Saturday, November 28, 2015

Our zeroeth birthday present

We inherit our microbiomes from our mother, picking up billions of them as we slide from her largely bacteria-free womb through her microbe-laden vagina. Being slathered in vaginal microbes might not seem like much of a treat but it’s vital for a newborn.

Babies end up with a very different portfolio of skin and gut bacteria depending on how they are delivered. Those who are born naturally harbour a more diverse array of bacteria, which resemble those in their mother’s vagina, including several species that are important for digestion. Those who are delivered by C-section are colonised by a less diverse array of bacteria, including some like Staphylococcus that are picked up from the hospital environment.
These early differences could directly affect a baby’s health for these first colonisers determine which the species that will follow. The bacterial heirlooms that babies inherit from their mothers might act as a shield, preventing more dangerous microbes like from setting up shop. By changing baby’s first bacteria, C-sections could alter the make-up of their later communities, leading to long-term effects on health and nutrition.
PS
The above thought provoking extract is from the web.
On a visit to a Private Nursing Home in Avissawella, I casually inquired, how many mothers were awaiting delivery in the labor room for the day. The answer was that there were no patients there and it was literally closed most of the time. Everyone preferred a Caeserian section. The reason for the choice of the latter method of delivery, was not to 'preserve the tubes' as  in the USA. The choice was made in present Sri Lanka, by the mother and extended family, to deliver the newborn at an auspicious time, forecast by an astrologer.


The Pope visits the 'White-House'.

How Powerful Is New Zealand?

Sri Lankan Sinhalese Family Gene

This Surreal 'HyperZoom' Time-Lapse Looks Like One Continuous Shot


Photographer Geoff Tompkinson has been working on a new time-lapse technique that he calls the “HyperZoom.” By matching up shots from camera zooms and pans, Tompkinson takes us on seamless journeys …

http://flip.it/ravhc

Flu and antibiotics.

China, largest market for Australia and all.


email from J. K. S. Weerasekera

China is a huge market.
And how much does New Zealand export there? Ask expats.
China is today Austalia's largest export market for both goods and services,
accounting for nearly a third of total exports,


About China-Australia Free Trade Agreement(CFAFTA)
ChAFTA lays an historic foundation for the next phase of Australia's
economic relationship with China. It will unlock significant opportunities
for Australia. China is Australia's largest export market for both goods and
services, accounting for nearly a third of total exports, and a growing
source of foreign investment. The agreement was signed on 17 June 2015.  
*

Report of The United States Senate Foreign Relations Committee, a bipartisan
endeavor, on Sri Lanka released December 07, 2009, which stated
unequivocally that "the U.S. Government has invested relatively little in
the economy or the security sector in Sri Lanka, instead focusing more on
IDPs and civil society. As a result, Sri Lanka has grown politically and
economically isolated from the West. .."This strategic drift will have
consequences for U.S. interests in the region. ...U.S. policymakers have
tended to underestimate Sri Lanka's geostrategic importance for American
interests. Sri Lanka is located at the nexus of crucial maritime trading
routes in the Indian Ocean connecting Europe and the Middle East to China
and the rest of Asia."

That is the view of Secretary Kerry, which in his higher understanding of
geo-politics, VG rejects. In recognition of VG's profound grasp of
geopolitics, President should make him our Minister of Foreign Affairs.