Thursday, July 23, 2009

Tourists up last month despite H1N1

2009/07/23

KUALA LUMPUR: Although the number Influenza A(H1N1) cases continued to rise in the country, tourist arrivals last month achieve an impressive 7.5 per cent growth compared with the 0.3 per cent drop in May.

Tourism Minister Datuk Seri Dr Ng Yen Yen said the number of tourist arrivals to Malaysia was 11.35 million last month, a 3.5 per cent increase from the 10.96 million for the corresponding period last year.

She believed that medical tourism was one sector that could bring great benefit to the country, with a projected contribution of RM540 million in 2010 with 625,000 medical tourists flowing into the country to get medical service.

This was possible for the fact that Malaysia offered a wide range of state-of-the-art private medical centres and an impressive array of sophisticated diagnostic, therapeutic and inpatient facilities.

"In addition, Malaysia is also the place to see the fusion of Eastern traditional healing methods blending with the modern sciences of the West," she said in her speech at the International Healthcare Conference and Exhibition 2009.


Her speech was delivered by the ministry's deputy secretary-general (Managment), Dr Junaida Lee Abdullah, who also launched "Patients Beyond Border" a book by Healthy Travel Media CEO and a reputable author in Medical Tourism Josef Woodman.

Dr Ng said Malaysia was also reported in the recent Deloitte Medical Tourism report 2008 to be the most preferred destination in East Asia for medical treatment.

She urged the private hospitals promoting medical tourism to work closely with tourism operators to capitalise on every opportunity available to promote Malaysia's natural and multi-cultural attractions.

On the book, she said it was the first comprehensive, easy-to-understand guide to medical tourism for Malaysia and was published with the collaboration and support of the Association of Private Hospitals Malaysia (APHM) and Tourism Malaysia. - Bernama

World's first H1N1 vaccine available soon

2009/07/23

ADELAIDE: A vaccine for the deadly swine flu could be available within weeks as Australia begins its world-first human trials, the Australian Associated Press (AAP) reported Wednesday.
Australian bio-pharmaceutical company CSL, the makers of the vaccine, believe it will protect against the H1N1 virus. Some 240 adults will be injected with the vaccine at the Royal Adelaide Hospital in trials which began on Wednesday.
A further trial of the vaccine on 400 children will begin on August 4.
So far, Australia recorded more than 40 deaths.
Quoting CSL's research and development director Andrew Cuthbertson, AAP reported that said the vaccine should be proven by late September.
The federal government has already ordered 21 million doses of the vaccine. "As soon as I have confirmation that the vaccine is safe and effective, I will ensure it can be rolled out to the community," federal Health Minister Nicola Roxon said on Wednesday.
The adult trials, to take six weeks to complete, are testing the appropriate dose of the vaccine.

"It will be available when the government decides how to roll it out," Dr Cuthbertson told reporters in Adelaide on Wednesday.
"There is a clear distinction between CSL's role, which is to do the research, develop the vaccine and make it in large amounts and make it available to government and government will then decide what the roll out will be.
"There may be a point where our government feels the threat justifies moving forward in deploying the vaccine."

CSL spokeswoman Rachel David said there was "no additional safety risk in rolling out the vaccine" in September or October.
She said the vaccine was similar to the currently available seasonal flu vaccine - the only difference being the new vaccine contained one strain of flu - swine flu - while the seasonal flu vaccine contained three strains of influenza.
Dr Cuthbertson said CSL was "confident that the safety profile of this vaccine will be very similar to our normal seasonal vaccines".
"We will be supplying other countries but we would supply Australia with the vaccine, and then the rest of the world," he said, adding that swine flu had yet to mutate.
"So far at least it doesn't appear to have changed very much which I guess from the point of view of preparing a vaccine is a good thing.
"This particular virus appears to continue transmitting in the warmer parts of the year which is unusual -- BERNAMA

Man claims he found condom in French onion soup

SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) -- A man has sued a local Claim Jumper restaurant claiming he ordered French onion soup and bit into a condom instead of melted cheese. Zdenek Philip Hodousek filed the lawsuit Tuesday in Orange County Superior Court seeking unspecified damages over fears he may have contracted a disease.

Hodousek's attorney Eric Traut said his client wants to have restaurant employees' DNA tested to find a match to the condom.

A public relations firm representing Claim Jumper said no one can prove the so-called "foreign object" Hodousek took from the restaurant is the item that was submitted to a lab for testing.

The firm said an internal probe revealed no employee wrongdoing.

RIM Warns Update for Blackberry Has Spyware

Research In Motion Ltd. warned BlackBerry users in the United Arab Emirates that a software upgrade recommended by their wireless carrier was actually surveillance software that could enable unauthorized access to the popular smart phone.

RIM, which makes the BlackBerry, said it didn't authorize the upgrade. "RIM did not develop this software application and RIM was not involved in any way in the testing, promotion or distribution of this software application," the Canadian company said in a statement.

Emirates Telecommunications Co., or Etisalat, didn't respond to requests for comment. The company, which is 60% owned by the U.A.E. government and operates in 18 countries, is the larger of two BlackBerry providers in the U.A.E.

Earlier this month, Etisalat began texting its Blackberry customers prompting them to install new software that the company said would upgrade their systems from 2G to 3G standards.

Some customers who accepted the download, however, complained that the software acted more like a virus by disrupting their ability to send or receive emails and draining their batteries.

Quickly word spread through the expatriate community in Dubai, the country's financial center, and Abu Dhabi, the capital of the U.A.E., that a possible virus was spreading through Etisalat's network.

Software-security companies started to describe the patch as "spyware," not a technical upgrade, that would allow the telecom company to store and read emails sent on its system.

On July 15, Etisalat issued a statement explaining the battery and other problems were due to a "slight technical fault" that affected "a very limited number of devices." It said it had received about 300 complaints from its more than 145,000 BlackBerry customers. Etisalat offered to give users instructions to undo the changes.

RIM said Etisalat appears to have distributed surveillance software designed by SS8 Networks Inc., a closely-held Milpitas, Calif., company. Installing the software on a BlackBerry can enable unauthorized access to confidential information stored on the device, the statement said.

SS8 didn't respond to requests for comment. The company's Web site indicated that, among other things, its products intercept a variety of communications traffic, including wireless traffic, and deliver analytical results to law enforcement.

Daniel Hoffman, chief technology officer at SMobile Systems Inc., which makes security products for BlackBerry devices, said the software Etisalat distributed was designed to intercept email traffic and send data to two email addresses at Etisalat.

"Mobile devices have been infected for years, and we encounter spyware every day, but we haven't seen it en masse before," Mr. Hoffman said. Spyware normally targets individuals or groups in business or government to collect data for financial or political reasons. "You want to be stealthy, and this seems more blatant," he said.

Because RIM develops and upgrades its own software code, carriers don't normally offer updates on their own. This is the first instance of a carrier offering to upgrade BlackBerry software on its own, according to a person familiar with the matter.

"This isn't a group of hackers, this is the operator that sent you a valid and authorized update," said Jacob Greenblatt, director of strategy at mobile-security firm Discretix Inc. "It's difficult to guard against this, because it's built into the capability of the device."

The damaged brain system

JULY 23 — One of the wonderful things about living in Malaysia is that we devote so much of our resources into building brain power. We love smart people in Malaysia. Parents spend an obscene amount on tuition classes.

Let’s look at some of the major initiatives by our wonderful government to increase our brain power:

1) Malaysia will produce more than 100,000 PhDs by 2012

2) Creating “knowledge” workers and “world-class” IT industry via the MSC

3) Almost all grants by MOSTI is geared towards science and technology

4) Building new universities left and right. In the 1980s we had fewer than a dozen universities — now we have more than 20 public universities and an equal number of private universities

5) “Apex” and “research” universities allocated extra millions of ringgit with the aim of getting into the top 200 university rankings

6) All sorts of academic prizes from all sorts of dubious exhibitions

7) Smart schools

8) All sorts of scholarships — JPA alone gives more than 2,000 overseas scholarships. If you include Mara and GLCs and private companies, the number is probably somewhere about 6,000-7,000 overseas scholarships plus thousands of local scholarships

9) “Brain gain” programme where we try to entice successful Malaysian scientists to come back to help our R&D

10) All sorts of government-backed programmes like the invention awards, best ICT Company, PM’s innovation awards, smart partnership, etc.

Yet, somehow we seem to be going the opposite direction. Mind you it’s been there for more than a decade already and, correct me if I am wrong; the MSC has been a dismal failure since the “knowledge” industry has not taken off and no major Malaysian IT inventions since the inception of the MSC. Cyberjaya is still years behind Singapore.

In fact, the most famous “Malaysian” IT invention — the pen drive — was invented in Taiwan by a Malaysian Chinese who could not even enter a public university here. He had to go to Taiwan, get a degree there (which is not recognised here!) and invented the pen drive there. So today, the world thinks it’s a Taiwan invention! Malaysia Boleh!

The brain gain programme is so successful that almost all the scientists who came back to work here have resigned from the public universities or government research centres, and the bulk of them have left for overseas again. Needless to say, their major complaints were racism (almost all were non-Bumiputeras) and red tape. But no one wants to admit to this since it’s not a very smart thing to admit failure.

Meanwhile we are rushing to produce 100,000 PhDs. Since most of these 100,000 PhDs will be awarded by local public universities you really have to wonder about the quality. But who cares? The important thing is to graduate 100,000 “doctors” of dubious quality so that they can train the next generation. After all, the majority of these PhDs will end up as professors in our public universities and they will supervise the next generation of PhDs. Remember the movie “Dumber and Dumber”?

Is it any wonder that our public universities’ ranking is dropping fast?

On top of that, we have decided to stop emphasising English at the high school level. No wonder international schools are celebrating — their student enrolment will go through the roof from next year onwards.

And to ensure that we have the right environment to produce “Towering Malays” and “world-class” Malaysians, the mainstream newspapers here follow the same editorial style as China’s People’s Daily and the old Soviet Union’s Pravda. Truth is not as important as propaganda and the promotion of racism and racist ideology. Malay newspapers are free to preach racism as long as they reinforce “Malay unity” and Malay dominance. News is only news if the government says so.

In the arts, local productions cannot reflect reality. How else can you explain government directives that Mat Rempits and transvestites cannot be shown on Malaysian movies and television. The way it works is like this: if we don’t show Mat Rempits and transvestites, then they do not exist! See how smart we have become because of all the government investment in educating Malaysians? Very soon, there will be no prostitutes or gay people in Malaysia.

Just to be sure, the government has just announced another round of books that are banned in Malaysia. In total more than 2,000 titles are banned in Malaysia. Some authors do not even know that their books are banned. Reading is a dangerous habit for a knowledge nation.

Meanwhile religion, or the official view of religion, is shafted down the throats of young people through television programmes and in the schools.

You really have to wonder how on earth Malaysia produces thinking citizens since all around them the system, from the mass media to the education system to the universities, is designed to damage the brain? The whole system is designed to produce a non-thinking, non-critical person who can easily be manipulated by propaganda.

It is really mind-boggling that somehow young people have managed to escape this system. Of course there are thousands who believe in the system and are basically brain dead, especially after reading the Malay newspapers and watching the local television stations. But there is a significant portion of young people out there who have managed to overcome the attempt to control their mind. I take my hat off to these young people. Without them, Malaysia will have no future.

Courtesy of The Malaysian Insider

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Pandemic (H1N1) 2009 - update 58

Laboratory-confirmed cases of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 as officially reported to WHO by States Parties to the International Health Regulations (2005)


6 July 2009 09:00 GMT

The breakdown of the number of laboratory-confirmed cases is given in the following table and map.

Country, territory and area Cumulative total Newly confirmed since the last reporting period

Cases Deaths Cases Deaths
Algeria 5 0 0 0
Antigua and Barbuda 2 0 0 0
Argentina 2485 60 898 34
Australia 5298 10 730 1
Austria 19 0 4 0
Bahamas 7 0 1 0
Bahrain 15 0 0 0
Bangladesh 18 0 6 0
Barbados 12 0 0 0
Belgium 54 0 5 0
Bermuda, UKOT 1 0 0 0
Bolivia 416 0 133 0
Bosnia and Hezegovina 1 0 0 0
Brazil 737 1 0 0
British Virgin Islands, UKOT 2 0 0 0
Brunei Darussalam 124 0 39 0
Bulgaria 10 0 0 0
Cambodia 7 0 0 0
Canada 7983 25 0 0
Cap Verde 3 0 0 0
Cayman Islands, UKOT 14 0 0 0
Chile 7376 14 0 0
China 2040 0 226 0
Colombia 118 2 17 0
Cook Island 1 0 1 0
Costa Rica 277 3 50 1
Cote d'Ivoire 2 0 0 0
Croatia 1 0 1 0
Cuba 85 0 12 0
Cyprus 109 0 39 0
Czech Republic 15 0 0 0
Denmark 66 0 3 0
Dominica 1 0 0 0
Dominican Republic 108 2 0 0
Ecuador 204 0 41 0
Egypt 78 0 11 0
El Salvador 319 0 66 0
Estonia 13 0 0 0
Ethiopia 3 0 0 0
Fiji 2 0 0 0
Finland 47 0 4 0
France 310 0 10 0
French Polynesia, FOC 4 0 2 0
Guadaloupe, FOC 2 0 2 0
Martinique, FOC 3 0 1 0
New Caledonia, FOC 12 0 6 0
Saint Martin, FOC 1 0 1 0
Germany 505 0 35 0
Greece 151 0 42 0
Guatemala 286 2 32 0
Guyana 2 0 2 0
Honduras 123 1 0 0
Hungary 11 0 0 0
Iceland 4 0 0 0
India 129 0 25 0
Indonesia 20 0 12 0
Iran, Islamic Republic 1 0 0 0
Iraq 12 0 1 0
Ireland 74 0 23 0
Israel 681 0 104 0
Italy 146 0 16 0
Jamaica 32 0 0 0
Japan 1790 0 344 0
Jordan 23 0 1 0
Kenya 15 0 3 0
Korea, Republic of 202 0 0 0
Kuwait 35 0 0 0
Laos 5 0 2 0
Latvia 1 0 0 0
Lebanon 49 0 2 0
Libya 1 0 1 0
Lithuania 3 0 0 0
Luxembourg 6 0 2 0
Macedonia 2 0 2 0
Malaysia 196 0 0 0
Malta 24 0 22 0
Mauritius 1 0 0 0
Mexico 10262 119 0 0
Montenegro 10 0 1 0
Morocco 17 0 0 0
Myanmar 1 0 0 0
Nepal 5 0 0 0
Netherlands 135 0 1 0
Netherlands, Aruba 5 0 0 0
Netherlands Antilles, Curaçao 8 0 0 0
Netherlands Antilles, Sint Maarten 7 0 0 0
New Zealand 1059 3 147 3
Nicaragua 321 0 13 0
Norway 41 0 0 0
Oman 4 0 1 0
Palau 1 0 0 0
Panama 417 0 0 0
Papua New Guinea 1 0 0 0
Paraguay 106 1 3 1
Peru 916 0 378 0
Philippines 1709 1 0 0
Poland 25 0 6 0
Portugal 42 0 15 0
Qatar 23 0 13 0
Romania 41 0 5 0
Russia 3 0 0 0
Saint Lucia 1 0 0 0
Samoa 1 0 0 0
Saudi Arabia 114 0 25 0
Serbia 15 0 0 0
Singapore 1055 0 177 0
Slovakia 18 0 0 0
Slovenia 14 0 9 0
South Africa 18 0 6 0
Spain 776 1 16 0
Sri Lanka 19 0 2 0
Suriname 11 0 0 0
Sweden 84 0 10 0
Switzerland 76 0 4 0
Syria 1 0 1 0
Thailand 2076 7 662 4
Trinidad and Tobago 65 0 12 0
Tunisia 5 0 2 0
Turkey 40 0 0 0
Uganda 1 0 0 0
Ukraine 1 0 0 0
United Arab Emirates 8 0 0 0
United Kingdom 7447 3 0 0
Guernsey, Crown Dependency 5 0 0 0
Isle of Man, Crown Dependency 1 0 0 0
Jersey, Crown Dependency 11 0 0 0
United States of America 33902 170 0 0
Puerto Rico 18 0 18 0
Virgin Islands 1 0 1 0
Uruguay 195 4 0 3
Vanuatu 2 0 0 0
Venezuela 206 0 2 0
Viet Nam 181 0 50 0
West Bank and Gaza Strip 60 0 30 0
Yemen 8 0 1 0
Grand Total 94512 429 4591 47

Chinese Taipei has reported 61 confirmed cases of pandemic (H1N1) 2009 with 0 deaths. Cases from Chinese Taipei are included in the cumulative totals provided in the table above.

Cumulative and new figures are subject to revision

Abbreviations

UKOT: United Kingdom Overseas Territory
FOC: French Overseas Collectivity

Netherlands Antilles, Curaçao : 3 confirmed cases: The three confirmed cases are crew members of a cruise ship. They did not leave the boat during their illness nor during the 24 hours preceding the onset of symptoms.

Norway: 7 confirmed cases are crew members and passengers of a cruise ship. They did not leave the boat during their illness nor during the 24 hours preceding the onset of symptoms.