MoD leaks ‘could lead to court’

Posted by: GBlake  :  Category: Uncategorized

Investigations into leaks at the Ministry of Defence could lead to "a number" of prosecutions, the defence secretary has said.

Speaking on the Andrew Marr Show, Dr Liam Fox said he had no idea who was behind the leaking of letters and documents from his department.

But he did not discount the possibility that a cabinet colleague was involved.

He said the leaks meant the government was less likely "to put things on paper", which meant less transparency.

The latest incident occurred last month when a letter from the defence secretary to Prime Minister David Cameron was leaked to a newspaper. In the letter, Dr Fox challenged plans to enshrine the UK's aid budget in law.

Another private letter, in which Dr Fox raised concerns about proposed cuts in defence spending, was leaked last year ahead of the defence review. The defence secretary criticised the leak and ordered an inquiry.

He told Andrew Marr: "We are investigating very much at the present time and we have a number of potential court cases coming as a consequence."

Asked whether he thought a fellow cabinet minister was behind the leaks, he said: "Well, you never know, and that's the whole thing with leaks.

"They are unprofessional and they are unethical, and in being unwilling to stand up and argue the case publicly they are cowardly. It's a culture I think that's emerged in recent years and it's hugely regrettable."

Dr Fox said he had "no idea who leaks" or therefore what their motivations were but he said it meant less information might be comitted to paper.

"It also means that we are far more likely to discuss things face-to-face without necessarily other advisers being there," he added.

© 2011 BBC News (www.bbc.co.uk)

Originally Published On: www.bbc.co.uk – Original Article Here

‘Our son’s 22q battle’

Posted by: GBlake  :  Category: Uncategorized

Harrison Stedman was five months old when a health visitor became concerned about him turning purple.

"It was a merry-go-round of medical appointments," Bernard says.

"We kept being referred to different hospitals and units, and making extra trips to lots of doctors and specialists who wanted to help us.

"In the end we felt we had become more knowledgeable about 22q than the doctors."

But at that stage they had no idea about the other factors that would come into play as a result of the genetic condition.

Harrison also has speech and language difficulties, although these didn't stop him from attending a normal state primary school when he was five.

However, when his parents realised Harrison wasn't progressing and he was finding school physically too exhausting, they took the decision to educate him at home.

They set up a classroom in their house and followed the national curriculum to the letter, with his mother acting as tutor and carer for six years.

Harrison is now 13 years old: his needs have changed again and he attends a special school near his home.

"He says school is much easier than being taught at home by Mum. He is doing well and is enjoying mixing socially with other children with similar problems. It's made him more confident," Bernard says.

The genetic condition Harrison suffers from is caused by a missing piece of chromosome 22 at "position 11" in the chain.

Dr Alex Habel, consultant paediatrician at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London, calls it "a very vulnerable, very special" bit of chromosome.

The unstable part of chromosome 22 is important in the formation of organs and also in relation to learning and behaviour disorders.

"Its early identification is vital. If we can recognise problems early then the children with 22q won't be swamped or submerged in the system. There are too many examples of kids left not coping," says Dr Habel.

A cleft palate, slow learning and heart problems are the main clues to whether a child has 22q deletion syndrome, which has been known as DiGeorge syndrome and velocardiofacial syndromes over the years.

Although Harrison will need his biochemistry monitored throughout his life, Dr Habel says a new technique could help future research into the genetic condition.

"If chromosomes are the chapters of the book, we can now look at the single lines on the page which are the DNA sequences, thanks to a technique called array CGH," he says.

In the meantime, Harrison is concentrating on making new friends at school and learning to make spaghetti bolognese, his favourite dish.

© 2011 BBC News (www.bbc.co.uk)

Originally Published On: www.bbc.co.uk – Original Article Here

Taking a stance for the planet’s furry friends

Posted by: GBlake  :  Category: Uncategorized

The shrubbery rustles and shakes, then Brian May falls out of the rhododendrons, dusts himself down and stumbles towards five fox cubs at play in a clearing. In the landscaped gardens of his historic home in the Surrey hills, the Queen guitarist looks every inch the semi-retired rock star: huge curly hair on gangly frame, black trousers, immaculate white Pumas and a dangerously unbuttoned white shirt.

In the state-of-the-art animal rescue centre the 63-year-old musician has built in his garden, the guitarist is nursing back to health 140 hedgehogs and half a dozen abandoned fox cubs. He is also fast becoming the public face of the campaign to stop a cull of badgers proposed by the authorities to answer the concerns of farmers who are convinced the animals are infecting cattle with bovine TB.

Multimillionaire rock legends often dabble in fast cars, metal detecting or saving rainforests. Is May worried his anti-cull campaign will be dismissed as just another rock-star hobby? "Hobby, hmmm," he murmurs, treating the word with a quiet disgust. "There aren’t many people from rock music or entertainment who put the time in that I have … this has become a huge part of my life. I don’t care what people say. I’m not doing it to make money. I’m not doing it because I want to be famous. Even if it was a ‘hobby’, why would I have that hobby? It could only be because I care about animals. This concerns us all. It’s not just something that concerns farmers."

May came to this passion through blogging. He began his "soapbox" before blogging was fashionable and although gentle and soft-spoken in person, he lets off steam online: His rants on subjects such as a review of Mika’s album by the Guardian’s Alexis Petridis have led him to be dubbed the world’s grumpiest rock star. His intention, he says, is to discuss important issues "so if you want to call it being grumpy, yeah, but it’s being concerned and trying to raise awareness of things which need to be fixed". There are "joyful" posts about music, astronomy and 3-D on the soapbox but May is most profoundly anguished about cruelty towards animals. The blog "changed my life completely, because it’s a two-way communication", he says. "I started talking about animals with people on the soapbox."

May has never been an ordinary rock star. Helped by his father, he built his own guitar, Red Special, as a child. He abandoned his PhD on zodiacal light for fame with Queen but returned four years ago and completed it. He is a great friend of astronomer Sir Patrick Moore, with whom he has written Bang!, a history of the universe.

His love for animals has not been so well documented but "it’s always been there", says May a little defensively, highlighting his Queen song White Man as an example. He promised himself "if there was ever an opportunity in my life to make a difference for animals I would take it". That opportunity came when someone contacted him online about a proposed cull of hedgehogs on the Scottish island of Uist. May was "aghast" and successfully fought to have the hedgehogs transported to the mainland instead. "When David Cameron started saying that if he got into power he would try to repeal the hunting act, my ears really pricked up and I thought if I can make a difference with hedgehogs, maybe I can alert people to the possibility of going back into what I regard as something very barbaric," he says.

May, who is married to the actor Anita Dobson and has three children from his first marriage, and three grandchildren, has set up a charity, Save Me, which rehabilitates injured wild animals, and is campaigning against the badger cull and any repeal of the hunting ban. Dobson is supportive but does not get involved. "Everybody has to work on their own passions," says May very quietly.

"So many people have said to me, foxes are just like rats, who gives a s**t? And then you say, so a rat isn’t worthy of some consideration? Rats are so like human beings, it’s frightening. And it’s human beings who are relegating them to ‘vermin’. It gives people the feeling that they don’t have to treat animals with any kind of consideration, and to me that’s wrong."

May, who has long been an "imperfect vegetarian" but does not now eat meat or fish, "certainly wouldn’t" engage in direct action, such as releasing animals from scientific laboratories or mink from farms, but thinks that animal rights has become a dirty word because its image has been "deliberately manipulated" by opponents who incorrectly characterise hunt saboteurs as violent. Hunting and killing animals for pleasure "boggles my mind", he says. "I don’t understand why people are like that. I wrestle with that the whole time. It’s a sickness. I don’t think a healthy human being needs to be killing or causing pain to be happy. A decent life and a decent death — that’s what I ask for myself and that’s what I would ask of any creature."

Ultimately, he believes animals have rights — both moral and legal — and wants to challenge "the mentality that says human beings are the only creatures on this planet who matter".

May happily plays with the fox cub he has named Caroline Spelman, after the environment secretary, but does not want to be caricatured as sentimental about animals.

"I don’t really love badgers because they are furry and good-looking. It’s not about that. They are appealing, there’s no doubt, they are like little bears, especially when they are young. To me they are fascinating and rather mysterious, because they have been in the British Isles longer than humans and they have their own social ways, not all of which is understood by us.

"I can’t help but have a sort of awe for all wild creatures who have survived even the awfulness of what we have done to the world. We are the vandals in this world, there’s no doubt about it."

Despite being the first wild animal to be given legal protection in Britain, in 1973, the illegal "sport" of badger baiting and digging still goes on, and this year killing badgers is set to be sanctioned by the government — which wants to authorise farmers to trap and shoot them to reduce bovine TB. May is convinced this is the Conservatives’ political sop to the countryside lobby because, locked in coalition, they lack the numbers to repeal Labour’s hunting ban. "It’s a panacea that is being offered to farmers, look we are doing something, we are on your side, we’re going out and killing things," he says.

Bovine TB led to the slaughter of 24,899 cattle in England recently, costing £63 million. Farmers insist the disease is a genuine crisis and argue it has increased with a burgeoning badger population and that disease hotspots correspond to high badger populations, particularly in the West Country. May insists that it is still unproven that badgers pass TB to cattle (it is proven that cattle transmit it to badgers) and unproven that a cull would help.

He quotes the conclusion of a ten-year culling trial in which 11,000 badgers were killed: Culling cannot meaningfully contribute to the control of TB.

After travelling to Cardiff to unsuccessfully plead with the Welsh assembly to reverse its own separate decision to cull badgers in Pembrokeshire, May admits he "got into a lot of trouble" for suggesting farmers should abandon cattle farming in bovine TB hotspots. "People called it a ridiculous idea but it came from a conversation I had with a farmer who had already switched from cows to sheep."

You would not knowingly bring up children in an area where there was radiation pollution, he says. "There was a nasty little piece" in the farming press that said telling farmers they should not farm cattle is "like telling Brian May he can’t play guitar and they said some people would welcome that. Ha ha, lovely. But there was a time when Queen was very uncool in Britain and what we did was play elsewhere. I actually took my family, and my little boy went to school in LA partly because of that, so it’s not such a ridiculous suggestion."

"People talk about a science-based cull. I’m afraid to say people don’t know what science is," he sighs. He believes bovine TB can be solved with vaccination of badgers and cows. But the vaccination of cows is tricky: The European Union legislation forbids the export of vaccinated cows because it is difficult to distinguish between a vaccinated cow and one carrying bovine TB. In contrast, the vaccination of badgers is "eminently doable", argues May. "All the research has been done. This business of ‘it’s not proven’ is really rubbish." A badger vaccine is now being trialled in Gloucestershire, although the coalition cancelled five other trials put in place by Labour’s "exemplary" environment secretary Hilary Benn. The National Trust recently announced plans to vaccinate badgers on its land in Devon.

May once said he stopped voting Conservative because of the party’s attitude towards wild animals. Now he says he is "very close" to the group Conservatives Against Fox Hunting, "who have the courage to stand up against the party line", but relates to the Green party more than any other.

May has all the accoutrements of a multimillionaire rock star — assistants running around, a stable full of gold discs and, incongruously, huge pink stems of rhubarb freshly picked from his organic garden — but says he scarcely gets time to enjoy the good things in his life.

Long nights awake debating with badger lovers and haters on the web can get "depressing", he admits, especially when he is confronted with videos of animal cruelty. "It’s a thing you have to fight, being depressed about it. It’s very uncomfortable to see into the minds of people who are so full of violence. I find it very upsetting. It’s changed my life."

© 2011 Gulf News (www.gulfnews.com)

Originally Published On: gulfnews.com – Original Article Here

China’s LinkedIn plots local recipe for growth

Posted by: GBlake  :  Category: Uncategorized


SHANGHAI |
Mon May 30, 2011 10:36am EDT

SHANGHAI (Reuters) – In a country where being connected is seen as crucial, Ushi, China’s answer to LinkedIn, expects explosive growth over the next few years in the world’s largest Internet market.

The professional-social networking site plans to have 10 million users in two years from the current 300,000, and aims to raise $5 million by the end of June, Dominic Penaloza, Ushi’s chief executive, told Reuters in an interview on Monday.

“We’re aiming to ultimately serve a very large portion of China’s 40 million Internet users who are white collar or entrepreneurs. Call it 10 million in two years,” said Penaloza.

“There’s more proportion of Chinese who will only do business with people they have met before and people who have a mutual friend,” said the Filipino-Chinese who grew up in Canada.

Venture capitalists and private equity funds have flocked to Chinese Internet firms, with U.S. IPOs of companies such as Youku and Dangdang surging as they market themselves as the YouTube and Amazon of China.

The growth is being fueled by China’s Internet industry which has more than 450 million users.

Ushi, which launched in October, is backed by Milestone Capital, U.S.-based Richmond Management, Li & Fung private equity and Simon Murray & Co.

The firm competes with Tianji.com, another social-networking site that caters to professionals. Tianji, which was founded in 2005, is now part of France’s Viadeo.

Tianji aims to have 10 million users by the end of the year and to start monetizing the website this year, its founder Derek Ling told Reuters separately.

The user base of Ushi, which means “outstanding professionals” in Chinese, doubled to 300,000 from 160,000 in about 60 days in March and April, Penaloza said.

Professional social-networking-site LinkedIn has a small presence in China and is one of the few foreign social-networking-sites to still have access to Chinese Internet users. Twitter and Facebook are blocked in China over censorship concerns.

LinkedIn shares more than doubled in their public trading debut this month, evoking memories of investors’ love affair with Internet stocks during the dot-com boom of the late 1990s.

Like LinkedIn, Ushi’s website (www.ushi.cn) has features that allow users to add connections and send messages but it is currently in a by-invitation phase. Penaloza said the firm plans to open the website to the public by the end of the year. Ushi is already monetizing users through the presence of Ushi coins which can be bought with real money.

Ushi’s key difference from LinkedIn is that it focuses on offline events as Chinese people greatly value face-to-face meetings and are generally hesitant to do business with people they do not know.

“If you ask them to pay $25 equivalent in Reminbi for a three-hour networking party they would not hesitate to pay, they would line up to pay. Chinese people are like that in general,” Penaloza said.

Ushi is banking on the value of “guanxi,” which means connections in Mandarin, in doing business in China to make money. The firm charges Ushi coins for introductions outside your immediate circle.

The Shangai-based firm raised 10 million yuan ($1.54 million) in its initial round of fundraising.

About 5 percent of Ushi’s current users are chief executives.

Last week, LinkedIn told reporters in Beijing it will seek opportunities in China to capitalize on its massive user base even though it sees the market as complicated.

Being called the LinkedIn of China has its benefits as it offers the general public a quick reference to the type of services the firm offers, Penaloza said.

“It’s kind of like LinkedIn and inspired by LinkedIn but it is not the same. Ushi will work better for Chinese people because it is made in China, made by Chinese, made for Chinese and that’s a huge difference,” said Penaloza.

($1 = 6.493 yuan)

(Editing by Anshuman Daga and Jacqueline Wong)

© 2011 REUTERS (www.reuters.com)

Originally Published On: www.reuters.com – Original Article Here

Running out of space

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"We are running out of space. Will your child have a school place by 2015?"

"The council seems to be looking at putting in a large amount of modular accommodation – which is a posh way of saying Portakabins."

"This is not an ideal solution," he says, to what he considers a "devilishly difficult" problem.

And further north, Sean Ell, a Conservative councillor in Wigan, says that new housing developments in some areas will "place extra burdens on local facilities".

"We need to get some financial support from the government to develop existing schools and build new schools in the area," he says.

The Department for Education says it has allocated £800m this year for local authorities to spend on precisely this problem.

They say the issue has been ignored for too long, and accuse Labour of "wasting vast sums" on bureaucracy in its Building Schools for the Future (BSF) programme of secondary school rebuilds.

The DfE says that, despite a 60% cut in education capital spending over the next four years, the coalition is still spending more per year on school building work than the previous government did in its first two terms.

Labour counters that when it came to power in 1997, it inherited a legacy of underinvestment in schools.

It accuses Education Secretary Michael Gove of making a "complete mess" of the schools capital budget, not least in axing BSF, including halting planned rebuilds for hundreds of secondary schools.

A government-commissioned review of school building recommended this April that a better system be put in place to prioritise schools' building needs, as well as to develop standardised designs that can be built more cheaply.

But Lambeth says it needs more money now. It has received £52m over the past five years, but is asking for £50m over the next two.

"We've identified schools that would like to expand," says Councillor Pete Robbins, Lambeth's cabinet member for children and young people.

"We're putting in bulge classes but we want to have permanent expansion."

"We've got our plans all ready but the one thing we're lacking is the "readies". We need the money!"

© 2011 BBC News (www.bbc.co.uk)

Originally Published On: www.bbc.co.uk – Original Article Here

‘Record’ numbers saved from abuse

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More than 400 children have been identified as victims of abuse over the past year by the UK's national centre for child protection.

"One of the unique things we do is use the internet to identify people who pose a risk to children and identify children who are at risk who otherwise would have just carried on suffering in silence.

"There is far more child abuse going on out there than ever gets reported. It's a major concern, it's something everyone needs to pull together and do something about."

He added: "Our contribution to that is to highlight it and do what we can using our technical expertise and our partnerships to stamp out the offending.

"And make sure that children and young people, and their parents and whoever cares for them, have the best possible advice and guidance so that they can empower themselves."

Mr Davies said Ceop was trying to stay ahead of developments in technology, including in the area of social networking sites.

Ceop is currently affiliated to the Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca), but is to be merged with the new National Crime Agency when it is formed in 2013.

The move prompted the resignation of Ceop's former head Jim Gamble over concerns that the changes were motivated by by a desire to cut the number of quangos rather than improve child protection.

Mr Davies insisted that, as well as retaining its own budget, the unit would also keep "its own brand, its own approach and its own dedication to putting the safety and well-being of children first".

He said the agency was "bringing this crime more into the open and are working collectively with many others to break down the taboos and obstacles that stop children getting the help and support they need".

A spokeswoman for child protection charity the NSPCC said: "This impressive work by Ceop underscores the constant and serious threat to vulnerable children.

"Latest figures from our helpline show a record number of children had to be given immediate protection because they are at risk of harm.

"But the good news is more people are no longer standing idly by but are reporting these cases."

© 2011 BBC News (www.bbc.co.uk)

Originally Published On: www.bbc.co.uk – Original Article Here

Competition: Win a Porsche hamper

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All you have to do to stand a chance of winning this bundle, is tell us what’s the most powerful production 911 ever built before next Thursday June 2.

If you’re entering outside the UAE it’s up to you to collect your prizes.

We’ll pick the winner at random, out of all the correct answers. Good luck!

How to enter

Visit our  Facebook page and post your answer in the comment box .

 

© 2011 Gulf News (www.gulfnews.com)

Originally Published On: gulfnews.com – Original Article Here

Lilo to lie low

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Lindsay Lohan has been fitted with an ankle monitor and will serve her sentence on house arrest rather than going to jail.

An official says the 24-year-old starlet started serving her term recently after turning herself in at a jail facility just after 5am. Lohan was sentenced in April to 120 days in jail for violating her probation in a 2007 drunken driving case by taking a necklace from a Venice jewellery store without permission. Lohan applied to serve house arrest but the accommodation hadn’t been finalised when she appeared in court and pleaded no contest to misdemeanour grand theft.

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department official Steve Whitmore says Lohan is expected to serve about 35 days of her sentence.

Whitmore says Lohan was cooperative.

© 2011 Gulf News (www.gulfnews.com)

Originally Published On: gulfnews.com – Original Article Here

Newspaper review

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The Financial Times says private care homes in Britain are facing a "deepening crisis".

In a detailed investigation across two pages, what emerges is a picture of an industry that has been badly hit by the shocks to the global financial system.

The paper says there is evidence that the sector provides worse quality care than their non-profit rivals.

A Care Quality Commission inspector tells the FT "it's now got to a point of being dangerous for residents".

The Daily Telegraph covers a review commissioned by the government into how to pay for the rising costs of caring for the elderly and disabled adults.

The paper says the report is expected to recommend a funding "partnership" between the Treasury and individuals.

The Daily Mail says taxes look set to rise so people are no longer forced to sell their homes to pay for "unlimited charges" for care.

An individual's contribution could be capped at £50,000.

The front pages of the Daily Star, the Sun, and the Daily Mirror illustrate the crisis at football's world governing body Fifa.

They all have the photo of $40,000 in "crisp" $100 bills beside a brown envelope marked "Bahamas".

"Bung to rights" is the headline in the Mirror and the Star.

Money was allegedly offered to the Bahamas FA by Mohamed Bin Hammam to help his bid to become Fifa's next president. He denies any wrongdoing.

The Times claims to have carried out a "unique survey" of peers.

The poll suggests that an overwhelming majority of them believe the government would be acting unconstitutionally by creating an elected upper chamber.

The Daily Telegraph says the UK's top commander in Afghanistan has told David Cameron that no more western troops should be withdrawn for at least year.

Lt Gen James Bucknall said it risked sending mixed messages that could encourage the Taliban.

© 2011 BBC News (www.bbc.co.uk)

Originally Published On: www.bbc.co.uk – Original Article Here

Essential health tips for the summer holidays

Posted by: GBlake  :  Category: Uncategorized

Before you tag your bags and head off for a stimulating holiday, remember: A wise traveller is one who is prepared for any eventuality. Whether you are taking a trip alone, as a couple, with children or with someone with a medical condition, it is essential to travel smart.

For a safe and incident-free journey, travellers must obtain health insurance. Many companies in Dubai offer a range of products designed to suit a variety of needs. Issam Mouslimani, head of regional retail product offering at AXA Insurance, explains the benefits of travel health.

"If you are travelling with normal medical coverage and something goes wrong, your insurers here will ask you to pay now and reimburse the claim later. But if you have travel insurance, we can guide and support you during any medical emergency immediately. We have a wide network of offices across the globe; you only have to call them."

Travel insurers provide premium coverage from 5 to 365 days, with the flexibility to extend it online (as many times as needed, within a 12-month period), in case the trip lasts longer than expected. Covering all medical expenses, including over-the-counter medication, hospitalisation and even medical transportation, the limit of travel health insurance is much higher than regular medical cover. It goes up to $1 million.

To enjoy a holiday experience, Dr Anil Awatramani, general practitioner at the Unicare Medical Centre, advises "travellers suffering from diabetes, asthma, allergies, epilepsy and cardiac or renal ailments to wear an Alert Bracelet and have their medical information in their wallet along with other travel documents." He recommends they carry an extra supply of medicine.

The most vulnerable travellers are kids. "Make sure travelling with children is as stress-free as possible by planning in well advance, being punctual and keeping children well educated about what to do in case of an emergency," suggests Unicare Medical Centre paediatrician, Dr Samitha Rajkumar.

Keeping the time-lag blind spot in mind, Awatramani advises, "while crossing time zones, travellers with medical problems should take medicines based on elapsed time rather than the time of day".

So don’t let minor hiccups spoil your vacation. Bon voyage!

Dr Anil Awatramani’s advice on medication

Always remember:

- Carry all medication in their original packaging, clearly labelled for easy identification.

- An accompanying doctor’s prescription is important. This should also include the generic names of the medicines.

- Carry medication in hand baggage, within the temperature recommended, especially for certain injections such as insulin.

- Declare the medication along with prescription on arrival to prevent unnecessary delays.

- A medical report describing the chronic condition, treatment advised and contact details of the treating physician is ideal, especially for those travellers carrying injections or controlled medications. This information is also useful in case of any emergency.

- Keep a contact list of suitable clinics available at the destination you are travelling to, in case of any medical emergency.

- It is always advisable to procure travel health insurance to avoid unexpected medical expenses.

Travelling with children

Paediatrician Dr Samitha Rajkumar recommends carrying the following medicines:

- Paracetamol (for fever and pain) in liquid, tablets or suppository form, depending on the age and weight of the child. (Carrying suppositories is easier but perhaps not to a hot country, as they need to be refrigerated.)

- An antihistamine to treat allergic reactions. These can occur due to various reasons such as food, insect bites and inhaled or contact allergens.

- If the child has anaphylactic reactions (allergic reactions) do not forget Epipen (medicine to counteract the allergic reaction).

- Decongestant nasal drops, if the child has blocked nasal passages and earache, especially on flights.

- Oral rehydration salts in sachets or readymade solutions. These are effective in preventing dehydration, especially in cases of diarrhoea or vomiting.

- Carry a good insect-repellent cream or spray. Use a mosquito net whenever it is available. It is better than using too many chemicals on the child and is eco-friendly as well.

- Make sure the child’s travel vaccinations are up to date, depending on the country/region you are visiting.

For children and adults: Medication to reduce motion sickness and nasal decongestants to prevent earache during the flight, can be administered about an hour before the journey begins.

First aid kit

Check this list, then fly out.

Courtesy: Doctors at the Unicare Medical Centre.

— Shahana Raza is a UAE-based freelance writer

© 2011 Gulf News (www.gulfnews.com)

Originally Published On: gulfnews.com – Original Article Here

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