Tag Archives: Deaths

News Ireland daily BLOG by Donie

Thursday 18th February 2016

Enda Kenny playing cute over taxation issue remarks by President Higgins

Taoiseach says he respects Michael D Higgins who ‘understands his remit’

 Tax cuts?  

President Michael D Higgins has questioned the emphasis being placed on tax cuts by political parties in a interview on the eve of the general election campaign.

The Taoiseach Enda Kenny refused to be drawn on Wednesday whether he had remonstrated with the President Michal D. Higgins after the President publicly asked if it was possible to have a decent society and at the same time lower taxes for short political gain.

Asked on RTÉ radio if it was appropriate for the President to make such a comment, Mr Kenny said he had spoken to Mr Higgins and that “he understood his remit”.

“I am not going to interfere across [the]threshold. The President has made a number of comments over the years. I have conversations with him. We understand each other”.

Asked if he had remonstrated with him over the remarks, Mr Kenny said he had a pleasant exchange of views with the President.

“He is a president I respect very much”.

Asked whether he disagreed with the President’s remarks, Mr. Kenny said politicians had to make decisions in the interests of the people.

“ My answer is it is possible to have a decent society with lower taxes”.

In an unprecedented intervention on the eve of the general election campaign President Michael D Higgins questioned the emphasis being placed on tax cuts by political parties.

“Is it possible to have a decent society and at the same time continue to lower taxes for the purposes of securing the best short-term benefit?” asked Mr Higgins.

Speaking earlier this month after the publication of his report on The President of Ireland’s Ethics Initiative, Mr Higgins warned that essential services must not become a political football in the election campaign.“I can’t obviously comment on the platforms of the parties that will contest the election,” he said before discussing the issue of taxation.

“People setting their face against tax and using the language that regards it as inevitably a great burden I’m afraid represents a view of the world [which]is not one that I think really can engage with what we are speaking about in the ethics initiative.”

The President said there had been great failures of an ethical kind in the lead-up to the recession but the good news was that the public wanted to get to a new place and wanted to get there ethically.

“But sometimes they are contradicted because they are being offered short-term advantages for themselves which are, if you like, contradicting the best of their social aspirations,” he said.

Irish Bishops urge the public to engage with and challenge election 2016 candidates?

    

The Archbishop of Armagh (above left) Eamon Martin, 

Irish bishops have this morning released a statement calling on the public to vote in the forthcoming general election.

They want all citizens and political parties to reflect and take stock of how we respond to the plight of the most vulnerable, ahead of the vote.

They say democracy flourishes when it is rooted in a shared social ethic and that good social policy requires economic stability and sustained growth.

The bishops also said that Ireland’s health crisis is the result of a fundamental failure of politics.

Pastoral Statement of the Catholic Bishops of Ireland on the Upcoming General Election in full

A general election is an important moment which offers a democratic society an opportunity to reflect on its successes and failures.

In Ireland we are fortunate to live in a lively democratic society, even with all its imperfections.

Democracy requires in the first place that all citizens exercise their right to vote and we strongly encourage all to vote in the up-coming election.

Democracy however is not limited to voting.

Democracy is fundamentally about people working and walking together to foster the common good.

Democracy is damaged by indifference and by a splintering of society or a fixation on individual interests.

A general election is a moment in which all citizens, and not just political parties, should reflect and take stock of the health of the nation and especially on how we respond to the plight of the most vulnerable.

Democracy flourishes when it is rooted in a shared social ethic.

To succeed, good social policy requires economic stability and sustained growth.

But economic growth on its own does not necessarily generate social equity.

Social equity has a logic of its own which must be worked on to achieve its aim.

Our comparatively wealthy Ireland has still a long path to travel in this task.

We share the anxiety of many citizens in Ireland at the fact that there is an uncertain social climate in the country regarding vital sectors of people’s lives, especially regarding health, homes, education, security, the fostering of a solid human ecology, and international responsibility.

Health: Most people feel great unease about the current health care system. They worry about what would happen to them if they became ill. They worry about the health of their children.

They worry about what would happen to their parents and other elderly people should they become ill. They are worried about the cost of health care.

They are worried about the quality of health care, including mental health care.

Successive governments have presented a variety of solutions and in so many cases they have either failed or have not been implemented. A blame game is not the answer.

Ireland’s health crisis is the result of a fundamental failure of politics.

Home: There is a crisis of homelessness, not just of those who sleep rough on our streets, but of those who are housed in inadequate and precarious accommodation especially in hotel rooms totally unsuitable for children and families.

All recognise that providing adequate and affordable social housing is an essential pillar of any solution.

Some more recent social housing has been poor in quality. Private rental accommodation is scarce and property market dealings are even reducing the available pool.

Education: This General election takes place on the anniversary of the 1916 Rising and the Proclamation of a Republic which set out to cherish all the children of the nation equally.

There has been much discussion about inequality in access to education. We are a young country and we will urgently need more and more new schools for the future.

The real inequality in Irish schools is not religious in nature but it is the economic inequality where poorer communities and schools with a large percentage of disadvantaged children are not being adequately supported.

Ireland is still marred by neglect of children and of lack of opportunity for the children of the most deprived and groups such as Travellers.

Security: Citizens can only exercise their rights fully if they live within an overall climate of security. The most fundamental obligation of the State is the protection of its citizens.

Recent killings on the streets of Ireland have shocked all of us.

These are not simply about gangland feuds; they are the product of a criminal industry of death which unscrupulously floods our streets and our children with drugs.

It is an “industry” which destroys young lives daily and which fosters even broader criminality.

People feel insecure in their homes both in rural and urban communities. They will willingly support policies which will strengthen An Garda Síochána.

Human ecology: Pope Francis speaks often of climate change. But he also speaks of a “human ecology”.

Austerity is not a popular word but there is another kind of austerity, that of simplicity in life-style in harmony with nature, through which all of us indicate where our real values lie, rather than in the empty values of consumerism and a rush for the superfluous.

Families deserve much greater support in their work in fostering and transmitting values.

A true human ecology recognises the equal right to life of every person from the moment of conception to the moment of natural death.

The Constitution of Ireland embraces the right to life of the unborn child.

It is a fundamental affirmation of equality, where the right to life of no child is considered of less value than that of another.

We strongly oppose any weakening of the affirmation of the right to life of the unborn.

International responsibility: Ireland is an island nation but not an isle of isolation. We belong within a world community. Ireland’s missionary past is a clear indication of the deep concern of the people of Ireland for the progress of peoples worldwide.

As a traditionally emigrant country we share a historical memory of how our emigrants were received or at times rejected in the lands to which they moved. Now it is the time for us to reciprocate the experience of openness by welcoming to our communities people who flee from persecution, from economic exclusion or from religious discrimination. Despite economic challenges Ireland can and must maintain its commitments in international life especially recent commitments to finance development and to combat climate change.

The believer in Jesus Christ cannot separate his or her understanding of responsibility in and for society from those criteria of judgement which are set out in the Gospel: “For I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you gave me clothing, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me” (Mt 25:35–36).

The Christian in politics and in society cannot renounce his or her special responsibility to protect the weak and the marginalised.

This responsibility cannot be delegated or suppressed to party interests or emptied into the language of spin.

Politics is not just the art of the possible; it is a vocation where the interests of all citizens should respected and where the respect and trust of citizens will only be won by honesty and integrity.

As bishops we encourage all citizens to engage with and challenge their local candidates about their commitment to the questions we have indicated, and about their understanding of politics as truly working and walking together to foster the common good.

Social group activities after retirement may be a good way for a longer life

  

A group of friends above relaxing together playing cards and getting involved with a choral group is a great way of transition from working to retirement life. 

Should retirement planning include strategies for being active and involved in social groups? the answer is probably yes, researchers have to say.

Losing membership in social groups during the retirement transition may be tied to lower quality of life and higher risk of death over the next six years, according to a new study of older adults in England.

“As people reach the end of their working lives, they are typically exposed to a lot of advice about how to plan their finances, medical care, and physical exercise in order to have a long and healthy retirement,” said a leading author Niklas K. Steffens of The University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia.

Social group membership may not be a part of this discussion, although the new results indicate that perhaps it should be, Steffens told Reuters Health by email.

“Social groups provide you with a sense of identity,” he said. “Amongst other things, they give you a sense of belonging, meaning, and purpose.”

The researchers studied survey responses from 424 adults who retired between 2002 and 2010 and 424 similar older adults who did not go through the retirement transition. The surveys included questions on work status, age, sex, subjective physical health, quality of life and socioeconomic status.

The surveys also asked about membership in eight categories of social groups, including social clubs, church or other religious groups.

About three-quarters of both groups were married.

For those who retired and were members of two social groups while still working, the risk of death over the next six years was 2 percent if they maintained both group memberships, 5% if they lost one group membership and 12% if they lost both group memberships, according to a report in BMJ Open.

The quality of life also decreased as group membership decreased.

“These effects are not small but are comparable with those derived from regular physical exercise,” Steffens said.

This study provides initial evidence of some connection between social groups and quality of life or mortality, but the statistics didn’t really directly test number of membership changes, said Mo Wang of the University of Florida, Warrington College of Business in Gainesville, who was not involved in the analysis.

Since the comparison group did not go through retirement, it is hard to compare them to the retirement group, Wang told Reuters Health by phone.

“The issue with this kind of study is causality is very difficult to determine,” he said. “While my inclination is that social membership would probably help directly or indirectly,” that’s not necessarily the case based on this study, he said.

Healthier people are more likely to join more groups and be more active to start with, the researchers noted.

In any case, an important part of joining a new group is making sure it’s a good fit for purpose and you, he said – make sure you choose one you enjoy and that does not cause undue stress.

“If you are in the process of retiring and don’t belong to any group, join one,” Steffens said. “If you exercise regularly, this is also likely to be good for you and your health.”

Exercising in a group may be even better, he said.

“One important way for all of us to enhance the health of those who are retired is to support them in their efforts to be part of groups that provide them with a sense of communality and belonging,” he said.

The number of swine flu deaths in Ireland this winter rises to 12

Health Protection Surveillance Centre says 341 H1N1-related hospitalisations this season

    

According to the latest weekly flu report from the HSE’s Health Protection Surveillance Centre (HPSC), a 16th individual died of flu between February 8th and February 14th.

There has been another death from swine flu bringing the death toll from the virus so far this winter to 12.

According to the latest weekly flu report from the HSE’s Health Protection Surveillance Centre (HPSC), a 16th individual died of flu between February 8th and February 14th.

The deaths have been mostly from the H1N1 virus, which is otherwise known as swine flu, as well as the B strain of the virus. The median age of those who have died from flu this year is 63.

Flu-associated deaths include all deaths where it is reported as the primary or main cause of death by the physician, or if flu is listed anywhere on the death certificate as the cause of death.

During the sixth week of the year, there were 194 confirmed flu hospitalisations, bringing the 2015/2016 season total to 665. Of these, 341 have been associated with swine flu, and 225 with the B strain. The median age of hospitalised cases for the season to date is 25.

The HPSC said most indicators of flu activity in the State decreased during week six of the year, but that activity remained “at high levels”.

It said swine flu was the “predominant virus” circulating and that reports of hospitalisations and intensive care admissions associated with flu “remain elevated”. It recommended that antivirals be considered for the treatment and prevention of flu in high-risk groups.

Smoking marijuana does not make you likely to be anxious or depressed,

A study finds out?

    

Cannabis use is not associated with increased risk for developing

Cannabis use disorders new research suggests.

But smoking marijuana does increase the risk of becoming addicted to alcohol and other substances, the study based on 35,000 American adults found.

The alcohol and drug use disorders marijuana users are at risk of include nicotine dependence, after three years of follow-up according to the paper – published in the journal JAMA Psychiatry.

The authors wrote: “Our study indicates that cannabis use is associated with increased prevalence and incidence of substance use disorders. These adverse psychiatric outcomes should be taken under careful consideration in clinical care and policy planning.”

Amir Englund, a post-doctoral researcher in psychopharmacology at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience at King’s College London, said: “The present study is a large study exploring the effects of cannabis use on future problems such as anxiety, depression and drug and alcohol addiction.

“They found that use of cannabis was related to increased risk of later addiction to alcohol, cannabis and other drugs. Cannabis was not related to anxiety or depression at follow-up.

“Of course a study such as this is unable to ascertain causality between cannabis use and later drug addiction, merely that a relationship exists.”

Russian plan for saving our earth? Nuking the 60-megaton Apophis asteroid may be the target?

    

Russia’s new plan for protecting Earth from potential asteroid strikes has some chilling aspects. Not only would it violate a 49-year-old international treaty, but it involves nuking potentially-hazardous asteroid 99942 Apophis.

On February 15, 2013, a 20-metric-tonne asteroid plummeted into Earth’s atmosphere and exploded over Chelyabinsk, Russia. Although the incident did not result in any fatalities, it highlighted exactly how important our asteroid detection and monitoring programs are, and that we should be investing considerably more in both these programs and into future plans to protect ourselves should we discover one of these space rocks on a collision course with Earth.

While teams of scientists from around the world have come up with many novel ideas on how to do this – including splattering asteroids with bright paint and letting pressure from sunlight divert their path, to putting a small satellite next to them and using gravity to draw them into safer orbits.

An old standby from science fiction has been to simply “nuke” them. The two latest examples of “doomsday from space” films – Armageddon and Deep Impact – follow this philosophy, although with slight alterations and slightly different targets (asteroid vs comet).

It seems that Russian scientists have taken some cues from these scripts now, as Russian News Agency TASS reported last week that a new project is in the works to convert some of the nation’s complement of Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) into planetary defense missiles. Rather than targetting exceptionally large asteroids, however, these upgraded ICBMs would be aimed at smaller objects, between 20-50 metres across.

On the one hand, this makes a certain amount of sense. Nuclear weapons are the most powerful ones at our disposal, and ICBMs can be launched at a moment’s notice. If we detected an asteroid inbound with only a short lead time, it is possible for an ICBM to intercept it beforehand.

On the other hand, though, there are several problems with this plan.

The very first one is that putting nuclear weapons into space violates an important part of the Outer Space Treaty of 1967, which Russia both signed and ratified (along with 103 other parties around the world). Along with the basic issue of the potential political tensions that could result from stationing nuclear weapons in space or simply aiming them in that direction, if a nuclear weapon were set off close enough to Earth, the resulting electromagnetic pulse could cripple satellites and spacecraft in orbit, and knock out power grids and computers here on the ground. This is preferable to a devastating asteroid impact, however it is not an ideal choice.

Beyond that, if a special exception was made in the Treaty for planetary defense, even science fiction has been quick to point out that some asteroids are simply too large and dense, and moving too quickly, to be noticeably affected by a blast from a nuclear weapon. Smaller asteroids, such at the one that exploded over Chelyabinsk or a bit larger, could be dealt with in this way, however that particular asteroid was only spotted when it entered the atmosphere. Not the best time to be targetting it with a nuclear missile. Others of the same size, caught further out in space, could be effectively destroyed, however.

For larger ones, a few hundred metres wide or bigger, the best you could probably do is divert it slightly from its path. If you have a very long lead-time before an impending impact, this is actually an effective strategy: Blow up several bombs in its vicinity, each one nudging it further off course, and you could put it on a trajectory that will take it safely past us (and lock it into a safe path for the foreseeable future).

Get a little more aggressive with one of these larger asteroids, such as by directly targetting the rock itself in an attempt to destroy it, and the likely result would be turning a single large space rock into a cloud of smaller pieces. In this case, unless you can guarantee that you’ve broken it down so the largest chunks are only about a metre wide or so (which would burn up fairly harmlessly in the atmosphere), you’ve probably made the situation worse. Rather than one massive strike, there would be multiple impacts, spread out over a large area, which could result in just as much damage, or possibly even more.

Why is this alarming?

According to TASS, the Russian scientists say that they want to test out their new system on a very specific asteroid – 99942 Apophis.

Apophis has already caused some concern in recent years. Discovered in 2004, plots of this asteroid’s orbit showed that it comes around for an encounter with Earth every three years or so, with some of those encounters involving close approaches. Two of these close approaches, in 2029 and 2036, were especially worrisome, since the 2029 pass had the potential to alter Apophis’ orbit just enough that the 2036 encounter could result in an impact.

NASA has since ruled out any possibility of impact from Apophis, ever, but if Russia launches one or more nuclear missiles at the asteroid during its March 28, 2036 pass – which seems to be the plan, according to TASS – it could cause unintended consequences.

The asteroid is expected to be quite distant during that flyby – at least 34 million km away, or roughly 88 times farther away than the Moon. Thus, one or even a few tiny nudges from nuclear blasts wouldn’t likely cause any immediate problems. The biggest concern for such a test is that Apophis is quite a bit larger than the size group of asteroids this defense system is apparently intended for. At roughly 325 metres across and tipping the scales at around 60 million metric tonnes, this is not an asteroid you want to mess around with, especially now that it has been deemed safe. Without knowing Apophis’ exact characteristics and composition, detonating nuclear weapons near it, or using them to break it apart, could result in a raised threat level for future passes.

There’s no word yet on whether the plan has been funded or been given the final go-ahead. Hopefully the rest of the world will be able to weigh in on the feasibility of this plan before it would go into effect.

News Ireland daily BLOG by DONIE

Thursday/Friday 17 & 18th September 2015

M. D. Higgins rejects an recovering Irish economy

Responsibility needs to be taken for housing lists and homelessness needs to be addressed,

Says the President.

 

“Our planet is scarred by inequality, and inequality is growing, and the gaps are widening in what are described as some of the most prosperous parts of the world,” President Michael D Higgins has remarked.

Those in positions of authority should apologise for not valuing social housing more in the past in light of the current housing crisis, President Michael D Higgins has said.

Speaking at the launch of Merchants Quay Ireland’s annual report on Friday, he said inequality continues to rise in Ireland, and that he “recoils” from headlines boasting the domestic economy is resurgent once more.

“Our planet is scarred by inequality, and inequality is growing, and the gaps are widening in what are described as some of the most prosperous parts of the world,” he remarked, referencing educational inequality in particular.

“I think it’s important to realise how inequalities are increasing in Ireland itself. I recoil a little bit from a headline that suggests ‘The economy roars back’ – well, the inequalities are roaring much louder in the world.

‘Simply ridiculous’

“It’s simply ridiculous to say that you’re living in a republic with republican values if you have children with different access to literacy itself, in relation to reading the schoolbooks and so forth.”

The President indicated that responsibility needs to be taken for a situation that has seen social housing waiting lists lengthening and people sleeping rough on the streets.

“The public view has to change in relation to that. The public view in relation to whether or not you want to say housing is a right, basic shelter is a right, and that it is a mark of failure in a society if decent, safe shelter is not available.

“I think it would be a great thing to hear from some authoritative body like the County and City Management Association: ‘We’re sorry we didn’t value social housing more’,” he said.

His address was given in the wake of a speech by Merchants Quay Ireland chief executive Tony Geoghegan, who revealed his “deep concern” for the welfare of homeless individuals ahead of the impending winter.

A drop-in service

The organisation’s report stated that its drop-in service provided over 5,600 supportive interventions including referrals to emergency accommodation, and served nearly 80,000 meals last year.

“I think it’s fair to say that the homeless situation at the moment is just unprecedented – we certainly haven’t seen anything like it before and it is going to require an unprecedented response to do something about it,” Mr Geoghegan said.

“Looking into this winter, we are deeply concerned for the welfare of homeless people and what is going to happen, and I’m praying and hoping that it’s not going to take something as extreme as people dying on the streets, as it did last Christmas, before there is a response,” he added.

Talking to reporters after the launch ceremony, Mr Higgins cautioned against creating an artificial “war among the poors” between those struggling for basic services in Ireland and the 4,000 destitute refugees set to enter the State, in response to commentators who say the country should resolve its own domestic problems before welcoming a large influx of immigrants.

“The very most unhelpful thing that could happen is if some kind of false tension was invented between those who shouldn’t be waiting for health services, who shouldn’t be homeless, who shouldn’t be waiting excessive periods on waiting lists, and people who are excluded in other ways,” he said.

He continued: “Our future is a diverse society that plays to the best of our Irishness […] these suggestions are that you must set the poor in contest with each other as some kind of ‘war among the poors’.

“It has always been something that is negative, and of course in many places in Europe it has led to xenophobia and in some places racism – so let’s just see it for what it is right at the beginning.”

New €1m campaign to promote potato consumption in Ireland

   

A new €1m marketing campaign was launched today (September 17) to boost potato consumption among Irish consumers, by the Minister for Agriculture, Simon Coveney.

Bord Bia will coordinate and manage the three-year campaign which has been designed to dispel fattening myths around potatoes, positioning them as naturally fat-free, tasty and versatile.

According to Kantar Worldpanel, retail sales of fresh potatoes in Ireland have declined by 25% over the last decade and by as much as one-third between 2002 and 2014.

Speaking at today’s launch Minister Coveney said that the potato is part of our culture like no other food, inextricably linked to Ireland’s story and part of who we are.

“This campaign will bring the different varieties and versatility of the Irish potato to a younger generation,” he said.

The initiative will be co-funded by the EU, Ireland’s potato industry and the Department of Agriculture and will be run in conjunction with the British Potato Council.

The overall strategy is to implement a single umbrella campaign, across both the Irish and British market, which will raise the image and profile of potatoes, and re-establish their relevance within the weekly shopping basket.

The Minister welcomed the European Commission’s decision to approve a total fund of €4.6m to promote potatoes on the Irish and British markets over the next three years of which 50% will be funded by the EU.

My department is also availing of the opportunity to grant financial support to the Irish potato industry for this positive promotional activity.

“Combined with industry funding the total campaign will be worth €1m over the three years in Ireland,” he said.

Mike Neary, Horticulture Manager at Bord Bia, highlighted some of the challenges facing the industry.

“Potatoes are still Ireland’s preferred main meal carbohydrate, however shoppers under-45 account for only 33% of potato sales and these consumers will ultimately make up a major part of the total market in the years to come.

“Younger consumers view potatoes as a traditional, unexciting food and less convenient than modern carbs such as pasta and rice,” he said.

The new promotional campaign, entitled “Potatoes – more than a bit on the side”, will focus on younger consumers, in particular, 22-44-year-old females.

Neary said that we really need to challenge consumer perceptions of fresh potatoes – particularly amongst younger age groups – in order to combat declining consumption.

“This integrated campaign will highlight the fact that potatoes offer enormous potential within the world of modern cooking and build awareness of the added health and nutritional benefits of potatoes in comparison to competitor carbohydrates,” he said.

The campaign will include print and digital advertising and it will kick off with National Potato Day on Friday, October 2.

It is estimated a total of 9,122ha of potatoes were grown in Ireland in 2014 producing 350,000t. Last year, the retail market was valued at €184m.

The main varieties of potatoes grown in Ireland include Rooster (60%), Kerr Pinks (8%), Queens (8%) and Whites (7%).

Meath, Dublin, Wexford, Louth, Donegal and Cork are the largest potato growing counties with approximately 500 active potato growers in Ireland.

HSE failed to deal with ‘sexual contact abuse in home,

A report finds

Man involved in incidents of ‘sexual abuse nature’ with another resident and a staff member

   

A report published by the Mental Health Commission into Knockroe House found evidence of three instances of sexual contact between a man and woman in its care over a five-month period in 2014.

Pamela DuncanThe HSE is to carry out a review of mental health services in Roscommon after it was found to have failed to take appropriate action on recorded instances of sexual contact between two residents in a Castlerea community service.

A report published by the Mental Health Commission into Knockroe House, a 14-bed community residence on the outskirts of Castlerea, found evidence of three instances of sexual contact between a man and woman in its care over a five-month period in 2014.

It also reported one incident “of a sexual nature” involving the same man and a woman staff member.

The inspection report published on Thusday said: “Inspection of the Incident Report books in Knockroe House identified three recorded instances of sexual contact between two vulnerable adult residents, one male, one female, over a five-month period in 2014 and one incident, also of a sexual nature, involving a female member of staff in 2015.”

Failed to assess

As regards the incidents of sexual contact between the two residents the Mental Health Commission reported that the HSE had failed to assess the two residents as to their capacity to engage in a sexual relationship or take other steps to ensure “neither resident is placed in a position where they may be exploited”.

It also said that, in the absence of such safeguarding measures, gardaí should have been informed.

The inspectors noted that, following the third recorded incident between the two residents in August 2014, management separated the two residents: one is accommodated in another community residence from Monday to Thursday, returning to Knockroe on weekends when the second resident is on home leave.

The inspectors said this was not an appropriate action as the other setting was “wholly inappropriate” for the resident who had been transferred.

In a subsequent inspection carried out in June inspectors recorded a further incident of a sexual nature involving the same male resident.

General secretary of the Psychiatric Nurses Association, Des Kavanagh said the Mental Health Commission report vindicated the concerns raised by nursing staff in the Galway/Roscommon mental health services prior to the April inspection.

“The incidents raised were clearly very serious and the response of management was not appropriate,” he said.

The HSE announced it had determined it “necessary to conduct a review of the quality, safety and governance of services within the Roscommon area”.

It said the review had been “prompted in part by a number of specific incidents” which would also form part of the review which would examine management, staffing levels and compliance with relevant national and HSE frameworks.

The HSE said it was conducting a systems analysis review into the incidents in Knockroe House as well as having commissioned an external review of the mental health services in Roscommon.

“As both these processes are currently under way we are unable to comment further at this time. The HSE has reported these matters to the Gardaí and safeguards have been put in place to ensure patient safety,” a spokeswoman said.

Mr Kavanagh said he hoped the review would result in an improvement of services and the safeguarding of residents in the Roscommon area.

Ireland’s plan to tackle alarming decline of our valuable bees

   

 “If the bee disappeared off the surface of the globe, then man would have only four years of life left. No more bees, no more pollination, no more plants, no more animals, no more man.”

That is a comment attributed to Albert Einstein and reflects why 68 governmental and non-governmental organisations are busy with a shared plan of action to tackle pollinator decline and make Ireland a place where pollinators can survive and thrive.

The All-Ireland Pollinator Plan 2015-2020, published today, makes Ireland one of the first countries in Europe with a strategy to address pollinator decline and protect pollination services. The initiative has generated huge support and has culminated in agreement to deliver 81 actions to make Ireland more pollinator friendly.

The plan identifies actions that can be taken on farmland, public land and private land. These include creating pollinator highways along our transport routes, making our public parks pollinator friendly and encouraging the public to see their gardens as potential pit-stops for our busy bees.

With the support of organisations like An Taisce Green-Schools, it aims to ensure that everyone, from schoolchildren to farmers, gardeners, local authorities and businesses, knows what pollinators need and which simple cost-effective actions they can take to help. The Plan will also support bee-keepers in keeping our honeybees healthy.

“Unfortunately, Irish pollinators are in decline, with one third of our 98 bee species threatened with extinction,” said Dr Úna FitzPatrick from the National Biodiversity Data Centre, who chaired the plan steering group. “Bees are declining because we’ve drastically reduced the areas where they can nest.”

The pollinator plan is not just about protecting bees but also about protecting the livelihood of farmers and growers who rely on their ‘free’ pollinator service, which allows consumers to buy Irish fruit and vegetables at an affordable price. This service is worth more than £7 million per annum for apples in Northern Ireland, and €3.9m for oilseed rape in the Republic of Ireland.

It’s not just crops; about three-quarters of our wild plants also require insect pollinators. Without pollinators the Irish landscape would be a very different and much less beautiful place. The value of pollination to tourism and branding our produce abroad is enormous, but has never been assessed in a monetary sense.

Dr Jane Stout, Associate Professor in Botany at Trinity College Dublin, who co-chaired the group, added: “If we want pollinators to be available to pollinate our crops and wild plants for future generations we need to manage the landscape in a more sustainable way and create a joined-up network of diverse and flower-rich habitats as well as reduce our use of chemical insecticides. This doesn’t just mean in the countryside, but in our towns and villages as well.”

The actions in the plan are based on scientific evidence from research conducted in Ireland and elsewhere.

However, there are still gaps in our knowledge. Dr Stout’s Plant-Animal Interactions research group in Trinity College Dublin will continue to do research to understand the full implication of pollinator declines.

Bee aware

According to the Royal Horticultural Society, the best ways to encourage bees of all types into your garden is by providing nectar- and pollen-rich flowers throughout the year.

  • Clumps of bee-friendly plants in sunny places will be more attractive than plants that are scattered or in shade. These include foxgloves, pussy willow, bluebells, honeysuckle, thyme, and summer heathers, while non-native species like sunflowers, sweet pea, and lavender will provide plenty for bees to forage on. Planting wildflower meadows will also greatly benefit bees.
  • Use pesticides sparingly. Those based on fatty acids or plant oils and extracts pose little danger to bees but will not control all pests. Do not spray open flowers.
  • Provide nest sites for bees. Some will nest in hollow stems, such as bamboo canes or herbaceous plant

As much as 3.3m people die annually from air pollution

A study shows

    

Air pollution is killing 3.3m people a year worldwide, according to a new study. Surprisingly, farming plays a large role in soot-and-smog deaths in industrial nations.

Scientists in Germany, Cyprus, Saudi Arabia, and Harvard University calculated the most detailed estimates yet of the toll of air pollution, and what caused it. The study projects that if trends don’t change, the yearly death total will have doubled to 6.6m a year by 2050.

The study, published in the journal Nature, showed that three quarters of the deaths are from strokes and heart attacks, said lead author Jos Lelieveld at the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry in Germany.

The findings are similar to other, less detailed pollution death estimates, outside experts said. “About 6% of all global deaths each year occur prematurely, due to exposure to ambient air pollution. This number is higher than most experts would have expected, say, 10 years ago,” said Jason West, a University of North Carolina environmental sciences professor who wasn’t part of the study, but who praised it.

Air pollution kills more than HIV and malaria combined. China has the most air pollution fatalities, with 1.4m, followed by India, with 645,000, and Pakistan, with 110,000. The United States, with 54,905 deaths in 2010, ranks seventh. What is unusual is that the study says agriculture caused 16,221 of those deaths, second only to 16,929 deaths blamed on power plants.

In the US northeast, all of Europe, Russia, Japan, and South Korea, agriculture is the leading cause of soot-and-smog deaths. Worldwide, agriculture is the second-biggest cause, with 664,100 deaths, behind 1m deaths from in-home heating and cooking done with wood, and other biofuels, in the developing world.

The problem with farms is ammonia from fertiliser and animal waste. That ammonia combines with sulphates from coal-fired power plants, and with nitrates from car exhaust, to form the soot particles that are the big air pollution killers, he said.

In London, for example, the pollution from traffic takes time to be converted into soot, and then it is mixed with ammonia and transported downwind to the next city, he said.

“We were very surprised, but, in the end, it makes sense,” Lelieveld said.

He said the scientists had assumed that traffic and power plants would be the biggest cause of deadly soot and smog.

Agricultural emissions are becoming increasingly important, but are not regulated, said Allen Robinson, an engineering professor at Carnegie Mellon University, who was not part of the study, but who praised it.

Ammonia air pollution from farms can be reduced “at relatively low costs,” Robinson said. “Maybe this will help bring more attention to the issue.”

In the central United States, the main cause of soot-and-smog premature deaths is power plants; in much of the West, it’s traffic emissions.

Jason West, and other outside scientists, did dispute the study’s projections that deaths would double by 2050. That is based on no change in air pollution. West and others said it’s likely that some places, such as China, will dramatically cut their air pollution by 2050.

And Lelieveld said that if the world reduces a different air pollutant — carbon dioxide, the main gas causing global warming — soot-and-smog levels will be reduced as well, in a “win-win situation in both directions”

News Ireland daily BLOG by Donie

Tuesday 26th May 2015

Some 150 small Irish food firms win listings with 221 SuperValu stores

Ice-cream, nettle syrup and spices among products to hit shelves

  

SuperValu Food Academy suppliers The Happy Pear, Nobo and Cool Beans help launch Food Academy 2015. More than 150 small food companies are to have their products stocked in 221 SuperValu stores as part of the retailer’s Food Academy programme run with Bord Bia and the Local Enterprise Office Network.

Over the past 12 months, hundreds of small food producers have had their products in trials in their local SuperValu stores as part of the programme.

  The successful firms are selling diverse food and drink products, including nettle syrup, granola cups, black and white pudding and spices.

SuperValu’s trading director Eamon Howell said the fact SuperValu stores were independently owned and operated meant owners could purchase directly from local suppliers.

He said the supermarket chain was working with an additional 250 small food producers, and there would be trials of their products in local stores.

Walt Disney asked to meet Eamon de Valera – to talk about leprechauns

     

Walt Disney was keen to learn about ‘leprechauns’ and ‘little people’ from Eamon de Valera, a newly uncovered letter reveals.

A letter from the Irish Consulate in San Francisco to the Department of Foreign Affairs in 1946 suggests Disney hoped to discuss plans to produce a film about “Irish life and folklore” with the then-Taoiseach.

The meeting could have formed part of Disney’s research for the 1959 film ‘Darby O’Gill and the Little People’, starring Sean Connery.

The letter, dated September 18, 1946, says that “Mr Walt Disney and a party of six, including himself, will sail from New York on November 14 on the SS Queen Elizabeth for Southampton, and will go directly from there to Dublin.

“The party intends to tour Ireland on a research mission, with the intention of making cartoon motion pictures dealing with Irish life and folklore.”

The author says Mr Disney wanted to meet “parties such as the president of the Irish Tourist Association. Mr Disney would also like to meet An Taoiseach.”

Before he departed for Ireland, Mr Disney, whose great-grandfather emigrated to the US from Kilkenny in 1834, also wrote to his sister Ruth outlining his plans.

“We are starting a picture on the Leprechauns or ‘little people’ as they are called in Ireland, so we plan to spend most of our time gathering background material and learning all we can about Irish folklore,” he said.

Psychiatric nurses to begin industrial action at UCH Galway

  

Union members concerned over staffing levels, assults and safety issues at hospital

Psychiatric nurses at University College Hospital Galway are due to take industrial action on Tuesday over staffing and safety issues.

Psychiatric nurses at the biggest hospital in the west are due to take industrial action on Tuesday over staffing and safety issues.

The nurses at the acute psychiatric unit of University College Hospital (UCHG) in Galway said they had been forced to take industrial action following “the failure of HSE management” to address the issues at the heart of a long-running dispute.

More than 90% of the nurses voted a fortnight ago to step up their action following 36 assaults on staff so far this year.

On April 22nd, 10 nurses refused to take up duty in the unit on health and safety grounds. They said they were doing so out of concern for both staff and patients. The 10 returned to work later that day after an agreement was reached to enter talks at the Labour Relations Commission.

The Psychiatric Nurses Association’s industrial officer, Peter Hughes, said it was time for Minister of State for Disability and Mental Health Kathleen Lynch to demand that the HSE address the health and safety issues of staff and patients at UCHG and avert industrial action.

“The PNA has been left with no option but to proceed to industrial action,” Mr Hughes said, “in an effort to get serious engagement on these issues from HSE management.”

Cold weather kills more people than hot weather

     

Cold weather kills 20 times as many people as hot weather, according to an international study analysing more than 74 million deaths in 384 locations across 13 countries.

The findings, published in The Lancet, also reveal that deaths due to moderately hot or cold weather substantially exceed those resulting from extreme heat waves or cold spells.

“It’s often assumed that extreme weather causes the majority of deaths, with most previous research focusing on the effects of extreme heat waves,” according to lead author Dr Antonio Gasparrini from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in the UK. “Our findings, from an analysis of the largest dataset of temperature-related deaths ever collected, show that the majority of these deaths actually happen on moderately hot and cold days, with most deaths caused by moderately cold temperatures.”

The study analysed more than 74 million deaths between 1985 and 2012 in 13 countries with a wide range of climates, from cold to subtropical.

Data on daily average temperature, death rates, and confounding variables (e.g. humidity and air pollution) were used to calculate the temperature of minimum mortality (the optimal temperature), and to quantify total deaths due to non-optimal ambient temperature in each location. The researchers then estimated the relative contributions of heat and cold, from moderate to extreme temperatures.

Some 7.71% of all deaths were caused by non-optimal temperatures, with substantial differences between countries, ranging from around 3% in Thailand, Brazil, and Sweden to about 11 per cent in China, Italy, and Japan. Cold was responsible for the majority of these deaths (7.29% of all deaths), while just 0.42 per cent of all deaths were attributable to heat.

The study also found that extreme temperatures were responsible for less than 1% of all deaths, while mildly sub-optimal temperatures accounted for around 7% of all deaths — with most (6.66%) related to moderate cold.

According to Dr Gasparrini, current public-health policies focus almost exclusively on minimising the health consequences of heatwaves. “Our findings suggest that these measures need to be refocused and extended to take account of a whole range of effects associated with temperature.”

Your stomach rumbling doesn’t mean you’re very hungry

     

We associate a large growl in our stomachs as a war cry for food – but it actually means your gut is cleaning itself.

Tummy rumbling comes at a time when we feel hungry, but it isn’t a biological mechanism to remind us to eat.

Around an hour after we finish digesting our system undergoes a muscular contraction to sweep any remaining food from the stomach into our intestines, says Guilia Enders, author of Germany’s hit book Gut: The Inside Story Of Our Body’s Most Underrated Organ.

In her punchy guide to our body, the 25-year-old explains the gut cleaning takes place some time in between meals. Nutritional scientists recommend we leave a five hour gap from one meal to another.

Snacking will stop the cleaning process immediately (Picture: Getty)

Snacking at any time will stop the process.

Guilia also makes the interesting point that our stomach starts just below our left nipple and ends at the bottom of the ribcage – generally much higher than we think.

So when people complain of a stomach ache the pain is more than likely happening in our intestine.

The poo chart: Types 3 or 4 are considered healthy. Experiencing any other type on a regular basis is good grounds to consult your GP.

Type 1: Separate hard lumps, like nuts (hard to pass).

Type 2: Sausage-shaped, but lumpy.

Type 3: Like a sausage but with cracks on its surface.

Type 4: Like a sausage or snake, smooth and soft.

Type 5: Soft blobs with clear-cut edges, passed easily.

Type 6: Fluffy pieces with ragged edges, a mushy stool.

Type 7: Entirely liquid.

Berkeley Robot Learns Through Trial and Error (Like Us Humans)

Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley have developed a robot capable of learning new skills through trial and error.

     

The robot, named BRETT (or Berkeley Robot for the Elimination of Tedious Tasks), taught itself to complete a series of motor tasks without pre-programmed details about its surroundings. Its assignments included stacking Lego blocks, screwing a cap on a water bottle, and assembling a toy plane.

The robot uses a camera, which allows it to survey its hands and the objects in front of it, and an algorithm coded to provide real-time feedback on its efforts. The algorithm responds to a pre-programmed scoring system, which provides BRETT with hot/cold-style clues about the task at hand.

Without any information about its surroundings, BRETT was able to learn new abilities in about three hours. When given beginning and end coordinates for a task, however, that dropped to just 10 minutes. Ultimately, researchers hope to empower robots to adapt to constantly changing environments without the need for reprogramming.

This breakthrough in artificial intelligence involves applying the same “deep learning” techniques used in technology like Google Street View or Apple’s Siri to problem solving in 3D. Loosely inspired by the human brain’s own neurological structure, deep learning involves the processing of vast amounts of data. As such, the capabilities of robots like BRETT will increase as this processing becomes easier. Though BRETT is far from able to wash dishes or do laundry, researchers expect advances in computing speed to drive progress toward such a goal in the coming decades.

The team will present its findings on May 28 at Seattle’s International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA).

News Ireland daily BLOG by Donie

Friday 4th April 2014

Irish ambassador in London gets ready for President Micheal D’s visit

 

Dan Mulhall sees promising future for Anglo-Irish relations as he awaits first State visit by Irish head of State

Each day in the central lobby of the Palace of Westminster, one that separates the House of Lords and the House of Commons, visitors crane upwards to see four mosaics.

Representing Saints Andrew, George, David and Patrick, the mosaics have browned with age and few will have noticed the name of Banba written above the head of St Patrick.

For Dan Mulhall, Ireland’s ambassador to Britain, however, the presence of Banba a member of the legendary Tuatha Dé Danann – highlights the complex heart of Anglo-Irish relations.

Fifteen years ago, Mulhall was based in Edinburgh, as it made its first steps after the devolution of power to Holyrood from Westminster.

There, he became friends with the late Seamus Heaney, agreeing with the latter’s view that the two countries were “linked and separated in various degrees by history and geography, language and culture”.

“Considering our convoluted connections, it seems strangely appropriate that this ancient Irish goddess should occupy this perch,” Mulhall mused recently.

For months, the Waterford-born diplomat has led preparations, at the Irish Embassy in London, for President Michael D Higgins’ State visit to Britain.

Often, it has been a job of explaining – to a British audience or to those internationals who have become intrigued – why the first State visit by an Irish head of State is only taking place now.

“For a long time relations between an independent Ireland and our nearest neighbour were burdened by a legacy of history,” he told journalists last week.

The four-day programme will reflect the “huge divide” that has been overcome in relations between Ireland and Britain, but one also that offers “a platform for the future”, he said.

During the visit, Mr Higgins will lay a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior at Westminster Abbey and inspect the colours of the Irish regiments disbanded when the Free State was founded.

“In the past we might not have seen that Ireland had any real connection with the first World War,” says Mulhall, noting the series of commemorations involving Irish ministers in recent years.

“It underlines our willingness yet again to see our past in its true colours and embrace our past without any reason to shy away from the fact that the Irish played such an important role,” he went on.

Since he moved to London from Berlin last year, Mulhall has spent time getting to know the Irish community, particularly those involved in a succession of Irish centres throughout Britain.

Last month, 350 Irish people were invited to Buckingham Palace for a reception that acted as the warm-up to President Higgins’ visit– one that is getting royal attention.

“It is a wonderful occasion for the Irish community in Britain; the biggest Irish community anywhere in the world outside Ireland,” said the diplomat on the night.

“They have made a huge contribution to Britain over the years. Many of the people here tonight have been here for 40, 50 or even 60 years,” he said.

The ties that bind are cultural too, says Mulhall, pointing to Mr Higgins’ visit to the Royal Shakespeare Company in Straford-upon-Avon and, later, Shakespeare’s birthplace.

“For the Irish, Shakespeare hardly counts as a foreign author; he has been part of our lives. Equally, here, people regard Irish authors as part of their own literary tradition,” he said.

Prone to quoting Heaney, Mulhall wondered, in a speech in Edinburgh some months ago, if Banba “was the goddess” the Derry poet had encountered “at the edge of centuries”.

“We are indeed at the edge of centuries on these islands, with centuries of contention behind us, significant centenaries upon us and, I think, a very positive vista ahead.

“This edge of centuries is a good place to be, a comfortable plateau rather than a threatening precipice. There are, of course, further uplands ahead of us.

“But we can be optimistic about our prospects. At the edge of centuries lies a friendly, cooperative, respectful partnership,” he said.

Pedestrians make up largest group of road users to die in Dublin

 

Newly released statistics show two out of every five road fatalities in Dublin are pedestrians

Between 2008 and last year pedestrians accounted for 37 per cent of the 121 road deaths in Dublin, just a slightly higher proportion than drivers who made up 35 per cent of the total.

Almost two out of every five road fatalities in Dublin is a pedestrian according to newly released statistics, making them the single biggest group of road users to die in the capital.

The figures have been released by An Garda Síochána as part of their “Casualty Reduction Campaign” to run for the next two months.

“When we analyse the tragic year end figure(s), we can clearly see that pedestrians still remain the most vulnerable, even more so than drivers who traditionally figure higher in terms of fatal incidents,” said chief superintendent Aidan Reid, head of the city’s traffic corps.

Between 2008 and last year pedestrians accounted for 37 per cent of the 121 road deaths in Dublin, just a slightly higher proportion than drivers who made up 35 per cent of the total.

That represents 45 pedestrian deaths, as against 42 drivers, 18 passengers, 11 cyclists and five motorcyclists.

“This is not solely an enforcement issue. We must get drivers to slow down, particularly in 30 kilometre an hour and 50 kilometre an hour zones, but also appeal to pedestrians to ensure they do everything to remain safe on the roads,” said chief superintendent Reid.

“This is particularly relevant in relation to pedestrians who may have been drinking. Getting home safely is what everyone wants, so when our socialising be responsible.”

Figures also show that those struck by a vehicle travelling at around 60 kilometres an hour stand an 85 per cent chance of death.

Michael Rowland of the Road Safety Authority said: “Drivers need to play their part too by realising that in a collision with a pedestrian, regardless of who is at fault, the pedestrian will come off worse so it’s important to drive with your eyes wide open to possible danger and slow down.”

Eircom to send 30,000 customers backdated error bills

  

Direct debits not taken from bank accounts due to error in system

Thousands of Eircom customers will have to pay arrears of between €100 and €500 after an error in the company’s billing system resulted in direct debits not being collected.

Around 30,000 customers did not have some or all of their monthly payments taken from their bank accounts for phone broadband and TV services since January.

They received their bills as usual however, which incorrectly stated the direct debits had been paid.

Eircom’s director of corporate affairs Paul Bradley said around 4 per cent of their customers had been impacted.

He said most of those affected would owe around €100, but this could rise to around €500 for some customers whose payments had not been collected for a longer period of time.

He said two-thirds of affected customers had already been contacted. Their next bill will reflect the full amount owed, including arrears, which will be paid by direct debit.

Chairman of the Consumers’ Association of Ireland Michael Kilcoyne has called on Eircom to write off the outstanding debts.

“The customer arranged for the payment to be made, they gave them the facility to do it, and Eircom botched it up,” he said.

“There are many people living hand to mouth now, who won’t be able to afford this. It is totally unacceptable that Eircom would demand this money from them.”

Mr Bradley said Eircom would arrange a payments plan for customers who are not in a position to pay the outstanding amount with their next bill.

“If they have any difficulties whatsoever in terms of paying, we are asking them please to contact us. We will work with them in order to put a payment plan in place,” he said.

The error is believed to be related to the implementation of the Single Euro Payments Area (Sepa) payment integration initiative.

Customers with queries about the error can call a dedicated phone line on 1800 303 432, Monday to Friday 9am-8pm.

Identity fraud and cybercrime in Ireland cost firms over €600m

 

An increase in cybercrimes is costing Irish companies over €600m a year, according to a Grant Thornton new report.

Reports of data breaches are mounting in Ireland as both foreign and Irish criminals infiltrate business computer systems, according to a Grant Thornton business report.

Common crimes include identity fraud, online scams, cyber theft and cyber extortion.

Notifications of security breaches rose 36pc in 2012. Incidents are typically under-reported to the Data Protection Commissioner because companies fear a hit to their reputation should they disclose their security systems failed, according to Grant Thornton partner Mike Harris, who launched the company’s cybersecurity service.

SECURITY

Breaches since 2011 include attacks on Loyaltybuild, Eircom StudyHub and Recruit Ireland. Loyaltybuild suffered a breach of customer data and credit card information and had to invest €500,000 on security.

It is estimated that 55pc of cybercrime is by international organised crime gangs – typically operating in countries where regulation is weak.

Mr Harris said: “Our estimate of €630m is likely to be below the actual level given that many companies still do not report security breaches for fear of the reputational damage.”

He said Irish businesses should be focusing… on the ability to detect and react to data security breaches.

“It is not a question of if an Irish business will be subjected to an online attack, but a question of when,” he said.

Europe launches a satellite to monitor our planets natural disasters

   The European Space Agency has successfully launched its Sentinel-1A satellite (above left), which is designed to monitor natural disasters such as floods and earthquakes.

Europe on Thursday launched the first satellite of its multi-billion-euro Copernicus Earth observation project that will supply valuable images in the event of natural disasters or even a plane crash.

The Sentinel-1a satellite, which blasted off into Earth’s orbit from Europe’s spaceport in French Guiana at 2102 GMT, will be used to monitor sea ice, oil spills and land use and to respond to emergencies such as floods and earthquakes.

The satellite, which carries a 12-metre-long (40-foot-long) radar antenna and has two 10 metre-long solar panels, is now orbiting the planet at 693 km (439 miles) above the earth.

The Copernicus project, for which the European Unionand the European Space Agency (ESA) have committed funding of around 8.4 billion euros ($11.5 billion) until 2020, is described by the ESA as the most ambitious earth observation programme to date.

Copernicus is designed to supply data that can help policymakers develop environmental legislation or react to emergencies such as natural disasters or humanitarian crises.

“The Sentinels will keep a watchful eye on our planet,” Thomas Reiter, ESA director of human spaceflight and operations and head of the ESA’s satellite control centre ESOC, said at the launch event in the German city of Darmstadt near Frankfurt, where ESOC is based.

The launch of the Copernicus project became especially urgent after Europe lost contact with its Earth observation satellite Envisat in 2012 after 10 years.

“The big step forward is that we can now cover every place on Earth every three to six days,” Volker Liebig, director of ESA’s Earth Observation programme, said ahead of the launch.

“This used to take much longer with Envisat. If you want to use images for disaster management support or to find a plane, then you want the images to be as fresh as possible.”

But he cautioned you would first need to know roughly where a plane had crashed, which is not the case with the missing Malaysian Airlines jet.

Chris Reynolds, director of the Irish Coast Guard in Dublin, said authorities needed more satellite images and data delivered as quickly as possible to catch “the bad guys”, such as people who purposely dump oil from their ships into the sea.

“At the moment, it’s very difficult to find out who has the data and to know what level of trust you can place in it,” he said at Thursday’s event.

Copernicus also offers new business opportunities.

Images can be downloaded free of charge, meaning companies can then use them to help deliver data to farmers on soil moisture or pest infestation, help oil companies decide where to drill new wells or make it easier for insurers to assess the risk of costly floods and fires.

Sentinel-1a, which will operate in tandem with a second satellite to be launched next year, Sentinel-1b, has high-tech instruments that will allow it to record radar images of Earth’s surface, even when the skies are cloudy or dark. As part of the Copernicus program, there will be 17 launches over the next decade.

Copernicus is one of the EU’s two flagship space programmes along with satellite-navigation initiative Galileo, which is meant to rival the dominant U.S. Global Positioning System, or GPS, Russia’s GLONASS and China’s new Beidou system.

The main suppliers for the first Sentinel are Italian-French venture Thales Alenia Space for the satellite and Airbus Defence and Space for the radar.

Ocean hidden under the frozen surface of the moon orbiting Saturn

 

Scientists measure the tiny gravitation pull exerted on satellite to predict what lies beneath the moon’s frozen surface

An ice encrusted moon of Saturn harbour’s a secret – a hidden ocean of liquid water. The Cassini satellite orbiting the giant ringed planet confirmed the huge body of water by studying the moon’s gravitational pull.

The moon Enceladus has proved something of a puzzle and a news maker since Cassini dropped into Saturnian orbit 10 years ago. Effectively Enceladus is a big ice-covered 500 km rock that attracted attention early as scientists wondered whether it might have liquid water underneath. Early pictures showed what have been described as the “tiger stripes” zig-zagging across the moon’s southern hemisphere. They looked very much like joints between giant ice floes.

Then in 2005 the probe detected jets of water vapour and ice emanating from the stripes, convincing scientists that there must be liquid water underneath. The question was how to prove it.

Years passed but observations continued and it was as a result of three Cassini fly-bys in April 2010 and May 2012 that the answer came. Scientists from Italy and the US were able to measure the tiny gravitation tug Enceladus exerted on the satellite and used this to predict what lies beneath the moon’s frozen surface.

The outer shell is ice 30 to 50km thick, but there is a small ocean of liquid water under part of the southern hemisphere, which must be the source of the water vapour jets, the scientists say in the current issue of the journal Science .

This was the first time that a geophysical method was used to understand the internal structure of Enceladus, says Prof David Stevenson, the Marvin L Goldberger Professor of Planetary Science at Caltech. “This is really the only way to learn about internal structure from remote sensing.”

It is assumed that the water stays wet rather than freezing solid because of the massive gravitational pull on the moon exerted by Saturn. The resultant orbital flexing generates heat that keeps the ice melted and probably drives the surface venting.

The Cassini Huygens mission is a joint enterprise involving the US, European and Italian space agencies. It includes the Cassini orbiter and also the Huygens lander that dropped onto the surface of another moon Titan back in 2005.

News Ireland daily BLOG by Donie

Wednesday 22nd February 2014

Rehab scratch cards made just 8% profit on sales of €7 million “Unbelievable ?”

  Angela Kerins, chief executive of Rehab

           Angela Kerins, chief executive of Rehab      

Lottery scratch cards sold by charity giant Rehab worth €4 million in 2010 made profits of just €9,452, according to Minister for Justice Alan Shatter.

In a Dail speech he revealed that an audit by his Department also found that Rehab Bingo sales of €3.19m in the same year yielded profits of €548,000.

  Minister Alan Shatter released the details as he explained his decision to phase out the Charitable Lottery Scheme.

Under the scheme charities could apply for government grants based the gross sales of tickets.

Shatter said the scheme was “no longer fit for purpose” and that more than €120 million in National Lottery surplus funding and taxpayers’ money has been paid out since 1997.

He said it encourages “inefficient fundraising practices and high administration costs” and that it was unfair to the donors that a low proportion of monies donated was being used for charitable purposes.”

Minister Shatter said that people must be properly paid for their “the charity sector is not well served by a lack of transparency over senior executive salaries, nor by excessive levels of remuneration, where such may exist.”

The Minister for Justice also pointed out that the Rehab Group and Rehab Lotteries are suing the State for €1.5 billion in damages over the operation of the National lottery.

 Rehab claim the rules are anti-competitive.

“Whatever the outcome of this costly action, it is likely to exert a significant burden on either public resources or charity resources or both,” said Shatter.

Homing pigeons navigate like Human pilots “Memory navigation map the key”

   

Pigeons are best able to memorise flight paths when the terrain below is neither too featureless nor too crowded

Homing pigeons navigate in the same classic way as human pilots, by spotting landmarks on the ground, research has shown.

And like their human counterparts, they can be confused by landscape that all looks the same.

The birds are best able to memorise flight paths when the terrain below is neither too featureless nor too crowded.

“We discovered that pigeons’ ability to memorise routes is highly influenced by the visual properties of the landscape in a 250 metre radius below them,” said lead scientist Dr Richard Mann of Uppsala University, Sweden.

“Looking at how quickly they memorise different routes, we see that that visual landmarks play a key role. Pigeons have a harder time remembering routes when the landscape is too bland like a field or too busy like a forest or dense urban area.

“The sweet spot is somewhere in between; relatively open areas with hedges, trees or buildings dotted about. Boundaries between rural and urban areas are also good.”

Dr Mann and colleagues from Oxford University and the Zoological Society ofLondon released 31 pigeons from four sites around Oxford for an average of 20 flights each.

Their findings, published in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters, showed the birds were better navigators over landscapes with a certain visual complexity, such as rural areas with hedges or copses.

Pigeons navigate exceptionally well despite having small brains. Whatever method they use must make highly efficient use of their limited mental processing, scientists believe.

“There may be certain rules that free-flying birds use to structure information that enable them to map the environment using their limited brain power,” said co-author Professor Tim Guilford, from Oxford University’s Department of Zoology.

“Fundamentally understanding how they do this will tell us more about their abilities and limitations, and could reveal methods that robots with limited processing power might use to navigate.”

Knowing the landscape features that pigeons use to navigate could also help researchers to predict the flight patterns of any birds that are active during the day, or diurnal.

Identifying the likely flight paths of birds could be of use to conservationists, birdwatchers and town planners.

“Homing pigeons provide a reliable model for studying navigation and there’s no reason to believe that other diurnal birds won’t use similar methods,” said Prof Guilford.

Watch out for glaucoma “Untreated can lead to blindness”

 

Did you know that glaucoma is the leading cause of blindness in the United States? Glaucoma is a sneaky disease which causes damage to the optic nerve, the part of the eye that carries the images we see to our brains.

Glaucoma awareness is extremely important since this disease has little symptoms. A person with glaucoma can lose up to 40% of their vision before they even notice and once their vision is lost, it is permanent.

The National Eye Institute projects a 58 percent increase in glaucoma patients by 2030.

Early detection and treatment (like eye drops above right picture) by your ophthalmologist (Eye M.D.) are keys in preventing optic nerve damage and blindness from glaucoma.

While the only sure way to detect glaucoma is to have a complete eye examination performed by your ophthalmologist, there are some important risk factors to consider.

These factors include age, elevated eye pressure, family history of glaucoma, African or Hispanic ancestry, farsightedness or nearsightedness, past eye injuries, thinner central corneal thickness, systemic health problems (including diabetes, migraine headaches, and poor circulation), and pre-existing thinning of the optic nerve.

Your ophthalmologist can weigh all of these factors to determine if your risk of developing glaucoma is higher than normal and whether you should be closely monitored as a glaucoma suspect.

Together we can work to spread the word about this sight-stealing disease and fight to prevent unnecessary vision loss from glaucoma!

“607 people died” 40% increase in drug-related deaths in Ireland since 2004

  

607 people died from drug-related incidents in 2011 – a 40% increase since 2004

The number of drug-related deaths in Ireland has increased from 431 in 2004 to 607 in 2011, according to the latest figures published by the Health Research Board (HRB).

365 of the deaths in 2011 were due to poisoning (ie overdose).

242 deaths were related to trauma, such as road traffic collisions, or medical causes, such as liver disease.

The 2011 figures show that there were ten more drug-related deaths than the previous year.

The HRB also says that from 2004 to 2011, 4,606 people died directly or indirectly from drug use in Ireland.

The HRB National Drug-Related Deaths Index provides the latest data about the nature and the extent of premature death due to problem drug and alcohol use in Ireland. It makes a number of key findings:

– The number of poisoning deaths increased from 338 in 2010 to 365 in 2011.

– Almost two thirds of these deaths were male and men account for the majority of deaths since 2004.

– The median age for those who died was 39 and alcohol was involved in 37% of poisoning deaths in 2011, more than any other drug.

– Alcohol alone was responsible for 17% of poisoning deaths.

More than half of poisoning deaths involved more than one drug (polydrug). There was a notable increase (28%) in the number of poisoning deaths as a result of polydrug use, rising from 168 in 2010, to 215 in 2011.

The drugs most implicated in polydrug use are alcohol, diazepam, methadone and anti-depressant medication.

Heroin-related poisonings continue to decline from 72 in 2010 to 60 in 2011, while cocaine deaths have fallen from a peak of 66 deaths in 2007 to 23 in 2011.

One quarter of all sharks and rays are threatened with extinction, according to a new study published in the open-access journal eLife. The paper analyzed the threat and conservation status of 1,041 species of chondrichthyans—the class of fish whose skeletons are made of cartilage instead of bone which includes sharks, rays, skates and chimaeras—and found this group to be among the most threatened animals in the world.

The collaboration between 300 scientists from 64 countries reports, “the main threats to chondrichthyans are overexploitation through targeted fisheries and incidental catches (bycatch), followed by habitat loss, persecution, and climate change.”

The authors pinpoint two areas with greater than expected threat levels: the Indo-Pacific Biodiversity Triangle and the Red Sea. The former is among the most biologically and culturally diverse areas on the planet, but is also among the least-regulated.

“The Indo-Pacific Biodiversity Triangle, particularly the Gulf of Thailand, and the islands of Sumatra, Java, Borneo, and Sulawesi, is a hotspot of greatest residual threat especially for coastal sharks and rays with 76 threatened species.” The paper’s authors argue that without national and international action, the species found in this area may rapidly become extinct.

The paper cites ‘finning’—the process of cutting off the fins and dumping the body back into the ocean—as a major threat to sharks, wedgefishes and sawfishes. This practice is driven by market demands in China where shark fin soup is a highly sought-after delicacy. 
“Fins, in particular, have become one of the most valuable seafood commodities,” the authors write, “It is estimated that the fins of between 26 and 73 million individuals, worth US$400-550 million, are traded each year.”

Large body size and shallow habitat are the biggest factors determining a species’ likelihood of being threatened. “The probability that a species is threatened increases by 1.2% for each 10 cm increase in maximum body length, and decreases by 10.3% for each 50 m deepening in the minimum depth limit of species,” the authors report.

In addition to targeted fishing, 20 species of shark and rays are directly threatened by pollution. 22 species are threatened by the destruction of river systems and estuaries through residential and commercial development. 12 species are at risk from the conversion of mangroves into shrimp farms, and the construction of dams and other water-control measures.

“While no species has been driven to global extinction— as far as we know,” the authors write, “at least 28 populations of sawfishes, skates, and angel sharks are locally or regionally extinct,” and “several shark species have not been seen for many decades.”

One quarter of sharks and rays are threatened with extinction

Giant Guitarfish  

One quarter of all sharks and rays are threatened with extinction, according to a new study published in the open-access journal eLife. The paper analyzed the threat and conservation status of 1,041 species of chondrichthyans—the class of fish whose skeletons are made of cartilage instead of bone which includes sharks, rays, skates and chimaeras—and found this group to be among the most threatened animals in the world. 

The collaboration between 300 scientists from 64 countries reports, “the main threats to chondrichthyans are overexploitation through targeted fisheries and incidental catches (bycatch), followed by habitat loss, persecution, and climate change.”

via IUCN SSG   The authors pinpoint two areas with greater than expected threat levels: the Indo-Pacific Biodiversity Triangle and the Red Sea. The former is among the most biologically and culturally diverse areas on the planet, but is also among the least-regulated. 

“The Indo-Pacific Biodiversity Triangle, particularly the Gulf of Thailand, and the islands of Sumatra, Java, Borneo, and Sulawesi, is a hotspot of greatest residual threat especially for coastal sharks and rays with 76 threatened species.” The paper’s authors argue that without national and international action, the species found in this area may rapidly become extinct.

The paper cites ‘finning’—the process of cutting off the fins and dumping the body back into the ocean—as a major threat to sharks, wedgefishes and sawfishes. This practice is driven by market demands in China where shark fin soup is a highly sought-after delicacy.

“Fins, in particular, have become one of the most valuable seafood commodities,” the authors write, “It is estimated that the fins of between 26 and 73 million individuals, worth US$400-550 million, are traded each year.”

Large body size and shallow habitat are the biggest factors determining a species’ likelihood of being threatened. “The probability that a species is threatened increases by 1.2% for each 10 cm increase in maximum body length, and decreases by 10.3% for each 50 m deepening in the minimum depth limit of species,” the authors report.

In addition to targeted fishing, 20 species of shark and rays are directly threatened by pollution. 22 species are threatened by the destruction of river systems and estuaries through residential and commercial development. 12 species are at risk from the conversion of mangroves into shrimp farms, and the construction of dams and other water-control measures.

“While no species has been driven to global extinction— as far as we know,” the authors write, “at least 28 populations of sawfishes, skates, and angel sharks are locally or regionally extinct,” and “several shark species have not been seen for many decades.”