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Archive for the 'Health' Category


Morgentaler among those named to Order of Canada

Posted by Graham on 2nd July 2008

–The nutters are out in full force over this. Congrats to Morgentaler, he deserves it. However, we still have a lot of fighting to do as this province still does not provide accessible abortion services to women, PEI doesn’t provide even inaccessible services, and NS only has one hospital that provides them. The reality is that the progressive movements in this country have not won this battle yet.

Posted in Canada, Health, Rights | Leave a Comment

HEALTH-CUBA: Lung Cancer Vaccine Available

Posted by Graham on 27th June 2008

–Cuba’s biotech industry.

Posted in Health | Leave a Comment

Independent study validates Canada’s Medicare program

Posted by Graham on 27th June 2008

–It is hardly news for those that are involved in this debate. The fight continues.

Posted in Canada, Health | Leave a Comment

IRIN Africa | Southern Africa | South Africa | SOUTH AFRICA: Maize - the unaffordable staple | Economy Food Security | News Item

Posted by Graham on 20th June 2008

–World food prices continue to have an effect on the lives of the majority.

Posted in Economics/Trade, Health, World | Leave a Comment

CUPE > Top Five Things Brian Day Doesn’t Get (Or Doesn’t Want You To Know)

Posted by Graham on 12th June 2008

–More on why privatization is not an answer to better health care.

Posted in Canada, Health, Unions | Leave a Comment

GTA town faces some ugly truths | Toronto Star

Posted by Faiz on 11th June 2008

Racist behaviour in our country’s “multicultural” metropolitan centres is often more vulgar and violent than outside. Here’s a perfect example.

“Last September there were a rash of disturbing attacks against Asian fishermen [just north of Markham, ON] … Six assaults were eventually reported to York police. Arrests have been made in five. Dozens more victims told stories of harassment, racial slurs, theft and assault on Chinese-language call-in shows. Incidents were reported as far away as Peterborough and Westport … Were these attacks racially motivated, or just a troubling example of tensions between locals and anglers, who are often Asian? As the debate raged, nine parked vehicles were vandalized with swastikas, anti-Semitic graffiti and homosexual slurs in late September … In late October, two men strung up a black-painted skeleton from a noose at the end of their yard in Keswick. The life-size dummy dangled from a flagpole beneath an oversized Confederate flag. It hung there for several weeks until a police officer noticed.”

Posted in Canada, Health, History, Rights | Leave a Comment

Native apology doesn’t address grim reality | Toronto Star

Posted by Faiz on 11th June 2008

“We could talk about so many other issues – the UN Declaration on Indigenous Peoples, First Nations poverty, drinking water – and the list is quite extensive.”

150,000 children were removed from their communities and put in the “residential school system”, and according to CBC Newsworld, this includes those kidnapped from their mothers immediately after birth.

Posted in Canada, Health, History, Rights | Leave a Comment

Saint John council rejects public-private partnership for water

Posted by Graham on 10th June 2008

–A definite victory for the people of Saint John.

Posted in Economics/Trade, Health, New Brunswick, Rights | Leave a Comment

Teen Sex Didn’t Decline as Abstinence Spending Rose | Bloomberg.com: Science

Posted by Graham on 9th June 2008

–Ya, there’s a shocker.

Posted in Health, World | Leave a Comment

Food summit blames trade barriers, queries biofuel | U.S. | Reuters

Posted by Graham on 3rd June 2008

–The statement is so inconsistent I don’t know where to start. If biofuels are causing increased starvation because the market favours fuel over food because profits on the international markets are blind to hunger in developing nations, then how is it that more profit driven markets directing distribution and growth are going to help the starving? The answer is that they are not. Export barriers are not the problem either. When governments impose export barriers it is in response to angry people who cannot buy food. There is an artificial increased demand (for a short time) and thus prices come down. However, if the heads of countries want a longer term solution they they are going to have plan and co-ordinate the distribution in their own countries before they see what is available to export. Making developing countries open their boarders to food export when their population is starving is not only immoral, it is a policy that will lead to massive civil unrest. It is also completely hypocritical for the developed world to demand free markets only for the developing world. Until we get a rational system of trade and development established using new economic theories (not this 19th Century liberal nonsense) we are not going to be able to solve these issues.

Posted in Economics/Trade, Health, Rights, World | Leave a Comment

OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook: 2008-2017

Posted by Graham on 2nd June 2008

–For those that heard the crap that passes as news on CBC radio this morning on the food crisis and how we should question the use of organics, I give you the actual Agricultural Report. In addition, searching Leftnews will give you a slew of reports, studies, and political economic analyses from the UN that show that genetically modified, monoculture crops, and the “Green Revolution” powered by cheap oil and fertilizer are the real culprits of the food crisis. The data is in for the academic community and those that engage in economic analysis, it is about time that the CBC news department starts listening to the facts instead of Agro Industry lobbyists.

Posted in Economics/Trade, Environment, Health, Rights, World | Leave a Comment

BP Ignored Safety Warnings Before Blast, Jury Told | Bloomberg.com: Law

Posted by Graham on 28th May 2008

–There continues to be concern for workers at BP refineries. Even with massive profits, BP and other companies continue to “slash operating and maintenance budgets”.

Posted in Economics/Trade, Health, Unions | Leave a Comment

Scientists call on federal government to release asbestos study

Posted by Graham on 27th May 2008

–It is not just scientists.

Posted in Canada, Environment, Health | Leave a Comment

Kira Cochrane on Nadine Dorries, the Tory MP campaigning against late-term abortion | Lifeandstyle | Life and Health

Posted by Graham on 18th May 2008

–Even Europe, it seems, is not immune from a new rash of social conservatism in governments. It is a shame that this debate has to keep being won by the Left every couple of years.

Posted in Articles, Health, Rights | Leave a Comment

Tories distorted abortion study, say scientists | Politics | The Guardian

Posted by Graham on 18th May 2008

–What else is new? The Conservatives make their living off of misrepresenting science and reasoned analysis for their masters’ interests.

Posted in Articles, Health, Rights | Leave a Comment

CANCER, RISK FACTORS & WOMEN IN N.B.

Posted by tracy on 1st May 2008

Women in regions with the highest incidence rate of all types of cancer do not have the highest smoking, obesity or alcohol consumption rates. So what’s missing in the equation? We know little about the extent to which environmental hazards – industrial emissions, pesticide use, etc. - contribute to disease. The Conservation Council of N.B. has called for the provincial Wellness Action Plan to address potential environmental factors.

Rates per 100,000 population, women, N.B., 1998-2003
Overall rate of cancer, highest: Saint John/St. Stephen, 383 /100,000 (lowest: Bathurst/Caraquet, 319).
Breast cancer, highest: Fredericton/Woodstock, 108 (lowest: Campbellton/Belledune, 87).
Brain, highest: Moncton/Richiboucto, 7 (lowest: Campbellton/Belledune, 3).
Leukemia, highest: Moncton/Richibucto, 9 (lowest: Miramichi/Doaktown, 4).
Lymphoid, highest: Moncton/Richibucto, 24 (lowest: Madawaska/Edmundston, 20).
Colorectal, highest: Moncton/Richibucto, 48 (lowest: Campbellton/Belledune, 36).
Squamous (skin), highest: Saint John/St. Stephen, 34 (lowest: Bathurst/Caraquet, 11).
Basal (skin), highest: Saint John/St.Stephen, 115 (lowest: Madawaska/Edmundston, 54).
Lung, highest: Saint John/St. Stephen, 59 (lowest: Madawaska/Edmundston, 41).
Pancreas, highest: Miramichi/Doaktown, 14 (lowest: Fredericton/Woodstock, 8).

Highest smoking, obesity and alcohol consumption rates, women:
Alcohol consumption: highest rate, Bathurst/Caraquet, 36% (Saint John/St. Stephen: 24%, Moncton/Richibucto: 31%; Fredericton/Woodstock, 28%).
Obesity: highest rate, Miramichi/Doaktown, 28% (Saint John/St. Stephen: 24%, Moncton/Richibucto: 22%; Fredericton/Woodstock, 24%).
Smoking: highest rate, Madawaska/Edmundston, 23% (Saint John/St. Stephen: 21%, Moncton/Richibucto: 20%; Fredericton/Woodstock, 20%)

- From Age-standardized incidence rates per 100,000 population, women, N.B., 1998-2003 and Selected Cancer Risk Factors 2005, compiled by Conservation Council of N.B. with data from N.B. Department of Health & Statistics Canada. For more on cancers and environmental factors, see Health Watch at www.conservationcouncil.ca/Health-Watch/

Posted in Environment, Health, New Brunswick, Rights | Leave a Comment

Merck Masked Vioxx Risk, Hired Study Ghostwriters, Records Show | Bloomberg.com: Exclusive

Posted by Graham on 16th April 2008

–More corporate backed fraud in the science community.

Posted in Articles, Health, Rights | 1 Comment

The Progressive Economics Forum » Canadians want higher taxes

Posted by Graham on 16th April 2008

–Canadians want higher taxes and increased public-owned and run services — new poll results.

Posted in Canada, Economics/Trade, Health, Rights, Unions | Leave a Comment

Hospital Employees’ Union - Home

Posted by Graham on 11th April 2008

–The union responds to the superbug reports.

Posted in Canada, Health, Unions | Leave a Comment

Moir: True costs of uranium mining outweigh benefits

Posted by tracy on 3rd April 2008

Fundy Royal NDP candidate and economist Rob Moir was among the keynote speakers at Moncton’s Public Awareness meeting to discuss the effects of test drilling and uranium mining on our health and ecosystem. Dr. Moir’s presentation outlined the overall effects that uranium exploration and mining has on the economy.

Moir toasted the crowd with a glass of Moncton city water, and commenced by saying, “Thank you Moncton for keeping water public, and here’s to keeping it free of radioactivity.”

Posted in Canada, Environment, Events, Health, New Brunswick, Newswire, Rights | Leave a Comment

Salmon Virus Indicts Chile’s Fishing Methods | New York Times

Posted by Faiz on 27th March 2008

“Residual antibiotics have been detected in Chilean salmon that have been exported to the United States, Canada and Europe [it is] estimated that 70 to 300 times more antibiotics are used by salmon producers in Chile to produce a ton of salmon than in Norway … Researchers say that some antibiotics that are not allowed in American aquaculture, like flumequine and oxolinic acid, are legal in Chile and may increase antibiotic resistance for people.”

Posted in Economics/Trade, Environment, Health | Leave a Comment

Health coalition says N.B. on road to private health care

Posted by Graham on 27th March 2008

–More public support for public health. The only people that are fighting for this are the unions and their supporters. Support the workers, your health may depend on it.

Posted in Canada, Economics/Trade, Health, New Brunswick | Leave a Comment