Bodies of 1,000 dead in Japan too toxic to handle
- Radioactive water leaks from Japan nuclear plant
- Thailand detects low-level radiation in vegetables from Japan


You may delay, but time will not.
(Benjamin Franklin)
Welcome to the 77th and last Oscars.
(Chris Rock)
I had never done animation, so I thought it would be cool to try something different
(Selena Gomez)
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Question 1: The Financial Impact of Breast CancerIn May 2010, the Canadian Breast Cancer Network released the research report entitled Breast Cancer: Economic Impact & Labour Force Re-Entry, which firmly positioned breast cancer as an economic as well as a healthcare issue.The economic impact of breast cancer is significant, and in many cases devastating for patients and their families. 80% of respondents experienced an economic impact following their diagnosis, often with distressing long-term financial consequences.Some report findings:
- Average decline in household income was $12,000 or 10% of family income
- 44% of respondents used savings, while 27% took on debt
- One fifth of respondents returned to work before they were ready because of financial pressure
- Those who had chemotherapy had a greater loss of household income and were 49% more likely to take longer than 16 weeks off work
Survey respondents reported that the average duration of their breast cancer treatment was 38 weeks, and two-thirds of the respondents took 16 weeks or more off from work. Because Employment Insurance Sickness Benefits last for a maximum of 15 weeks, there was an average gap of 23 weeks during treatment without coverage.If elected, will your government:A. Lengthen Employment Insurance Sickness Benefits for Canadians undergoing treatment for breast and other cancers as well as other illnesses and chronic diseases that require long periods of treatment so that no one who is ill is penalized by the current limit of 15 weeks of sickness benefits?B. Cancel the two-week waiting period for EI Sickness Benefits so that sick Canadians are not penalized?C. Immediately extend the Employment Insurance Compassionate Care Benefit to cover family caregivers providing care to those with breast cancer, other cancers and other long-term conditions?a. Increase the benefit to 75% of workers' earnings?b. Increase the benefit period to a maximum of 52 weeks?c. Allow partial weeks of compassionate care leave over a longer period?d. Expand the eligibility criteria beyond imminent death within 26 weeks?
Question 2: Drug Approval Process in CanadaThe drug approval process in Canada is lengthy and complex. Currently the performance targets as outlined on the Health Canada website is 300 days for "non-priority" drugs and 180 days for "priority" drugs.Once drugs are approved by Health Canada, cancer drugs pass through the Pan-Canadian Oncology Drug Review (pCODR), formally the Joint Oncology Drug Review (JODR).This process can take up to a year for recommendation to be made. Provinces and territories may then either confirm or disagree with pCODR's recommendations, often resulting in further significant delays and an uneven patchwork of drug coverage across Canada.Cancer patients in Canada face unduly long waits for much-needed drugs, and medications available in one province or territory may not be available in another. But when it comes to cancer treatment, especially for advanced or metastatic cancer, time is of the essence.If elected, how will your government:A. Ensure that the approval processes for new treatments are shortened to permit timely access to new treatments for those who need themB. Ensure that no cancer patient in Canada goes without internationally recognized gold standard treatmentsQuestion 3: Wait TimesThe Canadian Breast Cancer Network's 2008 Breast Cancer Wait Times in Canada Report Card showed that not all Canadian women are receiving equal access to breast cancer treatment. The project was undertaken in order to gather information about what happens across Canada in terms of wait times in four important areas: from abnormal screen to diagnosis, from diagnosis to surgery, time to radiation, time to chemotherapy.We found some outstanding examples of best practices and much evidence that many jurisdictions across the country are working on innovative solutions to the wait time issue. However, the most disconcerting finding was that there are no national benchmarks for wait times and no standards for wait time reporting systems across the continuum of care. The data reported are calculated differently across jurisdictions making it impossible to compare wait times. This has not changed since 2008.In the absence of comprehensive and consistent wait times data, there is no certainty that people diagnosed with breast cancer are receiving optimal care.This is a complex issue. There needs to be national benchmarks for maximum wait times for diagnosis and treatment. Electronic health records must include consistent reporting of wait times across jurisdiction. Best practices must be shared and implemented across the country. Access to timely cancer care cannot depend upon ones postal code.If elected, how will your government:A) Provide the infrastructure necessary to ensure comprehensive and consistent standards for wait time reporting for breast cancer diagnosis and treatment across CanadaB) Ensure that national benchmarks are established for wait times associated with surgery and chemotherapyC) Ensure the adoption of electronic health recordsJoin our survivor advocate campaign and make canada's decision makers aware of the issues that are important to you. Contact khurley@cbcn.ca for more information on how a little bit of your time can make a big impact.
Update: This was an April Fool's post. The acquisition was in 2003 :-)
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Posted by Brett Wiltshire, Blogger CEO
[Cross-post from google.blogspot.com]
This morning we’re beyond thrilled to announce that Blogger has signed a definitive agreement to be acquired by Google, the Internet search company. This is exciting news not only for all of us on the Blogger team, but for our users, our partners, and most importantly -- the blogosphere itself.
Understandably, you probably have lots of questions about what this means for Blogger and Blogger users. Below, we've put together some initial answers to many of the biggest questions. More info will be available as we figure it out. Thanks for your support as we transfer into this next exciting phase.
Q: Why did Blogger sell to Google?
A: Well, on the surface, it may look obvious: A company of Google's size could give Blogger the resources we needed to do things better, faster, bigger. It's been a long eleven+ years since we started the company, and not all of them were very fun. We had been making serious progress over the last year or so, but bootstrapping (growing without funding) is always a slow process, and we were a long way from where we wanted to be. We wanted to offer a better service. And with Google, it wasn't just their size, of course. They had clearly done an incredible job building their technology and business, and we'd been big fans.
However, that doesn't mean it was an easy decision. We'd seen many small companies doing interesting things die (or at least become uninteresting) after getting acquired. It was only after becoming convinced that: a) There were sensible, cool, powerful things we could do on the technology/product side with Google that we couldn't do otherwise; and b) It was a good company, run by people we liked, who wanted the same things we did (i.e., they wouldn't screw up Blogger or make our lives miserable).
We became convinced both of these were the case rather quickly after thinking about the product side and talking to lots of Googlers. Also, Google liked our logo. And we liked their food.
Q: Will Blogger go away?
A: Nope. Blogger is going to maintain its branding and services. While we may integrate with Google in certain areas there will always be a Blogger.
Q: What does the acquisition mean to Blogger users?
A: Greater reliability, new innovative products and a whole lot more that we aren't ready to share quite yet (truth is, we're still figuring a lot of it out). Right now, we're mostly bolstering up our hardware -- making things faster and more reliable -- and getting settled. Next, we're going to be working on some killer ideas we've been wanting to implement for years. It'll be fun.
Q: Will there be any changes to my account?
A: Not right now but if anything does change we will notify you ahead of time, as we've done in the past.
Q: Will there be any changes to the Blogger products?
A: We will be making some changes in our product line. We've been working on a new version of Blogger for some time now that will be coming out soon. We'll tell you more as soon as we know.
Q: What are your plans for the future?
A: We are building a nuclear powered... Wait, you almost had us. We aren't telling, yet! But we will have more in a few weeks.
Q: Does this mean my blog will rank higher in Google search results?
A: Nope. It does mean your blog might be stored physically closer to Google but that's about it. The people at Google have done a great job over the years making sure their search results are honest and objective and there's no reason they would change that policy for Blogger or anyone else.
Q: What will happen to all the nice kids that work on Blogger?
A: We’ll still be working on Blogger and making it better.
Q: Are you still as handsome as ever?
A:
I was sitting in my kitchen three weeks ago and I suddenly had an overwhelming urge to eat raw fruit. I ate four bananas, two apples and a grapefruit for dinner, and nothing else. I couldn't believe how great I felt! I sang a happy song and gave everyone hugs and kisses. Since I was out of fruit, the next morning I rushed to the grocery store and bought 10 pounds of bananas, 5 pounds of apples, a dozen oranges and various other fruit. Ever since then, I've been eating nothing but raw fruit and loving it!
Over the course of the last three weeks, I've been experimenting with adding back small portions of meat and dairy, which inevitably make me feel sick. I can just feel them clogging my digestive system and arteries. I've also tried cooking the fruit, which just makes it taste devitalized and doesn't give me the same energy-- maybe it's killing the enzymes.
So that's why I've decided to eat a raw vegan fruitarian diet from now on. Chimpanzees eat mostly raw fruit, and look at how strong they are! I hope that by eating enough fruit, I'll be able to climb trees better eventually. I'm starting with chin-ups.
I'm also changing the name of this blog to Raw Fruit Source to reflect my new dietary philosophy.
April fool's!
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