Popular Articles

'Nirmala Nagara' to ensure cleaner towns, cities
Towns and cities, witnessing a growing population and change in both quality and quantity of their urban solid waste, are finding garbage disposal a major environmental issue. Garbage clearance and its disposal is becoming a herculean task with the volume of solid waste rising by the day.

Barclays Capital appoints Matthew Ginsburg
Barclays Capital, the investment banking division of Barclays Bank PLC, has appointed Matthew Ginsburg as Managing Director and Head of Investment Banking, Asia-Pacific.

News of the day

Zydus Wellness Q3 net up 105% to Rs 14 cr
Zydus Wellness has posted a rise of 105 per cent in its net profit for the quarter ended December at Rs 14.3 crore compared with Rs 7 crore in the corresponding quarter previous year. Its net sales during the period grew to Rs 75.1 crore from Rs 53 crore, up 42 per cent.
Small Business

40% of swine flu patients young and healthy: WHO

About 40 per cent of people who have died of swine flu or fallen seriously ill were young and otherwise healthy, an expert from the World Health Organisation told a conference in Vienna today. - New drug fights flu as well as Tamiflu does: Study">New drug fights flu as well as Tamiflu does: Study - IIM-A guides schools, academia to fight swine flu - Stop calling it "Swine Flu", says US agriculture secretary - UPDATE: Inflation up at -0.12% on higher food prices - CCMB to set up BSL-3 facility to test swine flu - WHO warns of winter surge of Swine Flu in South East Asia Forty per cent of the most serious cases, as well as deaths, concerned people "who would otherwise be considered healthy," WHO expert Sin Lun Tam told a conference on pulmonary diseases that runs until Wednesday in the Austrian capital. Of those who had fallen gravely ill from the H1N1 virus, over 50 per cent of were below the age of 20, he said. Meanwhile, the death rate was highest among people between the age of 25 and 49, he added. The expert also noted that between 15 and 30 per cent of those admitted to hospital with the H1N1 virus had to be treated in intensive care. And the origins of the disease were still unknown, he said. In Australia and the United States, children made up the highest number of hospitalisations, according to the WHO. At least 3,205 people have died of the disease since it was uncovered in April, the organisation said on Friday.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):