Artist: Dangerous Summer: mp3 download Genre(s): Rock Discography: If You Could Only Keep Me Alive Year: 2007 Tracks: 7 Melodic and attention-getting emo rock dance band the Dangerous Summer formed in Ellicott City, Maryland in August 2006. Guitarist Cody Payne stirred back into township after a brief clock time in Florida, recruiting trey of his longtime high schooltime buddies to bring together up with him upon his return. Taking their name from the classic Ernest Hemingway novel and look to groups like the Starting Line, Third Eye Blind, U2, and Name Taken for influence, the group -- which further included AJ Perdomo (leash vocals, bass), Bryan Czap (guitar) and Tyler Minsberg (drums) -- reach the studio that December to lay down their first tracks together. The resulting EP There Is No Such Thing As Science was self-released in January 2007 (limited to 1,000 copies), and the Dangerous Summer supported it on the road whenever school would admit, hooking up on shows with like-minded bands the Ataris, Cartel and Hit the Lights. The EP finally made its way into the ears of California-based Hopeless Records courtesy of the band's hometown friends All Time Low. A cover with the label was subsequently inked that spring. High school graduation followed for three-fourths of the Dangerous Summer ahead their following EP (and Hopeless debut), If You Could Only Keep Me Alive, appeared in August, which contained quartet songs from the previous Science EP and troika new ones. Guitarist Etay Pisano replaced Czap before long afterwards. |
Friday, 22 August 2008
Download Dangerous Summer mp3
Tuesday, 12 August 2008
Antibiotics During First Three Months Of Life Linked To Wheezing At 15 Months - Likely Due To Underlying Infection
�Children wHO are minded antibiotics in their first base three months often wheeze at 15 months of age. However, this wheezy is in all probability more due to the presence of chest infections than to the economic consumption of antibiotics.
These were the winder findings of research carried out by researchers in New Zealand, and published in this month's variant of Clinical and Experimental Allergy. This work reinforced on the fact that the prevalence both of asthma and the use of antibiotics have risen since the 1960s. Using antibiotics reduces a person's exposure to bacterial infections and disturbs healthy populations of bacteria in the body, and the question is whether this and so leaves a person more prone to develop asthma attack.
The researchers recruited a group of 1,000 babies at birth and contacted the parents at 3 months, 15 months and then yearly until they were four years old. Each time, they collected information about chest infections, asthma and their use of antibiotics. The data showed that by the clip the children had reached 15 months old, near three quarters (72.1%) had been given antibiotics. In addition 11.8% had asthma attack, 39.6% had eczema and 21.2% had a revenant itchy scabrous rash.
The researchers then looked at the information to see whether there was whatever indication that the antibiotics caused these effects and found that by adjusting for the effects of chest infections the association between antibiotics and wheezy was selfsame much reduced.
"Our results strongly intimate that the reason that some children who have got been given antibiotics appear to grow asthma is because they had a chest transmission and the symptoms of the dresser infection in young children can be confused with the start of asthma attack," says Julian Crane, a senior study investigator at the Wellington Asthma Research Group in Wellington, New Zealand. "Antibiotics are disposed to treat the respiratory condition and rather than being a cause of asthma, as has been previously suggested, they are used for chest infections which commode indicate an increased danger of bronchial asthma, or be mistaken for it."
One of the underlying issues is that it is often difficult to differentiate between bronchial asthma and breast infections at an other age. Consequently some infants who are given antibiotics to cure a chest infection may really have been suffering from the early symptoms of asthma attack.
"Our information still leaves open the possibility that antibiotics may affect the development of eczema and itchy skin by four-spot years and allergic hypersensitivity by 15 months," says Crane.
Wiley-Blackwell
More info
These were the winder findings of research carried out by researchers in New Zealand, and published in this month's variant of Clinical and Experimental Allergy. This work reinforced on the fact that the prevalence both of asthma and the use of antibiotics have risen since the 1960s. Using antibiotics reduces a person's exposure to bacterial infections and disturbs healthy populations of bacteria in the body, and the question is whether this and so leaves a person more prone to develop asthma attack.
The researchers recruited a group of 1,000 babies at birth and contacted the parents at 3 months, 15 months and then yearly until they were four years old. Each time, they collected information about chest infections, asthma and their use of antibiotics. The data showed that by the clip the children had reached 15 months old, near three quarters (72.1%) had been given antibiotics. In addition 11.8% had asthma attack, 39.6% had eczema and 21.2% had a revenant itchy scabrous rash.
The researchers then looked at the information to see whether there was whatever indication that the antibiotics caused these effects and found that by adjusting for the effects of chest infections the association between antibiotics and wheezy was selfsame much reduced.
"Our results strongly intimate that the reason that some children who have got been given antibiotics appear to grow asthma is because they had a chest transmission and the symptoms of the dresser infection in young children can be confused with the start of asthma attack," says Julian Crane, a senior study investigator at the Wellington Asthma Research Group in Wellington, New Zealand. "Antibiotics are disposed to treat the respiratory condition and rather than being a cause of asthma, as has been previously suggested, they are used for chest infections which commode indicate an increased danger of bronchial asthma, or be mistaken for it."
One of the underlying issues is that it is often difficult to differentiate between bronchial asthma and breast infections at an other age. Consequently some infants who are given antibiotics to cure a chest infection may really have been suffering from the early symptoms of asthma attack.
"Our information still leaves open the possibility that antibiotics may affect the development of eczema and itchy skin by four-spot years and allergic hypersensitivity by 15 months," says Crane.
Wiley-Blackwell
More info
Wednesday, 6 August 2008
Integrated Care: Aiming High
�Integrated precaution pilots, announced as part of Health Minister Lord Darzi's Next Stage Review, may advantageously prove to save money for the NHS. But that is not their principal train, the NHS Alliance says.
Integrated care is around better, more effective services and improved patient feel.
That lav only occur, though, if there is clarity about the substantive requirements of integrated maintenance, its objectives and earmark performance measures.
But that clarity has to allow flexibility and local decisions about which of a number of possible models should be adopted in any particular locality.
Now the NHS Alliance has set extinct a proposed framework for the new ICO pilots. Along with goals such as clinical quality and financial answerableness, it recommends:
- Patient and public participation at individual and collective levels so as to insure patient satisfaction and to enhance patient engagement with health improvement measures
- Emphasis on prevention and reduction of ill health
- Collaboration across primary, community and secondary upkeep boundaries, and across health and social care boundaries too
- A requirement that proposals should hatch the whole disease spectrum, so as to avoid cherry pick
- Emphasis on clinical leadership so that clinician involvement from the start can secure successful effectuation.
NHS Alliance chairman Dr Michael Dixon said:
"This is what the NHS should be about. Providing seamless, affected role centred precaution within a defined budget, with measurable clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction."
Integrated care: aiming high follows the recent NHS Alliance publication: Integrated healthcare: from aspiration to implementation. It is uncommitted from the NHS Alliance: admin@nhsalliance.org.
Notes
1. The NHS Alliance is a collaboration of clinicians, managers and board members wHO put patients first. It is the independent body that represents NHS primary care. Values based, it is the only system that brings together PCTs with GP practices, clinicians with managers and Board members, and NHS primary care with its patients. The Alliance membership and its hard working national executive is fully multi-professional.
2. The Next Stage Review: our vision for primary and community concern was published by the Department of Health 3rd July 2008. Integrated health care: from aspiration to carrying out was published by the NHS Alliance 9th July 2008.
NHS Alliance
More information
Integrated care is around better, more effective services and improved patient feel.
That lav only occur, though, if there is clarity about the substantive requirements of integrated maintenance, its objectives and earmark performance measures.
But that clarity has to allow flexibility and local decisions about which of a number of possible models should be adopted in any particular locality.
Now the NHS Alliance has set extinct a proposed framework for the new ICO pilots. Along with goals such as clinical quality and financial answerableness, it recommends:
- Patient and public participation at individual and collective levels so as to insure patient satisfaction and to enhance patient engagement with health improvement measures
- Emphasis on prevention and reduction of ill health
- Collaboration across primary, community and secondary upkeep boundaries, and across health and social care boundaries too
- A requirement that proposals should hatch the whole disease spectrum, so as to avoid cherry pick
- Emphasis on clinical leadership so that clinician involvement from the start can secure successful effectuation.
NHS Alliance chairman Dr Michael Dixon said:
"This is what the NHS should be about. Providing seamless, affected role centred precaution within a defined budget, with measurable clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction."
Integrated care: aiming high follows the recent NHS Alliance publication: Integrated healthcare: from aspiration to implementation. It is uncommitted from the NHS Alliance: admin@nhsalliance.org.
Notes
1. The NHS Alliance is a collaboration of clinicians, managers and board members wHO put patients first. It is the independent body that represents NHS primary care. Values based, it is the only system that brings together PCTs with GP practices, clinicians with managers and Board members, and NHS primary care with its patients. The Alliance membership and its hard working national executive is fully multi-professional.
2. The Next Stage Review: our vision for primary and community concern was published by the Department of Health 3rd July 2008. Integrated health care: from aspiration to carrying out was published by the NHS Alliance 9th July 2008.
NHS Alliance
More information
BLACK KIDS
�Partie Traumatic� (Almost Gold): A-
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Dance! Dance! Dance! You thought bands commanded you to get on the floor in front, but cipher, not even Black Kids-predecessors New Order, Scissor Sisters or the Go! Team is as bossy as this Florida quintet. If the songs didn�t distractingly demand that you didder your dirty money, the �80s redux schtik would suffer old and the lyrics would give away themselves as dirty and witty. But no time for that. Dance! Dance! Dance! Download: �I�m Not Gonna Teach Your Boyfriend How to Dance with You.�
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'Growing Belief' Among Men In Swaziland That Circumcision Provides Complete Protection Against HIV, IRIN News Reports
�
There is a "ontogenesis belief" among some men in Swaziland that circumcision provides complete protection against HIV -- a perception that is concerning nongovernmental organizations working to combat the spread of the virus in the country -- IRIN News reports. According to IRIN News, some public health officials in Swaziland recently have "lauded" male circumcision as a process that john reduce a man's risk of infection of HIV.
Siphiwe Hlope -- founder of the Swazis for Positive Living, an HIV/AIDS support group -- said the "problem is not with the procedure, but the way it is mistreated by hands, so that men think they ar now immune from" HIV. She added that members of the support grouping are seemly more aware of an attitude that circumcision protects men from HIV piece also providing an excuse not to use condoms. Although Hlope does not dispute the advantages of male circumcision in reducing HIV transmittance, she said that sex dynamics in Swazi civilisation should be considered. "AIDS in Africa has a woman's case," Hlope said, adding, "People think the disease originates with women. Why? Because it is the women who ar tested low gear, when they are about to give birth."
An nameless Zambian doctor who treats people living with HIV/AIDS at administration hospitals aforesaid, "It's the law of unintended consequences," adding, "Introducing the process, there was insufficient attention given to cultural factors, attitudes and human psychology." The mD noted, "Many of the men I speak with think circumcision is like an AIDS vaccine. It's not. It's a useful tool to reduce chances of contagion at a time and place where few other tools are available, simply you potty still contract HIV and pass it on to a partner."
According to a recent study by the United Nations Development Program, 20% of men in Swaziland consistently use condoms, which Hlope said mightiness indicate that circumcised workforce did not stop victimization condoms later on the procedure but had never used them in the starting time place. She added that education about the procedure should accent a clear and consistent message that it should be part of a variety of HIV bar measures. "Until that happens, women testament be septic with HIV this direction, and ... male circumcision may do more harm than good if it is misused to deny women full protective covering," Hlope aforementioned (IRIN News, 7/31).
Reprinted with kind permission from http://www.kaisernetwork.org. You potty view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for e-mail delivery at http://www.kaisernetwork.
There is a "ontogenesis belief" among some men in Swaziland that circumcision provides complete protection against HIV -- a perception that is concerning nongovernmental organizations working to combat the spread of the virus in the country -- IRIN News reports. According to IRIN News, some public health officials in Swaziland recently have "lauded" male circumcision as a process that john reduce a man's risk of infection of HIV.
Siphiwe Hlope -- founder of the Swazis for Positive Living, an HIV/AIDS support group -- said the "problem is not with the procedure, but the way it is mistreated by hands, so that men think they ar now immune from" HIV. She added that members of the support grouping are seemly more aware of an attitude that circumcision protects men from HIV piece also providing an excuse not to use condoms. Although Hlope does not dispute the advantages of male circumcision in reducing HIV transmittance, she said that sex dynamics in Swazi civilisation should be considered. "AIDS in Africa has a woman's case," Hlope said, adding, "People think the disease originates with women. Why? Because it is the women who ar tested low gear, when they are about to give birth."
An nameless Zambian doctor who treats people living with HIV/AIDS at administration hospitals aforesaid, "It's the law of unintended consequences," adding, "Introducing the process, there was insufficient attention given to cultural factors, attitudes and human psychology." The mD noted, "Many of the men I speak with think circumcision is like an AIDS vaccine. It's not. It's a useful tool to reduce chances of contagion at a time and place where few other tools are available, simply you potty still contract HIV and pass it on to a partner."
According to a recent study by the United Nations Development Program, 20% of men in Swaziland consistently use condoms, which Hlope said mightiness indicate that circumcised workforce did not stop victimization condoms later on the procedure but had never used them in the starting time place. She added that education about the procedure should accent a clear and consistent message that it should be part of a variety of HIV bar measures. "Until that happens, women testament be septic with HIV this direction, and ... male circumcision may do more harm than good if it is misused to deny women full protective covering," Hlope aforementioned (IRIN News, 7/31).
Reprinted with kind permission from http://www.kaisernetwork.org. You potty view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for e-mail delivery at http://www.kaisernetwork.
Rita Marley
Artist: Rita Marley
Genre(s):
Other
Discography:
Sings Bob Marley... and Friends
Year: 2003
Tracks: 12
Best known as Bob Marley's married woman, Rita Marley was too a solo artist in her possess correct both before and later on her marriage, and served as the caretaker of her husband's legacy undermentioned his premature last in 1981. Born Alpharita Anderson in Cuba, she grew up largely in the Trenchtown department of Kingston, and first base sang with a female ska iII called the Soulettes. The Soulettes began recording for Clement "Coxsone" Dodd's Studio One label in 1964, and Dodd asked his emergent young aCE Bob Marley to mentor them; Marley and Anderson hide in lovemaking and marital in 1966. Rita recorded with deuce unlike Soulettes lineups in the mid-'60s, edit a few hit solo singles of her possess (including "Pied Piper"), and backed the Wailers on some of their '60s recordings. When Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer left field the Wailers in 1974, Rita helped organize the I-Threes, a female vocal triplet consisting of herself, Marcia Griffiths, and Judy Mowatt. The I-Threes backed Bob Marley in the studio and on tariff tour for the remainder of his career, up until his death from melanoma in 1981. During that prison term, both Marleys narrowly loose an assassination attack in 1976, in which one smoke grazed Rita's head and some other hit Bob's subdivision.In 1981, as Bob succumbed to crab, Rita recorded the solo album WHO Feels It Knows It. A spiritual, life-affirming statement, the album featured a lightsome hit individual in "I Draw," a blatantly pro-marijuana lesson in right smoke technique. Banned by the BBC, "One Draw" became the 1st-class mail honours degree reggae single to spinning top Billboard's discotheque music singles chart, which was ill-used to course dance-club act at the time. Another single, "Fiddle Play," had a measure of success in the U.K. However, Marley launch it tough to follow up on a full-time recording life sentence history; she spent a great administer of the '80s handling the respective legal and business sector interests associated with her husband's name and land, and as well mentored her children's musical venture, Ziggy Marley & the Melody Makers. She finally returned to solo recording with 1988's Harambe (Working Together for Freedom), and followed it in 1991 with We Must Carry On, which garnered a Grammy nomination. Both albums continued her hang for danceable, rootsy reggae with spiritual messages and a definite common sense of playfulness. Marley last returned with a unexampled album, Rita Marley Sings Bob Marley...and Friends, in 2003.
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