Saturday, October 22, 2011

Deschanel, country stars to sing at World Series (AP)

NEW YORK ? Zooey Deschanel has double duty on Fox: The star of the new series "New Girl" also is performing at the World Series.

Deschanel is from the indie pop duo She & Him. She'll sing the national anthem at Game 4 of the Major League Baseball seven-game series between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Texas Rangers. It airs Sunday on Fox.

Before the actress takes the stage, country singer Trace Adkins will perform the anthem at Game 2 on Thursday, and Ronnie Dunn will do the same two days later at Game 3.

The Cardinals and Rangers battle it out Wednesday night in Game 1 at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, where "American Idol" champion Scotty McCreery will perform the national anthem.

___

Online:

http://mlb.mlb.com/

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111019/ap_en_tv/us_music_world_series_singers

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Friday, October 21, 2011

Hospital safety practices unrelated to outcomes

Whether or not trauma centers meet national safety standards says little about a patient's risk of dying or getting an infection while there, according to new research.

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The findings add to evidence that quality measures meant to improve hospital outcomes may not be as effective as hoped.

Earlier this month, for instance, another study found that hospitals scoring high for their treatment of children with asthma aren't better at preventing those kids from ending up in the emergency room with asthma attacks.

The latest results, published in the Archives of Surgery, show that hospital scores on the so-called Leapfrog Safe Practices Survey weren't linked to either death rates or hospital-associated infections.

The survey asks hospitals about how they staff their intensive care unit, among other things, and how they try to avoid blood stream infections from catheters.

The Leapfrog Safe Practices have been adopted by the National Quality Forum, a non-profit organization that receives government as well as private funding, to try to improve patient safety and health care quality.

According to a 1998 report from the Institute of Medicine, 98,000 Americans die each year from preventable medical errors at hospitals.

The new study is based on data on more than 42,000 patients from 58 trauma centers across the country.

Dr. Laurent G. Glance, who led the work, said its findings were preliminary and don't mean the safety practices themselves aren't effective. Rather, he suggested in a telephone interview, the Leapfrog survey is falling short.

"You can't just rely on what the hospital executive says," Glance, of the University of Rochester School of Medicine in Rochester, New York, told Reuters Health. "You'd probably also need to have some sort of auditing in place."

He also called for studies following hospitals over time, to make sure that those with high scores aren't just the ones that had bad outcomes and therefore decided to up their game.

"We need additional studies to look at whether or not these safety practices are beneficial for trauma patients," Glance said.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/psguZq Archives of Surgery, October 17, 2011.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44951419/ns/health-health_care/

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Thursday, October 20, 2011

Smoking, tobacco ads banned at Euro 2012

Associated Press Sports

updated 10:09 a.m. ET Oct. 20, 2011

NYON, Switzerland (AP) -UEFA has imposed a ban on smoking and tobacco advertising at next year's European Championship.

UEFA says the ban will apply in and around all eight host stadiums in Poland and Ukraine.

UEFA President Michel Platini says the ban is about "respecting the health of our spectators."

Host cities will also be urged to extend the policy to "ensure smoke-free public transport, restaurants and fan zones."

UEFA worked with the World Health Organization and European Union to introduce the policy.

The 16-nation tournament will be played from June 8-July 1.

? 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Senate backs measure to avoid another gun scandal (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? The Senate on Tuesday passed a measure aimed at avoiding another botched operation to track guns smuggled from the United States, many of which ended up at crime scenes on both sides of the Mexico-U.S. border.

The "Fast and Furious" sting operation run by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) was meant to try to slow the flow of weapons to violent drug gangs.

The Senate voted 99-0 for a proposal that would bar the government from using funds to knowingly transfer guns to drug cartels if U.S. law enforcement agencies are not monitoring or controlling the weapons at all times.

The House of Representatives must pass a similar measure before President Barack Obama, a Democrat, can sign it into law. Border security, also tied to illegal immigration and the broader economy, is an important issue as U.S. politicians gear up for elections in November 2012.

The Senate bill amendment was introduced by Texas Republican John Cornyn after the ATF failed to track guns after they were bought by suspected suppliers to Mexican drug cartels in the operation that ran from late 2009 through 2010.

"When 2,000 firearms go missing and at least one is found at the crime scene of a murdered U.S. Border Patrol agent, we must do everything possible to ensure that such a reckless and ill-advised operation like 'Fast and Furious' is not repeated," Cornyn said in a statement earlier this week.

Republican congressional investigators have demanded Attorney General Eric Holder turn over documents and communications about the operation.

Escalating a battle between Holder and the House Oversight Committee, the panel subpoenaed the Justice Department -- which oversees the ATF -- seeking voluminous information from senior Obama administration officials.

(Editing by John O'Callaghan)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111018/pl_nm/us_usa_mexico_guns

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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Occupy Wall Street reaches 1-month birthday (AP)

NEW YORK ? The month-old Occupy Wall Street movement continues to grow, with nearly $300,000 in the bank and participants finding satisfaction in the widening impact they hope will counter the influence on society by those who hold the purse strings of the world's economies.

The expanding occupation of land once limited to a small Manhattan park in the shadow of the rising World Trade Center complex continued through the weekend, with hundreds of thousands of people rallying around the world and numerous encampments springing up in cities large and small.

For the most part, the protest action remained loosely organized and there were no specific demands, something Legba Carrefour, a participant in the Occupy D.C. protest, found comforting on Sunday.

"When movements come up with specific demands, they cease to be movements and transform into political campaign rallies," said Carrefour, who works as a coat check attendant despite holding a master's degree in cultural studies. "It's compelling a lot of people to come out for their own reasons rather than the reasons that someone else has given to them."

The demonstrations worldwide have emboldened those camped out at Manhattan's Zuccotti Park, the epicenter of the movement that began a month ago Monday. But there is conflict too. Some protesters eventually want the movement to rally around a goal, while others insist that isn't the point.

"We're moving fast, without a hierarchical structure and lots of gears turning," said Justin Strekal, a college student and political organizer who traveled from Cleveland to New York to help. "... Egos are clashing, but this is participatory democracy in a little park."

Even if the protesters were barred from camping in Zuccotti Park, as the property owner and the city briefly threatened to do last week, the movement would continue, Strekal said.

Wall Street protesters are intent on building on momentum gained from Saturday's worldwide demonstrations, which drew hundreds of thousands of people, mostly in the U.S. and Europe.

Nearly $300,000 in cash has been donated through the movement's website and by visitors to the park, said Bill Dobbs, a press liaison for Occupy Wall Street. The movement has an account at Amalgamated Bank, which bills itself as "the only 100 percent union-owned bank in the United States."

Donated goods ranging from blankets and sleeping bags to cans of food and medical and hygienic supplies are being stored in a cavernous space donated by the United Federation of Teachers, which has offices in the building a block from Wall Street near the private park protesters occupy.

Among the items are 20 pairs of swimming goggles (to shield protesters from pepper-spray attacks). Supporters are shipping about 300 boxes a day, many with notes and letters, Strekal said.

"Some are heartwrenching, beautiful," and come from people who have lost jobs and houses, he said. "So they send what they can, even if it's small."

Strekal said donated goods, stored for a "long-term occupation," have been used to create "Jail Support" kits consisting of a blanket, a granola bar and sanitary wipes for arrested protesters to receive when they are freed.

The movement has become an issue in the Republican presidential primary race and beyond, with politicians from both parties under pressure to weigh in.

President Barack Obama referred to the protests at Sunday's dedication of a monument for Martin Luther King Jr., saying the civil rights leader "would want us to challenge the excesses of Wall Street without demonizing those who work there."

Many of the largest of Saturday's protests were in Europe, where those involved in long-running demonstrations against austerity measures declared common cause with the Occupy Wall Street movement. In Rome, hundreds of rioters infiltrated a march by tens of thousands of demonstrators, causing what the mayor estimated was at least euro1 million ($1.4 million) in damage to city property.

U.S. cities large and small were "occupied" over the weekend: Washington, D.C., Fairbanks, Alaska, Burlington, Vt., Rapid City, S.D., and Cheyenne, Wyo. were just a few. In Cincinnati, protesters were even invited to take pictures with a couple getting married; the bride and groom are Occupied Cincinnati supporters.

More than 70 New York protesters were arrested Saturday, more than 40 of them in Times Square. About 175 people were arrested in Chicago after they refused to leave a park where they were camped late Saturday, and there were about 100 arrests in Arizona ? 53 in Tucson and 46 in Phoenix ? after protesters refused police orders to disperse. About two dozen people were arrested in Denver, and in Sacramento, Calif., anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan was among about 20 people arrested after failing to follow police orders to disperse.

Activists around the country said Saturday's protests energized their movement.

"It's an upward trajectory," said John St. Lawrence, a Florida real estate lawyer who took part in Saturday's Occupy Orlando protest, which drew more than 1,500 people. "It's catching people's imagination and also, knock on wood, nothing sort of negative or discrediting has happened."

St. Lawrence is among those unconcerned that the movement has not rallied around any particular proposal.

"I don't think the underlying theme is a mystery," he said. "We saw what the banks and financial institutions did to the economy. We bailed them out. And then they went about evicting people from their homes," he said.

In Richmond, Va., about 75 people gathered Sunday for one of the "general assembly" meetings that are a key part of the movement's consensus-building process. Protester Whitney Whiting, a video editor, said the process has helped "gather voices" about Americans' discontent.

"In regards to a singular issue or a singular focus, I think that will come eventually. But right now we have to set up a space for that to happen," Whiting said.

Some U.S. protesters, like those in Europe, have their own causes. Unions that have joined forces with the movement have demands of their own, and on Sunday members of the newly formed Occupy Pittsburgh group demanded that Bank of New York Mellon Corp. pay back money they allege it overcharged public pension funds around the country.

New York's attorney general and New York City sued BNY Mellon this month, accusing it of defrauding clients in foreign currency exchange transactions that generated nearly $2 billion over 10 years. The company has vowed to fight the lawsuit and had no comment about the protesters' allegation about pensions.

Lisa Deaton, a tea party leader from southern Indiana, said she sees similarities between how the tea party movement and the Wall Street protests began: "We got up and we wanted to vent."

But the critical step, she said, was taking that emotion and focusing it toward changing government.

The first rally she organized drew more than 2,500 people, but afterward, "it was like, `What do we do?'" she said. "You can't have a concert every weekend."

___

Associated Press writers Suzette Laboy in Miami, Steve Szkotak in Richmond, Va., Kevin Begos in Pittsburgh, Laurie Kellman, Ben Nuckols and Stacy A. Anderson in Washington, Tom LoBianco in Indianapolis, Sophia Tareen and Carla K. Johnson in Chicago contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111017/ap_on_re_us/us_wall_street_protest

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Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Mindy Weiss Gives Migraine Sufferers the Chance to "Rewrite" Their Day (omg!)

Imagine having to miss out on one of the most important events of your life.

For those suffering with chronic migraines, missing weddings, graduations, birthdays and other milestones due to pain is a reality. But celebrity event planner Mindy Weiss -- who planned the weddings of stars like Gwen Stefani and Heidi Klum -- is partnering with the National Headache Foundation, HealthyWomen and Allergan, Inc to help 15 people recreate the special moment they missed with Rewrite Your Day.

PHOTOS: Stars' good deeds

"We take it for granted that you plan an event for a year, that you're going to walk down the aisle or going to have your birthday party, but people living with chronic migraines,they can wake up that morning and not be able to attend their wedding," Weiss told Us Weekly. "That's how awful this is."

PHOTOS: Lavish kids' birthday parties

So how, for example, would Weiss help a woman who missed out on her wedding recreate her special day? "We'd let her invite people to it, and [she'd] walk down the aisle," she told Us. "We probably wouldn't do a four-course dinner, ten-piece band and all that, but we would do really the important elements? We're going to do a little wedding, where they cut the cake and have the important people there."

PHOTOS: Celebs' gorgeous wedding pics

Weiss -- who's currently planning Jessica Simpson's wedding -- has a busy schedule. "But this is important," she told Us of the Rewrite Your Day campaign.

If you or someone you know missed out on a special event because of migraine pain, visit rewriteyourday.com and share your story.

Get more Us! Follow us on Twitter, Friend us on Facebook, Subscribe to Us Weekly

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/http___omg_yahoo_com_news74665/43279731/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/mindy-weiss-gives-migraine-sufferers-the-chance-to-rewrite-their-day/74665

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Wall Street protesters buoyed by global support

Anti-Wall Street demonstrators were on the march again Saturday in New York City as protests against corporate greed and economic inequality spread around the world.

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Over the past month, the protests have expanded from New York's financial district to cities across the United States and abroad. Demonstrations were called this weekend in the U.S., Canada and Europe, as well as in Asia and Africa.

In New York, as many as 1,000 protesters marched Saturday morning to a Chase bank branch in the financial district, banging drums, blowing horns and carrying signs decrying corporate greed. A few protesters went inside the bank to close their accounts, but they didn't stop other customers from getting inside or seek to blockade the business.

Story: Day of global Occupy protests gets under way

Police told the marchers to stay on the sidewalk, but the demonstration appeared to be fairly orderly as it wound through downtown streets. Other demonstrations were planned around the city all day Saturday.

The march came a day after protesters at the heart of the "Occupy Wall Street" movement in New York exulted Friday after beating back a plan they said was intended to clear them from the privately owned park where they have slept, eaten and protested for the past month. They said their victory will embolden the movement across the U.S. and abroad.

"We are going to piggy-back off the success of today, and it's going to be bigger than we ever imagined," said protester Daniel Zetah after Friday's announcement that protesters could remain in the park.

In the U.S., marches were planned in cities large and small from Providence, Rhode Island, to Little Rock, Arkansas; to Seattle. About 200 people camped overnight in Detroit, a group spokeswoman said.

How does a group like Occupy Wall Street get anything done?

In New York, a march on a bank was scheduled for late morning with a rally simultaneously elsewhere, to be followed by other events through the day that were to culminate in what organizers called an Occupation Party starting late in the afternoon in Times Square.

The U.S. protests were linking up with anti-austerity demonstrations that have raged across debt-ridden Europe for months.

A call for mass protests on Saturday originated a month ago from a meeting in Spain, where mostly young and unemployed people angry at the country's handling of the economic crisis have been demonstrating for months. It was reposted on the Occupy Wall Street website and has been further amplified through social media.

On Saturday, tens of thousands nicknamed "the indignant" marched in European cities from Sarajevo, Bosnia, to Stockholm.

The Friday showdown in New York came as tensions rose, with dozens of arrests in several U.S. cities and scattered clashes between demonstrators and police.

The owners of Zuccotti Park in lower Manhattan had planned to temporarily evict the protesters Friday morning so the grounds could be power-washed. The protesters, their numbers swelled to about 2,000 before daybreak, feared the cleanup was a pretext to break up the demonstration. They vowed to stand their ground.

Just minutes before the appointed hour, park owners Brookfield Office Properties announced it would postpone the cleanup at the request of "a number of local political leaders." The company gave no details. Word of the decision brought boisterous cheers from the demonstrators.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg, whose girlfriend is on Brookfield's board of directors, said his staff was under strict orders not to pressure the company one way or the other. He noted that Brookfield can still go ahead with the cleanup at some point.

In San Diego, police used pepper spray to break up a human chain formed around a tent by anti-Wall Street demonstrators. Police in riot gear herded hundreds of protesters away from the Colorado state capitol early Friday in Denver, arresting about two dozen people and dismantling their encampment. In New Jersey's capital of Trenton, protesters were ordered to remove tents near a war memorial.

In New York City, police arrested 15 people, including protesters who obstructed traffic by standing or sitting in the street and others who turned over trash baskets and hurled bottles. A deputy inspector was sprayed in the face with an unknown liquid.

Organizers in Des Moines, Iowa, accepted an offer Friday night from the mayor to move from the state Capitol where they were prohibited from staying overnight to a city park blocks away, averting a possible showdown.

___

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Meghan Barr, Karen Matthews and Patrick Walters in Philadelphia, Patrick Condon in Minneapolis, Mike Householder in Detroit, Colleen Long in New York and Michael J. Crumb in Des Moines, Iowa.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44914155/ns/us_news-life/

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