Author: smartblogger2312

  • Vitamin D doses often do not match labels, study shows

    What’s in your vitamin supplement? It could be more or less than you think.

    What’s in your vitamin supplement? It could be more or less than you think, according to the latest study to show that what’s on a supplement label is not necessarily what’s in the bottle.

    Researchers who tested vitamin D pills sold in stores found they contained from 9% to 140% of the doses listed on labels, according to a research letter published Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine. Though none of the pills was likely to be dangerous, some contained too little of the vitamin to effectively treat someone with a deficiency, the researchers say.

    We found the potency of these vitamin D supplements varied widely

    says Erin LeBlanc, an endocrinologist who led the study at the Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research in Portland, Ore.

    Other studies have found similar variations in other supplements. For example, more than one-third of multivitamins tested by ConsumerLab.com in 2009 were contaminated or contained significantly more or less of some ingredients than their labels claimed. The company also recently tested vitamin D samples and found some mislabeling, it says.

    About half of adults in the USA take dietary supplements, spending $30 billion a year, according the Office of Dietary Supplements, National Institutes of Health. Vitamin D is particularly popular. The vitamin is essential for bone health and may have other benefits, but most people get enough from food and sun exposure, according to the Institute of Medicine.

    LeBlanc decided to test over-the-counter vitamin D pills after testing pills made at a compounding pharmacy for another study. She was surprised to find that those specially made pills contained 52% to 146% of the promised vitamin D doses.

    “I was curious about what else was out there,” LeBlanc says. She and her team went to five “mainstream grocery stories” in Portland, she says, and bought 55 bottles of vitamin D supplements from 12 different manufacturers. Promised potencies ranged from 1,000 to 10,000 international units (IUs).

    The actual amounts in the pills ranged from 9% to 140% of what was on the label. When researchers tested five pills from each bottle and averaged the results, levels were closer to 100%, but in a third of cases, they were still too high or low by the standards set by one independent testing group, the U.S. Pharmacopeial Convention (USP). The closest match was in the one brand with a USP mark, the researchers say.

    “It’s not surprising that they found a lot of products that were not meeting label claims,” says John Atwater, director of the verification program at the non-profit USP, one of several groups that offer voluntary testing programs and approval seals. Supplement makers must pay to participate in those programs.

    Unlike drug companies, supplement makers are not required to prove their products are safe and effective before selling them. The Food and Drug Administration can inspect supplement plants for good manufacturing practices and has issued warnings to many of them under regulations finalized in 2007. But the FDA does not test every product, even at plants under inspection, Atwater says.

    Companies that put out mislabeled products “are breaking the law,” says Duffy MacKay, vice president of scientific and regulatory affairs for the Council for Responsible Nutrition, a supplement trade association. He says responsible companies are responding to FDA and public pressure to do better. He suggests consumers look for well-known brands and voluntary testing seals.

    “We’re hoping that soon we’ll have a perfect record,” MacKay say. “We advocate very strongly for 100% compliance.”

    LeBlanc says her study is evidence that more regulation is needed to get companies in line.


  • Gun control takes center stage

    When President Barack Obama gives his State of the Union address on Tuesday night, gun violence will be center stage.

    When President Barack Obama gives his State of the Union address on Tuesday night, gun violence will be center stage, both literally and politically.

    The White House and Democratic lawmakers have invited more than 30 shooting victims or their surviving family members and friends to attend Obama’s speech, including several people tied to the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. Former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.), severely wounded in a Jan. 2011 shooting, will be there. And first lady Michelle Obama will be accompanied by the parents of Hadiya Pendleton, a 15-year-old Chicago teenager shot to death last month, shortly after she took part in the inaugural parade.

    “These people by their presence will send a message more powerful than any words from me or my colleagues,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.). “I think that picture will be worth a thousand words. And when the president looks to the gallery, sees the faces and voices of victims it will powerfully reinforce his message that we need to do something about gun violence.”

    On the other side of the issue, Rep. Steve Stockman (R-Texas), reelected to Congress last year after one term in the mid-1990s, is bringing musician Ted Nugent. The one-time rock star has become an outspoken critic of the president, especially over gun control.
    (Also on POLITICO: Stockman: Obama’s No. 1 needler)

    Obama has pushed for new gun-control measures since the December shooting in Newton, which left 20 children and six adults dead. The president is expected to renew his call for a ban on assault weapons and restrictions of high-capacity ammunition magazines, two measures strongly opposed by the National Rifle Association and its allies on Capitol Hill.

    Rep. Jim Langevin (D-R.I.), confined to a wheelchair since being hurt in an accidental shooting when he was a teenager, has led the effort by House Democrats to bring gun-violence victims to Tuesday’s address. Langevin aides said 23 House offices are participating in the effort. The Democrats will also hold a press conference Tuesday with Mayors Against Illegal Guns, the organization, backed by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg that is pouring tens of millions of dollars into the political struggle over gun control.

    Also Tuesday, Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), a close Obama ally, chaired a subcommittee hearing in the Judiciary Committee on reducing gun violence while “respecting the Second Amendment,” focusing on current gun trafficking laws and proposals to strengthen them.

    Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) is planning to mark up a gun control bill later this month. A big question remain whether Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) will offer her proposal to ban assault weapons during that session.

    Feinstein, who became mayor of San Francisco in 1978 following the shooting death of Mayor George Moscone, is weighing whether to offer the proposal in committee or to wait until Leahy’s bill reaches the Senate floor, an option favored by Democratic leaders and her colleagues facing reelection in 2014 in red states where the NRA is strong.

    Democratic leaders, thus far, have thrown their support to a universal background check proposal, which would require such reviews on all gun sales, including private transactions. The NRA also opposes this measure, and GOP leaders have not said whether they will back in on Senate floor or in the House.


  • IBM puts supercomputer to work on cancer

    IBM is putting its Watson supercomputer to work fighting cancer, in what is described as the first commercial program of its kind to use “big data” to help patients with the disease.

    WASHINGTON — IBM is putting its Watson supercomputer to work fighting cancer, in what is described as the first commercial program of its kind to use “big data” to help patients with the disease.

    The US computing giant last week unveiled its initiative with health insurer WellPoint and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

    The supercomputer, which gained fame by defeating two human champions in the “Jeopardy!” quiz show, has been sifting through some 600,000 pieces of medical evidence, two million pages of text from 42 medical journals and clinical trials in oncology research.

    This can speed up the way data is analyzed to make the best diagnosis and find the optimal treatment, says Craig Thompson, Sloan-Kettering’s president.

    It can take years for the latest developments in oncology to reach all practice settings

    “The combination of transformational technologies found in Watson with our cancer analytics and decision-making process has the potential to revolutionize the accessibility of information for the treatment of cancer in communities across the country and around the world.”

    IBM first announced plans to work with WellPoint in 2011, and last year began receiving data from the New York research hospital which specializes in cancer.

    The first application will work with 1,500 lung cancer cases, where clinicians and analysts are training Watson to extract and interpret physician notes, lab results and clinical research.

    The Maine Center for Cancer Medicine and Westmed Medical Group will be two centers testing the service and providing feedback to WellPoint, IBM and Memorial Sloan-Kettering.

    “IBM’s work with WellPoint and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center represents a landmark collaboration in how technology and evidence based medicine can transform the way in which health care is practiced,” said Manoj Saxena at IBM.

    “These breakthrough capabilities bring forward the first in a series of Watson-based technologies, which exemplifies the value of applying big data and analytics and cognitive computing to tackle the industry’s most pressing challenges.”

    The program is being commercialized under the name Interactive Care Insights for Oncology, powered by Watson.
    Watson, named after IBM founder Thomas Watson, can ingest tens of million pages of data in just seconds.


  • Complex Investments Prove Risky

    Regulators across the country are confronting a wave of investor fraud that is saddling retirement savers with steep losses on complex products.

    Regulators across the country are confronting a wave of investor fraud that is saddling retirement savers with steep losses on complex products that until a few years ago were pitched only to the most sophisticated investors.

    The victims are among the millions of Americans whose mutual funds and stock portfolios plummeted in the wake of the financial crisis, and who started searching for ways to make better returns than those being offered by bank deposits and government bonds with minuscule interest rates.

    Tens of thousands of them put money into speculative bets promoted by aggressive financial advisers. The investments include private loans to young companies like television production firms and shares in bundles of commercial real estate properties.

    Those alternative investments have now had time to go sour in big numbers, state and federal securities regulators say, and are making up a majority of complaints and prosecutions.

    “Since the crisis, we’ve seen more and more people reaching out into different types of exotic investments that are a big concern to us,” said William F. Galvin, the Massachusetts secretary of the commonwealth.

    Last Wednesday, Mr. Galvin’s office ordered one of the nation’s largest brokerage firms, LPL Financial, to pay $2.5 million for improperly selling the real estate bundles, known as nontraded REITs, or real estate investment trusts, to hundreds of state residents from 2006 to 2009, in some cases overloading clients’ accounts with them.

    LPL said it agreed, as part of the settlement, to reform its process for selling such alternative investments.

    There are few good statistics on the extent of the problem nationally. But cases are mounting in the offices of regulators like A. Heath Abshure, the securities commissioner in Arkansas, where a majority of the 66 open securities cases involve complex investments sold to less sophisticated investors looking for a steady return.

    J. Bradley Bennett, chief of enforcement at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, or Finra, Wall Street’s self-regulatory group, said that for the last two years, 10 staff members have looked at the “proliferation of these products, to understand how they are being sold.”

    “It’s got our attention,” he said. “We recognize the trends.”

    Brokers promoting bad investments to unsophisticated investors is nothing new. But while the easy prey used to be people looking to get rich quick, the pool has widened to include savers looking for ways to earn the kind of income once reliably available from traditional investments.

    Regulators are warning investors that the dangers are unlikely to recede, given the Federal Reserve’s pledge to keep interest rates near zero and the push among financial firms to earn more revenue from so-called alternative investments marketed to retail investors. Brokers are eager to sell these investments because they often bring in higher commissions than standard mutual funds and stocks.

    The money that retail investors have in alternative investments in the United States, ranging from baskets of commodities to mutual funds that employ sophisticated trading, more than doubled from 2008 to 2012, to $712 billion from $312 billion, according to McKinsey & Company. Many of the products hold out the promise of higher returns while ostensibly being immune to the volatility of stock markets.

    The phenomenon of investors’ actively moving money in pursuit of higher interest rates, known as chasing yield, is reverberating through the economy. Jeremy C. Stein, a Federal Reserve governor, said in a speech on Thursday that he worried that investors desperate for yield could be creating a bubble in widely available investments like junk bonds.

    Mary Beck, a furniture business consultant in Pasadena, Calif., said that in 2008, as the stock investments in her husband’s I.R.A. began to fall quickly, the couple moved $470,000 to a new product recommended by their broker.

    While the offering was unfamiliar — part ownership in a fleet of luxury cars — Ms. Beck bought the pitch because her broker had been around for years, and the product offered what seemed to be a modest annual interest rate of 7 percent.

    “We knew that 12 percent wasn’t realistic, but 7 percent seemed realistic,” Ms. Beck said. “To us, it was a very conservative way to ensure that we’d increase our savings.”

    Soon after they stopped receiving interest payments, the Becks lost their money when the venture went bankrupt in 2012. Ms. Beck and her husband have been reconfiguring their retirement and are planning to work longer.


  • Seaplane Adventures Tour

    Explore from the air the breathtaking beauty and splendor that is the San Francisco Bay Area – one of the most fascinating and scenic cities anywhere in the world!

    From WildheartPictures.com, a very short film about seaplanes and flying with Seaplane Adventures in Sausalito, California. It’s the trailer to the 18-minute version, which can be seen here.


  • Barclays to cut 3,700 jobs

    Tarnished by its role in a global interest-rate-rigging scandal, the British investment bank Barclays is trying to regain the public’s trust.

    Tarnished by its role in a global interest-rate-rigging scandal, the British investment bank Barclays is trying to regain the public’s trust.

    Antony Jenkins, who took over as Barclays’ chief executive last year after the scandal forced out the bank’s top leadership, declared Tuesday: “There will be no going back to the old way of doing things.”

    Jenkins, in a speech, added: “We never want to be in a position again of rewarding people for activity that is inconsistent with our values.”

    Barclays on Tuesday announced that it would lay off at least 3,700 employees this year as part of a broad restructuring. The bank said it lost $1.6 billion in all of 2012, compared to a $4.7-billion profit in 2011.

    Since Barclays agreed last year to pay $450 million to settle U.S. and British investigations into allegations that it, along with banks, colluded to manipulate the benchmark London Inter-Bank Offered Rate, or Libor, Jenkins has sought to regain trust from the public and investors.

    On Tuesday, he offered a critique of the banking industry’s recklessness.

    “The behaviors which made headlines during the year stemmed from a period of 20 years in banking in which the sector became too aggressive, too focused on the short term, and too disconnected from the needs of customers and clients, and wider society,” he said in a statement. “Barclays was not immune from the impact of these trends, and we suffered reputational damage in 2012 as a consequence.”


  • Linux Foundation ships UEFI Secure Boot workaround

    The Linux Foundation’s open source workaround for Unified Extensible Firmware Interface.

    The Linux Foundation’s open source workaround for Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) Secure Boot has shipped, and while it’s not necessarily the easiest way to boot Linux on UEFI-enabled PCs, its authors claim it should now work with any bootloader and any distribution.

    The Linux community was first alerted to potential problems with Secure Boot in 2011, when computer boffins warned that the digital signing restrictions in UEFI could lock Linux out of PCs that shipped with Windows installed and the firmware security features enabled.

    With Secure Boot switched on, the UEFI firmware will only boot operating systems that have been digitally signed, which is problematic for free software. In particular, software that is licensed under the GPLv3 – such as the popular Linux bootloader Grub 2 – is explicitly incompatible with Microsoft’s signing scheme.

    For its part, Microsoft argued that OEMs were free to allow users to disable Secure Boot, so long as those who did so understood that they were reducing the overall security of their systems. But Linux enthusiasts observed that some OEMs were actually disabling the Secure Boot switch in their firmwares, leaving customers with no way to turn it off (and thus, no way to boot Linux).

    Linux kernel hackers wasted no time attacking the problem, and a number of potential workarounds were soon mooted. With the official release of the Linux Foundation’s method on Friday, there are now two working techniques for booting Linux on UEFI Secure Boot machines.

    The first is Matthew Garret’s Shim, some variant of which is currently used by Fedora, Suse, Ubuntu, and a number of smaller Linux distros. This method has the advantage of being fairly painless for end users, while allowing small distros to support Secure Boot without dealing directly with Microsoft.

    The new method proposed by the Linux Foundation is slightly more complicated than the Shim method, but it does a better job of supporting the full Secure Boot OS loading API. Specifically, Shim doesn’t support the standard UEFI LoadImage() and StartImage() calls, which means some UEFI-compatible bootloaders won’t work with it.

    The Linux Foundation’s pre-bootloader does support such loaders – including gummiboot and efilinux – but the price is that it makes systems that use it harder to maintain.

    The Linux Foundation’s method is based on cryptographic hashes rather than signing keys, which means that every time the kernel or bootloader for a specific machine is updated, the user must manually add the new hash for that component to the list of permitted binaries. Doing so requires being physically present at the machine, which makes this method unsuitable for servers that are managed remotely.

    Some of this may change in the future, however. Garrett says he is currently working on merging the Linux Foundation’s code with Shim to produce a new loader that can support both approaches – though when such a combined tool might emerge remains up in the air.

    For now, Linux hackers who would like to try out the Linux Foundation’s method can download the code for its loader from maintainer Jim Bottomley’s website. ®


  • Digital Tags Help Ensure the Price Is Right

    Then bar codes and computerized cash registers arrived. In most stores, prices were posted on shelves but not on the items themselves.

    SOME decades ago, a grocery store’s aisles were often filled with “chunk-a-chunk-a” sounds, as clerks stamped prices to the tops of cans and boxes before putting them on shelves. It was a labor-intensive operation, but it did result in a price being affixed to most every item in the store.

    Then bar codes and computerized cash registers arrived. In most stores, prices were posted on shelves but not on the items themselves.

    I’ve always trusted that the system works well — and I’ve tapped my foot impatiently when a shopper ahead of me slowed the checkout process by closely watching the prices that came up, as if the scanner might have recorded the wrong product code. What I hadn’t realized was that there is valid reason to be vigilant. The potential problems originate on the shelves, in the form of the shelf tags, which may or may not match the current price in a store’s computer.

    A typical grocery store puts 5,000 items on sale in a week and removes sale prices from another 5,000. That creates an abundance of opportunities for mismatches when workers print out the new price labels in a back room, then hunt for the proper place on the shelf to attach them.

    This has left store technology in an incomplete state: mostly but not entirely computerized. The next step is to go completely paperless by putting small, battery-powered digital price tags on the shelves. Price changes can then be received wirelessly from the store’s network, ensuring that the price displayed on the shelf and the one called up at the checkout counter are the same.

    Altierre, a digital tag and sensor maker based in San Jose, Calif., has raised more than $80 million from investors and spent 10 years developing the technology for digital tags and the wireless networks they require. It asserts that outfitting a store with 20,000 to 25,000 tags, each costing about $5, would produce labor savings that would pay back the investment in two to two-and-a-half years.

    The tags can provide multiple screens of information. To reduce power consumption, Altierre uses black-on-gray liquid crystal displays, the same type used in digital watches and pocket calculators. The most generous thing that can be said about this type of display is that its legibility is satisfactory.

    At Altierre’s headquarters, a full-size mock grocery store is set up with its tags installed on the shelves. There, I was surprised to find that the LCD’s legibility problems didn’t seem so significant: shoppers stand close to the shelves anyway. On some shelves, Altierre showed off an improved tag, at a higher price, that uses E Ink technology. Its text is noticeably crisper than that of an ordinary LCD tag.

    I asked Sunit Saxena, Altierre’s chief executive, why grocery stores haven’t leapt at the chance to save themselves money by installing the tags. “They’re treading carefully because the fear is, they’ll put 30,000 of these in a store where people are used to seeing paper and it will be a drastic change,” he said. “They worry that their sales will drop.”

    Digital sign technology is hardly new. In France, customers are accustomed to digital signs in grocery stores, where an LCD tag with limited display capacity has been on shelves for about 10 years, says Michel Itié, an I.T. consultant. It shows only the price and the price per weight, so it requires a separate paper tag to show an item’s name.

    Many French hypermarkets, which combine grocery stores and department stores, also use the tags. Mr. Itié is working with a company that is installing Altierre’s technology for the hypermarket chain E.Leclerc, which has installed 300,000 new LCD tags in 10 stores and plans to deploy a total of two million tags by year-end.

    In the United States, grocery stores still cannot justify making the investment in digital price tags, says Patrick C. Fitzpatrick, president of Atlanta Retail Consulting. “If the payback was advantageous, you’d see them everywhere.”

    Stores are eager, however, to find an affordable way to reduce price-related errors. Mr. Fitzpatrick says that when grocery store managers conduct “price integrity audits” and compare price labels on the shelves with the prices in the store computer, paper labels are only 95 percent to 96 percent accurate.


  • A day at the Zoo

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  • Caribbean Islands You Don’t Know

    We rounded up 2 islands to visit now before they’re completely taken over by crowds.

    Saba

    Known for a stomach-wrenching runway built into its cliffs, Saba is nothing like sister island St. Martin. There are only 1,800 residents, a small harbor, 4 villages and not much more. In fact, there are no beaches, shopping centers, casinos or, thankfully, mass tourism. The beauty of the volcanic island is its sprawling nature; no wonder it was nicknamed “Unspoiled Queen.” European travelers abound due to the Dutch commonwealth, and the island is becoming a favorite for the LGBT community.

    The island’s commissioner, director of tourism and one member of the island council are all openly gay. Couples of all orientation like to shack up at Queen’s Resort (again, “queen” is a curious coincidence), a 12-suite property that is notorious for its timeless appeal, with suites averaging 1,200 square feet. Known mostly for hiking and diving, Saba is all about truly getting away and disappearing in the rolling green hills for much-needed R&R.

    Dominica

    Not to be confused with the Dominican Republic, Dominica is all about mountains, rainforests and natural attractions. The “Nature Island” is only 298 square miles and home to Morne Trois Pitons National Park. What makes Dominica unique is the 365 rivers that flow throughout the island. One of the most peaceful excursions is a boat tour on the Indian River, which is flanked by mangroves and lush foliage, with its unexpected stop for a cold beer at the Bush Bar.

    Due to the geothermal activity, plenty of hot springs abound, whether at Wotten Waven or Papillote Wilderness Retreat, which has a garden featuring more than 200 plant species woven into the tropical setting. Snorkelers can head to the black-sand beach at Champagne Reef for exciting underwater adventures or take the 3-mile hike to Boiling Lake, a hot, flooded fumarole at the bottom of a sinkhole. Well-heeled travelers make a beeline to Rosalie Bay Resort, a 22-acre eco-resort that feels like a small village, with 28 spacious, cottage-style accommodations (many oceanfront) and a new, pampering spa.