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| http://www.rotarysouth.org/michaelkors-com.html (CBS News) - An enormous sinkhole about 100 feet wide and 50 feet deep has forced two Windermere, Fla. families to go out of their homes. http://www.harpersalumspecialties.com/guccihandbags.html Under increasing political pressure to deal with the UK's health care problems, British Pm Tony Blair this week announced one more $28 billion in funding on the next four years for more doctors, nurses, medicine and take care of the elderly.The new funding was designed to close a gap in coverage by Britain's National Health Service, the 52-year-old system that treats everyone totally free, reports CBS News Correspondent Randall Pinkston.Government entities admits that in some cases, the care a Briton gets depends on where she or he lives. Residents of poorer neighborhoods have higher rates of cancer reducing survival rates.The geographic disparities reflect the system's frugal funding.In comparison with most other industrialized countries, Britain has fewer cancer specialists, spends less on drugs and devotes a reduced amount of its national income to medicine.Graham Tarling's case is a example of the medical roulette faced through the critically ill all over the British isles. Seven months ago, when British doctors discovered Tarling's kidney cancer, they told him to prepare to die."The surgery here was felt to be too risky to my life and people did not have the skills and did not want to put me as well risk," he said.Tarling ventured into the Internet and found a doctor at the Cleveland clinic in Ohio prepared to perform the surgery. "A ray of hope did start to emerge that we could go to America, possibly, for treatment, however it would be very costly," he stated. The cost of the 13-hour operationmore than $45,000was paid by NHS. Tarling is recuperating in your house, undergoing chemotherapy and his prospects for recovery are good.The question for other patients in the uk is whether Blair's prescription for the NHS improves its condition."The truth is, there are gaps between the health from the poorest and the better off," Blair said immediately, promising that, "there will be a national framework of standards that may lay down minimum standards of access and desire to which patients will be entitled." http://www.ahlborn-kirchenorgeln.com/uggaustralia.html "This was a terrible spring for prime pollen counts," says Dvorin. "This is amongst the worst springs we've had since 1993." http://muvdigital.net/ Health officials said Tuesday that the woman died from West Nile virus, the state's sixth death from your mosquito-borne disease this year.The 80-year-old Loveland resident died in a hospital there, said epidemiologist John Pape. He'd not reveal the woman's name or when she died.Colorado may be the state hardest hit by West Nile, with at least 215 human cases.As people buy gadgets, bug spray and citronella candles to maintain the mosquitoes away, cities are also trying to stop mosquitoes from hatching.In aspects of Boulder County, home to one of many victims, trucks slowly lower streets misting the air with mosquito pesticide.Workers in Colorado Springs are putting larvicide by 50 percent,000 stormwater basins where mosquitoes have been breeding. The larvicide stunts the growth of mosquitoes. It also prevents larvae from developing into biting adults. Why Colorado has seen such high numbers of the mosquito-borne disease this season is unclear to experts. Some have blamed the outbreak on a wet June and very hot July, that they say provided the perfect summer for mosquitoes. Others have said the weather doesn't entirely explain the numbers."I can't predict after that happen in Colorado, nor can one completely explain why it is occurring," said Dr. Julie Gerberding, director from the CDC."That certainly makes us very nervous," said Craig Levy from the Arizona Department of Health Services. "If it could increase that dramatically in Colorado, it has the potential to do so in Arizona."Experts expect the mosquito-borne disease — which killed 284 people nationwide this past year — to reach every state from the coming months.Colorado differs from other states because it reports mild cases of the virus that some don't report, Pape has said.The CDC had confirmed only 72 Colorado cases and just one of its deaths by Friday, according to the organization's Web page. Nationwide, the agency confirmed 182 West Nile cases and five deaths.The virus is spreading fast nationwide and will likely break last year's record 4,156 cases, Gerberding said."The numbers are starting to change very, very quickly," Gerberding said yesterday. "That is very concerning.""It indicates were starting the epidemic with additional cases than last year," the CDC director said. She warned of "a many infected people."New cases are most likely until the first frost of the year kills the mosquitoes. Thankfully that the numbers tend to decrease following a state's second year dealing with the disease."Ever since West Nile virus arrived, we've for ages been forecasting that this year would be the worst year for infections in humans," Heath Harmon, communicable disease control coordinator for Boulder County Public Health. "For the rest of this summer and into next year, we'll try to weather the storm." http://www.rotarysouth.org/michaelkors-com.html It wasn't the machine but human error, and hospital officials are calling it an unspeakable tragedy. http://gcthulin.com/classicuggboots-uk.html Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean said Monday that Vp Cheney should resign if he ordered a top-notch aide to leak classified information on the media to defend the invasion of Iraq. On CNN's "American Morning" program, Dean repeated calls he first made Sunday, saying Cheney might have broken the law if he ordered his former chief of staff, I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, to talk about secret information with reporters in 2003. "If Second in command Cheney has, in fact, ordered the leaking of political information — of intelligence information — meaning he has to step aside," Dean said on CNN. "We do not know if it's true, but she has been accused of it. Should it be true, he has to step aside." On Sunday, Democratic and Republican senators said Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald should investigate Cheney while others in the CIA leak probe when they authorized Libby to give secret information to reporters. Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., called the leak of intelligence information "inappropriate" if it is true, and said, "I think he (Fitzgerald) needs to look closely at their behavior." Sen. George Allen, R-Va., said an entire investigation is necessary. "I don't think anybody must be releasing classified information, period, whether within the Congress, executive branch or some underling in most bureaucracy," said Allen, who appeared with Reed on "Fox News Sunday." According to published reports last week, Libby told a federal grand jury that in July 2003, he disclosed inside the contents of a classified National Intelligence Estimate contained in the Bush administration's defense of intelligence accustomed to justify invading Iraq. Fitzgerald said from the documents it was his knowning that "Mr. Libby testified that he was authorized to disclose information about the NIE to the press by his superiors." The White House has refused to touch upon the case. Libby, 55, was indicted recently on charges that he lied to FBI agents and the grand jury about how he learned CIA operative Valerie Plame's identity when he told reporters. He is not charged with leaking classified information. Dean initially called for Cheney's resignation when he appeared on CBS' "Face the Nation" on Sunday. "I don't even think the vice president has any credibility on national security whatsoever, and I think he's in deep trouble," Dean said on CBS. Documents do not identify Libby's superiors. But Dean said on CNN, "You have only one superior if you're the primary of staff and that's the second in command." Dean said releasing classified information is "against the law ... There's a process you will need to go through to declassify information. And you also certainly don't release it to discredit your political opponents."
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