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How Government Spending in the Argentine Economy Continues to Add Fuel to the Fire

Reckoning today from Paris, France…

“France is rotten,” said a friend yesterday. “I don’t know why you came back. half the people are broke. the other half are crazy…

“…and you foreigners still come here, pay $1 million for a hole- in-the-wall apartment…and walk around the city and step in dogsh*t.”

Yes, dear reader, that is a fair description of France circa 2012. the new president, Francois Hollande, says he won’t wait for the private sector to create jobs. He will do it himself. He’ll hire more teachers. never mind that the payback on educational spending is zero – or less. it sounds good to the lumpen-voters.

And how will he pay for these new teachers? this week, he is expected to raise taxes on the rich. the top marginal rate, he says, will go up to 75%. and the wealth tax will go up too.

In short, the elites who control France will soon control, directly, more of it…and more of the rich will move to Switzerland, England or Belgium.

Rotten…rotten…rotten…

But here at the Daily Reckoning, we like rotten countries. for example, in a state of even more advanced decay, there is Argentina, where president Cristina Fernando de Kirchner has just announced a solution to Argentina’s housing problem.

We pause to give dear readers a quick résumé of how housing got to be a problem south of the Rio Plata. In the ’80s, the generals who ran Argentina tried to pay their bills by printing money. this led to consumer price increases of more than 1,000% per year.

They had to throw out one currency, start a new one, and then throw that one out too. and then there was the war with England. Eventually, people got sick of it and threw the generals out. then, President Carlos Menem promised a “hard” currency for Argentina, which he would achieve by tying the peso directly to the dollar.

No one is more persuasive than an Argentine when he is trying to borrow money. and since the currency risk was eliminated – or so investors thought – the Argentines soon were able to borrow more money than they could possibly repay, which led to the biggest default – about $100 billion – in world history.

The official inflation rate is now still in single digits. but the actual inflation rate – which is apparently illegal to report – is near 25%. this – combined with the fact that when you lend Argentines money they don’t pay it back – greatly reduces the availability of credit…and housing. People have to pay all cash…or nearly all-cash…to buy a house.

Well, you can imagine what the US housing market would look like if people had to save money before buying a house. there wouldn’t be so many houses. and that’s why there aren’t so many houses in Argentina. and many of those that were built in the past are not in great shape.

So, in comes Cristina. rather than give any hint that her predecessors and her own political party bear any responsibility for the housing problem, she offers another crackpot solution.

We just want to point out that this situation is classic. Government causes problems. it then offers solutions that make them worse.

And today’s note is about rotten economies. and while the US is developing large brown spots and a sticky-sweet smell…it’s not nearly as ripe as some others. for example…Argentina. Here’s Cristina’s solution to the housing problem; if the private sector won’t make mortgage loans, the government will:

She’ll take money from pension accounts (that she seized 2 years ago) and then lend it to homebuyers at one-tenth the rate of inflation!

Gee, you’d think that people would line up around the block to get that kind of money…which is exactly what they do. so, how do they decide who gets a loan? By lottery! Here’s the report:

Argentina Denies Runaway Inflation Subsidizing Loans: MortgagesBy Camila Russo

June 29 (Bloomberg) – Argentines are lining up at banks again. this time, they’re leaving with loans.

Veronica Cajal, who wants to move out of her mother’s house, is among 1.4 million Argentines who applied for subsidized home- construction loans in the first week they were offered as part of a program designed to ease a chronic housing shortage and help revive growth in South America’s second-biggest economy.

The plan calls for the national pension agency to lend about 20 billion pesos ($4.4 billion) for new homes at rates as low as one- tenth the pace of consumer-price increases. the government is trying to foster home building as private banks balk at issuing long-term loans amid inflation that economists estimate at 24 percent a year, a legacy of government policies that followed a $95 billion default in 2001, when Argentines queued at banks to buy dollars before a currency devaluation.

The program calls for making 100,000 loans by the end of 2013. Recipients will be chosen randomly from all eligible applications.

Why didn’t you think of that, mr. Market? you dumb-bell. All you can think of is tired old formulas – protecting the value of the money…then letting willing buyers and sellers work out for themselves how much credit they want…and at what price.

C’mon, mr. Market…use some imagination…!

Bill Bonnerfor the Daily Reckoning Australia

P.S. to get the Daily Reckoning direct to your inbox sign up to our free e-mail newsletter or if you prefer to use RSS, subscribe to the Daily Reckoning RSS feed.

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How Government Spending in the Argentine Economy Continues to Add Fuel to the Fire

PIP breast implants are not significant long-term health risk for women, experts find

Almost 8,000 women have been referred by their GPs and more than 4,400 of them have received scans, thought to add at least £1 million to the overall bill.

The implants were filled with non-medical grade silicone intended for use in mattresses and have been linked to rupture and swelling in the body.

The latest data from the Department of Health shows that almost 750 women are to have the implants removed on the NHS – 490 of whom had their PIP implants put in at private clinics.

Others are believed to have had their implants removed privately.

The NHS Medical Directors expert group, led by NHS medical director Professor Sir Bruce Keogh, has now found the materials used in them are not toxic or carciogenic.

In the final report on the implants, experts concluded the chemical does not present a health risk.

If a PIP implant does rupture, it was found to cause local reactions in a small proportion of women, which can result in symptoms such as tenderness or swollen lymph glands.

The implants do, however, have a 15 to 30 per cent chance of rupturing after ten years, compared with a 10 to 14 per cent rupture rate in the same timeframe for other breast implant brands.

The implants contain the chemical compound siloxane which is chemically similar to silicone and is found in many consumer products including hair and skin products and antiperspirants and deodorants.

Prof Keogh said: “This has been an incredibly worrying time for women. we have been determined to look thoroughly at all available evidence so we are able to give them the best clinical advice possible.

“Repeated tests on different batches of PIP implants have been carried out in the UK, France and Australia according to international standards.

“Those tests have shown that the implants are not toxic and therefore we do not believe they are a threat to the long-term health of women who have PIP implants.

“We have, however, found that these implants are substandard when compared to other implants, and that they are more likely to rupture.

“We would therefore advise that women who have symptoms of a rupture – for example tenderness, soreness or lumpiness – should speak to their surgeon or GP.

“I would ask all GPs to refer any patient who has concerns about their PIP implants to a specialist.

“I sincerely hope this helps to reassure women that their long- term health is not at risk.”

The group, which studied information on 240,000 implants of differing brands that have been given to 130,000 women in England, also called for surgeons and clinics that have used PIP implants to contact their patients and share the latest information with them.

In January, the Government announced that anxious women given PIP breast implants on the NHS would be able to have them removed free of charge, with private firms expected to offer the same deal.

However, it said any woman refused help by a private company would be able to visit their GP and access NHS care.

BAAPS president Fazel Fatah, who was part of the expert group, said: “Despite rigorous testing showing no long-term danger to human health from the individual chemicals in the gel, the fact remains that PIPs are significantly more likely to rupture and leak and, therefore, cause physical reactions in an unacceptable proportion of the patients.

“We agree with the report findings that anxiety itself is a form of health risk and thus it is entirely reasonable for women to have the right to opt for removal – regardless of whether there has been rupture.

“Available data shows that should intact implants be left in the body there is still a 15-30% chance that patients may need removal or replacement surgery at some stage.

“It will come as no surprise to the many women affected that PIPs have been officially confirmed as defective – this has also been our long-held view, and that the choice of removal should be offered to them by their provider regardless of rupture or symptoms.

“We fully support the report’s conclusions that all providers who implanted PIPs have a responsibility to proactively share with their patients objective and up-to-date information about the risks to their health so they can make an informed decision on the removal of their implants.”

Dr Andy Jones, group medical director of Nuffield Health, said they welcomed the report’s findings.

He said: “It should be reassuring to all women who have received PIP implants to see that the research has shown the implants to be neither toxic nor carcinogenic and to carry no long term health threat.

“while we respect the opinion of the expert group regarding the long term health of patients, the fact remains that the implants are clearly substandard and of non medical grade quality.

“On this basis we continue to support patients in their decision making for removal and replacement of implants, free of charge to Nuffield Health patients, regardless of whether there are signs of rupture.”

Professor Norman Williams, president of the Royal College of Surgeons, said: “The PIP breast implant issue brought into sharp focus the need for better regulation and surveillance for all surgical implants.

“With the publication of the final report by the expert group, it is time to look to the future to ensure no patient experiences unnecessary harm or distress from substandard surgical implants.

“It is the view of the College that we should, as a minimum, have mandatory databases for all surgical implants and associated techniques which would provide ongoing patient safety data.

“New surgical devices, and the techniques required to implant them, must be regulated so that they can be safely introduced into our healthcare system, disseminated appropriately and monitored in the long term.”

The , which represents Plastic Surgeons on behalf of the Royal Colleges, has been part of the Government’s Expert Group on PIP breast implants since its formation in January 2012.

Tim Goodacre, head of professional standards at the British Association of Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgeons (BAPRAS), said: “After nearly six months of uncertainty, we now have clarity and can be reassured that, despite the use of non-medical grade silicone, PIP breast implants do not show any evidence of potential harm to human health.

“This is very good news.

“However, we have found that PIP breast implants are significantly more likely to rupture than other types of implants, and are more likely to be associated with signs such as lumpiness or lymph node enlargement.

While this is not known to be harmful, it may understandably cause anxiety amongst women with PIP implants.

“It is critical that all the women involved feel fully supported and our advice remains the same; they should return to their implanting clinic for a consultation and that clinic should take full responsibility for supporting them. However, if women are not getting the help they need, then they should talk to their GP and be referred to an appropriately qualified surgeon operating within the NHS.”

PIP breast implants are not significant long-term health risk for women, experts find

'She's a cocaine-fuelled nymphomaniac': So You Think You Can Dance judge Mary Murphy sued for $1m by ex-manager

LAWSUIT: Mary Murphy’s former manager has painted an unflattering picture of her in court. (Photo by Dave Kotinsky/Getty Images) Source: PerthNow

SHE is known for her enthusiastic behaviour on So you Think you Can Dance.

But it has been claimed show judge Mary Murphy is even more gregarious in real life, as she has been labeled a ‘desperate, cocaine-fueled nymphomaniac’ by her long-time manager in a lawsuit.

Michael Sanchez, who represented her from 2006 to 2010, is suing her for breach of written and oral contracts for more than $1 million.

According to RadarOnline, he claims he is due the hefty sum due to unpaid commissions and damages.

But it is his powder keg revelations about the 54-year-old choreographer, who is known for her colourful vernacular, that is sure to grab the attention of the show’s fans.

For he is claiming her ‘self-absorbed’ antic including alleged prescription and illegal drug abuse, caused her to miss or underperform in meetings and appearances.

Mr Sanchez also lists a battery of incidents in 2009, during which he alleges security broke into her apartment, where she was ‘unresponsive,’ due to a ‘cocaine-fueled evening of partying.’

He also claims to found her in her Sydney, Australia hotel suite ‘high on drugs, in bed with a So you Think you Can Dance producer, with cocaine on the nightstand.’

Her former manager also said his former client had ‘many inappropriate sexual relationships’ that he was forced to cover up, causing him to believe she is a ‘desperate, cocaine-fueled nymphomaniac.’

He claims she had illicit liaisons with SYTYCD and Chelsea lately crew members, a drug dealer, and even a married U.S. Naval officer she met online.

In addition he claims she demanded producers give her alcohol ‘disguised in a Coke cup’ to drink during studio tapings.

Mr Sancez also made a claim that is sure to embarrass bosses at Fox TV even more – that she ‘secretly’ coached and worked with SYTYCD contestants behind-the-scenes, a direct violation of the rules and game show fixing laws.

He is also claiming he counseled the champion dancer on numerous personal issues including ‘self-described "depression," "suicidal thoughts;" and "addiction to plastic surgery."’

It remains to be seen how impressed judges will be however with his claim it was his ‘guidance and advice’ that led to her first full season contract as a judge on the show in 2007,m not to mention an even more a lucrative, three-year renewal of the contract as the following year.

In the lawsuit he also claims responsibility for keeping her on the Emmy Award-winning show despite ‘erratic and demanding behavior.’

The Hollywood manager alleges he not only provided Murphy with his public relations expertise, but Murphy owes her on-camera persona in-part to him, having written many of the judge’s “one liners," rehearsing her scripted reactions and organizing her styling needs.

His attorney Steven P. Krakowsky also released a statement about mr Sanchez.

He said: ‘Michael built and fiercely protected Ms. Murphy’s brand.

‘Like anyone who works hard, he deserves to be fully and fairly compensated for his efforts.’

However they will not be winning without a fight, as her lawyer said the claims were ‘libelous remarks and allegations,’ and has brought her own lawsuit against him, alleging the dispute stems from his personal bankruptcy and failure to pay her contractually owed cash.

'She's a cocaine-fuelled nymphomaniac': So You Think You Can Dance judge Mary Murphy sued for $1m by ex-manager

Humor Feast: $290 million mega millions

$290 million mega millions, On Tuesday, there were several people across the country that won a small piece of the jackpot, but no one was able to take home the ultimate jackpot, which is now $290 million.There are a few smiling faces today with reports from Michigan stating that nine people had tickets that matched five numbers which earned each ticket holder $250,000.The winning numbers drawn were 1-4-6-11-14 with the Megaball being 30.five of the winning tickets were bought at the Meijer cash office in Northville. The others tickets were purchased in Taylor, Howell, Fenton and Canton, according to Mlive.com.according to the Mega Millions website, 68 tickets matched 5 numbers which included 21 winning tickets in California.The other tickets that matched five numbers were spread out across the country form Idaho, Illinois and Indiana to Maryland, New Jersey and New York.according to a press release issued by the Hoosier Lottery, there was an individual who purchased a Mega Millions ticket which turned out to be worth $1 million.The ticket matched the first five numbers, but not the Megaball number. The person purchased the Megaplier option for an extra dollar which increased the ticket’s value from $250,000 to $1 million. The number for the Megaplier was four.Since there was no one who matched all six numbers the drawing on Friday night the Mega Millions jackpot is now $290 million.Mega Millions drawings are held every Tuesday and Friday at 11 p.m. The game is played when five balls are drawn from a set of balls numbered one through 56; the Mega ball is drawn from a set of balls numbered one through 46.There are nine ways to win a prize, from two dollars to the jackpot. if no one wins the jackpot the money is combined with the jackpot for the next drawing. overall chances of winning any prize are 1 in 40.

Humor Feast: $290 million mega millions

Mike Tharp: The doctor who helped the lame to walk and helped restore a theater

Dr. Art Kamangar stands in the balcony of the restored Merced Theatre. His $1 million donation helped get the matching funds to finish the 14-year, $14 million renovation of the classic 1931 theater.

Its grand reopening will be April 21. He’ll be in the front row. His daughter Tara will play the piano and perform with the Merced Symphony on stage.

The 74-year-old retired orthopedic surgeon gazes at the 1,100 new seats, the Spanish courtyard decor of the elevated box seats on each side, the ruby curtain across the stage.

Does he have a feeling of fatherhood about the project that marks one of the most important milestones in Merced’s cultural history?

“More a sense of relief,” the trim, Iranian-born philanthropist says softly. “Now all the people of Merced can enjoy this.”

His legacy was already assured before he ever became a benefactor and board member of the Merced Theatre Foundation. In medical circles he became well-known for an innovation that helped make the transplant of artificial hips safer and more durable.

His $500,000 donation endowed a chair at UC Merced. for 25 years, since he moved to Merced from the Bay Area, Kamangar Ranches, which specializes in fruit orchards, kept his “retirement” busy.

And the achievements of his two sons and daughter have made him more proud of them than any of his own accomplishments. Salar, 35, is CEO of YouTube and a senior vice president of Google. (“Do you realize YouTube collects more than 2 billion items every 24 hours?” Art marvels.) His other son, Arya, 28, holds a Ph.D. in modern languages and has studied at the Sorbonne in Paris, the University of Mainz in Germany and in Japan. and daughter Tara, an honors graduate from Harvard and London’s Royal Academy of Music, has been called “a huge talent” at the piano by the London Evening Standard.

Now, like the keystone of one of the theater’s arches, that legacy will include what some believe will be a cultural tipping point that will not only revitalize downtown Merced. Many think the theater will become an entertainment hub for the whole Valley — music, drama, ballet, cinema, opera, graduations, weddings — all manner of special events whose economic tides will lift all local boats.

Not bad for the

second-youngest of eight children born to his parents in Tehran. His family were investors before and during the days of the Shah’s rule in Iran.

Art had left his native soil after getting a medical degree, years before the 1979 revolution that brought the mullahs to power. he did his internship and residency in Pittsburgh, Pa., in the ’60s. “I was always interested in total hip arthroplasty,” he says over lunch at Fernando’s Bistro.

He contributed to the research done by Sir John Charnley, the British surgeon who pioneered the artificial hip. the Briton’s main breakthrough was an artificial hip that placed metal against high-density polyurethane, a plastic. Earlier metal-on-metal devices had proved painful and vulnerable to metal fatigue.

Art’s contribution was to determine the right size of the femoral head in an artificial hip. he and Sir John published a scientific paper in the ’60s with Art’s calculation that 22 millimeters (he holds his hand up and makes a circle the size of a quarter with four fingers pressed against his thumb to show the dimension) was the ideal width to make an artificial hip work well.

“Normally, it was much bigger,” he recalls. “If the femoral head had been as big as normal, there would be no space for the socket (from the pelvis). If it were smaller (than 22 millimeters), it would have bored into the high-density polyurethane and there would have been much quicker wear.”

Mike Tharp: The doctor who helped the lame to walk and helped restore a theater

Understanding the Risks and Dangers of Plastic Surgery

While it is true that a large majority of plastic surgery procedures are completed as desired, it is suggested that you have complete knowledge of the risks and dangers of plastic surgery. When you consider the quantity of procedures that are done each year it is not surprising to find out that risks and dangers occur. Research from the American Society of Plastic Surgeons showed that in 2008 there were 12.1 million of cosmetic procedures and 4.9 million of reconstructive procedures. each of those figures was showing a 3% rise. In total, $10.3 billions went on cosmetic surgery procedures in the USA.

Plastic surgery is not risk-free. however, it is significant to know that the majority of surgery is done without any major issues. As you understand that, it is not sufficient to know that there are risks and dangers but you need to know what they are for the particular procedure you are having done. if you are cognizant of these you are further ahead than most folks to make an educated choice.

So what are the risks and dangers?

The discomfort you will feel include the normal bruising, swelling, discomfort, and pain but there are also additional risks like wound infections, bleeding, scarring and skin irritation. Customarily, these will not remain long term or become serious and some can even be neutralized with painkillers or antibiotics.

Complications that may happen include:

- Adverse reactions to the anesthesia or other medication

- Breast augmentation implants leaking or hardening

- one breast that is visibly bigger or smaller than the other.

- Drooping breasts after augmentation surgery

- Removal of too much skin

- Lots of scarring

- Tissue, muscle or nerve damage

One needs to be reminded that fatal or severe results are rare. Most plastic surgery is fully safe provided it has been performed by a respected and well qualified surgeon. Other risks that may happen following plastic surgery is that the outcome is not what was anticipated. for people reshaping their nose with rhinoplasty procedure it would be extremely unfortunate to have a mistake on your nose instead of the perfect shape that was imagined.

If you are thinking of having to remove some excess skin around your stomach area with a tummy tuck or as doctors refer to it as abdominoplasty, it can be very negative to put on weight again in the same area. By putting on excess weight this area it will make it stretch and thin further than it should. if you have taken off a lot of weight then it is recommended to hold off a few months before having surgery to permit your body some time to adjust to the difference. if not, a person runs the risk of having to have more surgery to solve the problem.

Always talk it over with your doctor the risks and dangers that may occur from plastic surgery in the specific procedure you are scheduled to have. Knowledge is power is not just a phrase without meaning. it means a lot and can help one so much especially in this situation. By being able to factor in all the facts and knowing all the dangers and side effects of plastic surgery you will be able to make a wise choice based on reality versus blindly thinking that nothing can go wrong.

Understanding the Risks and Dangers of Plastic Surgery

Social Media Gives Beauty & Plastic Surgery Industries A Major Boost [Exclusive Infographic] – SocialTimes

Beauty is big business.  Everyone wants to look their best and cosmetic companies and plastic surgeons are making billions of dollars each year off of consumers’ desire to look pretty, and thanks to social media the industry is bigger than ever.  A new infographic from Schoenheitsklinik.de shows how social media is bringing money to the beauty industry like never before.the infographic, Social Media Beauty, reveals some interesting statistics about how social media has shaped (and continues to shape) the beauty industry.  For instance, did you know that blogs are two times more likely to drive product purchases than magazine ads?  Or that last year 42 percent of patients found information about plastic surgery from Facebook and Twitter?

The infographic also ranks the top names in the beauty industry on Facebook and Twitter.  the top 5 beauty brands on Facebook (Dolce & Gabbana, MAC Cosmetics, Sephora, Maybelline, and L’Oreal Paris USA) all have over 1 million fans, beauty brands also have massive amounts of followers on Twitter and millions of views on YouTube.

Check out the infographic below to find out more and let us know what you think.  have you turned to social media for information about beauty?

Megan O’Neill is the resident web video enthusiast here at Social Times.  Megan covers everything from the latest viral videos to online video news and tips, and has a passion for bizarre, original and revolutionary content and ideas.

Social Media Gives Beauty & Plastic Surgery Industries A Major Boost [Exclusive Infographic] – SocialTimes

Robotic surgery popular, expensive, but is it more effective?

The new Da Vinci surgical robot is a hit with patients, who request it for all kinds of procedures. but is it really more effective than traditional surgery — or just more expensive? Some doctors argue that without much authoritative research, the Da Vinci robot is more a marketing tool than an improvement to surgery. Surgeries performed with the new, high-tech, da Vinci robot use a narrower blade and provide greater precision than traditional open surgeries, which are performed with a scalpel. the machines are maneuvered by a surgeon operating the robotic arms from behind a nearby console. there are 2,132 da Vinci systems world-wide, said Chris Simmonds, senior director of marketing services for manufacturer Intuitive Surgical, inc. and that number is growing. but they do not come cheap. the machines each cost between $1.1 million and $2 million, with an additional cost of $100 thousand to $180 thousand for maintenance annually.in a 2011 study from Johns Hopkins University about the marketing of the da Vinci robot, 41 percent of hospital websites included a description of robotic surgery, with 89 percent of those descriptions claiming clinical superiority. despite this claim, only 2 percent of those hospitals made a specific comparison to open or laparoscopic surgery, which involves inserting a camera through an incision. the marketing for robotic surgery may win over more converts than the results of the surgeries. “You start to see this is not just a trivial issue of exuberant marketing, but it is in some cases potentially inaccurate and really harmful, potentially harmful information, wrapped in the glitz and the glamor of a new technology,” said Gary Schwitzer, publisher of HealthNewsReview.org, a site devoted to reviewing media coverage of “medical treatments, tests, products and procedures.” Schwitzer has been reporting on health issues for more than 30 years.He said he first noticed heavy positive media coverage of robotics about three years ago and HealthNewsReview.org has since examined a number of articles about robotic surgery. The site often highlights the lack of critical analysis done by journalists. For example, in a may 2009 post, Schwitzer noted that a good Morning America episode devoted to robotic surgery did not mention risks, the cost of the technology or treatment, independent research to verify results or other treatment options.Dr. Enrico Benedetti, head of the department of surgery at University of Illinois Hospital Health and Sciences System called the robot a “tremendous advantage” but said it was a “cosmetic advantage more than anything.” His group recently performed the first single port robotic gallbladder removal in the Midwest.

Single port surgery involves making only one incision to reduce scarring. the robotic method gives the surgeon a greater range of motion and increased visibility. one of the most common uses of the robot is in prostate removal. the prostate cancer support group us Too estimates every five minutes, two men  are diagnosed with prostate cancer. of that group, a 2010 new York Times article estimated that 86 percent of the ones who opted for surgery chose to have robot-assisted operations. Yet despite the procedure’s popularity, a 2008 study of Medicare patients found that adverse effects like sexual dysfunction and incontinence were no less frequent than with open surgery.Prostate cancer survivor Bob Wright, an us Too volunteer, chose to go through with a robotic procedure after talking to a coworker who had gone through it and recommended an experienced surgeon in San Antonio. Wright highlighted the benefits – a shorter hospital stay and decreased blood loss, as well as the increased range of motion provided by the robot that’s not possible with laparoscopic surgery.but Schwitzer said greater precision and control were not as important as the long-term results. “If that doesn’t translate to improved outcomes, then healthcare consumers should be asking, ‘well, what do I care about greater precision and control?’”Simmonds disagreed.“We do think the surgery is proven,” Simmonds said, pointing out that there have been more than 4,600 peer-reviewed papers published on da Vinci surgery.Another naysayer of robotic surgery writes a blog called Skeptical Scalpel. the anonymous blogger claims to have been a surgeon for 40 years and a surgical department chairman and residency program director for more than 23 of those years. Skeptical Scalpel publishes an extensive list of studies regarding the effectiveness of robotic surgery.one 2009 study from the Royal Free Hospital and University College School of Medicine in London claims that robot-assisted gallbladder removal had no significant advantages over traditional laparoscopic ones. Another report from the Department of Surgery at the Second Hospital of Lanzhou University in China in 2010 reviewed studies of robot-assisted surgery for acid reflux. It concluded that robotic surgery was a “feasible alternative” but that it lacked obvious advantages for extensive clinical application.the standard of proof in medical research is the control study, which randomly determines the patients who get each treatment, keeping that information secret even from the patients. Robotic surgery lacks the control studies that would comfort doctors such as Dr. Richard Hodin, chief of endocrine surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. Hodin said that “the number of good trials comparing robotic surgery are slim, if any.” “There have been 25 randomized trials carried out on da Vinci out of the 5,600,” Simmonds said. “There have been attempts to do randomized trials over the years against open, but patients have not been willing to go into the open arm when given a choice.”Dr. Gerald Chodak, a urologist and prostate disease specialist, agreed that the likelihood of more randomized trials is slim, but argued that they were necessary to reduce biases in data. “The bottom line is that there is no evidence there are better outcomes, but there is less blood loss and faster time to playing golf,” Chodak said.instead of randomized trials, most research has been done through the less effective cohort studies, studies that follow people who chose their own treatment. Because the studies aren’t randomized, it might, for example, turn out that the type of people who request da Vinci surgery are the people who do the most outside research into cancer treatments and are most likely to pursue other effective lifestyle changes. but even the cohort studies do not peg da Vinci as a universal panacea. “It’s a new technology and there’s certainly surgeons and hospitals that are pushing the technology and describing it in a way to make it sound better. if that’s what people are told, that’s what people believe,” Hodin said.Some robotic surgeries, such as the cystectomy (the removal of all or part of the bladder) did fare well in these studies. while the cost of a robot based procedure is always more expensive, that cost may be offset by the reduction in the hospital stay and fewer necessary corrective procedures. a 2011 review study by researchers at the University of Bern in Switzerland and the University of Southern California noted that complications in cystectomies could add as much as $20,000 and that after one month complications were nearly 50 percent more likely in traditional, rather than robotic surgery. The Bern study speculated that cutting the costs of complications could compensate for the high price of the robotic procedure, though evidence of this is still pending.but reduced complications do not result from all robotic procedures. a 2011 cohort study by the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia in Italy found that average length of hospital stays and number of surgical complications were almost identical in patients receiving traditional and robotic splenectomies (when all or part of the spleen is removed). the study of 90 patients found that the total cost of robotic spleen surgeries was nearly three times as much as conventional surgeries.still, it’s difficult to argue with testimonials from people like Wright, who chose to go through with the surgery and was pleased with the results. “There’s no question in my mind that if you’re a surgical candidate, it’s a good alternative if you have a well-trained physician doing it.”He said to choose the technician – not the technique, which may ultimately be the main thing fans and detractors of robotic surgery can agree on.  

Robotic surgery popular, expensive, but is it more effective?

Utica College takes Run & Walk to heart

three Utica College staff members sat against plastic-covered windows Wednesday anxiously awaiting their fate.

Deliberately and with marked accuracy, Eric Barnes fired. the first shot hit Sarah Lucia square in the face. the second grazed Ashleigh Wade on the chin. the third stuck the right side of Lauryn Davis’ face while laughter erupted from the hallway outside of the college’s Dining Commons.

And for just $3, 25-year-old Barnes pied his co-workers while at the same time giving to the America’s Greatest Heart Run & Walk, which takes place Saturday. the “Pie the Professor/Staff Person” event is part of Team UC’s efforts to raise thousands of dollars for the campus-hosted event.

Utica College might be host to the event that attracts thousands of walkers and runners and raises more than $1 million each year, but the campus is more than that. this year, Heart Run organizers hope to raise $1.2 million, beating last year’s $1.1 million mark.

Team UC adds about 300 participants each year and about $9,000 year-to-year. Last year, the team raised $11,000, said Debbie McQueary, coordinator at the office of corporate and professional programs and member of the Heart Run committee.

“It’s such a great event, because it raises awareness for a disease that affects literally everybody and it’s really big for our community, for the college and for Utica,” said Sarah Elleman, one of this year’s team captains and Utica College field hockey coach.

Staff members, alumni and students – whether individually or via clubs or athletic teams – latch on to that “big” concept, McQueary said.

“our Young Scholars program participates on our team,” she said. “We have all of our athletic teams, fraternities, sororities, Asa Gray Club … It’s a huge event and everybody really embraces the campus.”

whether students are paying $1 to pie their professors in the face, buying a Heart Run T-shirt or a chance to win dinner for two made by UC chefs, fundraising is a daily part of campus life in the weeks leading up to the event, said Rebecca Sullivan, student employment coordinator and health and wellness committee leader.

 “It’s something (the UC community) can get our fingers in and it brings everyone together in the community,” Sullivan said. “this and the Boilermaker (Road Race) that goes right by here are two events that bring people together in Utica and that we can host this and raise so much money for it is just a great thing we can do.”

three Utica College staff members sat against plastic-covered windows Wednesday anxiously awaiting their fate.

Deliberately and with marked accuracy, Eric Barnes fired. the first shot hit Sarah Lucia square in the face. the second grazed Ashleigh Wade on the chin. the third stuck the right side of Lauryn Davis’ face while laughter erupted from the hallway outside of the college’s Dining Commons.

And for just $3, 25-year-old Barnes pied his co-workers while at the same time giving to the America’s Greatest Heart Run & Walk, which takes place Saturday. the “Pie the Professor/Staff Person” event is part of Team UC’s efforts to raise thousands of dollars for the campus-hosted event.

Utica College might be host to the event that attracts thousands of walkers and runners and raises more than $1 million each year, but the campus is more than that. this year, Heart Run organizers hope to raise $1.2 million, beating last year’s $1.1 million mark.

Team UC adds about 300 participants each year and about $9,000 year-to-year. Last year, the team raised $11,000, said Debbie McQueary, coordinator at the office of corporate and professional programs and member of the Heart Run committee.

“It’s such a great event, because it raises awareness for a disease that affects literally everybody and it’s really big for our community, for the college and for Utica,” said Sarah Elleman, one of this year’s team captains and Utica College field hockey coach.

Staff members, alumni and students – whether individually or via clubs or athletic teams – latch on to that “big” concept, McQueary said.

“our Young Scholars program participates on our team,” she said. “We have all of our athletic teams, fraternities, sororities, Asa Gray Club … It’s a huge event and everybody really embraces the campus.”

whether students are paying $1 to pie their professors in the face, buying a Heart Run T-shirt or a chance to win dinner for two made by UC chefs, fundraising is a daily part of campus life in the weeks leading up to the event, said Rebecca Sullivan, student employment coordinator and health and wellness committee leader.

 “It’s something (the UC community) can get our fingers in and it brings everyone together in the community,” Sullivan said. “this and the Boilermaker (Road Race) that goes right by here are two events that bring people together in Utica and that we can host this and raise so much money for it is just a great thing we can do.”

RED CAP AMBASSADORS

the American Heart Association’s Red Cap survivor ambassadors strive to educate and inform on various cardiovascular diseases via their own experiences.

Krysta DeRosia

New Hartford

Krysta was born with a heart condition called Truncous Arteriosis and has had three open-heart surgeries in her 13 years of life.

Krysta describes herself as a “very active, social and funny person” who loves horses and who one day would like to become a veterinarian.

“on the outside I am just like everyone else, but on the inside I am a little different,” she says. “I have a pig valve, an artificial valve and a pacemaker.”

Maria “Mia” Palmer

Holland Patent

At 3:30 a.m. Nov. 22, 2010, Maria Palmer woke up with discomfort in her chest. When ambulance crews arrived at her home, she was told she was having a heart attack. She was 44.

Once at the hospital, doctors found a 99 percent blockage, performed an angioplasty and inserted a stent.

“the embarrassment hit me that I'm sure this was because of my smoking and the stress I put on myself,” Palmer said. “When the doctor told me I inherited my father’s cardiovascular disease and that smoking triggered it, I knew right then and there it was a wakeup call for me to change. Change I did. I’ve stopped smoking, started exercising more and now live a healthier life.”

Tim O’Connor

Lowville

in 1996, Tim O’Connor was returning from his 25th class reunion at University of Notre Dame. while driving, he felt discomfort, pulled into the last Indiana rest stop and ended the day at a hospital.

Doctors inserted a cardiac catheterization into a chamber of his heart and sent him home. Annual stress tests followed, and in 2001 doctors found a blockage. Doctors inserted three stents and instituted a cardio-exercise program, but by 2003, O’Connor needed bypass surgery.

That surgery in December led to O’Connor’s first Heart Run & Walk participation. He hasn’t stopped walking since.

Russell Arant

Rome

When Russell Arant went for a routine physical in September 2010, his doctor told him he was the healthiest patient he had ever had. but then he heard a heart murmur.

the murmur was caused by a heart valve defect, which Arant had since birth. the malfunctioning valve wasn’t allowing blood to flow correctly, which caused his heart to become enlarged and an aneurysm to form in his aorta just above his heart. He was 35.

 “I was completely a-symptomatic,” Arant said. “a lot of people don’t go in for routine physicals. if I hadn’t gone to the doctor I would not have known there was a problem until it was too late.”

Utica College takes Run & Walk to heart

Homes in search of a character

Expect to do the same only if your eyesore is in a good area, says Hesse. “any work you do will then be boosted by the location. Remember, first impressions are everything. if you turn your nose up at your own property, then others will do the same.”

Don’t skimp, either. “I had one client who allocated funds of £250,000 to do an attic extension and the exterior of a property in Hertfordshire. that was only enough to do the extension,” says Hesse. “the estate agent advised that if he remodelled the house as well, the uplift would be £1 million.”

When Hesse saw a modern detached, red-brick gabled family home in Cookham, Surrey, she had a glint in her eye worthy of any plastic surgeon.

“it was big, ugly and modern,” she says. “but it was transformed into a looker with clapboard, new windows and a gravel forecourt. we also gave it slate tiles and a new bargeboard which covered up the second-rate brick corbelling. two porches completed the transformation.”

Hesse cautions that if extensions are added, they must be in keeping with the main building. if finances mean you can’t do both the existing exterior and the extension, then do the exterior first. And expect the work to take anything from three months to more than a year, in the most startling transformations.

A house in Kent offers a startling example of what can be done. To the unassuming three-bedroom, two-storey property in Bromley the company added an extension, a pool house and another bedroom, as well as giving both inside and out a complete overhaul. This sort of work can cost in the region of £350,000, but as the “before” and “after” photos (pictured on front cover) testify, the results are stunning.

Another challenge was a Sixties detached property in Farnham, Surrey. “the house had good underlying geometry, including a porch and gable, so money didn’t have to be spent on getting the shape right. but the windows were not in keeping. we replaced the 8ft (2.5m) window on the left of the house, blocking out a pier between two new portrait sash windows. there wasn’t enough room for a pier on the far right, so we introduced two sash windows with a mullion.”

Concrete roof tiles, a serial offender in post-war builds, were replaced with slate and the garden landscaped. “It’s far easier to turn a Sixties build into a Georgian house than it is into a Victorian one,” she says. “the Georgians used low-pitched roofs, as builders did after the Second World War.”

The benefits are more than just aesthetic. a good makeover can take away the opportunity for a buyer to negotiate downwards, says Nick Barnes, the head of research at Chesterton Humberts. With property prices 12 per cent below last year’s peak and 2.5 per cent lower in London, buyers are fussy, he says. “they are looking for ways to drive down the price, so you want your property to look as good as possible.” However Barnes cautions that hefty returns on a makeover are the exception rather than the norm.

So where do you start? And will it be worth it? I invite Steve Tyler of Erincastle Exterior Design, a south London-based makeover firm, to look at my Victorian terraced home. It’s in a conservation area in Primrose Hill, north London. a top location, at odds with the house’s grotty facade. I can’t see what one could do beyond sprucing up the paintwork.

Wrong, says Tyler, who suggests restoring the property’s Victorian features. This would include cleaning the brickwork, taking it back to its original bright yellows and reds, then replacing the tarmacked front steps with stone (see artist’s impression, right).

He also recommends hiding the wires, tidying up the drainage and replacing the Seventies single-panelled front door with a Victorian-style glass-panelled one. some “bold, masculine” door furniture wouldn’t go amiss either, he says.

And – shock horror – he advises replacing the white paintwork on this and every other house in our half of the street with coloured paint. “the Victorians liked colour, not white paint,” says Tyler. “the paintwork would have been a vibrant blue or olive. that might be radical here, but you could try pastel, which is used at the other end of your street. Others might follow.” And the price for all this? somewhere around £1,500.

I take Tyler’s recommendations to estate agent Jeremy Bass – a good idea for anyone thinking of embarking on this sort of project.

“They’re terrific,” he says. “in terms of sales, appearances help tremendously. the house would look very smart. the pastel colours are absolutely right, and I could see neighbours following suit.”

Sadly, he adds, it’s unlikely that the work would create added value in an area like this, where supply exceeds demand. Prime London property is bucking the downward national trend, with prices 12.5 per cent higher than last year.

“Houses in Primrose Hill in tip-top condition can reach £1,500 per sq ft,” says Bass. “if you didn’t revamp the exterior, you could expect to knock 10 per cent off your asking price. planning permission for any extension would also add extra value. outside London, however, immaculate presentation will give your home a definite advantage.” he estimates a smart exterior could prevent prospective buyers negotiating up to 20 per cent off the asking price. “if a property is in poor condition, the surveyor may well advise that the outside of the building is in need of refurbishment and withhold funds accordingly.”

Despite the advantages of making your house look shipshape, it’s vital not to rush into anything. it is important that the new exterior matches the home’s interior.

There’s no shortage of jaded-looking properties across the country, waiting to be transformed into a dream home. Who knows, perhaps you own one of them?

How to give your house a facelift

Consider replacing tarmac paths with black and white flagstones picked up from a salvage yard.

Is your house an appropriate colour for its age? And that includes the windows – everybody thinks white woodwork looks smart but the Victorians, for instance, preferred bright blues and greens.

Does the front door reflect the age of your home? might a panelled one with stained glass from a reclamation yard be more suitable?

Fitting bold, well-maintained door furniture – letterboxes, handles and house numbers – is a relatively cheap way of creating an immediate impact.

Sort out trailing wires, cable boxes, satellite dishes, drains and unsightly extractor fans.

Consider replacing concrete tiles (a postwar favourite) with slate ones.

Does the surface of the facade need some TLC? you might be able to have exterior brickwork rendered, or expose original beams.

Alterations should be in keeping with your property, and you may need permission from the local authority.

Back to Front Exterior Design, 01252 820984, backtofrontexteriordesign.com

Erincastle Exterior Design, 020 7237 7646, erincastle.co.uk

Lassco architectural salvage, 020 7394 2100, lassco.co.uk

Solopark Period Homes Supplies Centre, 01223 834663, solopark.co.uk

Homes in search of a character