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U.S. vows to keep up pressure on Pakistan to arrest of most-wanted militants

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AHN News Staff

Kolkata, India (AHN) – United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who is on a two-day trip to India, assured New Delhi on Monday of Washington’s continued pressure on militant groups in neighboring Pakistan, adding that the U.S. strongly believes the new chief of al-Qaeda is also in Pakistan.

“There are several significant leaders like Ayman al-Zawahiri still on the run. Zawahiri, who inherited the leadership from Osama bin-Laden is somewhere, we believe, in Pakistan,” she added.

The U.S. believes that three of the top five most-wanted militants–Jamaat-ud-Dawa chief Hafiz Saeed, Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Omar and Zawahiri–live in Pakistan.

Clinton said that the U.S. is seeking the arrest of the founder of the Pakistan-based militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) for the 2008 Mumbai attacks, which killed nearly 200 people, mostly foreigners. She said that Washington would keep up its pressure on Islamabad to arrest the Egyptian cleric, whom it regards as the chief ideologue for the militant group.

Her comments came a week after the first death anniversary of Osama, who was killed by U.S. Navy SEALs at his hideout in the garrison city of Abottabad.

Clinton said that Washington had also offered a $10 million bounty for any information on Hafiz Saeed, who is believed to have masterminded the assault in India. The U.S. believes that Saeed openly lives in Pakistan and that the government of Pakistan has not taken any steps for his arrest.

“We’re going to be pushing that. So it’s a way of raising the visibility and pointing out to those who are associated with him that there is a cost for that,” Clinton said referring to the reward.

During her visit, Clinton also expressed appreciation for India’s efforts in decreasing oil purchases from Iran. However, she urged India to do more to reduce its oil imports before Washington slaps sanctions on nations that still continue to trade with the Islamic Republic.

“We hope they will do even more and we think there is an adequate supply (from other exporters) in the market place,” Clinton told a forum in Kolkata before meeting Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in the capital. “We think this is part of India’s role in the international community.”

In a related development, militants on Monday beheaded two Pakistani soldiers and killed nine others in North Waziristan – a province strongly dominated by terror groups such as al-Qaeda and Taliban. The incident happened when armed Islamic militants attacked a military convoy.

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08

May
2012
Time: 13:12

Insurers embrace “virtual” doctor visits as possible solution to physician shortages

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Washington, DC, United States (KaiserHealth) – Tired of feeling “like the walking dead” but worried about the cost of a doctor’s visit, Amber Young sat on her bed near tears one recent Friday night in Woodbury, Minn.

That’s when she logged onto an Internet site, run by NowClinic online care, a subsidiary of UnitedHealth Group (which also owns UnitedHealthcare), and “met” with a doctor in Texas.

After talking with the physician via instant messaging and then by telephone, Young was diagnosed with an upper respiratory illness and prescribed an antibiotic that her husband picked up at a local pharmacy. The doctor’s “visit” cost $45.

“I was as suspicious as anyone about getting treated over the computer,” said Young, 34, who was uninsured then. “But I could not have been happier with the service.”

NowClinic, which started in 2010 and has expanded into 22 states, is part of the explosion of Web- and telephone-based medical services that experts say are transforming the delivery of primary health care, giving consumers access to inexpensive, round-the-clock care for routine problems — often without having to leave home or work.

Insurers such as UnitedHealthcare, Aetna and Cigna, and large employers such as General Electric and Delta Air Lines are getting on board, pushing telemedicine as a way to make doctor “visits” cheaper and more easily available. Proponents also see it as an answer to a worsening doctor shortage.

But some physician and consumer groups worry about the trend.

“Getting medical advice over a computer or telephone is appropriate only when patients already know their doctors,” said Glen Stream, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians. “Even for a minor illness, I think people are going to be shortchanged,” he said.

Carmen Balber, a spokeswoman for Consumer Watchdog in Santa Monica, Calif., is concerned that lower co-payments, and other incentives, will spur consumers to see doctors or nurses online just to save money. “People will choose the more economical option, even if it is not the option they want,” she said.

Employers, however, say they’re getting mostly positive reviews.

“Our employees just love the convenience, the low cost and the efficiency,” said Lynn Zonakis, managing director of health strategy and resources at Delta Air Lines, which offers NowClinic to some employees for $10 a consultation.

The global telemedicine business is projected to almost triple to $27.3 billion in 2016, according to a recent report by BBC Research, a Wellesley, Mass., research firm.

“Virtual care is a form of communication whose time has come and can be instrumental in fixing our current state of affairs within the health care system,” said Robert L. Smith, a family doctor in Canandaigua, N.Y., and co-founder of NowDox, a telemedicine consulting firm.

Although the field developed more than 40 years ago as a way to deliver care to geographically isolated patients, its growth was slow. That’s changed in the past decade thanks to the development of high-speed communications networks and the push to lower health costs.

“It’s the wave of the future,” said Joe Kvedar, director of the Center for Connected Health, founded by Harvard Medical School.

Major obstacle

One major obstacle has remained, however: Many state medical boards make it difficult for doctors to practice telemedicine, especially interstate care, by requiring a prior doctor-patient relationship, sometimes involving a prior medical exam, said Gary Capistrant, senior director of public policy at the American Telemedicine Association, a trade group. “The situation seems to be getting worse, not better,” he said.

He cited a 2010 ruling by the Texas Medical Board that effectively blocks a physician from treating new patients via telemedicine. The only exception is if the patient has been referred by another physician who evaluated him or her in person.

“It’s about accountability,” said Dr. Humayun Chaudhry, CEO of the Federation of State Medical Boards. State boards insist on licensing doctors treating patients in their states so that if patients are injured, they have a state agency they can go to for help.

“We want to enable telemedicine to flourish, but at the end of the day we want patients protected,” Chaudhry said.

Some medical boards are loosening restrictions, he noted, citing nine, mostly rural, states, including Tennessee, Nevada and New Mexico, which in recent years passed rules to ease the licensing process.

Companies marketing telemedicine services say they are seeing strong demand. Bloomington, Minn.-based HealthPartners, a health system with four hospitals and 1.4 million health plan members, began an online service in fall 2010 that allows anyone in Minnesota or Wisconsin to consult a nurse practitioner for $40 or less.

Using an online interactive tool called Virtuwell, 23,000 patients have received a treatment plan often including a prescription, after answering questions about their condition and medical history.

Laurie Fedje, of Coon Rapids, Minn., tried Virtuwell last fall when her son, Noah, had a high fever and other flu symptoms and she did not want to go out in bad weather. She said it took her about 15 minutes to answer about 50 questions about her son’s health, such as whether he had ear pain, how long he had been sick and whether he had any allergies. Within a few minutes, she received an e-mail and a call from a nurse practitioner who diagnosed him with flu and sent a prescription.

“It was wonderful,” Fedje said.

Her employer, St. Paul-based Bethel University, covers the first three visits for free as an employee benefit.

About 80% of patients using Virtuwell have insurance, and many use the service as a covered benefit, said Kevin Palattao, a vice president at HealthPartners.

He notes that Virtuwell has turned away 45,000 prospective patients because they had problems that required in-person consultations, such as chest pain or multiple chronic conditions.

The most common problems treated online are routine sinus and bladder infections, pinkeye, upper respiratory illness and minor skin rashes, Palattao said.

OptumHealth, which operates the NowClinic, said it leaves it to physicians to determine if they can diagnose a patient via computer.

“This is not intended to replace the intimacy of the doctor-patient relationship,” said Chris Stidman, senior vice president.

The company would not disclose how many people have used the service or how many physicians it employs.

Testing at drugstores

Camp Hill, Pa.-based Rite Aid recently began testing NowClinic in several of its drugstores in Michigan and Pennsylvania. It’s a cheaper alternative to hiring doctors or nurse practitioners to work in store clinics.

At the stores, patients can pay $45 for a 10-minute teleconsultation with a doctor, or less if their employer has negotiated a reduced rate.

In a tiny office next to the pharmacy counter in one Harrisburg, Pa., Rite Aid, patients use a Web camera and microphone to talk to a doctor on a desktop computer, where they type in their symptoms, a brief medical history and their credit card information. A thermometer, blood pressure machine and scale are available nearby.

The physician sends an electronic prescription to the store that can be picked up minutes later.

On a recent afternoon when a reporter tested the service, there was a choice of only one doctor — Dr. Pardeep Shori, an internist in Irving, Texas, who is board-certified in family medicine.

Shori said he typically treats about a dozen NowClinic patients a day. While he is unable to look into a patient’s ears or throat, he noted, “The key thing you learn in medical school is that a lot of information comes from just listening.”

Young, the woman who talked to a NowClinic physician from her home in Woodbury, Minn., said she would use the service again even though she now has health insurance. She was impressed when the online doctor called her three days later to see how she was feeling.

“I’ve never had my own primary care doctor do that,” she said.

– Provided by Kaiser Health News.

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07

May
2012
Time: 16:10

S&P finishes the worst week of 2012

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Diane Alter – AHN News Reporter

New York City, NY, United States (AHN) – U.S. stocks tumbled Friday following a report from the Labor Department that revealed employers added fewer than expected jobs in April.

The closely watched April jobs reports showed that 115,000 jobs were added in April, substantially less than the forecast of 160,000.

The news fueled a sell-off, taking the Dow down some 168 points, or 1.3 percent to end the week at 13,038. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slumped 22 points, or 1.6 percent to 1,369. And the NASDAQ gave back 68 points, or 2.2 percent to end at 2,956.

All the major indexes ended the week lower following two consecutive weeks of gains.

The S&P fell 2.3 percent over the last five trading sessions marking its largest weekly decline of 2012.

Energy stocks Friday felt the pressure from falling oil which slid 4.4 percent to below $100 a barrel.

The big news for the week came from Facebook which set a price range of $28 to $35 per share for its highly anticipated IPO, expected sometime later this month. It also increased the maximum size of the offering to $13.6 billion, up from its initial estimates of $5 billion.

After the close Friday, investment guru Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway posted first-quarter net income of $3.2 billion, an increase from the $1.5 billion it recorded in the same period a year earlier.

In world markets, European shares all ended the week lower and Asian markets were mixed.

Oil for June delivery lost $4.05 to settle at $98.56 a barrel. Gold rose $10.40 to end at $1,645.20 a troy ounce.

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06

May
2012
Time: 21:09

S&P finishes the worst week of 2012

Posted by admin
Diane Alter – AHN News Reporter

New York City, NY, United States (AHN) – U.S. stocks tumbled Friday following a report from the Labor Department that revealed employers added fewer than expected jobs in April.

The closely watched April jobs reports showed that 115,000 jobs were added in April, substantially less than the forecast of 160,000.

The news fueled a sell-off, taking the Dow down some 168 points, or 1.3 percent to end the week at 13,038. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slumped 22 points, or 1.6 percent to 1,369. And the NASDAQ gave back 68 points, or 2.2 percent to end at 2,956.

All the major indexes ended the week lower following two consecutive weeks of gains.

The S&P fell 2.3 percent over the last five trading sessions marking its largest weekly decline of 2012.

Energy stocks Friday felt the pressure from falling oil which slid 4.4 percent to below $100 a barrel.

The big news for the week came from Facebook which set a price range of $28 to $35 per share for its highly anticipated IPO, expected sometime later this month. It also increased the maximum size of the offering to $13.6 billion, up from its initial estimates of $5 billion.

After the close Friday, investment guru Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway posted first-quarter net income of $3.2 billion, an increase from the $1.5 billion it recorded in the same period a year earlier.

In world markets, European shares all ended the week lower and Asian markets were mixed.

Oil for June delivery lost $4.05 to settle at $98.56 a barrel. Gold rose $10.40 to end at $1,645.20 a troy ounce.

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06

May
2012
Time: 21:09

Eurozone private sector manufacturing and services shrank more in April

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Linda Young – AHN News Writer

Brussels, Belgium (AHN) – The eurozone saw it private sector contract sharply in April by one of its sharpest falls in nearly three years and its steepest decline since October, London-based Markit Economics said Friday.

A contraction is defined as any figure below 50 in the Markit eurozone composite purchasing managers’ index (PMI). The PMI fell to 46.7 in April from 49.2 in March.

Weak manufacturing exports were largely to blame for the drop, Markit said.

Moreover, Markit said the figures suggested the eurozone economy as a whole contracted at a dire quarterly rate of 0.5 percent in April.

The 17-member nation eurozone saw new business fall for the ninth consecutive month, while employment dropped for the fourth straight month.

Even Germany, known as Europe’s economic engine, slid toward stagnation. Economic growth has nearly stopped in both Germany and France and both are now seeing the sort of economic decline that has plagued Spain and Italy.

In addition, the eurozone’s services sector PMI also fell. It slid to 46.9, down from 49.2 in March.

The eurozone seems to be heading toward a third consecutive quarter of contraction in gross domestic product.

Release of Markit’s PMI reports helped to keep the euro low in currency pairs trading against the dollar.

 

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06

May
2012
Time: 2:38

U.S. markets falter Friday on jobs report

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Diane Alter – AHN News Reporter

New York, NY, United States (AHN) – A disappointing report Friday from the Labor Department sent stocks lower on the open Friday.

Just after the opening bell on Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 88 points, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 11 points and the NASDAQ sank 35 points.

The jobs report showed a net gain of 115,000 jobs in April, much less than the expected 160,000. However, upward revisions to the February and March job figures helped the unemployment rate inch down from 8.2 percent to 8.1 percent.

Investors didn’t like the news and stocks were sent sharply lower.

Friday’s market drop followed Thursday’s decline on a weaker-than-expected reading on the U.S. service sector.

In corporate news, LinkedIn’s shares jumped 8 percent Friday following a stellar earnings release Thursday after the close. But shares of insurer AIG lost nearly 6 percent despite earnings that came in ahead of expectations,

In world markets, European exchanges were lower in midday trading and Asia ended the day and the week mixed.

In currencies and commodities, the dollar advanced against the euro, the British pound and the Japanese yen.

Oil slipped $2.09 to $100.45 a barrel and gold gave back $4.40 to $1,630.40 a troy ounce.

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05

May
2012
Time: 5:07

Number of jobs created by U.S. economy fell in April

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Linda Young – AHN News Writer

Washington, D.C., United States (AHN) – The April employment report brought disappointing news that the economy did not create enough jobs to keep up with growth in the labor force.

Nonfarm payroll employment only rose by 115,000 in April, which left the official unemployment rate little changed at 8.1 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today.

Moreover, the report dashed hopes that the approximately 12.5 million Americans counted in the official 8.1 percent unemployment rate will be able to find a job any time soon.

Jobs created by the economy were in professional and business services, retail trade, and health care, but jobs in transportation and warehousing declined.

Moreover, the percentage of working-age Americans with a job declined in April to 63.6 percent from 63.8 percent in March.

The number of people officially counted as long-term unemployed consists of people who have been jobless for 27 weeks and longer who qualify to collect unemployment benefits. That number did not change much and stood at 5.1 million in April. These individuals made up 41.3 percent of the unemployed. The number of long-term unemployed has fallen over the year by 759,000.

Unemployment rates by group were:

  • Adult men (7.5 percent)
  • Adult women (7.4 percent)
  • Teenagers (24.9 percent)
  • Whites(7.4 percent)
  • Hispanics (10.3 percent)
  • African Americans (13.0 percent)
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04

May
2012
Time: 16:10

UN threatens sanctions on Sudan-South Sudan

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AHN News Staff

New York, NY, United States (AHN) – The United Nations Security Council on Wednesday threatened to impose sanctions against Sudan and South Sudan if they fail to stop their hostilities within 48 hours.

In a resolution that passed unanimously, China and Russia, which had blocked sanction talks, also joined the call to stop the border conflict.

Under resolution 2046, the UNSC demanded a written commitment from both the countries that they would halt the fighting within the next two days and start peace talks within two weeks under observation of African Union mediators.

The council also threatened to impose non-military sanctions under Article 41 of the U.N. Charter if any of the sides fail.

“The current conflict between Sudan and South Sudan is on the verge of becoming a full scale and sustained war,” U.S. ambassador Susan Rice told the council. “Both countries are on the brink of returning to the horrors of the past and threaten to take the entire region with them,” she added.

The resolution on the conflict depends on the settlement of an oil dispute because landlocked oil producer South Sudan has to rely on Sudan to export its oil.

South Sudan is already in talks with Sudan, which is asking for $32 to $36 per barrel – a price South is unwilling to pay. “If we reach an agreement, we will continue to export our oil through Port Sudan,” South Sudanese Minister for Government Affairs Deng Alor Kuol said. Talking to journalists after the U.N. vote, Kuol said that they would continue to look for alternatives.

Responding to the Security Council vote, the Sudanese government cautiously welcomed the move, saying it contained positive elements. However, Sudan pledged to review the threat carefully to finalize its strategy with South Sudan.

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03

May
2012
Time: 13:08

Ford warns of job losses from imbalances in free trade

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Linda Young – AHN News Writer

Brussels, Belgium (AHN) – The head of Ford Motor Co. operations in Europe and several other automakers have warned that a new free trade agreement between the European Union and South Korea poses a threat to jobs.

Ford notes that it is an advocate of free trade, but that there are non-trade barriers to doing business in South Korea that create trade imbalances.

During the past 11 months, the new agreement resulted in allowing 450,000 vehicles built in South Korean to be imported into Europe for sale while only 75,000 cars made in the European Union were exported to Korea.

Ford is the fourth-biggest car maker in Europe by sales. It pointed out that some of the non-trade barriers include the government policy in South Korea of only buying Korean-made cars, along with problems with doing business in Korea and currency problems.

The issue of auto sales in European nations is particularly sensitive know because the ongoing problems from the financial crisis have caused a decline in auto sales there for five consecutive years.

That decline in sales has affected by a financial crisis, auto sales are on track to decline in 2012 for a fifth consecutive year. The slump has caused decreased in sales for automakers, including:

  • General Motors Co. GM European operations -2.02
  • Fiat SpA, F.MI -2.19 percent
  • Renault SA RNO.FR -1.41 percent
  • Ford Motor Co. F European operations -1.16 percent

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03

May
2012
Time: 2:37

BP sees profits drop by 12%

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Linda Young – AHN News Writer

London, United Kingdom (AHN) – Oil giant BP reported its first quarter profits were down by 12 percent to $4.8 billion compared to $5.6 billion for the same period a year ago.

Part of the drop in profits comes from BP selling some of its fields after the disastrous oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010 at the Deepwater Horizon oil rig. The explosion killed 11 workers and the subsequent uncontrollable gushing of oil for several months resulted in the worst offshore spill in United States history.

BP had paid $16.6 billion into a trust fund. It expects to reach the target amount of $20 billion about one year earlier than it had originally planned.

Other factors dragging down BP’s bottom line included a decrease in oil and gas production. BP said its production had dropped by around 6 percent to 2.45 million barrels of oil per day.

However, its net profits were helped by the fact that oil prices were higher for this quarter than the same period last year with Brent crude prices averaging $118.60 a barrel, compared with $105.43 a year ago. That increased BP’s revenue by 9.3 percent to $96.7 billion.

Total charges for the Gulf of Mexico spill reached $37.2 billion at the end of the first quarter. However, BP still has not admitted liability. Moreover, it still faces claims from the US federal government as well as affected state governments and drilling firms.

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01

May
2012
Time: 21:09