Thursday, August 1, 2013

What Happens to Your Poop After You Flush It?

Though we may think we pump out roses when it's go time on the ivory throne, nobody in their right mind would actually want to keep those roses around. So flush them away and down the magical toilet they go! But where do they go? To the vague destination of the sewers. And then where? To the ocean? To the city "river"? To anywhere that's away from here? AsapScience explains the cycle of poop, from your bowels into the system with condoms and pebbles through bacteria and sludge into fertilizer for more poop. [AsapScience]

Read more...

Source: http://gizmodo.com/what-happens-to-your-poop-after-you-flush-it-995867844

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Report Cyber Attacks ? The Threat Vector

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Hacker attacks and computer viruses: Disconnect the affected computer from the Internet and having it thoroughly scanned and cleaned, either by your internal IT department or a specialist. Report any suspected Internet crimes to the FBI. ... Spam: Use a spam filter and delete spam messages that pass through. You can also forward spam to the FTC at ... Online Shopping Fraud: Be careful who you conduct business with online. If you are defrauded in an online ...

Source: http://thethreatvector.wordpress.com/2013/07/31/report-cyber-attacks/

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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

AstraZeneca buys rights to anaemia drug from FibroGen

LONDON (Reuters) - AstraZeneca took a further step to bolster its new drug pipeline on Wednesday by striking a deal with private biotech firm FibroGen potentially worth more than $815 million for rights to an experimental anaemia drug.

Britain's second biggest drugmaker will pay $350 million upfront and in subsequent non-contingent payments, plus future development-related milestone payments of up to $465 million, for rights to FG-4592 in the United States, China and certain other markets.

There may be additional payments if use of the drug is expanded.

Japan's Astellas Pharma already has rights to the medicine in Japan, Europe, the Commonwealth of Independent States, the Middle East and South Africa.

(Reporting by Ben Hirschler; editing by Kate Holton)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/astrazeneca-buys-rights-anaemia-drug-fibrogen-062323695.html

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Video: Diageo reports strong full-year results

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52629238/

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More physician assistants allowed to work in Washington under new law

Puget Sound Business Journal | Marcus R. Donner

Physician assistant Mark Aytch, at right, talks with patient Marvin Hoskings Jr. at Neighborcare Health's Ballard Homeless Clini, in Seattle.

A new state law that took effect this week in Washington allows more physician assistants to work with doctors.

The change could help mitigate the shortage of primary care providers that?s anticipated next year when the state expands Medicaid and other health reforms kick in.

Physician assistants are nationally certified and state-licensed to practice medicine. They can perform physical examinations, diagnose and treat illnesses, order lab tests and perform other tasks. In Washington and elsewhere, they've become more common.

Previously, Washington state limited the number of assistants that a physician could supervise to three, but the new law allows for five assistants per doctor. Physicians could also petition for a waiver to the limit.

The new law also no longer requires physicians to be on site for 10 percent of the time that a physician assistant is practicing medicine.

Nationally, health industry experts are concerned that offering health care coverage to millions of people who?ve gone without insurance could place a major burden on primary care providers. Physician assistants, nurses and nurse practitioners have been looked to as part of the solution to that problem.

These support personnel are expected to be most critical in rural areas and underserved urban areas.

The new bill requires the Medical Quality Assurance Commission and the Board of Osteopathic Medicine and Surgery to work with the Washington Academy of Physician Assistants to update the rules governing these health professionals by the end of 2014.

Valerie Bauman covers health care, nonprofits and the marijuana industry for the Puget Sound Business Journal.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_15/~3/67ZFNc7EoYw/more-physician-assistants-allowed-to.html

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Obama administration delayed plans to improve oil train safety by nearly a year

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The Obama administration has delayed by nearly a year a plan to boost safety standards for the type of rail car involved in a fiery explosion that killed at least 47 people in Canada this month.

Officials began work on the rule more than a year before an oil train derailed and exploded in Quebec on July 6 ? but the rule was never put in place. The proposal by the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration is intended to fix a dangerous design flaw in a rail car commonly used to haul oil and other hazardous liquids from coast to coast. The soda-can shaped car, known as the DOT-111, has come under scrutiny from safety experts because of its tendency to split open during derailments and other major accidents.

That's exactly what happened when an unattended Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway train came loose, hurtling down a 7-mile incline before derailing and igniting in Lac-Megantic, near the Maine border. All but one of its 73 cars were carrying crude oil, and at least five exploded, setting off massive explosions that devastated the small lakeside town of 6,000 people.

The structure of the tank car is not believed to be a factor in the derailment, which is under investigation. But transportation experts say the car's underlying design makes it prone to damage and catastrophic loss of hazardous materials.

A proposed rule to beef up rail-car safety was initially scheduled to be put in place last October, but it has been delayed until late September at the earliest. A final rule is not expected until next year.

The pipeline safety agency said in a report this month that the latest delay was needed to allow "additional coordination" among officials and interested groups, including industry representatives who have resisted calls to retrofit existing cars, citing the expense and technical challenges such a requirement would pose.

In the first half of this year, U.S. railroads moved 178,000 carloads of crude oil. That's double the number during the same period last year and 33 times more than during the same period in 2009. The Railway Association of Canada estimates that as many as 140,000 carloads of crude oil will be shipped on Canada's tracks this year, up from 500 carloads in 2009. Much of that increase is from oil produced in the Bakken oil patch in North Dakota and Montana and surrounding areas. The train that crashed in Quebec was carrying oil from North Dakota to a refinery in New Brunswick, Canada.

The DOT-111 tank car represents more than two-thirds of the rail fleet carrying crude oil.

The Associated Press reported in September that the DOT-111 tank car has been allowed to haul hazardous liquids from coast to coast even though transportation officials were aware of the design flaw.

The AP had reviewed 20 years of federal rail accident data involving DOT-111 cars used to haul ethanol and found that the cars had been breached in at least 40 serious accidents since 2000. In the previous decade, there were just two breaches.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., is urging the Obama administration to phase-out DOT-111 tank cars or require freight rail carriers to retrofit them to prevent potential explosions or spills. Schumer described the DOT-111 cars as "flawed, out-of-date and a factor in hazardous material spills during derailments," such as the one in Quebec.

While freight rail should not be "demonized," increased traffic of rail cars carrying crude oil "warrants increased safety measures, and that begins with putting the safest, most up-to-date tank cars on the tracks," Schumer said at a news conference last week in Albany, N.Y.

Democratic Reps. Mike Michaud and Chellie Pingree of Maine said the government should conduct a wide-ranging safety review as transportation of oil by train increases dramatically in Maine and other states. Nearly 30,000 barrels of per day crossed Maine in March ? 15 times more than the same period a year earlier, the lawmakers said in a letter to National Transportation Safety Board and other officials. The train that derailed in Quebec was scheduled to cross Maine on its way to a refinery in St. John, New Brunswick.

A spokeswoman for the American Association of Railroads, which represents the rail industry, said the group shares Schumer's belief in putting safety first.

"If safer and better DOT-111s can be had, then it makes good sense to ensure that the design and standards that these cars are built to, must be tougher than the federal standards that exist today," said spokeswoman Patricia Reilly.

Rather than waiting for the Obama administration to act, Reilly said, the industry has adopted voluntary standards ensuring that all DOT-111s ordered after October 2011 meet tough requirements recommended by the NTSB after a deadly ethanol train derailment and explosion in Illinois in 2009.

But those voluntary standards do not apply to an estimated 40,000 cars built before October 2011 that carry oil, ethanol and other flammable liquids.

The railroads and the oil industry have resisted calls to retrofit existing cars, saying that would present technological and engineering challenges and cost at least $1 billion.

The American Petroleum Institute, the largest lobbying group for the oil industry, declined an interview request. But in comments submitted along with the Renewable Fuels Association, the American Chemistry Council and other groups, the API asked the Obama administration to focus its rule-making on cars built after October 2011.

The industry's proposal "ignores the safety risks posed by the current fleet," the NTSB said in a report on safety recommendations last year. Older tank cars "can almost always be expected to breach in derailments that involve pileups or multiple car-to-car impacts," the report said.

The NTSB cited the car's "inadequate design" in the 2009 crash outside Rockford, Ill., which killed a woman and injured 11 others. The NTSB called for a redesign or replacement of the DOT-111 cars. A decision on whether to require a redesign is up to the pipeline safety administration, part of the U.S. Department of Transportation.

The DOT-111 car's steel shell is too thin to resist puncture in accidents, the NTSB said, and the ends of the car are vulnerable to ruptures. Valves used for unloading and other exposed fittings on the tops of the tankers can also break during rollovers.

The flaws were noted as far back as a 1991 safety study.

The pipeline safety administration is considering whether to split the proposed rule into one that addresses new tank cars and another that addresses possible retrofits, said spokesman Gordon Delcambre Jr.

Source: http://www.sunjournal.com/news/maine-nation/2013/07/29/obama-administration-delayed-plans-improve-oil-tra/1400053

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Simon Property Group second-quarter beats Wall Street's forecast

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Simon Property Group Inc , the largest owner of U.S. malls and outlet centers, on Monday reporter a higher-than-expected quarterly profit boosted by increased occupancy and rent, and the company raised its forecast for the year.

The company reported funds from operations, an earnings measure for real estate investment trusts, rose to $766.3 million, or $2.11 per share, from $688.8 million, or $1.89 per share in the year-earlier quarter.

Analysts had expected $2.07 per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

(Reporting by Ilaina Jonas; Editing by Maureen Bavdek)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/simon-property-group-second-quarter-beats-wall-streets-111749248.html

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