Sunday, March 30, 2008

WITNESS: No pain, no gain? Giving birth Dutch-style...

Health Reuters

By Emma Thomasson. Emma is chief correspondent for Reuters in the Netherlands. Since joining Reuters in 1995, she has worked in Bonn, Cape Town, Johannesburg and Berlin. She has been based in Amsterdam since 2004. In the following story she writes about giving birth in a country where childbirth is seen as a natural process that should not be medicalised unless there are complications.

Thu Mar 27, 2008. AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - When I discovered I was expecting a baby during my posting to the Netherlands, I spent much of my pregnancy trying to work out how to avoid a traditional Dutch birth -- at home and with no pain relief.

But since the arrival of my bouncing baby son, I have become a convert to at least one aspect of the Dutch health system -- home care for a week after birth by a maternity nurse who does everything from nappy-changing to cleaning and cooking.

The Dutch philosophy is that childbirth is a natural physical process that should not be medicalized unless there are complications, and should primarily be handled by midwives at home rather than by doctors in a hospital.

The Netherlands has the highest rate of home births in the western world at 30 percent, only 10 percent of women in labor are given pain relief and caesareans are relatively rare.

In contrast, about a third of babies are born by caesarean in the United States and about 20 percent in Britain, while only a tiny fraction of women have home births. Midwives who assist home births can even be prosecuted in some U.S. states.

Stunned that the Dutch believe labor pains are important for helping develop the mother-baby bond, I researched the anesthesia policy at all the nearby hospitals only to discover that there was no guarantee of drugs at any of them.

The prospect of a home birth became all the more real when I was advised to have medical supplies on hand -- including swabs and an umbilical cord clamp -- and when metal stands were delivered to raise our bed to help the midwife during delivery.

With my due date set for May 1, I nervously joked I might be in labor on labor day. Then I realized I might not be able to get to hospital in an emergency because of the partying throngs celebrating the April 30 Dutch national holiday.

A Dutch neighbor offered to have his boat at the ready to ferry me from our canal-side home if necessary, but I decided to make contingency plans to stay near the hospital instead.

HOSPITAL VS HOME?
As it turned out, complications meant a home birth was out of the question and I was induced in hospital on April 27 with an opiate-based pain relief available at the touch of a button.

Delirious for much of the experience, my most abiding memory is screaming at my journalist partner to put away his notebook just before baby Oscar arrived at 9.27 p.m., weighing 4 kgs.

Most of the women from my birth preparation class had a more Dutch experience: none were offered pain relief and one labored at home for hours despite repeated calls to the midwife, who turned up less than an hour before the arrival of baby Kaya.

I must admit the Dutch brainwashing left me a bit disappointed I didn't have a chance to put my months of yoga practice and breathing exercises to good use in a natural birth.

But questions are now being asked about whether the country's philosophy increases risks during birth.

"Giving birth at home, a unique Dutch tradition, should not be a goal in itself. What really matters is a good result of the pregnancy for mother and child," Jan Nijhuis, Maastricht professor of obstetrics and gynecology, wrote recently.

He argued that births should be centralized in about 30 to 50 maternity hospitals, staffed around the clock by gynecologists, anesthetists and other specialists.

gynecologists are also considering a new guideline that would give pregnant women the right to pain relief in hospitals, something they are currently often denied because anesthetists are not on duty at night or because it is not seen as medically necessary during labor.

Petra de Bruin, the birth assistant or doula who ran my prenatal class, says she would like it to be easier to get pain relief, but defends the Netherlands' overall philosophy.

"It would be a shame to lose our Dutch system and treat birth in a medical way as if it is a disease. I think it is good to think of it as a natural process," she said.

One element of the Dutch system is universally supported -- the 'kraamzorg' or maternity nurse who offers after-birth care. David Cameron, leader of Britain's opposition Conservatives, is so impressed he wants to introduce similar nurses there.

Mine turned up just a few hours after we got home from hospital and set to work making dinner and teaching me and my partner how to swaddle Oscar to help him sleep.

For the next week, she did daily health checks on both of us, helped me breastfeed, and taught us how to bathe the baby and put him to sleep -- on his back by the window to prevent cot death and jaundice -- among dozens of other practical tips.

It was great to be cared for at home rather than in hospital and the nurse gave me such confidence. Perhaps, if I decide to have another baby, I'll go Dutch.

© Reuters 2008 All rights reserved

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Playboy to launch in Philippines, eyes mature Dads...

Reuters

Thu Mar 27, 2008. (Reuters) - Playboy magazine is launching in the Philippines next month and will be targeting mature men who like well-written articles and tasteful photographs of semi-nude women.

"Maxim and FHM are called laddy magazines. We can be called a Dad magazine," Beting Laygo Dolor, Playboy Philippines' editor, told Reuters on Thursday.

"We are targeting a more mature market, Filipino men, 30 and above."

"There will be no full frontal nudity."

Mens' magazines with risque photos are already sold in the Philippines, which despite being a largely Catholic country has a macho culture that encourages promiscuity.

Although rural areas are more conservative, Manila and other large cities have a relaxed attitude to sex.

Dolor, who describes himself as a "bad Catholic," said the religion's values had influenced the decision not to go for a raunchier look for the magazine.

"I don't want to be ashamed to show it to my mother," said the father of four. "I have daughters in their twenties. It's something that I want them to also enjoy. I want them to be proud of their Dad."

Founded in 1953, Playboy has some 20 local editions around the world that cater to local taste rather than simply exporting and translating its U.S. content.

The magazine will be sold across the Philippines at a cost of 199 pesos ($4.76) and 70 percent of the content will be local.

Playboy's first edition in Indonesia in 2006 sparked protests although it had no nudity and less flesh visible in the issue than many other magazines on sale in the world's most populous Muslim country. Its editor was cleared of distributing indecent pictures last year.

Dolor said he didn't expect any uproar when his magazine hits the news stands on April 3.

"It's supposed to be a very good read," he said.

(Reporting by Carmel Crimmins; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan and Sanjeev Miglani)

© Reuters 2008 All rights reserved

Friday, March 14, 2008

Will IE 8 break the Web? | All about Microsoft...

ZDNet.com By Mary Jo Foley

March 12, 2008. There’s been one nagging question about Internet Explorer (IE) 8 about which I can’t stop wondering: Once it finally ships, will it break the Web?

It’s not just because I’m an unabashed Microsoft skeptic that I am puzzling over this. It’s also because right up until Microsoft decided to go whole-hog and — as many developers and customers wanted — by making “super-standards” mode the IE 8 default, Microsoft officials claimed that going the full-fledged standards route would “break the Web.” What, if anything, changed, making Microsoft willing to assume that risk?

After all, just a month before announcing it was going to make super-standards mode the IE 8 default, IE Platform Architect Chris Wilson blogged:

“We started from a simple statement of ‘enable (and encourage) interoperable web development, but don’t force IE to break pages that work properly in IE today.’ I think we all want to converge to a world where a web developer doesn’t have to spend much time at all testing and recoding their site for different browsers. At the same time, we can’t break the web experience on current sites for users like my mom, even for as good a reason as improving standards compliance. With all the great styling and layout changes we’re working on in our new engine for IE8 to be much more standards compliant, that’s a lot of potential breakage.”

Did Microsoft cut some of the IE 8 features to make it less likely to break sites, pages and applications that adhered to IE-7-specific rules? Or were Microsoft execs guilty of crying wolf, knowing full-well that moving to standards mode wouldn’t really wreak the havoc they claimed?

I put this question to Dean Hachamovitch, General Manager of the IE team, last week in Las Vegas at the Microsoft Mix ‘08 conference. Hachamovitch said neither of my theories was correct.

“In the past with IE 7, developers weren’t as proactive (about adhering to standards) as they could have been,” Hachamovitch said. “We took that as a strong data point, regarding how quickly devs will respond to anything that we change in IE.”

He continued: “But this time, the community seems to have shifted. They say they will be more responsive. We are giving developers a much easier way to choose their own timeline (for moving to the fully-standardized IE 8)…. Long term, we know this is the right thing for the Web.”

My interpretation: Microsoft is giving developers more leeway regarding how, when and if they will use the full standards mode in IE 8, but isn’t overly worried about compatibility issues arising because it expects the majority of developers to give super-standards mode more lip service than rapid support.

Hachamovitch also noted that Microsoft was going out on a limb, to an extent, by promising IE 8 would adhere to a number of Web standards that are still evolving, like Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) 2.1 and HTML 5. He said that Microsoft was not going to wait for the set-in-stone final versions of these standards, if the standardization process dragged on. Hachamovitch said if the standards changed substantially after Microsoft ships IE 8, the company would have to come up with a plan to deal with that fact.

“We will ship when we are ready to ship,” Hachamovitch said, noting that Microsoft cares more about the “installed base of Web sites,” than the “installed base of browsers” when figuring out how and if it would need to revise IE 8 if it ended up not being compliant with certain, currently unfinished Web standards.

So I’m back to square one. I think Microsoft’s official stance is that it’s done the “right thing” by making standards mode the default for IE 8, but it doesn’t expect many developers to actually rush out and redo their applications and pages to take advantage of this new mode.

What’s your take? Even though Microsoft is getting love for going the standards route now, whenver IE 8 is finally released (Beta 2 is due this summer), do you think the Redmondians will end up roundly criticized for “breaking the Web”?

Mary Jo has covered the tech industry for more than 20 years. Don't miss a single post. Subscribe via Email or RSS. Got a tip? Send Mary Jo your rants, rumors, tips and tattles. For disclosure on Mary Jo's industry affiliations, click here.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Burned alive for not washing feet...

Reuters

Wed Mar 12, 2008 Featured Broker sponsored linkBEIJING (Reuters) - A Chinese bride burned her new husband to death after he got into bed after a drunken argument without washing his feet, state media reported on Wednesday.

"Wang and his wife, Luo, were married on February 2. The couple, however, frequently fought over trivial things while still on their honeymoon," the official Xinhua news agency quoted a local newspaper as saying.

The couple, from the central province of Hubei, had another fight on the night of March 4, "and in frustration they together drank a bottle of liquor to ease their anger."

"At about 10 p.m., Luo watched her husband get into bed without cleaning or washing his feet. In a fit of anger and intoxication, she set fire to the sheet he was sleeping in," the report said.

"When he awoke, the two began fighting before a very drunk Wang collapsed. As fire engulfed the bedroom. Luo escaped to the living room, leaving her other half to burn," it added.

The woman has been arrested, Xinhua said.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard)

© Reuters 2008 All rights reserved

IE 8 Beta 1 Launches New Microsoft Web Activities...

Emerging Technologies - Web Technology

Wednesday, March 05, 2008 4:03 PM/EST With the release this week of the first beta of Internet Explorer 8, we are finally getting a good look at the next step in Microsoft's Web strategy. And we also can finally start to put the next generation of the Browser Wars into focus with a new version of IE to compare with the recent betas of Mozilla's forthcoming Firefox 3.

Of course, this release of Internet Explorer 8 is a very early beta and one that Microsoft accurately describes as a developer beta, meaning that regular users should probably stay away from it.

However, while Beta 1 of IE 8 is definitely developer-oriented, it does include more in the way of actual new features than I'm used to seeing in developer releases, which are typically focused on helping Web developers code to the new HTML engine in the browser.


Among some of the new features in Internet Explorer 8 Beta 1 are WebSlices and Activities. While I didn't find either of these features revolutionary in their design, they do offer some interesting tweaks to how users access Web content and carry out everyday Web browsing.

Activities is probably my favorite new feature in IE 8 so far based on my initial tests. Activities makes it possible for a user to quickly carry out actions on highlighted text within a Web page.

In some ways, Activities works in a similar way to some Firefox extensions, and it even opens to third-party developers in the same way. Activities can be accessed by highlighting text and right-clicking, or in some pages, once text is highlighted, a small symbol appears over the text that when clicked pops open an Activities window.

The nice thing about the way Activities is implemented is that it launches in a small window directly from the menu, rather than launching an entirely new Web site. This made it possible for example to easily translate text to a new language or view a quick map of an address without launching an entirely new Web page.

The WebSlices feature provides an extended way for Web site developers to make it possible for visitors to extend site content into their browsing experiences. If a developer has enabled WebSlices in a site, IE 8 will detect it in much the same way that current browsers detect RSS feeds.

If IE 8 finds a WebSlice, a button appears on the browser tool bar. Clicking this button subscribes the visitor to the WebSlice and places it in the IE 8 Favorites tool bar. Once a WebSlice is subscribed to, the user can quickly view content from that site from the tool bar or in a sidebar and not have to launch the site to see that specific content.

Both Activities and WebSlices are being developed using fairly standard Web technologies such as XML.

On the security side, IE 8 Beta 1 offers some small enhancements, with the new Safety Filter replacing the old phishing filter. The Safety Filter, which users can choose to turn on or off, looks to see if a site is known as a phishing or malware site, and users can also report sites they suspect of being malicious. If the filter is turned on then Web site information will be sent to Microsoft servers.

There were a couple of other small security enhancements in IE 8 Beta 1, including an altered browser address bar that now shows the core domain of the Web site URL in bold, with the idea being that it may be easier for users to detect fake sites that play games with domain names similar to legitimate sites.

Along with the information available in the Internet Explorer 8 Readiness Kit, IE 8 Beta 1 also includes some features designed to help developers. These include an IE 7 emulation button which switches the browser back to a standard IE 7 rendering engine.

In order to use this feature the browser needs to be restarted. Also, I was sometimes unsure if I was in or out of emulation mode until I found in the Tools menu that the mode was checked when on.

Of course, this being a developer release, much of the focus is on the new Web rendering engine of IE 8. As was previously reported, this beta of Internet Explorer does successfully pass the Web Standards Project's Acid2 test, meaning the browser has a good baseline of standards support (other browsers including Opera, Safari and the beta of Firefox 3 have also passed Acid2). However, the Web Standards Project also has a newer much tougher test called Acid3, which Internet Explorer 8 Beta 1 performed very poorly on.

In limited testing performance seemed good, though this is an early beta and even in this short testing period I had a couple of sites hang on me in testing.

Because of this, regular users should heed the warning and stay away from this beta for now. Web developers and cutting-edge enthusiasts who can't stay away can download Internet Explorer 8 Beta 1 here.

Posted by Jim Rapoza on March 5, 2008 4:03 P