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Lower Blood Pressure Through On-Line Support

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typing.gifA new study shows that home blood pressure monitoring and on-line pharmacy care can be an effective treatment for high blood pressure, possibly even more effective than clinic visits.

(read the full story at WebMD)

Refugee Doctor ‘Making a Difference’ for Thousands in Burma

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burma-refugee.jpgThousands of people flee Burma each year, escaping poverty, oppression, and civil war.The nearest escape for most is Thailand, where they experience both despair and hope. Burmese refugee, Dr. Cynthia Maung, runs a small, modest public health clinic near the border in Thailand, and is making a difference in her community by providing essential services not available to most residents of the poor region.

Mothers line up with children, waiting for immunizations. In another line, couples with newborns wait for documents certifying their children were born in Thailand. The documents take the place of birth certificates Thailand refuses to issue.These people are refugees, and in the eyes of Thailand’s authorities, they do not exist.

But to Dr. Cynthia Maung, they do matter. Dr. Cynthia is a Burmese physician and a refugee herself. She makes a difference for thousands of her fellow refugees in Thailand and for many more inside Burma. For example, the Burmese physician founded the Mae Tao Clinic, a safe haven where miracles happen every day.

Dr. Cynthia fled Burma in 1988 following an army crackdown on those who demonstrated for democracy and justice.

“I joined with the demonstration group and then when the military seized power, people started disappearing, or missing, or fled to the border. I myself also decided to come to the border to continue struggling or working for political change,” she says.

In a two-room shack, she started doing amputations and delivering babies using instruments sterilized in a rice cooker. Young volunteer medics trained by Dr. Cynthia treat everything from landmine injuries to gastroenteritis.With donations from NGO’s and foreign governments, including the United States, Dr. Cynthia’s work has a reputation for a making a little money go a long way.One hundred 50 thousand people come here for treatment each year. Those who can, pay under a dollar.

Dr. Cynthia lives in modest quarters next to the clinic. She could have immigrated to the West and be making a huge salary. But for Dr. Cynthia, this is a greater calling.

“When we live here, we are not only treating illnesses, we can also educate young people who can go back and work in their community and who are very willing to promote the health activities in their village. So it is a very good opportunity for young people to give education and to give more hope,” she says.

The clinic trains volunteer medics who fan out into the ethnic Karen and other isolated areas of Burma. Some of the volunteers are former patients who, once desperate for help, are now the ones helping. It is they who embody Dr. Cynthia’s vision.

The Burmese physician says young people should be taught “not to feel as victims.” Instead, she says, they should see themselves as “people who can change or improve the situation.”

Dr. Cynthia is reviled by Burma’s military government. To the generals, she is a terrorist and an insurgent. To the thousands she treats and trains, she is a saint.

Part of VOA’s new Making a Difference series. Each week, VOA introduces a different individual – famous or lesser-known – working to help others. See the video to this story on VOA’s website.

93-Year-Old Man Gets High School Diploma

Harold Pugh, a 93-year-old man from Minnesota, has finally received his high school degree. Pugh completed 2 1/2 years of high school before dropping out to join the Merchant Marines earlier in his life.

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234,060 Stop Smoking After the Ban

“Record numbers have given up smoking because of the ban on lighting up in pubs, clubs and restaurants. A report shows 234,060 people quit cigarettes in the months before and after the law introduced in England a year ago – a figure up 22 per cent on the previous year.” (The UK Mirror)

Energy-Saving Technology Inspired By Humpback Whales’ Flippers

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humpbackjpg.jpgA new energy-saving wind turbine has been modeled after the flippers of humpback whales. The bumps on the whales’ flippers allow water to flow over them more smoothly, saving energy. The principle has now been adapted to capture wind energy.

 

Overfished Species Recover Fast

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cutthroat-trout.jpgSwedish Radio & Swedish Science Radio reported on June 24th, 2008, that overfished species are able recover fast in marine reservations where no fishing is allowed. The results were published by Australian scientists who had done research in the world’s largest marine reservation, the Great Barrier Reef, outside the northeastern Australian coast.

Family Relationships More Important Than Income

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family.jpgA new study has found that having strong family relationships makes people happier than having a high income provided that basic economic needs are met.

(read the full story at WebMD)

Ocean Satellite Helps In Understanding How Oceans Are Changing

An Australian ocean satellite could help in understanding how the world’s oceans are changing and in developing better ocean forecasting products.

(read the full story at Environmental News Network)

Teaching Tolerance in High School Religion Class

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religion-hs-class.jpgModesto, Calif. is the only public school district in the U.S. that requires students to learn about the major religions. It is a model that may benefit Americans of all faiths.

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Lucky Ducklings Saved

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mallard-ducklings.jpgIt was a lucky day for nine mallard ducklings that had tumbled through a sewer grate in Liverpool, New York. Lucky for them a local student, Matt Heath got involved. (Syracuse.com has the story)

 

 

Bridging the Iran-West Divide to Save Cheetahs

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cheetah.jpgIranian and Western wildlife experts are working together to save the rare Asiatic cheetah from extinction. Overcoming political differences, U.S.- and British-based conservation groups are cooperating in a mountainous region of Iran with that country’s Department of Environment and the UN Development Programme to prevent the endangered Asiatic cheetah from dying out. (Reuters News has the story) …More on the Iran Cheetah project at The Wildlife Conservation Society

Arab Cities to Launch Drive to Combat Racism

Several cities across the Arab world have launched a campaign to fight racism, discrimination, xenophobia and intolerance, with the support of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).

Chinook Rescues Helicopter

A Chinook has successfully airlifted a giant RAF Sea King helicopter which had broken down while on an operation to winch an injured hillwalker to safety. BBC NEWS features a video of the dramatic lift.

UN Refugee Agency Restores Dozens of Schools Across Uganda

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uganda-schools.jpgThe United Nations refugee agency has restored 134 primary schools in northern Uganda, allowing thousands of children to return to classes, after the damage and destruction caused by two decades of conflict between Government forces and the rebel Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA).

UNHCR said some of the restored schools have been rebuilt at their old sites while others have been moved to new sites as peace gradually returns to the north after a series of agreements between the Government and the LRA to end conflict that began in the mid-1980s. (Photo- Some classes in Awak Kol Primary School are still conducted under trees because there are not enough classrooms. © UNHCR/M.Odokonyero)

Ten Tips for Summer Learning

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classroom.jpgSchools may be empty during the summer, but learning can continue. California State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O’Connell gives his top ten suggestions of how to keep children learning during the summer.

Happy in Horse Poop: The Entremanureal Journey

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mare-and-foal.jpgI didn’t make a plan to save critters in need, but that is the path my life has taken. My passion for animals went all the way back to when I was four years old. For months, I stole rags from under Mom’s kitchen sink. I made little beds for stray cats, injured rabbits and other tiny four legged critters in our garage. Cardboard boxes were my favorite. I cut and taped them into tents, beds, or even houses for all sorts of animals. I raided the icebox and hauled morsels of food to my little haven.

This was all done nonchalantly of course, because I didn’t want my folks to catch on. My mother was a neat nut and animals and neatness never go hand in hand.

What I didn’t know is that Dad knew all about it. One spring morning, he hid in the bushes until I came out to the garage. I thought I was so clever shoving the mornings left over breakfast in my pockets. I strolled, ever so casually, to my hideaway with my goods.

I always made a big fuss over whoever happened to be there waiting for me. They were usually panting, toothless, tailless or something falling off them, but they were ecstatic that I had given them a home. I chattered up a storm with my new friends and pet them until, I swear, the fur should have fallen off.

Then Dad came up with a plan to help me, without Mom or I knowing a thing. He was considerate of things like that. He started the scam by offering to do the shopping for Mom. Next, he volunteered to make her a food storage pantry in the garage. He piled cat food, dog food, bird food, kitty litter; well you name it, on the bottom shelf behind a big box of fluffy, flaked mashed potatoes. He always quietly shuffled around the house doing mysterious things anyway, so we never noticed much.

One day, when he knew I was with my babies, he shuffled out to the opposite side of the garage. He made all kinds of noise and hummed dramatically. Then I heard something fall on the floor on the other side of the car.  Dad had opened the pantry and accidentally, on purpose, kicked the “mashed pots” over. I bent down, peaked under the car, and across the cement to view the box tumbled over, and what was hiding behind it.

There was my pot of gold! Loads of food and bandages and bedding and bowls and everything I needed for my babies. It was like getting special permission from my Dad! That’s all it took for things to take off from there and I’ve had furry-faced patients every since.

Stay tuned for more articles from Jeannie’s Entremanureal Journey…

Jeannie Sample is author and founder of Camp Critter in Emmett, Michigan.

New York State Begins Historic Energy Efficiency Program

New York State has just begun a historic initiative called the Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standard (EEPS). The project seeks to devote $13 million to natural gas energy efficiency programs through the year 2011 and seeks to reduce the city’s electric usage by 15 percent by 2015. The overarching goal of the program is to halt a predicted rise in energy consumption by New Yorkers by the year 2015.

Australian Cancer Breakthrough Saves Lives of Women

A blood test has been developed in Australia that detects ovarian cancer in its earliest stages, when 80% of patients treated can survive. The test, proving 94 per cent accurate in clinical trials, will be available from September for $200. (Australia Herald Sun)

Investment in Clean Energy Hit Record High in 2007

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wind-turbines.jpgPrompted by climate change concerns, surging oil prices and continuing anxiety over energy security, investment in renewable energy and energy efficient reached a record last year, according to a United Nations Environment Program report released this week. The report found that in spite of the subprime mortgage crisis that engulfed  global markets, new investment in clean energy reached nearly $150 billion in 2007, up 60 per cent from the year before.

Video Conference Calls for Military Families in Honor of July 4th

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yellow_ribbon.pngGenesee Community College in Batavia, New York, TANDBERG, and the Freedom Calls Foundation are offering video conference calls for military families in honor of July 4th. The event will take place at 31 locations across the United States on July 1st, 2008.