24 Nov 2010

The Women’s Health Guide

The Women’s Health Guide
The patient had underlying health conditions," the statement continued. The World Health Organization (WHO) declared influenza pandemic on Thursday and advised governments to prepare for a long-term battle against the virus. The Scottish government said no further details about the patient would be released until later to allow the family time to grieve...Blanchflower sees jobless rising in 2010 The Women’s Health Guide - Unemployment will continue to rise this year and next, adding some 100,000 more to jobless numbers a month, former Bank of England monetary policy committee member David Blanchflower said on Monday. Blanch flower, who stepped down from the MPC at the end of May, said the current recession made the economic outlook particularly difficult to forecast but said he was concerned about rising unemployment.” The worry is that we have lots of downside risks," he told BBC radio.” I suspect we are going to see unemployment increasing through the rest of 2009, probably through much of 2010 as well, and these increases are going to be large.”
My Women’s Guide view is that we are going to see something like an average of 100,000 a month for the next year or so.” Official data last month showed the internationally-recognized ILO measure of unemployment rose by 244,000 to 2.215 million in the three months to March, taking the jobless rate up to 7.1 percent. The number of The Women’s Health Guide claiming jobless benefit rose by 57,100..Inquiry launched into Iraqi detainee's death LONDON (Reuters) - Britain launched a public inquiry on Monday into the death of an Iraqi civilian and the alleged mistreatment of nine others at the hands of British soldiers in southern Iraq in September 2010.Baha Mouse, a 26-year-old Women’s Boots, was beaten and died some 24 hours after he and six others were arrested by the British army during a sweep of hotels in the city of Basra looking for weapons. The inquiry will seek to establish how Mouse came to die and will also examine the British military's use of banned techniques to attempt to break prisoners during interrogation. Gerard Elias, a lawyer for Mouse’s family, showed a video to the inquiry which he said was likely shot during the initial hours of the Iraqis' detention.
In it, several hooded men, The Women’s Health Guide arms bound behind them, can be seen crouching in fear as a man in military uniform shouts at them, using foul language and screaming "get down.” The video was not visible to reporters at the hearing but was broadcast by TV networks.” There can be little doubt that the detainees were the victims of physical assaults," Elias said in his opening remarks to the public hearing.

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