Friday 5 September 2008

'Barcelona' a Sexy, Steamy Summer Escape


"Vicky Cristina Barcelona" is as exhilarating, enthralling and enjoyable as a summer love affair in an exotic city.
(Victor Bello/The Weinstein Company, 2008)More Photos


Woody Allen's a la mode comedy almost the vagaries of rage, set in Barcelona, shows that endearing Spanish metropolis off to its topper advantage, just now as it does its lead actors.


A witty, engrossing and well-crafted musing on the whimsical nature of love, the film also is a valentine to the city, which is almost an additional quality. Its ocular splendors are displayed in a sun-dappled light with special regard for its striking prowess and computer architecture, particularly the work of Antoni Gaudi. Allen seems to have been refreshed since he began motion-picture photography in Europe.





The title derives from the names of two American women travelling in Spain. Vicky (Rebecca Hall) and Cristina (Scarlett Johansson) ar best friends, with vastly different attitudes about relationships. Vicky approaches love pragmatically and is engaged to a stolid and decent American piece (Chris Messina). Cristina is a relieve spirit, always searching for transcendent love. After attending an fine art exhibit, the women meet a painter, Juan Antonio (Javier Bardem) who invites them to the town of Oviedo for a weekend of fine food, wine and amorous playfulness. Vicky is put off, but Cristina is enthralled. Of class, things don't transpire the way we expect.


We con about Juan Antonio's spousal relationship to the gorgeous merely unstable Maria Elena (Penelope Cruz) through the accounts of others. A lot has been written about the m�nage � trois involving Bardem, Cruz and Johansson, but the story is more substantive than sensational.


Bardem and Cruz ar perfect, and their interpersonal chemistry is palpable. Johansson is a bit bland, only her attitude is appropriate to play an adrift soul. Hall, who sounds like the young Mia Farrow, does a fine job.


The yearnings and entanglements of the characters ar engrossing, and provocative questions are elevated about love. Like a glass of sangria, "Vicky Cristina Barcelona" is a zesty and luscious film to be savored.




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Tuesday 26 August 2008

Medical Debt Or Problems Paying Medical Bills Experienced By 79 Million US Adults


The high cost of care and inadequate insurance is leading more adults to stay or ward off getting treatment. Working-age Americans are outlay more of their income on out-of-pocket costs.



The proportionality of working-age Americans world Health Organization have medical bill problems or wHO are salaried off medical debt climbed from 34 percent to 41 per centum between 2005 and 2007, bringing the total to 72 zillion, according to recent survey findings from the Commonwealth Fund. In addition, 7 million adults age 65 and over also had problems salaried medical bills, for a total of 79 meg adults with medical bill problems or medical debt.



In a new Commonwealth Fund report about the survey findings, Losing Ground: How the Loss of Adequate Health Insurance is Burdening Working Families, the authors describe how working-age adults are comme il faut more exposed to the rising costs of wellness care, either because they have lost insurance through their jobs or because they are paying more out of pocket for their wellness care. This combination of factors, along with sluggish growth in average family incomes, is contributing to problems with medical bills and cost-related delays in getting requisite health care.



The report finds that in 2007, closely two-thirds of U.S. adults under eld 65, or 116 zillion people, had medical bill problems or debt, went without needed care because of toll, were uninsured for a time, or were underinsured - insured person but had high out-of-pocket medical expenses or deductibles relative to income.



"We are seeing a perfect surprise of negative economic trends threatening working families in the United States," said Sara Collins, Commonwealth Fund Assistant Vice President, and the study's lead author. "While gas and nutrient prices are increasing and home values are declining, the rise in health care costs is surpassing income emergence and fewer people suffer adequate policy. As a result, working people ar struggling to pay their bills and accruing medical debt."



While the increase in problems paid medical bills or carrying unpaid medical bills cuts across income brackets, low and moderate income families are burdened the most. The report finds that more than half of working-age adults earning less than $40,000 a year reported problems paid medical bills or existence in debt due to medical expenses. Medical bill problems included not existence able to pay bills, being contacted by a collection agency about an unpaid handbill, and ever-changing one's way of life in lodge to make up medical bills.



Those with medical bills and medical debt are more and more facing grave financial problems and sometimes facing trade-offs among immediate life necessities. Thirty-nine per centum of those with government note problems or debt say they have used up all of their savings to pay their health care bills; 29 per centum are unable to give for basic necessities wish food, heating plant, or economic rent; and 30 percent took on credit card debt. Twenty-four per centum of adults under age 65 with medical debt owe $4,000 or more and 12 percent owe $8,000 or more in unpaid aesculapian expenses.



In a new Commonwealth Fund issuance brief which accompanies the report, Seeing Red: The Growing Problem of Medical Debt and Bills, the authors explain that uninsured and underinsured adults ar more at risk of having medical bill problems and medical debt than those with adequate insurance coverage. Three in basketball team adults world Health Organization are uninsured or underinsured face these challenges, more than duple the rate of those who had adequate insurance all year (26 per centum). Notably, adults 65 years and sr. were far less likely to report medical billhook problems or debt than younger adults because they are covered by Medicare and may also take supplemental private coverage, and in the case of low-income individuals, may get Medicaid. Just 19 percentage of adults over 65 - half the rate for adults under 65 (41%) - reported whatever medical peak problems or debt.



"The stream economic slowdown makes it even more urgent for a modern Administration to make universal and low-priced health insurance a high priority in 2009, to ensure that no American suffers financial hardship as a resultant of serious illness," aforesaid Commonwealth Fund President Karen Davis.



The written report also finds that more working-age adults are delaying or avoiding needed medical care, such as skipping doses of medication or not fill prescriptions, because of health care costs. Forty-five per centum of adults reported problems getting care because of costs in 2007, a dramatic addition from 29 percent in 2001. Increasing numbers of adults ar spending high proportions of their income on health care. One-third of U.S. working-age adults spent 10 percent or more of their income on out-of-pocket medical expenses and health insurance premiums in 2007, up from 21 pct in 2001.



The proportion of Americans world Health Organization are uninsured continues to grow. More than one-quarter (28%) of U.S. adults ages 19 to 64, or an estimated 50 million people, were uninsured for some time in 2007, compared with 24 percent in 2001. But even having insurance reporting does not guarantee trade protection from aesculapian bill problems and debt. The proportion of those who are underinsured increased from 9 percent to 14 per centum, or 25 million the great unwashed, between 2003 and 2007. Sixty-one percentage of those with medical bill problems or accrued medical debt were insured person at the time care was provided.



Other key survey findings include:
Among the medical nib problems reported in the survey: 28 percent are paying off medical bills over time, up from 21 percentage in 2005, and 27 percent of adults below age 65 said they had problems paying or were unable to pay their bills in 2007, up from 23 per centum in 2005.



More than half (53%) of insured person working-age adults who have deductibles that represent 5 percent or more of their income reported medical bill burdens and debt; one-third of adults with lower deductibles face these kinds of difficulties.



While adults in families with incomes under $20,000 a yr report the highest rates of wanting coverage during the year, more adults in soften income families are loss without policy. In 2007, 41 per centum of adults in families earning between $20,000 and $40,000 a year reported a meter uninsured during the year, up from 28 pct in 2001.



Most people who were uninsured at any point in the last twelvemonth are in working families. Of the estimated 50 million American adults wHO were uninsured in the last year, 58% were in families where at least i person was working full-time.



People world Health Organization are uninsured or underinsured experience inefficient care; closely half of adults (47%) under age 65 world Health Organization had gaps in their health insurance or were underinsured reported they had experienced problems such as test results not organism available on time, receiving duplicate medical tests, and delays in receiving results of unnatural test results; in contrast just 26 percent of adults world Health Organization are adequately insured reported these inefficiencies.


Methodology




Data come from the Commonwealth Fund Biennial Health Insurance Survey (2007), a national telephone survey conducted June 6 through October 24, 2007 among a nationally representative sample of 3,501 adults age 19 and older living in the continental United States. The 25-minute telephone interviews were accomplished in both English and Spanish, according to the preference of the respondent. The survey achieved a 45-percent reply rate (deliberate according to the standards of the American Association for Public Opinion Research). The survey sample was drawn using standard list-assisted random figure dialing methodology, which selected telephone numbers disproportionately from area-code/exchange combinations with higher-than-average density of low-income households. Using this stratified sampling design, this study obtained an oversample of low-income, African American and Hispanic adults. To correct for the disproportionate sample intention and make the last total sample results tative of all adults age 19 and older living in the continental U.S, the data are weighted by age, sexual urge, race/ethnicity, education, household size, and geographical region, victimisation the U.S. Census Bureau's 2006 Annual Social and Economic Supplement (ASEC). The report restricts the psychoanalysis to the 2,616 respondents under age 65. The resulting weighted sample is representative of the approximately 177 million adults ages 19 to 64. The go over has an overall security deposit of sampling error of �2 percent at the 95 percent confidence level.





The Commonwealth Fund is a private grounding supporting independent research on health policy reform and a high performance wellness system.



Source: Mary Mahon

Commonwealth Fund



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Saturday 16 August 2008

Florida Health Experts Meet To Discuss Means Of Addressing State Racial Health Disparities


Florida health experts on Wednesday began a three-day summit to address racial health disparities in the state, the AP/Miami Herald reports (AP/Miami Herald, 8/13). Health experts have identified gaps in seven areas of health care: cancer, diabetes, philia disease, oral health, adult and shaver immunizations, maternal/infant health and HIV/AIDS. Summit participants testament focus on developing strategies to close the gaps, according to the Orlando Sentinel.

The Sentinel reports that minorities in the state face a number of barriers to accessing health tutelage that arrive at them less healthy than their gabardine counterparts, including a deficiency of health insurance. The 2004 Florida Health Insurance Study launch that 31% of Hispanics and 22% of blacks younger than age 65 were uninsured, compared with 14.3% of whites.

Susan Fleming, syllabus administrator for the state cancer broadcast, noted that while the incidences of cervical cancer are similar among different groups in the state, "mortality rates are higher" for low-income and less-educated populations. Across the state, 910 women were diagnosed with cervical cancer in 2005, and of those women, 39% of Hispanics and 52% of blacks were diagnosed during the advanced stages of the disease, compared with 44% of whites.

Josephine Mercado, executive director of the Hispanic Health Initiative, aforesaid minority women need more education around the causes and uncommitted treatments for cervical cancer. She said, "Many of the chronic diseases that we have found in the community can be prevented or controlled with more health education," adding, "We have to pop out giving people the tools. And we haven't been doing it" (Hernandez, Orlando Sentinel, 8/13).


Reprinted with kind permission from hypertext transfer protocol://www.kaisernetwork.org. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives, or star sign up for email delivery at hypertext transfer protocol://www.kaisernetwork.

Thursday 7 August 2008

B.J. Thomas

B.J. Thomas   
Artist: B.J. Thomas

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Midnight minute   
 Midnight minute

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 9




 






Monday 30 June 2008

BIG BROTHER: Nominations Time!

Well it’s that time again! And the first nominations of BB9 did not disappoint.
We could have predicted this, but if you have been watching some other show (can’t imagine why you would be) Mario and Alex are up for nomination!

Alex ended up with nine nominations and Mario with seven. The closest contenders were Dennis and Sylvia, with four nominations’ each. This means that if they don’t do some serious creeping in the next week they could see themselves facing the public vote next!

From the nominations, it is clear that this year’s housemates are a bit more aware of their fellow housemates’ ‘games.’
Even though Sylvia had been trying her best in the last few days to separate herself from the ‘clearly’ disliked Alex and form ‘friendships,’ her fellow housemates, such as Kat, can see that she is “supportive in the wrong way.”

So we don’t have to shout at the television in vain anymore “to get her out!” - the housemates are actually learning from previous years!

Just one decision now – Mario or Alex – it’s hard to decide which one is worse!!!

Tuesday 24 June 2008

Nicole Richie: Don't Drop that Latte!

Nicole Richie took baby Harlow and a fresh cup of hot Starbucks out for a stroll yesterday.
Nicole Richie

At least she wasn't pushing the stroller into oncoming traffic.






See Also

Sunday 15 June 2008