Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Senate to begin hearings on gun control after school massacre

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Six weeks after the massacre of 20 children and six adults at a Connecticut school ignited new calls to curb U.S. gun violence, the issue reaches Congress on Wednesday amid questions about whether lawmakers can agree on significant legislation.

In hearings that begin in the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday, President Barack Obama and other Democrats are seeking the largest gun-control package in decades.

Former Arizona congresswoman Gabby Giffords, grievously hurt in a 2011 mass shooting that left six people dead and 13 wounded, will make an appearance at the hearing.

According to a senior Democratic aide and a person familiar with the proceedings, Giffords will testify. Her husband, former astronaut Mark Kelly, also is due to testify. The couple recently founded Americans for Responsible Solutions, a group intended to combat gun violence.

Others set to testify include National Rifle Association Executive Vice President and CEO Wayne LaPierre, whose group is an influential opponent of gun restrictions.

Obama's proposals to curb gun violence include reinstating the U.S. ban on military-style "assault" weapons, limiting the capacity of ammunition magazines, and more extensive background checks of prospective gun buyers, largely to verify whether they have a history of crime or mental illness.

Republicans and some pro-gun Democrats envision a more modest package. It is unclear whether there is sufficient support in the Democrat-led Senate and the Republican-led House of Representatives to pass any gun restrictions beyond improved background checks.

"We are trying to weigh things that could make a big difference against things that can pass," said Democratic Senator Charles Schumer of New York. "I think background checks is the sweet spot."

That sentiment reflects how the calls for gun control - so prominent during the emotional days following the December 14 shootings in Connecticut - will face political reality in Congress.

"We must come together today as Americans seeking common cause," Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat, said in his prepared opening statement for the hearing.

Facing opposition by the NRA and others who assert that new restrictions on firearms would violate their constitutional right to bear arms, Leahy, a gun owner, said: "Let us forego sloganeering, demagoguery and partisan recriminations."

'TOO IMPORTANT'

"This is too important for all that. We all abhor the recent tragedies - in just the last two years - in an elementary school in Connecticut, in a movie theater in Colorado, in a sacred place of worship in Wisconsin, and in front of a shopping mall in Arizona."

Giffords, an Arizona Democrat who was the target of an assassination attempt, survived a head wound but later retired from the House.

Most Republicans and some Democrats in Congress favor gun rights and represent constituents who do as well. The NRA has called any attempt to restrict weapon sales an assault on Americans' constitutional right to bear arms.

In recent days, some Republican lawmakers have joined Schumer and other Democrats in emphasizing better background checks of gun buyers, rather than Obama's plan to ban the sale of rapid-firing assault weapons like the one used in the Connecticut shootings.

Republican Senator Jeff Flake of Arizona, a Judiciary Committee member, said that "we all recognize the need for more effective background checks." But, Flake said, "people say responsible gun owners should be able to own any type of weapon or (ammunition) clip within reason."

The NRA's plan for securing schools has revolved around putting armed guards on campuses. In a statement released Tuesday that he plans to give before the Senate panel on Wednesday, LaPierre sounded a familiar refrain of gun-rights supporters, calling on better enforcement of existing gun laws rather than new laws.

"We need to look at the full range of mental health issues, from early detection and treatment, to civil commitment laws, to privacy laws that needlessly prevent mental health records from being included in the National Instant Criminal Background Check System," he said.

Federally licensed firearms dealers are required to run background checks for criminal records on gun buyers. But the government estimates that 40 percent of purchasers avoid screening by getting their guns from private sellers, including those at gun shows.

The White House's plan would require screening for all prospective buyers.

The background check provision is generally regarded as the gun-control measure most likely to receive bipartisan support, but even it could face some difficulty.

Although Obama's Democrats hold a 55-45 edge in seats in the U.S. Senate, the president's call to revive the assault weapons ban that expired in 2004 faces an uphill fight.

(Editing by David Lindsey and Will Dunham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/amid-questions-senate-begins-hearings-gun-control-115838971.html

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Prehistoric humans not wiped out by comet, say researchers

Prehistoric humans not wiped out by comet, say researchers [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jan-2013
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Contact: Tanya Gubbay
tanya.gubbay@rhul.ac.uk
Royal Holloway, University of London

Comet explosions did not end the prehistoric human culture, known as Clovis, in North America 13,000 years ago, according to research published in the journal Geophysical Monograph Series.

Researchers from Royal Holloway university, together with Sandia National Laboratories and 13 other universities across the United States and Europe, have found evidence which rebuts the belief that a large impact or airburst caused a significant and abrupt change to the Earth's climate and terminated the Clovis culture. They argue that other explanations must be found for the apparent disappearance.

Clovis is the name archaeologists have given to the earliest well-established human culture in the North American continent. It is named after the town in New Mexico, where distinct stone tools were found in the 1920s and 1930s.

Researchers argue that no appropriately sized impact craters from that time period have been discovered, and no shocked material or any other features of impact have been found in sediments. They also found that samples presented in support of the impact hypothesis were contaminated with modern material and that no physics model can support the theory.

"The theory has reached zombie status," said Professor Andrew Scott from the Department of Earth Sciences at Royal Holloway. "Whenever we are able to show flaws and think it is dead, it reappears with new, equally unsatisfactory, arguments.

"Hopefully new versions of the theory will be more carefully examined before they are published".

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Prehistoric humans not wiped out by comet, say researchers [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-Jan-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Tanya Gubbay
tanya.gubbay@rhul.ac.uk
Royal Holloway, University of London

Comet explosions did not end the prehistoric human culture, known as Clovis, in North America 13,000 years ago, according to research published in the journal Geophysical Monograph Series.

Researchers from Royal Holloway university, together with Sandia National Laboratories and 13 other universities across the United States and Europe, have found evidence which rebuts the belief that a large impact or airburst caused a significant and abrupt change to the Earth's climate and terminated the Clovis culture. They argue that other explanations must be found for the apparent disappearance.

Clovis is the name archaeologists have given to the earliest well-established human culture in the North American continent. It is named after the town in New Mexico, where distinct stone tools were found in the 1920s and 1930s.

Researchers argue that no appropriately sized impact craters from that time period have been discovered, and no shocked material or any other features of impact have been found in sediments. They also found that samples presented in support of the impact hypothesis were contaminated with modern material and that no physics model can support the theory.

"The theory has reached zombie status," said Professor Andrew Scott from the Department of Earth Sciences at Royal Holloway. "Whenever we are able to show flaws and think it is dead, it reappears with new, equally unsatisfactory, arguments.

"Hopefully new versions of the theory will be more carefully examined before they are published".

###



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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-01/rhuo-phn013013.php

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Students see the light at computer programming workshop (From ...

Students see the light at computer programming workshop

STUDENTS came up with plenty of bright ideas as they got creative with computers in Oxford.

The Creative Computing project at Science Oxford in London Place saw students from four secondary schools gather to tackle computer programming.

Initially, they coded light-emitting diode (LED) lights to work to on and off switches.

Quickly catching on, the youngsters even managed to program their own set of traffic lights by the end of the day.

Children from Oxford High School, Oxford Spires Academy and Cheney School in Headington took part.

Jonathan Jeczalik, the head of information and communication technology (ICT) at Oxford High School, said: ?Students were taught how to write a program, compile it and then upload it.

?From a standing start they were able to plug all this software and hardware in and write short programs to get a switch to turn some lights on. It was really quite something.?

William Cheetham, 13, from Headington, a pupil at Oxford Spires Academy, was among those taking par.

He said: ?It was quite exciting because I had never done anything quite like it.

?It was challenging in the right areas, it made you think.

?I am quite interested in computing generally, and this was developing that kind of interest further.

?I would definitely like to do more of it within the school curriculum.?

Students used basic computer science to design, write, and test Arduino programming code, which operated the lights.

Arduino is an Italian microchip that is cheap, flexible and designed for anyone to use and write programs on.

The program can be used to create interesting projects ? from light displays and alarm clocks to robots.

Sixteen students, four from each school and four ICT teachers took part in the event.

They were taught by four volunteers who work in computer science at the STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Harwell.

They will act as mentors to students and teachers as they continue to work on their projects back in school.

Source: http://www.oxfordmail.co.uk/news/yourtown/oxford/10190103.Students_see_the_light_at_computer_programming_workshop/

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Diabetes drug could hold promise for lung cancer patients

Jan. 28, 2013 ? Ever since discovering a decade ago that a gene altered in lung cancer regulated an enzyme used in therapies against diabetes, Reuben Shaw has wondered if drugs originally designed to treat metabolic diseases could also work against cancer.

The growing evidence that cancer and metabolism are connected, emerging from a number of laboratories around the world over the past 10 years, has further fueled these hopes, though scientists are still working to identify what tumors might be most responsive and which drugs most useful.

Now, in a new study in the journal Cancer Cell, Shaw and a team of scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies found that phenformin, a derivative of the widely-used diabetes drug metformin, decreased the size of lung tumors in mice and increased the animals' survival. The findings may give hope to the nearly 30 percent of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) whose tumors lack LKB1 (also called STK11).

The LKB1 gene turns on a metabolic enzyme called AMPK when energy levels of ATP, molecules that store the energy we need for just about everything we do, run low in cells. In a previous study, Shaw, an associate professor in Salk's Molecular and Cell Biology Laboratory and researcher in the Institute's new Helmsley Center for Genomic Medicine, demonstrated that cells lacking a normal copy of the LKB1 gene fail to activate AMPK in response to low energy levels. LKB1-dependent activation of AMPK serves as a low-energy checkpoint in the cell. Cells that lack LKB1 are unable to sense such metabolic stress and initiate the process to restore their ATP levels following a metabolic change. As a result, these LKB1-mutant cells run out of cellular energy and undergo apoptosis, or programmed cell death, whereas cells with intact LKB1 are alerted to the crisis and re-correct their metabolism.

"The driving idea behind the research is knowing that AMPK serves as a sensor for low energy loss in cells and that LKB1-deficient cells lack the ability to activate AMPK and sense energy loss," says David Shackelford, a postdoctoral researcher at Salk who spearheaded the study in Shaw's lab and is now an assistant professor at UCLA's David Geffen School of Medicine.

That led Shaw and his team to a class of drugs called biguanides, which lower cellular energy levels by attacking the power stations of the cell, called mitochondria. Metformin and phenformin both inhibit mitochondria; however, phenformin is nearly 50 times as potent as metformin. In the study, the researchers tested phenformin as a chemotherapy agent in genetically-engineered mice lacking LKB1 and which had advanced stage lung tumors. After three weeks of treatment, Shaw and his team saw a modest reduction in tumor burden in the mice.

Continuing the study between Salk and UCLA, Shaw and Shackelford coordinated teams in both locations to perform further testing on mice with earlier stage disease, using cutting-edge imaging technologies just like those used on lung cancer patients in the clinic. They found that early phenformin treatment causes increased survival and slower tumor progression in tumors lacking LKB1, but had no significant benefit for tumors with alterations in other lung cancer genes. This specificity in treatment fits with an emerging approach in cancer treatment nationwide, known as personalized medicine, in which the therapies for each patient are selected based on the genes altered in their tumors.

"This study is a proof-of-principle that drugs of this chemical type cause energy stress and lower ATP levels to where it kills LKB1-deficient cells without damaging normal, healthy cells," says Shaw, senior author of the study.

The Food and Drug Administration took phenformin off the market in 1978 due to a high risk of lactic acid buildup in patients with compromised kidney function, which is not uncommon among diabetics but less of an issue for most cancer patients. The issue of kidney toxicity would also be bypassed in cancer patients because the course of treatment is much shorter, measured in weeks to months compared to years of treatment for diabetes patients.

The next step is to determine if phenformin alone would be a sufficient therapy for certain subsets of NSCLC or if the drug would perform better in combination with existing cancer drugs. Based on their findings, the researchers say that phenformin would be most useful in treating early-stage LKB1-mutant NSCLC, as an adjuvant therapy following surgical removal of a tumor, or in combination with other therapeutics for advanced tumors.

"The good news," says Shackelford, "is that our work provides a basis to initiate human studies. If we can organize enough clinicians who believe in investigating phenformin -- and many do -- then phenformin as an anti-cancer agent could be a reality in the next several years."

Other researchers on the study were Laurie Gerken, Debbie S. Vasquez, and Mathias Leblanc of the Salk Institute, and Evan Abt, Atsuko Seki, Liu Wei, Michael C. Fishbein, Johannes Czernin, and Paul S. Mischel, of the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles.

The work was supported by the Salk Institute's Dulbecco Center for Cancer Research, the Adler Family Foundation, the Ahmanson Translational Imaging Division at UCLA, the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, the National Institutes of Health, the American Cancer Society, the Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Salk Institute for Biological Studies.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/Lf5vpsCIwE4/130129100115.htm

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Family Party: 30 Great Games Obstacle Arcade Review - Nintendo Life

Obstacle to fun, maybe

If you were to poll gamers at large and ask them what they felt were the worst things about the Wii, chances are you'd hear "waggle" and "bad minigame collections" pretty frequently. In fact they often went hand in hand, and Family Party: 30 Great Games Obstacle Arcade is trying its hardest to make sure both of things carry over into the Wii U generation. We can only hope that they don't.

Family Party: 30 Great Games Obstacle Arcade ? it just rolls off the tongue, doesn't it? ? is, as you might guess, a collection of short games that you can play with up to three friends. You might also guess that the games would revolve around an "obstacle" theme, but you'd be wrong; many of them are standard rounds of target practice, hide and seek, or, erm, picking the balloon with the number two on it after the game tells you to pick the balloon with the number two on it. That last one's not much of a game really, but there you go.

The collection is given a sort of theme park approach, with the games broken up into smaller, unlockable areas. Again, you'd expect the space area to contain space-themed games and the Western area to host games with a cowboy flair but by and large everything is just thrown at the wall with no regard for where it lands, and there's no telling what you'll encounter where. Fortunately, we guess, whatever you encounter will be reliably awful, so there's that to look forward to.

The games are hosted by a dead-eyed teddy bear with a stare so cold and creepy that we were constantly on edge for that inevitable moment when he'd pull out a knife. Half of his face is frozen in a bizarre semblance of what we can only assume is the developer's attempt at "'tude", while the other half just passively smiles. This, combined with the fact that his lips don't move when he talks, makes it seem like we've walked in on the bear in the middle of a massive coronary that's doomed to go untreated.

The entire package feels like a holdover from the previous generation; none of the graphics come anywhere near the capabilities of Nintendo's newest console, and the Wii U GamePad barely factors in at all, with each of the games requiring instead a Wii Remote and, often, Nunchuk. This means Family Party: 30 Great Games Obstacle Arcade plays identically to every other poorly-responsive, uninteresting, lazily slapped together mini-game collection you've been doing your best to avoid since 2006.

Every game supports four players; if there are fewer human players than that, the CPU will fill the void. Human players can enter any name for themselves that they like, but oddly the game also requires you to choose a separate name for the bear to call you by. This is because the developers only gave the bear a limited bank of audio files from which to draw, so you may tell the game that your name is William, but then you'll have to choose whether it calls you Chano or Shamus or Julio instead. It's bizarre to say the least.

In each game you'll compete against the other three for points. This nearly always involves waggling as quickly as possible, but sometimes it can rely on maneuvering crosshairs around the screen instead. No game is any more complicated than that, and it often feels as though the developer went out of its way to assign the most frustrating control schemes possible. Some games, for instance, are races that see you hopping from platform to platform. Despite the fact that each player has a perfectly good D-Pad and A button to use, Family Party: 30 Great Games Obstacle Arcade requires you to thrust the Wii Remote in the direction you wish to jump. Not that it cares where you actually thrust; it's a crapshoot whether or not the game will ever recognise your input. It's a needless and mandatory use of the least reliable control scheme possible, which is pretty much par for the course here.

The Wii U GamePad only comes into play during the bonus rounds. The rest of the time it features the glass-eyed bear glowing creepily at you and loudly narrating minor gameplay developments without moving his mouth. During the bonus rounds the winner of the previous game spins a roulette wheel, which determines what the bonus game will be. Here the GamePad is used differently than the Wii Remotes, but it's certainly no more fun, and it really does feel like a tacked on addition to what's essentially a low budget Wii cash-in.

The sound effects are beyond terrible, as the four players on-screen avatars laugh and hoot and holler over each other throughout every event, turning everything into a clamorous, cluttered aural monstrosity. The bear barks meaningless platitudes about every minor thing that happens ? from a player grabbing a coin to a player not grabbing a coin ? and while you're not likely to come away from this game feeling fulfilled you're more or less guaranteed a headache.

We'd like to close on a positive note of some kind, but we genuinely can't. This is an absolutely terrible game, and you don't want it. Trust us.

As clunky and poorly considered as its title, Family Party: 30 Great Games Obstacle Arcade is awful. Relying entirely on the shallow and repetitive waggle that should have died along with Wii, there's absolutely no reason to recommend this obnoxious, screaming, clattering monstrosity at all. It's mindless entertainment at its worst, but, on the bright side, it might be the perfect way to cure your childrens' burgeoning video game addiction.

Source: http://www.nintendolife.com/reviews/wiiu/family_party_30_great_games_obstacle_arcade

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For early-stage breast cancer surgery, less is more | MNN - Mother ...

Women with early stage breast cancer who undergo breast-conserving surgery do just as well, and perhaps better, in terms of survival, than those who have their breasts removed, a new study suggests.

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In the study, early stage breast cancer patients who were treated with lumpectomy ? a surgery that removes the tumor and part of the surrounding tissue ? were 19 percent less likely to die from any cause over a nine-year period compared with those who received a mastectomy.

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The advantage was seen even after researchers took into account factors that could affect survival, such as age, size of the tumor before surgery, and the aggressiveness of the cancer.

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However, experts caution the apparent survival benefit might have been due to differences between the two groups of women that the researchers were not able to take into account, such as access to health care.

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Regardless of this issue, the study provides reassurance to breast cancer patients who opt for more conservative surgery. In recent years, mastectomies have risen among certain groups of patients, such as young women, the researchers said.

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Many women think "they may do better the more surgery they do," said study researcher Dr. E. Shelley Hwang, chief of breast surgery at Duke Cancer Institute. "They need to be aware that lumpectomy gives them excellent long-term outcomes."

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The researchers note lumpectomy is not for everyone. It is not recommended for women with large tumors or multiple tumors in the same breast, those who have had previous chest radiation, or those who have certain genetic mutations, such as the BRCA1 mutation. But the majority of women diagnosed with early stage breast cancer (over 80 percent) are candidates for lumpectomy, Hwang said.

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Breast cancer surgery

Hwang and colleagues analyzed information from 112,154 women in California diagnosed with early stage breast cancer between 1990 and 2004 who received either a lumpectomy followed by radiation, or a mastectomy.

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During the study period, there were 31,416 deaths, about 39 percent of which were due to breast cancer.

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Women who were 50 years and older and who had tumors that were sensitive to the hormones estrogen and progesterone showed the biggest benefit from lumpectomy. They were 13 percent less likely to die from breast cancer, and 19 percent less likely to die from any cause, compared with those undergoing mastectomy.

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For women who were under 50 with hormone-sensitive tumors, survival was about the same whether they received a lumpectomy or mastectomy, the researchers said.

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Survival benefit?

"It's good news in that a lot of women sometimes come in and feel that a mastectomy must be better than breast conservation," said Dr. Stephanie Bernik, chief of surgical oncology at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, who was not involved in the study. But breast surgeons have had confidence based on previous studies that breast conservation surgery is equivalent to mastectomy for early stage cancer, Bernik said.

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Bernik cautioned against interpreting the findings to mean that lumpectomy offers a survival benefit.

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As a group, those who had mastectomies had some key differences compared with those who had a lumpectomy: They tended to have larger, more aggressive tumors, and they were more likely to have undergone surgery earlier in the study period, when treatment options were different, Bernik said.

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Although the researchers tried to account for these differences by using statistics, "that's not perfect," Bernik said.

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The researchers also could not directly determine whether participants had other conditions, besides breast cancer, that could have influence their survival.

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Women who have lumpectomies need to be monitored in case their cancer reoccurs, an issue that may factor in to a women's decision to undergo the surgery, Hwang said. Because the study only looked at patient survival, it could not determine how likely lumpectomy patients were to have their cancer reoccur.

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Related on MyHealthNewsDaily and MNN:

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This story was originally written for MyHealthNewsDaily and is reprinted with permission here. Copyright 2013 MyHealthNewsDaily, a TechMediaNetwork company.

Source: http://www.mnn.com/health/fitness-well-being/stories/for-early-stage-breast-cancer-surgery-less-is-more

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Monday, January 28, 2013

Police chiefs, sheriffs divided over gun control measures - U.S. News

President Barack Obama says he's looking forward to a "robust conversation" on reducing gun violence.

By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

In urging law enforcement leaders to back new gun control efforts, President Barack Obama is asking police chiefs and county sheriffs to unite behind a cause they don't even agree about among themselves.

Obama said Monday that he was seeking a "basic consensus" among law enforcement executives to pressure Congress for legislation to ban assault-style weapons and restrict high-capacity ammunition magazines, among a score of other measures.

But it turns out the two national groups representing police and sheriffs at a?meeting of law enforcement officials?Monday at the White House ??the Major Cities Chiefs Association and the Major County Sheriffs Association ??disagree on the initiative. The chiefs back it, while the sheriffs oppose it.


Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey, president of the police chiefs group, said the deaths of 20 students and six teachers and staff members at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., last month had settled the issue.

"If the slaughter of 20 babies does not capture and hold your attention, then I give up, because I don't know what else will," Ramsey said last week. "We have to pass legislation."

But?in a letter to Vice President Joe Biden (.pdf), who is leading the White House lobbying effort, the sheriffs group argued that "a ban on assault weapons alone will not address the issues of gun violence we are facing in our country today."

Nor would limiting magazine capacity, it said: "The problem is not the law-abiding citizen that will follow the restrictions; the problem again is one of access. ... (E)ven if you can?t buy in bulk, you can still buy multiple boxes of smaller quantities."

Similarly, the International Association of Chiefs of Police said?in a position paper (.pdf)?that it was "a strong supporter of the assault weapons ban" and measures to limit ammunition capacity. But the?Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association?applauded what it called efforts to "uphold and defend the Constitution against Obama's unlawful gun control measures."

Chiefs vs. sheriffs
The divide reflects a cultural and political gulf between police chiefs and sheriffs in a number of areas, criminal justice experts told NBC News.

Police chiefs run departments in cities where most gun crimes take place, according to FBI crime statistics over the past decade. Sheriffs run departments in counties, some or all of their jurisdictions covering rural areas where hunting and sport shooting are cherished rights. As a result, "you have these wildly different views of guns," said Gary Kleck, a professor of criminology and criminal justice at Florida State University in Tallahassee.

In counties, particularly heavily rural ones, "guns equal hunting, fishing, father-and-son-bonding-type things," he said, while in cities, "guns equal crime."

Those community views have real political effects, according to Kleck and another expert, Scott H. Decker, a professor of criminology at Arizona State University in Tempe.

"The big difference is a sheriff is elected and has to face the voters every four years," Decker said, but police chiefs are almost always appointed.

"If you're a police chief, you're not responsible to an electorate," Kleck said, and are therefore more free to advocate for politically unpopular policies like bans on certain kinds of weapons.

Sheriffs vs. sheriffs
Decker suggested that there was likely to be a broad range of opinion among sheriffs, because it's not just elections that keep them in touch with community sentiment. Because they have more varied duties ? running jails and patrolling areas that can include rural, suburban and urban communities, all in the same county ??their jurisdictions range across populations with widely?different political views on guns.

So while?many sheriffs say they wouldn't enforce new federal gun control laws, there are other sheriffs who call those sheriffs misguided.

Last week, Milwaukee County (Wis.) Sheriff David Clarke issued a public service announcement urging residents to learn how to handle a firearm "so you can defend yourself until we get there."

"With officers laid off and furloughed, simply calling 911 and waiting is no longer your best option," Clarke says in the spot,?which you can listen to here.

Just a few counties over, Ron Cramer, sheriff of Eau Claire County, objected that Clarke was sending the wrong message.

Clarke could have gotten across his point that residents could take more responsibility for their own safety "without having to say it's time to join our team and pick up a gun," Cramer told?NBC station WEAU of Eau Claire.

Related links:

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/28/16740488-police-chiefs-sheriffs-divided-over-gun-control-measures

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PFT: Lovie Smith plans to sit out 2013 season

AFC Championship - Baltimore Ravens v New England PatriotsGetty Images

So you come home at the end of a long work day, put the keys on the counter, and check the answering machine.

After the reminder about your kid?s doctors appointment, and the neighbors asking you to clean up after your dog, imagine if this is the next message:

?Hi, this is Tom Brady calling, . . .?

If he could have followed it up with ?Can Gronk come out and play?? he might be otherwise occupied this week.

But according to Mike Reiss of ESPNBoston.com, the Patriots are using their star quarterback?s voice to send out a message of thanks to their season-ticket holders.

?On behalf of the entire Patriots organization, I want to thank you for the tremendous support you showed our team this past season,? the message continues. ?Your enthusiasm and passion in the stadium really motivated me and the team on game day. Thanks for being our 12th man on the field. As a season-ticket holder you help provide the foundation for our team?s success and we look forward to welcoming you back in 2013.?

It?s one thing to send a letter or a trinket, but the Patriots are giving their fans a chance to have Tom Brady in their voice mail.

If they really appreciated their fans, they?d get Bill Belichick to record the message next year.

?Thanks. . . . Bye.?

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/01/28/lovie-smith-plans-to-sit-out-2013-season/related

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Content management systems - UK Business Forums

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Content management systems


What is the best content management system out there?

I have used wordpress since the launch of my site 18 months ago, and although I really like the ease of wordpress I have never been 100% happy with the functionality of my website as a whole.

I have tried for ages to bridge the site with all the different forum software's & shopping carts & never found anything I am truly happy with. All 3 components work brilliantly individually but what I really want is 1 website that offers everything under 1 login.

Our website is now becoming really popular, so want to invest in a long term website option.

My requirements are...
1, blogging system
2, chat forum
3, shopping cart
4, Facebook connect (1 of my main traffic sources)
5, WHMCS / membership module - we run a magazine so something that could handle magazine subscriptions as well as website membership.

Anyone have any experience or advice to offer on upgrading from wordpress ??

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I think that you are really talking about a custom build. You will find similar 'components' in Joomla & Drupal, but you probably will have the same concerns as you do today in Wordpress.

However the custom build costs could be frighteningly large for everything you need compared to the free opensource / low cost components you get with Wordpress etc.

Another approach is to identify the specific concerns you have and get a developer to fix them.

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Thanks roibot,
Out of interest, what ball park figure do you estimate for a custom build?

Instead of having the whole site custom built would it be better to take existing software which matches most my requirements then custom build the rest?

Has anyone used expression engine? http://ellislab.com/expressionengine
would this have all the functionality I require?

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Wordpress/Buddypress/Zencart would sort this out.
Quite a lot of recoding needed but can be done and should
be a lot cheaper than a custom build.

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I have used EE and it's blooming brilliant but like Joomla and Drupal, it has a large learning curve as it's ultimately a custom built system.

It can also get very expensive as modules are chargeable and can be upto $500 for the forum module.

A lot of large websites use EE including Vidahost, but they don't use the EE forum module, instead running on Xenforo (which is built by the guys who built Vbulletin)

You're never going to find a 100% fit without a custom build, as every websites needs are different and what works for one website, won't work for another.

Custom build, estimate would be ?15k + but will depend on so many variables including features, coding language used etc.

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Quote:

Out of interest, what ball park figure do you estimate for a custom build?

Instead of having the whole site custom built would it be better to take existing software which matches most my requirements then custom build the rest?

For your requirements a custom build would be really quite expensive, it's a lot of work. Hiring someone to link pieces together would be a bit cheaper but it's not going to be without it's issues. With each part being separate and developed elsewhere the updates might be pulling in different directions and you might have to do a lot to keep it maintained.

Consider that it's not a completely terrible crime to have separate unlinked systems though. It's not at-all outside the realm of a users typical experience to have to sign up to a website and then separately to it's forum.

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Cheers Faevilangel,
Why don't vidahost use the EE forum? is it not that good? does the Xenforo forum integrate fully?

I'm aware that I still won't get 100% of my requirements but if I could get 90% + I would be really happy. as my site continues to grow I think wordpress is going to be less suitable, so would like to design for the future now.

I have my own graphic designer so would only really need to pay for the modules and then maybe someone experienced to do little bits of coding I reckon I could pick up a lot myself.

I have a decent sized budget but not enough for a custom build.

As a rough guess what would it cost to set up a site with my requirements with EE? and would this meet most of my requirements?

Also anyone recommend any other CMS's not yet mentioned?

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The EE forum module is kind of limited, it's not developed very much while Xenforo is and is just a better forum out of the box.

It's the same for all forum packages, using modules for existing systems, normally means a more limited system while an external script gives you a better system.

I haven't used EE in at least 2 years so wouldn't be able to quote as not looked at it for ages, but can put you in touch with someone I know who develops with EE.

Cost wise, including buying the system, ?1500-?4k depending again on how many features you want (EE has a lot out of the box).

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Quote:

For your requirements a custom build would be really quite expensive, it's a lot of work. Hiring someone to link pieces together would be a bit cheaper but it's not going to be without it's issues. With each part being separate and developed elsewhere the updates might be pulling in different directions and you might have to do a lot to keep it maintained.

Consider that it's not a completely terrible crime to have separate unlinked systems though. It's not at-all outside the realm of a users typical experience to have to sign up to a website and then separately to it's forum.

Cheers that's brill, yeah I have seen a lot of decent websites that run a different forum.
As I would eventually like to make my website a membership service, I would prefer to have it all the same if poss? that way I can restrict parts of the site & forum for paid members.

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The EE forum module is kind of limited, it's not developed very much while Xenforo is and is just a better forum out of the box.

It's the same for all forum packages, using modules for existing systems, normally means a more limited system while an external script gives you a better system.

I haven't used EE in at least 2 years so wouldn't be able to quote as not looked at it for ages, but can put you in touch with someone I know who develops with EE.

Cost wise, including buying the system, ?1500-?4k depending again on how many features you want (EE has a lot out of the box).

This sounds more in the ballpark I was looking at, yeah would be great if you could put me in touch.

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W.Pa. colleges find new ways to bring classes to life | TribLIVE


By Rachel Weaver

Published: Saturday, January 26, 2013, 9:00?p.m.
Updated 7 hours ago

Washington & Jefferson students travel to another dimension to learn philosophy. Robert Morris scholars use music to study mathematical concepts. Point Park students learn how to sell out venues.

Western Pennsylvania colleges are exploring ways to make learning engaging with classes beyond the scope of traditional education. The classes often fill up fastest and are the most popular with students, educators say.

?Why should colleges have these ivory towers between disciplines when there are so many shared ideas between them?? said Heather Pinson, Robert Morris University professor of communications and media arts.

Pinson teaches a class with math professor Monica VanDieren called Math, Music and Art in which students apply theories of each discipline to study four themes: symmetry, finite and infinity, improv, and searching for truth and self.

Pinson admits the concept is complex, but students appreciate the class, for which one of their required textbooks is a graphic novel ? a novel in which the story is told with artwork, typically comic book art.

?The idea of the classroom is changing,? said Joe Douglas, 21, a senior actuarial science major from Greenville, Mercer County. ?Ten years ago, it would be someone standing there telling you the information. Now, it?s much more interactive. All classes are transitioning to that.?

During a recent class, Pinson played piano and taught students the mathematics behind chords: Each note is separated by one half-step, totaling up to 12 for an entire scale. Each student was assigned a note and, while standing in a circle, they held a piece of string to make triangles depicting each chord.

This triangle could be rotated or flipped by applying recent mathematical discoveries to the treatment of the musical notes, Pinson said. Students can maneuver points of the triangle over the diameter of the circle to create a new chord.

?You have to be able to work with others and be innovative and be problem-solvers,? she said.

Andrew Rembert, a Washington & Jefferson philosophy professor, teaches The Twilight Zone, which requires students to watch episodes of the popular 1960s television show, then delve into its themes of time travel, what it means to be human, eternal life and fear of the unknown.

Many students take it as a way to fulfill one of three required humanities courses. No matter their majors, students flock to the class. Rembert has to set aside a few slots for freshmen so that upperclassmen can?t get first bid on all the spots.

?You think outside the box and learn more in-depth concepts,? said Turner Rintala, 18, a freshman from Philadelphia.

In a recent class, Rembert delivered a lesson on nuclear weapons and the fear of their use during the time of the Cold War and Cuban Missile Crisis. A viewing of a ?Twilight? episode titled ?Third From the Sun? followed.

?It?s about what constitutes a human being,? Rembert said. ?The series was very in tune with the kinds of issues that were on people?s minds.?

Fans of Johnny Depp and history alike flock to Molly Warsh?s Global History of Pirates class at the University of Pittsburgh. The class is so popular, it will be open to 80 students in the fall, double this semester.

?It?s been super fun,? said Warsh, a history professor. ?It?s an easy sell. They all grew up with ?Pirates of the Caribbean.? ?

Students learn about much more than Depp?s Capt. Jack Sparrow. They talk about the role pirates played in the building of empires, the later struggle of merchants and their allies to eradicate piracy and how the culture persists today.

?It?s always really fun when you hear the students say, ?Holy smokes! This still exists!?? Warsh said.

In an age of rising tuition, classes that cross disciplines help educators prepare students for careers that might not even exist yet, RMU?s VanDieren said.

?They have to be able to adapt and be creative,? she said.

The average in-state tuition and fees for a full-time undergraduate at a four-year public institution in Pennsylvania was $12,079 in 2011-12, up 6.6 percent from the year before.

At Point Park, students are analyzing the workings of ticketing systems used in the sports, arts and entertainment industries in a class simply called Ticketing. They?re learning from industry veterans Jason Varnish, box office manager of Consol Energy Center, and Anthony Dennis, director of sales at the Pittsburgh Playhouse.

The class is the brainchild of several Point Park alumni, who told their former teachers how valuable such a class would be. Students go to Consol Energy Center and learn about its operation and are required to work a Playhouse event.

?You can only learn so much in the classroom,? Varnish said.

Chris Vella, 22, a senior sports, arts and entertainment management major from Oakland, said he thinks the class will give him a one-up when applying for a job.

?You get the relevant knowledge of working in the field,? he said. ?It?s something you can write on your resume.?

Rachel Weaver is a staff writer for Trib Total Media. She can be reached at 412-320-7948 or rweaver@tribweb.com.

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The Newest Edition of Psychiatry s Bible, the DSM-5, Is Complete

For more than 11 years, the American Psychiatric Association (APA) has been laboring to revise the current version of its best-selling guidebook, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) (see " Psychiatry's Bible Gets an Overhaul? in Scientific American MIND). Although the DSM is often called the bible of psychiatry, it is not sacred scripture to all clinicians?many regard it more as a helpful corollary to their own expertise. Still, insurance companies in the U.S. often require an official DSM diagnosis before they help cover the costs of medication or therapy, and researchers find it easier to get funding if they are studying a disorder officially recognized by the manual. This past December the APA announced that it has completed the lengthy revision process and will publish the new edition?the DSM-5?in May 2013, after some last (presumably minor) rounds of editing and proofreading. Below are the APA's final decisions about some of the most controversial new disorders as well as hotly debated changes to existing ones, including a few surprises not anticipated by close observers of the revision process: Hoarding is now an official disorder
Hoarding is the excessive accumulation of stuff?often stuff that most people would throw out or give away, such as junk mail, unworn clothes, old newspapers and broken tchotchkes. Some people hoard animals or obsessively collect a particular item, such as fabric. Many hoarders store their collections in their homes, but some use their cars or offices instead. Although the stuff piles up, commandeering all living spaces save for narrow "goat trails," hoarders refuse to get rid of anything. In some cases, hoarders simply do not recognize all the chaos and clutter as a problem. In past editions, the DSM regarded hoarding as a symptom of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Now, in a move well supported by a variety of research, the DSM-5 makes hoarding a disorder in its own right. Studies published in the last 10 years have emphasized that many hoarders do not have any other symptoms of OCD and that hoarding may be more common than OCD in the general population. Investigations have also suggested that although OCD and hoarding can co-occur, they are genetically and neurologically distinct. Parents and siblings of hoarders show higher rates of hoarding than do first-degree relatives of people with OCD, for instance, and hoarding seems to be inherited as a recessive trait, whereas the compulsive checking and organizing that characterizes OCD is dominant. Further, although some antidepressants, such selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), and cognitive behavioral therapy often help OCD, their success is much more mixed in changing hoarding behaviors. Neuroimaging studies support the new diagnosis as well. They have revealed that when hoarders make decisions about what to keep and what to throw out, their brain activity is markedly different from that of people with OCD and people without a mental disorder. In such situations, hoarders take far longer to make up their minds and show more activity in the anterior cingulate cortex, a brain region that is important for decision-making, as well as higher activity in the insula, an area of the brain that helps us interpret our emotions and physiological responses. Hoarders, it seems, form strong emotional attachments to objects that most people would not hesitate to chuck out. Renaming addiction and introducing gambling disorder
The DSM has long avoided the word ?addiction.? Instead, the DSM-IV?the current edition and predecessor of the new manual?discusses substance abuse and substance dependence. According to the fourth edition, substance abuse refers to repeated drug use that creates problems at work or school and in one's social life?binge drinking in college, for example. In contrast, the DSM-IV's definition of substance dependence is what the phrase "drug addiction" brings to most people's minds: an inordinate amount of time spent acquiring a drug, increased tolerance, recurrent physical or psychological harm as a result of drug use, failed attempts to stop taking the drug and symptoms of withdrawal. Charles O?Brien of the University of Pennsylvania and Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), have previously written that the APA committee responsible for revising the DSM-III in the 1980s favored the term "dependence" over "addiction" by a single vote. Since then, they and other psychiatrists have argued that the DSM conflates addiction and dependence. In general, clinicians (including the American Society of Addiction Medicine) define addiction not as chemical dependence but as repeatedly seeking and using a drug despite all its obvious repercussions. People who take antidepressants, pain mediations or drugs to keep their blood pressure in check all depend on drugs to function, for example, but they are not addicted. As a result of the DSM's conflation, wrote O'Brien and Volkow, "clinicians who see evidence of tolerance and withdrawal symptoms assume that this means addiction, and patients requiring additional pain medication are made to suffer. Similarly, pain patients in need of opiate medications may forgo proper treatment because of the fear of dependence, which is self-limiting by equating it with addiction." Now, the APA has made a gesture toward fixing what many critics contend was a poor choice. The DSM-5 abolishes the confusing terms substance abuse and substance dependence. All addictions and related problems will fall under the single category of "substance use disorders" in a chapter titled ?Substance Related and Addictive Disorders.? The DSM-5 also tightens criteria for these disorders and grades them as mild, moderate or severe. Whereas a diagnosis of substance abuse required only one symptom in the DSM-IV, a diagnosis of the newly defined mild substance use disorder requires at least two symptoms. Although the APA originally proposed including a new chapter titled ?Behavioral Addictions,? no such chapter will appear in the new edition according to Darrel Regier, vice chair of the DSM-5 Task Force. For the first time, however, the new manual will include gambling disorder in the same chapter as substance use disorders; previous editions of the DSM classified "pathological gambling" as an impulse control disorder. Whether one can be addicted to a behavior like gambling the same way one can be addicted to a drug remains highly controversial. The APA based its decision in part on recent evidence that the brains of people who are addicted to gambling change in similar ways to the brains of drug addicts and that both drug addicts and pathological gamblers benefit from group therapy and gradual weaning. Another behavioral addiction, Internet use gaming disorder, will appear in section 3, which is reserved for conditions that require further research before they are considered formal disorders. The proposed hypersexual disorder, which many people viewed as another name for sex addiction, was rejected from the new manual entirely. Mistaking tantrums for a mental illness?
Unusually intense and frequent fluctuations in mood?swinging from an energetic, even agitated, state to serious depression?characterize bipolar disorder (previously known as manic-depressive disorder). For most of the DSM's existence, bipolar disorder was considered primarily an illness of adulthood, although it sometimes began in adolescence. In the last two decades, however, more and more children have been diagnosed as bipolar. Since about 2000 pediatric diagnoses have increased at least fourfold in the U.S. This new trend outraged a large segment of the psychiatric community. Most of the so-called bipolar kids?some of whom subsequently took mood stabilizers and antipsychotics with serious side effects?did not have a form of bipolar disorder, many psychiatrists argued. They probably had a different illness altogether. Instead of vacillating between mania and depression, they were irritable most of the time and often erupted in fits of rage and physical violence incommensurate to whatever supposed offense set them off. So the APA decided to create a brand new diagnosis to accommodate these misunderstood children: disruptive mood dysregulation disorder. To meet the criteria, a child between six and 18 must "exhibit persistent irritability and frequent episodes of behavior outbursts three or more times a week for more than a year." Critics such as Stuart Kaplan of the Penn State College of Medicine, clinical social worker and pharmacist Joe Wegmann, and Allen Frances, professor emeritus at Duke University and chairman of the DSM-IV Task Force, worry that psychiatrists will confuse temper tantrums for a mental disorder and thus continue what they see as a trend of overdiagnosis and overmedication. David Axelson of the University of Pittsburgh put the DSM-5 disruptive mood dysregulation criteria to the test using several years' worth of data collected from 706 children and concluded that the new disorder was not very useful. First, it confusingly overlapped with?and was often difficult to distinguish from?two established diagnoses: oppositional defiant disorder and conduct disorder. Furthermore, a diagnosis of disruptive mood dysregulation in childhood was not a good predictor of future mental health issues, specifically depression and anxiety. Many observers hoped that this research, published in late 2012, would change the APA's mind, but the committee decided to keep disruptive mood dysregulation disorder in the DSM-5. The personality disorders chapter remains disordered
For decades psychiatrists within and without the APA have called for a complete overhaul of the way clinicians describe and diagnose personality disorders because of obvious flaws. For one thing, many criteria for the 10 personality disorders listed in the DSM overlapped, resulting in so many patients with multiple diagnoses that the validity of certain disorders came into question: Did some of these disorders simply not exist outside the pages of the DSM? Histrionic and narcissistic personality disorders, for example, are both characterized by a need to be the center of attention, a willingness to take advantage of families and friends, and difficulty reading other people's emotions. Additionally, psychiatrists began to rely too heavily on ?Personality Disorder?Not Otherwise Specified,? suggesting that some patients had personality problems that were not adequately defined by the DSM in the first place. More fundamentally, clinical psychologists have increasingly come to realize that people do not categorically have or not have certain problematic personality traits?rather, these characteristics vary in strength from person to person. Therefore, instead of making a diagnosis by looking for the presence or absence of maladaptive personality traits, clinicians should measure the severity of such traits to help determine, in the context of a patient's overall mental health, whether and how the person should be treated. Although the members of the DSM-5 work group tasked with redefining personality disorders did not agree about everything?and two members, Roel Verheul and John Livesley, resigned in frustration?the team drafted a relatively well-received proposal for serious revisions. The proposal eliminated four redundant disorders and, overall, adopted a much more nuanced view of personality than espoused by earlier versions of the DSM, encouraging thorough interviews to assess how well an individual maintains a coherent sense of self and how he or she interacts with others, rather than trying to slot someone into one of 10 categories based on a few supposedly telltale symptoms. Some psychiatrists, however, lambasted the proposed revisions as far too complex and burdensome, arguing that no clinician would ever use the new system. The work group continually revised the proposal, simplifying it as much as possible, and won approval from the DSM-5 Task Force. But the APA Board of Trustees ultimately voted against the proposed changes, according to Andrew Skodol of the University of Arizona College of Medicine, a member of the Personality Disorders Work Group. As a result, the DSM-5 chapter on personality disorders is more or less the same as the DSM-IV chapter. Skodol is not sure why the Board of Trustees rejected the proposal at the 11th hour, but "there was a lot of behind-the-scenes lobbying to keep things the way they were," he says. The work group's proposal has been relegated to a back section of the manual to "encourage further study." Recognizing that grief can quickly precipitate depression
Symptoms of depression?such as low mood and energy, insomnia, feelings of worthlessness, loss of pleasure and change in weight?must persist for at least two weeks to meet the DSM-IV criteria for a major depressive episode. The DSM-IV stipulates, however, that someone who has recently lost a loved one should not receive a diagnosis of depression unless the relevant symptoms last longer than two months. The idea is that, in these cases, what looks like major depression is probably bereavement?more commonly known as grief?a typical and transient response to loss that does not require medication. The DSM-5 has eliminated this "bereavement exclusion" and replaced it with a few footnotes describing the differences between grief and depression. Now, someone can be diagnosed with depression, and ask their insurance company to cover the costs of antidepressants, as well as talk therapy or other treatment, in the first two months following the death of a loved one. Richard Friedman of Weill Cornell Medical College and others have criticized this decision, worrying that it will encourage overdiagnosis and overmedication. According to the APA, however, the change reflects the new understanding that bereavement is a severe stressor that can precipitate a major depressive episode relatively quickly. Some studies have shown, for instance, that symptoms of depression co-occurring with bereavement are similar to depression unrelated to bereavement in their severity and duration, response to antidepressants and long-term outcomes. Therefore, the reasoning goes, people who are grieving and clinically depressed within two months of a loss should have access to treatment. Similarly, some researchers have questioned why, when it comes to identifying depression, the DSM makes an exception of grief following the death of a loved one, but not of any other kinds of loss or psychosocial stress such as divorce, unemployment, financial failure or romantic rejection. The International Classification of Diseases, published by the World Health Organization, makes no such exceptions. In an article published in Depression and Anxiety in May 2012, Sidney Zisook of the University of California, San Diego, and his co-authors examined the results of several review papers and studies and concluded that the available evidence supports the removal of the bereavement exclusion from DSM-5. "Acknowledging that bereavement can be a severe stressor that may trigger an MDE [major depressive episode] in a vulnerable person does NOT medicalize or pathologize grief!" they wrote (emphasis theirs). "Rather, it prevents MDE from being overlooked or ignored and facilitates the possibility of appropriate treatment. Furthermore, removing the BE [bereavement exclusion] does not imply that grief should end in two months. Indeed, for many individuals, grief lasts for months, years or even a lifetime in its various manifestations, whether or not it is accompanied by MDE." Embracing the autism spectrum
Often called a neurodevelopmental disorder, autism is characterized by impaired social interaction and communication?such as delayed language development, avoiding prolonged eye-contact and sometimes difficulty making friends?as well as restricted and repetitive behavior, such as repeated vocal quirks or gestures. In the DSM-IV, autistic disorder, Asperger's and childhood disintegrative disorders, along with pervasive developmental disorders not otherwise specified (PDD-NOS), are distinct diagnoses listed in the same chapter. The DSM-5 combines them all into a single new diagnosis named autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The APA argues that the symptoms of these disorders are so similar that they belong to the same continuum, rather than constituting separate entities. Some people in the Asperger's community maintain that Asperger's is different enough from autistic disorder to merit its own category, worrying that they will lose an important part of their identity; others in the community applaud the change, embracing the idea of a continuum. Some parents have pointed out that the change may in fact help children who have been denied after-school programs or assistance from insurance companies because Asperger's was considered too mild to warrant such support. The APA has also made it more difficult for someone to get a diagnosis of autism. As Scientific American has previously reported, the DSM-IV offered 2,027 different ways to be diagnosed with autism; the DSM-5 provides just 11. That reduction might sound drastic but, overall, many psychiatrists agree that this is a helpful change. They argue that past criteria were too loose: Some people who received a diagnosis probably did not have autism, and this misdiagnosis has surely contributed to skyrocketing rates of autism diagnoses worldwide since the 1980s. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that one in 88 children in the nation is diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder. By early 2012, however, several studies had tested the new DSM-5 autism criteria and concluded that they were too strict, excluding some high-functioning people on the milder end of the spectrum. In October 2012 a larger and more comprehensive analysis of data from more than 5,000 children concluded that the DSM-5 autism criteria identified 91 percent of children who received a diagnosis of autism or a related developmental disorder under DSM-IV. A few tweaks suggested by the smaller studies published in early 2012 might have made the DSM-5 criteria even more inclusive and helped to identify the 9 percent of children neglected in the October 2012 study. Yet when it came time to finalize the DSM-5 at the end of 2012, the APA decided to stick with the stricter criteria, as confirmed by Catherine Lord of Weill Cornell Medical College, one of the work group members who helped revise the definitions. Attenuated psychosis syndrome was too weak to make the cut
The APA originally proposed adding a new disorder to the DSM-5 called attenuated psychosis risk syndrome, which was intended to identify children with warning signs that precede full-blown psychosis?signs such as hallucinated voices or images. Critics pointed to research showing that two thirds of children who would meet the proposed criteria never develop serious psychosis (see ? At Risk for Psychosis?? by Carrie Arnold; Scientific American MIND, September/October 2011). Related research suggests that 11 percent of the general population sometimes hears voices or engages in moments of intense magical thinking without any distress or interference in work and social life. Allen Frances, chair of the DSM-IV Task Force and the most vociferous critic of the new manual, called attenuated psychosis syndrome the "single worst DSM-5 proposal." As with disruptive mood dysregulation disorder, the fear was that children who did not need medication would be given powerful antipsychotics with potentially harmful side effects such as trembling, suppressed immunity and weight gain. The APA acknowledged the criticism and, after disappointing tests of the proposed criteria, moved attenuated psychosis risk syndrome out of the DSM-5's main section into section 3, reserved for conditions that require further research before they are considered formal disorders. Some researchers still argue, however, that attenuated psychosis syndrome is useful and that further research will support its utility. "I think it is the future of therapeutics and our best hope to make a real-life course difference for people vulnerable to developing chronic psychosis," William Carpenter, director of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center, wrote in an e-mail. "I would have preferred to place it in the main text now, but appreciate the limitation without proof of good reliability." Patrick McGorry, director of the Orygen Youth Health Research Center in Australia, has similar thoughts. "On balance, I agree with and can certainly accept the decision," he said in an e-mail. McGorry notes, however, that although only one third of children identified as high risk for psychosis become psychotic, more than 70 percent of the remaining children develop mood, anxiety or substance use disorders, according to data he has presented at conferences and will publish shortly. Both Carpenter and McGorry say that antipsychotics and other drugs are not the only treatment option; alternatives include cognitive behavioral therapy to recognize and diminish maladaptive thought patterns, talk therapy, interventions to reduce substance abuse and simply increased watchfulness for any worsening indicators of psychosis. Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/newest-edition-psychiatry-bible-dsm-5-complete-120000000.html

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