Thursday, March 24, 2011

Senior Citizens Joint Action Committee Meet followed by Press Conference on March 26, 2011 at TISS


Dear Friends,

We Invite you for JAC meet Sat 26th March at 2pm sharp to 3pm.  Followed by 'Press Meet' at 3.15pm to 3.45pm at Conference Hall, TISS Main Campus. , TISS, Deonar,Mumbai.

This meet is to discuss Govt of Maharashtra Post Budget (to be presented on 23rd March)  implication for Senior Citizens.

Please find attached Press Invite for your ready reference, please send to Press withing your contact.


Please confirm your participation to make necessary arrangement.


Press Conference: Maharashtra Government 2011-2012 Budget implication for Senior Citizens


Joint Action Committee (JAC) of Senior Citizens, Mumbai –has pleasure to invite you for Press Conference on Sat 26th March 2011.

JAC of Senior Citizens was formed by 23 Organization/ Federations, Associations, NGO’s working for Senior Citizens to protest against continuous neglect and ignorance by the central & state government. On 16th August 2010 JAC had successfully organized a Protest Day all over Maharashtra.
JAC & various Organizations have been constantly fighting for basic rights, various issues of Senior Citizens, and implementation of Senior Citizens Policy and Maintenance Act. We strongly condemn the step motherly treatment towards Senior Citizens by Government of Maharashtra.

Press Conference Venue: Conference Hall, TISS Main Campus. , TISS, Deonar, Mumbai. Tel: 9833548088 / 9819819145

Date: Sat 26th March 2011

Time: 3.15 pm sharp

Speaker:
Dr.S.P.Kinjawadekar, President AISCCON,
Keshav Samant, Gen Sec, General Insurance Pensioners All India Federation,
Vijay Aundhe – Gen Sec. FESCOM – Mumbai


Regards,
Sailesh Mishra – Coordinator, JAC All India Committee
9819819145


Tuesday, March 22, 2011

The Hindu : Opinion / Lead : Nuclear power after Fukushima

The difficulty in bringing Japan's nuclear crisis under control has undoubtedly put a serious question mark over the entire issue of nuclear power.
Even if it is as yet unclear how the Japanese nuclear emergency will play itself out, it is certain that the town of Fukushima in Japan, familiar hitherto only to a few, will enter the global nuclear lexicon alongside Three Mile Island and Chernobyl. The difficulty in bringing the nuclear crisis under control, a crisis precipitated by a series of accidents and failures while negotiating a safe shutdown of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power complex in the wake of the earthquake and tsunami of March 11, has undoubtedly put a serious question mark over the entire issue of nuclear power.
What drives home the gravity of the situation is that this nuclear emergency, we would have been told earlier, is one that would never happen. Japan after all is one of the world's most advanced industrial nations, an acknowledged leader in the technologies of the twentieth century, with several decades of experience in handling nuclear matters in all its varied aspects. Japan is a world leader in the design of earthquake-resistant structures. The reactors themselves had withstood the ravages of earlier earthquakes and despite some incidents, nothing had happened, either at Fukushima or at other nuclear complexes in Japan, to suggest the possibility of a crisis of this magnitude. The word “tsunami” itself is of Japanese origin and it is well-known that the island nation has worked towards an extraordinary level of preparedness to face this kind of onslaught from the seas around it. Japan was, until now, along with countries like France and South Korea, a textbook example of holding nuclear fears at bay in the public sphere, while making nuclear power an integral part of their energy security and overall energy strategy. It could not be that Japanese society would allow radiation dangers to exist unchecked; no other country in the world is as aware of the dangers of radiation and fallout.
Unfortunately, the post-shock scenario has rewritten all these perceptions. Despite the advanced level of Japanese technological capabilities, the reactors at Fukushima, it now emerges, have had a troubled history. From as far back as 1971, warnings have been sounded regarding the specific unsafe features of the General Electric Mark I boiling water reactors as this class of reactors is known, warnings that went unheeded. Despite the technological capabilities of Japanese industry, the Japanese nuclear operator, TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Company) that runs the Fukushima reactors, faltered in its response to the crisis, whose scale was clearly unanticipated. As a former Vice-Chairman of the Nuclear Safety Commission of Japan, Kenji Sumita, put it to the leading Japanese daily Asahi Shimbun, “Every step taken by TEPCO is a day late and a dollar short.” He also faulted the utility for its slowness in releasing information. Kenji Sumita's concluding remarks are a comprehensive critique of the Japanese nuclear establishment: “The unfolding nuclear disaster has unveiled weaknesses in TEPCO's crisis-management system and a structural flaw in Japan's administrative policy to ensure the safety of nuclear power.”
The nuclear establishments of the major nuclear powers and their governments have reacted to the events in Japan with concern and for the most part have not sought, wisely, to brush aside or dismiss their implications for the continuing use of and possible expansion of nuclear power. But it is possible that in the future there would be a serious temptation to characterise these events as solely a failure of the Japanese nuclear industry.
Undoubtedly, some of the issues arising from this crisis are peculiar to the Japanese situation. Not only did they not set right a faulty design but continued to operate it in an earthquake and tsunami prone region, with critical facilities such as part of the cooling installations located literally on the sea-shore. In hindsight one may question the lack of wisdom of such an extensive dependence on nuclear installations for energy in what is arguably one of the most earthquake-prone nations in the world, though what a nation without fossil fuel reserves that desires energy security should do is not a question that is easily answered.
But the most serious questions raised by the Fukushima crisis go much deeper. The real shock has been the relative ease with which safety systems, procedures and protocols were rendered ineffective by the earthquake and the tsunami. In designing the system to withstand the severe but rare natural calamity, the potential for such an event to overwhelm all safety systems had clearly not been anticipated. When all installed safety systems are down, it is even more difficult to bring into play new measures to prevent the crisis from escalating further. To this we may add that, in the event, at Fukushima there were only two levels of safety precautions for continued cooling in case of an emergency shutdown, these being the generator-based and the battery backup based power systems. One of these, the generator-based system, was at the same level of vulnerability as the main power system itself and the second could hardly make up for the deficit in power after the others failed. Unanticipated sources of danger may arise, such as the danger of a meltdown or explosion with extensive radioactive contamination not from the reactors alone but also from large spent fuel pools.
The point here is obviously not the specifics of earthquakes and tsunamis, but that of allowing for the unthinkable to happen, and then providing further leeway. One of the key issues in nuclear safety has been the correct estimation of the level of risk from nuclear accidents. The critics have always pointed to the enormity of the consequences of a nuclear accident. Those in favour have however pointed out that the probability of such accidents is extremely small. In the present instance it has turned out that even if the probability of a calamity of rare magnitude leading to an accident is very small, it may still occur. At the same time, the costs of containing the effects of such an accident are significant, even when the accident falls well short of the truly catastrophic. Again at Fukushima it will not only be the immediate costs of containment that are relevant but also the long-term costs of entombing the reactors together with the contaminated water and other material that have been used to cool the reactors down.
It is striking that the international community of nuclear experts and nuclear decision-makers have exhibited a curious perplexity, indecision and confusion in their comments on and evaluation of the crisis. For days, it now appears, that no one outside a section of the Japanese nuclear establishment has been adequately briefed, while foreign nuclear agencies have speculated, often intemperately, regarding the situation at Fukushima. Despite several decades of existence of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), it appears that the nuclear powers have no special role to play, at least in a manner visible in the public domain, in the event of a serious nuclear accident in a country that is a trusted signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The precise mechanism for transparent and rapid exchange of scientific information and expertise in such a crisis is not clear. If no such adequate mechanism exists or is not functional, it is a sorry comment on the functioning of the IAEA.
India needs to carry out a thorough-going review of the current status of nuclear safety, a review with independent scientific and technical expertise, drawn also from outside the ranks of the atomic energy establishment. Such a safety review clearly must go beyond the mere routine types of safety audit if it is to carry adequate credibility. The government is currently promoting large nuclear reactor complexes that are similar to, if not larger than, the Fukushima complex. There is no question that such complexes cannot move ahead without credible study and assurances flowing from a detailed study of what transpired at Fukushima and its implications for India. But despite such studies, democratic norms require that the population be adequately convinced of its safety in the future. Fukushima underlines the fact that nuclear power cannot be thrust on an unwilling populace.
(T. Jayaraman is Chairperson, Center for Science, Technology and Society, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai.)

Source : http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/article1556382.ece

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Aasara for senior citizens


Aasara for senior citizens
Special Correspondent

VIJAYAWADA: Distressed senior citizens in need of help can now call 1253, an exclusive helpline introduced for their welfare.

Minister for Secondary Education K. Parthasaradhy on Sunday urged senior citizens to make use of the facility. He was addressing a meeting organised in connection with the inauguration of an Aasara Kendram (shelter) for senior citizens, set up on the premises of CVR High School in Governorpet, by Vijayawada Municipal Corporation. He said the objective of these shelters was to address the needs of senior citizens left uncared for and who were in need of help. He said the elders of the family had a respectful role in the traditional joint families. But the scenario had changed. The elderly lot were not included in the nuclear families and most often, they were left uncared for.

The Government had set up Aasara Kendrams which would not only provide nutritious food to them but also take care of their other needs.

He said a primary health centre would also be attached to these shelters to extend medical facilities to the inmates. A doctor and a couple of ANMs were appointed at these centres. District Collector Peeyush Kumar, Municipal Commissioner G. Ravibabu, Vijayawada Central MLA Malladi Vishnu, former mayors Tadi Sakuntala, M.V. Ratna Bindu and Mallika Begum and others participated.

Source: http://www.hindu.com/2011/03/14/stories/2011031454480200.htm

Brief Behavioral Counseling May Help Seniors Sleep


Brief Behavioral Counseling May Help Seniors Sleep

A brief, individualized counseling program can improve sleep in older adults with insomnia, a new study shows.

The research involved 79 insomnia patients, with an average age of about 72, who were divided into two groups. The 39 patients in the treatment group received four sessions of individualized behavioral counseling from a nurse clinician. Two sessions were conducted in person and two by phone.
The 40 patients in the control group received only general printed educational material about insomnia and sleep habits.
After four weeks, more patients in the behavioral treatment group than the control group showed a favorable response (67 percent versus 25 percent) or no longer had insomnia (55 percent versus 13 percent).

The results suggest that for every 2.4 patients treated with the counseling program, one would respond favorably and one would no longer have insomnia, said Dr. Daniel J. Buysse, of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, and colleagues.

The study is published online Jan. 24 and in the May 23 print issue of the journal Archives of Internal Medicine.
Up to 35 percent of older U.S. adults have insomnia, according to background information in the article. Because of trouble falling asleep or staying asleep, they may complain of daytime fatigue, difficulty concentrating and mood disturbances.

"Although brief behavioral treatment for insomnia shares many features with other behavioral insomnia treatments, some particular features make it an especially attractive option," the researchers wrote in a journal news release.

They said the strong focus on behavior may reduce patient concerns about "psychological" treatments. Also, the program can be taught to nurses in a short period of time, the authors said.

(Source: http://www.sciencemagnews.com/brief-behavioral-counseling-may-help-seniors-sleep.html)