Portugal in 1.25bn euro bond sale

A Portuguese financial broker in Lisbon talks on the phoneDealers will be closely watching the price of Portuguese debt

Portugal will go to the markets for up to 1.25bn euros (£1.04bn; $1.62bn) with a sale of four and 10-year bonds.

The auction will be closely watched as an indication of investor confidence, as markets see how easily – or not – the debt-hit nation can raise funds.

Yields, or the interest rate Portugal must pay to borrow funds, hit a recent fresh high on its 10-year bonds of 7.3%, before falling to 6.9%.

The country is now likely to offer very high yields to sell its debt.

However, bond buying by the European Central Bank (ECB) should stop yields rising so much that Portugal is forced to seek an EU bail-out.

Portugal is to offer a total of between 750m euros ($972.1m) and 1.25bn euros in four- and 10-year bonds.

“The market will take it down primarily because of what the ECB is doing,” said Peter Chatwell, rate strategist at Credit Agricole in London.

“The ECB appears to be proactive enough and we’ve seen tightening in Portuguese yields so far this week.”

There has been speculation Portugal could join Greece and the Irish Republic in needing an international bail-out, something it has denied.

The country’s borrowing costs have surged as investors worried over its financial health.

However, analysts are not worried about demand at the auction, particularly after the ECB buying.

“I expect the auction to be already sold, with domestic demand enough to cover supply, but it doesn’t mean that concerns will go away,” said BNP Paribas analyst Ioannis Sokos.

Lisbon has argued its situation is different from Greece and the Republic of Ireland – both of which have agreed to bail-outs from the European Union and International Monetary Fund.

It says that its deficit and debt are lower than those nations, that it has not suffered a bubble in property prices and that its banks are sound.

And the European Commission has said there are no discussions under way on an EU-International Monetary Fund bail-out of Portugal.

Analysts believe that while Europe could support Portugal, a bail-out of Spain would stretch the existing bailout fund.

Greece was the first eurozone nation to take a bail-out when a three-year 110bn-euro deal was agreed.

The Irish Republic’s 85bn-euro bail-out package was agreed last month.

A debt sale due on Thursday by Spain will also be closely watched by investors.

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

Man dies after flats disturbance

Police vanPolice cordoned off a tower block in the Gilmerton area of Edinburgh during their investigation

A man has been killed and another seriously injured following a fight in an Edinburgh flat.

Police were called to a disturbance at Craigour Place on the south side of the city at about 2045 GMT.

Officers sealed off the Castleview tower block while a team of negotiators liaised with the residents inside.

When they gained access to the flat they found the body of a man, believed to be in his 40s. Another man had been stabbed and is now in hospital.

He is being treated for non life-threatening injuries.

It is understood the men knew each other and an argument between them had escalated out of control.

Detectives said they were following a positive line of inquiry and have appealed for witnesses.

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

Ivorian policemen die in clashes

Ivorian gendarmes ride on11 January 2011 in Abidjan's Abobo neighbourhood in the PK18 areaThe latest clashes took place in the neighbourhood of Abobo in Abidjan

At least two police officers have died in fresh fighting overnight in Ivory Coast’s main city of Abidjan, in a stronghold of Alassane Ouattara.

Mr Ouattara is recognised by the UN as the winner of a November poll, but incumbent President Laurent Gbagbo has refused to concede that he has lost.

The BBC’s John James in Abidjan says four police transport vehicles and one armoured vehicle were also destroyed.

Four people died in fighting nearby on Tuesday between rival supporters.

Mr Gbagbo’s party has rejected an offer from Mr Ouattara to form a unity government.

November’s presidential vote was supposed to reunify the world’s largest cocoa producer, which has been divided between north and south since a conflict in 2002.

A spokesman for the New Forces – the armed movement that is loyal to Mr Ouattara and that controls the northern half of the country – has said its fighters were not involved in the fighting in Abobo, the suburb of Abidjan which has witnessed the fighting.

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

Waiting to exhale

Bajau fisherman Sulbin freedives

Bajau fisherman Sulbin freediving on one breath, filmed in real time

With sea levels rising, can humans adapt to a more watery world? The Bajau people of South-East Asia live in stilt houses and fish underwater for up to five minutes on one breath. What does this do to the body?

Take a deep breath in – how long until the urge to gasp for air becomes too much? Perhaps it comes after 30 or 40 seconds.

But the bodies of habitual freedivers, who hold their breath for minutes at a time, can change to be better adapted to the water.

Sulbin surfaces

“I only dive once I’m totally relaxed”

Bajau diver Sulbin

The Bajau people, sometimes known as the sea gypsies of Malaysia and Indonesia, are renowned natural freedivers. Traditionally, they are born, live and die at sea, and fish by diving 20m (more than 65ft) underwater for minutes at a time on one breath.

At this depth, water pressure is double what it is on the surface, squeezing lungs already deprived of oxygen.

Filmed underwater in real time for the BBC’s Human Planet, Bajau fisherman Sulbin demonstrates his techniques off the east coast of Sabah, Borneo. Wearing hand-made wooden goggles and armed with a spear, he first prepares himself mentally.

“I focus my mind on breathing. I only dive once I’m totally relaxed,” says Sulbin, who goes into a trance-like state before entering the water.

This degree of mind control is crucial, says freediving instructor Emma Farrell, the author of One Breath, A Reflection on Freediving. “You have to be warm and relaxed – you don’t want to hyperventilate before taking your last breath.”

Stilt houses of the Bajau Laut, off the east coast of Sabah, Malaysia on the island of BorneoA Bajau stilt village, built on a coral reef – some settlements are far off shore

The mammalian dive reflex – seen in aquatic animals such as dolphins and otters, and in humans to a lesser extent – helps, says Farrell.

“It’s a series of automatic adjustments we make when submerged in cold water. It reduces the heart rate and metabolism to slow the rate you use oxygen.”

During breath-holding, oxygen stores reduce and the body starts diverting blood from hands and feet to the vital organs.

Our bodies have a way to compensate. Underwater pressure constricts the spleen, squeezing out extra haemoglobin, the protein in red corpuscles that carry oxygen around the body.

“Not enough research has been done to know if it wears off when you’re not diving,” says Farrell. “But I know people who do a lot of deep training – as Sulbin does – whose blood is like that of people living at high altitude.”

In high altitudes, there is less oxygen and so the amount of haemoglobin in blood increases.

For most of their history, the Bajau have lived on houseboats, or in stilt houses built on coral reefs – some far from shore. Many report feeling “landsick” on the rare occasions they spend time on dry land.

Baby swimming underwaterThe dive reflex means babies don’t breath in underwater

Thanks to time spent in the water as children when the eyes are developing, the Bajau, in common with other coastal dwelling people, have unusually strong underwater vision.

Their eye muscles have adapted to constrict the pupils more, and to change the lens shape to increase light refraction.

This makes their underwater eyesight twice as strong, according to Anna Gislen, of Sweden’s Lund University, who from 2003 has compared the underwater eyesight of sea gypsy children of Thailand and Burma with that of European children. A gap that can narrow with training.

One part of the Bajau body that hasn’t fared well is the ear. Their eardrums rupture at a young age, says anthropologist and Human Planet director Tom Hugh-Jones.

“Sulbin’s hearing is shot because he doesn’t equalise the pressure in his ears as he dives. He’s never had formal dive training. He was taught by his father to hold his breath.”

There are evolutionary theories – not widely accepted, he adds – that an early ancestor of modern humans had to adapt to a partially aquatic environment. The aquatic ape theory suggests this is why humans are largely hairless and have a subcutaneous layer of fat for underwater insulation, and so are better adapted to swimming than near relations such as the great ape.

Bajau girl, her face covered in rice paint for sun protectionBajau children’s underwater vision is less blurred than landlubbers of the same age

But Sulbin and other Bajau divers have little body fat. The wiry frame of these subsistence fisherman may actually help.

A lean physique is more efficient at using oxygen. And having little body fat makes Sulbin less buoyant, able to walk across the reef bed with ease.

“This type of freediving – repeatedly diving to depths of 10 to 20m – carries the greatest risk of decompression sickness,” says Farrell. “But you are less likely to get the bends if you are lean, or very well hydrated.”

Some Bajau die of the bends from diving – also a risk for compression divers in the Philippines encountered by the Human Planet team.

“Anyone who thinks this is an example of what a non-smoker’s lungs can do will be disappointed,” says Hugh-Jones. “Sulbin smokes like a chimney. He says it relaxes his chest.”

Human Planet will be broadcast on Thursday 13 January at 2000 GMT on BBC One, and will also be available on the BBC iPlayer.

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Left winger to join Sunderland FC?

David MilibandDavid Miliband is weighing up his next career move
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Former Foreign Secretary David Miliband is in talks over joining the board of a premier league football club as he continues to search for a new role.

The defeated Labour leadership contender is in discussions with Sunderland over a non-executive post.

He would focus on international and community work, a club spokesman said.

Mr Miliband was also reported to have pitched TV ideas to the BBC and is set to become a volunteer politics teacher at his local school in North London.

He and wife Louise, a concert violinist, have also set up a company, The Office of David Miliband, with registered offices in London’s West End – in a move reminiscent of his former mentor Tony Blair, who set up The Office of Tony Blair when he stood down as prime minister.

Mr Miliband, who lost out to younger brother Ed in last summer’s Labour leadership contest, has rejected talk of becoming Britain’s next ambassador to Washington.

Sunderland chairman Niall Quinn approached the 45-year-old Arsenal supporter after his Labour leadership defeat and Mr Miliband has met club officials to discuss becoming the public voice of the club around the world.

In a statement, Mr Quinn said: “We’re always challenging ourselves to find new ways to grow and develop the club and to make it stronger.

“We have had talks with David Miliband about a non executive role at the Club but have nothing further to report at the moment.”

According to The Daily Mail, the former cabinet minister, whose South Shields constituency is about eight miles north of Sunderland’s Stadium of Light, on the North-East coast, would receive a salary of £50,000 a year for the role.

As a backbench MP, Mr Miliband earns £65,738-a-year.

Mr Miliband’s spokesman said: “David Miliband is determined to continue to serve his constituency and pursue his interests in foreign and environmental policy.

“Discussions have taken place between David Miliband and Sunderland AFC about a non-executive role with the club focusing on his international and community work.

“As with all former ministers this is currently being considered by the advisory committee on business appointments.”

Mr Miliband would not be the first politician to take up a prominent role in football – former home and defence secretary John Reid is now chairman of Glasgow Celtic football club, while former Conservative Party chairman Lord Mawhinney became chairman of the Football League.

The former foreign secretary is also known for his love of the game – he played in goal for his school team and sometimes appeared for the all-party Parliamentary football team.

But his diary is rapidly filling up as he begins to put together an alternative career path following his departure from frontline politics.

He is due to become a volunteer politics teacher, for two hours a week, at his old North London school, Haverstock School in Chalk Farm.

On Sunday, the Observer reported he was considering a move into television presenting, like former Tory leadership hopeful Michael Portillo who carved out an alternative career as a TV pundit and documentary presenter after leaving the Commons. Mr Miliband intends to remain MP for South Shields.

The BBC said the former foreign secretary had approached the corporation “with some programme ideas”.

“The BBC receives suggestions from a wide variety of sources and these will be considered in the same way as any others,” it said, adding “no substantive discussions” had taken place.

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Vietnam vows economic restructure

Vietnam's Communist Party congressVietnam’s new leadership will have to deal with high inflation and a budget deficit
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The five-yearly congress of Vietnam’s governing Communist Party has begun in the capital, Hanoi.

The main task of the meeting is to choose new leaders for the party to guide the country through rising economic challenges.

A new central committee with 200 members will be selected at the end of the nine-day meeting.

Some 1,400 delegates opened the meeting with the singing of the Communist anthem, the Internationale.

The delegates’ selection will give some indication of the party’s future direction.

Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung and other top leaders were seated on red chairs at the front of the meeting hall, near a bust of the country’s founding president, Ho Chi Minh.

Vietnamese Communist PartyEstablished in 1930Has 3.6 million membersCurrent Central Committee comprises 160 official members, 40 alternate membersPolitburo has 15 membersIncumbent General Secretary: Nong Duc ManhNumber of delegates at the 11th congress: 1,400

The BBC’s Nga Pham, who is at the congress, says the Communist Party is determined to hold on to its monopoly on power, but in order to do so, it will need strong, energetic and reform-minded people at the helm.

She says little change in policy is expected at the meeting, but the new leadership will have to find ways to renew old socialist ideas seen by many as impeding economic development.

Despite enjoying good growth figures, the country faces testing issues, such as high inflation, a budget deficit and the collapse of state-owned companies.

A socio-economic strategy for the next decade, to be debated at the congress, pledges to carry out reforms long sought by foreign investors. These include the need for a more skilled workforce, better infrastructure, and more efficient state enterprises.

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Early testing key to cancer drive

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley

Andrew Lansley: “If we were to achieve the European average on outcomes we would save 5,000 lives a year”

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Ministers in England are setting out their plans to improve cancer care in a bid to bring survival rates up to European averages.

The Cancer Strategy focuses on early diagnosis, saying this is the key to saving an extra 5,000 lives a year.

More than £450m is being promised to give GPs better access to early tests, including brain scans and chest x-rays.

It comes after a series of announcements on cancer recently by the coalition government.

Setting out the plans, Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said: “Our ambition is simple, to deliver survival rates among the best in Europe and this strategy outlines how we will make our first steps towards this.

He added: “Our commitment is to save 5,000 extra lives a year from 2014/15 and that is what we will be measuring our success against.”

At the moment, patients are guaranteed to see a cancer specialist within two weeks if they get an urgent referral from their GP.

The coalition government has promised to keep this target, which was set by Labour, as they say it is clinically justifiable.

However, they believe GPs should have better direct access to testing for those patients who are not classed as urgent but could benefit from further investigation.

To achieve this they are freeing up money to improve access to chest x-rays, ultrasounds and MRI brain scans.

Doctors can already send patients for these tests, but there are often delays.

The strategy also contains details on a number of initiatives already announced.

These include the plans to roll out sigmoidoscopy screening for bowel cancer, the £200m cancer drugs fund for treatments not routinely funded by the NHS and increasing the number of cancer specialists.

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Welfare move ‘to hit 1.4m homes’

FamilyThere will be many winners and losers when the universal credit is introduced, the IFS says
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Some 1.4 million families will lose money as a result of the government’s reforms to simplify welfare, a think-tank has warned.

But the “universal credit”, set to replace many benefits and tax credits, will help 2.5 million households, the Institute for Fiscal Studies said.

Among those losing out will be lone parents and families with savings of more than £16,000, its report added.

The government said universal credits would “make work pay”.

It has promised that, under the new system, people will always be better off in work than on benefits.

There would be stricter rules for people losing their payments if they refused a job, with those who do so three times losing their benefits for three months.

The government also says it needs to streamline an over-complex system, with universal credits being introduced from 2013.

In its report the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said the change would create clear “winners and losers”.

It calculated that 2.5 million families would gain in the long-run and 1.4 million would lose, while 2.5 million would see no change to their benefit and tax credit entitlements.

The IFS said that, while the universal credit would create stronger incentives for single adults and the main earners in couples to work, it would weaken the incentives for both partners in a couple to find jobs.

The changes would benefit poorer families more than the better off, with the poorest six tenths gaining on average while the richest four tenths lost out slightly.

The IFS said couples with children would gain more than couples without children who would, in turn, do better than single adults without children. However lone parents would, on average, be worse off.

The report stressed that within all family types some people would be worse off, such as couples with children who have savings of more than £16,000.

BBC News Channel chief political correspondent Laura Kuenssberg said the report’s findings could raise some difficult questions for the government.

In November Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith told MPs: “We will financially protect those who move across to the universal credit system. There will be no losers.”

A government source said no-one who currently claimed benefit would see a cut in the level of their payments.

The IFS estimates that the universal credit will cost around £1.7bn, although that could rise if the simplified system results in a higher take-up rate.

But the costs could fall if, as intended, the system encourages more people to take jobs.

IFS deputy director Mike Brewer said: “Our analysis illustrates the constraints all governments face when contemplating radical welfare reform.

“Work incentives will be strengthened for some, but weakened for others, and the reform will lead to both winners and losers in the long-run.”

The Department for Work and Pensions said the universal credit had been designed to “make work pay”.

A spokesman said: “Our reforms will move 350,000 children and 500,000 adults out of poverty. This will change Britain for generations – a change we cannot wait any longer for.”

For Labour, shadow work and pensions secretary Douglas Alexander said the analysis suggested there were “clear potential benefits” to the universal credit, but added: “The more immediate issue is that government cuts from this April will see tax credits withdrawn faster and support for childcare for working families cut back.”

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Sony takes PS3 hackers to court

PlayStation 3
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Sony has launched legal action against hackers who uncovered and published security codes for the PlayStation 3.

The hack potentially allows anyone to run any software on their machine, including pirated games.

Sony’s lawsuit argues that this constitutes copyright infringement and computer fraud.

But George Hotz, one of the hackers at the centre of the controversy, told BBC News that he was “comfortable” the action would not succeed.

“I am a firm believer in digital rights,” Mr Hotz said.

“I would expect a company that prides itself on intellectual property to be well versed in the provisions of the law, so I am disappointed in Sony’s current action.

“I have spoken with legal counsel and I feel comfortable that Sony’s action against me doesn’t have any basis.”

The twenty-one-year-old, who rose to prominence for breaking the iPhone’s security, is named in the lawsuit alongside more than 100 people associated with a hacking group known as fail0verflow.

“Already, pirate video games are being packaged and distributed with these circumvention devices.”

Court filing

In the filing, submitted to the Northern District Court of California, Sony asks for a restraining order that bans Mr Hotz from further hacking and prevents distribution of the software produced as a result.

“Working individually and in concert with one another, the defendants recently bypassed effective technological protection measures employed by Sony,” the document states.

“Through the internet, defendants are distributing software, tools and instructions that circumvent the [protection measures] and facilitate the counterfeiting of video games. Already, pirate video games are being packaged and distributed with these circumvention devices.”

The controversy centres around a series of secret codes that Sony uses to protect its system from being used for unauthorised purposes.

Among them is a number used to “sign” all PS3 games and software as a way of proving that they are genuine.

Once the key is known, however, it can be used to sign any software – including unofficial software and, potentially, pirated games.

The PlayStation’s protection had remained impenetrable for several years, but members of fail0verflow demonstrated the first breakthrough in December when they presented a security exploit at the Chaos Communication Congress in Berlin.

Mr Hotz then revealed that he had uncovered the secret signing number using a similar method.

fail0verflow’s website was taken down overnight, replaced with the message “Sony sued us” and a brief statement.

“We have never condoned, supported, approved of or encouraged videogame piracy,” it says.

“We have not published any encryption or signing keys. We have not published any Sony code, or code derived from Sony’s code.”

The group has said in the past that it is vehemently against games piracy and that it had worked on the hack so that users could install other operating systems and amateur software on the console.

Sony had indicated previously that it would try to fix the hack by updating the PS3’s software over the internet.

Console hacking and online copyright infringement is a contentious topic, frequently ending in high-profile court cases as technology companies seek to prevent their systems from being copied or modified.

While most cases in recent years have involved music and video file-sharing services like Napster, Grokster and Kazaa, a growing number of cases have involved the hacking of video games consoles.

Last year, a team released a piece of hardware called PSjailbreak that allowed gamers to play homemade and pirated games on the PlayStation 3.

Although the company has issued software to block the device and launched legal, it has not prevented it entirely – with a Spanish court ruling that the gadget is not illegal.

In December, meanwhile, federal prosecutors dropped their case against a student accused of pirating games for Microsoft’s Xbox 360.

The case against California resident Matthew Crippen was dropped after the judge said that he had “serious concerns” about the legality of the evidence collected against him.

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China acts on German dioxin scare

German eggsContaminated animal feed was sent to poultry and pig farms in Germany
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China has banned imports of German pork and egg goods after tests last week had revealed levels of dioxin at 77 times the permitted level in animal feed.

The country has ceased imports of “German-produced edible pork and egg products” China’s product safety watchdog said in a statement.

The authorities will also inspect goods shipped from Germany before the ban was imposed to see if they are safe.

Previously only South Korea had banned German pork imports.

Slovakia had halted sales of German eggs and poultry meat, even though Germany has said there is no immediate risk to human health.

The Chinese ban was effective from 11 January, said the country’s General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ).

Shipments already on the way to China and that arrive after 11 January will have to be tested for dioxin.

DioxinsDioxins are a group of chemicals commonly formed as by-products of industrial combustion and chemical processes, such as manufacturing of chemicals, pesticides, steel and paints, pulp and paper bleaching, exhaust emissions and incinerationThe main source of dioxin contamination of food for human consumption is contaminated animal feedDioxins are absorbed by fatty tissue of cattle, poultry, pork and seafood. Foods high in animal fat, such as milk, meat, fish and eggs (and foods produced with them) are the main source of dioxins although all foods contains someDioxins are found throughout the industrialised world, in air, water and soil, as well as in foodDioxins can cause problems for people if they are absorbed at high levels for long periodsThey have been shown in lab tests to cause a wide range of effects in certain animals, such as cancer and damage to the immune and reproductive systems, including low sperm count and learning difficulties

German Agriculture Minister Ilse Aigner wants to look at tightening regulations in order to prevent a repeat of the current situation.

The scare started after oils intended for bio-fuel had become mixed with oil destined for animal feed.

Some 4,700 German farms were banned from making deliveries after tests at the Harles und Jentzsch plant in the state of Schleswig-Holstein, which produces fats for use in industrial processes as well as to enrich animal feed.

Most of these farms have been since been given the all-clear.

Dioxins are toxins formed by industrial processes and waste burning.

They have been shown to contribute to higher cancer rates and to affect pregnant women.

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

Hope for Down’s DNA blood test

Blood testThe blood test looks for foetal DNA
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An accurate new DNA blood test for Down’s syndrome could save nearly all pregnant women from invasive tests like amniocentesis, say experts.

Invasive testing takes place in 3% to 5% of pregnant women in the UK – some 30,000 women – and increases the risk of miscarriage.

The new DNA blood test could bring this down to 0.1%, according to a study in the British Medical Journal.

Around one woman in every 100 who has an invasive test will miscarry.

Some faced with the dilemma choose not to go for a diagnostic test – which involves having a needle inserted into their bump to draw off a sample of placenta cells or some of the fluid that bathes the baby – particularly if their estimated risk of having a Down’s baby is smaller than the chance of miscarriage.

“This extra screen is non-invasive and would save many from needing further investigation”

Professor Kypros Nicolaides One of the study authors

The non-invasive DNA blood test could offer another option.

Babies with Down’s syndrome have an extra copy of chromosome 21, causing physical and intellectual impairments.

As DNA can cross the placenta from the baby to the mother, the blood test can look for this extra chromosome.

Scientists believe it should be rolled out as a screening test in the future based on their findings.

The latest study – the largest to date, based on 753 pregnant women in Hong Kong, the UK and the Netherlands – shows that it could bring the number of invasive tests down significantly, by about 98%.

Testing for Down’s syndromeAll pregnant women are offered screening for Down’s syndromeScreening entails an ultrasound scan of the baby and a normal blood test for the mumFrom the results, experts can estimate a woman’s risk of having a Down’s babyWomen at higher risk can then opt to go for an invasive diagnostic test that will tell them if their baby has Down’sThere are two invasive diagnostic tests – amniocentesis and chorionic villus samplingBoth involve inserting a needle into the womb to collect cells or fluid from around the babyThe new blood test could reduce the number of high risk women needing an invasive test by adding an extra level of screening

This is because current NHS screening has a “false positive” rate of about 5%, meaning 5% will be told they are carrying a Down’s baby when they are not.

If these women were given the DNA blood test instead, almost all invasive procedures could be avoided, according to the researchers.

For example, each year in the UK some 30,000 pregnancy women undergo invasive testing and around 10% of these end up with a diagnosis of Down’s.

Doing a DNA blood test beforehand would mean fewer than 4,000 women would still need an invasive test.

Professor Kypros Nicolaides of King’s College London, who led the research along with colleagues from The Chinese University of Hong Kong, said the test would be welcomed by many women.

“Some women, understandably, are fearful of invasive tests.

“This extra screen is non-invasive and would save many from needing further investigation.

“Our study shows it is feasible to use in clinical practice.”

He said the test was still too expensive and needed further study before it could be rolled out to be used routinely – something that could take 10 years.

The ultimate goal is to make it 100% accurate so that invasive tests could be dispensed with completely.

Currently, three women in every hundred that test positive would not actually have a baby with Down’s.

Professor Lyn Chitty of University College London has also been trialling Down’s DNA blood tests.

She said: “I suspect there are many women who would welcome such a test and it may lead to a lot more women accepting the offer for screening.”

But she said it would be important to counsel women about the shortcomings of test.

“As yet, the results are not accurate enough to inform important decisions, like whether to continue the pregnancy.”

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German economy rebounds in 2010

Shoppers in BerlinConsumer spending has picked up

The German economy rebounded strongly in 2010, growing by 3.6%, according to provisional figures from the national statistics office.

This is stark contrast to many European economies that are stagnating or growing much more slowly.

German GDP grew at its fastest pace since reunification in 1990, as an export recovery was matched by increased domestic demand.

Europe’s biggest economy had contracted by 4.7% in 2009.

That had been its worst performance since World War II.

Exports from Germany, the world’s second biggest exporter after China, grew by 14.2% last year, following a 14.3% decline in 2009.

In a statement, the Federal Bureau of Statistics added: “What was striking in 2010 was the fact that economic growth was not only based on foreign trade, but also on domestic demand.”

Investment in machinery and equipment was up 9.4%, after a decline of 22.6% the previous year.

Household spending was up 0.5%, after a 0.2% fall in 2009, and imports rose 13%, recovering from a 9.4% drop the previous year.

Germany is driving the eurozone’s fragile economic recovery. where smaller economies such as the Irish Republic, Greece and Portugal have been struggling with large debts.

Data on Wednesday also showed the country’s budget deficit was 3.5% of GDP.

That meant, that for the first time in five years, it had exceeded the 3% limit laid down by EU rules.

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Feeding birds delays dawn chorus

Feeding wild birds during the breeding season may delay the start of the dawn chorus, suggests a study on great tits.

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