Wednesday, November 29, 2006

English "Fluentzy" from Illiterate Teachers

Are there any native English speakers in the house?

This full page ad that ran on page 9 of The Hindu this morning typifies a growing industry of English language class hucksterism that is sweeping South Asia. Yes, English is the new global lingua franca, and yes, in order to cash in on the growing number of tech and outsourcing jobs you had better have a firm grasp of Anglo-Saxon grammar. But three month crash courses from billboard plastering bodegas is certainly not the way to go.

First the name. "Fluentzy"? You've got to be kidding me.

Do you really need that debilitating "Z"? All that casual marquee mistake does is prove that Prof. Kev Nair is only proficient enough to make his way passably on Internet chat rooms and SMS messages to pimple faced 14-year-olds.

Take a gander over to the website and you can get a full rundown of pedagogical tools, handbooks and links to dictionaries, but also several quotes from national newspapers that seem to endorse his product. Never mind that the quotes most likely emerge from the text of his own advertisements, I'm sure that anyone silly enough to sign up for his course has difficulty combing through his split infinitives and spectacular typos.

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Tuesday, November 28, 2006

More Than Absent, I've Disappeared

I regret to inform you that I have disappeared. It isn't just that I've been away from my keyboard chasing down some exciting lead, or running amok in a crowded arms bazaar. If only.

For the last weeks, or maybe months, the very thought of blogging has invoked in my a response not unlike the final stages of cerebral malarial. When I sit down to my keyboard with a rant about Chennai traffic, an upsurge in community radio, or the recent encroachment of WalMart to a village near you, I've been overcome with fits of dizziness, nausea and a bout of incontrollable writers block. But don't worry about my health, I'm sure I will be fine. These things come in bouts.

In the mean time check out the blog of Anna Dubrovsky. She just did a great post about our communal ex-pat Thanksgiving fiasco with a frozen turkey from the Chennai Poultry Research Institute and the ensuing salmonella poisoning.

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Monday, November 13, 2006

India's Techno Trash Heap

This story came out in August of this year in .net magazine the UK, but it has taken forever for it to get online. I had always heard about E-Waste disposal but never knew how bad it was until I scoured the dumps behind Central Station. Special thanks to my mother-in-law Indira Govindan who helped me traipse through ankle deep mud and chemical waste in search of scrap dealers.

A dark concoction of grease, dirt and sweat on Mohan’s screwdriver made it difficult to grip the handle as he pried the copper coil loose from an old computer motor. Finally, with a grunt and a twist of his wrist, the wire broke and he unwound his bounty like silk from a spool of thread. In the age of globalisation where everything takes on a glossy sheen, Mohan is one man in a legion of morticians who attend to the last days of obsolete computer systems, appliances and gadgets. He turns them into gold.

“You know where he comes from?” his co-worker asks me while he gums a burnt cigar. “That bastard’s family used to climb trees for a living. He’s lucky to find a job working here with us.” Despite doing the same basic job, the scrap workers in this Chennai slum still make it a point to reinforce centuries-old caste hierarchies.

E-waste is a politely coined term that encompasses a wide variety of non-functional techn trash. It’s a growing problem in Asia. From the date of purchase, just about every electronic product sold on the planet begins a steady progression towards obsolescence. No matter how slick a device it was on the shelf of your local computer store, it will eventually become just one more piece in a mountain of useless keyboards, computers, mobile phones, game systems, televisions and countless other items. . .

Read the rest at .net magazine.

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Calling All Open-Source Experts

I am looking for someone who can help set up an online open-source wiki for people to submit tips and follow up leads on bioethics in the developing world. Certain types of stories are simply too big for a single journalist to cover and I am looking for a partner who might be able to help me out with the tech side and track leads on breaking stories. Preferably I can find someone with a good bit of technical expertise as well as a keen interest in social justice. It might also be a great way for an aspiring journalist to break onto the scene.

Anyone interested please e-mail me at sgcarney@gmail.com

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Monday, November 06, 2006

Missing Scissors Recovered from Patient

Scissors





In 1994 a group of doctors at Chenglepattu Medical College Hospital, India lost a pair of 7 inch long scissors while removing a tumor from a 33 year old woman. The doctor's must frequently lose medical instruments, because they didn't seem to notice the missing tools. When Ms. Sigamani began complaining about abdominal pain after the procedure, the doctors figured that it was probably just run of the mill post-surgery blues and suggested she take pain killers.

Twelve years later the independent investigators believe they may have solved the mystery of the phantom pain and the lost scissors when a local medical practitioner suggested that Sigamani have an X-ray.

The hospital denies having any medical records pertaining to the now-12 year old surgery, and has not asked for the scissors back.

via The Deccan Chronicle

Thursday, November 02, 2006

Wired News: Stem-Cell Fix for Diabetic Ulcer

For the last couple days I have been feverishly working on a set of stories about stem cell therapies in India. I have been very impressed with the facilities available here in Chennai, and am beginning to think that India has a strong shot at becoming a world leader in stem cell therapy. While research still lags behind the Unites States and Europe, Indian doctors are making bold steps in designing treatment regimes that have not been successful elsewhere. Here is one example that I recently wrote about in Wired News.

Stem Cell Fix for Diabetic Ulcer?

CHENNAI, India -- Vamal Cattacha didn't pay much attention to the pinprick-size sore on the back of her leg, and before she knew it the oozing wound had spread 22 inches, from her instep all the way up to her calf. And it was beginning to smell bad.

When Vamal, a 68-year-old diabetic, finally sought treatment for the nasty-looking wound, many doctors said it was too late to save her leg. She traveled up and down the coast of India, searching out doctors offering miracle cures, but every respectable medical practitioner said her leg would have to be amputated. And it would have to happen fast, lest the ulcer spread further and turn gangrenous.

After several bouts of bad news, Vamal visited vascular surgeon S.R. Subrammaniyan at Vijaya Hospital here. Subrammaniyan, who works closely with a stem-cell research facility, came to the conclusion that an experimental treatment involving stem cells harvested from Vamal's bone marrow could be her only hope for saving the leg. An angiogram showed she had almost no circulation in the limb.

"She was otherwise in good health, and an ideal patient to try this treatment," said Subrammaniyan, who had read about the success of similar procedures performed in Poland, Japan and China.

Once Vamal was admitted to Vijaya Hospital, bone marrow was drawn from her hip and the sample was rushed to a nearby lab, where technicians used a specialized cold centrifuge to extract stem cells. The sample had to be kept at a constant temperature of 25 degrees Fahrenheit or the cells would begin to deteriorate.

The results of the harvest were promising: Out of 108 milliliters of bone marrow, the lab workers got 14 milliliters of stem cells. It was a good yield.

After preparing the wound, Subrammaniyan injected the concentrated solution of stem cells back into Vamal's leg two times over the next week and waited anxiously for evidence of improvement. Because the wound was so large, he also grafted a piece of skin from her thigh over the ulcer.

The results were nothing less than miraculous.

Within 60 days, the ulcer had visibly healed, and bright, white signatures of arteries streaked across her post-treatment angiograms. The stem cells had apparently re-formed significant lengths of her atrophied circulatory system.

"No one quite knows how it works," said Subrammaniyan, "but somehow, once injected, the stem cells know how to transform into the right sort of cells."

Still, an isolated success story does not necessarily signify a revolution in ulcer treatment.

"This was a single case with no controls," wrote Geoffrey Gurtner, associate professor of surgery at Stanford University and an expert on diabetes care, in an e-mail. "We know that in any disease states, some patients get better even in the absence of care for reasons we do not entirely understand."

A recent The New England Journal of Medicine article, he pointed out, deflated media hype surrounding studies in which doctors transplanted stem cells into damanged hearts. The results are promising, but mixed, the authors found, and more study is necessary before anyone can declare the treatment a cure.

Still, Gurtner commended the Chennai team "for the high-throughput manner in which they isolated and purified the bone marrow cells," calling the method "a real contribution" to stem-cell research.

Diabetes sufferers could use the type of medical breakthrough hinted at by Vamal's recovery. The number of diabetics is on the rise around the world, and amputation is often the only option left to doctors treating patients with critical limb ischemia, a condition that develops in people with severely decreased blood flow in their lower extremities. The problem is a particularly dramatic consequence of diabetes.

According to the American Diabetes Association, patients with diabetes undergo 60 percent of non-trauma-induced amputations in the United States, totaling 82,000 severed limbs in 2002.

India is even worse off than some other places, Subrammaniyan said. He predicts that by 2015, 10 to 15 percent of the population will suffer from some form of diabetes, up from 4 percent today. That would mean more than 100 million diabetics in a country still racked with severe poverty and weak medical infrastructure.

At the moment, the best treatments for diabetics with critical limb ischemia are surgery to bypass atrophied arteries and certain drug regimens that are not always effective.

For Subrammaniyan, stem cells will be a necessary part of the future. And what's more, stem-cell treatments could be quite cheap: Vamal's procedure cost less than $2,000. That's more than most Indians can afford, but over time the cost probably would come down.

More importantly, a significant advance in stem-cell therapy could mean the difference between patients walking away from treatment and spending their lives in wheelchairs.

"I am happy," said Vamal as she left the hospital with her family. "I can walk again -- and there is no pain."

Published on November 1, 2006 in Wired News