AUGUST 2005

Dear VIEWER

What's happening at uktherapists.com

We are pleased that members of uktherapists.com are renewing their yearly subscription fees, and “thank you” again to everybody out there for all their support.

As a reminder to all our members who have not yet renewed your subscription to UKtherapists.com? This can be done via the member’s area, by logging in your username and password, which will take you straight to the subscription page, where you can pay on-line. 

Any difficulties, please contact us e-mail admin@mcpt.co.uk or telephone: 0161-862-9456 where we shall be able to take you through the process of renewing your subscription.

You can still have a whole years advertising for only £19.99, and better still, if you chose to take the saving, 2 years for  £29.99 that's £10 in your pocket.

Because we have a large membership uktherapists.com is on every search engine so your chances of making your business pay through advertising goes a long way with a uktherapists membership, getting your name out there, seen in the universe, is the way forward.

Once again thanks to everybody for all the positive comments concerning the site and all feedback is of course welcome.

Best Wishes
From all at uktherapists.com

Top National Health Story - Bush Signs Transportation Bill, Says It Will Deliver Jobs

The $286.5-billion measure will fund more than 350 projects in California. Critics say it contains an 'egregious' amount of pork.

President Bush signed the $286.5-billion transportation bill Wednesday, saying it would ease traffic congestion throughout the country, create hundreds of thousands of jobs and impose stricter vehicular safety standards that would save lives.

But critics said the legislation was stuffed with unnecessary and expensive projects that benefited only members of Congress seeking hometown support.

In California, the measure will fund more than 350 transportation projects, including the completion of highway interchanges and the construction of bicycle paths.

The six-year bill, the first major transportation spending measure since 1998, pays for projects from fiscal years 2004 through 2009. The previous highway bill expired Sept. 30, 2003, and Congress repeatedly passed funding extensions for projects until it could agree on legislation.

After years of delay over the amount of spending and the division of funds among states, the bill cleared the House and the Senate last month by large bipartisan votes. But some lawmakers and government watchdog groups expressed outrage over the number of individual projects — more than 6,000 — in the legislation.

The bill's price tag was $2.5 billion higher than Bush had requested.

"Our economy depends on us having the most efficient, reliable transportation system in the world," Bush said during the signing ceremony at a Caterpillar Inc. plant in Montgomery, Ill., about 40 miles west of Chicago.

But "highways just don't happen," the president said. "People have got to show up and do the work to refit a highway or build a bridge, and they need new equipment to do so. So the bill I'm signing is going to help give hundreds of thousands of Americans good-paying jobs."

He described the legislation as "more than a highway bill; it's also a safety bill" — an assessment with which Joan Claybrook, a longtime auto safety advocate, agreed.

Claybrook said the bill's provisions "could produce the most significant safety enhancement since air bags were required" in the 1991 highway bill and could "literally save thousands of lives and prevent untold suffering."

The biggest effect, she said, will come from addressing the two deadliest types of accidents, rollover and side-impact crashes, which kill about 20,000 people each year and injure more than 17,000.

The legislation, Claybrook said, requires the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to create by April 2009 a stability standard designed to prevent rollovers and to update its 34-year-old roof strength standards.

Said Bush: "This law makes our highways and mass transit systems safer and better, and it will help more people find work."

Among the projects earmarked for California are about $150 million to improve railroad corridors in the Los Angeles area, $58 million to strengthen the Golden Gate Bridge and $15.8 million to study the feasibility of a new transportation corridor — possibly a tunnel under the Cleveland National Forest — between the Inland Empire and Orange County.

Also in Los Angeles, the measure provides $130 million to add carpool lanes on the San Diego Freeway through the Sepulveda Pass, $9 million for a new connector between the Golden State and Antelope Valley freeways, and $9.6 million for offramp improvements on the Pomona Freeway. More than $5 million is allocated for projects related to the long-fought extension of the Long Beach Freeway through South Pasadena, including a feasibility study of building a tunnel.

In Orange County, Fullerton will receive about $13 million to build a railroad overpass on State College Boulevard. Placentia will receive about $37.5 million to improve a railroad corridor through town. An additional $5.2 million has been made available for new interchanges and carpool lanes on the Garden Grove Freeway.

Elsewhere around Southern California, San Bernardino County will receive about $20 million to improve roads and highways around the former Norton Air Force Base. In addition, the legislation allocates $9 million to build an access tunnel to the North Island Naval Air Station in Coronado. Riverside County will receive $8 millon for a new interchange on Interstate 15 at Cajalco Road.

One of the biggest critics of the bill was Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), one of four senators who voted against it. He said the estimated $24 billion that lawmakers directed to special projects was "egregious."

Other Health News Stories - Low-Fat Diet May Slow Cancer, Study Says

An ultra low-fat diet and other lifestyle changes may help keep early-stage prostate cancer from worsening, researchers found in a small study that tracked men whose tumors weren't aggressive.

The study, published in the September issue of the Journal of Urology, promises to increase research into whether diet might really help battle cancer.

The study was led by heart-health guru Dr. Dean M. Ornish, and used his strict regimen, where people become vegetarians, limit dietary fat to 10% of total calories, exercise regularly and learn stress-management techniques such as yoga.

Ornish's studies have shown that the regimen can help reverse heart disease. There is some evidence that diets high in fat increase the risk of prostate cancer and that certain foods — such as broccoli, or the nutrient lycopene from cooked tomato products — are protective.

Ornish and fellow researchers at UC San Francisco recruited 93 men who had decided against treatment for early-stage prostate cancer, a route known as "watchful waiting."

Half were randomly assigned to the Ornish regimen; the others weren't asked to vary their routines. The researchers sent participants' blood samples to Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York to measure prostate specific antigen, or PSA, a marker used to track prostate cancer growth.

After one year, PSA levels had decreased 4% in the diet group — unusual for untreated patients — while the levels rose by 6% in the control group. That difference wasn't big, but it is statistically significant, and the researchers plan to continue tracking the men to see if it really signals better health.

Also, six of the non-dieters had undergone cancer treatment in that year after all because their disease was progressing. None of the dieters was treated.

Other cellular tests suggested that the diet wasn't just affecting PSA production, Ornish said. "I always find it amusing" that people call the diet hard, he said. "Compared to having your prostate removed? The only side effects are you feel better and it helps prevent heart disease."

“Post Qualifying Certificate in Counselling Children & Young People”

This course is open to anyone who already has a Diploma in Counselling (min 450 hours of training) and is working therapeutically with Children or Young People.

Following our success in delivering this course in Exeter, Brighton, Birmingham and Edinburgh we are now expanding to include London and Harrogate for the first time this year. Further information can be found on our website: www.qualitytraininguk.com

Starting On:October 2005

Lynn Martin
Marily House
Honiton
Devon
EX14 2DP

Phone: 0140446233
Fax: 0140446233
Email: admin@qualitytraininguk.com

Psychotherapy Trainiing Courses

For your up to date current courses in psychotherapy, and continued professional development courses please visit: www.mcpt.co.uk for the 2005-2006 new programme, this is well worth a visit for all the new existing courses both professionally and personally

We have just posted out our annual mail shot, which includes The Manchester Institute For Psychotherapy first Conference on “Emotional Literacy In Psychotherapy” at The University Of Manchester (Umist) on Saturday 30 th April 2005. If you wish for more information please visit: www.mcpt.co.uk

On a final note: This newsletter currently goes to all our members of uktherapists.com, thus it is an excellent way of advertising your site or event. Please go to: http://www.uktherapists.com/payment/news.asp for advertising costs.

Advertising in uktherapists.com Newsletter

On a final note: This newsletter currently goes to all our members of uktherapists.com, thus it is an excellent way of advertising your site or event. Please go to: http://www.uktherapists.com/payment/news.asp for advertising costs.

Suggestions and Comments

With the constant re-newing and re-vamping of uktherapists.com and the increasing membership, we are always interested in suggestions and comments that you think will help in the sites operation and clarity.

E-Mail: admin@mcpt.co.uk

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The uktherapists.com newsletter has been edited by Bob Cooke. Comments and suggestions to - admin@mcpt.co.uk

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