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Number of NHS patients waiting more than 18 weeks has doubled, says report

Report by King’s Fund follows release of DoH figures that showed 48% increase in breaches of legally binding NHS targets The number of patients waiting more than the recommended maximum of 18 weeks for NHS treatment has soared by 48% since last year. Figures released by the Department of Health came as a separate report by the King’s Fund found that in more than 45 hospital trusts, more than 10% of patients were not admitted within 18 weeks of being referred by their GPs, breaching legally binding targets in the NHS constitution. The figures have more than doubled on the previous year. The report found that while the NHS overall had managed to meet targets on waiting times and infections despite hospitals having to find savings of between 6% and 7% this year, this masked “considerable variation” at a local level. Using government data, the Guardian found that 28,635 patients in England who were treated in an NHS hospital during August had been waiting more than 18 weeks, compared with 19,355 in the same month in 2010 – a rise of 48%. The King’s Fund, a leading health thinktank, concurred with this analysis, pointing out that “although average waiting times remain within target range, one in four hospitals failed to meet the target”. Rob Findlay, who runs NHS waiting times company Gooroo, pointed out that in St Georges, Kingston, Bath, Guy’s & St Thomas’, Sheffield and South London hospital trusts, there were “1,000 patients on waiting list for more than a year”. On this measure, the numbers waiting are the largest since the coalition came to power last year, when the health secretary, Andrew Lansley, reviewed or eased several NHS waiting time targets. One of the measures changed was Labour’s target that no one should wait more than four hours in A&E, with the threshold lowered from 98% to 95%. The King’s Fund found that 29 hospitals failed to meet that measure. In Surrey and Sussex Healthcare NHS Trust, a third of the 13,000 patients who used the hospital’s A&E ward waited more than four hours. The report also found that “45 hospital trusts reported higher levels of C difficile infections than the same period last year”. John Appleby of the King’s Fund said: “Infection rates are a indication of when hospitals are under pressure. As more patients go through the system, you end up with higher bed occupancy. This is when you can get higher rates of infection.” Appleby said a survey of 23 NHS finance directors had shown “15 are pessimistic about the financial state of their local health economy, with only three optimistic about this”. Most of the NHS finance directors questioned by the King’s Fund are “uncertain or concerned” about whether their trust will meet its savings target, with the majority expecting to face equally challenging targets of 4% or more next year. Appleby said: “We are seeing a minority of trusts are struggling to keep waiting lists down and reduce hospital-acquired infections. Looking ahead, the challenge will be to maintain performance and deliver productivity improvements as finances tighten further. “Six months into an unprecedented four-year period of financial restraint, the pressures already emerging in a small number of trusts highlight the scale of the challenge facing the NHS.” Katherine Murphy, the Patients Association’s chief executive, said: “The prime minister made a personal promise to ensure that the right to be treated within 18 weeks, enshrined in the NHS constitution, was upheld. He has utterly failed to live up to that promise.” A Department of Health spokeswoman said: “Waiting times are low and remain stable. But we know that, despite the increase in funding, the NHS needs to save up to £20bn from within its budget to meet future challenges. We are absolutely clear that this does not mean cutting services. This means getting better value for every pound spent in the NHS so that it can continue to improve and deliver services for patients every day.” NHS GPs Health Health policy Doctors Randeep Ramesh Denis Campbell James Ball guardian.co.uk

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New Hampshire Lawmakers Boo Bachmann’s Anti-Union Speech

Click here to view this media Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann elicited cheers, boos and some heckling from the lawmakers in New Hampshire Wednesday after she encouraged the Legislature to enact right-to-work legislation. All of the five GOP hopefuls appearing before the lawmaking body were greeted with respectful applause, but only Bachmann’s speech was met with loud disapproval. “This body can have a significant impact on the people of New Hampshire’s ability to fully restore their economic liberty by making New Hampshire a right-to-work state,” Bachmann said, pausing for almost 30 seconds while lawmakers reacted. “Just a few more votes and we’ll be there, New Hampshire,” she announced. The comment was followed by several more seconds of whistles and boos. “Because you see, it’s a proven fact right-to-work states have created more jobs than those that are not,” Bachmann stated as the boos continued. “Facts are stubborn things.” “We’re free people!” someone in the audience shouted. Later Wednesday, the New Hampshire House was scheduled to attempt an override of Democratic Gov. John Lynch’s veto of their right-to-work legislation. House Speaker Bill O’Brien (R) told NHPR that he was uncertain that the override would be successful. “It really depends who shows up,” he explained. “If all our supporters show up, we get it overridden. If as in other House sessions, we see they haven’t show up, it’s going to be difficult to bring it forward and be successful.” The Professional Fire Fighters of New Hampshire (PFFNH) has accused O’Brien of “using Republican presidential candidates as lobbyists to further his personal anti-worker agenda.” “The speaker is orchestrating a dog and pony show, using GOP presidential candidates to generate support for a right-to-work bill that doesn’t have support in the New Hampshire House and would do nothing more than erode the rights of New Hampshire workers,” PFFNH president Dave Lang said in a media advisory.

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Atlantic Wire Slams Arianna’s Hypocritical Complaint About Media Running ‘Non-Stories’

Do as I say, not as I do, dahling. Atlantic Wire blogger Alexander Abad-Santos finds Arianna Huffington's criticism of “our media culture” a bit hard to take, seeing how Huffington is a major culprit in perpetuating it. Abad-Santos writes — In an interview with CNN Money, Huffington talked about AOL's plan for growth, editor Michael Arrington's departure, TechCrunch and Crunchfund. Huffington, playing it cool, had nothing but warm words for Arrington. When asked why the story became as big as it did, Huffington replied, “Our media culture likes to obsess over non-stories, the balloon boy, the pastor who was going to burn or not burn the Koran, Casey Anthony. It's just unfortunately part of our culture we … have OCD over non-stories.” Abad-Santos proceeded to link to these non-stories … at Huffington Post — Click ahead for: Casey Anthony's dad on Doctor Phil, non-Koran burning , or balloon boy's parents auctioning off his balloon, cat hair covers or Michael Arrington's first post on his new blog.

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Occupy Wall Street protesters set for Zuccotti Park showdown

Protesters in New York are preparing for a confrontation with police, as the owners of the park order a ‘clear-up’ • Follow @AdamGabbatt at the park from Thursday night The collection of sleeping bags, camping stoves and Macbook Airs that makes up the Occupy Wall Street stronghold in Lower Manhattan is about to be broken up. Four weeks after the first protesters took up residence at Zuccotti Park, what looks like a final showdown with the city authorities is looming. The owners of the park, Brookfield Properties, appear to have had enough of their uninvited guests and have ordered a cleanup to begin at 7am on Friday. On Thursday, representatives of the company distributed leaflets in the park saying that, following the clear-up, protesters will not be allowed to keep sleeping bags, tents, and other camping gear in the park. Nor will they be allowed to lie down on the benches or the ground. In effect, the camp is finished. Police have said all along that they would enforce the wishes of the park’s owners – Zuccotti is a private space that is open to the public under the terms of an agreement with the city authorities. Occupy Wall Street protesters called for supporters to gather at the park from 6am on Friday to defend it from what they said was an eviction attempt. Police say they will move in to enforce the clean-up from 7am. Some sort of confrontation appears inevitable. OWS spokesman Tyler Combelic told the ThinkProgress website: “We have decided that at 7 o’clock tomorrow, we will not leave the park. We are not opposed to cleaning it ourselves.” On Wednesday, protesters began cleaning up the park themselves. The New York Police Department told the Guardian that the park would be cleaned in thirds on Friday, in an operation that was expected to last 12 hours. Brookfield, the owners, said in the statement distributed to the park’s occupants: “Zuccotti Park is a privately-owned space that is designed and intended for use and enjoyment by the general public for passive recreation. For the safety and enjoyment of everyone, the following types of behaviour are prohibited in Zuccotti Park: Camping and/or the erection of tents or other structures; Lying down on the ground, or lying down on benches, sitting areas or walkways which unreasonably interferes with the use of benches, sitting areas or walkways by others. The placement of tarps or sleeping bags or other covering on the property.” Occupy Wall Street said the statement by the owners amounted to an “attempt to shut down #OWS for good”. OWS said in a statement on Wednesday: “Last night Mayor Bloomberg and the NYPD notified Occupy Wall Street participants about plans to ‘clean the park’ – the site of the Wall Street protests – tomorrow starting at 7am. ‘Cleaning’ was used as a pretext to shut down ‘Bloombergville’ a few months back, and to shut down peaceful occupations elsewhere. “Bloomberg says that the park will be open for public usage following the cleaning, but with a notable caveat: Occupy Wall Street participants must follow the ‘rules’. These rules include, ‘no tarps or sleeping bags’ and ‘no lying down.’ “So, seems likely that this is their attempt to shut down #OWS for good.” Whatever happens, the protesters have made significant gains. They have forced the media to take notice of them, and they appear to have made inroads with public opinion. A survey by Time magazine found that 54% of Americans have a favourable impression of the protests, with 23% reporting a negative impression. An NBC/Wall Street Journal survey, found 37% “tend to support” OWS, while 18% “tend to oppose” it. CBS News headlined a piece on its website : “Occupy Wall Street – more popular than you think”. Occupy Wall Street Protest New York United States Michael Bloomberg Matt Wells guardian.co.uk

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Chinese researchers create ping-pong playing robots, trash talk still needs work

Wu and Kong are the latest additions to a pantheon of robot athletes . Sure, their eye-mounted motion-tracking cameras may not make for the most emotive games you’ll ever see, but we can’t help but be impressed by all those precision shots. The robot twins were developed at China’s Zhejiang University and, we’ll admit, compared to getting hustled at pool or being struck out by a baseball robot , there’s something a bit friendlier about a game of table tennis with our future oppressors . You can marvel at the duo’s bionic backspin in action after the break. We’re massive Wu fans. Continue reading Chinese researchers create ping-pong playing robots, trash talk still needs work Chinese researchers create ping-pong playing robots, trash talk still needs work originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Oct 2011 17:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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One in six mobile phones contain E coli

Reseachers say 16% of UK mobile devices and users’ hands contaminated with faecal bacteria due to poor personal hygiene One in six UK mobile phones are contaminated with faecal bacteria due to poor personal hygiene, scientists have found. Researchers said that 16% of the devices were contaminated with E coli, which can cause food poisoning, most probably because people fail to properly wash their hands after going to the toilet. The study by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and Queen Mary, University of London, also found that Britons tend to lie about their personal hygiene. While 95% of the 390 people surveyed said they washed their hands with soap where possible, 92% of mobile phones and 82% of hands were contaminated with bacteria. The study, which took samples from 390 phones in 12 cities, raises serious public health concerns as it found that 16% of hands and the same proportion of phones were contaminated with E coli. A virulent strain of the bacterium has recently been implicated in the fatal outbreak of food poisoning in Germany in June. Dr Val Curtis, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said: “This study provides more evidence that some people still don’t wash their hands properly, especially after going to the toilet. “I hope the thought of having E coli on their hands and phones encourages them to take more care in the bathroom – washing your hands with soap is such a simple thing to do but there is no doubt it saves lives.” Birmingham has the highest proportion of bacteria-ridden phones (41%) but the highest level of E coli contamination was found in London (28%). But the scientists also found a north-south divide in the levels of bacteria found on phones, with northern cities the dirtiest. Glasgow was the worst with average bacterial levels on phones and hands nine times higher than in Brighton. The scientists also found those who had bacteria on their hands were three times as likely to have bacteria on their phone. Dr Ron Cutler, of Queen Mary, University of London, said: “While some cities did much better than others, the fact that E coli was present on phones and hands in every location shows this is a nationwide problem. “People may claim they wash their hands regularly but the science shows otherwise.” Faecal bacteria can survive on hands and surfaces for hours at a time, especially in warmer temperatures away from sunlight. It is easily transferred by touch to door handles, food and even mobile phones. The research was released ahead of Global Handwashing Day on 15 October. E coli Hygiene Health Health policy Mobile phones Telecoms David Batty guardian.co.uk

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Inquiry into child sexual exploitation by gangs to be launched

Report finds that three-quarters of councils are failing to implement measures to protect vulnerable young boys and girls An inquiry into child sexual exploitation by gangs will be launched on Friday, as a report finds that three-quarters of councils are failing to implement measures to protect vulnerable young people. Fears about the rise in child sexual exploitation have being growing after high-profile cases of groups of mainly Asian men grooming teenagers for sex in Derby and Rochdale. The Office of the Children’s Commissioner (OCC) warned that the problem is more widespread and stereotyping of perpetrators could mean victims are being missed. The OCC is taking the unusual step of exercising its powers under the 2004 Children’s Act to investigate the scale of sexual exploitation of girls and boys by youth street gangs and other groups in England in a two-year study. Under the powers local authorities, police, health and education professionals and the judiciary will be forced to provide information about child sexual exploitation for the first time, said Sue Berelowitz, deputy children’s commissioner, leading the inquiry. “There is a huge gaping hole in our knowledge about this area. Children are being failed, they are subject to a most pernicious form of sexual abuse and they cannot access protection and support,” she said. “We believe this is happening in every part of the country and these children need to be protected.” Sexual, and often violent, exploitation of children and young people was happening throughout the country, often perpetrated by young people in street gangs, and not only by certain groups of men, she said. “It is a very worrying picture, with patterns that differ according to demographic and area,” she said. “In Derby it was Asian men but in [a recent case in] Torbay white men were involved. It happens in cities but also in rural areas. If it is happening in those areas it is happening everywhere.” A report by Bedfordshire University released on Friday reveals that three-quarters of councils have failed to put in place government guidance issued in 2009 to protect children from sexual exploitation. Professor Jenny Pearce, principle investigator of the two-year report, What’s Going on to Safeguard Children and Young People from Sexual Exploitation?, said some local authorities were turning a blind eye to abuse. “We are seeing only a quarter of LSCBs [local safeguarding children boards] being proactive and that is shameful. What worries me is that to ignore the problem is to collude in the abuse,” she said. The issue has come under the spotlight after a series of cases. In January the ringleaders of a gang in Derby who groomed girls for sex were given indefinite jail sentences, while in Rochdale nine men were found guilty of a series of sexual exploitation related offences. The report states that there is “no one model of how young people are sexually exploited”: 31% were exploited by a older “boy/girlfriend” but 27% of cases involved young people exploiting other young people. “Recent media attention has suggested predominance of exploitation through an organised network of perpetrators,” the report adds, but finds that this was only true of 18% of cases studied. Sue Jago, report author, said: “The danger is that local authorities think this only happens to a certain type of child by a certain group of men, and then they are blinkered to different models of abuse.” The study finds that less than half of all LSCBs collected data on exploitation, prosecutions of sexual predators was low and the experience of going through the court process often left abused children traumatised. It highlights a snapshot of 158 cases, that resulted in only 34 convictions which, it said “reflects the low number of cases reaching court [and] may also reflect the low number of people receiving appropriate support before, during and after the court proceedings.” Young girls, particularly in violent gang situations, were too often seen as part of the problem, rather than as abused children, said Berelowitz. “These girls are too often seen as transgressors or aggressors, rather than victims,” she added. “But the abuse of young girls by gangs and groups transcends the awfulness of anything I have ever seen.” Berelowitz detailed a case where girls of 11 and 12 were expected to give oral sex to lines of young men. Another example involved young women being offered as “payment” as part of a drug deal or girls associated with one gang being sexually abused as “payback” by another gang. The report suggests that the most vulnerable children are falling prey to sexual predators. Sexually exploited young people studied were up to four and a half times more likely to be accommodated in residential care, just under half were known not to be attending school while 41% were already in contact with children’s services. The minister for children and families, Tim Loughton, welcomed the inquiry and said the findings of the Bedfordshire study would help inform a government action plan expected next month. “Child sexual exploitation is an appalling form of child abuse and we are determined to do everything possible to stamp it out,” he said. “LSCBs have a key role in tackling child sexual exploitation but too many are not taking the issue seriously enough and abuse is often remaining hidden from view. Raising awareness must be a priority along with tackling the difficulties that young victims and their families can face in getting justice.” ‘She was making me do stuff with them’ Sarah was fifteen when she ran away from home last year after a series of fights with her mum and step-dad in her Yorkshire home. She had nowhere to go, and when a girl her own age who she hung around with, and knew from school, said she’d give her a place to stay she was grateful. “She said she was looking after a house and I didn’t have anywhere to go,” said Sarah. She slept at the house for a few nights, but soon visitors, a group of men, started coming to the flat. “Before I knew it she was making me do stuff with them I didn’t want to do,” she said. The men, who she thought were a group of friends, were nice to her at first. “They keep on giving you stuff, buying me stuff. But the girl I was with was pressuring me and saying she’d give me weed and whatever, but she was doing it so she could get her weed and beer and money.” The girl took away her keys and locked the door. Sarah was frightened, she thought about phoning the police but feared what the consequences would be. “I was feeling proper scared, like if I said no she would do something. It made me feel upset and sick.” At the end of two weeks Sarah was allowed out of the house, and found support at a Children’s Society project based in Keighley and Bradford. Although she sometimes still sees her abusers, she feels she is stronger and more aware of the dangers now and wouldn’t be abused again. “Before I didn’t want to talk about it but there are people who listened to me, and I got it all out. I’ve moved away from the place where it happened, it’s behind me now.” • Names have been changed in this section to protect the identity of the speaker. Child protection Children Social care Alexandra Topping guardian.co.uk

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Anti-Choice Rep. Virginia Foxx: ‘Nobody Has Fought More for the Rights of Women’

Click here to view this media Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC) denied Thursday that a bill that would allow hospitals to refuse treatment to pregnant women was misogynist, adding that “nobody has ever fought more for the rights of women than I have.” In a speech on the House floor, Rep. Jackie Speier (D-CA) explained why she believed “The Protect Life Act” was a step backward for women’s reproductive rights. “I think this bill goes to the farthest extreme in trying to take women down, not just a peg, but take them in shackles to some cave somewhere,” she said. “Twenty-five years ago, this body passed [The Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA)], a bill that basically said that anyone that shows up at an emergency room would access health care, no questions asked. Now, my colleagues on the other side of the aisle want to amend that law and basically say, ‘Oh, except for a woman who is in need of an abortion, or except for a woman who is bleeding to death who happens to be pregnant. Or except for a woman who is miscarrying.’ Basically, what this bill would do is say that any hospital could decline to provide services to one class of people in this country and that one class of people are pregnant women.” Speier added: “What my colleagues on the other side of the aisle are attempting to do is misogynist. It is absolutely misogynist.” Foxx responded by charging that Democrats were “outside the mainstream” for wanting to use taxpayer funding for abortions. “For my colleagues across the ailes who say that this is a misogynist bill, nobody has ever fought more for the rights of women than I have,” she declared. “Fifty percent of the unborn babies that are being aborted are females. So the misogyny comes from those that promote the killing of unborn babies. That’s where the misogyny comes in, Madame Speaker.” In the past six years, Foxx has voted against abortion rights at least nine times . Family planning advocates claim that an amendment introduced by the congresswoman in May was designed to prevent doctors from being properly trained to perform abortions. “Once again, instead of focusing on improving access to health care, opponents of women’s health are manipulating the legislative process to undermine women’s access to and information about comprehensive reproductive health care services,” Planned Parenthood Federation of America’s Dawn Laguens said in a media advisory . Democrats have called House Republicans’ latest effort a waste of time because “The Protect Life Act” would never be passed by Democrats in the Senate or signed into law by President Barack Obama. “Under this bill, when the Republicans vote for this bill today, they will be voting to say that women can die on the floor of health care providers,” House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) told reporters Thursday. “I can’t even describe to you the logic of what they are doing today.”

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Solyndra CEO Resigns, Major Backer Delinquent on Taxes; Will Media Report?

Two more shoes dropped in the Solyndra scandal today, but it remains to be seen their sound will stir the sleepy liberal lapdog media. Solyndra CEO Brian Harrison resigned last Friday, the Associated Press reported early this afternoon. Oh, and while the media of late have cheerleading the Democratic push for a new surtax on millionaires, don't expect the news media, particularly MSNBC, to note how a key Obama donor who pushed for the Solyndra loan has been delinquent on his federal taxes for years . As Washington Examiner's Mark Tapscott noted this morning :

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Circuit City starts shipping Lenovo IdeaPad U400, reminds you it still exists

Remember Circuit City ? It may no longer exist in your local mall (or alongside the 405) but somehow it’s wangled a flock of Lenovo’s new IdeaPad U400s — ahead of the company’s own official store. This thin yet powerful object of desire has a 14-inch 1366 x 768 Backlit LED screen, 6GB of DDR3 RAM, 1GB ATI Radeon HD6470M graphics and a 2.40GHz Intel Core i5-2430m processor. Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit is stashed on the 750GB HDD and the whole thing is rated to run for four-hours on the built-in battery. If you want one to be slung on the back of a UPS truck on its way to your domicile, it’ll set you back $920 — a little more than the $850 that Lenny had promised, but isn’t it worth a little bit extra to get one before anyone else? [Thanks, Elliott] Circuit City starts shipping Lenovo IdeaPad U400, reminds you it still exists originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Oct 2011 16:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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