authority made to its financial adviser, NW Financial Group LLC, last year.
NW Financial, of Jersey City, is paid 50 cents per $1,000 of bonds issued in which it acts as adviser, records of its contract obtained by Bloomberg show. At that rate, the firm would have been paid $600,000 if it had been the adviser for $1.2 billion of bonds sold by New Jersey’s Transportation Trust Fund Authority last year. That authority paid its adviser, First Southwest Co. of Dallas, $125,000, according to state records.
‘Breadth and Depth’
NW’s principal, Dennis Enright, is lobbying to stay on as the turnpike authority’s adviser, and has offered to cut his fee to $125,000, the same amount paid to First Southwest, according to a July 22 letter he wrote to Deborah Gramiccioni, director of Christie’s unit that oversees all state authorities.
“Although the state has experienced public finance professionals on its staff, they are not exposed to the breadth and depth of deal flow that an experienced financial advisory firm sees every week,” Enright said in the letter, a copy of which was obtained by Bloomberg News. “This additional insight into the market allows for tighter negotiation of rates and terms that translate into lower borrowing costs for the state.”
Kevin Roberts, a spokesman for Christie, confirmed the authenticity of Enright’s letter.
Robin Prunty, managing director at Standard & Poor’s in New York, said Florida and Ohio are among states that have issued debt without advisers. “There are many states that handle it internally,” she said in a telephone interview today.
Enright’s firm ranked 13th in the U.S. by volume among financial advisers on long-term issues last year, the Bond Buyer statistics show.
Since 2002
Enright didn’t return telephone messages left at his office and on his mobile phone July 29, and hung up when reached on his cell phone that day. Diane Scaccetti, executive director of the turnpike authority, declined to comment on a series of questions regarding Enright’s letter in a telephone interview July 29.
Enright, a Democratic campaign contributor, has been the turnpike authority’s financial adviser since 2002. The authority operates the 148-mile (238-kilometer) New Jersey Turnpike and the 173-mile Garden State Parkway that stretches from Cape May to the New York state line.
“This isn’t about Enright; this is more about the state trying to save money -- save millions of dollars -- wherever they can,” state Transportation Commissioner James Simpson, a member of the turnpike authority board, said in an interview today at a press conference in Pennsylvania. “I have all the confidence in the world in our treasurer.”
The turnpike authority plans to issue $2 billion in revenue bonds over the next 12 to 18 months, according to a request for proposals for underwriters the authority issued this month. That level of work would generate $1 million in fees for NW under the terms of its three-year contract that the authority approved in March 2009, when Democrat Jon Corzine was governor. Christie ousted Corzine in November’s election and took office Jan. 19.
State Costs
Enright and NW’s officers have contributed more than $250,000 to New Jersey political campaigns over the past four years, according to the firm’s filings with the New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission and the Alexandria, Virginia-based Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board, which regulates the state- and local-government bond industry.
Christie, 47, slashed state spending to close a record $10.7 billion deficit in his budget for the fiscal year that began July 1. He may encounter a $10.5 billion gap next year, according to a projection this month from the non-partisan Office of Legislative Services.
“The governor and his administration as a whole continue to examine every area of state spending where we can save money and find greater efficiency,” Roberts said in an e-mailed statement yesterday. “To that end, we are evaluating the feasibility of reducing or discontinuing the use of outside financial advisers who contract with the state.”
Enright collected $1.2 million in fees from the turnpike authority last year, for helping issue $2.5 billion in bonds, state records show. California paid its adviser, Public Resources Advisory Group, $205,558 on a $6.85 billion bond deal last year, according to Tom Dresslar, spokesman for California Treasurer Bill Lockyer.

New Jersey May Not Make Pension Payment in Fiscal 2012, Christie Says

New Jersey May Not Make Pension Payment in Fiscal 2012, Christie Says

July 28 (Bloomberg) -- New Jersey Treasurer Andrew Sidamon-Eristoff talks about the state's budget situation and shortfall projections for fiscal 2012. Sidamon-Eristoff, speaking with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television's "InBusiness," said projections that the state faces a gap of more than $10 billion for the year that begins July 1, 2011, are "wildly inflated." (Source: Bloomberg)
Governor Chris Christie of New Jersey said the state may not be able to make a required pension payment in the next fiscal year.
Christie’s comment contrasts with those of his treasurer, Andrew Sidamon-Eristoff, who told Bloomberg News July 28 that the state planned to make a $512 million contribution to the pension system in fiscal 2012, its first in four years.
“I think the treasurer got a little bit out in front on that,” Christie, 47, told reporters today during a news conference in Trenton. “We’ll go forward and we’ll make that contribution if the state is in a position to make that contribution.”
The governor, who took office in January, skipped a $3 billion payment into the $66.9 billion fund in his first budget as he coped with a record $10.7 billion deficit. The fund, which provides benefits for almost 800,000 current and retired teachers and government workers, had a gap between assets and anticipated payouts of $46 billion as of June 30, 2009.
The payment “is something that is required under current law,” he said. “Laws change all the time. That’s our current intention, but that could change.”
The ability to make a pension payment depends upon the state’s financial condition, Christie said. The nonpartisan Office of Legislative Services projected the state may face a deficit of $10.5 billion next year even as revenue grows $1 billion if Christie fully funds all programs and makes a recommended pension payment of $3.5 billion.
Pension Costs
The governor said he intends to work with lawmakers later this year on a series of changes to lower future pension costs. Those initiatives may include scaling back a 9 percent pension increase enacted in 2001 and reducing future benefits for current workers, he said.
In March, the first-term Republican signed a package of bills barring part-time workers from the pension system, capping payouts for unused sick-time and requiring employees to pay 1.5 percent of their salaries for health insurance.
“Six years from now, public workers are going to thank me because there will be a pension there to collect,” Christie said. Public workers and government officials can’t “continue to bury our heads in the sand and believe that somehow the forces of the market or good luck are going to get us out of this.”
Christie, the first Republican elected governor of New Jersey since 1997, closed the gap in his $29.4 billion spending plan for the year that started July 1 by skipping a $3 billion pension payment and cutting aid to public schools by $820 million and municipalities by $445 million. He also suspended almost $1 billion in property-tax rebates in a state where residents pay the highest real-estate levies in the U.S.
To contact the reporter on this story: Terrence Dopp in Trenton at tdopp@bloomberg.net

North Korean football team shamed in six-hour public inquiry over World Cup

North Korean football team shamed in six-hour public inquiry over World Cup

North Korea's football team has been shamed in a six-hour public inquisition and the team's coach has been accused of "betraying" the reclusive leader's heir apparent following their failure at the World Cup, according to reports.

 
North Korean football team shamed in six-hour public inquiry over World Cup
The team's coach, Kim Jong-hun, was reportedly forced to become a builder and has been expelled from the Workers' Party of Korea. Photo: REUTERS
The entire squad was forced onto a stage at the People's Palace of Culture and subjected to criticism from Pak Myong-chol, the sports minister, as 400 government officials, students and journalists watched.
The players were subjected to a "grand debate" on July 2 because they failed in their "ideological struggle" to succeed in South Africa, Radio Free Asia and South Korean media reported.
The team's coach, Kim Jong-hun, was reportedly forced to become a builder and has been expelled from the Workers' Party of Korea.
The coach was punished for "betraying" Kim Jong-un - one of Supreme Leader Kim Jong-il's sons and heir apparent.
The country, in its first World Cup since 1966, lost all three group games – including a 7-0 defeat to Portugal.
The broadcast of live games had been banned to avoid national embarrassment, but after the spirited 2-1 defeat to Brazil, state television made the Portugal game its first live sports broadcast ever.
Following ideological criticism, the players were then allegedly forced to blame the coach for their defeats.
Only two players avoided the inquisition - Japanese-born Jong Tae-se and An Yong-hak, who flew straight to Japan after the tournament.
However, media in South Korea said the players got off lightly by North Korean standards.
"In the past, North Korean athletes and coaches who performed badly were sent to prison camps," a South Korean intelligence source told the Chosun Ilbo newspaper.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Classic Game Room HD - ZEN PINBALL for PS3 review

"James At 15" Star Pleads Guilty To Theft

"James At 15" Star Pleads Guilty To Theft

Lance Kerwin sentenced to 90 and five years probation.

Original photo at KTLA

Police find 8 severed heads in northern Mexico

Police find 8 severed heads in northern Mexico

 July 27, 2010
 
MEXICO CITY — The severed heads of eight men were found left in pairs along highways in the northern Mexico state of Durango, state prosecutors said Tuesday.
The bodies had not yet been located, but the victims appeared to have been between 25 and 30 years old, officials said.
Durango has been the scene of brutal turf battles between drug gangs. Prosecutors said over the weekend that officials at a Durango prison let drug cartel gunmen to leave penitentiary and lent them guns and vehicles to carry out executions.
Also Tuesday, prosecutors in the central state of Puebla reported that three federal police agents were shot to death on a highway in a confrontation with gunmen. The assailants escaped.
In the northern border state of Chihuahua, prosecutors said a second cousin of Gov.-elect Cesar Duarte was shot to death by attackers in the city of Parral. The victim, lawyer Alberto Porras Duarte, was slain while waiting in a vehicle outside his office.
One of Duarte's nephews was killed earlier this month in the Chihuahua state capital in what appeared to be a failed kidnapping attempt. The state has been the scene of some Mexico's bloodiest drug violence.
In the border state of Tamaulipas, army officials reported Monday that they had captured nine Guatemalan citizens during patrols against drug trafficking organizations and seized seven grenades and two guns from the suspects.
A day earlier, troops in Tamaulipas detained 11 people believed to work for the Zetas drug gang and seized five rifles.
Almost 25,000 people have died in drug-related violence since President Felipe Calderon launched an offensive against the cartels in late 2006.

Far From Iran, a Struggle to Stay Involved

July 27, 2010

Far From Iran, a Struggle to Stay Involved

A political tract hammered out by an Iranian feminist this spring presents a snapshot of activism from exile.
Incensed by an aging ayatollah’s pronouncement that women exposing excessive flesh cause earthquakes, the young lawyer, who fled to Germany after her arrest in Iran, fired off a Web post accusing all Iranian men of complicity in the oppression of women propagated by the ayatollahs.
The screed went viral instantly, provoking a global debate among Iranians, with countless men denouncing the premise. But the furor soon died, underscoring the quandary faced by former high-ranking reformist politicians, journalists, academics, student leaders and others who have sought safety abroad since the contested presidential election in June 2009.
The Web keeps them involved with events inside Iran, easing some of the isolation of life in exile. Still, they can no longer directly confront the government in the Islamic republic, where widespread bloody repression has left the opposition Green Movement with an uncertain future. From Ankara, Turkey, to Oslo to New York, the exiles struggle to remain relevant, hoping that by reflecting on past experience they can somehow shape whatever future emerges.
“They have shifted the goal posts in saying that Iran is ruled by an illegitimate government; that had never been said before by so many people who were important inside the government,” said Behrouz Afagh, the director of the BBC World Service for Asia and the Pacific, including its successful Persian-language television channel. “But they have a future only if things inside Iran keep moving. Once out they might be effective for a year or two, then what they say will not have the same resonance.”
Given the scattershot nature of the exiles’ escapes, their exact numbers are elusive, though the United Nations says there has been an increase in the number of academics, journalists and others seeking refugee status on the grounds of persecution for political opinions.
The Iranian government has tried to combat their use of the Internet by slowing the Web, so YouTube videos or other large files are often impossible to view from inside the country. But enough information passes back and forth that many exiles feel connected.
In Brooklyn, Sadra M. Shahab, 25, an Iranian graduate student who grew his black hair long in protest even before he left Isfahan, signs onto Facebook in a design laboratory at Pratt Institute.
One posting on Mr. Shahab’s Facebook page typified the tensions over strategy between those outside the country who urge greater action and those inside who fear for their lives. It was a picture of movie directors, scriptwriters and actors meeting with the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who lectured them about the importance of television in spreading the Islamic Revolution.
Some exiles condemned the artists for not boycotting the session. But people in Iran defended them, saying no one would dare ignore such a summons.
Mr. Shahab, a frequent rally participant, gets inspiration for his chants like “no to sanctions” by reading what the former Green presidential candidate, Mir Hussein Moussavi, writes from inside Iran. The constant communication back and forth will have a cumulative effect, he contends, although it may take a decade to bear fruit.
Women play a prominent role among the exiles, as they have recently in the Iranian opposition.
In Iran, Asieh Amini, 37, started a campaign called Stop Stoning Forever, even collecting bloody rocks from one stoning. Such tactics are out of reach from Norway, where she fled last year, so in June she joined a dozen activists from inside and outside Iran in creating a 133-page pamphlet called “Once Again From the Same Street,” suggesting that the Greens could learn from the long struggle for women’s rights and its success in building grass-roots organizations in Iran.
“The Greens have no continuous or purposeful program of activism; they are reacting to events,” Ms. Amini said. While nodding to security concerns, she concluded, “If the purpose of the Greens is not to build a network, then what purpose does it serve?”
Mahboubeh Abbasgholizadeh, 52, a women’s rights activist who was sentenced in absentia in May to two and a half years in prison and 30 lashes for “acts against national security,” is now working from Amsterdam to establish an online television channel to broadcast discussions about women’s rights.
As the months, and years, go by, many exiles battle depression, the gnawing sense that removed from the fray, they no longer matter. Some focus on winning the small battles — like loosening sanctions banning sales to Iran of certain software applications, a goal they recently achieved — that they hope will lead to bigger victories.
On a recent muggy afternoon in Washington, Aliakbar Mousavi Khoeini, a former member of Parliament, sat at a white table in a small Google conference room, imploring a top executive to provide more Persian-language Internet tools.
Speaking in halting English acquired during his year in the United States, Mr. Mousavi Khoeini told Robert O. Boorstin, the company’s director of public policy, that activists inside Iran desperately needed Google Earth, Google advertising and other services that could help thwart repression.
Mr. Boorstin was sympathetic if noncommittal, promising to consult with various engineers.
Iranians have always been a terribly fractious people, and the diaspora is no exception. Younger Iranians seem particularly mistrustful of the old guard from the reformist administration of President Mohammad Khatami, suspecting that its priority is to return to power rather than to achieve democracy. Atollah Mohajerani, a former minister of guidance now in Britain, raised hackles in youthful circles when a Lebanese weekly quoted him in April as saying that the Green movement sought reform within the current Constitution.
Although the harsh government crackdown created greater solidarity among exiles, such differences are a sign that the diaspora has not yet jelled into an opposition party. Some reject the very idea, fearing that would buttress government accusations that the opposition is a foreign conspiracy.
Exiles believe that the administration of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad pushed thousands into exile to rid itself of critics without creating martyrs. But the government evidently still considers some prominent exiles a threat. Kayhan, a newspaper close to the supreme leader, frequently attacks Rooz Online, a news site that Nooshabeh Amiri helped found from her exile in Paris. One recent editorial said it sought to turn the Green movement into a “carnival of crazy animals.” More visibly, on the main nightly news in recent months the Iranian government has broadcast a series of video clips devised to besmirch high-profile opposition members.
One depicted Shirin Ebadi, the lawyer and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, who has been abroad since the election, as working with foreign powers to destroy the Islamic republic while battering her husband at home. Many exiles welcome the government’s smear tactics as evidence that they are having some success. Yet others recognize that the impact of overseas efforts is necessarily limited.
In New York City, another activist, a slight dark woman, who does not want her name printed because she continues to visit family in Iran, said she still participated in antigovernment demonstrations, even though the whole exercise felt vaguely absurd.
“We do come here because we think it matters, but honestly, you don’t change anything by coming out onto the streets of New York,” the woman said at a June 12 rally outside the United Nations. “It is partly a psychological thing; you should not let the battle fade.”
Artin Afkhami contributed reporting from Washington.
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: July 27, 2010
Due to an editing error, an earlier version of this article contained a photo caption that reversed the middle and last names of Aliakbar Mousavi Khoeini.

Pregnant Cow Breaks Loose at Fair, Shot By Cops







 

Pregnant Cow Breaks Loose at Fair, Shot By Cops

Pregnant Cow Breaks Loose at Fair, Shot By Cops
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- A pregnant cow that got loose at the California State Fair has been shot and killed.

State Fair general manager Brian May says the animal broke free of its enclosure Tuesday morning and stampeded through the fairgrounds where exhibitioners and concessionaire were setting up.

The incident occurred before the gates had officially opened for the day. No one was injured.

Police and veterinarians at the scene tried to corral and tranquilize the animal, but May said the tranquilizer gun didn't fire properly.

Police ultimately shot and killed the cow, whose calf did not survive.

Fair operations were not affected.

Top 12 Reasons Why I Have a Job

Top 12 Reasons Why I Have a Job

Why Music Therapy Works
Children are little creative scientists. If you ever watch a child, they experiment, test, draw, sing, dance, imagine, and play their way to learning. This is true for almost any type of learning they need, from learning the alphabet to learning how to throw a ball, learning right from wrong, and learning first words.

Music is one of the ways through which children learn. In fact, music itself is such a powerful tool for learning and growing that there’s an entire profession dedicated to it: Music Therapy.

According to the American Music Therapy Association, “Music Therapy is the clinical and evidence-based use of music interventions to accomplish individualized goals within a therapeutic relationship by a credentialed professional who has completed an approved music therapy program.” Music therapists can target motor goals, learning goals, social goals, emotional goals, and even speech and communication goals through music-based interventions.
 
Now music therapy doesn't work only with children. Board-certified music therapists also work with teenagers, adults and older adults. In fact, it may be one of the few professions that can work from cradle-to-grave...from NICUs to hospices.

Music works as a therapeutic tool because (as music neuroscientist Daniel Levitin says in his book This is Your Brain on Music) our bodies like rhythm and our brains like music. A quick overview of some of the reasons why music as therapy works:
  1. Music is a core function in our brain. Our brain is primed early on to respond to and process music. Research has shown that day-old infants are able to detect differences in rhythmic patterns. Mothers across cultures and throughout time have used lullabies and rhythmic rocking to calm crying babies. From an evolutionary standpoint, music precedes language. We don’t yet know why, but our brains are wired to respond to music, even though it’s not “essential” for our survival.
  2. Our bodies entrain to rhythm. Have you ever walked down the street, humming a song in your head, and noticed that your walking to the beat? That’s called entrainment. Our motor systems naturally entrain, or match, to a rhythmic beat. When  a musical input enters our central nervous system via the auditory nerve, most of the input goes to the brain for processing. But some of it heads straight to motor nerves in our spinal cord. This allows our muscles to move to the rhythm without our having to think about it or “try.” It’s how we dance to music, tap our foot to a rhythm, and walk in time to a beat. This is also why music therapists can help a person who’s had a stroke re-learn how to walk and develop strength and endurance in their upper bodies.
  3. We have physiologic responses to music. Every time your breathing quickens, your heart-rate increases, or you feel a shiver down your spine, that’s your body responding physiologically to music. Qualified music therapists can use this to help stimulate a person in a coma or use music to effectively help someone relax.
  4. Children (even infants) respond readily to music. Any parent knows that it’s natural for a child to begin dancing and singing at an early age. My kids both started rocking to music before they turned one. Children learn through music, art, and play, so it’s important (even necessary) to use those mediums when working with children in therapy. 
  5. Music taps into our emotions. Have you ever listened to a piece of music and smiled? Or felt sad? Whether from the music itself, or from our associations with the music, music taps into our emotional systems. Many people use this in a “therapeutic” way, listening to certain music that makes them feel a certain way. The ability for music to easily access our emotions is very beneficial for music therapists.
  6. Music helps improve our attention skills. I was once working with a 4-year-old in the hospital. Her 10-month-old twin sisters were visiting, playing with Grandma on the bed. As soon as I started singing to the older sister, the twins stopped playing and stared at me, for a full 3 minutes. Even from an early age, music can grab and hold our attention. This allows music therapists to target attention and impulse control goals, both basic skills we need to function and succeed.
  7. Music uses shared neural circuits as speech. This is almost a no-brainer (no pun intended), but listening to or singing music with lyrics uses shared neural circuits as listening to and expressing speech. Music therapists can use this ability to help a child learn to communicate or help someone who’s had a stroke re-learn how to talk again.
  8. Music enhances learning. Do you remember how you learned your ABCs? Through a song! The inherent structure and emotional pull of music makes it an easy tool for teaching concepts, ideas, and  information. Music is an effective mnemonic device and can “tag” information, not only making it easy to learn, but also easy to later recall. 
  9. Music taps into our memories. Have you ever been driving, heard a song on the radio, then immediately been taken to a certain place, a specific time in your life, or a particular person? Music is second only to smell for it’s ability to stimulate our memory in a very powerful way. Music therapists who work with older adults with dementia have countless stories of how music stimulates their clients to reminisce about their life. 
  10. Music is a social experience. Our ancestors bonded and passed on their stories and knowledge through song, stories, and dance. Even today, many of our music experiences are shared with a group, whether playing in band or an elementary music class, listening to jazz at a restaurant, or singing in church choir. Music makes it easy for music therapists to structure and facilitate a group process.
  11. Music is predictable, structured, and organized--and our brain likes it! Music often has a predictable steady beat, organized phrases, and a structured form. If you think of most country/folk/pop/rock songs you know, they’re often organized with a verse-chorus structure. They’re organized in a way that we like and enjoy listening to over and over again. Even sound waves that make up a single tone or an entire chord are organized in mathematical ratios--and our brains really like this predictability and structure.
  12. Music is non-invasive, safe and motivating. We can’t forget that most people really enjoy music. This is not the most important reason why music works in therapy, but it’s the icing on the cake.

Note: This article is adapted from articles I originally wrote for Pediastaff, a nation-wide staffing company for pediatric therapists, and PositScience, a company that provides brain fitness and brain training software.