Britain condemned for “mad house” schizophrenia care system
















LONDON (Reuters) – Patients with schizophrenia in Britain are too often locked up in “mad house” institutions that are more likely to make them worse than better, mental health experts said on Wednesday.


In a damning report on how people with the severe mental illness are cared for in Britain, the experts said there were “catastrophic failings” in treatment and described “shameful” standards of care on some mental health wards.













The problems arise and are exacerbated in part by public misconceptions that schizophrenics are crazy, violent people who pose a risk to society, they said.


“In this country we’ve become preoccupied with the idea that schizophrenia means a madman with an axe,” Robin Murray, a professor of psychiatric research at Britain’s Institute of Psychiatry, told reporters as the report was published.


The reality, he said, was that the vast majority of people with schizophrenia were not violent and were in fact more likely to be victims of attacks than to lash out at others.


He said Britain could learn a lot from countries such as Switzerland, the Netherlands and Denmark, where health systems focused on getting patients with schizophrenia into calm, caring environments, rather than spending limited funds on unnecessary security and less appropriate treatment.


Schizophrenia affects around 24 million people globally, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). Patients can suffer from psychotic experiences such as delusions, paranoia, or hearing voices.


Although there is no cure and relatively little is known about its causes, there are many medicines and therapies that can treat some of the most serious symptoms.


The WHO estimates the costs of treating someone with chronic schizophrenia can be as low as $ 2 a month. But across the world, including in developed countries like Britain, many patients have limited access to treatment. The WHO says more than half of all schizophrenia sufferers do not get appropriate care.


“ABANDONED ILLNESS”


The British report, which described schizophrenia as “the abandoned illness”, found that nursing and other healthcare staff working in schizophrenia services in the country’s state-funded National Health Service were often demoralised and “burnt out” and that “pessimism pervades the system”.


It was written by a panel of mental health specialists known as the Schizophrenia Commission who heard evidence in person from 80 experts and people affected by the illness, and from 2,500 more who gave evidence online.


It said mental health hospital wards were often such appalling places they made patients worse rather than better.


“If you develop psychosis and your mind is disturbed … and you think people are against you, you’d want to be admitted for a period of care and respite and calm and some gentle pharmacological and psychological treatments,” said Murray.


“But in fact that doesn’t happen. Here, you get admitted to a mad house. And some of these places are very anti-therapeutic – not only for patients but also for staff. No sensible person would want to be admitted to one of these places.”


Paul Jenkins, chief executive of the charity Rethink Mental Illness, said it was a “scandal” that in 2012 people with schizophrenia were dying 15 to 20 years earlier than the general population and that only 7 percent were able to get a job.


“Too many people are falling through the gaps in the system and ending up in prison or homeless,” he said.


An analysis by researchers at the London School of Economics (LSE), which formed part of the report, estimated schizophrenia costs the UK 11.8 billion pounds ($ 18.7 billion) a year in “societal” costs including care and treatment, loss of employment, tax revenue, unpaid care and premature deaths.


Martin Knapp, professor of social policy at LSE who carried out the analysis, said too much was spent on expensive types of care – secure units – and not enough on trying to prevent schizophrenia and provide community support for patients.


Marjorie Wallace, chief executive of mental health charity SANE, said: “The real scandal is that despite all the pledges of successive governments, (schizophrenia) patients are daily being deprived of hospital beds, except on remaining wards which can be so shabby and chaotic they make their conditions worse.” ($ 1 = 0.6302 British pounds)


(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Pravin Char)


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Subj: Emailed Secrets Will Be Found Out
















David Petraeus ran the largest, best-funded, most capable intelligence service in the history of the world, but even he failed to learn the lesson learned long ago by small-time mobsters and corner drug dealers: If you want something to remain a secret, stay off the phones and—more important—stay off e-mail.


You have to presume that anything sent electronically can be discovered, duplicated, decoded, and undeleted—because it can. Digital files can be infinitely reproduced, and they leave a trail of data wherever they go.













General Petraeus was not entirely unaware of this. He did make some attempts to conceal his communication with his paramour, Paula Broadwell. But it wasn’t like he used NSA-level encryption and bounced his e-mails off 17 satellites to make them hard to trace (I’m not sure that would even work, but it always seems to do the trick in the movies).


No, the director of the Central Intelligence Agency set up a Gmail account under a pseudonym, which both he and Broadwell had the password to. They would write messages to each other but, instead of sending them, they would leave their hot-and-heavy missives in the drafts folder. By not transmitting them, there was no way to trace them back to a specific PC.


Except, of course, when Broadwell sent messages to that account. Whoops. That established a connection the FBI could follow, and led to the “secret” e-mails the two were sharing.


Petraeus and Broadwell could have taken things a step further by using an e-mail service that encrypts messages. With an encrypted e-mail, only the sender and the recipient would be able to read the contents—anyone else would see gibberish. Sites like Hushmail automatically encrypt messages, and downloadable software patches like GPG and Enigmail can encrypt messages on Gmail and other webmail sites. Sites like 10minutemail create e-mail addresses that can only be used for 10 minutes before the address expires.


But even these measures have loopholes. Encrypted messages have encoded content, but not address and subject information. So even though the main text may be garbled, an investigator could, for example, see that 39 messages were sent to the same person in one day, including one at 1:37 a.m. with the subject line “You just left—still cleaning the maple syrup off my chest.” At that point, does it even matter what was written in the e-mail?


There is a distinction made regarding who is trying to retrieve old electronic messages. The government—local, state, or federal—is bound by the Stored Communication Act, part of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 (that’s not a typo). That means electronic communications less than 180 days old require a search warrant to be viewed by law enforcement. Messages older than 180 days, however, are able to be viewed by the government with a subpoena. (Except at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, which includes parts of Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, and Tennessee. The court ruled that the SCA is in violation of the Fourth Amendment and therefore even messages that are more than 180 days old require a search warrant.)


As for private investigations, like divorce attorneys’, the bar is much, much higher. “Private parties have a much harder time accessing e-mail than the government,” says Hanni Fakhoury, a staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a legal nonprofit. Private investigators may be able to access the header information on an e-mail (addressee and subject fields), but the content of the e-mails will remain off limits.


Even deleted messages are not always truly deleted. For starters, anything “deleted” off a local hard drive may still be recoverable by savvy law-enforcement technicians (most data are not really deleted on a hard drive, just overwritten). On many webmail services, you have the option to archive or delete messages, but even deleting them doesn’t banish them to oblivion. Here’s what Google’s (GOOG) Gmail help page says about deleted messages:


“Please be aware, residual copies of deleted messages and accounts may take up to 60 days to be deleted from our active servers and may remain in our backup systems for an additional period of time.”


The same can be true of instant messages and texts. In the case of the former, most IM programs let you choose whether you want to archive your conversations or not—retired (and not retired, in what appears to be the case of General John Allen) four-star generals may want to uncheck that box.


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Liza Minnelli to guest star on TV musical drama “Smash”
















LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Liza Minnelli will guest star on an episode of TV musical drama “Smash,” NBC said on Tuesday.


The singer and actress will play herself and sing a number in one episode of the show when it returns in February 2013. The series, starring Debra Messing, Anjelica Huston and Katharine McPhee, dramatizes the backstage life of writers, producers and actors working to create a Broadway musical about Marilyn Monroe.













Liza Minnelli is the essence of a multi-talented, singular show business sensation, particularly for her extraordinary contributions to Broadway,” Robert Greenblatt, the president of NBC Entertainment, said in a statement.


“So what could be more fitting than to have her legendary talent on a show that celebrates a world Liza has dazzled for decades?” he added


The daughter of director Vincente Minnelli and Hollywood legend Judy Garland, Minnelli, 66, is one of a handful of stars to have won an Oscar, Emmy, Grammy and Tony award.


She is best-known for her portrayal of Sally Bowles in the musical “Cabaret.” She is also expected to revive her role as Lucille on the upcoming fourth season of “Arrested Development,” which is slated to air on Netflix after being canceled by Fox in 2006.


NBC has moved the second season of “Smash” from Monday to Tuesday night, starting on February 5, 2013.


(Reporting by Eric Kelsey; editing by Jill Serjeant and Matthew Lewis)


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General investigated for emails to Petraeus friend
















PERTH, Australia (AP) — In a new twist to the Gen. David Petraeus sex scandal, the Pentagon said Tuesday that the top American commander in Afghanistan, Gen. John Allen, is under investigation for alleged “inappropriate communications” with a woman who is said to have received threatening emails from Paula Broadwell, the woman with whom Petraeus had an extramarital affair.


Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said in a written statement issued to reporters aboard his aircraft, en route from Honolulu to Perth, Australia, that the FBI referred the matter to the Pentagon on Sunday.













Panetta said that he ordered a Pentagon investigation of Allen on Monday.


A senior defense official traveling with Panetta said Allen’s communications were with Jill Kelley, who has been described as an unpaid social liaison at MacDill Air Force Base, Fla., which is headquarters to the U.S. Central Command. She is not a U.S. government employee.


Kelley is said to have received threatening emails from Broadwell, who is Petraeus’ biographer and who had an extramarital affair with Petraeus that reportedly began after he became CIA director in September 2011.


Petraeus resigned as CIA director on Friday.


Allen, a four-star Marine general, succeeded Petraeus as the top American commander in Afghanistan in July 2011.


The senior official, who discussed the matter only on condition of anonymity because it is under investigation, said Panetta believed it was prudent to launch a Pentagon investigation, although the official would not explain the nature of Allen’s problematic communications.


The official said 20,000 to 30,000 pages of emails and other documents from Allen’s communications with Kelley between 2010 and 2012 are under review. He would not say whether they involved sexual matters or whether they are thought to include unauthorized disclosures of classified information. He said he did not know whether Petraeus is mentioned in the emails.


“Gen. Allen disputes that he has engaged in any wrongdoing in this matter,” the official said. He said Allen currently is in Washington.


Panetta said that while the matter is being investigated by the Defense Department Inspector General, Allen will remain in his post as commander of the International Security Assistance Force, based in Kabul. He praised Allen as having been instrumental in making progress in the war.


The FBI’s decision to refer the Allen matter to the Pentagon rather than keep it itself, combined with Panetta’s decision to allow Allen to continue as Afghanistan commander without a suspension, suggested strongly that officials viewed whatever happened as a possible infraction of military rules rather than a violation of federal criminal law.


Allen was Deputy Commander of Central Command, based in Tampa, prior to taking over in Afghanistan. He also is a veteran of the Iraq war.


In the meantime, Panetta said, Allen’s nomination to be the next commander of U.S. European Command and the commander of NATO forces in Europe has been put on hold “until the relevant facts are determined.” He had been expected to take that new post in early 2013, if confirmed by the Senate, as had been widely expected.


Panetta said President Barack Obama was consulted and agreed that Allen’s nomination should be put on hold. Allen was to testify at his confirmation hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday. Panetta said he asked committee leaders to delay that hearing.


NATO officials had no comment about the delay in Allen’s appointment.


“We have seen Secretary Panetta‘s statement,” NATO spokeswoman Carmen Romero said in Brussels. “It is a U.S. investigation.”


Panetta also said he wants the Senate Armed Services Committee to act promptly on Obama’s nomination of Gen. Joseph Dunford to succeed Allen as commander in Afghanistan. That nomination was made several weeks ago. Dunford’s hearing is also scheduled for Thursday.


___


Associated Press writer Slobodan Lekic in Kabul, Afghanistan, contributed to this report.


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Belize wants to quiz anti-computer virus guru McAfee in murder probe
















BELIZE CITY (Reuters) – Police in Belize want to question U.S. anti-computer virus software pioneer John McAfee in connection with the murder of a neighbor he had been quarrelling with, but they say he remains a person of interest at this time and is not a suspect.


McAfee, who invented the anti-virus software that bears his name, has homes and businesses in Belize, and is believed to have settled in the country sometime around 2010.













“He is a person of interest at this time,” said Marco Vidal, head of Belize’s police Gang Suppression Unit. “It goes a bit beyond that, not just being a neighbor.”


Police officers were looking for the software engineer, said Miguel Segura, the assistant commissioner of police.


Asked if McAfee was a suspect, he said: “At this point, no. Our job … is to get all the evidence beyond reasonable doubt that Mr A is the one that killed Mr B.”


“He (McAfee) … can assist the investigation, so there is no arrest warrant for the fellow,” added Segura, who heads the Criminal Investigation Branch.


McAfee’s neighbor, Gregory Viant Faull, a 52-year-old American, was found on Sunday lying dead in a pool of blood after apparently being shot in the head.


McAfee has been embroiled in controversy in Belize before.


His premises were raided in May after he was accused of holding firearms, though most were found to be licensed. The final outcome of the case is pending.


McAfee also owns a security company in Belize as well as several properties and an ecological enterprise.


Reuters was unable to contact McAfee on Monday.


Segura said McAfee had been at odds with Faull for some time. He accused his neighbor of poisoning his dogs earlier this year and filed an official complaint.


“There was some conflict there between (them) … prior to the death of the gentleman,” Segura said. “But those dogs didn’t have a post mortem to see if the toxicology would confirm what type of poison, if any.”


McAfee previously accused the police Gang Suppression Unit of killing his dogs during the May raid.


McAfee was one of Silicon Valley’s first entrepreneurs to amass a fortune by building a business off the Internet.


The former Lockheed systems consultant started McAfee Associates in 1989, initially distributing its anti-virus software as “shareware” on Internet bulletin boards.


He took the company public in 1992 and left two years later following accusations that he had hyped the arrival of a virus known as Michelango, which turned out to be a dud, to scare computer users into buying his company’s products.


(Reporting by Simon Gardner and Gabriel Stargardter in Mexico City and Jim Finkle; Editing by Kieran Murray and Todd Eastham)


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Arseus makes three acquisitions, sees more this year
















BRUSSELS (Reuters) – Belgo-Dutch medical supplies firm Arseus has made three acquisitions in drug compounding and plans to announce more by the end of the year as it seeks to benefit from a growing trend of pharmacists mixing their own medicines.


The firm, which also sells dentist chairs and surgical equipment, said on Tuesday it has made acquisitions in Brazil, Colombia and Scandinavia worth around 16.5 million euros ($ 21 million) in total.













The firm is the only real global company that supplies ingredients for compounding, meaning it has become the consolidator in the sector.


“There are lots of opportunities and we are involved in numerous processes now, so we hope to announce a little bit more before the end of the year,” Chief Executive Ger van Jeveren told Reuters in a telephone interview.


He said the company has 75 million euros in cash that is still available for acquisitions.


Arseus said the three added companies would generate a combined annual revenue of 12 million euros, with a 25 percent core profit margin.


The acquisitions are to be consolidated from Nov 1. ($ 1 = 0.7867 euros)


(Reporting By Ben Deighton; editing by Philip Blenkinsop)


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Glitch prevents trading in over 200 stocks on the NYSE
















NEW YORK (Reuters) – NYSE Euronext on Monday suspended trading in over 200 stocks on the New York Stock Exchange due to a technical problem with a server, though the stocks in question were still trading actively on other markets.


There will be no closing auctions in the affected stocks, and a list of the official closing prices for the securities, based on the consolidated last sale, will be distributed via email and NYSE’s website, the exchange operator said.













NYSE first alerted traders it was having problems with one of its cash equity matching engines at 9:38 a.m., and it said it would not publish quotes on a total of 216 stocks, including CVS Caremark Corp and Lazard Ltd .


Nasdaq OMX Group , BATS Global Markets and Direct Edge exchanges stopped sending orders to the NYSE, declaring “self help” against the exchange.


“Orders were coming in, but those who were issuing the orders were not getting their confirmations or their reports, so we felt it was best to zero it out, if you will, and then to suspend trading of those stocks on our market,” said Rich Adamonis, an NYSE spokesman.


NYSE said that any open orders should be considered canceled.


Adamonis said the server issues were still being investigated at around 3 p.m., but said they came as the issues were being moved over to a new trading platform.


NYSE is in the process of moving all of its markets – including bonds, options, futures and cash equities – in the United States and Europe to a universal electronic trading platform.


The New York-based company’s European markets have been fully integrated with the new system, and the exchange is now in the process of moving over its roughly 3,800 U.S. cash equities issues to the new platform, with about 800 having been migrated so far, Adamonis said.


The migration will continue to be rolled out through the rest of the year, he added.


(Reporting By John McCrank; Editing by Leslie Adler)


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Australia’s INXS calls it quits as touring band after 35 years
















SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australian rock group INXS has called it quits as a live touring band after 35 years, thanking fans and honoring late frontman Michael Hutchence in a statement on Tuesday.


INXS, which sold more than 30 million albums worldwide, including more than 10 million alone of their 1987 breakthrough “Kick”, issued the statement after comments by band member Jon Farriss during a weekend performance sparked a frenzy on Twitter.













“We understand that this must come as a blow to everybody, but all things must eventually come to an end,” INXS members Tim, Andrew and Jon Farriss, Kirk Pengilly and Garry Beers said. “We have been performing as a band for 35 years, it’s time to step away from the touring arena.”


“Our music will of course live on and we will always be a part of that,” they added.


INXS was one of the biggest touring bands of the 1980s and 1990s, playing to 80,000 at Wembley Stadium in London and 120,000 in Rio De Janeiro.


But the death of charismatic lead singer Hutchence in 1997 was a major blow.


A U.S. TV talent show for a new frontman was won by Canadian J.D. Fortune, while Terence Trent D’Arby and Jon Stevens also had a turn at the microphone. Irishman Ciaran Gribbin was the last to take the role.


Farriss, the band’s drummer, set the Internet abuzz on Sunday night after he told the audience during a support performance for U.S. band Matchbox Twenty in Perth that it was the last time INXS would perform together. Saxophone player Pengilly later told a radio station the band was not breaking up.


The group declined to comment further on Tuesday.


(Reporting By Grace Williams, editing by Elaine Lies)


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Clarke’s 218 puts Australia on front foot
















BRISBANE (Reuters) – Australia captain Michael Clarke scored a brilliant unbeaten double century to give the hosts a remarkable 37-run first innings lead on the fourth day of the first test against South Africa on Monday.


Supported first by a maiden century from opener Ed Cowan in a record stand of 259, and then by Mike Hussey‘s 86 not out, Clarke’s 218 helped lift Australia from 40 for three when he took to the crease on Sunday to 487 for four when stumps were drawn.













It was Clarke’s sixth test century, and his third double hundred, in the 15 tests since he was named captain last year in the wake of the Ashes humiliation and Australia’s quarter-final exit at the World Cup.


Although by no means a chanceless knock, the 31-year-old played with patience when South Africa’s vaunted pacemen got anything out of the Gabba track before punishing anything loose with some fine shot-making.


When he carried his bat back to the pavilion at the end of the day to the raucous cheers of a sparse crowd at the famous Brisbane ground, Clarke had faced 350 balls over 504 minutes and scored 21 fours.


“I’m very happy with that,” Clarke, who accumulated his 1,000 test run of the year during the innings, said in an interview on the boundary.


“I didn’t feel great at the start and I think Ed Cowan batted beautifully.


“We’re in a great position with a 30-odd lead. I’d like another 70 odd runs in the morning and then I want to have a crack with the ball. We’ll see what happens.”


Cowan departed for 136 in heartbreaking fashion just before tea, run out at the non-striker’s end when Dale Steyn got a finger to a Clarke drive that hit the stumps and the opener was caught out of his crease backing up.


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His partnership with Clarke was an Australian record for the fourth wicket at the Gabba, beating the 245 Clarke and Mike Hussey made against Sri Lanka in 2007.


Cowan’s wicket was the only wicket to fall on the day and Hussey started pouring on the runs as if determined to get the record back for his own partnership with his captain.


The 37-year-old bucked his poor recent form against South Africa by reaching his half century off just 68 balls with a drive through long-off and was closing on a century of his own when play ended.


It was Hussey’s cut four off Morne Morkel with which Australia overhauled South Africa’s first innings tally of 450 and put themselves in with an unlikely chance of even winning a test which lost an entire day to rain on Saturday.


Clarke’s negotiation of the “nervous nineties” for his century had been fraught and he was nearly run out going for a second run that would have brought him to the hundred mark.


There were no such jitters on his approach to the two hundred mark, which he passed by slapping the ball through mid-on for two runs before giving the badge on his helmet another kiss.


Cowan’s century was a retort to those critics who have consistently questioned his place in the team since he made his debut in last year’s Melbourne test against India.


The 30-year-old lefthander reached the mark two overs after lunch by pulling a short Vernon Philander delivery for four to the square leg boundary, beginning his joyous celebrations before the ball hit the rope.


South Africa’s number one test ranking is on the line in the series, which continues with matches in Adelaide and Perth after Brisbane.


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Global deal agreed to fight tobacco smuggling
















SEOUL (Reuters) – Global health officials agreed a deal on Monday to fight smuggling of tobacco products, a trade which robs governments of more than $ 40 billion in revenue each year and undercuts efforts to reduce smoking.


The measures include making it mandatory for member governments to license manufacturers and for tobacco packaging to be marked so the products can be tracked.













The agreement came at a meeting of the 176 member states to the World Health Organisation (WHO)’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control in the South Korean capital Seoul and follows more than five years of negotiations.


“The protocol gives the world an orderly, rules-based instrument for countering and eventually eliminating a very sophisticated international criminal activity,” WHO Director General Margaret Chan told the conference.


“Illicit trade is bad for health because it circumvents measures like taxes and price increases that are known to reduce demand.”


Roughly one in 10 cigarettes, or 600 billion, are smuggled each year by organized gangs, experts say.


A study by the independent non-profit International Tax and Investment Center based in Washington said approximately 11 percent of the world cigarette market is illicit, resulting in annual loss in government revenue of more than $ 40 billion.


“There is evidence that the proceeds of the illicit trade in tobacco products funds both international criminal organizations


A network of civil society groups, the Framework Convention Alliance, called to pact a major step in curbing the illegal trade in tobacco products.


“The illicit trade in tobacco feeds the worldwide tobacco epidemic by flooding markets with cheap products and keeping tobacco taxes low,” it said.


However, some countries where major tobacco companies are based, notably the United States, will not be subject to the anti-smuggling agreement because they have not ratified the original pact.


Industry giants Philip Morris International and British American Tobacco have previously said they would back a pact with effective measures against illicit trade.


(Editing by Jonathan Thatcher)


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