Monday, 24 September 2012

EWG releases Online Guide to Healthy Cleaning

Even if you don't get headaches from conventional cleaning products, the chemicals used in them aren't good for the environment and they aren't good for your health – especially if you have allergies. To help out people who want to use healthier ...

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Mother Nature Network (blog)

This is our opinion and feelings about the the posts added to this blog by ourselves and writers who have asked to write on our blog network and does not necessarily represent our agreement or disagreement with the writers concerned.Tweet at #AceHealthNews and email your " News & Views" to our "Ace News Desk" be published in featured posts.

Thank you, Ian [Editor]

Miners’ Rights at the Forefront

When I arrived at the Mine Safety and Health Administration in October 2009, one of my top priorities was to educate miners about their rights and responsibilities in the workplace, specifically those rights that pertain to their safety and health.  According to Section 105(c) of the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977, a miner cannot be discharged, discriminated against or interfered with in the exercise of statutory rights because he or she has filed a complaint alleging a health or safety violation.
Some mine operators, however, have disregarded this law, suspending, laying off or taking adverse action against a miner who became too vocal about mining conditions.  In fact, issues relating to fears of discrimination and retaliation came to light during congressional hearings held in the wake of the Upper Big Branch Mine disaster. Statements from miners and family members of the miners who died indicated that mine employees had been reluctant to speak out about safety conditions in existence prior to the April 2010 explosion, fearing retaliation by management.
Thus, the critical need to better educate miners about their rights and to promptly and thoroughly investigate discrimination complaints.  Those efforts are working.  The number of requests for temporary reinstatements the Labor Department submitted on behalf of miners who filed discrimination complaints more than tripled from the period of fiscal years 2007-2009 to the period of FY 2010-2012 (through July 31, 2012), increasing from 22 to 71. Furthermore, the Labor Department filed 70 complaints alleging mine safety discrimination during the period of FY 2010-2012 (through July 31, 2012), up from 39 from FY 2007-2009.
In June 2011, MSHA released new Web-based training tools to help miners better understand their rights and responsibilities, including “A Guide to Miners’ Rights and Responsibilities“; an electronic form for filing an anonymous hazard complaint; a discrimination complaint packet; information about black lung benefits and resources; and a compendium of online videos addressing miners’ concerns about unsafe working conditions, hiring decisions, how to refuse unsafe work, the role of supervisors and the role of miners’ representatives who travel with federal inspectors.
MSHA has instituted other measures to enhance enforcement of miners’ rights, including a reorganization of the Office of Assessments, Accountability, Special Enforcement and Investigations to provide enhanced efficiency, staffing, oversight and training of special investigators.
A guide for miners’ representatives explaining their rights under the Mine Act is slated for completion this fall. The publication will include information on inspections and investigations, filing a hazardous condition complaint, accessing information using MSHA’s Data Retrieval System and becoming a miners’ representative.
All miners have the right to a safe workplace, and the right to identify hazardous conditions and refuse unsafe work without fear of discrimination or retaliation.  We at MSHA take the rights of miners and our responsibility to enforce them very seriously, and will continue to work to ensure they are upheld.
Joseph Main is the assistant secretary for mine safety and health.

This is our opinion and feelings about the the posts added to this blog by ourselves and writers who have asked to write on our blog network and does not necessarily represent our agreement or disagreement with the writers concerned.Tweet at #AceHealthNews and email your " News & Views" to our "Ace News Desk" be published in featured posts.

Thank you, Ian [Editor]

Awareness Raising Works

Awareness Raising Works:

A young Beninese girl, approximately 6 years old, carries stones across a quarry.
Educating parents and communities can help protect children from the worst forms of child labor – work that threatens their health, thwarts their education and limits their futures. This tale of three villages in Benin, a country in West Africa, shows how effective raising awareness can be.
All three villages are poor, and in all three, people earn their living working in quarries. And in all three, the Department of Labor is funding a project called “ECOWAS II.”
Ask parents in these villages what they think of their children – some as young as three – breaking rocks with pick axes, breathing heavy dust and straining to carry heavy loads of rubble, and you will get three different answers.
In the first village, where awareness raising under the project began just this month, parents say, “They are not in danger. Sure, they should go to school, but we can’t afford that.”
In the second village, where awareness raising efforts have had more time to take root, you hear a different story: “I am so happy my children are in school and not in the quarries where it is dangerous.” Yet, parents still ask, “What am I supposed to do when the project leaves?”
Beninese Boys
Two young Beninese boys work together to move a stone to the appropriate stone pile in a quarry.
In Lokossa, a village where the project has been in place for nine months and children regularly attend school, parents are adamant that they want their children in school where they are safe.  Even if the project ends, they say, their children will not work in quarries. They are even organizing “neighborhood watch” groups to guard against it.
Like many projects supported by the Labor Department’s Bureau of International Labor Affairs, ECOWAS II uses a variety of strategies to protect vulnerable children. It improves access to school and helps parents increase their incomes so that they no longer need to rely on their children’s earnings. But in Benin, as elsewhere, raising awareness is key. The more parents are informed, the better choices they make for their children.

A project partner discusses the hazards of quarrying with parents and their children in a stone quarry in Zakpota, Benin.
Approximately 1 million children work in mines or quarries worldwide. In Benin, as in many other countries, such activity is illegal and underreported.  But the problem and its dangers, though often hidden, are very real. In the quarries, children inhale dust from the rocks, which causes a chronic and potentially fatal respiratory illness. Some fall into pits or get injured lifting rocks; others are crushed under falling stones.
Parents may put their children in harm’s way for lack of better alternatives. In Benin, where nearly half the population lives on less than $1.25 a day, stone quarrying is a family affair, employing the father to dislodge the rocks and the mother to sift out the dirt. Leaving small children at home is not an option, and schools are typically too expensive and may be too far away. Many families are so poor that they need the extra hand.

Beninese children and their mothers use grates to sift stones from dirt.
Projects like ECOWAS II – which supports children in Benin, Nigeria, Ghana, and Cote d’Ivoire – aim to break this cycle of poverty. They educate families, businesses and communities about the hidden dangers of quarrying and lasting value of sending children to school. And they bring that education within reach for poor families, by paying for books, uniforms and other expenses. The project has also produced a documentary shown on local television and it will soon begin helping parents raise their incomes without their children’s help.

The Labor Department supports these children in Zakpota, who are able to attend school and have learned the importance of education.
As a result, children in Benin are beginning to move from lifting rocks to toting schoolbooks, from a life steeped in hazard to one empowered through awareness.

This is our opinion and feelings about the the posts added to this blog by ourselves and writers who have asked to write on our blog network and does not necessarily represent our agreement or disagreement with the writers concerned.Tweet at #AceHealthNews and email your " News & Views" to our "Ace News Desk" be published in featured posts.

Thank you, Ian [Editor]

The End of a Long, Hot Summer

The End of a Long, Hot Summer:
While my colleagues here at the Labor Department were busy honoring the legacy of America’s working men and women this Labor Day, for many Americans, the holiday meant putting away our summer clothes and writing the last chapter of another summer come and gone.
This year, for the second year in a row, OSHA conducted a summerlong campaign to educate workers and employers about the risks of working outdoors in extreme heat. Looking back on the summer, there were an astonishing number of heat-related weather emergencies across the country: the hottest month in U.S. history, local temperature records broken by the thousand, wildfires and drought.
From the very first day of the summer, the OSHA began getting the word out about the dangers associated with this type of weather. On June 20, I joined Secretary Solis and representatives from the National Weather Service on a teleconference with dozens of television and radio weather broadcasters to discuss just how deadly extreme heat can be for outdoor workers and to urge them to spread the message about heat’s dangers to outdoor worker and their families. NWS meteorologist Eli Jacks previewed the extended heat outlook for the summer, accurately characterizing the scorching months to come.
OSHA’s outreach continued through a grueling July and August with hundreds of events in which OSHA field staff brought the message to their communities by attending worker events and appearing on radio and television. In Texas, OSHA staffed live, Spanish-language phone banks on Univision affiliates to answer questions from the public on heat illness prevention. OSHA also posted more than 100 “Water. Rest. Shade.” billboards across four states to educate employers and workers about the primary ways for outdoor workers to protect themselves in hot weather. The billboards appeared in Arkansas, Florida, Texas and Illinois – the four states with the highest number of occupational heat-related fatalities in 2010.
Since the beginning of the last year’s campaign, OSHA has distributed more than half a million educational posters, fact sheets, tools and other resources through our network of local offices, worker representatives and employer organizations – targeting the workers and industries that need them most. Secretary Solis, along with labor pioneer (and recent Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient) Dolores Huerta, recorded television and radio Public Service Announcements in English and Spanish that were broadcast in the hottest parts of the country, like Texas, Arizona and Nevada.
We were especially concerned about hard-to-reach, vulnerable workers who may have limited English proficiency or may work in remote areas in industries like agriculture or construction.  We noted that these workers increasingly rely on mobile communications for information. That’s why OSHA created the OSHA Heat Safety Tool, a mobile smartphone application that provides vital safety information whenever and wherever you need it. As of this week, the app has been downloaded more than 54,000 times in English and Spanish on the iPhone, and Android and some Blackberry devices.
It is difficult – if not impossible – to measure the number of workers who are alive and well this September because employers took common-sense steps to reduce the risk of becoming seriously ill by allowing them to acclimatize to the heat. We can’t count the number of workers who recognized the signs of heat stroke or heat exhaustion in a co-worker and took action to get life-saving medical help. There is no telling what might have happened to the workers whose employers conducted comprehensive heat illness prevention training, and who – as a result – stayed hydrated and took frequent breaks in the shade during the summer’s most unforgiving days.
Sadly, we do know of workers who perished this summer from the effects of heat-related illnesses. Reports of these tragedies make perfectly clear what havoc extreme heat can wreak on the human body without the proper precautions. When word of these fatalities reaches us at OSHA’s national office during our videoconferences with our regional administrators, the room goes silent, and all of us share the sense of loss. We grieve for the loved ones of these workers and resolve to keep fighting. It will be months before we learn the estimated number of heat-related fatalities in 2012 from the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics, but not one worker’s life should be endangered by these entirely preventable illnesses.
Still, there are parts of the country where the weather will continue to pose a risk of heat stroke and heat exhaustion. Even in September and beyond, it is critical to remember three little words: Water. Rest. Shade. The work can’t get done without them.
Dr. David Michaels is the assistant secretary for occupational safety and health.

The posts and articles provided by our news desk are not always representative of our personal views of the story.Tweet at #AceHealthNews or email to News & Views

Thank you, Ian [Editor]

Monday, 27 August 2012

Fat Britain Is 'Dereliction Of Duty' By Government

Fat Britain Is 'Dereliction Of Duty' By Government:
Health Secretary Andrew Lansley has been accused of a "dereliction of duty" in his efforts to tackle Britain's growing obesity problem by one of his former public health advisers.

Professor Simon Capewell, who served on Mr Lansley's Public Health Commission while in opposition, said the minister had "moved Britain back" in terms of public health since the general election two years ago.

He labelled the Government's Responsibility Deal as "a pantomime" and said the plan to work together with manufacturers to introduce voluntary cuts to fat, sugar and salt levels in food was like "putting Dracula in charge of the blood bank".

In an interview with The Independent, Prof Capewell, a member of the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges committee on obesity, said: "Andrew Lansley, in my opinion, is guilty of a gross dereliction of duty in relation to public health.

"He has actually moved Britain back in terms of public health from where we were before he was elected.

"He has officiated over a responsibility deal which is a pantomime - and has been a huge public relations coup for the industry."

The Responsibility Deal, launched in March last year, encourages companies to voluntarily help to improve the health of the nation by labelling food in restaurants with calorie counts and reduce saturated fat, salt and sugar in products.

However consumer group Which? reported earlier this year that only a handful of the top 10 restaurants and pub groups had agreed to provide calorie information on menus.

In its report into the Responsibility Deal, the House of Commons Health Select Committee concluded it was "unconvinced" that it would be "effective in resolving issues such as obesity".

It called on the Department of Health (DoH) to set out clearly how progress will be monitored and tougher regulation applied if necessary.

Prof Capewell told the Independent: "Even a moment of reflection should show that this is a spectacular conflict of interest.

"It is breathtaking that when deciding on public health policy in relation to food you should be sitting around the table with the very people who make large amounts of money from selling this stuff."

But a DoH spokesman said: "In the last decade, Britain had some of the fastest rising obesity rates in Europe and successive attempts have failed to tackle them.

"The Responsibility Deal has delivered far more action, more quickly than before and more than could have been achieved through regulation in that time.

"We have shown real leadership, working in partnership with industry to find an approach that delivers results.

"We are seeing the results in our everyday lives - calories on menus in our high streets, less salt in the food we buy and artificial trans fats are being taken out of food. This is helping people around the country to live healthier lives."

The DoH pointed out that more than 70% of fast food and takeaway meals sold on the high street will have calories clearly labelled by the end of this year.

Every major supermarket chain has committed to removing artificial trans fats and promoting alcohol unit awareness in their stores, it added.

All the posts are provided by me and any comments l provide are my own view of the markets and are not the views of the article writer and or news provider.Please tweet your opinion at #AceHealthNews or email me at News & Views 

Thank you, Ian [Editor]  

Saturday, 25 August 2012

Explore How Isaac Storm Surge Could Flood Tampa, RNC

Explore How Isaac Storm Surge Could Flood Tampa, RNC:
By Climate Central
Click image for full interactive
Click image for interactive
Tropical Storm Isaac is forecast to strengthen into a hurricane over the next few days, just in time for the Republican National Convention, which begins Monday in Tampa.
While it’s still too early to predict if it will directly hit Tampa, even a mere sideswipe of the storm could cause huge problems for people in the Tampa Bay area, conventioneers, included. That’s because Tampa is especially vulnerable to storm surge, the wall of water hurricanes and tropical storms push ahead of them.







This interactive, based on research done by Climate Central, shows how much of the Tampa Bay area lies below storm surges of different heights as measured in feet above high tide (use the slider to select a number and the location of the Republican Convention is marked on the map). The 100-year flood level is 6.5 feet above the high-tide line, which would cause major flooding.
As a comparison, the devastating surge caused by an unnamed hurricane in 1921 — the last direct hit on the bay — reached 10.5 feet. In 1921, however, sea level was, on average, about 8 inches lower than it is today. That means that the same storm striking today would make the surge that much higher.
The risk for Tampa and other coastal cities all over the nation – and all over the world -- will keep growing in the future, as climate change continues to drive up sea level.


All the posts are provided by me and any comments l provide are my own view of the markets and are not the views of the article writer and or news provider.#AceNewsServices

Thursday, 16 August 2012

OFT welcomes action by NHS trusts to ensure compliance with competition law

OFT welcomes action by NHS trusts to ensure compliance with competition law: Eight NHS Hospital Trusts have given voluntary assurances to the OFT that they will no longer exchange commercially sensitive information about their Private Patient Unit prices, to ensure they comply with competition law.

Tweet at #AceNewsServices or email to AceNewsDesk your News and Views

Thursday, 9 August 2012

Weekday Vegetarian: Sesame Green Beans

Weekday Vegetarian: Sesame Green Beans:
An Asian sauce is a simple way to turn leftovers into something delicious.


This is our opinion and feelings about the the posts added to this blog by ourselves and writers who have asked to write on our blog network and does not necessarily represent our agreement or disagreement with the writers concerned.Please add #SpecialOcassion to your tweets and follow us on twitter at http://twitter.com/SpecialOcassion for quality food and hospitality Thank you, Chris {Chef}

Why PepsiCo is Fighting GMO Labeling in California

Why PepsiCo is Fighting GMO Labeling in California:
The nation’s largest peddler of soda and junk food has the most at stake in ballot measure.
Ed says!
Why Pepsico is fighting GMO labeling in California!
 
PepsiCo brands span five divisions: Pepsi-Cola, Frito-Lay, Gatorade, Tropicana, and Quaker. While most consumers probably think of processed snacks and cereal-type products when trying to avoid foods containing GMOs, beverages are also a major culprit (which explains why Coca-Cola has donated more than $61,000 to the No on 37 campaign).

Over 85% of all corn in the US is genetically modified and a significant number of products supplied by them contains corn!   

This is our opinion and feelings about the the posts added to this blog by ourselves and writers who have asked to write on our blog network and does not necessarily represent our agreement or disagreement with the writers concerned.Please add #AceHealthNews to your tweets and follow us on twitter at http://twitter.com/AceHealthNews and quality healthcare. Thank you, Ian

5 Gigawatts of Renewable Energy Projects Fast-Tracked by Obama Administration

5 Gigawatts of Renewable Energy Projects Fast-Tracked by Obama Administration:
Located across Arizona, California, Nevada, and Wyoming the projects will power 1.5 million homes -- and include a massive 3 GW wind farm.


" The Roving Giraffe News Report " provided through Ace News Service

Fracking to Get Green Light in New York by Labor Day

Fracking to Get Green Light in New York by Labor Day:
The final regulations are yet to be determined, but here's a glimpse at how fracking will soon start in New York State. The future was green and soon these fracker's will poison us and kill our green and pleasant land!


This is our opinion and feelings about the the posts added to this blog by ourselves and writers who have asked to write on our blog network and does not necessarily represent our agreement or disagreement with the writers concerned.Please add #AceHealthNews to your tweets and follow us on twitter at http://twitter.com/AceHealthNews and quality healthcare. Thank you, Ian

US Nuclear Regulators Freeze 19 Power Plant Licensing Decisions, After Court Ruling on Waste Storage

US Nuclear Regulators Freeze 19 Power Plant Licensing Decisions, After Court Ruling on Waste Storage:
Storing spent fuel on-site at nuclear power plants does indeed pose dangerous long-term health and environmental risks, a US Appeals Court has ruled.


The posts l provide are my views of good recipes and also are shared from a number of contacts, news and blogging services. #AceHealthcareNews

6 Paraben-Free Skin Care Products Tapping the Ancient Health Benefits of Tea

6 Paraben-Free Skin Care Products Tapping the Ancient Health Benefits of Tea:
Formulated from mostly organic ingredients, these products use tea to fight aging, moisturize, detoxify, and more.


" The Roving Giraffe News Report " provided through Ace News Service

Monday, 6 August 2012

Healthy Living Application

Healthy Living: Healthy Living application is the most comprehensive guide on healthy living, developed exclusively for BlackBerryA .
The content is supplied by NHS

Found in: Apps, Health, Fitness

Healthy Living

Download Healthy Living

Mobile Friendly Download


" The Roving Giraffe News Report " provided by Ace News

Wednesday, 25 July 2012

Troubled Families In A Troubled World

Troubled Families In A Troubled World:
Louise Casey reception at 10 Downing Street
Louise Casey reception at 10 Downing Street (Photo credit: Downing Street)
Today I picked up what on the face of it seem totally random and unrelated articles, but decided to look deeper at the actual cause of these problems. What l found was what l suspected for many a year, these problems within families are all related to one single cause! This is how we all live our lives in favour of ourselves and not actually taking account of the damage we cause, that takes place or eventually destroys a family unit! Or can and invariably does lead to the need for implementation of measures by successive governments ,we have all come to know as the nanny state.
Here is the first article called:
Problem Family Prognosis -
The troubled families unit, recently set up by David Cameron in response to the riots, has reported that these “problem families” are typically made up of single mothers bringing up children from relationships with several absent fathers. Their problems often dated back generations, with long histories of abuse and periods in care homes a common factor for both the children and their parents. Eric Pickles commented: “I welcome this report as it provides a real insight into these families’ dysfunctional lives. My civil servants are not just sitting in an office in Whitehall telling local authorities what to do but seeking to gain a true understanding of the challenges they face.” The Mail points to a “culture of criminality” and notes that Tower Hamlets has 1,110 problem families in a relatively small area. The Guardian profiles Louise Casey, the head of troubled families unit.
On the face of it seems a great idea and could maybe help many families, but read deeper into the cause’s and we find it was set-up following the riots, it refers to single mothers bringing up children with out a father figure. It also makes reference to this report providing an insight into the lives of dysfunctional families. It notes cultural criminality and the need for this report.
But it does not highlight or find the cause!
Here is article two called
Despair and Isolation
Research from Camden Council after interviewing 70 vulnerable people in the borough focusing on three groups: disabled residents and carers;young people; and families on low incomes has found people are under immense, and in some cases, almost intolerable pressure. The threat of being uprooted from the borough by housing benefit caps provoked particular terror.
Does this start to highlight the cause the sheer threat of being uprooted and moved bag and baggage to another part of the country under this governments new initiative. Maybe if we interviewed and took notice of their answers, instead of putting in a new initiative or thinking we know how to put the problem right without knowing how, it was caused. But look at the groups we call vulnerable, NO REALLY LOOK not with your eyes but with your heart, how would you feel if your children were taken into care? Yes it is a really scary thought and the actual fact this latest initiative [prefer to call it an idea] is being put into place is so they can save money! Not to help these families but to save money and not find the cause.
Do you know what the cause is yet?
Well maybe article three will give you a real clue! It is called simply:
Lacking Care In Our Community
It relates to a real persons case and how he will cope with the cuts to his care provisions!
The case of former cricketer Winston Davis is detailed. Mr Davis is now tetraplegic and receives round-the-clock help from care staff in his home. He now fears he could lose his independence as Worcestershire County Council  considers plans to cap the amount it pays for care in the home. Disability campaigners fear the move could force people with physical or learning disabilities into care homes against their will – and set a precedent for other councils as they struggle to reconcile squeezed budgets with increasing demands for social care.
This is one of many l have seen and read about in my community of Warwickshire over a number of years. The way to highlight this case more clearly is to take out their reasons and consider the effect on another person. for instance 2 son’s looking after one mother and one son does everything the other does a little, but passes the buck to the one who does everything. The mother sees the son doing everything all the time and the other son rarely, which son does she show most affection? Well those who are like son one will know the answer and the others will not, well its son who she rarely sees. The reason is simple she cannot blame him for anything as he does very little, but if he does she blames the one who does everything as she can and believes he is responsible for everything!
This is called taking responsibility for your actions, well we ALL need to take responsibility for our actions and how are world is in such a mess. This third article shows us a man who fears his future and all we can do is say ah well everyone is in the same situation, are you? Really scared that you maybe moved into a care home tomorrow! Well maybe you are one of the lucky ones and it will not happen to you,but spare a thought for this man and many like him? Who are scared and have no control over their lives, due to being disabled, infirm and no longer able to look after themselves and are reliant on who?
I am sure anyway taking time and trouble to read this post will or may change their view on care or lack of care in the community, but imagine this as a last point. You are in your home housebound ,unable to see or hear properly and someone enters your home using your key! They say we are here to remove you to a home as you no longer qualify under this rule to stay in your own home. There is an ambulance outside and we will pack your suitcase and be ready to leave in 1 hour!
They cannot does this l hear you say! Are you sure?
Related articles

Filed under: Ace Healthcare News, Ace News Desk Tagged: Worcestershire

This is our opinion and feelings about the the posts added to this blog by ourselves and writers who have asked to write on our blog network and does not necessarily represent our agreement or disagreement with the writers concerned.Please add #AceHealthNews to your tweets and follow us on twitter at http://twitter.com/AceHealthNews and quality healthcare. Thank you, Ian