Sunday 22 May 2016

Viewpoint: Are e-cigarettes really a menace?


Michael Mosley vaping

A few years ago they were a rarity, but now there are nearly three million e-cigarettes out there. Many people think that they are as bad for you as normal cigarettes. But are they?
E-cigarettes, devices that give you a nicotine-hit by heating up a liquid which you then inhale, have become all the rage. But is the concern about them justified, asks Michael Mosley.
I've recently spent a couple of months making a documentary about e-cigarettes, trying to find out truth behind the headlines. I took up heavy vaping (that's what you do when you inhale vapour from an e-cigarettes). I have never smoked anything before and I wanted to see what effects inhaling nicotine in the form of an e-cig would have on a non-smoker. The results surprised me.
Everyone knows that smoking is bad for you and can lead to lung cancer. It also increases your risk of dying from a range of other conditions including heart attack, stroke and dementia. If you're a man you might like to know (but then again you might not) that smoking is one of the main causes of impotence.
Fans of e-cigarettes say vaping can reduce the burden of smoking either by making it easier for smokers to quit or by providing them with a safer way for them to get a nicotine hit.
Michael Mosley and Hon Lik, the inventor of the e-cigarette
Image captionMichael Mosley and Hon Lik, the inventor of the e-cigarette
Critics, however, say that we are gambling with a technology we don't understand and that there is no convincing evidence that e-cigarettes help people quit smoking. It may even encourage non-smokers to start.
Some countries have warily embraced e-cigarettes, while others have effectively banned them.
The UK has so far adopted a liberal approach, but on Friday new European legislation will come into force which will limit the size of refills and the nicotine content of the fluids. Vaping will become more restricted.

So, who's right? Are e-cigarettes one of the greatest public health measures ever invented, with the potential to save millions of lives, or are they just another cunning way to keep us hooked on nicotine? I was keen to find out.

Well the scientific consensus is that vaping, at least in the short term, is a lot safer than conventional smoking. A recent study for Public Health England concluded that e-cigarettes are 95% less harmful than normal cigarettes.
To be honest when I took up vaping I wasn't that worried about the short term health effects. What I was far more concerned about was getting hooked on nicotine. Yet as the weeks went by and I puffed away, nothing happened. When I leapt out of bed I didn't feel a longing to reach for my machine. If anything I found it a bit of a chore.
Chatting to experts I discovered, to my considerable surprise, that although cigarettes are highly addictive, nicotine alone may not be. Although no-one knows for sure, research in animals suggests that nicotine is far more addictive when delivered in combination with the other chemicals found in regular cigarettes.
And nicotine in its pure form may have an upside. There's evidence it can help patients with Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease.
The National Institute on Aging in the US has recently funded a trial of 300 patients with mild cognitive impairment (a precursor to Alzheimer's). The patients, none of whom are smokers, will be randomly allocated to either nicotine patches or placebo patches. Over the next few years they will have regular health checks, as well as memory and cognition tests.
Michael Mosley
Image captionEverybody agrees that smoking is bad for you
A similar, smaller study, published in 2012, found that non-smokers given nicotine patches saw improvements in memory, attention and reaction times.
But before you start slapping on the patches or firing up an e-cig you should be aware that though nicotine may help people who already have impaired memory, there's no evidence it will help the rest of us. Although I was tested before and after doing a month of heavy vaping, the nicotine didn't enhance my brain, apart from a small improvement in my fine motor skills.
But the main health justification for e-cigarettes is that they can help those who are keen to quit smoking tobacco, quit. So do they?
There have been very few randomised controlled trials, but the ones that have been done suggest it does.
When Horizon conducted a small study where we randomly allocated a group of hardcore smokers to either e-cigs, nicotine patches or simply giving up (going cold turkey), we found the vapers and those who slapped on the patches were far more successful at abandoning their cigarettes.
E-cigs are not risk free and after a month of heavy vaping there were signs of increased inflammation in my lungs (which rapidly reversed when I stopped). Nonetheless I think that for smokers e-cigarettes could prove to be a game changer.
There is a huge amount at stake. A billion people worldwide spend around £500bn a year on cigarettes and around half of them will die of smoking related diseases. In the UK alone smoking kills around 100,000 a year. Anything which gets people off cigarettes is going to save a lot of lives.

The beautiful flower with an ugly past

Cornflower
Dieter Dorner takes a long sip of his Gemischtes, a mix of dark beer and lager, and smiles.
We are sitting in an inn in Untersiebenbrunn, a little town east of Vienna, where he is a councillor for the far-right Freedom Party. Over a meal of sausage, chips and locally grown white asparagus, he tells me about a planned dance.
In true Austrian fashion, it's to be a ball - the local Freedom party's first Cornflower Ball, Der Kornblumenball.
"We've never had a Freedom Party Ball in Untersiebenbrunn before," he explains. "So we said to ourselves, let's do something, let's have a ball. The band will play dance music. My favourite is the slow waltz."
A poster for the Austrian Freedom Party's Cornflower Ball
Image captionA poster for the Austrian Freedom Party's Cornflower Ball
The ball was arranged last September, but the timing is felicitous, because these days the Freedom Party in Untersiebenbrunn has a lot to celebrate. In the first round of voting in Austria's presidential election in April, 53% of people here voted for the Freedom Party candidate, Norbert Hofer.
Dotted through the town's leafy streets are the blue Freedom Party campaign placards and posters for the Kornblumenball, featuring a silhouette of a dancing couple in evening dress.
"Hasn't there been some controversy about the blue cornflower?" I ask. "Something to do with the Nazis?" Dieter shakes his head. "The cornflower is simply the Freedom Party flower and we like it," he says.
"To discuss what happened 80 years ago, or what didn't happen or perhaps happened doesn't bring us forward. There is certainly nothing deliberately nasty about it."
But other Austrians are not so sure.
"The cornflower is a complicated symbol," Vienna historian, Bernhard Weidinger, tells me. "It was the German Kaiser Wilhelm's favourite flower, and was used by pan-German nationalists in the 19th Century.
"Then between 1934 and 1938, when the Nazis were a banned party in Austria, it was the secret symbol they used to wear in order to recognise each other."
Austrian Freedom Party members Heinz Christian Strache and Martin Graf wear cornflowers in the Austrian parliament in 2008Image copyright
Image captionAustrian Freedom Party members Heinz Christian Strache and Martin Graf, 2008
Nowadays, it's traditional for Austrian MPs to wear a flower in their buttonholes at the opening of parliament, he explains. The colour of the Freedom Party is blue, so they wear a cornflower.
"You are not a neo-Nazi if you wear a cornflower," he continues. But it is fair to say that the Freedom Party cultivates a certain ambivalence when it comes to the past.
Their presidential hopeful, Norbert Hofer, continues to face sharp criticism about his occasional choice of floral decoration. In response to a question last week, he declared that he wanted nothing to do with the Nazis, and wouldn't let them take away things like the cornflower.

The Cornflower

Cornflowers with poppiesImage copyright
  • Latin name: Centaurea cyanus, also known as bachelor's buttons
  • Native to the Mediterranean and Europe
  • National flower of Estonia
  • Worn in France as a "le bleuet" a symbol of remembrance akin to the poppy in the UK
The Freedom Party has moved on a long way from the heyday of its firebrand leader, Joerg Haider, who died in a car crash in 2008. Back in the 1980s and 90s, Haider openly praised aspects of the Third Reich. These days, Freedom Party members who veer in that direction are quickly silenced or removed from their posts.
A day or so later I fall into conversation with a young man called Michael, in a park in Vienna.
It's a balmy spring evening, the chestnut trees are in bloom, and in the distance a jazz band is playing a free concert on an open-air podium. "What do you think about the Freedom Party and the cornflower?" I ask.
"I hate those people," he replies. "And the cornflower isn't great. But you know, I'm not quite as worried about their attitude towards the past as I am about their attitude to what's going on now. Their barely-concealed racism, their rhetoric against Muslims and refugees is really wrong."
Demonstration against Norbert Hofer in ViennaImage copyright
Image captionA demonstrator at an anti-Hofer rally in Vienna holds up an image of the cornflower
He looks around at a family playing with their well-groomed dogs. "And the other thing that bothers me," he says, "is that they are working on people's fears and encouraging our worst instincts. Like Donald Trump does. Austria is better off than most countries in the world. It's safe - and in general life is pretty good here. But to hear the Freedom Party talk, you'd think we were living in some desperately difficult country." He shrugs.
I think back to my conversation with Dieter in the comfortable little town of Untersiebenbrunn. I had asked him if the Freedom Party was deliberately stirring up fears to gain votes.
"We don't create people's concerns, we express them," he had said. "We're worried about our future. When you have a lot, you also have a lot to lose."
(Source : BBC)

Paradise lost: World's most beautiful places under threat of tourism

It is the double-edged sword of tourism: On the one hand it brings the awareness of beautiful places and and economic development for the local population. On the other, this exposure can lead to uncontrolled numbers of tourists, damaging the beauty they came to see.
As the authorities in Thailand close the island of Koh Tachai because of the toll of heavy tourism, we take a look at some other popular destinations that are at risk of losing their best asset.

Phi Phi Islands, Thailand

Boats against the backdrop of vegetation-covered mountains on Phi Phi Island in December 2005Image copyright
Image captionThe Phi Phi islands are facing coral extinction and other environmental problems brought on by a boom in tourism
Since becoming the backdrop for the Hollywood film The Beach, this tropical paradise has come under increasing pressure as the result of a largely uncontrolled tourism boom.
Koh Phi Phi and nearby islands welcome more than 1.4 million tourists a year, according to the Tourism Council of Thailand.
Coral reefs have been destroyed by boat anchors and scuba divers, and the marine environment has been damaged by pollution from motorboats and the dumping of untreated waste into the sea.

Cozumel Island, Mexico

The cruise ship Brilliance of the Seas is docked in the waters of Cozumel, Mexico, Saturday, 19 March 2016.Image copyright
Image captionThe paradise island of Cozumel is reported to be the second most popular destination for cruise ships worldwide
Known for its beautiful beaches and tropical reefs, Cozumel island, off the coast of Mexico, was once a peaceful place until docks were built for cruise ships.
Today, it is the second most popular cruise ship destination in the world.
The fragile reefs are threatened by pollution and development, and the ships are causing the waters to get warmer and damage the coral.

Caribbean cruises

  • The wider region gets 63,000 port calls from ships each year
  • They generate 82,000 tonnes of rubbish a year.
  • The average cruise ship carries 600 crew members and 1,400 passengers.
  • Passengers on a cruise ship each account for 3.5kg of rubbish a day, compared with 0.8kg per local inhabitant
Source: Our Planet, UNEP magazine, 1999

Bali, Indonesia

Foreign and local tourists enjoy their evening along a beach in Kuta, on Bali island, 2 October 2005Image copyright
Image captionBali's delicate island ecosystem is under threat from continued encroachment
The Indonesian island of Bali is under threat of increased deforestation, as the area makes way for the tourism industry and Indonesia's growing population.
Tourism is growing at an exponential rate, but the infrastructure is not, resulting in mountains of waste that have nowhere to go.
Non-native animals and plants also threaten the island.

Galapagos islands, Ecuador

A marine iguana in 'Playa de los Perros' (Dogs Beach) in the Santa Cruz island in the Galapagos Archipelago, on 16 July 16 2015.Image copyright
Image captionThe unique biodiversity of the Galapagos Islands inspired Charles Darwin to conceive the theory of natural selection
Although it is not quite mass tourism, thousands of tourists flock to the Galapagos Archipelago every year to experience the unique biodiversity and its pristine environment.
But this island habitat is extremely sensitive to outside pressure, not only from too many tourists and the resulting development, but from the invasive species they are bringing with them.
As a consequence, the Galapagos Islands has been put on Unesco's World Heritage list.

Mount Everest

This picture taken on 23 May 2010 shows a Nepalese sherpa collecting garbage, left by climbers, at an altitude of 8,000 metres during the Everest clean-up expedition at Mount Everest.Image copyright
Image captionNepalese climbers collect 1,800kg of rubbish at an altitude of 8,000m (26,000ft)
Since Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay reached the top of Mount Everest in 1953, tens of thousands of hikers have trekked to base camp and almost 7,000 climbers have made it to the summit.
There was a two-year gap in the stream of climbers after a deadly avalanche in 2014 and another a year later caused by the Nepal earthquake, but this spring the expeditions have started up again.
The sheer number of people visiting has had a huge impact on this fragile environment.
Climbers take with them things including climbing equipment, food, plastics, tins, aluminium cans, glass, clothes, papers and tents. Some of this is left behind.
But sanitation is the biggest problem - about 11,000 kilo of human excrement is removed every year, which leaves you to imagine how much is left on the mountain.

Evidence of ancient tsunamis on Mars

Mars surface image
Image copyright
Image captionTsunami-borne sediments (arrow) inundate the land in an upslope direction (towards bottom-right)
Scientists think they see evidence of two huge tsunamis having once swept across the surface of Mars.
They point to satellite data suggesting a major redistribution of sediments over a large region at the edge of the Red Planet's northern lowlands.
The US-led team argues that asteroid or comet strikes into an ocean of water could have triggered the giant waves.
Such events could only have occurred more than three billion years ago when the planet was wetter and warmer.
Today, Mars is dry and very cold, and any impact would merely dig out a dusty hole.
But researchers have long speculated that the low, flat terrain in Mars' northern hemisphere could have hosted an ocean if the climate conditions were just right.
The nagging doubt with this theory has been the absence of an identifiable shoreline - something the new study could now help explain.
diagrams of Mars surfaceImage copyright
Left: A colour-coded digital elevation model of the study area showing the two proposed shoreline levels of an early Mars ocean that existed approximately 3.4 billion years ago. Right: Areas covered by the documented tsunami events extending from these shorelines.

If tsunamis regularly inundated the "land", dumping sediments and scouring new flow channels, they could over time have disguised what otherwise would have been an obvious "coast".
"Clearly, it's one of the implications of this work: to have tsunamis, you must have an ocean," said Alexis Palmero Rodriguez from the Planetary Science Institute in Tuscon, Arizona.
"So, we think this is going to remove a lot of the uncertainty that surrounds the ocean hypothesis. Features that have in the past been interpreted as relating to an ocean have been controversial; they can be explained by several, alternative processes. But the features we are describing - such as up-slope flows including large boulders - can only be explained in terms of tsunami waves," he told BBC News.
Dr Rodriguez and colleagues' tsunami findings appeared on Thursday in the journal Scientific Reports. Their work centres on two connected regions of Mars, known as Chryse Planitia and Arabia Terra.
The team claims that the sediments observed by satellite betray the action of two ancient mega-tsunamis.
illustration of Martian oceanImage copyright
Image captionDid early Mars have a vast northern ocean?
The older event is perhaps easier to understand in an Earth context, where energetic waves can pick up sediments, including massive boulders, and dump them at a higher elevation. The water, as it turns back to run downhill, then cuts new channels - such as the ones identified on Mars by Dr Rodriguez's group.
But the scientists go on to describe the traces of a second, younger event. This is calculated to have occurred a few million years later, when the climate had cooled significantly. In this instance, the tsunami wave likely froze as it propagated across the land surface. This is suggested by the observation of "lobes" of sediment without the backwash channels.
On Earth, the frozen floes capping a sea or a lake can sometimes be pushed ashore by a storm surge. It is an unusual phenomenon but would be analogous to what is being suggested - albeit on a much larger scale - for Mars.
The team has estimated the energetics of the impacts and their ensuing tsunamis, based on the scale of the sediment distributions.
The craters that were produced were probably about 30km across, they say. The waves could have been 50m in height, or even 120m at some locations.
The areas affected by the tsunamis cover some 800,000 sq km for the older event and 1,000,000 sq km for the younger one.
"On Earth, the K-T boundary impact (that wiped out the dinosaurs) produced an enormous tsunami wave that hit the continental United States, equivalent to the area we see flooded in our study region on Mars," Dr Rodriguez added.

Wet Red Planet?

Having lost some currency, the idea of an ocean on Mars is gaining popularity again.
Investigations by Nasa's Curiosity rover at Gale Crater have revealed that the deep bowl likely contained persistent lakes in the past.
Such water, it is argued, could only have been maintained if there was a robust hydrological system on Mars, cycling moisture between a large sea somewhere on the planet, its atmosphere and its land surface.
Boulder fieldImage copyright
A view (right) of a boulder-rich surface (yellow bars are 10m) deposited by the older tsunami, and then eroded (left) by channels produced as the tsunami water returned to the ocean elevation level

"[The] large expanse of currently documented tsunami inundation is but a portion of what occurred along the margin of the Martian northern plains-filling ocean," said co-author Kenneth Tanaka of the US Geological Survey.
"Tsunami-related features along other parts of the ocean margin, and potentially other smaller former bodies of water, remain to be identified, mapped and studied in detail."
Peter Grindrod from University College London was not involved in the study. He commented: "The idea of a northern ocean on Mars has been floating around for decades. But the evidence hasn't been able to push this idea forward as the consensus view.
"However, this possible evidence of tsunami deposits is interesting and, along with other recent studies of widespread deltas, could perhaps mark the beginning of a reinvigoration of the ocean hypothesis."
The lobe deposits from the younger event would be an excellent location for future exploration by surface robots or astronauts, the team believes. They are relatively undisturbed and so probably retain important information about the nature of the ocean, and possibly even some bio-signatures if the body of water happened to support life.
Ice lobesImage copyright
This satellite image taken using a thermal (temperature) sensor shows ice-rich lobes thought to be the remnants of tsunami waves that transitioned into slurry ice-rich flows as they propagated under extremely cold climatic conditions. The up-slope direction of flow is indicated by the white arrows. The lobe length is about 250km.

(Source: BBC)

Top news trending-

1. Brazil Zika virus confirmed in Africa

2.India saw 51 Celsius this week, a record temperature for the country. Meanwhile in Sri Lanka, many have been reported dead after torrential rain triggered devastating landslides.

3. Taliban chief 'probably killed' in raid

4.The world's biggest plane: Antonov An-225 Mriya lands in Australia

5.Nokia to Cut Over 1,000 Jobs in Finland

6.Google, Levi's Unveil Touch-Sensitive Jacket That Can Control Smartphones

7.Apple CEO Tim Cook Discusses India Manufacturing, Retail Plans With PM Modi

8.Apple's Tim Cook Meets Indian Prime Minister, Unveils Updated Narendra Modi App
9.Wrist-Band Device for Alcohol Monitoring Wins US Prize
10.Microsoft to Crack Down on Content Promoting Extremist Acts

11. 343 Industries Explains Why All of Halo 5 Is Not Coming to Windows 10 PC

12. Fan Discovers Level Editor in Metal Gear Solid 5: The Phantom Pain

13.Facebook Sued in US for Scanning Private Messages

14.Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella to Visit India This Month

15.IBM to Transform Rashtrapati Bhavan Into Smart Township

16.Hackers Spying on US Presidential Campaigns: Official

17.Microsoft to Sell Feature Phone Division to Foxconn for $350 Million

18.Sony to Build Up AI as Key Business Pillar, Invests in US Startup

19.Uber joins race for driverless cars

20.WhatsApp Video Calling Feature Spotted in Android Beta Update

Wednesday addams series Wednesday in short

 Follow this link to watch the Wednesday Netflix series summaru fully explained-  https://youtu.be/c13Y4XLs_AY