August 31, 2010

CANADA: Study finds boomers’ attitude raises their self-esteem

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TORONTO, Ontario / Globe & Mail / Family & Relationships / August 31, 2010

Ageism
Older people prefer negative news about young people
 
By Zosia Bielski
 
Adults these days.

When given a choice, people over the age of 50 prefer reading negative – rather than glowing – news about young folk, an attitude that often raises their own self-esteem. In a youth-centric world, it can feel good to read about hapless young-uns, say the authors of a joint study from Ohio State University and Germany’s Zeppelin University. 
Photo: Ryan McVay/Photodisc

The study, published in next month’s issue of the Journal of Communication, involved 178 people aged 18 to 30 and 98 people aged 50 to 65. The German participants arrived at a laboratory, where they were asked to review a not-yet-published online magazine and pick the stories that grabbed their attention.

Different respondents got the same stories, but some stories were given a positive spin and others were negative. For example, one article got the positive headline “Visitation rights gained after daring protest: Demonstration at 100 feet high a success.” The negative version read, “Visitation rights denied despite daring protest: Demonstration at 100 feet high in vain.” The stories included a photo of the protester: In half, the protester was young; in the other half, the protester was old.

Older respondents homed in on the story of the young protester failing. After browsing the magazine, they filled out a short questionnaire measuring their self-esteem, and it appeared that the exercise bolstered these emotions.

And the younger respondents? They preferred reading about their young counterparts, and passed on the stories featuring older people altogether.

Both responses – the fist-shaking reading choices of the older participants and the indifference of youth to their elders – seem to point in one direction: Ageism is alive and well.

© Copyright 2010 CTVglobemedia Publishing Inc.


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USA: Lasting Pleasures, Robbed by Drug Abuse

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NEW YORK, NY / The New York Times / Health / Views / August 31, 2010

By RICHARD A. FRIEDMAN, M.D.

Of all the things that people do, few are as puzzling to psychiatrists as compulsive drug use.

Sure, all drugs of abuse feel good — at least initially. But for most people, the euphoria doesn’t last. A patient of mine is all too typical.

“I know this will sound strange,” he said, as I recall, “but cocaine doesn’t get me high any more and still I can’t stop.”

When he first started using the drug, in his early 30s, my patient would go for days on a binge, hardly eating or drinking. The high was better than anything, even sex.

Within several months, though, he had lost the euphoria — followed by his job. Only when his wife threatened to leave him did he finally seek treatment.

When I met him, he told me that he would lose everything if he could not stop using cocaine. Well, I asked, what did he like about this drug, if it cost him so much and no longer made him feel good? He stared at me blankly. He had no clue.

Neither did most psychiatrists, until recently.

We understand the initial allure of recreational drugs pretty well. Whether it is cocaine, alcohol, opiates, you name it, drugs rapidly activate the brain’s reward system — a primitive neural circuit buried beneath the cortex — and release dopamine. This neurotransmitter, which is central to pleasure and desire, sends a message to the brain: This is an important experience that is worth remembering.

We would not have gotten very far as a species without this brain system to motivate us to seek out rewards like food and a nice mate. The trouble is that while such natural reinforcers activate the reward system, mind-altering drugs do it much more powerfully, causing a far greater dopamine release.

In other words, drugs have a competitive advantage over these natural rewards and can hijack the brain’s reward system.

Even so, the acute pleasure fades when the neurons in the reward circuit get used to all that dopamine. Eventually, as with my patient, even higher and higher doses cease to feel good as users try in vain to recapture the initial high.

So what explains compulsive drug use, especially when it brings the user to the brink of personal ruin?

I got a clue from my patient’s recent relapse. After nearly six months of abstinence, he found himself inexplicably craving cocaine on the way home from work.

It happened that he had run into an old friend just outside his office with whom he had used drugs years earlier. Although he did not consciously associate the friend and the drugs, his brain had not forgotten, and the meeting touched off the urge to use again.

In short, recreational drugs like cocaine don’t just usurp the brain’s reward circuit; they have powerful effects on learning and memory.

Many brain imaging studies, using positron emission tomography, show that cues like viewing drug paraphernalia are enough by themselves to activate memory circuits and unleash drug craving. Where you are and what you are doing when you use a drug like cocaine is inextricably linked with the high. And these associations are stored not just in your conscious memory, but also in memory circuits outside your awareness.

This kind of pathologic learning lies at the heart of compulsive drug use. Long after someone has apparently kicked the habit, long after withdrawal symptoms subside, the individual is vulnerable to these deeply encoded unconscious associations that can set off a craving, seemingly out of the blue.

I could not rewire my patient’s brain. But at least I could try to help him reconfigure his environment by avoiding cues that might provoke cocaine craving. I had him make an inventory of all the people and places he associated with his drug use — and then had him steer clear of as many as he could. Lucky for him that he never used drugs at home.

His problems did not end there, however. Although he has been cocaine-free for nearly two years, he feels life is lackluster and little excites him. And that experience is consistent with recent evidence that the effects of drugs like cocaine can endure long after use has ended.

Dr. Nora D. Volkow, a psychiatrist who is director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, has shown using PET scans that methamphetamine-dependent subjects have about 25 percent fewer dopamine transporters in critical brain regions compared with normal volunteers. Since the transporters ferry dopamine in and out of neurons, this decrease means less dopamine release and a less responsive reward circuit.

Alarmingly, this reduction in dopamine transporters was present in subjects who had not used methamphetamine for at least 11 months, suggesting that the effect was long-lasting — perhaps even permanent.

Though my patient had not used methamphetamine, cocaine has similar effects in the brain. With years of abuse, he could have lost enough dopamine transporters that his own reward circuit would become dulled to everyday pleasures. After all, to most brains a fine dinner with friends or a beautiful sunset is no match for the euphoria of cocaine.

We do not yet know whether the loss of dopamine transporters is permanent or eventually reversible. But why take the chance and endure a dulled life? The plain truth is that drug-induced pleasure is a cruel illusion: it never lasts.

Dr. Richard A. Friedman is a professor of psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College.

Copyright 2010 The New York Times Company

CANADA: Farm wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, died at 87

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TORONTO, Ontario / The Globe & Mail / Facts & Arguments / August 31, 2010

Lives Lived
IRENE KENNEDY

Farm wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, biscuit maker, map reader, mission control for her extended family. Born April 10, 1923, in Dunrobin, Ontario. Died May 14 in Mississippi Mills, Ontario, of Alzheimer’s disease, aged 87.

That Irene Kennedy could enjoy such a full life within a two-mile radius of where she was born is testament both to the times in which she lived and to her energetic approach to life.

Growing up during the Depression on a farm in the Ottawa Valley community of Dunrobin, Irene had first-hand experience of hard work – both inside the house and out in the fields. The only child of Tommy and Ruby Dolan, she learned from an early age to be resourceful, self-reliant and prudent with scarce financial means. Years later, her granddaughter Rebecca recalled how “Grana” had instilled in her the necessity of a woman maintaining her own bank account after marriage.

In 1944, Irene married Kingsley Kennedy, a ruggedly handsome, soft-spoken farmer whose sister, Ruth, had been Irene’s best friend since childhood. By 1950, she and Kingsley were blessed with three sons – Bryan, Shane and Robin – a new house and an expanding farm operation. They had always wanted a daughter and in 1959, due to health problems in Kingsley’s brother’s family, three-month-old Barbara Jean came to live with them for a few years. The bouncing baby girl brought a welcome new dimension to their household and a steep learning curve for the boys, who suddenly needed to acquire babysitting skills.

When Irene and Kingsley’s fourth son arrived, in 1962, the family dynamic changed once more. Born with developmental disabilities, Rodger required extensive care, which Irene provided cheerfully and without once complaining.

A long-serving member of the Dunrobin Women’s Institute and the United Church, Irene was also the original “meals on wheels” lady for aging and infirm relatives and others in need of assistance. She took people shopping, to do their banking, to medical and hair appointments and myriad other tasks.

Irene knew how to have fun, too. Her happiest times were those spent in the thick of a family get-together, especially one that spanned three or four generations. No such gathering was complete without a plate of her mouthwatering tea biscuits, warm from the oven and draped in a freshly laundered cloth.

Irene’s unparalleled ability to remember names, birth dates and family connections reflected her abiding interest in other people. Robbed of this skill by Alzheimer’s in later years, she nonetheless maintained a positive outlook to the end, and would repeat to her family the words that became her credo: “You takes what you gets and be thankful.”

Shane Kennedy is Irene’s son and Nancy Kennedy Dorrance is her niece.

© Copyright 2010 CTVglobemedia Publishing Inc.

USA: America's Most Profitable Hospitals

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NEW YORK, NY / Forbes.com / Healthcare / August 31, 2010

America's Most Profitable Hospitals
By David Whelan 

Some hospitals make colossal profits. Are they running a tight ship--or using monopoly power to overcharge patients? It's not a discussion hospitals want to have.

Forbes' first-ever list of the 25 most profitable hospitals in the country contains a surprising mix of big and small, from the Mayo Clinic to Ohio State University to several hospitals owned by the for-profit HCA chain. The list comes from the American Hospital Directory and is based on operating revenue and expense data found in cost reports that each hospital must give annually to Medicare. If you have a choice, pick a hospital that makes money over one that doesn't. There's some evidence that solid financial performance goes hand in hand with fewer complications.

The average American hospital barely breaks even. But some are enormous profit centers. Forbes' first-ever survey of America's most profitable hospitals reveals that some American hospitals make 25 cents or more for every $1 in patient revenue they take in.

Our list, done by the American Hospital Directory, is based on operating income figures that hospitals must report to the federal Medicare program each year. It found that 24 hospitals in the country with over 200 beds make an operating margin of 25% or more. That kind of profit margin compares favorably to drug giants like Pfizer ( PFE - news - people ), who are often vilified for charging too much for their drugs. It easily beats the operating profit margin that General Electric ( GE - news - people ) reported last year.

The most profitable hospital in the country, 235-bed Flowers Medical Center in Dothan, Ala., recorded an incredible 53% operating margin. It is part of the big for-profit Community Health Systems ( CYH - news - people ) chain in Brentwood, Tenn. Del Sol Medical Center in El Paso snared second place with an astronomical 45% operating margin. It's part of the big HCA chain, based in Nashville. Neither hospital returned calls asking for comment. After this story came out, Flowers Hospital disputed the figures in an e-mail. It says it overstated its revenue by an astonishing $180 million in its official report to Medicare and that its actual margin is 12%.

Not surprisingly, a disproportionate 15 of 25 hospitals on our list were part of for-profit chains. HCA had 10 other hospitals in the top 25, including Medical City Hospital in Dallas, with a 26% operating margin; it is expected to do an initial public offering soon. But some big nonprofits also made the list, including both of Mayo Clinic's main hospitals and Ohio State University's hospital.

For an in-depth look at America's Most Profitable Hospitals, click here.

Some say profitable hospitals may be using local monopoly to overcharge insurers and patients. Others see the high profits simply as sign of efficiency and good quality.

The question is important because hospital charges represent about a third of total health care spending--$718 billion altogether. It's more than what's spent on doctors, drugs, nursing homes or any other category-type of care. Hospitals have been quietly consolidating in recent years. Now many hospital "systems" dominate their regional markets, often allowing them to dictate prices to insurers who pay the bill.

"Profitability can be as simple as being in a protected market [with little competition] and having lots of privately insured patients," says Michael Millenson, a consultant with Health Quality Advisors in Highland Park, Ill. Private insurance usually pays more than the federal Medicare program.

In an industry where four in five facilities are nonprofit charities, those that do run a profit draw scrutiny from policymakers, HMOs and local communities. Hospitals have been accused of excessive charges, discriminating against uninsured or underinsured patients and acting like monopolies by controlling a specific market. Even acknowledging profitability is taboo at many facilities.

There's another school of thought, however, that says that hospitals that are well-run financially are often those that are producing the best clinical outcomes.

There's more. Click to read on

2010 Forbes.com LLC™

BRUNEI: Japem Hands Over Raya Goodies To Four Senior Citizens

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BRUNEI DARUSSALAM / Radio Television Brunei / Brunei News / August 31, 2010

Community Development Department hands over welfare assistance to four senior citizens

In a show of care and attention towards the nation's Senior Citizens, the Community Development Department (JAPEM), under the Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sports handed over welfare assistance to four senior citizens in the Brunei Muara District.

The contributions were presented by the Minister of Culture Youth and Sports, Yang Berhormat Pehin Orang Kaya Pekerma Laila Diraja Dato Paduka Awang Haji Hazair. Yang Berhormat and delegation first presented the aid to Dayang Hajah Murah binti Japar@Jafar at Kampong Belimbing.

A similar function was also held at the residence of Awang Mainin bin Timbang in Kampong Sungai Matan. The contribution was in terms of basic food ration for Hari Raya Aidilfitri festivity.

Awang Rakit bin Jakaria from Kampong Tanah Jambu also received the similar aid package. The presentation of contribution was one of JAPEM's charity activities during the month of Ramadan.

Dayang Hajah Intan binti Kula from Kampong Sungai Akar was the next recipient of such aid. The Minister's delegation included his Deputy, Datin Hajah Adina and the Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Culture Youth and Sports, Dato Paduka Haji Jemat bin Hj Ampal.

©2009 Radio Television Brunei.

JAPAN: Seikatsu hogo - help for those in dire straits

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TOKYO, Japan / The Japan Times / Life in Japan / August 31, 2010

LIFELINES
By ANGELA JEFFS and KEN JOSEPH JR.

Reader KS is having a hard time and doesn't know where to turn.

"I have been working for years but suddenly find myself unemployed, over 60 and unwell. I didn't know about the pension program so have not paid into it at all. What can I do?"

Thankfully in Japan there are a number of programs that can help.

First, get a friend who speaks fluent Japanese to take you to the Seikatsu Hogo (livelihood protection) Department at your local city hall.

If you don't have a place to stay, the staff will help you get into an apartment, furnish it for you and loan you the funds to make any necessary down payments.

If you are found to qualify, you can receive monthly seikatsu hogo support, which in the major cities is about ¥148,000 a month, including around ¥56,000 in rent support. They can also supply you with a train or bus pass and papers entitling you to medical care.

If you are elderly and unable to work, this can become permanent. If you are able to work, support will usually continue for about six months until you can find a job and get back on your feet.

Be advised that there are a number of individual programs depending on your specific circumstances.

Visit The Japan Helpline website and press "help" if you want to find a local volunteer in your area to go with you. It is extremely important that you do not go alone, and if at all possible have a place to stay before you go.

Seikatsu Hogo staff are usually extremely kind and helpful, and they should take the time to put together a personal program for you. For example, there is one scheme that began last autumn targeting people who suddenly lose their jobs. This program provides immediate support for six months.

Have any readers had any experiences with seikatsu hogo? This being Japan, there are variables between city halls, and in our experience we know some to be absolutely wonderful and others less so.

Up and running

KL has come to Japan for a year and wonders where to get information on running.

Try the following website to give you a head start: runningintokyo.com
For more information on marathons, track and field events and races, mail zatopek42@yahoo.co.jp.

Angela Jeffs is a freelance writer and writing guide (www.thewriterwithin.net/). Ken Joseph directs the Japan Helpline at http://www.jhelp.com/. Send queries, problems and posers to lifelines@japantimes.co.jp

UK: Older people remember what they said but not who they said it to

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LONDON, England / The Telegraph / Elder Health / August 31, 2010

Older people forget who they have just spoken to because the effort of talking consumes so much of their dwindling mental resources.

By Richard Alleyne, Science Correspondent

Research has shown that pensioners lose their memory for places and people because they are concentrating so hard on the content of their conversation. This "destination memory" suffers at the expense of the "communication memory" because as you get older powers of concentration reduce and you can only focus on one thing at a time.

Same old story? Photo: ALAMY

The study by Baycrest's Rotman Research Institute which is affiliated to the University of Toronto, Canada, appears in the Online First Section of Psychology and Ageing.

"What we've found is that older adults tend to experience more destination amnesia than younger adults," said lead investigator and cognitive scientist Dr Nigel Gopie, who led the study.

"Destination amnesia is characterised by falsely believing you've told someone something, such as believing you've told your daughter about needing a ride to an appointment, when you actually had told a neighbour."

Why are older adults more prone to destination memory failures? The ability to focus and pay attention declines with age, so older adults use up most of their attentional resources on the telling of information and don't properly encode the context (who they are speaking to) for later recall.

The false belief that they have told someone something also increases the tendency for the elderly to repeat themselves, the latest research shows.

But the memory faux pas can lead to awkward or embarrassing social situations and even miscommunication in the doctor's surgery even though after making these memory errors older adults remain highly confident in their false beliefs.

© Copyright of Telegraph Media Group Limited 2010

INDONESIA: Healthcare for Indonesia - Universal or not? A viewpoint

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JAKARTA, Indonesia / The Jakarta Post / August 31, 2010

OPINION
By Jennie S. Bev, San Francisco

The Indonesian Health Ministry claims to have spent eight years drafting a universal healthcare bill, but has been facing a series of hurdles: lack of funding and other technical issues. The 2008 health insurance scheme for the poor, Jamkesmas, is notorious for its complex procedures and documentation requirements.

For Indonesia to pursue universal healthcare is constitutional, as it is stated in the 1945 Constitution amendments of Article 28H and Article 34 (2) and (3), as the poor’s healthcare is assured by law. The underlying premise is the financially able should assist those who are not.

The notoriety in defining “poor” in Indonesia is because it is based on a local authority’s letter stating one’s poverty (surat pernyataan miskin). Compared with the USA, where one must show one’s annual tax report statement that quantifies the exact taxable earnings. Such a subjective statement of being “poor” in Indonesia must be revised, which brings with it implications for tax-reporting procedures.

What is exactly is “universal healthcare”? Why is it appealing? Is it the answer to all healthcare issues?
 
For more, click here
The writer (jenniesbev.com) is an author and columnist based in Northern California.
 
Copyright © 2008 The Jakarta Post - PT Bina Media Tenggara.

August 30, 2010

RUSSIA: 86-year-old self-immolation starts blaze at nursing home, kills 9

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MOSCOW / LA Times / Associated Press / August 30, 2010

Russian nursing home blaze apparently started when a resident set himself on fire, investigators say. People in neighboring rooms died from smoke and gas inhalation.

A screen grab of a broadcast from Russian television channel NTV shows the retirement home in Vyshny Volochyok. NTV, AFP/Getty

A blaze that killed nine people at a Russian nursing home early Monday apparently started when an elderly resident doused himself in gasoline and set himself on fire, investigators said.

Daria Korovina, a spokeswoman for the regional Emergencies Ministry, said two other people were injured in the fire at the facility in Vishny Volochek in the Tver region, about 120 miles north of Moscow. Some 480 people were evacuated, she said.

The prosecutor-general's Investigative Committee, Russia's top investigative body, said preliminary inspection showed that an 86-year-old resident of the facility committed suicide by self-immolation, starting a blaze that killed eight people in neighboring rooms from smoke and gas inhalation.

The state news agency ITAR-Tass reported the man was believed to be upset about being unable to obtain an apartment of his own, which he had sought under a program providing housing for World War II veterans.

Also Monday, a fire of uncertain cause broke out in a wooden building that is part of a halfway-house complex for the mentally ill in the Ulyanovsk region, 300 miles southeast of Moscow, but there were no injuries, the Interfax news agency reported.

Russia suffers frequent fires at hospitals, schools and other state-run facilities. Many have been blamed on negligence and violations of fire safety rules. They have served as grim reminders of crumbling infrastructure in Russia.

However, the head of the Emergencies Ministry's supervision department, Yuri Deshevykh, was quoted by the ITAR-Tass news agency as saying the nursing home's fire-alarm system, installed this year, had functioned properly. The Investigative Committee said the seven-story brick building was constructed in 1988.

Russia records nearly 18,000 fire deaths a year, several times the per-capita rate in the United States and other Western countries.

In January 2009, a nursing home fire in the Komi region of Russia's northwest killed 23 residents. A November 2007 fire caused by a short circuit killed 32 patients in a nursing home in the Tula region south of Moscow.

In March 2007, 62 people died in a fire in another nursing home in southern Russia. A nearby fire station had been shut, and it took firefighters almost an hour to get to the site from a larger town after a night watchman ignored two fire alarms before reporting the blaze, authorities said.

In the same year, a nursing home fire killed 10 people in Siberia. The fire alarm system functioned properly, but a nurse on duty was away at the time and failed to immediately alert patients and call firefighters.

In December 2006, locked gates and barred windows prevented victims from escaping a blaze that killed 46 women at a drug treatment center. Inspectors had recommended its temporary closure earlier that year because of safety violations.

Copyright © 2010, Los Angeles Times

IRAN: Iran Media Call French First Lady 'prostitute'

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TEHRAN, Iran  / Associated Press / August 30, 2010

Iran's hardline media have called French first lady Carla Bruni a "prostitute" after she expressed strong support for an Iranian woman facing death by stoning for adultery.

Iran's hardline media have called French first lady Carla Bruni a "prostitute" after she expressed strong support for an Iranian woman facing death by stoning for adultery.

The Monday report by the state news website comes two days after the hardline Kayhan newspaper also described the wife of French President Nicolas Sarkozy as a "prostitute."

Bruni condemnation of the stoning sentence comes after about 300 people from rights organizations demonstrated in Paris to urge Iran to lift its death sentence Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani.

The stoning sentence against Ashtiani, a 43-year-old mother of two, has been halted after international protests but she could still face execution by hanging.

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press
 
See Report on CBS News
 
Related report:  
Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani
Iranian Woman Will Not Be Stoned

Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, a mother of two, is facing the punishment of being stoned to death in Iran. The world responded to her sentence with a number of protests and national outcry. It seems that the country has heard the cry.

“She will not be executed by stoning punishment,” an official at the Iranian embassy said in a statement. The embassy went on to explain that despite a number of international reports, the woman was never going to be stoned in the first place. They said that the news that was released was completely false
 
Copyright © 2006 - 2010 News @ Spreadit.org : Breaking News

KOREA: The Elderly Job Market, a Second Life

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SEOUL, Korea / Arirang Korea Global TV / National News / August 30, 2010

In a soap plant in Goyang, Gyeonggi Province, a group of senior citizens is getting ready for a day's work. The types of soap coming out of this plant are hand-made and contain only natural ingredients. Only senior citizens aged 60 or over can work in this plant, which opened in 2009.  This is because the plant is part of a jobs and businesses program for the elderly that was started by a local seniors club. The news about the soap spread by word-of-mouth, and orders are coming in non-stop.

[Interview : Choi Byeong-cheol, General manager Senior Club]

"Last year, about 16 senior citizens ran a business for roughly 6 months and earned 41,850 US dollars. For a business run by this age group, it was a big income. We were all surprised."

Since 2000, Korea has been rapidly becoming an aged society.

So the elderly job market was implemented to help bolster the shrinking work force due to the growing number of senior citizens.

According to statistics, the elderly job market increased sixfold in five years and showed a greater variety in job selections.

[Interview : Lee Yeong-seon, Social Worker Community Relief Center]

"In the beginning, most jobs in the elderly job market consisted of menial labor, such as taking down flyers or picking up trash. Today, the elderly make food and everyday goods, and they even sell them."

One of the changes brought by this project is that the service industry has expanded.

Hwang Su-il, who just turned 70, has been a barista for 2 years.

[Interview : Hwang Su-il, Barista]

"After wondering how to spend the rest of my days, I decided to become a barista, something that gives me the chance to work with young people."

The two senior citizen baristas in this cafe are now experienced enough to take any order without difficulty.

Many young people, who are more used to famous coffee franchises, are now coming here.


[Interview : Woo Jae-gyeong, Customer]

"I didn't expect a good taste and high quality but that isn't the case at all. I just keep coming back here."

These youthful seniors are breaking the limitations of age.

If the job market for the elderly continues to develop, the lives of seniors in Korea are bound to be radiant.

Reporter : sample@arirangtv.com

Copyright: The Korea International Broadcasting Foundation


Seniors World Chronicle adds:

Goyang provides full support to its senior citizens. Its Ilsan Old Age Welfare Center and Deogyang Old Age Welfare Hall, which boast of the best facilities for senior citizens in Korea, serve as places of peace and relaxation for the elderly, and provide them with diverse welfare services. The city is expanding such facilities to provide better and more direct services to the elderly, and is developing a related policy

Source: Goyang City


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News reports and features on Aging.
Visit our home page
To send us a token of your support!

INDIA: More rebate for senior citizens proposed in Direct Tax Code

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NEW DELHI / NDTV Profit / News / Press Trust of India / August 30, 2010

While senior citizens will continue to enjoy greater tax exemption, women tax payers will lose their special status under the proposed Direct Taxes Code.

The Bill proposes to raise the tax exemption limit for senior citizens above 65 years to Rs. 2.5 lakh per annum from Rs. 2.4 lakh at present.

The income tax exemption limit for general tax payers has been proposed at Rs. 2 lakh, up from Rs. 1.6 lakh at present.

The Bill, however, is silent on women tax payers. Under the existing rules, the income tax exemption limit for women tax payers is Rs. 1.9 lakh per annum, as compared to Rs. 1.6 lakh for general tax payers. As there is no special category for women, their incomes will be taxed at the rates applicable for general tax payers.

However, tax experts believe that the government will later on include a 'women' category in the Bill when it comes up for deliberation in the Parliament Committee.

"The women category would be included later on in the DTC Bill. It is possible that the exemption limit would also increase," PWC Executive Director (Tax and Regulatory Services) Ajay Kumar said.

Copyright © NDTV Convergence Limited 2010.

PHILIPPINES: Centenarian Day - Sept 25 - will honour Filipinos who live to 100

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MANILA, Philippines / Manila Standard Today / Business / August 30, 2010

Live a hundred

By Dr. Emiliano T. Hudtohan

The proposed House Bill 834 motivates senior citizens to live a hundred years. This bill will also honor and grant benefits to Filipino centenarians on Sept. 25, which has been proposed to be Centenarian Day.

Indeed, we must honor our centenarians because even when they have retired early (and permanently retired in many institutions at age 70), they continue to peak and remain productive.

I know of three senior citizens who are active members of society, as they journey toward their centenary.


Septuagenarian engineer
Br. Crisanto Moreno FSC is 75 years old and the oldest living Filipino De La Salle Brother in the Philippines. Though retired, he is authorized to sign checks of De La Salle University, and continues to look after the many buildings of the De La Salle Philippines Inc., many of which were built under his supervision. He also continues to practice his profession as a civil engineer-consultant of non-De La Salle schools in order to build up an educational fund for the young Brothers.

In 2009, he was honored by La Salle Greenhills for his architectural concept and design as building engineer-in-charge of the construction of St. Benilde Gymnasium, a landmark likened to Araneta Coliseum. This gym was the historic site of the Namfrel count during the 1986 snap election and of late, the venue of the wake of President Corazon Aquino.

Born in Oton, Iloilo, Br. Cris has a sister who is a member of the Daughters of St. Paul de Chartres. Br. Cris, his sister and their other siblings manage the Maria Mediodia Moreno Foundation, which has become a channel of the Moreno Christian charitable and social responsibility projects.

Octogenarian supervisor
Eugenia “Gene” Agravante is an 81-year-old supervisor of the San Antonio Community School at Singalong. She travels everyday from Antipolo to Manila to be with Alma del Mar, Gina Ferreras and Cynthia Batungbakal as they teach some 300 nursery pupils in two sessions.

According to Gene, she got involved with the school in 1998 as a social worker of St. Scholastica’s College and as a catechist and family planning advocate of St. Anthony parish church. It was Sr. Francoise of St. Paul who founded the school in 1973 and later turned it over to St. Scholastica’s College. The school then had a feeding program, catechism classes, and rosary circle with bible study.

From Gene’s socio-religious experience, she later broke her “culture of silence” by actively teaching human rights anchored on biblical principles. Today, she dreams of becoming a lawyer to help defend the poor and the oppressed.

Nonagenarian directress
Mamang Luz, my mother, is 94 years old and she is the directress-proprietress of Haven’s Learning School in Bacolod City. On school days, she stands at the gate of Haven to say, “Good morning” to incoming pre-schoolers. Then she goes back to her room to rest and by noontime she stands again at the gate to bid the pupils goodbye. Two teachers and a registrar-administrator (my youngest sister Jo) help her manage the school she founded in 1993. Jo tells me that our mother still observes her teachers, and she sometimes takes over the class to demonstrate her time-tested methods.

She holds an elementary teacher certificate and is a master of arts in teaching elementary agriculture graduate. She retired from the public school with a rank of principal 3. Her love for teaching and passion for learning inspired me to follow her profession.

I believe her maternal DNA is resilient. Her mom, Ana Profetessa Clavel vda. De Torrecarion (who named me after her husband, Emiliano) died at the age of 88 and her grandmother, Lola “Putot (which means Shortie)” Rodregaso died at the age of 101.

Conclusion
As our nation matures, it is critical that the government does not only provide benefits for the senior citizens discounts and privileges. The Singaporean model has an employment program for the elderly who are still active and productive. RH Bill 834 must create jobs for the elderly, if society expects the elderly to live a hundred years.

It is also my experience that several companies I patronize are sensitive to the needs and requirements of senior citizens. We hope they will continue to propagate programs to honor the senior citizens of the country.

May senior citizens and service providers all
live to be a hundred years old.

Dr. Emiliano T. Hudtohan, the author, teaches at the De La Salle University College of Business. 
E-mail: dr.eth2008@gmail.com

Copyright Manila Standard Today 2005-2009

PAKISTAN: Aging philanthropist is Pakistan's icon of dedication to the poor

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PESHAWAR, Pakistan / Associated Press /  August 30, 2010

By CHRIS BRUMMITT (AP)

The aging man in mud-splattered, frayed clothes has barely lowered his body onto the sidewalk when the money starts piling up. Heeding his call for donations for flood victims, Pakistanis of all classes rush to hand over cash to Abdul Sattar Edhi, whose years of dedication to the poor have made him a national icon.

In this photo taken on Aug. 2, 2010 humanitarian leader Abdul Sattar Edhi sits on the side of a road in Peshawar, Pakistan to collect money for flooding victims. Edhi has been helping the destitute and sick for more than 60 years. (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed)

He thanks each donor, some of whom ask to have their photo taken next to him. Four hours later, the crowd remains — and the equivalent of $15,000 is overflowing from a pink basket in front of him.

Edhi has been helping the destitute and sick for more than 60 years, filling the hole left by a state that has largely neglected the welfare of its citizens. Part Mother Teresa, part Gandhi, with a touch of Marx, he is the face of humanitarianism in Pakistan.

Funded by donations from fellow citizens, his 250 centers across the country take in orphans, the mentally ill, unwanted newborns, drug addicts, the homeless, the sick and the aged. His fleet of ambulances picks up victims of terrorist bombings, gang shootings, car accidents and natural disasters.


Pakistan's corruption-riddled government acknowledges Edhi and other charities do the work that in other nations the state performs. The country has no national health service, insurance program or welfare system, and few state-run orphanages or old people's homes.

The foundation offers an alternative to charitable work performed by hardline Islamist groups in Pakistan, some with alleged links to terrorism. The spread of these organizations has triggered concerns in the West, including their work in the aftermath of this summer's floods.

Edhi is a devout Muslim, but critical of Islamic clerics in general, not just extremists. He says they focus on ritual, preaching hellfire and defending the faith against imagined enemies, rather than helping the poor — which he says should be the cornerstone of all faiths.



The 80-something Edhi — he and his children disagree on his exact age — lives with his wife, herself a charity worker, in a tiny room in one of his welfare centers in Karachi, a bustling port city. His bed is a one-inch thick mattress on a piece of wood.

"I am a beggar for the poor," he says, stained teeth showing in a wide smile, eyes sparkling after a week touring flood-hit areas. "Serving humanity is the biggest jihad. It is the real thing."
___

Edhi deals with birth and death, and almost everything in between.

Just above his bedroom, a maternity ward and an orphanage are home to 18 children, many of them abandoned by their mothers in cradles left outside his centers. They wear hand-me-downs from the city's rich. Edhi's wife, Bilquis, tries to get the children adopted, but few Pakistanis want to take girls or older children, she says.

Bilquis Begum, wife of humanitarian leader Abdul Sattar Edhi, takes care of children living in an Edhi charity home in Karachi, Pakistan.  (AP Photo/Shakil Adil)


On a recent afternoon, the kids shouted out English nursery rhymes and danced. They then sat cross-legged on the floor, drinking tea from plastic mugs and eating spicy pastries and sticky sweets that an anonymous benefactor had dropped off.

The home was clean and bright, with plenty of toys and loving staff. But there was no place to play outside, and the roar of motorbikes from the lanes below was a constant backdrop.

Across town, workers at the Edhi morgue were dealing with latest influx of bodies. They receive around 25 a day, half of which are never claimed — the city's unloved and unknown.

Working quickly but carefully, they cut the clothes from the bodies, lather them with a bar of soap from head to toe, rinse them with water from a jug, then wrap them in a white sheet. The bodies are bussed across town, prayed over and buried in unmarked graves.

The body of American journalist Daniel Pearl, killed by al-Qaida terrorists in Karachi in 2002, was picked up by an Edhi ambulance and taken to the morgue, the largest in the city of 14 million people.

The morgue is attached to a hospital for the homeless, a dispensary, a shelter for boys and women and children, even a wedding hall for the marriages arranged for children who have been looked after by the foundation. The smell of baking bread from an oven that churns out 9,000 loaves a day fills the air.

"The poor can come here and get a solution to all their problems," says Ejal Hassan Zaidi, who had accompanied a neighbor to the morgue to collect the body of his 3-year-old daughter, killed in a hit-and-run incident hours earlier. "From the cradle to the grave."
___

Born in what is now India, Edhi and his parents moved to Pakistan in 1947 when that country was created as a Muslim state at the end of British colonial rule. The family was quite well off — his father was a traveling salesman — and socially progressive.

In his biography, Edhi credits his mother for setting him on a humanitarian path. She urged him to give half his pocket money to someone poor every day and rebuked him if he didn't.

"'You have a selfish heart, one that has nothing to give,'" he remembers her saying. "'What kind of human being are you? Look at the greed in your eyes. Already you have started robbing the poor. How much more will you rob from them in your lifetime?"

When she was dying, he looked after her, bathing her emaciated body and washing and braiding her hair — experiences that would also shape his life.

"The first night she spent in the grave, I dedicated my life to the service of mankind," he says.

Edhi started small. In 1951, he bought an eight-foot-square shop in a slum neighborhood in Karachi that he converted into a dispensary. Seven years later he bought a van that he used as an ambulance, writing "Poor Man's Van" on both sides.

He became intimately involved in the business of caring for the sick and dying. He would drive the ambulance to the scene of an accident to pick up the bodies, administer injections during a flu outbreak and travel across the country to help after earthquakes and other natural disasters.

Edhi's record of round-the-clock service and frugal lifestyle attracted donations, and he soon had a fleet of 14 ambulances. In the 1980s and 90s, he opened centers and ambulance services throughout the country. He donated $200,000 to relief efforts after Hurricane Katrina, and his workers have also helped out in disasters in Asia and the Middle East.
___

Pakistanis are a generous people, required by their Muslim faith to give away 2.5 percent of their wealth each year. The last nationwide survey done in 1998 showed that Pakistanis gave the then equivalent of $820 million to charity, around the same as the government's health and education budget at the time. There are no numbers on how rising terrorism and a poor economy have affected this philanthropy.

Edhi does not accept donations from international organizations or governments, including Pakistan's, saying he doesn't need outside help and it is important for Pakistanis to help each other. He and his wife live simply of the interest from some savings.

The foundation does not produce detailed financial statements or annual reports. Edhi points to a wall of files in one office in which he says everything is accounted for. Donors do not seem to mind, such is their trust in him.

"You ask any Pakistani on the streets, Edhi is total credible with them," says Anjum Haque, the executive director of the Pakistan Centre for Philanthropy. "The success of the trust is down to Edhi himself."

Last year, donations to Edhi-run charities totaled around $5 million, according to Faisal Edhi, the founder's son and trust member. A significant chunk of the funds comes from overseas Pakistanis, who want to donate to their homeland.

The lack of transparency has caused some concern among others in the charity sector in Pakistan. Faisal Edhi acknowledges that some of their 13,000 employees — who receive very modest salaries — might skim money off donations. There have also been questions raised about the lack of professionalism and efficiency, specially as the foundation has grown.

Edhi Village, a 65-acre complex in the undulating hills beyond the northern slums of Karachi, is home to 300 children, many picked up off the streets, and 900 adults, many elderly or suffering from mental disabilities. Most wear clean, ironed clothes, and the food is fresh. Yet there are also signs of neglect. One naked youth dragged himself through a puddle. Some had no shoes and begged visitors to buy them a pair.


Edhi kisses an orphan child living in one of his charity centers in Karachi. Helping the poor he says should be the cornerstone of all faiths. (AP Photo/Shakil Adil)


The adults live in rooms around the size of three tennis courts, bare except for raised sections for sleeping. They are locked inside for part of the day. There are two doctors, four nurses and two ward boys looking after them.

"We do the most we can do with our resources," says Billal Mohammad, a regional Edhi manager. "They would be living on the pavement under the sky. We give them shelter, food and treatment. You must not see this place throughout Western eyes."

Abdul Sattar Edhi, left, has a meal with children living in one of his charity houses in Karachi, Pakistan. Helping the poor he says should be the cornerstone of all faiths. (AP Photo/Shakil Adil)

Edhi has made no secret of his dislike of Pakistan's ruling class. So it was a surprise to see a gaggle of politicians using one of his orphanages in Karachi as a venue to mark the recent birthday of President Asif Ali Zardari.

The visitors spooned cake into the mouths of the children, shouted political slogans for television cameras and asked Edhi to be photographed next to them. He said he only let the politicians in so the children would have a party to enjoy.

"So what if the politicians are using me? They even use God," said Edhi, who sat by himself for most of the event. "Landowners, clerics, politicians. They are all looters. There is no fear in telling the truth."

Hardline Islamist groups have criticized Edhi for his progressive views on women and the secular nature of his work. Some have said that by accepting newly-born babies from unmarried mothers, he is promoting premarital sex.

"We meet them and we read their newspapers. They say we are non-Muslims, unbelievers and communists," says Faisal Edhi. "The jihadi groups don't like us. They don't believe in humanity."

There are questions about what will happen to the foundation when Edhi dies. He says his two sons and three daughters will take over, though without him at the helm, people may not give as generously.

For now, his children appear more concerned about their father's health. Apart from an afternoon nap, he works just as hard as he did when he was in his 30s, they say.

"We tell him to take it easy, but he doesn't listen," says daughter Almas Edhi. "He wants to keep busy."

On the Net
http://www.edhifoundation.com/
http://www.pcp.org.pk/

Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press.


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JAPAN: Daughter of '102-year-old woman' facing fraud charges in Fukushima

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IWAKI, Fukushima Prefecture  / The Japan Times / Kyodo News / August 30, 2010

Police said Sunday they had arrested the 70-year-old daughter of a woman registered as 102 years old but who is most likely dead, for allegedly defrauding the city of Iwaki, Fukushima Prefecture, of ¥300,000 in special benefits her mother would have been owed if she were alive.

Aiko Watanabe, the fifth daughter of Michi Watanabe, turned herself in Saturday after skeletal remains were found at their home. She told investigators that her mother died in about 1996, but that she used the money her mother was still receiving to cover living expenses, they said.

Police believe the remains are those of Michi Watanabe, given her daughter's account and autopsy results indicating she died more than five years ago. They are now investigating whether the suspect falsely received her pension benefits.

Based on the suspect's allegedly false response to an inquiry about elderly people, the city paid out benefits related to her mother's centenary in September 2007, according to the police.

The office lost contact with her on Aug. 19 after trying to confirm the mother's presence following revelations that several centenarians are also unaccounted for in other parts of Japan.

(C) The Japan Times

Read earlier report about Michi Watanabe in MAINICHI JAPAN

INDIA: Old Age Home In North East India celebrates foundation day

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DIMAPUR,  Nagaland / The Eastern Mirror / August 30, 2010

Our Correspondent - EMN

KOHIMA, Nagaland - The first and only Old Age Home in Kohima, providing home to 21 elders from different parts of the State without any financial assistance from the Government, today celebrated its fifth foundation day at the Home on Indira Gandhi Stadium road, Kohima. Parliamentary Secretary for Social Welfare and Women Development, Chotisuh Sazo, was the chief guest.

Speaking on the occasion, Sazo said the need for Old Age Home was felt and accordingly been set up in many parts of the world since many years back, while the need has been felt even in Nagaland.

Nevertheless, he remarked that the realization of such need has not been possible for many people.

The importance of establishing old age home in Nagaland cannot be overstated, he said. Many people arguing against the need of having old age home felt that it would be unnecessary because their families can take care of aged members. He, however, said that the need and the merit in having one has been established through the home.

He was appreciative of the Good Samaritans Women Society saying that, “this old age home has made many people aware that the elderly folks of our society have been given the privilege to live the last days of their lives in grace and with dignity.” Without any doubt, he also maintained that the lives of aged people have been dramatically transformed from pitiable to admirable state.

Later, the Parliamentary Secretary also released the magazine of the Old Age Home entitled ‘Into the sunset with dignity!’

Chairing the function, Managing Director of the Home, Neithonuo T Liegise, highlighted on the activities of the Home saying that their vision is to provide and promote quality geriatric care with pleasant and secure environment as well as to support them to retire with dignity and encourage them to complete their life journey peacefully.

Kohima Old Age Home, established in 2005, was first located at D. Block till the State government provided the present land for them.

The function began with Pastor of Mission Revival Church, Basanguü Yashü pronouncing the invocation prayer. Joint Secretary of Good Samaritan Women Society, Ayien Theünuo, delivered the welcome address while Secretary, Shuya, tendered the vote of thanks.

August 29, 2010

USA: Two new books show why aging - and anti-aging - science matters

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WASHINGTON / The Washington Post /  Outlook & Opinions / August 29, 2010

BOOK REVIEW
The scientific quest to combat aging -- two books take sides

By Susan Okie

It's striking that two new books on the same subject -- science's current efforts to slow aging and lengthen the human lifespan -- view a single body of research through such different lenses.


LONG FOR THIS WORLD
The Strange Science of Immortality
By Jonathan Weiner
Ecco. 310 pp. $27.99


In "Long for This World," Pulitzer Prize-winning science writer Jonathan Weiner surveys the field as if from a mountaintop:

He's intrigued, yet detached and skeptical, frequently digressing from science to discuss how religions and cultures have dealt with the problem of mortality and to ponder whether humans' lust for ever-longer lives is a good thing.



In "The Youth Pill," science and business journalist David Stipp hunkers down in the trenches with researchers as they test compounds, such as resveratrol, rapamycin and their chemical cousins, that offer the hope (based mainly on animal studies) of warding off many of the ills that afflict aging bodies.

THE YOUTH PILL
Scientists at the Brink of an
Anti-Aging Revolution
By David Stipp
Current. 308 pp. $26.95

Although no drug has been shown to extend the human lifespan, David Stipp argues that such remedies are potentially just around the corner -- and that the federal government should fund clinical trials to speed their arrival on pharmacy shelves.

Meanwhile, resveratrol, found in small amounts in red wine, is being marketed as a dietary supplement, even though no studies have established whether taking large doses over long periods is safe and effective.


Weiner usually structures his books around the work and ideas of individual scientists, and for this one he has chosen Aubrey de Grey, a brilliant but eccentric Cambridge computer scientist who has become an acknowledged leader in devising strategies to vanquish aging. As a protagonist, de Grey is unappealing: He's good at seeing the big picture, but he's described as an arrogant man who takes pleasure only in working, swilling beer and punting on the River Cam.

Weiner uses their encounters to lay out current theories about why we age. Aging is not a biological constant: Some organisms (hydras and sponges, for example) seem to be virtually immortal, while some closely related groups of animals (such as bats and mice) have dramatically different lifespans. Human aging stems from progressive damage to our cells and their DNA -- caused by threats from within, such as dangerous byproducts of metabolic reactions, and from without, such as exposure to radiation or mutagenic chemicals. It's also thought to result from inherited mutations that have persisted in our genomes because they improve our reproductive success, though they take a toll later in life.

De Grey simplifies aging to a list of the "deadly things" that eventually happen to everyone: the accumulation of junk inside and outside cells, harmful mutations, a loss of certain crucial cells and an oversupply of others, and the progressive cross-linking of molecules in connective tissue that leads to wrinkled skin, stiff tissues and organ damage. Fix those problems, he argues, and a human being could live to be 1,000.

Sound far-fetched? I agree -- yet discoveries during the past two decades suggest that some of these processes can at least be postponed. Despite his overly cheerleading tone, Stipp does a better job than Weiner of explaining this recent progress and conveying the mounting excitement of scientists in the field. His central character is David Sinclair, a brash Harvard researcher whose 2006 study of resveratrol's life-extending effects in mice ignited the interest of investors, drug companies and the public. Stipp, a former reporter for Fortune and the Wall Street Journal, also interviewed other scientists on the forefront of the search for compounds that, like resveratrol, appear to activate genes involved in animals' response to environmental stress. Some of these genes were discovered in mutant worms or fruit flies that lived unusually long; others were found by researchers exploring why restricting food intake lengthens lifespan and conserves vigor in virtually every species that's been studied.

Calorie restriction itself isn't a practical therapy: It shrinks muscles, causes fatigue and infertility, and makes people miserably hungry. But compounds that selectively activate some of the genes that are activated by calorie restriction may slow aging without these side effects. In a study sponsored by the National Institute on Aging, one such compound, rapamycin, increased the maximum lifespan of mice by around 10 percent; small trials have been conducted in people with heart disease and cancer, but rapamycin's net effect on human health is unknown.

The past two centuries have already seen a doubling of average life expectancy, with most of the progress in the past 50 years coming from improvements in the lives of older adults.

"The number of centenarians on the planet has more or less doubled with every decade since 1960," Weiner notes. Longer lifespans in developed countries are strongly associated with lower birthrates, leading to changes in population makeup and raising questions about the impact on national economies.

While Stipp suggests that anti-aging drugs could deliver a "free lunch," it seems more likely that there will be costs -- for the individual, for society, for the planet. As Weiner writes, "No other scientific program raises so many enormous and imponderable questions, and they are so blithely dismissed by the engineers who would build the dam in the valley of the shadow of death."

Susan Okie is a physician, a freelance medical journalist and a former Washington Post reporter and editor.

© 2010 The Washington Post Company

USA: Superman Hat Website Makes Kids Smile and Granddads Dream

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DETROIT, Michigan / EIN News / August 29, 2010

Superman is a fictional character, a comic book superhero appearing in publications by DC Comics, widely considered to be an American cultural icon. Created by American writer Jerry Siegel and Canadian-born American artist Joe Shuster in 1932 while both were living in Cleveland, Ohio, and sold to Detective Comics, Inc. (later DC Comics) in 1938, the character first appeared in Action Comics (June 1938) and subsequently appeared in various radio serials, television programs, films, newspaper strips, and video games.

Mark Maupin 60 year old internet marketer said I use to run from the bus to watch superman when I came home from grade school. Look at the super hero today movies and now my grandchildren are running to see him in action. It has been fun to build a site for his products and history. I can not run as fast as I could as kid, but I can wear a Superman Hat.

With the success of his adventures, Superman helped to create the superhero genre and establish its primacy within the American comic book. The character's appearance is distinctive and iconic: a blue, red and yellow costume, complete with cape, with a stylized "S" shield on his chest. This shield is now typically used across media to symbolize the character.

The original story of Superman relates that he was born Kal-El on the planet Krypton, before being rocketed to Earth as an infant by his scientist father Jor-El, moments before Krypton's destruction. Discovered and adopted by a Kansas farmer and his wife, the child is raised as Clark Kent and imbued with a strong moral compass. Very early he started to display superhuman abilities, which upon reaching maturity he resolved to use for the benefit of humanity.

Check out Maupin's Superman hat website

© 1995 - 2010 IPD Group, Inc.

USA: Besse Cooper Got By With A Bit of Family Help - To Blow Out 114 Candles

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MONROE, Georgia / The Walton Tribune / August 29, 2010

Cooper: One for the record books

By Stephen Milligan

    RECORD OF THE YEARS:  Besse Cooper of Monroe is the third oldest person in the world.     Friends, family, and Monroe Mayor Greg Thompson celebrated her 114th birthday Thursday.

Celebrating her birthday Thursday, Besse Cooper needed a bit of help from family to blow out the candles on her birthday cake — all 114 of them.

Cooper celebrated her 114th birthday in style Aug. 26, marking her as the third oldest person in the world, the second in the country and the oldest person still living in Georgia.

“I feel great,” Cooper said on reaching her birthday. “It’s always a happy day.”

Although Cooper has been alive long enough to see the Roaring Twenties, the Great Depression, two world wars, the moon landing and so many other of the historic events that marked the 20th Century, she’s still alert. Her hearing is failing, but she seemed pleased with all the attention, as TV stations, newspapers and even the “Guinness Book of World Records” came to witness her big day.

“Oh, good,” Cooper said smartly when told Mayor Greg Thompson wished her well on her birthday. Not only that, the mayor also read a proclamation making Aug. 26 Besse Cooper Day in Monroe.

For reaching 114, Cooper will appear in the new 2011 edition of the “Guinness Book of World Records,” set to come out later this year, as one of the top 10 oldest people in the world. Last year, she wasn’t even on the list.

“Not a lot of people turn 114,” said Robert Young, the editorial consultant on gerontology for Guinness.

Only about one in a billion reach that age.”

Cooper could only shake her head when asked if she ever though she’d reach such an age.

“Of course, I didn’t,” Cooper said, but said she was glad to see another birthday. “A lot of people came. My children came. I got letters and cards. That’s the best part of it all.”

© 2010 The Walton Tribune

August 28, 2010

INDIA: She would have been 100 - Celebrating Mother Teresa

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NEW YORK / Wall Street Journal / India Realtime / August 28, 2010

By Siddhartha Vaidyanathan

Hundreds gathered at the Empire State Building Thursday evening to pay homage to Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Mother Teresa, who would have turned 100 on August 26 had she been alive. Some were there in “peaceful protest” against the Empire State building’s decision not to light up the building in blue and white, but others said they were there to “simply celebrate a great life.”  Peter O’Hara joined several hundred protesters at the Empire State Building on Thursday.
Keith Bedford for the Wall Street Journal

Click here for full report

Copyright ©2010 Dow Jones & Company, Inc

JAPAN: He'll no longer pull strings - popular puppet animation producer dies at 85

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TOKYO, Japan / The Japan Times / Entertainment / Kyodo News / August 28, 2010

Puppet animation producer Kihachiro Kawamoto, best known for the NHK series "Sangokushi" ("The Romance of the Three Kingdoms"), died Monday of pneumonia, his family said Friday. He was 85.

Pulling the strings: Leading puppet animation producer Kihachiro Kawamoto shows the puppet of Zhuge Kongming, a character from "Sangokushi," in March 2007. Kyodo Photo

Kawamoto released numerous stop-motion puppet animation films, including "Oni" ("The Demon"), "Dojoji" ("Dojoji Temple"), and the series "Heikemonogatari" ("Tale of the Heike"), which was also aired on NHK.

In 1963, he traveled to Czechoslovakia to study under acclaimed puppet motion picture animator and film director Jiri Trnka.

His last film "Shishanosho" ("The Book of the Dead"), based on a book by Japanese folklorist Shinobu Origuchi, premiered in 2005.

The recipient of many film awards at home and abroad, Kihachiro Kawamoto was awarded the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette in 1995. In 2007, a museum displaying his major productions was opened in Iida, Nagano Prefecture.

(C) The Japan Times

Also read
Interview with Akino Kondoh
The Passing of a Puppet Master:
Kihachiro Kawamoto (1925-2010)












                            Seniors World Chronicle
Brings you a wide selection of
News reports and features on Aging.
Visit our home page
To send us a token of your support!

August 27, 2010

USA: Social networking among internet users aged 50 and older doubled in one year

.
WASHINGTON DC / Pew Internet & American Life Project / Reports / August 27, 2010

Older Adults and Social Media
By Mary Madden

While social media use has grown dramatically across all age groups, older users have been especially enthusiastic over the past year about embracing new networking tools.
 
Social networking use among internet users ages 50 and older nearly doubled—from 22% in April 2009 to 42% in May 2010.


Overview
• Between April 2009 and May 2010, social networking use among internet users ages 50-64 grew by 88%--from 25% to 47%.
• During the same period, use among those ages 65 and older grew 100%--from 13% to 26%.
• By comparison, social networking use among users ages 18-29 grew by 13%—from 76% to 86%.

“Young adults continue to be the heaviest users of social media, but their growth pales in comparison with recent gains made by older users,” explains Mary Madden, Senior Research Specialist and author of the report. “Email is still the primary way that older users maintain contact with friends, families and colleagues, but many older users now rely on social network platforms to help manage their daily communications.”

• One in five (20%) online adults ages 50-64 say they use social networking sites on a typical day, up from 10% one year ago.
• Among adults ages 65 and older, 13% log on to social networking sites on a typical day, compared with just 4% who did so in 2009.

At the same time, the use of status update services like Twitter has also grown—particularly among those ages 50-64. One in ten internet users ages 50 and older now say they use Twitter or another service to share updates about themselves or see updates about others.

About the Survey
This report is based on the findings of a daily tracking survey on Americans' use of the Internet. The results in this report are primarily based on data from telephone interviews conducted by Princeton Survey Research Associates International between April 29 and May 30, 2010, among a sample of 2,252 adults, age 18 and older. Interviews were conducted in English. A combination of landline and cellular random digit dial (RDD) samples was used to represent all adults in the continental United States who have access to either a landline or cellular telephone. For results based on the total sample, one can say with 95% confidence that the error attributable to sampling and other random effects is plus or minus 2.4 percentage points. For results based Internet users (n=1,756), the margin of sampling error is plus or minus 2.7 percentage points. In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting telephone surveys may introduce some error or bias into the findings of opinion polls
 
Read Full Report
 
Copyright 2010 Pew Internet & American Life Project

USA: Unaddressed sexual problems may impair quality of life of diabetes patients

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NEW YORK / BusinessWeek / Lifestyle / Executive Health / August 27, 2010

Older Diabetes Patients Still Sexually Active, Study Finds
But many have unaddressed sexual problems that may impair their quality of life, expert says

Most older adults with diabetes are sexually active but the disease does cause some problems with intimacy, a new study found.

U.S. researchers surveyed 1,993 people, aged 57 to 85, and found that nearly 70 percent of partnered men with diabetes and 62 percent of partnered women with diabetes had sex two or three times a month, which is comparable to people the same age without diabetes.

However, compared with men without diabetes, diabetic men were more likely to lack interest in sex and to experience erectile dysfunction. Men and women with diabetes reported a higher rate of orgasm problems, such as climaxing too soon (men) or not at all (men and women).

The study, published in the September issue of the journal Diabetes Care, also found that 47 percent of men with diabetes had discussed sexual problems with a doctor, compared with only 19 percent of diabetic women. Men were much more likely than women to initiate this type of discussion.

Diabetes Can Cause Sexual Problems in Women Too

Photo courtesy: Health.cm/Getty Images

"Patients and doctors need to know that most middle-age and older adults with partners are still sexually active despite their diabetes. However, many people with diabetes have sexual problems that are not being addressed," study lead author Dr. Stacy Lindau, an associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology and of medicine at the University of Chicago, said in a university news release.

"Failure to recognize and address sexual issues among middle-age and older adults with diabetes may impair quality of life and adaptation to the disease," added senior author Dr. Marshall Chin, a professor of medicine at the University of Chicago. "Sexual problems are common in patients with diabetes, and many patients are not discussing these issues with their physicians."

More information:
The U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases has more about diabetes and sexual health.
-- Robert Preidt

SOURCE: University of Chicago Medical Center

Copyright © 2010 HealthDay.

CANADA: Alzheimer's caregivers suffer severe stress, depression

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VANCOUVER,  British Columbia / The Vancouver Sun / Health / August 27, 2010

Caregivers run high risk of anger and anxiety, Canadian Institute for Health Information study warns

By Carmen Chai and Gerry Bellett, Vancouver Sun

Philip Seth has been the primary caregiver to his 88-year-old mother and he is aware their situation is not likely to improve. Photograph by: Gerry Kahrmann, Vancouver Sun

Philip Seth is one of the two million Canadians providing informal care to an aged relative -- in Philip's case his 88-year-old mother.

On Thursday, the Canadian Institute for Health Information released the results of a study that showed one in six of Canada's informal care providers were experiencing severe stress.

And those like Seth taking care of people with Alzheimer's disease and other serious conditions ran the highest risk of feeling depression, anger and anxiety.

Seth's mom has dementia, suffers from deafness and has difficulties making herself understood, he said.

"But I consider myself lucky my mother is relatively high functioning, the difficulty is she's quite incoherent sometimes," said Seth, an only child and his mom's only caregiver, a role he seems to have had for as long as he can remember.

Nancy White, manager of home and continuing care development at the CIHI, said taking care of a senior can be "hectic and it can be really scary for the caregiver."

See video
Stressful job : CTV News Channel: Nancy White, manager
The manager of home and continuing development at the Canadian Institute for Health Information discusses the study. She says stress becomes a problem when the caregiver begins to feel they cannot continue their duties because they feel upset or frustrated.

The organization researched more than 130,000 seniors to compile two reports -- on Canadians' experiences with coping with informal care and helping seniors with Alzheimer's -- that were released Thursday. White said the reports are the "first snapshot looking at understanding what's going on in Canadian home care."

"This may be a sad story but it's an important story that families need to understand and the health care system can use these findings to prepare for the future," White said.

Seth admitted feeling frustrated.

"I'm not angry but I'm incredibly desperate. I have a feeling of despair. I look into the future and all I can see is a black hole. I know things are going to get worse. It's anticipatory dread -- feelings of hopelessness, helplessness and despair," he said.

Peter Silin of Vancouver's Diamond Geriatrics Inc., a private agency that provides services to seniors and family members, said adult children should be prepared to "look down the road" and see what type of help they will be able to give aging parents.

Silin says there's an expectation that the government is going to help out but with services reduced, a greater burden has been placed on family members to do the caregiving for the elderly.

He recommends that people find out in advance what resources and programs are available to help them.

"This will relieve some of the stress. There are lots of people like myself who can provide counselling and mediation services. They should contact the Alzheimer's or Parkinson's disease societies for advice -- they have done all the legwork," he said.

As for the report's findings that one in six of the country's informal caregivers have trouble coping with anger, depression and anxiety, Silin said he was surprised it wasn't higher.

"One in six is a huge number but providing that kind of care can be really stressful. People need to think about their limits and boundaries and how exhausted they are willing to get before they will allow themselves to say 'You'll have to go into senior housing," he said.

"For children of aging parents, if they take them into their home they have to think how it might affect their marriage, what their tipping point is going to be and what are they prepared to sacrifice.

"When you are under stress it's harder to think these things through," he said.

"You have to learn to take care of yourself and sometimes some guilt and depression is unavoidable. Remember it's not your fault, it's just part of life," said Silin.

Only two per cent of Canadian seniors living at home didn't have support from a spouse, adult child, friend or neighbour. The majority received "critical" help at home with daily activities such as bathing, shopping and eating, the report said.

About 55 per cent of seniors in the study had help from a spouse while almost 75 per cent who were not married received care from an adult child. White said these percentages will grow as the number of families keeping elderly members at home steadily increases.

gbellett@vancouversun.com

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