Thursday, March 31, 2011

Alert over child eating disorders

Women looking in the mirrorConcerns have been raised about eating disorders in young children
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There is an urgent need for services to recognise and treat eating disorders in young children, say doctors.

The first study of the scale of the problem in the UK has been published in the British Journal of Psychiatry.

It study of UK and Irish data suggests three in every 100,000 children under the age of 13 have an eating disorder, including children as young as six.

The charity Beat has called for more specialist treatment for young people as it could save lives.

There has been anecdotal evidence of children having eating disorders at even younger ages, but the issue had not been formally studied.

The researchers from University College London used monitoring data from between March 2005 and May 2006 in the UK and the Republic of Ireland.

They identified 208 cases of eating disorders in children between five and 13, with more than four in five cases being in girls.

Childhood eating disorder study208 cases82% of them were girls37% had anorexia nervosa1.4% had bulimia43% had an eating disorder, but not underweight

Dr Dasha Nicholls, a consultant child and adolescent psychiatrist at Great Ormond Street Hospital, said there were huge developmental differences between children and adolescents and adults.

"Unfortunately, many eating disorder services are aimed specifically at adolescents," she said.

"Our study shows there is an urgent need to consider the needs of children with eating disorders separately and not simply lower the age range of existing adolescent services."

She added that it had been thought that puberty could be a trigger for eating disorders, however, that did not account for these cases.

A spokesperson for the charity Beat said: "Beat welcomes this new research from UCL - and supports the call for improved diagnosis and specialist treatment for these young people.

"Although there is first class treatment available in this country for adolescents and adults with eating disorders, there is very little for those under the age of 13.

"The earlier the intervention, the better the long term prognosis for a full recovery to avoid these young lives being blighted or even lost to these serious conditions."

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/health-12920551

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5 live host up for trio of awards

Victoria DerbyshireDerbyshire is nominated for best news show, speech broadcaster and best speech programme
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Radio 5 live's Victoria Derbyshire has been nominated for three prizes at this year's Sony Radio Academy Awards.

The host is up for best news show, speech broadcaster and best speech programme.

Comic Frank Skinner is also nominated in three categories for his show on Absolute Radio, including best speech personality.

Radio 3, Radio 4 and TalkSport will fight it out for national station of the year prize.

Radio 2's Chris Evans, Absolute Radio's Christian O'Connell, TalkSport's Alan Brazil, LBC's Nick Ferrari and 5 Live's breakfast duo Nicky Campbell and Shelagh Fogarty are in the running for best breakfast show.

Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood and Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker will compete for the music personality of the year honour, along with Radio 1 DJs Chris Moyles and Scott Mills, who won the award last year.

Wood, 63, who hosts a show on Absolute Radio, is also shortlisted for the Rising Star Award.

He joins a number of other presenters up for two awards including Moyles and Radio 2's Jeremy Vine and Mark Radcliffe.

Ronnie WoodRolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood is shortlisted for a rising star award

Moyles, who recently set a new world record for an on-air marathon with sidekick Comedy Dave Vitty, is also nominated for best entertainment programme.

As well as speech broadcaster of the year, Vine also receives a nod for best interview when he grilled former Prime Minister Gordon Brown just moments after he was caught on tape calling Gillian Duffy a "bigoted woman" during the 2010 election campaign.

Competing against Vine for the honour are 5 live's Danny Baker for his interview with Sir Elton John, Radio 4's John Humphrys for Julian Assange, Magic's Neil Fox (Robbie Williams) and John Wilson (Peter Mandelson), also for Radio 4.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/entertainment-arts-12905420

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Blood monitor 'could save �400m'

UltrasoundThe monitor was pioneered at University College Hospital, London.

The NHS could save £400m a year if a blood flow monitor was used more during surgery, the health watchdog says.

In its guidance for England, NICE says the device, which was developed in Britain and uses ultrasound, reduces complications and speeds up recovery.

It says the CardioQ-ODM cuts the length of time patients spend in hospital following major or high-risk surgery by an average of two days.

Use of the device saves £1,000 each time, the watchdog adds.

At present, fewer than three in 100 eligible patients are monitored using it, but NICE estimates if that figure was increased to 50 in 100 patients, it would save the NHS in England more than £400m a year.

Based on the same technology as a police speed gun, the monitor uses ultrasound to measure the rate of blood flow from the heart.

The device, which has an ultrasound probe at its tip, is inserted into the oesophagus or gullet.

The signal is reflected by blood cells travelling down the aorta, which enables doctors to establish how much oxygen and nutrients are being sent to vital organs.

“The great thing about this is everybody wins”

Sir Andrew Dillon Chief executive, NICE

The monitor was pioneered at University College Hospital in London.

Monty Mythen, professor of anaesthesia at the university said: "The main benefit is it allows us to adjust the amount of fluid and blood we give to the patient to maintain optimum flow during surgery.

"This helps prevents complications in the post-operative period and means patients feel well more quickly."

Because the probe is inserted into the gullet, it also reduces the risk of infection that comes with monitoring using a tube inserted through a vein into the heart.

"The great thing about this is everybody wins," said the chief executive of NICE, Sir Andrew Dillon.

"There are fewer complications for patients post-operatively, they spend less time in hospital and the NHS can save money. It's a much more efficient way of undertaking this kind of surgery."

This is not new technology - proDeltex Medical, based in Chichester, West Sussex, has been producing the monitor for around 20 years.

But its chief executive, Ewan Phillips, is hopeful NICE's backing will lead to a huge increase in orders at home and overseas.

"It takes a long time for ideas from the clinicians to feed through to the senior management - the sort of people who can make decisions to do things on a wide scale. That's always been a problem in the NHS," he said.

NICE's guidance applies to England, but it hopes hospitals around the UK will begin to use the heart monitor more frequently as a means of benefiting patients and cash-limited budgets.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/health-12899316

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Gravity probe shows 'Potato Earth'

Model of Earth's gravity

How gravity differs across Planet Earth. Video courtesy ESA

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It looks like a giant potato in space.

And yet, the information in this model is the sharpest view we have of how gravity varies across the Earth.

The globe has been released by the team working on Europe's Goce satellite.

It is a highly exaggerated rendering, but it neatly illustrates how the tug we feel from the mass of rock under our feet is not the same in every location.

Gravity is strongest in yellow areas; it is weakest in blue ones.

Scientists say the data gathered by the super-sleek space probe is bringing a step change in our understanding of the force that pulls us downwards and the way it is shaping some key processes on Earth.

Chief among these new insights is a clearer view of how the oceans are moving and how they redistribute the heat from the Sun around the world - information that is paramount to climate studies.

Those interested in earthquakes are also poring over the Goce results. The giant jolts that struck Japan last month and Chile last year occurred because huge masses of rock suddenly moved. Goce should reveal a three-dimensional view of what was going on inside the Earth.

"Even though these quakes resulted from big movements in the Earth, at the altitude of the satellite the signals are very small. But we should still seem them in the data," said Dr Johannes Bouman from the German Geodetic Research Institute (DGFI).

Ocean currents (Bingham)Built from Goce data: To understand how ocean currents move you need to understand the role of gravity

Technically speaking, the model at the top of this page is what researchers refer to as a geoid.

It is not the easiest of concepts to grasp, but essentially it describes the "level" surface on an idealised world.

Look at the potato and its slopes. Put simply, the surface which traces the lumps and bumps is where the pull of gravity is the same.

Described another way, if you were to place a ball anywhere on this potato, it would not roll because, from the ball's perspective, there is no "up" or "down" on the undulating surface.

Goce artist's impression (Esa)Goce flies lower than any other scientific satellite

According to this slightly bizarre way of viewing things, a boat off the coast of Europe (bright yellow) can sit 180m "higher" than a boat in the middle of the Indian Ocean (deep blue) and still be on the same level plain.

But this is the trick gravity plays on Earth because the space rock on which we live is not a perfect sphere and its mass is not evenly distributed.

The Gravity Field and Steady-State Ocean Circulation Explorer (Goce) was launched in March 2009.

It flies pole to pole at an altitude of just 254.9km - the lowest orbit of any research satellite in operation today.

The spacecraft carries three pairs of precision-built platinum blocks inside its gradiometer instrument that sense accelerations which are as small as 1 part in 10,000,000,000,000 of the gravity experienced on Earth.

This allows it to map the almost imperceptible differences in the pull exerted by the mass of the planet from one place to the next - from the great mountain ranges to the deepest ocean trenches.

An initial two months of observations were fashioned into a geoid that was released in June last year. The latest version, released in Munich at a workshop for Goce scientists, includes an additional four months of data. Each release should bring an improvement in quality.

"The more data we add, the more we are able to suppress the noise in the solutions, and the errors scale down," said Dr Rune Floberghagen, the European Space Agency's Goce mission manager. "And of course the more precisely you know the geoid, the better the science you can do using the geoid.

"We are seeing completely new information in areas like the Himalayas, the Andes mountain range, and in Antarctica particularly - the whole continent is desperate for better gravity field information, which we are now providing."

The mission has funding up until the end of 2012 when, like all European Space Agency Earth observation missions, it must seek further financial support from member states to continue.

Goce has delivered the data promised in its primary mission - some 14 months of observations in total - but researchers would like to see it fly for as long as is possible.

Because it flies so low in the sky - a requirement of being able to sense gravity signals which are incredibly weak - it needs an engine to push it forwards through the wisps of atmosphere still present at its altitude.

Without this engine, Goce would rapidly fall from the sky. But the mission team reported here in Munich that Goce probably has sufficient propellant onboard to drive its engine until deep into 2014.

GOCE SPACECRAFT PROBES GRAVITY FIELD VARIATIONS
Goce
1. Earth is a slightly flattened sphere - it is ellipsoidal in shape2. Goce senses tiny variations in the pull of gravity over Earth3. The data is used to construct an idealised surface, or geoid4. It traces gravity of equal 'potential'; balls won't roll on its 'slopes'5. It is the shape the oceans would take without winds and currents6. So, comparing sea level and geoid data reveals ocean behaviour7. Gravity changes can betray magma movements under volcanoes8. A precise geoid underpins a universal height system for the world9. Gravity data can also reveal how much mass is lost by ice sheets

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/science-environment-12911806

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Paintings saved by �15m donation

Zurbaran paintingsThe works by Zurbaran have been at Auckland Castle for 250 years
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Plans to sell off 17th Century paintings which hang in the home of the Bishop of Durham have been shelved after a £15m donation.

Church Commissioners said selling works by Spanish Baroque artist Francisco Zurbaran would have funded Church efforts in poorer areas.

But the donation by investment manager Jonathan Ruffer means the paintings can stay in Auckland Castle.

Commissioners also want the castle to become a major tourist attraction.

The paintings, which depict Jacob and his sons, have hung in Auckland Castle, in a room specifically designed and built for them, for 250 years.

In a statement, the Church Commissioners said: "It is intended that Auckland Castle shall become a leading public heritage site, bringing tourism and economic regeneration to the North East.

"The proposals have been made possible thanks to a £15m donation by investment manager Jonathan Ruffer.

"Discussions are now continuing with Durham County Council, the National Trust, the Department for Media, Culture and Sport, the Art Fund and the National Gallery about the broader future for Auckland Castle."

Nicholas Penny, director of the National Gallery, said: "It is excellent news that the Zurbarans remain in their historic home and that the castle will be more accessible to the public.

"We hope to be able to support this exciting venture in the future with loans from the National Collection."

Dr Richard Chartres, acting chair of the commissioners, said: "Jonathan Ruffer's generosity has made that rarest of scenarios possible.

"There is now an opportunity to create a leading arts and heritage centre in the North East."

Mr Ruffer's contribution was made through a new charitable trust called the Zurbaran Trust.

The Marlborough and Cambridge-educated financial expert will continue to chair his firm, but plans to spend more time in the North East helping people.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-england-12913686

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Review backs grandparent access

Agreements allowing grandparents access to their grandchildren after parents split up are proposed in a review of the law in England and Wales.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-12918256

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VIDEO: Stars turn out for Gorbachev event

Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev is being honoured at a spectacular concert at the Royal Albert Hall in London to celebrate his 80th birthday.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-12914474

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