Health care tweak: Big companies get wiggle room

WASHINGTON (AP) Big retail stores, hotels, restaurants and other companies with lots of low-wage and part-time workers are among the main beneficiaries of the Obama administration's latest tweak to health care rules.

Companies with 100 or more workers will be able to avoid the biggest of two potential employer penalties in the Affordable Care Act by offering coverage to 70 percent of their full-timers.

That target is considerably easier to hit than the administration's previous requirement of 95 percent, but the wiggle room is only good for next year.

"It will be very helpful to employers," said Bill O'Malley, a tax expert with McGladrey, a consulting firm focused on medium-size businesses. "This gives them a bit of a transition period to begin expanding coverage on a gradual basis. There would be some cost savings to employers who otherwise were nowhere near meeting the standard for 2015."

It means that big companies, not only medium-sized firms, can benefit from the new employer coverage rules that the Treasury Department announced Monday. Under those rules, companies with 50 to 99 workers were given an extra year, until 2016, to comply with the health care law's requirement to offer coverage.

"I think it's pretty significant because the vast majority of the workforce is in large firms," said Larry Levitt, a health insurance expert with the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation. "It affects a much bigger swath of the economy."

President Barack Obama's health care law requires companies with 50 or more employees working 30 or more hours a week to offer them suitable coverage or pay fines.

The so-called employer mandate was written into the law as a guardrail to discourage employers from shifting workers into taxpayer-subsidized coverage. Small businesses with fewer than 50 workers are exempt. And more than 90 percent of the larger firms already offer health care.

But even if it directly impacts a relatively small share of companies, the mandate still represents a major new government requirement on businesses. At a time when the economy remains weak, implementation has been fraught with political overtones. The requirement was originally supposed to take effect in 2014, but last summer the White House delayed it for a year. Then came this week's additional delay for medium-size companies.

Treasury officials say the lower coverage standard for bigger companies should help employers struggling with the health care law's definition of a full-time worker as someone who averages 30 hours a week. Many firms have traditionally set a 35-hour week as the threshold for offering health care benefits.

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Health care tweak: Big companies get wiggle room

Religion shouldnt dictate health care; dont impose beliefs on others

Religion shouldnt dictate health care

Kathleen Parker, like many religious people, seems to believe that religious liberty means the freedom of those who are religious to impose their beliefs on everyone else with whom they interact, especially those people over whom they have some control, such as employees and also customers [Obama, practice what you preach, Opinion, Feb. 9].

This interpretation of religious liberty fails to acknowledge that religion should be private and every person should have the right to her or his own religious beliefs and practices. I believe that any state or country that imposes, legalizes or allows the imposition of any religious belief of one person onto another is taking away the religious liberty of the other person.

With that reasoning, when employers are allowed to not provide contraceptive health coverage because of their own religious beliefs, they are taking away their employees religious freedom. To borrow an observation by Jon Stewart, religious employers are already providing the means to obtain contraception it is called a paycheck. Why do so few people talk about this other side of religious liberty?

Margaret Garber, Seattle

Dont impose beliefs on others

Kathleen Parker seems to intentionally ignore that President Obama does practice what he preaches in regard to religious freedom. She just doesnt want to acknowledge what he is actually preaching.

By requiring that employers provide contraception as part of preventive insurance coverage, the president is relying on the First Amendment clause against the establishment of religion in his position that church-related groups or private employers cannot utilize the government as leverage to force their particular religious beliefs on their employees.

Would Parker be as sanguine if an Orthodox Jewish employer refused to hire any males who werent circumcised into the Covenant of Abraham? Or if a Muslim charity required all employees not to drink or eat pork? Or if a fundamentalist Christian hired only those attesting to a belief in creationism? An employers freedom of religion does not include curtailing that same freedom for their employees.

Philip L. Bereano, professor emeritus, University of Washington

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Religion shouldnt dictate health care; dont impose beliefs on others

Genetic Subtypes of Bladder Cancer Reflect Breast Cancer Biology

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Newswise A comprehensive genetic analysis of invasive bladder cancer tumors has found that the disease shares genetic similarities with two forms of breast cancer, according to researchers at the University of North Carolina Lineberger Cancer Center. Bladder cancer, which is the fourth most common malignancy in men and ninth most common in women in the United States, claimed more than 15,000 patients last year.

The analysis of 262 bladder cancer tumors, published online by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, reveals that the invasive form of the disease can be classified into two distinct genetic subtypes basal-like and luminal which were shown to be highly similar to the basal and luminal subtypes of breast cancer first described by Charles Perou, PhD, May Goldman Shaw Distinguished Professor of Molecular Oncology at UNC Lineberger. A greater understanding of the genetic basis of cancers such as breast cancer has led to the development of new therapies and diagnostic aids.

It will be particularly interesting to see whether the bladder subtypes, like the breast subtypes, are useful in stratification for therapy, said lead author William Kim, MD, associate professor with the UNC School of Medicine.

The mapping of the genetic signaling pathways of the breast cancer subtypes has led to development of drugs and diagnostic aids that aid physicians in determining the best course of therapy for patients with that disease. As the identified bladder cancer subtypes share many of the same genetic signaling pathways of breast cancer, researchers hope that the identification of the genetic subtypes can lead to similar advances.

Currently there are no approved targeted therapies for bladder cancer. Our hope is that the identification of these subtypes will aid in the discovery of targetable pathways that will advance bladder cancer treatment, said lead author Jeffrey Damrauer, graduate student in the Curriculum of Genetics and Molecular Biology.

The study also revealed a possible answer to why women diagnosed with bladder cancer have overall poorer outcomes compared to males. Analysis from female patients showed a significantly higher incidence of the deadlier, basal-like tumors, but researchers said that more research is needed before a definite link between the subtype and survival can be confirmed.

Dr. Kims lab has developed a gene map, BASE47, that proved successful as a prognostic aid when applied to the tumor samples in the study. The PAM50 genetic test, a similar genetic map developed in the Perou lab, was recently approved as a clinical diagnostic tool by the FDA.

Additional LCCC members contributing to this work are Katherine Hoadley, PhD; David Chism, MD; Cheng Fan; Christopher Tiganelli, MD; Sara Wobker, MD; Jen Jen Yeh, MD; Matthew Milowsky, MD; and Joel Parker, PhD. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant R01 CA142794 and Integrative Vascular Biology Training Grant T32-HL069768. Dr. Kim is a Damon Runyon Merck Clinical Investigator. Dr. Kim and Damrauer are inventors on the patent for the BASE47.

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Genetic Subtypes of Bladder Cancer Reflect Breast Cancer Biology

Mount Sinai Genetic Testing Laboratory Launches More Accurate Carrier Screening Test for Spinal Muscular Atrophy

New York, NY (PRWEB) February 11, 2014

The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai today announced the launch of a more accurate carrier screening test for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), one of the most common and severe autosomal recessive disorders. This new test will help prospective parents more effectively identify whether they carry the mutation that will affect their offspring. The test screens for genetic variation discovered by Mount Sinai researchers, which has been demonstrated to identify silent carriers of SMA in certain populations with higher accuracy and offers more accurate risk estimates than existing tests in all ethnic groups tested. Mount Sinai will be licensing the new test to other clinical laboratories to facilitate access to more accurate SMA carrier screening for as many people as possible.

SMA is an autosomal recessive disease that affects about 1 in 10,000 people and is one of the most deadly genetic diseases among infants and toddlers. It is transmitted by carrier parents who have no symptoms themselves; as many as 1 in 35 people may carry an SMN1 gene mutation, which is the gene that is defective in SMA. The disease kills nerve cells in the spinal cord, causing progressive degeneration among patients and diminishing capacity for walking, breathing, and swallowing. Severe forms of SMA are fatal, and there is currently no cure for the disease.

Scientists at the Mount Sinai Genetic Testing Laboratory recently used next-generation DNA sequencing to discover a new SMN1 genetic pattern that more accurately predicts the risk of having children with this disease. Current SMA carrier screening tests may result in false negative results due to their inability to detect silent carriers with two copies of the SMN1 gene on one chromosome and no copies on the other. The Mount Sinai Genetic Testing Laboratorys patent-pending enhanced SMA test identifies a novel haplotype that successfully distinguishes those duplicated genes. This work, which was conducted by Mount Sinai scientists and published in Genetics in Medicine in June 2013, significantly improves detection rates in the Ashkenazi Jewish population and improves risk estimates after a negative carrier screen for SMA in all ethnic groups.

People who choose to undergo carrier screening for spinal muscular atrophy do so to ensure that their future children will not suffer from this debilitating disease. It is important to provide patients with the most accurate risk estimates possible, said Lisa Edelmann, PhD, Director of the Mount Sinai Genetic Testing Laboratory. Launching this enhanced test based on our recent scientific findings on SMN1 will provide more meaningful answers to these prospective parents, and it can also provide new information to people who have previously been screened with existing SMA carrier tests.

The new test will be performed by the Genetic Testing Laboratory for all patients undergoing carrier screening for SMA. In addition, Mount Sinai will actively license the test to as many third-party clinical laboratories as possible.

This enhanced SMA carrier screening test shows the tremendous value in Mount Sinais approach to translational research, said Robert Desnick, MD, PhD, Dean for Genetics and Genomic Medicine, Professor and Chairman Emeritus of Genetics and Genomic Sciences at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. What began as a basic research project to identify founder alleles for Ashkenazi Jewish SMA carriers has resulted in a test that outperforms existing screening methods and offers real clinical benefit to the hundreds of thousands of people who will be screened by Mount Sinai or any of our licensees around the world.

About the Mount Sinai Health System The Mount Sinai Health System is an integrated health system committed to providing distinguished care, conducting transformative research, and advancing biomedical education. Structured around seven member hospital campuses and a single medical school, the Health System has an extensive ambulatory network and a range of inpatient and outpatient servicesfrom community-based facilities to tertiary and quaternary care.

The System includes approximately 6,600 primary and specialty care physicians, 12-minority-owned free-standing ambulatory surgery centers, over 45 ambulatory practices throughout the five boroughs of New York City, Westchester, and Long Island, as well as 31 affiliated community health centers. Physicians are affiliated with the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, which is ranked among the top 20 medical schools both in National Institutes of Health funding and by U.S. News & World Report.

For more information, visit http://www.mountsinai.org, or find Mount Sinai on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

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Mount Sinai Genetic Testing Laboratory Launches More Accurate Carrier Screening Test for Spinal Muscular Atrophy

Penn Medicine and CHOP Study: New Genetic Analysis Confirms Connection Between Cholesterol and Heart Disease

PHILADELPHIA New research is adding to a growing body of evidence showing the effects that genetics, cholesterol and other lipids in the blood have on coronary heart disease (CHD). Previous research has shown elevated levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDLc, commonly known as bad cholesterol) are known to cause heart disease, but the effects of other lipids such as high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDLc, or good cholesterol) and triglycerides (TG) have been less clear. In a new study, published online in the European Heart Journal, an international team led by researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and the Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia, used a novel genetics approach integrated with cardiovascular outcomes and lipid data taken fromblood samples from study participants to target specific lipids in the blood. The approach allowed the team to rule out other behavioral or environmental factors that may contribute to heart disease. The results are lending support to existing evidence showing that levels of TG are likely associated with risk of heart disease, while elevated levels of HDLc alone do not provide protection against CHD.

These results contribute to our current understanding of which blood lipids cause heart disease and which ones dont, said Michael Holmes, MD, PhD, research assistant professor of Surgery in the division of Transplant at Penn Medicine. Knowing that LDLc and TG contribute to an increased CHD risk allows health care providers to better offer individualized treatment plans with drugs that specifically target those lipids.

Results of the new study were gathered using a recently developed tool called Mendelian randomization (MR), which identifies genes responsible for particular diseases and analyzes genetic variations, while ruling out other behavioral or environmental variables that can be difficult to adjust for in study design. Using genetic risk scores, researchers analyzed genetic data from 62,199 participants in 12 previous studies. More than 12,000 of the participants were found to have experienced an event related to coronary heart disease (CHD).

After analyzing the genetic data, the results of the new study not only confirm that higher levels of LDLc are more likely to cause heart disease, but also show that high levels of TG also cause a higher risk of heart disease, a finding that has previously only been speculated upon. At the same time, there was little evidence to suggest that higher levels of HDLc provided protective effects against heart disease.

While the findings provide an important contribution to existing knowledge on blood lipid traits and risk of CHD, the authors suggest further studies using emerging technologies in the genomics arena are needed to precisely understand the role specific lipids and genetic predispositions play in a patients risk of CHD.

Its still not clear exactly what role HDLc plays in a patients risk of heart disease, or to what extent said senior author Brendan Keating, PhD, research assistant professor of Pediatrics and Surgery at Penn Medicine and lead clinical data analyst in the Center for Applied Genomics at The Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia. This requires further testing with new methods like Mendelian randomizing that can account for behavioral or environmental factors and focus specifically on the effects of those cholesterol subtypes.

Funding for the study came was provided by multiple sources, including the National Institutes of Health (grants N01-HC-65226, HL36310 and NHLBI33014), the UK Medical Research Council and the British Heart Foundation.

For more information on the study design and results, please see the full press release.

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Penn Medicine and CHOP Study: New Genetic Analysis Confirms Connection Between Cholesterol and Heart Disease

Marsden Medal for Barry Scott

From protecting New Zealand from the mad cow disease to guiding legislation around genetic engineering, Professor Barry Scott has been at the forefront of some of the most important scientific discussions over the past 30 years.

Now his lifes work has been recognised with the New Zealands Association of Scientists top honour, the Marsden Medal.

"Sometimes I think scientists are maniacs with the hours we work, so its nice to be recognised," Professor Scott says. "Im really delighted."

His work has taken him far from the laboratory. He has sat on world-leading boards, spoken at international conferences and helped guide government policy-makers dealing with international dilemmas.

In 1996, he was a member of a committee that advised the New Zealand Government on how to protect agriculture and human health after the outbreak of mad cow disease in Britain. As part of an expert panel, he looked at the implications for New Zealand, its agricultural sector and New Zealanders living in Britain at the time.

As a founding member of Environmental Risk Management Authority, Professor Scott was also been heavily involved in shaping New Zealands policy and decision-making around the introduction of genetically-modified organisms in the 1990s. He was regularly called upon to front public debates on the issue and to help educate people about the underlying science.

Much his work has helped the advancement of New Zealands agricultural sector, including his world-leading research into how an endophyte fungus protects ryegrass from drought, disease and insects.

He is particularly proud of the successes of students he taught and supervised, including more than 20 PhD students now employed in major organisations throughout the world.

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Marsden Medal for Barry Scott

Futurist Jack Uldrich to Deliver Two Presentations at the Million Dollar Round Table Experience in Kuala Lampur …

Los Angeles, CA (PRWEB) February 12, 2014

The 2014 Million Dollar Round Table (MDRT) Experience being held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia will feature futurist Jack Uldrich as a guest speaker on February 13th and 14th. (The MDRT Experience offers one-of-a-kind information, as well as opportunities to share innovative ideas and exclusive strategies with a diverse group of the world's leading life insurance and financial services professionals from more than 450 companies in 74 countries.)

In order to enhance their mission of being "a valued, member-driven, international network of leading insurance and investment financial services professionals/advisors who serve their clients by exemplary performance and the highest standards of ethics, knowledge, service and productivity," MDRT has chosen business trends expert Jack Uldrich as a double-heading keynote speaker. Uldrich will namely be tackling the issue of how those in the life insurance and financial services industries can begin future-proofing their businesses. Other notable speakers at the event include Bill Cates, Duncan McPherson, Colleen Francis and Eric Feng.

Uldrichs particular focus on the notion of "future-proofing" will serve as a diving board for MDRT members who will be swimming amidst a sea of technological changes in the coming years. The goal of Uldrichs sessions is to deliver cutting-edge ideas, technologically savvy information and invigorating new concepts for the 6,500 members who attend his talks.

Throughout his presentations Uldrich will cover various aspects of his popular and Bellwether Award-winning new book, "Foresight 2020: A Futurist Explores the Trends Transforming Tomorrow," and draw on his work in the field of change management. Uldrich will also draw upon ideas from his 2011 best-seller "Higher Unlearning: 39 Post Requisite Lessons for Achieving a Successful Future."

Another goal of Uldrichs, while at MDRT, is to explain how business leaders must let go andunlearnmany of their assumptions about their fields of insurance and finance, their current business models and customers, in order to grasp the full potential within their industries in the years ahead. Additionally, Uldrich will highlight why these trends demand unlearning and discuss how participants need to embrace the concept of future-proofing in order to achieve future success. Uldrich will conclude his presentations in Malaysia by reviewing specific habits, customs, beliefs and ideas that MRDT members and leaders canand must adoptin order to fully future-proof their organizations, and thrive.

An overview of some of Uldrichs ideas can be found in this YouTube clip of his presentation, "Why Future Trends Demand Unlearning", which aired on WFYI in Indianapolis. And a synopsis of some of Uldrichs written work on information technologies can be found in this article, 10 Future Mobile Trends for CIOs to Consider Today.

In the past year, Uldrich has addressed hundreds of business and trade groups from around the world, including delivering customized keynote presentations at ten McGladrey Emerging Technology Summits across the United States, Case IH, Emerson, the Womens Food Forum, PepsiCo, United Healthcare, Boston Scientific, Southern Company, Cisco, IBM, WiPro, Parsons Brinckerhoff, and various private financial firms.

Parties interested in learning more about Jack Uldrich, his books, his daily blog or his speaking availability are encouraged to contact Catherine Glynn.

Jack Uldrich is a renowned global futurist, technology forecaster, best-selling author, editor of the quarterly newsletter, The Exponential Executive, and host of the award-winning website, http://www.jumpthecurve.net. He is currently represented by a number of professional speakers' bureaus, including Leading Authorities, Convention Connection, Gold Star Speakers Bureau and Executive Speakers Bureau.

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Futurist Jack Uldrich to Deliver Two Presentations at the Million Dollar Round Table Experience in Kuala Lampur ...

PH drops anew in press freedom rankings

by Angela Casauay Posted on 02/12/2014 5:13 PM |Updated 02/12/2014 8:32 PM

AT A GLANCE. Reporters Without Borders ranks the state of press freedom across the world. Image by Reporters Without Borders

MANILA, Philippines For the 2nd year in a row and against the backdrop of unsolved media killings and the President's refusal to endorse the Freedom of Information bill, the Philippines dropped in press freedom rankings across the world.

Out of 180 countries surveyed by Paris-based organization Reporters Without Borders or Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF), the Philippines ranked 149th in the 2014 World Press Freedom Index. It dropped even further from 147th in 2013 and 140th in 2012.

The results of the survey come two months after the killing of 3 media practitioners within just two weeks. (READ: Gov't probes media killings)

Presidential Communications Operations Office Secretary Herminio Coloma Jr said the government "acknowledges" the Philippines' "slight decline" in the rankings.

Coloma told reporters: "We are committed to pursue and prosecute assailants of slain journalists so that we may obtain justice for those who were killed in the practice of their profession. We will continue to ensure that there are no prior restraints to the exercise of press freedom. This is in keeping with the spirit of EDSA People Power as we commemorate this month the 28th anniversary of the struggle that ensured the triumph of democracy over dictatorship and martial rule."

Factors

In this year's press freedom index, armed conflicts and abusive surveillance practices were some of the major factors that contributed to the repression of press freedom.

Even countries known for being democratic suffered drops in rankings. The United States (46th) fell 13 places due its handling of the trial and conviction of Private Bradley Manning and the pursuit of NSA analyst Edward Snowden.

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PH drops anew in press freedom rankings

Freedom campers flocking to reserves

A sign at Ocean Grove. Photo by ODT.

Community boards in the trial area were this month asked by the council how they thought the trial was going.

Saddle Hill Community Board chairman Scott Weatherall said since the reserve had become a trial site it had become very popular and the car park was at its maximum.

On one day he had seen a dozen campervans, eight stationwagons and two tents sited there.

The sign which said a maximum of five campervans were allowed at any one time had been used to dry washing, Mr Weatherall said, and tents were pitched in the reserve about four days a week.

Dunedin City Council parks manager Lisa Wheeler said the council would move tents on if there was a complaint or any concerns about the activity. However, board member Keith McFadyen said he fully supported campers who pitched a tent.

''I think it's fantastic.''

A family struggling financially should be allowed to camp and not have to pay the expensive fees at a camping ground, he said.

Councillor representative Cr Andrew Whiley disagreed.

''Freedom camping to me is in a vehicle - it's not tents.''

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Freedom campers flocking to reserves

Sliding press freedom: Best democracy in the world?

Malaysia hit an historic low in the World Press Freedom Index ranking 147 out of 180 countries in the latest index produced by Reporters Without Borders.

PETALING JAYA: DAP supremo Lim Kit Siang made a snide remark against Prime Minister Najib Tun Razaks best democracy in the world claim after Malaysia was ranked 147 in the World Press Freedom Index, out of a total of 180 countries.

Shame of shame! This is the worst setback to Prime Minister Najib Tun Razaks best democracy in the world claim with Malaysias 2014 Press Freedom Index falling to the lowest point in nations history, even below that of Myanmar, Lim said in a statement today.

In 2013, Malaysia was ranked 145 out of 179 countries, falling 23 rungs from the previous year.

Malaysia already plunged last year to a historic low of No 145 ranking out of 179 countries in the 2013 World Press Freedom Index the worst since the start of the annual index by Reporters Without Border (RSF) in 2002.

In the latest 2014 World Press Freedom Index just released, Malaysia fell further to 147 out of 180 countries, two places behind Myanmar which climbed from 151st ranking to 145th position this year, he added.

There are nine other South East Asian countries ranked higher than Malaysia in this latest index.

Asean nations which outperformed Malaysia include Brunei (117), Thailand (130), Indonesia (132), Cambodia (144), Myanmar (145), Philippines (149), Singapore (150), Laos (171) and Vietnam (174), Lim added.

Lim also stressed that the Malaysian ranking has plummeted ever since Najib took over the administration.

Malaysia was in a respectable ranking of 92nd position in 2006 but under Najibs premiership, Malaysia is now locked into the worst position, in the bottom quarter of 180 countries assessed.

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Sliding press freedom: Best democracy in the world?

Media Group: Press Freedom Slipping in Some Countries

A new Reporters Without Borders index cites hot spots in the Middle East, Africa and Asia as being among the worst offenders of press freedom. The journalism rights group also says there has been a significant decline in press freedom in the United States.

Reporters Without Borders says Syria has become an increasingly dangerous place for journalists during the nearly three-year conflict between the government and the opposition.

The group's U.S. director, Delphine Halgand, said Syria ranks near the bottom of the index of 180 countries. "You have to keep in mind that more than 130 news providers have been killed in Syria since the start of the conflict in March 2011, including 45 since last year. On top of that, at least 16 foreign reporters and 26 journalism providers are right now detained, kidnapped or missing," she said.

Elsewhere, Halgand said a "privatization of violence" is problematic in some African countries.

"What we mean is that non-state groups are the main source of violence against the media. This is the case in many countries in Africa like the M23 in the [DRC] Congo or the al-Shabab group in Somalia," said Halgand.

Reporters Without Borders looked at factors including transparency, media independence and level of abuses in its annual ranking of countries.

It says government attempts to crack down on social media sites and bloggers played a role in Vietnam's low index ranking of 174.

Viet Youth for Democracy co-founder Huong Nguyen said several of her friends who are bloggers have been jailed for using social media to express their views.

"The thing with social media is that it is so difficult for the government to control what people are talking about and for people to use and to discuss public affairs in the social media. That is why there has been a lot of focus from the Vietnamese government on restricting the freedom of information on the Internet," she said.

Reporters Without Borders says a government "hunt" for leaks and whistleblowers played a role in propelling the U.S. ranking down 13 positions to 46 on the index.

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Media Group: Press Freedom Slipping in Some Countries

Freedom Financial Network Reminds Consumers How to Protect Their Credit, Identity

San Mateo, Calif. (PRWEB) February 12, 2014

With several national companies including Target, Neiman Marcus and White Lodging Services reporting major data breaches recently, consumers may be worried about protecting their credit and identity. But they can take steps to protect themselves, says Kevin Gallegos, vice president of Phoenix operations for Freedom Financial Network (FFN).

More than 100 million customers may have had personal information or credit and debit card numbers stolen in the Target data breach alone. Many more could be impacted by hackers who broke into data for Neiman Marcus and for White Lodging Services, which manages franchises from Hilton, Marriott, Sheraton and Westin.

All of these customers are at high risk for identity theft, Gallegos said. And with the increasing use of online shopping, with extensive use of credit and debit cards, data fraud is a real danger. Fortunately, people can take action to protect themselves.

1.Monitor accounts daily. Keep an eye on bank and credit card accounts for unauthorized activity. Do not wait to receive monthly statements. Rather, check for discrepancies frequently each week. Thieves often use small, unusual amounts ($1.21 or 6 cents) as a test before attempting a pricier transaction. Consumers should not drop their guard. Data thieves sometimes wait months before taking action. Experts say it is not necessary to ask bank or credit card companies to issue new cards unless a problem is identified.

2.Report suspicious account activity. Consumers who notice unauthorized charges should call the bank or creditor immediately. The fraud monitoring department will cancel the card and issue a new one. They also will help to dispute charges. Cardholders are not liable for unauthorized charges. Target customers also should call the Target hotline (866-852-8580). Target will cover the cost of any fraudulent activity that results from the data breach for its affected customers.

3.Change PINs. Personal identification numbers (PINs) were among the data stolen from Target. A PIN is the number the customer enters when processing debit card transactions or making cash withdrawals from ATMs. Because the stolen PINs were encrypted, experts believe the thieves will be unable to use them. Its still wise, however, to request PINs be re-issued.

4.Register for free credit monitoring. Take advantage of free credit monitoring and identity theft protection being offered via CreditMonitoring.Target.com. Customers can register for this service until April 23. Victims of identity theft related to the Target security breach will be assigned an agent to help resolve problems.

5.Beware of scams. Thieves may have mail or email addresses and phone numbers for anyone whom Target has ever contacted. These customers are at higher risk of phishing scams. Thieves phish for additional information (such as bank account or Social Security numbers) in several ways. They may send emails that look like they are from a bank, creditor or store. Consumers should not open emails or attachments from unknown senders or click links provided by these senders. Instead, use an Internet search engine to navigate directly to a bank or credit company site. If someone calls claiming to be from a bank or credit card company, do not provide information, but instead call the toll-free number on the back of the credit or debit card to verify the earlier calls authenticity.

Any business is at risk for a cyber-attack, and with the popularity of computer-processed credit card transactions, data breaches are likely to become more widespread, Gallegos said. For these reasons as well as your ability to stick to your budget paying with cash is one way to protect yourself. But when cash is not feasible, observe safe shopping practices while remaining vigilant about your personal finance accounts."

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Freedom Financial Network Reminds Consumers How to Protect Their Credit, Identity

Black History Month talk to focus on story of Joshua Glover

RACINE One of the leaders of Americas Black Holocaust Museum will be at the Racine Public Library, 75 7th St., for a pair of events during Black History Month.

Reggie Jacksons first talk will be Wednesday night about Joshua Glover, a runaway slave who sought asylum in Racine. The free event is scheduled to begin at 6 p.m.

Glover escaped from St. Louis and lived in Racine for about two years before he was captured and jailed. Jackson said his speech will focus on how local residents helped free Glover from jail and move him to Canada through the Underground Railroad.

Its really a fascinating story of how the Underground Railroad was a part of Wisconsin, Jackson said.

His Feb. 26 speech, which also begins at 6 p.m., will focus on eugenics, a practice prevalent in the late 1800s and early 1900s that sought to improve genetics, in part by sterilizing people in the bottom rungs of society.

Jackson will discuss the ramifications of that practice and laws in place at the time that still make an impact today.

Jackson is no stranger to the Racine library. He appeared multiple times last year, facilitating a movie series on civil rights and a presentation on Americas Black Holocaust Museum founder, Dr. James Cameron.

Hes planning more speeches on race later this year, he said. Jackson has gotten a great response each time and the library is eager to have him back, Librarian Nick Demske said.

Jackson regularly gives talks in Wisconsin and around the Midwest on aspects of history related to blacks. By day, hes a special education teacher in Milwaukee.

Hes been involved with Americas Black Holocaust Museum since 2002. While the museum closed in 2008, Jackson helped establish an online presence for the museum and is part of an ongoing effort to re-establish a physical presence.

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Black History Month talk to focus on story of Joshua Glover

‘Lakshaya…’ bridges eco-system communication gap – | TV …

AP

Mumbai: 'Lakshaya: EK Living Planet', a show on environmental issues, hit the small screen with the avowed aim of creating an environment movement in the country.

'Lakshaya: EK Living Planet' is a 26-episode environment series that went on air in January on Doordarshan and airs every Sunday at 9.30 p.m.

It is hosted by Niret Alva, chairman of Miditech Pvt Ltd, who feels there is a big communication gap when it comes to environmental issues.

"In todays era there is a big gap in communication when it comes to environmental issues. While there are cutting edge public service adverts and one off documentaries, there isnt really an incisive television series that focuses on the need to better understand our fragile eco system," Alva said in a statement.

"'Lakshaya: EK living planet' fills that gap by focusing on the immediate environment issues in an investigative reportage form without mincing any words or being safe," he said.

Highlighting the unique features of the show, he said that "it works with passionate young filmmakers from around the country on the editorial approach".

"They send in story ideas, they shoot and we work together till the story truly brings out what we are trying to say," he added.

Each episode of 'Lakshaya: EK Living Planet' has five different segments - red alert - stories based on the socio-environment issues; wild India - stories based on man-animal conflict and conservation; green tech - technologies at the forefront of environment revolution; initiative, environmental success stories; and citizen, stories from citizens of India on environment issues in their backyard.

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'Lakshaya...' bridges eco-system communication gap - | TV ...

Eco-centric worldview defines cultural creatives

More than 10,000 people in 49 states gathered in vigils in early February to protest the expansion of the Keystone XL transnational pipeline because of its impact on wildlife and their habitats.

At Paul Quinn College, a 250-student, African-American Episcopal college in Dallas, Texas, the administration converted its 1.3-acre football field into a working organic farm to help local food pantries thrive in the midst of their food desert neighborhood.

A group of rice farmers in drought-stricken California partnered with an environmental organization to postpone the draining of their paddies for two extra months to create temporary pop up wetlands to help thirsty migratory birds survive.

And in Rome, word has come that Pope Francis will address environmental issues in an upcoming encyclical on the ecology of man.

There is a common-bond mover and shaker in these four diverse developments. Her name is Spirit, and she is surely amovin across the land. She has to work through us because we are all she has on this earth-plain.

Spirit is no respecter of rigid, fearful hearts. She moves where she will, delighting in toppling boundaries around politics (itll cost too much), social beliefs (but weve always done it this way), and religion (nature is there for us to use as we see fit). She scatters her pearls and amethysts of grace and wisdom in our paths, hoping that we will succumb to her sacred promptings for turning our oft-fearful selves into agents of hope, change and action.

As I added those four good news stories to my already overstuffed folder on hopeful environmental happenings, I remembered Fr. Pierre Teilhard de Chardin. Spirit surely touched the thoughts of this Jesuit mystic and paleontologist. Teilhard was a prophet of good things to come, when he talked about noogenesis, the growth of the collective sphere of human consciousness for the greater good (later known as the global brain). Before his death in the middle 1950s, he was writing about the hope of transcending the barriers to human unity and peace.

In a 1997 issue of Computer-Mediated Communicationmagazine, PaulistFr. Phillip J. Cunningham noted that Teilhard predicted the emergence of an organic informational system in which we are linked together within a web of conscious reflection. It later came to be known as the Internet.

Before the Internets genesis, preceding technologies -- radio and television -- were already linking people across the world, bringing new ideas and cultures in touch with one another, according to social researcher Paul Ray.

That brings us to another level of Spirits workings through human beings, where she brings more of us together into a social caring bond called the "cultural creatives."

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Eco-centric worldview defines cultural creatives