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Recipe of the day: How to boil Pear and Apple Soup



Pear and Apple Soup
By Amy Beh

Ingredients

o ½ red Fuji apple
o ½ Granny Smith apple
o ½ Korean pear
o 5 dried figs
o 8 dried red dates, seeded and cut into thin slices
o 125g rock sugar
o 1.2 litres water
o 5-6 slices lemon

Method

Remove core from apples and pear. Keep skin intact and cut into thin long strips. Dice the pear.

Combine figs, dates and water in a saucepan. Bring to a boil for 10 minutes.

Reduce the heat and add the fruits and rock sugar.

Simmer for 20-25 minutes or until fruits are soft. Add lemon slices.

Serve warm.

Credits to and source taken from: http://kuali.com/recipes/

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A superbug which is resistant to antibiotics has been detected in a 24-year-old woman, the first known case in Malaysia

Superbug detected in woman
By CHRISTINA TAN
chris@thestar.com.my

GUA MUSANG: A superbug which is resistant to antibiotics has been detected in a 24-year-old woman, the first known case in Malaysia, said Health Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai.

She has since recovered after receiving treatment at Ampang Hospital in Selangor for the past one month.

“Fortunately, she is only a carrier and we were able to extract the bacteria from her body,” Liow told reporters yesterday outside the nomination centre in Galas when he and other party leaders were accompanying the Barisan Nasional candidate Abdul Aziz Yusof to file his nomination papers.

“We are monitoring the patient closely to ensure the superbug is not transmitted to health workers and other patients,” he said.

Liow said the superbug, known scientifically as the NDM-1 (New Delhi metallo-lactamase-1), was not a threat to the patient and she was receiving regular attention at the hospital.

Asked how the patient contracted the bug, he said: “It can be anywhere, and can evolve in the body.”

The patient had not travelled overseas, he added.

He said the Institute for Medical Research notified the ministry on the detection of the superbug.

Liow reminded all health workers and doctors to abide by the guidelines and standard operating procedure in handling all patients to ensure the superbug did not spread in the country.

Hospitals or clinics are required to immediately report any suspected cases.

“Don’t simply give antibiotics as the bug is immune to the drugs and will evolve,” warned Liow.

He added that the superbug was only transmitted through direct contact like touching and through wounds, not through the air.

Identified in India and Pakistan, it had reportedly caused the death of a Belgian man and infected several people from Britain, Australia and the United States who travelled to the two countries for surgery.

The Belgian was reportedly infected by the bacteria after being hospitalised in Pakistan for a leg injury suffered in a car accident.

According to the United States Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, NDM-1 is an enzyme that destroys many commonly used antibiotics, rendering them ineffective.

On another development, Liow said Malaysia needed 500 doctors to treat senior citizens for Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease.

He said the country had only 13 such doctors. The Government was hiring foreign doctors to meet the shortage, while training more doctors in this field, he said, adding that the ministry was targeting to have 50 doctors in five years.

More news on: http://thestar.com.my/news/

Credits to and source taken from: http://thestar.com.my/news/

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A volcanic eruption and a tsunami killed scores of people hundreds of miles apart in Indonesia

Indonesia hit by deadly tsunami, volcanic eruption

MOUNT MERAPI, Indonesia (AP): A volcanic eruption and a tsunami killed scores of people hundreds of miles apart in Indonesia - spasms from the Pacific "Ring of Fire," which spawns disasters from deep within the Earth.

Tuesday's eruption of Mount Merapi killed at least 18 people, forced thousands to flee down its slopes and spewed burning ash and smoke high into the air on the island of Java.

Meanwhile, off the coast of Sumatra, about 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) west of the volcano, rescuers battled rough seas to reach Indonesia's Mentawai islands, where a 10-foot tsunami triggered by an earthquake Monday night swept away hundreds of homes, killing at least 113 villagers, said Mujiharto of the Health Ministry's crisis center. Up to 500 others are missing.

A rescuer wheels a man heavily burned in the eruption of Mount Merapi at a hospital in Pakem, Yogyakarta, Indonesia,

The twin disasters happened hours apart in one of the most seismically active regions on the planet.

Scientists have warned that pressure building beneath Merapi's lava dome could trigger its most powerful explosion in years.

But Gede Swantika, a government volcanologist, expressed hope the 9,737-foot (2,968-meter) mountain, which sent rocks and debris cascading down its southern slope, could be releasing steam slowly.

"It's too early to know for sure," he said, adding that a big blast could still be coming. "But if it continues like this for a while, we are looking at a slow, long eruption."

A 2006 eruption at Merapi killed two people, one in 1994 killed 60 people, and a 1930 blast killed 1,300.

After refusing to budge from the volcano's fertile slopes, saying they wanted to tend to their crops and protect their homes, villagers started streaming by the thousands into makeshift emergency shelters late Tuesday. Many carried sleeping mats, bags of clothes and food as they settled in.

Officials said earlier that by closely monitoring the volcano 310 miles (500 kilometers) southeast of the capital of Jakarta, they thought they could avoid casualties. But the death toll rose quickly.

A motorcycle lies covered by volcanic ash at a village that is hit by pyroclastic flows from Mount Merapi eruption in Kaliadem, Yogyakarta, Indonesia.

Police and volunteers were shown on Metro TV pulling at least 14 ash-covered bodies and carrying them to waiting vehicles.

Among the dead was a 2-month-old baby, said Mareta, a hospital worker who goes by only one name. The infant's tiny body was draped in a sheet as his mother cried.

Three people at Panti Nugroho hospital died of burns after being hit by a searing cloud of ash, said Agustinus Parjo, a spokesman.

Even as they contended with the volcano - one of 129 to watch in the world's largest archipelago - officials were trying to assess the impact of Monday night's 7.7-magnitude earthquake off Sumatra that triggered the killer tsunami.

The quake, just 13 miles (20 kilometers) beneath the ocean floor, was followed by at least 14 aftershocks, the largest measuring 6.2, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

The fault also caused the 2004 quake and monster Indian Ocean tsunami that killed 230,000 people in a dozen countries.

After Monday's quake and tsunami, many panicked residents fled to high ground and were too afraid to return home.

That could account in part for the more than 500 people still missing, said Hendri Dori, a local parliamentarian, adding: "We're trying to stay hopeful."

Hundreds of wooden and bamboo homes were washed away on the island of Pagai, with water flooding crops and roads up to 600 yards (meters) inland. In Muntei Baru, a village on Silabu island, 80 percent of the houses were badly damaged.

With few relief workers able to get to the hardest-hit islands - reachable only by a 12-hour boat ride - fishermen searched for the living and dead. Corpses lay unburied because there was not enough outside help to dig graves, according to the Mentawai district chief, Edison Salelo Baja.

The island chain, 175 miles (280 kilometers) from Sumatra, has long been popular with surfers.

A group of Australians said they were on the back deck of their chartered boat, anchored in a bay, when the quake hit just before 10 p.m. Monday. It generated a wave that pushed their boat into a neighboring vessel. A fire soon ripped through their cabin.

Australians tsunami survivors Daniel Scanlan, left, and injured Robert Marino walk on the pier upon their arrival at a port in Padang, West Sumatra, Indonesia, Wednesday.

"We threw whatever we could that floated - surfboards, fenders - then we jumped into the water," Rick Hallet told Australia's Nine Network. "Fortunately, most of us had something to hold on to ... and we just washed in the wetlands, and scrambled up the highest trees that we could possibly find and sat up there for an hour and a half."

Ade Edward, a disaster management agency official, said crews from several ships were still unaccounted for in the Indian Ocean.

The quake also jolted towns along Sumatra's western coast - including Padang, which last year was hit by a deadly 7.6-magnitude quake that killed more than 700. Mosques blared tsunami warnings over their loudspeakers.

"Everyone was running out of their houses," said Sofyan Alawi, adding that the roads leading to surrounding hills were quickly jammed with thousands of cars and motorcycles.

More news on: http://thestar.com.my/news/

Credits to and source taken from: http://thestar.com.my/news/

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A disaster official says the death toll from an Indonesian tsunami has climbed to 154, with more than 400 other villagers still missing

Indonesian tsunami toll climbs to 154

PADANG (Indonesia): A disaster official says the death toll from an Indonesian tsunami has climbed to 154, with more than 400 other villagers still missing.

The 7.7-magnitude quake that struck Monday 20km beneath the ocean floor triggered a three-metre-high wave that slammed into several remote islands.

With rescuers struggling to reach many of the hardest-hit villages, reports of damage and casualties were only now starting to trickle in.

Harmensyah, who heads the West Sumatra provincial disaster management center, said Wednesday that the number of people killed in the tsunami had climbed to 154.

More than 400 others were missing. - AP

More news on: http://thestar.com.my/

Credits to and source taken from: http://thestar.com.my/

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