Thursday, 30 June 2016

Soon, testing for malaria, cancer at home via cheap paper strips!

 Soon, testing for diseases like malaria or cancer may get a lot easier and simple as testing your blood sugar or taking a home pregnancy test.
The Ohio State University chemists are developing paper strips that detect diseases including cancer and malaria.
The new system will make it affordable for anyone to get medically tested, at costs as low as 50 cents per strip.
Researcher Abraham Badu-Tawiah explained that the idea is that people could apply a drop of blood to the paper at home and mail it to a laboratory on a regular basis and see a doctor only if the test comes out positive.
The researchers found that the tests were accurate even a month after the blood sample was taken, proving they could work for people living in remote areas.
The patent-pending technology could bring disease diagnosis to people who need it most--those who don't have regular access to a doctor or can't afford regular in-person visits, Badu-Tawiah said.
"We want to empower people. If you care at all about your health and you have reason to worry about a condition, then you don't want to wait until you get sick to go to the hospital. You could test yourself as often as you want," he said.
The technology resembles today's "lab on a chip" diagnostics, but instead of plastic, the "chip" is made from sheets of plain white paper stuck together with two-sided adhesive tape and run through a typical ink jet printer.
Instead of regular ink, however, the researchers use wax ink to trace the outline of channels and reservoirs on the paper. The wax penetrates the paper and forms a waterproof barrier to capture the blood sample and keep it between layers. One 8.5-by-11-inch sheet of paper can hold dozens of individual tests that can then be cut apart into strips, each a little larger than a postage stamp.
"To get tested, all a person would have to do is put a drop of blood on the paper strip, fold it in half, put it in an envelope and mail it," Badu-Tawiah said.
The technology works differently than other paper-based medical diagnostics like home pregnancy tests, which are coated with enzymes or gold nanoparticles to make the paper change color. Instead, the paper contains small synthetic chemical probes that carry a positive charge. It's these "ionic" probes that allow ultra-sensitive detection by a handheld mass spectrometer.
The university will license the technology to a medical diagnostics company for further development and Badu-Tawiah hopes to be able to test the strips in a clinical setting within three years.
In the meantime, he and his colleagues are working to make the tests more sensitive, so that people could eventually use them non-invasively, with saliva or urine as the test material instead of blood.
Badu-Tawiah conceived of the papers as a way to get cheap malaria diagnoses into the hands of people in rural Africa and southeast Asia, where the disease kills hundreds of thousands of people and infects hundreds of millions every year.
As per the World Health organisation (WHO), bbout 3.2 billion people - almost half of the world’s population - are at risk of malaria.
The research team claimed that the test can be reconfigured to detect any kind of antibody-producing disease, including ovarian cancer and cancer of the large intestine.
The study has been published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. 

Atmosphere of ancient Mars had high levels of oxygen: NASA

 NASA draws parallel between ancient Mars and the Earth in terms of presence of oxygen and suggested that the atmosphere of the Red Planet had high levels of oxygen than it has now.
This research was done on the basis of chemicals found in Martian rocks by NASA's curiosity Mars rover. A laser firing instrument on the rover also helped in detecting high concentration of manganese oxide.
NASA researchers still don't have any clear idea about the past life on Mars. But they do have a theory that suggests that at one point in distant past, the Red Planet had both water and protective magnetic field just like our home planet.
However, as soon as magnetic field disappeared, the high radiation ionized the water and splitted its molecules into hydrogen and oxygen. And eventually planet's famous red-oxide rocks absorbed much of its oxygen.
So, on this basis scientists believed that early Mars had more oxygen than the Earth.

Instead of holidaying in Bangkok, Ravi Shastri should have been physically present for high-profile coach interview: Sourav Ganguly

 Former Indian skipper Sourav Ganguly on Wednesday slammed Ravi Shastri for his comments post the high-profile interview process conducted by Cricket Advisory Committee (CAC) for the post of the Indian coach.
According to a report on CNN News 18 channel, Ganguly, who was absent during Shastri's interview, said that the Mumbaikar should have been physically present for the interview instead of enjoying his vacation in Thailand.
"He has given me an advice that next time when there is such meeting, I should be present. I also have an advice for him. When the coach of India is selected, he should be in front of the committee giving his presentation, instead of spending Holiday in Bangkok," the former Kolkata batsman said.
Ganguly further added that he was severely disappointed since the remarks have come from someone who has been a part of various BCCI committees for the last 20 years.
Speaking to reporters, Ganguly said, "I am extremely saddened and disappointed by Ravi Shastri's comments...I was reading it in couple of newspapers in last three to four days but chose to ignore it. Especially from someone who has been in BCCI committee for the last 20 years."

7th Pay Commission: 23.5% hike in salaries, minimum pay increased to Rs 18,000 per month; arrears to be paid this year

The Cabinet, headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Wednesday cleared the recommendations of the 7th Pay Commission according to which the overall hike in salary and allowance of central government employees and pensioners comes to 23.5 percent.
"The recommendations of the Pay Commission with respect to pay and pension, have been accepted by and large by the government. And those recommendations will be implemented with effect from January 1, 2016, and the arrears would also be paid in this year," Finance Minister Arun Jaitley told reporters here after the Cabinet had approved the recommendaions.
The Finance Minister said the government is "not surprised" at the additional expenditure, which is estimated at Rs 102,100 crore as per official estimates.
The Cabinet has also decided that arrears of pay and pensionary benefits will be paid during the current financial year (2016-17) itself, unlike in the past when parts of arrears were paid in the next financial year.
 The new scales of pay provide for entry-level basic pay going up from Rs 7,000 per month to Rs 18,000, while at the highest level i.e. Secretary, it would go up from Rs 90,000 to Rs 2.5 lakh. For Class 1 officers, the starting salary will be Rs 56,100.
The recommendations will benefit over 1 crore employees. This includes over 47 lakh central government employees and 53 lakh pensioners, of which 14 lakh employees and 18 lakh pensioners are from the defence forces.

Wednesday, 29 June 2016

Clinton leads Trump by 11 points in US presidential race: poll

Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton posted an 11 percentage point lead over her Republican rival Donald Trump, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Tuesday, a small decline since late last week.
The June 24-28 poll showed that 45.3 percent of likely American voters supportClinton while 34.1 percent support Trump, and another 20.5 percent support neither.
Clinton's lead was 14 points on Friday, though she has generally been widening her advantage over the New York real estate magnate since mid-May, when the two were nearly tied.
The former secretary of state, senator and first lady was bolstered in recent days by endorsements from members of the Republican establishment, including Henry Paulson, Treasury secretary under former President George W Bush.
Her Democratic rival Bernie Sanders, a USsenator from Vermont, said last week he would vote for her to stop Trump even though his campaign said this was not a formal endorsement.
Clinton is struggling to win over Sanders supporters after a hard-fought campaign for the nomination. Critics have assailed her over her handling of emails and a 2012 attack on a US mission in Libyawhile secretary of state.
Trump got a brief boost in the days after the June 12 mass shooting in Florida, coming within nine points of Clinton as he fine-tuned a campaign promise to temporarily ban the entry of Muslim immigrants to shore up national security.
His level of support so far in June, however, lags behind what his predecessor, Republican White House hopeful Mitt Romney, received in the same period in 2012.
He has sparred with Republican leaders over his off-the-cuff rhetoric and lagged behind Clinton's campaign organization in both size and fundraising, worrying some of his allies.
The poll included 1,099 likely voters and has a credibility interval, a measure of accuracy, of 3.4 percentage points.

Sensex opens over 100 points up on firma global cues, Nifty above 8,170; DLF, Sobha surge

Benchmark indices BSE Sensex and NSE Nifty continued to trade notably higher in afternoon deals on Wednesday as traders remained busy in brisk buying in blue chip counters amid firm cues from the global markets. Sentiment remained upbeat with Economic Affairs Secretary Shaktikanta Das’ statement that the India is poised for a ‘big leap’ in growth which could touch 8 per cent in the current fiscal on the back of normal monsoon. Some support also came on report that the Cabinet has approved a proposal to revise up salaries and pensions for government employees.

Balrup Hanuman Mandir