Saturday, November 3, 2012

Yes, there is already an iPad Mini installed in a car dashboard (video)

Yes, there is already an iPad Mini installed in a car dashboard

What's that? You had dreams of being the first person in the world with an iPad Mini installed in your 2012 Toyota's dashboard? Well consider those dreams dashed, as Tampa, Florida's Soundwaves is way ahead of you. Like, "they already did it" ahead of you. That regular old iPad you've got in your car? Boooring.

The folks at Soundwaves had a dashboard setup fabricated ahead of the Mini's launch this morning, and filmed themselves performing the installation (see for yourself below the break). Beyond having a freakin' iPad embedded in the dashboard being sweet unto itself, this installation also works in concert with the in-car speakers and a separate music control device. Now all the guys at Soundwaves have to do is install, like, six more iPads in the car and Xzibit will be totally on board.

[Image credit: Soundwaves / Thanks Rob!]

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Yes, there is already an iPad Mini installed in a car dashboard (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 02 Nov 2012 12:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/02/ipad-mini-toyota-dashboard/

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Fierce finish: Romney, Obama sharpen closing lines

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney waves to supporters before speaking at a campaign event at Wisconsin Products Pavilion at State Fair Park, Friday, Nov. 2, 2012, in West Allis, Wisc. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney waves to supporters before speaking at a campaign event at Wisconsin Products Pavilion at State Fair Park, Friday, Nov. 2, 2012, in West Allis, Wisc. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

President Barack Obama smile as he speaks at a campaign event at the Franklin County Fairgrounds, Friday, Nov. 2, 2012, in Hilliard, Ohio, before heading to another campaign stop in in Springfield, Ohio. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama waves upon his arrival at the Lima Allen County Airport, Friday, Nov. 2, 2012, in Lima, Ohio, prior to a campaign stop. (AP Photo/David Kohl)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney gestures as he speaks at a campaign stop at the Wisconsin Products Pavilion at State Fair Park in West Allis, Wis., Friday, Nov. 2, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

President Barack Obama high-five a young girls while meeting with supporters after speaking at a campaign event at Franklin County Fairgrounds in Hilliard, Ohio, Friday, Nov. 2, 2012. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

(AP) ? Down to a fierce finish, President Barack Obama accused Mitt Romney of scaring voters with lies on Friday, while the Republican challenger warned grimly of political paralysis and another recession if Obama reclaims the White House. Heading into the final weekend, the race's last big report on the economy showed hiring picking up but millions still out of work.

"Four more days!" Romney supporters bellowed at his rally in Wisconsin. "Four more years!" Obama backers shouted as the president campaigned in Ohio.

With Ohio at the center of it all, the candidates sharpened their closing lines, both clutching to the mainstream middle while lashing out at one another. Virtually all of the nine homestretch battleground states were getting personal attention from the contenders or top members of their teams, and Romney was pressing hard to add Pennsylvania to the last-minute mix.

Urgency could be felt all across the campaign, from the big and boisterous crowds to the running count that roughly 24 million people already have voted. Outside the White House, workers were setting the foundation for the inaugural viewing stand for Jan. 20. Lawyers from both camps girded for a fight should the election end up too close to call.

Obama, for the first time, personally assailed Romney over ads suggesting that automakers General Motors and Chrysler are adding jobs in China at the expense of auto-industry dependent Ohio. Both companies have called the ads untrue. The matter is sensitive in Ohio, perhaps the linchpin state of the election.

"I know we're close to an election, but this isn't a game," Obama said from Hilliard, Ohio, a heavily Republican suburb of the capital city of Columbus. "These are people's jobs. These are people's lives. ... You don't scare hardworking Americans just to scare up some votes."

For once, the intensely scrutinized monthly jobs report seemed overshadowed by the pace of the presidential race. It was unlikely to affect the outcome.

Employers added a better-than-expected 171,000 jobs in October, underscoring that the economy is improving. But the rate is still short of what will be needed to seriously shrink unemployment. The jobless rate ticked up to 7.9 percent from 7.8 percent ? mainly because more people jumped back into the search for work.

No issue matters more to voters than the economy, the centerpiece of a Romney message called the closing case of his campaign.

He said an Obama presidency would mean more broken relations with Congress, showdowns over government shutdowns, a chilling effect on the economy and perhaps "another recession."

"He has never led, never worked across the aisle, never truly understood how jobs are created in the economy," said Romney, a former private equity firm executive, in a campaign stop in Wisconsin.

Later in Ohio, he declared: "I will not represent one party. I will represent one nation."

Democrats sought to kick the legs out of Romney's late-campaign theme of bipartisanship.

"Mitt Romney's fantasy that Senate Democrats will work with him to pass his 'severely conservative' agenda is laughable," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.

Obama claimed he loved working with Republicans ? when they agreed with him. His tone was scrappy.

"I don't get tired," he said in the longest days of the campaign. When Romney's name drew boos, Obama blurted out: "Vote! Voting is the best revenge."

While the politics intensified, real-life misery played out in the Northeast.

The death toll and anger kept climbing in the aftermath of the massive storm Sandy. Millions were without power, and many drivers could find no gasoline.

Obama noted at the top of his campaign speeches that he was still commanding the federal storm response. He also managed to tie it to the theme of his political bid. "We rise or fall as one nation and as one people," he said, before launching directly to the economic recovery under his watch.

Polling shows the race remains a legitimate toss-up heading into the final days. But Romney still has the tougher path to victory because he must win more of the nine most-contested states to reach 270 electoral votes: Ohio, Florida, Virginia, North Carolina, Colorado, Nevada, Wisconsin, Iowa and New Hampshire.

The dash for cash continued to the end. A fundraising email under Romney's name asked for money to expand operations into other states and "redefine the landscape of this election." An Obama fundraising pitch said final decisions were being made Saturday on where to direct the last campaign money. "It's not too late," it said.

Romney was making a late, concerted push into Pennsylvania, drawing jeers from Obama aides who called it desperation. Obama won the state comfortably in 2008. Romney appeared intent on another path to the presidency should he lose Ohio.

His foray into Pennsylvania is not folly. Unlike states that emphasize early voting, Pennsylvania will see most votes cast on Election Day. The state has not been saturated with political advertising, giving Romney and his supporting groups ? still flush with cash ? an opportunity to sway last-minute voters with a barrage of commercials. Obama is countering by buying commercial time in the state as well and is sending former President Bill Clinton to campaign Monday in Pittsburgh, Scranton and the Philadelphia area.

The candidates' wives and running mates fanned out to the South, Midwest and West to cover more ground.

"Here's what it comes down to: We can't afford to wait four more years for real change to get us on the right track," said the Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan, rallying for votes in Montrose, Colo. "We only need to wait four more days."

Meanwhile, Vice President Joe Biden drew roaring support in Beloit, Wis., in a middle school near Ryan's hometown.

Obama reached beyond the big cities of Ohio before heading back to the White House. Romney was headed into the weekend with a kickoff event for the finish, joining up with his running mate and their wives.

___

AP White House Correspondent Ben Feller reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Ken Thomas, Julie Pace and Julie Carr Smyth in Hilliard, Ohio, Steve Peoples in Pataskala, Ohio, Daniel Sewell in Cincinnati, Ann Sanner in Springfield, Ohio, Matthew Daly in Beloit, Wis., Philip Elliott in Montrose, Colo., and Jim Kuhnhenn and Mark S. Smith in Washington contributed to this report.

__

Follow Ben Feller on Twitter at www.twitter.com/BenFellerDC

Follow Kasie Hunt on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/kasie

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-11-02-Presidential%20Campaign/id-7f492c3c406244c1a0fc99f52b067f48

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Join the 2012 Concept2 Holiday Rowing Challenge! | Shelburne ...

What a great way to stay in or get into shape over the holiday season while raising funds for a worthwhile cause ? all at the same time!? Each year, Concept2 issues a holiday challenge to row 100,000 meters or more.? For every kilometer rowed, they will donate $.02?to your choice of four different causes. If you row 200,000 meters or more, they?ll double it!? This year?s causes are

We?ll be posting our rowers? results in the club to help keep everyone motivated.? To participate, go to www.concept2.com and sign up for an online logbook.? Then let Ute know that you?re participating.? Because this is an individual challenge, you?ll have to update your own meters at the club.? This is a GREAT way to stay motivated, keep on moving, and raise money for incredibly worthwhile causes.? Hope to see you on a rowing machine at SHF soon!? If you don?t yet know how to row, do not hesitate to go to the front desk and ask for help.? Most of us will be taking the challenge and we?re happy to help!? For more information, click here.

This entry was posted in News. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://shelburnehealthandfitness.com/join-the-2012-concept2-holiday-challenge/

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Weekly applications for US jobless aid dip to 363K

In this Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012, photo, Patricia Mazza, left, meets job seekers, including recent college grads Ashley Deyo, 22, second from left, and Chyna Dama, 23, second from right, during a National Career Fairs' job fair, in New York. Weekly applications for U.S. unemployment benefits dropped 9,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 363,000, the Labor Department said Thursday, Nov. 1, 2012. The level is consistent with modest hiring. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

In this Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012, photo, Patricia Mazza, left, meets job seekers, including recent college grads Ashley Deyo, 22, second from left, and Chyna Dama, 23, second from right, during a National Career Fairs' job fair, in New York. Weekly applications for U.S. unemployment benefits dropped 9,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 363,000, the Labor Department said Thursday, Nov. 1, 2012. The level is consistent with modest hiring. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

(AP) ? Applications for U.S. unemployment benefits dropped 9,000 to a seasonally adjusted 363,000 last week, a level consistent with modest hiring.

The report comes just before Friday's October jobs data, the last broad snapshot of the economy before the presidential election Tuesday. The still-weak job market has been a top issue for voters.

The Labor Department said Thursday that the four-week average of applications for unemployment aid, a less volatile gauge, declined to 367,250. The average has been around that level for three months.

A department spokesman said Superstorm Sandy had no direct effect on the number of applicants. The report covered the week ending Oct. 27, before the storm reached shore.

But the devastation and economic disruptions that the storm caused this week will likely increase applications for unemployment aid in coming weeks. Workers who have been temporarily laid off because of the storm are expected to seek benefits.

In some states, though, applications might decline if unemployment offices are closed or laid-off workers are unable to request benefits.

Weekly applications have fluctuated between 360,000 and 390,000 since January. During that time, employers have added an average of about 150,000 jobs a month. The unemployment rate has declined from 8.3 percent in January to 7.8 percent in September.

But few expect unemployment to drop sharply in the months ahead, given the still-modest pace of hiring.

"We continue to see employment growth making little progress," Bricklin Dwyer, an economist at BNP Paribas, said in a note to clients.

The total number of people seeking unemployment benefits rose to just over 5 million in the week that ended Oct. 13, the latest period for which figures are available. That's up slightly from 4.9 million in the previous week.

The economy picked up slightly this summer after a sluggish spring. Growth rose to a 2 percent annual rate in the July-September quarter, up from 1.3 percent in the April-June quarter. Consumers and the federal government spent more, and the housing market contributed to growth for the sixth straight quarter.

Still, the economy is growing too slowly to rapidly bring relief to roughly 12 million out-of-work Americans. With the unemployment rate still high, steady growth of more than 3 percent is generally needed to create a sufficient number of jobs.

When the unemployment rate fell to 7.8 percent in September, it was the first time the rate had fallen below 8 percent since January 2009, President Barack Obama's first month in office.

The rate fell in September because a government survey of households found a huge increase in the number of people who had jobs. Still, a jump in part-time employment accounted for most of the gain.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-11-01-Unemployment%20Benefits/id-eab7229afda04a99ae6da29252128479

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Families Living Well: Fooled by Food: Strategies for Healthy Eating ...


In a culture where a cheeseburger is cheaper than an apple, sometimes it is not easy deciphering what to eat, how much to eat, or even where to eat. Our nation is confused and overwhelmed with food. Unfortunately, the food industry?s misleading marketing has led to misinformed consumers, resulting in an astronomical prevalence of obesity, diabetes, and heart disease. These diseases have crept into our children, escalated health-care costs, and done a number on our aging bodies. With all of this confusion, the popular answer is to turn to the Internet, where we inevitably get more confused and deceived by self-proclaimed ?experts?. Well, fear no more! Below are five simple (evidence-based) tips to navigate you through the confusion of fast food and restaurants. And the next time you are seeking advice about nutrition, pursue reliable information from a Registered Dietitian or credible health website, such as ChooseMyPlate.gov, extension.psu.edu, or nih.gov. Use these sources to become an educated consumer and role model to children. Be skeptical of advertisements and media persuasion until you do your own research!

1. Know the Facts: Plan ahead! Look at restaurant?s online nutrition facts and make a selection before you go to the restaurant. This way you won?t feel rushed at the restaurant or temped to get the 30oz steak a waiter just walked past your table. Prepare for long car trips and bring snacks to keep you and your family satisfied. Choose fruits, vegetables, low-fat string cheese, unsalted nuts, and granola bars.

2. Portion Distortion: Restaurants typically provide far more food than your body needs for one meal. Put half your meal in a box right away, split a meal with someone, or select a smaller, kid-sized portion.

3. Think your Drink: With huge cups and free refills, it is easy to drink extra calories without even thinking about it. Stick to water, unsweetened iced tea, or low-fat milk. Add lemon or lime for extra flavor! Avoid diet drinks, because they can increase hunger and cravings, making you eat more.

4. Pick your Indulgence: Only choose one indulgence, whether that is fries, dessert, or a cocktail. Pick only one guilty pleasure so you don?t go overboard with calories, fat, or sodium.

5. Little Changes Make a Big Difference: Only a small amount of additional calories every day can cause weight gain! Fortunately, little positive changes can really add up for your benefit! Start your meal with a veggie packed salad; Skip the croutons and cheese. Ask for dressing, sauces, butter, gravy, and condiments on the side. Choose whole-wheat bread or pasta. Try fruit and low-fat yogurt for dessert. Ask for steamed, grilled, or broiled dishes. Opt for low-sodium options. When ordering Chinese food, ask for brown rice, extra veggies, and sauces on the side. Top pizza with vegetables.

By: Cierra Neiswender, Penn State Dietetic Intern

Source: http://familieslivingwell.blogspot.com/2012/11/fooled-by-food-strategies-for-healthy.html

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Eat Your Heart Out - The Independent Media Group

A & E -> A&E THU, NOV 1 9:56AM by Walter Pierce

?

Poet Clare L. Martin talks to IND Monthly about her craft and her new collection.

November 2012

Youngsville resident Clare L. Martin?s debut collection of poetry, Eating the Heart First, was published last month by Press 53 of Winston-Salem, N.C. as a Tom Lombardo Selection. Martin?s poetry has appeared in Avatar Review, Blue Fifth Review, Melusine, Poets and Artists and Louisiana Literature, among others. She has been nominated for numerous awards, and her poems have been included in the anthologies The Red Room: Writings from Press 1, Best of Farmhouse Magazine Vol. 1, Beyond Katrina and the 2011 Press 53 Spotlight. She is a lifelong resident of Louisiana, a graduate of UL Lafayette, a member of the Festival of Words Cultural Arts Collective and a teaching artist through the Acadiana Center for the Arts.

Martin fielded some questions from IND Monthly about her fine new collection.

IND Monthly: Why did you choose ?Eating the Heart First? as the title poem? ?
Clare L. Martin: We are meaning seekers. For me, all language of a poem should work to embody meaning. I wrote the poem, ?Eating the Heart First? several years ago and when I wrote it, my personal response to the metaphor was that it was the way I approach poetry, when reading or writing it ? my aim is to go to the heart first. Many, many years ago I envisioned that if I ever did publish a book of poetry, which has been an enduring hope, that I would use that title.

IM: Explain your use of punctuation and the way you structure lines and stanzas. ?
CLM: I try to use proper punctuation and follow the rules of grammar, but I have been known to play fast and loose with a comma. Form and structure are very important to me. I seek balance in the form, visually on the page, and break lines in ways that seem natural or interesting while maintaining balance. I am continually learning through form. Recently, I have been more experimental with line breaks/formatting, and that ?play? is quite freeing and interesting to me.

IM: Describe your process. How does a poem come to be?
CLM: I write in journals and notebooks, but I compose on the computer. I start with a ?free write,? sometimes beginning with a phrase or line that has come to me in a whisper. I write. I follow words where they lead, and do not hold back the flow. I shape the work until I have a solid draft. The pace of writing is usually quick but polishing the work takes time. I have learned somewhat to let the poem rest. Letting go is another thing. Here is a quote from Anais Nin I often return to when thinking about my own process: ?If you do not breathe through writing, if you do not cry out in writing, or sing in writing, then don?t write, because our culture has no use for it.?

IM: How long has Eating the Heart First been in the works, and how many poems did you choose from before distilling them to the collection that is published? And what role did Press 53 and its editors play in this process?
CLM: Eating the Heart First has been in the works for eight years plus a lifetime. Although I have always written, I did not commit to a dedicated practice until my son, Adam, died in 2004. When he died, I made a promise to myself to be the writer I was born to be.?? ?
I began pulling poems together as a manuscript in 2007, after my father died. Eating the Heart First went through many incarnations. When I first offered it to Press 53, it was rejected. Tom Lombardo, the Press 53 poetry editor, encouraged me to work on it and resubmit. I went back to the work and trusted it. When I resubmitted the manuscript, I actually withdrew it a short time later because I felt it still wasn?t ready. Tom respected that and told me to do the work that needed to be done because he believed I could make it work. When I was absolutely sure, I sent it again and he accepted it. I found out it would be published by Press 53 three days before Christmas 2011, and signed the contract with Kevin Morgan Watson, my publisher, in January. The actual time that it took from the initial submission to publication has been around two years. The Press 53 team has been supportive and respectful at every turn. I am really lucky to be with them. ?

?? GARBAGE WOMAN

??? By Clare L. Martin

??? I am a gallows tree.

??? Bottle glass ?
??? chicken bones
??? jointed mannequins
??? of milk jug plastic

??? drowned oaks
??? crab shells
??? wind-struck birds
??? seaweed, guts and eels
??? hang.

??? I am a body of water.

??? The love letters you folded
??? into paper boats,
??? sail across my hips,
??? burn to ash
??? in faraway volcanoes.

??? My palms weep
??? with pearls.


IM: Many of these poems seem intensely personal yet simultaneously detached as your narrative perspective shifts from first- to second- to third person. Where is Clare Martin the person, as opposed to the poet, within these shifts? How personal is this poetry?
CLM: Ah, that is the poet?s magic, isn?t it? Some poems are very personal and some are imagined in a way that conveys truth and emotion without my having personally experienced the happenings of the poem. The poems are of me, and in that sense the person of Clare Martin is in each of these poems.

IM: Is there something poets can do to make their art form more accessible to a wider audience, or will poetry increasingly become a ?niche? form? ?
CLM: I believe humans need art and meaning for survival, which poetry offers in process and product. I try to write in language that is accessible and about experiences that are tied to the human heart and mind, to give a reader an imaginative, intimate experience that is relatable and real. ?

IM: When did you know you wanted to be a poet? ?
CLM: I have written since childhood. I took a creative writing class in high school and was as serious as a moody teenage girl can be. I met a girl in college who was kind of subversive and into poetry. I became enamored with her. She shared books with me. She turned me onto Wallace Stevens and Sylvia Plath, and others. I was fired up and took other creative writing classes. I was first published in The Southwestern Review, the USL literary journal, in 1989.

IM: The book is arranged in three parts. Explain the triptych within Eating the Heart First.
CLM: First I must say how the sequencing came to be. My friend and fellow poet, Kelly Clayton, read the manuscript after I told her the trouble I was having sequencing the book. I was ordering the poems as though they were being filed in a filing cabinet. Kelly invited me over one night to work on it, and we shared a little wine. She lit a candle that was set on a table next to photos of her ancestors. She spread the pages of poetry on her living room floor, and infused with an unusual energy, she began putting the pages in order that made sense to her intuitively. When she was finished, the candle went out. I respected that and I firmly believe the book is the way it is supposed to be. Amen. ?
I divided the book in three sections at Tom?s suggestion to give the book a sense of form and to speak to the breadth of the poems. In the final editing process, we added two poems to the manuscript, slipping them in carefully and respectfully.


Hear Clare L. Martin read from Eating the Heart First and purchase a signed copy of the collection at these November events:

Nov. 2


First Fridays Reading Series
Arts and Humanities Council of Southwest Louisiana
The Porch
4710 Common St.
Lake Charles
7 p.m. (reading and book-signing)

Nov. 10
Book Fair
Festival of Words
232 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive
Grand Coteau
Day event (book-signing)

Nov. 10
Second Saturday Art Walk
Acadiana Center for the Arts
101 W. Vermilion St.
Lafayette
6- 8 p.m. (reading in the Art House and information table)

Nov. 11
Carpe Diem! Gelato-Espresso Bar
812 Jefferson St.
Lafayette
2 p.m. (reading and book-signing)

Nov. 15
17 Poets! Reading Series
The Goldmine Saloon
705 Dauphine St.
New Orleans
8 p.m. (reading)

Nov. 18
Sundays @ 4
Baton Rouge Gallery Center for Contemporary Art
1515 Dalrymple Drive
Baton Rouge
4 p.m. (reading)


busy? LA LA Land
  • At some point, you're going to have to jump

    NOV 1 The Jindal Administration is like a giggling middle-schooler who's afraid to jump into the pool. Michelle Millhollon's account is the best in recounting what happened (or didn't) when the privatization of the OGB came up for a vote on Thursday. It's interesting that Jindal's team doesn't seem to know what to do when bullying doesn't work. Apparently, they can't win in a fair fight.

  • Taxpayers Union endorses Landry

    NOV 2 Landry's camp calls the Congressman's endorsement by the conservative advocacy group National Taxpayers Union "huge," but it's no big surprise. Last year (the most recent ranking on the group's website indicates) NTU gave Landry an "A" while grading Boustany a "B" and "C" student. Also, as this brief in The Advocate explains, the NTU supports a national flat tax, as Landry does.

  • Our little boy's all grown up

    NOV 1 Breaux Bridge native Hunter Hayes has won CMA New Artist of the Year, posts Mike Soileau of Cajun Radio. For those of us who remember seeing a four-year-old Hunter swinging an accordion almost as big as he was, it's like seeing a member of the family make good.

  • Oh, you didn't vote? Then shut up

    OCT 27 The Daily Comet's editor, Keith Magill, tries to persuade his neighbors to vote in this editorial. Good luck with that one. He raises an oft-raised idea: if you don't vote, you don't have any right to complain. Wouldn't it be lovely if the world worked that way?

  • Jim Brown's musings while waiting to vote

    NOV 1 Jim Brown shares the thoughts that were running through his head as he stood in line, waiting to vote early: He thinks Ohio will decide who is president. He misses the doughnuts that politicians used to take to polling commissioners. And, he remembers posting those "no politicking" signs at polling places -- with his name on them -- until his opponents complained. Nice.

  • "Pistol Envy" and a beatles reference

    NOV 1 The Mighty Favog (you heard me) posts an entertaining entry about former Gov. Mike Foster campaigning for the proposed amendment to protect gun rights in Louisiana. He sees it as a barometer of how crazy, or uncivilized, we have become as a state. It's worth a read, even if just to hear a Beatles song that never got enough attention.

  • Varney: Polls are as useless as boobs on a boar hog

    NOV 1 Picayune columnist James Varney expresses the frustration many of us feel in trying to decipher the myriad polls that pepper each election season, and he certainly has a point. However, memo to Jim and all his friends: quit using "gumbo" as a metaphor for a conglomeration of unrelated items. That's not what a gumbo is. Oh, and one more thing? Nobody eats gumbo with a fork. That is all.

  • Another bill for the taxpayers from Jindal

    NOV 1 Tom Aswell tells us what we're paying to protect Gov. Jindal's rear flank while he's jetting about the nation, talking to people who don't live or work here about politicians who don't represent us. The thought arises: if the governor wants to travel and he brings home benefits, that's great. But if the outcome is only more political capital for himself, why are we paying for it?

  • Duke and Mary Olive still neck and neck

    NOV 1 Melissa Landry posts in Hayride about the Supreme Court race that's been overshadowed by other, more interesting campaigns. She has an interesting take on the most recent poll numbers, whipping out the perennial hobgoblin of the trial lawyers (cue scary music). Yawn. What's the alternative? Lawyers shouldn't have opinions about judges?

in case you missed it
  • Shunick file reveals new details in case

    District Attorney Mike Harson has opened up Brandon Scott Lavergne?s case file for media viewing. The 218 pages provided by Harson?s office reveal a few new details regarding Mickey Shunick?s murder and the life of her disturbed killer.

  • OMG, Landry?s rich!

    Or, have we arrived at a peculiar place wherein one Republican makes a campaign issue out of a fellow Republican?s personal wealth? That?s a rhetorical question. Of course we have.

  • LUS tinfoil fee: $12.20 per month

    Lafayette residents who fear that ?smart meters? will sap their vitality, scramble their brains or otherwise render them incapable of living rich, fulfilling, private lives will have to pay a smidgen over $12 per month to keep one foot in the 20th century.

  • Iowa to Jindal: mind your own damn business

    Gov. Bobby Jindal?s trip to Iowa over the weekend was greeted with no small amount of sniffing and huffing by Iowans perturbed by the Louisiana governor?s ?temerity? in lecturing the Hawkeye State about its state supreme court judges.

  • RE: Parks & Recriminations

    In spite of a few parsimonious partisans, Lafayette residents recognize that government revenue ? yes, taxes ? is necessary for the greater good.

Source: http://www.theind.com/a-a-e/arts-a-entertainment-stories/11850-eat-your-heart-out

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Thursday, November 1, 2012

Obstetrics and gynaecology: problems below the belt

woman holding_stomach_30_10_12If you start experiencing problems with your reproductive system, it?s vital that you visit your doctor right away. Not only are there possible implications for your health, but your chances of having children could be affected, too

Obstetrics and gynaecology covers the health of women?s reproductive organs and the care of women during pregnancy and childbirth. This very broad spectrum includes routine screening for diseases such as gynaecological cancers; non-surgical treatment for common complaints such as period problems and fibroids; and complex surgical procedures such as hysterectomies.

Monthly period problems

A normal menstrual cycle is usually 21-35 days long, with bleeding for around five days and 25-80ml of blood loss. Period problems fall into three areas: absent periods (amenorrhea ? classed as primary, when periods don?t start by the age of 16; and secondary, when periods stop for three months or more); painful periods (dysmenorrhoea, when the pain limits activities or needs medication); and heavy periods (menorrhagia, when more than 80ml of blood is lost or periods last longer than a week).

What causes it?
Primary amenorrhea can be caused by developmental problems or failure of the ovary to receive or maintain eggs. Secondary amenorrhea can be due to hormonal disturbances, premature menopause, intra-uterine scarring formation, excessive exercise, anorexia, severe stress, thyroid dysfunction or as a side effect of certain drugs. Dysmenorrhoea is common and is caused by contractions of the uterus as it squeezes the uterine lining (blood) out through the vagina. Menorrhagia has no underlying cause in 40-60% of cases, but can sometimes be a side effect of cervical polyps, fibroids, pelvic inflammatory disease or hormonal imbalance.

Treatment
For amenorrhea, treatment may be deemed unnecessary, unless the patient is trying to conceive. For menorrhagia, treatment may involve drug or hormone therapy to reduce menstrual blood flow.

Fibroids

These are non-cancerous growths in the uterus. It?s thought that 30-40% of women in the UK will have fibroids during their lifetime. They are most common in women in their 30s and 40s, particularly in overweight and Afro-Caribbean women. Fibroids are made up of muscle and fibrous tissue range from the size of a pea to a melon, although they often go undetected.

What causes them?
Fibroids swell when oestrogen levels are high ? for example, during pregnancy ? and shrink when oestrogen levels are low, such as after the menopause. However, the exact cause of fibroids is unknown. Many sufferers have no symptoms, but they can cause heavy periods and lead to anaemia. If fibroids grow large, they can press against the bladder, leading to an increased need to urinate.

Treatment
Most fibroids do not require treatment and will simply be monitored by ultrasound. If necessary, they can be surgically removed. Small ones can be removed by keyhole surgery or through the vagina. Larger fibroids require open surgery and, in severe cases, hysterectomy. There are also new surgical techniques that can help. Uterine artery embolisation involves injecting a chemical into the artery feeding the fibroid to block blood flow, reducing the size of the fibroid by up to 60%. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technology can also be used to locate and treat fibroids.

Endometriosis

This affects two million women in the UK and occurs when the lining of the uterus grows into other parts of the body. Blood can?t be expelled during a period, causing pain, inflammation and scar tissue, which can lead to infertility. It commonly occurs on the ovaries, fallopian tubes and outer womb. Symptoms include painful, heavy or irregular periods, pain during
or after sex, bowel problems and fatigue.

What causes it?
The exact cause of this condition is not fully known, although theories relate it to genetic disposition, environmental toxins and cell mutations.

Treatment
As there?s no cure, the aim is to reduce the severity of symptoms and improve quality of life. Medication can relieve pain, slow cell growth and preserve fertility.

Pcos

Around one in 10 women have polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS). It is characterised by tiny cysts on the ovaries; the ovaries producing higher levels of male hormones (leading to excessive body hair, thinning of scalp hair and acne); and not ovulating each month (causing irregular or absent periods and fertility issues).

What causes it?
The causes are unclear but it?s widely believed that increased insulin production is a main contributing factor. This condition is also associated with obesity.

Treatment
As the cause is not understood, the focus is on managing symptoms and preventing complications such as high blood pressure and diabetes. Losing weight helps to lower insulin levels and improve fertility, while medication or topical treatments can help to control acne and excessive hair growth.

Pelvic inflammatory disease

This is a bacterial infection of the womb, fallopian tubes and/or ovaries. Symptoms include pain in the pelvis and lower abdomen, discharge, fever and heavy, painful periods ? but often there are no symptoms at all.

What causes it?
PID is caused by an infection that travels up from the vagina ? most commonly chlamydia and gonorrhoea.

Treatment
If diagnosed early, a two-week course of combined antibiotics usually clears the infection. Sexual partners should also be treated in order to stop reinfection.

Pre-eclampsia

This condition usually occurs during the second half of pregnancy (from around 20 weeks) or immediately following birth. Women develop high blood pressure, fluid retention and protein in the urine. Symptoms include sudden swelling of the face, hands, feet and ankles, rapid weight gain, blurred vision or seeing flashing lights, abdominal pain and severe headaches.

What causes it?
Current theories suggest that insufficient blood flow to the uterus, causing the placenta to not develop properly, and hormonal imbalance are to blame. It is more common in first-time pregnancies; in those with high blood pressure, diabetes or polycystic ovary syndrome; and in women either under the age of 18 or over 40.

Treatment
In mild cases, women are advised to take bed rest and have regular check-ups. If the condition worsens and the mother and/or baby is at risk, the baby must be delivered.
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Gynaecological cancers
We take a look at three types of female cancer: cervical, endometrial and ovarian. Increased?awareness of their symptoms can mean an earlier diagnosis and treatment

The disease

Cervical cancer is one of the most common cancers that affect a woman?s reproductive organs. Strains of the human papillomavirus (HPV), a sexually transmitted infection, play a role in causing most cases. HPV is a commonly occuring virus and because most women with HPV never develop cervical cancer, other risk factors, such as your genetics, environment and lifestyle choices, also determine whether or not you will develop the disease.

Endometrial cancer (cancer of the uterus) is often found during its earliest, most treatable stage because it frequently causes vaginal bleeding between menstrual periods or after the menopause. It is caused when cancerous cells start to develop in the lining of a woman?s uterus (the endometrium). There are three types of ovarian tumours, named according to where they form in the ovary. Epithelial tumours develop in the thin layer of tissue covering the ovaries. Germ cell tumours occur in the egg-producing cells. And stromal tumours develop within the oestrogen- and progesterone-producing tissue that holds the ovary together.

Treatment
Early cervical cancers can be treated with surgery. If the tumour is microscopic, it may be removed with a biopsy. Larger tumours of up to 4cm and confined to the cervix will usually be treated with a radical hysterectomy ? an operation to remove the uterus and the tissue to the side of it (parametrium). Larger tumours are treated with a mixture of chemotherapy and radiotherapy.


Figuring out female health
The facts and stats of conditions and diseases affecting today?s women the world over

  1. Around 2,800 new cases of cervical cancer are diagnosed in the UK each year ? that?s 55 new women a week facing the condition.
  2. Only one in three women with fibroids will show symptoms. Often the benign growths are only found by chance during a routine check-up.
  3. 15 out of every 100 premenopausal women suffers from endometriosis, with the condition typically affecting women aged between 25 and 49.
  4. One in 60 sexually active women under 45 visit their GP with pelvic inflammatory disease each year. One in five will become infertile.

Picture credit: Shutterstock


The above feature was
published in
Dr Hilary
Jones'
Healthcare Guide

Sept 2012.

Click here for more
Dr Hilary Jones
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Source: http://www.athomemagazine.co.uk/hilary-jones/6188-obstetrics-and-gynaecology-problems-below-the-belt

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