Judge: Florida's health care for needy kids violates US laws

MIAMI (AP) - A federal judge has ruled that Floridas health care system for impoverished and disabled children violates several U.S. laws.

In a ruling Wednesday, U.S. Circuit Judge Adalberto Jordan said lawmakers had for years set the states Medicaid budget at an artificially low level, causing pediatricians and other specialists for children to opt out of the insurance program for the needy.

Jordan said that amounted to rationing of care and exacerbated a shortage of pediatricians, particularly in rural areas.

This is a great day for the children in this state, said Dr. Louis B. St. Petery, a Tallahassee pediatrician who is executive vice president of the Florida Pediatric Society and helped spearhead a 2005 lawsuit against Floridas Department of Health, Department of Children and Families and the Agency for Health Care Administration.

This action was taken because we found that children werent being treated properly if they were on Medicaid. Our position as pediatricians is that children do not choose their parents. They dont have a choice to be born into a rich family or a poor family, St. Petery told The Miami Herald (http://hrld.us/1rFlx23 ).

On behalf of the state agencies named in the lawsuit, the Agency for Health Care Administration issued a statement Wednesday responding to Jordans ruling: The Judges outdated observations pertain to a Medicaid program that no longer exists. Floridas new Statewide Medicaid Managed Care program is cost-effective and a working success.

Enrollment in the Medicaid program increased from 1.2 million in 2005 to 1.7 million in 2011, but the number of pediatricians did not rise at all, Jordan said.

The judge found that almost 80 percent of children enrolled in the Medicaid program are getting no dental services at all.

He also said Florida health regulators were leaving a third of the states children on Medicaid with no preventative medical care despite federal legal requirements, and they sometimes switched children from one Medicaid provider to another without their parents knowledge or consent.

The number of needy Florida children able to get a potentially life-saving blood screening for lead is extremely low, notwithstanding the fact that part of Florida has an aging housing stock, which means children are more likely exposed to lead-based paint, Jordan ruled.

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Judge: Florida's health care for needy kids violates US laws

Two thirds of cancer cases were genetic of bad luck: study

TWO thirds of adult cancer cases were the result of genetic bad luck rather than unhealthy living, according to groundbreaking new research from the US.

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine scientist Dr Bert Vogelstein said random mutations in DNA were the most common cause of cancer, with the rest caused by environment or inherited genes.

But he warned the finding should not be taken as a licence to drink or smoke to excess.

"This study shows that you can add to your risk of getting cancers by smoking or other poor lifestyle factors," Dr Vogelstein said.

"However, many forms of cancer are due largely to the bad luck of acquiring a mutation in a cancer driver gene regardless of lifestyle and heredity factors."

Researchers compared the number of times organ stem cells divided with the risk of cancer in the tissues.

Those with the most divisions were generally more prone to tumours.

They found 22 of 31 cancer types were caused by random cell mutations - really just genetic misfortune which scientists could not otherwise explain.

The remainder, including smoking-related lung cancer and skin cancer, were related to heredity and environmental factors like exposure to harmful chemicals.

"Cancer-free longevity in people exposed to cancer-causing agents, such as tobacco, is often attributed to their 'good genes', but the truth is that most of them simply had good luck," Dr Vogelstein said.

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Two thirds of cancer cases were genetic of bad luck: study

Futurist says movie got some things right

(CNN) -

There are only nine months left to get that flying car designed and in production.

The Internet has reminded us of the very specific vision "Back to the Future II" had for October 21, 2015. Flying cars zipping through the air, auto-drying clothes that fit to your body, shoes that lace up on their own and time travel are all the norm when Marty McFly and his girlfriend, Jennifer, played by Michael J. Fox and Elisabeth Shue, land in that year.

And don't even get us started on the fact that we still don't have time travel.

The 1989 film did highlight a few technologies that are currently in our present -- or at least similar items. Future Marty has a video call with his coworker and boss, people are able to answer the phone with glasses that are very much like Google glass, and of course hoverboards do exist, though they're not as cool or as high-flying as in the movie.

There's also no "Jaws 19," but we do have 3-D movies and holograms, as seen on the screen. As for flying cars, there is the Terrafugia Transition and the AeroMobil, but don't count on coasting the friendly skies in those anytime soon, especially using banana peels and such for fuel.

Futurist Michael Rogers told Newsweek the movie did get a few things right.

"Three definite hits: biometrics, large screen home displays, video telephone calls," Rogers said. "Skype and FaceTime are part of everyday usage; by the end of the decade I think it will be totally natural for younger users to transition from text to audio to video in a single call, depending on the content at the moment."

You still have a wait, however, for things like hydrated pizza.

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Futurist says movie got some things right

Back to the Future II Takes Place This Year. How Close Did We Get?

Every decade produces iconic pieces of futurism that help to define a generation. For the 1960s it was The Jetsons and Star Trek. For the 1970s it was Future Shock and Soylent Green. What about the 1980s? It was almost certainly Back to the Future Part II.

Sure, Back to the Future Part II didn't get great reviews when it first came out. The 1989 film was seen as a lesser achievment than the original Back to the Future. But it became firmly wedged into the brains of a generation that wanted to believe the future was going to be filled with amazing technological advances.

I know I wanted to believe. It's half the reason I write about past visions of the future! When I was a kid I wanted nothing more than that hoverboard Marty zips around on. But BTTF2 was more than just hoverboards.

It's now the year 2015 (the year that Marty McFly travels to in the film) and we're launching a new series with American Public Media's Marketplace Tech, looking at the different futuristic aspects of the movie.

You can hear the first episode in our series below, and feel free to let us know what your favorite BTTF2 technology is in the comments. Was it the automatic dog walker? How about that thumbprint payment system? Some of the technological predictions were spot on, while others are still yet to be realized. We'll be exploring many of them in the next few months.

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Back to the Future II Takes Place This Year. How Close Did We Get?

Lawns Transformed Into Sculpture Galleries

On the front lawn of the Marvelwood Drive home of Ted Baldwin and Barbara Geller, a young giraffe stretches for food. Nearby, its towering parent surveys the landscape. A stork cackles while a giant black spider meanders through the low-growing, bamboo-like grass.

All are neighbors in the Baldwins free-range residential paradise.

Some homeowners adorn their lawns with inflatable Santas, wicker deer, and other holiday displays. In the spring, others put outwhirligigs or garden gnomes. A few, however, defy the status quo. Their yards are year-round outdoor galleries, showplaces for the art they create, or just love to collect. For some outdoor gallerists, showing their art is a means of communicating and creating interest for neighbors and passersby. For others, showing their art makes sense for practical as well as aesthetic reasons.

Baldwin, a retired state judge, said that a shady canopy of trees around his house made growing a conventional lawn difficult. So he and Geller, a state Department of Mental Health & Addiction Services regional director, planted the special grass. It seemed to call out for some of the exotic inhabitants that now slow traffic and bring smiles on the sharp curve outside their home.

Exposed to the elements, some of the welded and assembled creatures develop a rusty patina. Others retain their original finish. Baldwin said that curating his display was simply a matter of showing the things they like. If we like them, we buy them, he said.

Less than a mile away on another well-traveled, residential road, Dog draws the eye with its machine-like appendages and commanding presence.

The Ramsdell Street sculpture is the work of Marcus Schaeffer, aka Markus Surrealist, who fabricates and restores metal sculpture at Versteeg Art Fabricators in Bethany. He has worked on public sculptures including Tony Rosenthals well known Alamothe cube sculpture at Astor Place in New York City. The company also restored Alexander Calders Gallows and Lollipops, the monumental kinetic sculpture at Yales Beinecke Plaza.

Dog wasinspired by the Yale bulldog mascot and Yales relationship with the city. The general aesthetic he said, was also influenced by early industrial design and heavy machinery like steam shovels and locomotives. Like most of my art, its based on a philosophy/conceptual framework aesthetic I refer to as pre-dystopianism. The abandoned remnants of futures that never were, as it were. Art that riffs on the perennial tendency to romanticize the past and insist that everything is worse today and that it will all fall apart real soon now.Also theres a bit of steampunk retro-futurism in the design.

Schaeffer said the homeowner, Camille Keeler, requested the sculpture be placed on the Ramsdell Street property; also, there was no space to exhibit the piece where he had previously lived. Finally, as Schaeffer said, the whole point of sculpture for me is to allow other people to experience it. Its a way of communicating concepts that are hard to put into words. That everyone tends to interpret art differently and see different meanings in it a bonus.

Walk or drive by the home of Alexander Hunenko at Cleveland and Central Avenues in Westville, and your attention will most likely be drawn to Skowhegan, an elongated, bronze abstract sculpture resting on a tall base. His distinctive biomorphic piece is surrounded by well-tended landscaping that includes beds of clover instead of grass.

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Lawns Transformed Into Sculpture Galleries

Govt sets up task force for domestic mobile manufacturing

New Delhi, Jan 1, 2015, agencies:

Aiming to take the Make in India programme a step further, the Department of Electronics and Information Technology (DeitY) has formed a Fast Track Task Force to reestablish growth in the countrys mobile handset and component manufacturing eco-system.

The task force will be meeting the Department of Electronics and Information Technology Secretary (R S Sharma) in the first week of January, Indian Cellular Association National President Pankaj Mohindroo said. Sharma is also the chairman of the task force.

(One of the tasks is) To promote large-scale manufacturing/assembling activities to achieve production of 500 million units by 2019. This can create additional employment opportunities for 1.5 million approximately, a note issued by the department said.

It also laid thrust on increasing exports from the estimated 30 million units in 2014 to 120 million units by 2019.

Indias position in mobile phone exports has fallen from 7th in 2009 to 14th in 2013. The value of exports was $3.40 billion in 2009 and fell to $2.28 billion in 2013.

Industry stakeholders say that at this rate, handset exports will crash to zero in 2015. Through this task force, we will be reaching out to global handset manufacturers, brands, original design manufacturers and electronic manufacturing services to request them to come and set up shop in India. The government has to provide a level playing fields to those players, he said.

He said sub-committees will be formed under this group to carry out various tasks, adding that promoting manufacturing will also have a positive impact on the prices of mobile handsets and they will come down.

In India, Samsung and Micromax currently engage in the large-scale manufacturing of handsets. Nokia operated the worlds largest manufacturing facility at Sriperumbudur in Tamil Nadu which was shut down in November on tax and labour issues.

All the other players import their products mostly from China, followed by Vietnam.

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Govt sets up task force for domestic mobile manufacturing

Battle for Donetsk Airport: Ukraine’s iconic ‘Cyborg’ soldiers vs. Kremlin-backed insurgents – Video


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Lena’s Art Diary: Girls on a train! California, LA, Freezing beaches, Tiny Mountain Towns – Video


Lena #39;s Art Diary: Girls on a train! California, LA, Freezing beaches, Tiny Mountain Towns
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How To Set Up Turtle Beaches WITHOUT Having AV Cables Plugged In – Video


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