UK stillbirth rates among highest

A pregnant womanAround 29% of still births are caused by placental problems, but around a third have no obvious cause
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A series of new reports in the The Lancet suggest stillbirth rates in the UK are higher than in almost every other high-income country.

Britain ranks only 33rd in a list of countries ranked by stillbirths per 1,000 births, down from 26th in 1995. Only France and Austria rank lower among high-income nations.

The research also points to wide regional variations in the UK, with stillbirths a third more likely in the East Midlands than in the South West.

According to The Lancet’s figures, approximately 4,100 stillbirths occurred in the UK in 2009, which equates to about 11 children still born every day.

Although stillbirth rates are actually declining – by about 3.5% between 2000 and 2009 – other countries have moved faster, the report concludes.

The causes of stillbirths in high-income countries are both manifold and often unclear.

An estimated 29% are caused by problems with the placenta, which can affect the growth of the foetus. Some 12% are linked with infections, 9% with umbilical chord problems and 6% with congenital abnormalities.

But 30% of stillbirths have no obvious cause.

There are also risk factors which can increase the risk of stillbirth. Smoking and drinking during pregnancy can increase susceptibility, as can being overweight or obese, or having children later in life. Previous caesarean sections can also increase risk, as can multiple births.

But the authors of the series stress a stillbirth can affect any woman, with or without risk factors.

They say better monitoring during pregnancy could reduce the figures, but say more research is needed to more clearly understand what causes a baby to be still born.

“The grief of a stillbirth is unlike any other form of grief,” said Dr Richard Horton, The Lancet’s editor-in-chief.

“Almost three million stillbirths happen worldwide every year, which, even for a country with a developed health system such as the UK, means that 11 sets of parents every day will take home their newborn baby in a coffin.”

The causes behind the regional variations seen in the UK are also unclear, but the researchers believe social deprivation could be playing at a part.

“Within the UK there’s about a 33% difference between the South West with the lowest rates and the East Midlands with the highest rates,” said Professor Gordon Smith of Cambridge University and a report author.

“Why we see that variation we don’t know, but there’s plausible explanations around deprivation and around different ethnic groups.”

Dr Tony Falconer, President of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, welcomed the survey, and said the data provided further evidence of the link between stillbirth and maternal obesity.

“The rise in obesity is a serious issue and women need to be encouraged to lead a healthy lifestyle before conception to ensure the best outcome for them and their baby,” he said.

“Although we have good information about the social demographics of stillbirth, we need to know more about the pathology of stillbirth and more research in this area is needed.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Italian deputies back trial bill

People protest outside Italy's lower house of parliament in Rome, 13 April 2011There were protests inside and outside parliament

Italy’s lower house of parliament has approved a bill that would cut the length of some trials and be likely to end a bribery case against Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

The measure passed by 314 to 296, amid boos and shouts from opposition politicians.

They said the law was a “disgrace” and tailor-made for Mr Berlusconi.

Meanwhile, the Italian leader indicated that he would not stand for re-election in 2013.

The bill on shorter trials still needs final approval from the Italian senate, where Mr Berlusconi has a solid majority.

It would cut the length of trials for people with no previous convictions, and thereby effectively end a trial in which Mr Berlusconi is accused of bribing British lawyer David Mills to lie in court.

Mr Mills was convicted in the case 2009, but the ruling was overturned when the country’s highest criminal court said the statute of limitations had expired.

Mr Berlusconi denies any wrongdoing in the case.

The opposition have dismissed government claims that the bill that would shorten some criminal trials would help overhaul Italy’s justice system.

“It’s up to us now to make people understand the disgrace of this measure, which shows absolute contempt for the country’s real problems,” Democratic Party leader Pier Luigi Bersani was quoted as saying by the news agency Ansa.

Antonio Di Pietro, a former magistrate who leads the opposition Italy of Values party, called the bill “the umpteenth law to save Berlusconi from his trials”.

There were protests outside parliament in Rome, where people said the law would put at risk several important cases, including a trial linked to a fatal train crash in 2009.

Mr Berlusconi faces several other trials, including one in which he is charged with paying for sex with an under-age prostitute and using his position to cover it up.

He denies the allegations.

Mr Berlusconi says he is the victim of a long-running campaign by the judiciary, an accusation he repeated during a long dinner with foreign journalists in Rome on Wednesday.

The BBC’s David Willey, who was at the dinner, says Mr Berlusconi promised to complete his ambitious plans to reform Italy’s judicial system, to change his country’s post-war constitution and replace the members of the constitutional court, Italy’s highest legal authority, which he claims is stuffed with left-wing judges.

He said he did not intend to run for office again at the end of his mandate in 2013, and quashed rumours that he intends to stand for president in the same year, offering his cabinet secretary Gianni Letta as a possible candidate.

He also suggested Angelo Alfano, Italy’s 40-year-old justice minister, might be a possible future leader of his ruling Freedom Party – though he did not rule out some future political role for himself as a father figure who would advise future centre-right coalitions.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

N Korea confirms American arrest

Portrait painting of Kim Il Sung, People's Palace of Culture, 2 April 2011, Pyongyang, North KoreaIn North Korea dynastic rule has been accompanied by a distinctive leadership cult

North Korea has confirmed that it has arrested a US citizen, and is preparing to charge him with “committing a crime” against the country.

Jun Young Su was arrested in November last year, the official KCNA news agency said.

The US state department announced the arrest on Tuesday and is calling for the detainee’s release on humanitarian grounds.

The US has not named him, but said that Swedish diplomats had visited him.

The Swedish embassy in Pyongyang looks after American interests, as there are no diplomatic relations between North Korea and the US.

Later this month, former US President Jimmy Carter will fly to Pyongyang on a private visit to discuss issues including nuclear weapons, and would be likely to raise this case as well.

There is a long history of American citizens being held after trespassing in North Korea.

Since 2009, it has taken visits to Pyongyang by two former US presidents to secure the release of Americans in detention there.

This week, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is due on a scheduled visit to South Korea.

Efforts to ease tensions on the Korean peninsula are continuing, after two military attacks last year.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Cameron promises immigration cut

Airport arrivalsThe government wants to cut immigration to “tens of thousands” a year
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David Cameron is to “promise” the UK will reduce the level of immigration to “1980s’ levels” as a result of government measures.

But in a speech later, the prime minister will also say the country will “always be open to the best and brightest from around the world”.

He will argue the government has a “sober, comprehensive and effective plan to cut immigration”.

Labour accused ministers of “not delivering” on immigration.

Ministers have introduced tighter caps on the number of non-EU migrants, saying the government wants to cut the overall limit from about 200,000 to “tens of thousands” by 2015.

This is being split into monthly allocations, with a total of 4,200 available for April and 1,500 each month after that.

Non-European Union workers earning more than £150,000 a year are to be excluded from the cap.

Scientists will also be given “a significant advantage” in coming to the UK, as firms attempt to fill jobs where there are staff shortages.

In a speech outlining the government’s policy, Mr Cameron will say: “What we don’t want is for this to be a hugely attractive destination for people who only want a passage to Britain.

“So we are cracking down on the abuses of the system.”

He will promise to tackle “bogus colleges, providing bogus qualifications as cover for bogus visas”.

“He has made very big promises about the level of net migration he will achieve – but he hasn’t set out workable, transparent policies to deliver it”

Yvette Cooper Shadow home secretary

Mr Cameron will call for a “sober” debate, which is “clear-headed about not only the benefits of immigration but also its impact on our public services, communities and society”.

He will add: “This time last year, we said we would listen to people’s concerns and get immigration under control.

“Today I can confidently say that we are getting there.

“If we take the steps set out today, and deal with all the different avenues of migration, legal and illegal, then levels of immigration can return to where they were in the 1980s and 90s, a time when immigration was not a front-rank political issue.

Under control

“And I believe that will mean net migration to this country will be in the order of tens of thousands each year, not the hundreds of thousands every year that we have seen over the last decade.

“Yes, Britain will always be open to the best and brightest from around the world and those fleeing persecution.

“But with us, our borders will be under control and immigration will be at levels our country can manage.

“No ifs. No buts. That’s a promise we made to the British people. And it’s a promise we are keeping.”

But Labour shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper accused the prime minister of “not being straight with people”.

Ms Cooper said: “His two flagship policies were the immigration cap and a UK Border Police Force.

“Yet the cap only applies to 20% of non-EU migrants, and instead of creating a border police he has cut the UK Border Agency by 5,000 staff.

“And whilst he is cutting one set of student visas, he is simply expanding another – student visitor visas – which he won’t count in the net migration figures.

“He has made very big promises about the level of net migration he will achieve – but he hasn’t set out workable, transparent policies to deliver it.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

MGM to control its Macau casino

MGM Grand Macau Takings in Macau have soared in recent years making it the biggest gambling market in the world
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MGM Resorts International has reached a deal with its partner Pansy Ho to take a controlling stake in their Macau casino joint venture.

They have also agreed to an Initial Public Offering (IPO) of some of its shares on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange

Under the deal, MGM will get a 51% stake in the IPO, Pansy Ho will receive 29% of the shares and the remainder will be sold to investors.

The two partners currently each hold 50% of the venture.

MGM owns some of the biggest casinos in the US, while Pansy Ho is the daughter of Macau mogul Stanley Ho, the largest casino operator in Macau.

No date has yet been finalised for the launch of the IPO.

“Macau is very strong, and it will now be a more meaningful contributor to MGM’s results”

Chris Jones Telsey Advisory Group

MGM shares surged by more than 8% in New York.

Once it becomes the majority shareholder, MGM will be able to include the revenue and profit from its Macau operation in its balance sheet.

Gaming revenues in Macau have soared. Last year it reported at 57% rise, with total revenue of $23.5bn (£15.2bn).

Only six companies have licenses to operate casinos in Macau.

Analysts say they are expecting a big impact on MGM’s earnings once the deal has been finalised.

“The market likes it,” said Chris Jones of Telsey Advisory Group

“Macau is very strong, and it will now be a more meaningful contributor to MGM’s results,” he added.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Council mileage perks ‘wasteful’

Woman driving carLancashire, Derbyshire, Cornwall and Warwickshire offered staff the most generous allowances
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Councils are being accused of wasting millions of pounds on motoring perks for staff, with some receiving 65p per mile when using their own car for work.

The Taxpayers’ Alliance, a group which lobbies for lower taxes and greater public sector efficiency, found last year’s average for UK councils was 56p.

The HM Revenue and Customs-approved level at the time was 40p.

The Local Government Association has disputed the figures, but ministers called the subsidies a waste of money.

Local Government Minister Bob Neill said: “Town halls are wasting millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money by these preferential and privileged motoring perks.”

Among those local authorities offering the highest mileage allowance were Lancashire, Derbyshire, Cornwall and Warwickshire, according to the Taxpayers’ Alliance survey.

Those on the average mileage would have ended up £164 better off for every 1,000 miles driven, the study found.

In all, local authorities paid staff a total of £427m in mileage allowances in 2009-10, up from £402 million in 2008-09, the Taxpayers’ Alliance said.

Its director Matthew Sinclair said: “Ordinary motorists who are feeling the pinch will be shocked that council staff are getting such a generous deal for their mileage claims. It simply isn’t fair.

“Some authorities have shown that it is possible to save millions by cutting back to the rate recommended by the taxman.

“This is a quick and painless saving that won’t affect council services and will ease the burden on households, who’ve seen council tax double in the last decade.”

Minister Mr Neill agreed that “simple changes like clamping down on these subsidies would help councils drive down costs and protect front-line services”.

But the Local Government Association said the only council workers able to claim the 65p rate were casual users with the largest cars.

The vast majority, including care givers and social care workers, were on a 50.5p rate, it said.

It added that mileage allowances had been renegotiated since the Taypayers’ Alliance carried out its research, and would have been frozen or lowered.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Satnav bingo

 

Michael BlastlandBy Michael Blastland

SatnavComputers now often decide the way

Many now rely on satnav or online routefinders for directions – instead of paper maps – but how do these gizmos find their way?

Once, you gazed at the map, remembered that cursed bridge on the old A30 near Bodmin where lorries got wedged, thought of a number, doubled it, gave up, guessed, set off at 4am, whatever.

Now, you consult an online routefinder.

Or maybe eight, as I did. I wouldn’t usually, honest. It’s like having eight argumentative backseat drivers, as you’ll see.

So how far is it, anyway? And how long does it take? The occasion was another bank holiday, the journey was Hertfordshire to the South Devon coast near Kingsbridge, and here are the results:

Map and graph showing journey times

Is that a bigger spread than you’d expect? The distances are 246, 244, 243, 242, 221, 221, 220, and 220 miles. The durations vary by more than an hour. But the explanation is not that some are adjusted for traffic conditions.

Four routefinders recommend the M4 down to Devon, the other four the A303. When trying a few different times of travel on the TomTom – which is one of those that says it updates according to traffic conditions during the day – it varied by a maximum of 20 minutes from quickest to slowest in either direction.

I had expected more. In the event, we passed a life-sapping tailback on the M5 in the other direction that would add who-knows-how-much suppressed road rage.

So how do they do it? The one I spoke to was a bit cagey about this in case the competition would be listening. But the basics are that they first assume you drive legally, count the distance, make standard calculations for how much time a roundabout or junction adds, then check samples of these with real drives.

There’s apparently no encyclopaedia of routes from every destination to every other. Rather, they look for the shortest way to the trunk road network and then refer to a database of main routes, before finding the shortest reasonable – ie not down a farm track – connection at the other end.

“Do you choose who values your house, audits your company or sets your exams because you think they will give you the most favourable verdict? Or the most accurate?”

So we might expect variations to tend to be proportionately bigger where less of the route is on a trunk road.

But here’s a question that moves the problem of measurement from one about miles to one about you. Do you choose the route finder that offers the quickest journey, the slowest, or one in the middle? Are you a travel optimist or pessimist?

If you think it possible that one of them knows a better route, it might make sense to choose the fastest. But how likely is that? Makes you wonder why they don’t put a range of uncertainty around the journey time.

The distance is what it is, the journey will take what it takes. As they used to say about the timetable for certain continental rail networks – you leave when you leave and arrive when you arrive. This doesn’t change just because someone thinks otherwise.

But I wonder if the hope that it might is common in many areas of life. For example, do you choose who values your house, audits your company or sets your exams because you think they will give you the most favourable verdict? Or the most accurate?

In other words, do we go for the one that we think will tell us what we want to hear – and stuff the facts?

Come to think of it, you do meet people who like to say they did the journey faster than they really did – yeah, my driving’s that good. Or slower – see how I struggled to get here. See what you put me through?

It is what it is, but measurement is something else. Measurement, as we all know, is also about the measurer.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Quick on the draw

Pens on the Staedtler production lineThe proximity of Staedtler and Faber-Castell encourages innovation at both firms
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The ancient city of Nuremberg, steeped in medieval and Nazi history, is home to a cluster of fiercely competitive pen and pencil manufacturers whose survival is driven by innovation.

Staedtler and Faber-Castell are both part of the Mittelstand, the backbone of German industry, made up of thousands of small and medium-sized companies. Privately-owned, many are still family businesses after several generations.

Staedtler celebrated its 175th anniversary in 2010, while Faber-Castell will celebrate its 250th birthday in summer 2011.

But despite this, the two companies have argued about which company can rightfully claim to be the oldest, a “pencil war” that ended up in court in the 1990s.

Count Faber-Castell

“I would have been fired a couple of times in a publicly-traded company somewhere in the US, where you are judged according to quarterly earnings per share”

Count von Faber-Castell Head of Faber-Castell

Staedtler lost the legal case, but managing director Axel Marx still points out that Friedrich Staedtler, who was born in Nuremberg in 1636, was “the first person worldwide to be mentioned as a pencil manufacturer”.

His sons had their own pencil-making businesses. But the city’s strict guild rules meant that the Staedtler company was not set up until 1835.

By this point, 10km (6.2 miles) down the road in the small town of Stein, there was already a flourishing pencil company, Faber-Castell.

Outside the city limits, Kasper Faber had been able to incorporate a company in 1761.

The current head of the family firm, Count Anton-Wolfgang von Faber-Castell, is the eighth generation and a direct descendent of the founder.

“I do hope the company will still flourish with the ninth and tenth generations,” he says.

That the disagreement over longevity continues to rankle is symptomatic of the keen rivalry that has helped to shape both companies.

The need to survive in high-cost Germany – and in such close proximity to each other – has forced the companies to innovate and export.

Both are profitable, global companies and still highly dependent on the same school-age consumers who use their pencils, crayons and pens.

Source: Faber-Castell and Staedtler

Faber-Castell Staedtler

Staedtler has an annual turnover of approximately 250m euros (£220m). It has some factories in Asia and world-wide sales but still manufactures 80% of its pencils and pens in Germany.

At the Nuremberg plant where it makes graphite leads and pens, it has developed an “anti-break system” for coloured pencils.

This extra coating around the coloured pencil leads stops them breaking when sharpened, which Staedtler says has boosted sales.

Its most recent development is the Wopex pencil, manufactured on a secret production line visitors are not allowed to see.

It uses mashed up wood and therefore, the company says, is more environmentally friendly – 80% of the wood from a tree can be used, rather than the 20% used in traditional wood-cased pencils.

Axel Marx describes this new production method as a “revolution”, and says the pencils have double the writing capacity of older versions.

He accepts that the new process will be copied in time, but is determined to exploit the window of opportunity before competitors catch up.

Staedtler is no longer in the Staedtler family. It is owned by a private foundation.

It has no bank debts, and in fact the company is reluctant to take out bank loans for new projects, preferring to re-invest profits and expand more slowly. Mr Marx says this is typical of the Mittelstand mentality.

Find out more

Blue Faber-Castell pencils

In Business is on BBC Radio 4 on Thursday 14 April at 2030 BST and Sunday 17 April at 2130 BST.

Listen via the BBC iPlayer Download the programme podcast

“You do not say, ‘OK, there is a business opportunity, let’s take a bank credit to realise it’. You are more on the cautious side,” he says.

He acknowledges this approach means many Anglo-Saxon rivals consider German companies to be “a little bit conservative in financial issues”.

Down the road at Faber-Castell, in factories painted as brightly as the pencils that roll off its production line, Count von Faber-Castell appears to share his opposite number’s philosophy.

“I would have been fired a couple of times in a publicly traded company somewhere in the United States, where you are judged according to quarterly earnings per share,” he says.

But even without shareholders breathing down his neck, there were some in his company who were sceptical about his plan to introduce luxury pencils, a move he says was unique among pencil manufacturers. The Perfect Pencil comes in a platinum holder, and sells for 190 euros (£170).

“It helped tremendously to really position Faber-Castell as a company which is making interesting products even in a dull business of pencils,” he says.

Turnover for the financial year 2009-10 was 451m euros (£402m), with pre-tax profits of 46.5m euros (£41m).

In contrast to Staedtler, Faber-Castell has more of its production abroad than at home, with factories in South America and Asia, but remains committed to its German presence.

Ten years ago the company introduced the grip pencil which has painted dots on the outside to make it easier to hold and use.

Workers on the Staedtler production lineStaedtler has developed an “anti-break” system

The product won five design awards, and was one of Business Week’s products of the year in 2001. It boosted sales worldwide and secured the future of the German pencil plant in Stein.

With yet another large writing instrument manufacturer, Stabilo, nearby, Nuremberg mayor Ulrich Maly insists the pencil makers are “more than just companies, because they are part of the city’s history”.

He says Nuremberg’s economy depends on the Mittelstand companies like the pencil makers to provide employment. There is a great deal of loyalty to local firms, and he says pencils are bought “patriotically”.

And he says the relatively high labour and manufacturing costs the companies face within Germany offer their own reward.

“In places where labour is expensive, the ideas simply have to be greater.”

In Business is on BBC Radio 4 on on Thursday 14 April at 2030 BST and Sunday 17 April at 2130 BST. Or listen via the BBC iPlayer or download the programme podcast.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

‘REM had no goals’

REMREM released their 15th album, Collapse Into Now, in March
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REM’s 30-year career began in the underground, with the groundbreaking and influential mid-80s albums Murmur and Reckoning.

They finally achieved mainstream success with 1988’s alternative rock masterpiece Green, and progressed to MTV-fuelled international success with singles like Losing My Religion and Everybody Hurts.

Somehow, they managed to enjoy world-wide mainstream recognition while also maintaining their status as one of the most esoteric, unique voices in rock music.

In doing so, they opened the door for alternative rock bands like Nirvana and Pearl Jam, and set a template (both musically and ethically) that’s been followed by everyone from Radiohead to Arcade Fire.

In the wake of the release of the band’s 15th album, Collapse Into Now, Michael Stipe granted a handful of interviews. Speaking to BBC 6 Music’s The First Time, he displayed little of his trademark intensity and solemnity.

“His reputation for fixing you in his eye and carefully considering every aspect of every question is well justified,” says presenter Matt Everitt. “But Stipe seemed happy to chat about his early obsessions and his comical ignorance of musical history.”

When did you first become aware of music?

It would have been the Beatles, Michelle, my belle. I was staying with a German friend and she was making cabbage soup for me. That song came on the radio, and I remember standing alone in the living room, looking at that radio on a tall shelf and thinking that it was really beautiful.

“I didn’t know the bass guitar did the low notes – that’s how ignorant I was of music”

Michael StipeWatch Michael Stipe interview clips

Did you have a musical upbringing?

Not particularly. My parents were very specific about what they loved, and they would play it over and over again. Although I come from an artistic family, music was not a huge part of my upbringing.

What was the first single that you owned?

My grandmother took my two sisters and I to a record store, Mr Pemberton’s Record Store in Texas. He had some singles that were discounted, so we were able to buy whatever we wanted.

We bought an Elvis Presley album, for one of his films called Double Trouble, and a Disney Film called The Parent Trap starring Hayley Mills. Amongst the singles was Tammy Wynette’s D.I.V.O.R.C.E. and I Want To Hold Your Hand by The Beatles.

Now, if that isn’t random, I don’t know what is.

It’s definitely an eclectic mix.

As a pre-teen, before punk rock radically changed my life, there were songs on the radio that resonated with me and, to this day, I don’t know why.

Such as?

REM in 1994The band were a four-piece until drummer Bill Berry quit in 1997 after suffering a brain aneurism two years before

Benny And The Jets by Elton John. It seemed like it came from another galaxy. As an adult who makes music, I realise now that the production on that song is probably the weirdest to ever make the top 20.

Your first single was Radio Free Europe. What do you remember of recording it? Were you excited?

No, I wasn’t! I didn’t know the process of recording. In fact, it wasn’t until our second album, Reckoning, that I realised the difference between the bass guitar and the guitar. I didn’t know which one did which sound. I knew the bass guitar had four strings on it… because I could count them. But I didn’t know the bass guitar did the low notes. That’s how ignorant I was of music.

What was the first REM song that you felt connected with a mainstream audience?

From the first show we did I felt like a pop star, because people clapped when I did something. On some level, that’s all part of the insane insecurity and courage it takes to perform in the first place.

But I think that when The One I Love came out and went into the top 20 in the US, that’s when it felt like, “Wow, this is really serious. This is real.”

It’s always gratifying when someone works for a long time – and this doesn’t just have to be in music – and finally achieves their goal. How did that feel?

But we didn’t know what we wanted. We were the band that had no goals. The fact that we were making records and touring felt like this amazing adventure to us. We didn’t necessarily want to conquer the world – but then we ended up doing exactly that in some small corner of the universe that belonged to pop music and us.

You’ve made a film for each of the songs on the new album. How did that come about?

REM at Glastonbury 1999Stipe has branched out into film, both as an actor and producer

To an 11-year-old child, the album is a thing of the past. But I think an album is something quite significant. A medium and a format that needs to be celebrated. So how do we do that in 2011? One thing we can do is create something that’s going to be presented on YouTube, or you can watch on your phone. That’s what these 12 films were all about.

When you were recording Collapse Into Now were you aware of trying to celebrate the album format. Did you sequence it to be listened to as a complete body of work?

Sequencing is absolutely important to an album. It’s perhaps one of the most important things. Also being able to edit yourself: If you’ve written 17 songs, being able to bring it down to a number that will create a complete piece. That’s a skill I don’t own, but Peter [Buck] does.

REM is credited with being a band that took the alternative into the mainstream. Do you look at bands like Nirvana or Pearl Jam and see some of yourself?

Never! I just don’t see it. It’s like when people compared REM to The Byrds. I didn’t get that either. It was the way Peter picked the guitar instead of strumming it, but I didn’t know about the history of music to know that.

So when that’s turned around on me… I only recently found out that people think my voice is unique. People say they can recognise it instantly and I never knew that. It’s not false modesty or humility. I honestly had no idea.

Does it feel like every REM album might be the last one?

I put so much into the work we do that, when I’m done, I feel like I’d never be able to do it again. For better or worse, one of the things I’m most proud of is that we’ve never taken the advice of other people over our own. So the triumphs that are ours are distinctly and completely ours. And the failures are also completely ours. So looking back, I get equal dollops of humility and triumphant joy.

You can hear the full interview with Michael Stipe on BBC 6 Music on 17 April at 1200 GMT. Collapse Into Now is out now.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Fox species clash in the Arctic

Russia’s Arctic foxes are under threat from an expanding population of red foxes, according to scientists.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Rio lawmaker had ‘criminal ties’

Rocinha neighbourhood (file photo)Paramilitary groups are active in many of Rio’s favelas
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Police in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro have arrested a local lawmaker on suspicion of heading a paramilitary group linked to a series of murders.

They say Luiz Ferreira da Silva runs an illegal armed group which controls 13 Rio neighbourhoods, a charge he denies.

Police said the group had been planning an attack on the city’s police chief.

Originally formed to offer protection from drug gangs, many paramilitary groups are now running the criminal rackets they once fought.

Luiz Andre Ferreira da Silva was arrested at his home in Rio.

Police said they had been investigating the paramilitary group he is alleged to have run for two years.

The officers said they had brought the operation which led to Mr Ferreira da Silva’s arrest forward after uncovering a plan to kill Rio police chief Martha Rocha and lawmaker Marcelo Freixo.

Mr Freixo led an investigative commission which uncovered the growing influence of paramilitary groups in Rio.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Mind over matter

Optical illusion of stretched finger

Dr Roger Newport, from the University of Nottingham, explains how the optical illusion works on arthritic suffer Pam Tegerdine

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A chance discovery by academics in Nottingham has found that a simple optical illusion could unlock a drug-free treatment for arthritis.

The computer-generated mind trick has been tested on a small sample of sufferers and found that in 85 per cent of cases it halved their pain.

Research is still in the early stages, but initial results suggest the technology, called Mirage, could help patients improve mobility in their hands by reducing the amount of pain they experience.

For the illusion to work patients place their hand inside a box containing a camera, which then projects the image in realtime onto a screen in front of them.

The subject then sees their arthritic fingers being apparently stretched and shrunk by someone gently pushing and pulling from the other side of the box.

Chance finding

The Mirage mind trick has been developed by The University of Nottingham’s Psychology department. It was first used at an open day last year as part of research project into the way our brains put together what we see and feel happening to our bodies.

The machine was a big hit with children at first, but it was one of their grandparents who made an unexpected discovery.

Dr Catherine Preston, from Nottingham Trent University, who is collaborating on the study said: “The grandmother wanted to have a go, but warned us to be gentle because of the arthritis in her fingers.

“We were giving her a practical demonstration of illusory finger stretching when she announced, ‘My finger doesn’t hurt any more’, and asked whether she could take the machine home with her. We were just stunned – I don’t know who was more surprised, her or us.”

Pam Tegerdine

“It was a very weird sensation, but as my finger was being stretched it felt more and more comfortable.”

Pam Tegerdine

The chance find was followed up by recruiting 20 volunteers with osteoarthritis to put Mirage to the test.

The subjects averaged 70 years old and had all been clinically diagnosed with arthritic pain in their hands and fingers. Before starting the test they were asked to rate their pain from 0-20, with 0 indicating no pain and 20 representing the most unbearable pain they could imagine.

Pam Tegerdine, from Nottingham, volunteered for the first study. She has suffered with osteoarthritis since her 30s and now has constant pain in her hands, feet, and lower back.

Physiotherapy and numerous prescription drugs help, but she said the optical-illusion technology was like nothing she had ever experienced.

“It was a very weird sensation, but as my finger was being ‘stretched’ it felt more and more comfortable. I just wanted it to stay like that, to keep that image in my head. If this could lead to a drug-free treatment for arthritis then that would be fantastic.”

Pain relief

The team were looking at how the illusion affected painful and non-painful parts of the hand when they were apparently stretched or shrunk. The study showed a marked reduction in pain – on average halving the discomfort for 85 per cent of volunteers.

Some reported greater reduction in pain for stretching, some for shrinking and some for both.

The pain reduction worked only when painful parts of the hand were “manipulated” and for a third of the volunteers it temporarily eliminated the pain altogether.

Anecdotally, many volunteers also reported an increased range of movement. The results will be reported in the next edition of the medical journal, Rheumatology.

Osteoarthritis is a debilitating and painful inflammatory condition that affects the joints, and is one of the most common arthritic conditions.

Around 10 million people suffer from some form of arthritis, the most at-risk being those over 50.

There is currently no cure, but the symptoms can be managed by a range of treatments including painkillers and physiotherapy. Doctors say pain can be a barrier to sufferers trying to exercise and keep joints mobile.

Arthritic fingerExercising arthritic joints can be very painful – something this new technology may help combat

The Nottingham team hopes it can find a use for the new technologies in physiotherapy, allowing health professionals to reduce pain for sufferers while exercising their joints.

Eventually, cheaper technology may also allow a low-cost, smaller model of the system to be produced for sufferers to keep at home – offering brief periods of respite from their discomfort.

Dr Newport stressed that the work is at a very early stage and that further studies are needed to further assess Mirage and its effect on pain reduction.

Researchers have secured a £23,000 grant for the next test phase and say they could collaborate with colleagues at the Arthritis UK Pain Centre at The University of Nottingham to study the brain’s role in mitigating pain in arthritis.

Dr Newport added: “This… is an excellent example of how fundamental research can often produce unexpected and significant results. In my early career I was lucky enough to receive internal funding to develop the technology which is unique to The University of Nottingham.

“Without that support we never would have unearthed this surprising and exciting result, which potentially could be extremely important to the millions of people who suffer from this painful and debilitating illness.”

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