Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Respecting All People: Evangelical perspective on marriage ...

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Respecting All People: An evangelical perspective of the marriage amendment

By President of Transform Minnesota and board chairman; Carl Nelson and Ray Kuntz.

(Published in Star Tribune, Nov. 4, 2012)

Should the moral conviction that marriage is a lifelong relationship between one man and one woman be put into the Constitution? This is a question faced by evangelical Christians, who overwhelmingly agree that this is God?s desire for marriage.

First, we need to be clear that all human beings are created in the image of God, and we love, welcome and respect them as God?s created beings. Our call as Christians is to love all people no matter if their marriages haven?t turned out to be lifelong, or if they choose to live in alternative relationships, or if they have same-sex desires. The Bible calls Christians to love all people as together we seek to rediscover God?s vision for healthy and sustainable relationships.

Within evangelical Christianity, we often have failed to reach this vision. Yet we still aspire to God?s ideas, because we believe sex and marriage are good gifts from God intended to bless married couples, to serve the good of children and to build stronger communities.

But the marriage amendment is more than putting moral convictions into the Constitution. All laws are based on some conception of what is good for the public. Voting ?yes? on the marriage amendment reflects a belief that it will enhance the public good to define marriage to be one man and one woman.

Minnesota?s Constitution has been amended to define important public values before ? for example, that ?hunting and fishing and the taking of game and fish are a valued part of our heritage? to be preserved for the people and managed by law.

In other words, we Minnesotans believed that hunting and fishing are such important values that we chose to include them in our state Constitution and required laws regulating these activities. Marriage has much greater significance, and we believe it, too, should be defined and protected by our Constitution.

The public benefit of marriage is clearly supported by social-science research. In the 2011 report ?Why Marriage Matters: Thirty Conclusions from the Social Sciences,? 18 scholars, a majority of them secular researchers at public universities, summarize the literature by saying that ?marriage is an important social good associated with an impressively broad array of positive outcomes for children and adults alike.? These include reducing child poverty, strengthening the child-parent bond, and improving health and educational outcomes.

Fatherhood in particular has positive effects on child outcomes. The National Fatherhood Initiative has long lists of research results that show that children raised in stable homes with a married father in the household have better emotional health, fewer behavioral problems, and lower teen pregnancy and sexual activity rates. These are just some of the benefits of having a married father in a child?s life.

Mothers are by nature more closely tied to their children and play a distinctive role in their development. Mothers and fathers love and interact with their children in distinct and unique ways, and both are important to the well-being of children; neither role is replaceable. Marriage is what attaches fathers and mothers to their children. The definition of marriage should support this fact.

In ?Why Marriage Matters,? researchers conclude that ?whether American society succeeds or fails in building a healthy marriage culture is clearly a matter of legitimate public concern.?

Marriage is an important social institution, and healthy marriages can provide better outcomes for children, women and men. How you vote on the marriage amendment is an important public-policy decision that impacts children?s lives, our schools, communities and social services.

As the evangelical network representing nine evangelical denominations and 160 churches, Transform Minnesota believes that evangelical Christians should vote ?yes? for the marriage amendment, certainly because our faith informs what we believe marriage to be, but specifically because the evidence shows us that marriage is a public good of such great importance that it deserves to be defined in our Constitution. And as you vote, make a commitment to love, welcome and respect all people as human beings made in the image of God.

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Raymond C. Kuntz is board chair and Carl H. Nelson is president and CEO of Transform Minnesota: the evangelical network

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Source: http://www.transformmn.org/2012/11/op-ed_star_tribune/

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Monday, November 5, 2012

Why Americans can't vote on the Internet in the 2012 elections ...

Why aren't we voting online yet

When you use the Internet for everything from ordering pizza to shuffling around thousands of dollars between bank accounts, why can't you use it to cast a simple vote?

With national elections looming, many Americans are getting ready to show up at their polling place and mark paper ballots. Some have already cast their votes via absentee ballots, early voting, or vote-by-mail options.

But in this age of broadband Internet, smartphones, tablets, and near-ubiquitous connectivity, paper ballots ? and all the problems they entail ??seem tremendously backwards and counterproductive. After all, we trust billions of dollars in financial transactions to the Internet every day: Why can?t we use technology to do something simple like vote?

The reasons, of course, are complicated.

Advantages of online voting

Phone vote (shutterstock wiml)

Americans have been casting ballots at polling places for more than 200 years, but few would argue requiring citizens to show up in person at precincts, schools, churches, and other locations to cast votes is a perfect system. Simple access to polling places is a major issue for many voters, including the disabled and elderly, students away from home, folks living or working overseas, and many others. Sometimes, voters face hours of waiting when they get to a polling place ? leading many to give up without voting ? and the primarily paper-based technology used by many localities is distinctly old school. Remember the 2000 presidential election where the outcome hung on dangling chads? Not the greatest moment for a country that went to the Moon and is putting rovers on Mars. And this leaves aside substantial issues with voter registration, and identifying voters who do cast ballots.

The most appealing arguments in favor of online voting address some of these issues. The first is enfranchisement, empowering democracy by enabling more eligible voters to cast ballots. Many voters currently have no access (or limited access) to polling places, but a recent report from the Federal Communications Commission found that 94 percent of Americans currently have access to the Internet, meaning they could potentially vote online without going to a polling place. What if voting were extended to mobile phones? The Pew Internet & American Life Project recently found 85 percent of American adults have a mobile phone, with about half of them having smartphones ? numbers which are almost certain to increase rapidly in the next few years. Internet and mobile technology could bring voting to citizens who are historically under-represented in the current electoral process simply by eliminating the need to get to a polling place.

Online voting technologies could potentially lift some barriers for folks who have trouble meeting voter registration requirements: Perhaps they?ve never had a passport or a driver?s license, or are living with parents and have no utility bills or other means of asserting their identity. With broadband increasingly being viewed as a utility, the ability to maintain a mobile or home Internet connection might be enough in some locales. After all, in some places presenting a utility bill and even an expired photo ID will get you on the voting rolls.

Another compelling argument is convenience: Think how much voter turnout might rise for elections (particularly mid-term or local elections) if voters could make their voices heard using computers or smartphones. Online voting could be particularly appealing for younger voters who are the most comfortable with the technology, but who historically don?t seem to turn out in great numbers for elections. With online voting, voters wouldn?t have to visit a polling location and potentially wait for hours for their turn. When more people participate in an election, the democratic process more accurately reflects the will of the people.

?As more and more Americans begin to wonder why they have to trek to the polls, find parking, stand in line, sometimes in rain and cold, while at the same time banking or buying books via their iPad, smartphone, or other connected device, they will begin to demand a more up-to-date and convenient method of voting,? said William J. Kelleher, Ph.D., author of Internet Voting Now!.

Another argument is cost. Although estimates vary, the cost of conducting a presidential election in the United States is in the hundreds of millions of dollars. Localities have to purchase, operate, and maintain voting machines, hire election workers, staff polling places, prepare ballots, and (of course) tabulate results, among many other things. Shifting to online voting could lower the costs of conducting elections by reducing the need for polling places, staff, and equipment. Just as it?s less expensive for Amazon to take an order via the Web, states could lower their costs conducting elections online.

So why the heck aren?t we voting online?

Barriers to online voting

El Paso primary voting 2008 (shutterstock, frontpage, editorial only)

Online voting isn?t a far-flung dream; plenty of countries are already studying and experimenting with it. In Canada, several dozen municipalities have used Internet voting in municipal elections (often via systems provided by Canadian firm Intelivote). Markham, Ontario, has offered online balloting since 2003 and an independent study from Delvinia found online voting was well-liked by participants, convenient, and could produce a modest increase in overall turnout ? although younger voters haven?t been terribly enthused. Estonia has offered online voting since 2007, with roughly a quarter of its population of 1.3 million voting online ? although, it should be noted, Estonia also has a national smart-card ID card system.

Things get more complicated in the United States. First of all, the United States has no national election system. Although the U.S. Constitution and federal law outline aspects of federal elections, most of the mechanics are defined and handled by individual states, including election methods, setting voter eligibility requirements, conducting both state and local elections, and (for presidential elections) managing the state?s electoral college. Diving down further, polling places are usually managed by individual cities, counties, and townships ? all told, there were over 4,600 voting jurisdictions in the United States in 2010. The result is a mishmash of procedures and systems that makes implementing online voting very complicated. An online voting system that?s acceptable to one municipality won?t be acceptable to another. It also means implementing a one-size-fits-all approach to nationwide online voting would be a matter of policy and politics first, technology second ? and we all know how fast policymakers move on this stuff.

Another key issue is voter validation. How would an online voting system recognize legitimate voters? Estonia has national smart card IDs that citizens can set up with PIN numbers and use remotely to authenticate with a voting system (and other services). The United States has no similar system: not everyone has a passport, drivers? license, or state-issued ID. As a result, the most practical way to validate people for online voting may be to send them one-time PIN numbers via postal mail. Besides the issue of mail theft, this omits newly eligible voters, the homeless, some disabled, deployed military personnel, or others who might not have fixed addresses or access to postal mail. Maybe we could use passwords? If there?s one thing the Internet has proven it?s that people pick crappy passwords ? and often forget them. Would you remember a password you set up for a presidential election four years ago?

What about securing online voting systems? The two primary ways to approach online voting are to let voters cast ballots using their own devices, or a device operated and maintained by local election authorities. Letting people use their own devices is far more convenient ? and convenience is one of the main attractions behind online voting, after all ? but it?s a potential security nightmare. Millions of people already have spyware and malware on their PCs and (increasingly) on their mobile devices: Letting people vote with their own devices is essentially exposing the electoral process to the same bands of organized, sophisticated cybercriminals who have been exploiting security flaws to steal identities and clear out bank accounts for decades now. Requiring voters to use systems operated by local election officials should be far more secure, but doesn?t solve the access problems of today?s balloting systems. Voters would still have to go to polls, or have devices brought to them by election officials. Both methods are potentially vulnerable to attacks on servers and election infrastructure: it doesn?t matter whether voters? own devices or state-administered devices are secure if the voting system itself can be hacked. One lesson of the digital revolution is that no system is completely secure.

Can e-commerce technology enable online voting?

Firefox 14 encrypts all Google searches

It does seem ridiculous that Internet users can buy almost anything online but online voting isn?t commonplace. If the technology exists to validate buyers and sellers and handle secure financial transactions, why can?t that same technology handle something as simple as voting?

Many of the same encryption, authentication, and validation technologies used in e-commerce will undoubtedly play roles in any online voting system. However, online businesses and financial institutions have very different goals than a local, state, or national online election efforts.

?If an unauthorized banking transaction occurs, you can see it in your statement,? wrote SRI International?s Jeremy Epstein in ACM Computing Reviews back in 2009. ?The bank is responsible for losses, and has the ability to reverse an erroneous transaction. And, above all, you and your bank both know that the transaction was on your account.?

These principals do not apply to voting due to issues of anonymity. Secret ballots are one of the cornerstones of democracy, the idea being that voters cast their ballots privately, free from intimidation and coercion, and their votes cannot be linked back to them. This is why voting booths in many polling places have curtains, and why no one is allowed to go into a voting booth with you when you cast your ballot. Voters do not get a statement at the end of each election cycle listing their votes and when they were tabulated; elections officials cannot pull up the record of a particular voter and inspect it for errors or irregularities.

Being able to reconcile financial transactions is one of the primary ways of detecting online fraud and identity theft, and it?s a enabler of online commerce. When fraud and mistakes happen, they can usually be worked out. Banks, financial institutions, credit-card companies, and online retailers have invested billions of dollars in trying to secure their processes while making them widely accessible to consumers.

Businesses have always operated on the principle that they?ll never be able to eliminate all theft or fraud, but they can try to keep it down to an manageable level. Visa subsidiary CyberSource estimated online fraud?totaled?up to $3.4 billion in 2011, with about 0.6 percent of all online transactions being fraudulent. That?s actually the lowest number of fraudulent transactions in 13 years, although the total amount of money lost has gone up.

To date, there have been no known instances of election fraud in online elections. However, outside of Estonia and parts of Canada, online voting hasn?t been conducted on a significant scale, and we know that the over 4,600 electoral jurisdictions in the United States don?t have the same sorts of budgets, experience, and technical expertise as major banks, credit card companies, and online retailers. And online election tampering doesn?t have to be limited to fake votes. Using spam, phishing attacks, malware, and other techniques, would-be election-riggers could prevent votes from being filed at all, or lure voters to a fake Web site where they think they?re voting?but aren?t.

Will online voting ever happen?

Smartphone voting (Shutterstock Clenpies Design)

This may all sound like doom and gloom for the possibility of online voting, but the reality is really more when than if. Although the U.S. military scrapped a planned online voting program for overseas personnel in 2004, in 2008 Arizona became the first state to let overseas military and civilian voters to vote in a national election via a secure Web site. (It was remarkably clunky: Voters filled out ballots they received via postal mail or printed themselves, then made scans they sent back to election officials.) West Virginia tried true online voting for overseas military personnel in 2010: it covered just 125 people, but was deemed a success.

There?s a theme here: military voters deployed overseas. According to the Military Voters Protection Project, in 2008 only 20 percent of the 2.5 million military voters were able to request and return their absentee ballots on time, and fewer than 5 percent had an absentee ballot for the 2010 election. These are the men and women who have voluntarily put their lives on the line for their country? the least we could do is make it easy for them to vote.

?The issue of better serving overseas and military voters has been the?single most important driver of this issue lately,? noted Rob Weber of the blog Cyber the Vote. ?Paper absentee registration and voting does not serve military residents well, and both Congress and the states are looking to improve that situation. Several states are now allowing emailing of ballots for overseas military voters. It is a step in the right direction.?

Although the military backed away from online voting mechanisms in 2004, if states and other jurisdictions are able to develop secure online voting mechanisms that work well for overseas military personnel, those technologies could be extended to other voters. The most obvious candidates would be other overseas residents and disabled voters within a local jurisdiction. From there, assuming the systems hold up, they could be extended to larger portions of the population ? and once online voting systems have proven themselves, more local jurisdictions will begin to take a close look at online voting.

?Here is where the decisions to implement Internet voting will be made,? said Dr. Kelleher. ?As more folks demand of their local election officials that the voting technology be brought into the 21st century, these officials will demand of their legislatures laws allowing them to buy Internet voting systems.?

Budget issues may also drive jurisdictions towards online voting. With most U.S. states facing budget shortfalls, the prospect of lowering the costs of elections through online voting may be very appealing to lawmakers. However, election officials will have to be careful to balance new costs associated with online voting against the continuing cost of current election systems ? since those aren?t going to go away overnight.

In the meantime?

Online voting lies at a peculiar intersection of technology and public policy: Even if we have all the software and connectivity necessary to operate widespread electronic voting, implementing it will probably involve at least as much politicking as technology.

Over the next few years, we can expect more widespread (if tentative) implementation of online voting systems, initially to serve troops overseas, but perhaps also being extended to some local voters. Online voting efforts in other countries will also be watched closely.

And, even though you can?t do it from your smartphone or computer, please do vote in the general election this Tuesday.

?Vote? image via Shutterstock / Feng Yu
Phone vote image via Shutterstock / WimL
El Paso 2008 Primary voting image via Shutterstock / Frontpage
Smartphone voting image via Shutterstock / Clenpies Design

Source: http://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/its-the-21st-century-why-arent-we-voting-online/

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Sunday, November 4, 2012

Obama Holds Lead in Florida and Ohio Polls (WSJ)

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?A Seeker After Beauty, Wherever It Might Be Found?

1211_SBR_TheEntertainer_Illo

Illustration by Noah Van Sciver.

I had an odd experience while reading The Entertainer, Margaret Talbot?s wry, wonderful new book about her irrepressible actor father, Lyle, and American entertainment over the course of the 20th century. Every time I opened it, an accompanying soundtrack began to play in my head.

At first, it wasn?t much more than the howl of winds moving over turn-of-the-last-century Nebraska, but that soon gave way to carnival noises?fairway barkers, snippets of music coming from the depths of tents. Then it was the steady rhythm of trains carrying itinerant theater troupes through the dark Midwestern night. Later, whenever I picked it up, I kept overhearing the sounds of 1940s Hollywood royalty clinking glasses at cocktail parties, or the thwack of tennis balls on the courts at Hearst Castle as they let the old man win. I caught the fox trot beat from the Trocadero and the Cocoanut Grove. As I neared the end of the book, I strained to hear the noises of four children, first splashing in the pool, later arguing about the war in Vietnam, all the while listening to their finally settled father telling them stories of his long ago youth.

These, of course, are the sounds of a still-young America coming into its own. In The Entertainer they are also the sounds of Lyle Talbot coming into his own. His career as a performer, while it never quite reached stratospheric heights, dovetailed perfectly with every major shift in American entertainment before landing gently in a very happy family life that began long after he had given up hope it ever would. It?s a convergence that allows his daughter to thread his story??the brightest fiber??through a larger social and cultural history of the world in which he came of age, where it casts a lovely, personal glow over everything around it.

That Talbot is a writer gifted enough to evoke not just images but their attendant music through her words will come as no surprise to anyone who?s read her in The New Yorker or elsewhere. One of the things The Entertainer makes abundantly clear, though, is that she comes by her aesthetic sense naturally. Lyle, she writes, was ?a seeker after beauty, wherever it might be found,? starting from his earliest days in small-town Nebraska. She is, too. From her childhood memories, her father?s scrapbooks, his stories, and her own research and interviews, Talbot has woven a tale as romantic and vivid as any film could hope to be, while still seeing every bit of it plain. She is as clear-eyed about her father as she is about history?no easy feat.

Open on Pittsburgh, 1902, where Lyle was born to a mother who died of typhoid when he was just a few months old. His maternal grandmother, a widow, took him away from his father and back to Nebraska, where she raised him in her boarding house. (With no room of his own as a child, he bed-hopped among the Bohemian girls his grandmother employed, which, according to Talbot, left him with a few sentences of Czech and a lifelong love of women.) To seal the deal, she changed his name to her married name, Talbot. Her maiden name, which Warner Bros. would seize on with glee decades later when Lyle was one of their contract players, was Hollywood. Talk about fate.

In the intervening years between life at the Talbot Hotel and life on set, there were carnival acts (the names of which rise up from the page like emissaries from a dusty, lively forgotten world: MacKnight, the Hypnotic Funmaker; Mock Sad Alli; Tootsie Galvin), followed by roles of all sorts with touring theater groups. These companies would soon ?be overwhelmed, first by radio and movies, then by television,? Talbot writes, ?but from the 1880s til the late 1920s, touring companies were what brought America its most reliable entertainment ? its sense of make-believe.?

Luckily?and luck was a big part of Lyle Talbot?s life?just as repertory theater was dying out, Lyle was summoned by telegram to what was fast becoming the bright new epicenter of make-believe. A Hollywood agent trolling for film stars to fill out Tinseltown?s burgeoning ranks had seen him on the stage, noted, as one critic had it, that his ?good looks are not wasted on the feminine portion of the audience,? and asked for a screen test. Too broke to pay his train fare to California, Lyle borrowed it from the agent and set out for the coast.

At Warner Bros., which signed him after that screen test, he suddenly found himself in boldface company. He was cast in pictures with Carole Lombard, with whom he also had one of many (many!) affairs; Bette Davis; Humphrey Bogart; Barbara Stanwyck (in Talbot?s marvelous words, a woman ?who seemed to be built for quick escapes and tight corners?); James Cagney; Mae West; and countless other stars of the 1930s. They were all, it seems, utterly charmed by him, and he by them. As he recalled many years later about ?Miss West?: ?She?d say, in that voice, ?Where are you gonna have lunch? I think I?ll have a hamburger,? and she?d sound, you know, like Mae West.?

He made nine movies in 1932 and another 12 in 1933, and often spent his days bicycling between lots with scripts for all the films he was in simultaneously in both the front and back baskets of his bike. In an interview, he described the circumstances of contract actors like himself: ?We would work 14-, 15-hour days and then be called back the next morning. Saturday night they liked to work till midnight because you had Sunday off. The Catholic actors, Pat O?Brien and Bill Gargan and Spencer Tracy, would joke that they?d barely get home in time to make it to mass.? The pace was unsustainable. And so, in 1933, Lyle joined together with 20 of his fellow actors, a not-yet-famous Boris Karloff among them, to found the Screen Actors Guild. Though it wouldn?t be formally recognized for a few more years, by 1936 the actors? union had more than 5,000 members and had changed life in Hollywood forever.

Meanwhile, Hollywood itself was busy transforming life in America. Though the Production Code, which went into effect in 1934, placed certain limits on what films could depict, it could do nothing to contain their influence. As going to the movies became less expensive (popcorn, considered too trashy for many years, made it to the movies around the same time Lyle did), and theaters transitioned from ?palaces? to simpler affairs where all the seats were the same price, audiences across the country began to take their cues about how to look, behave, and even feel from the silver screen. ?When Clark Gable took his shirt off in It Happened One Night and revealed?yowza?no undershirt,? Talbot notes, in one of the many meticulously researched then seamlessly deployed details that makes The Entertainer such a pleasure, ?it caused a national sensation and a serious dip in undershirt sales.? Even divorce lost some of its stigma as fans followed the affairs and breakups of their favorite stars in gossip columns and newsletters published by fan clubs. (Joan Crawford was the honorary vice president of Lyle?s.)

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=c3c42097621e3471df768594a73dc88f

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Obama tells supporters: 'Now it's all up to you' (Los Angeles Times)

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Saturday, November 3, 2012

NYC Marathon runners fill unexpected free time

Dressed to run, people pose for photos at the finish line for the 2012 New York Marathon, Saturday, Nov. 3, 2012 in New York?s Central Park. NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg canceled the marathon on Friday, Nov. 2, amid rising criticism as he planned to go ahead with the race less than a week after much of New York City was damaged by Superstorm Sandy. (AP Photo/Cara Ana)

Dressed to run, people pose for photos at the finish line for the 2012 New York Marathon, Saturday, Nov. 3, 2012 in New York?s Central Park. NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg canceled the marathon on Friday, Nov. 2, amid rising criticism as he planned to go ahead with the race less than a week after much of New York City was damaged by Superstorm Sandy. (AP Photo/Cara Ana)

Pallets of food are lined up near what would have been the finish line for the 2012 New York Marathon, Saturday, Nov. 3, 2012 in New York?s Central Park. The food was intended for the marathon participants after they finished the race. NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg canceled the marathon on Friday, Nov. 2, amid rising criticism for planning to go ahead with the race less than a week after much of New York City was damaged by Superstorm Sandy. (AP Photo/Cara Ana)

Sue Johnson refused to give New York City any more money.

She preferred to shell out for the change fee to move her flight home to Pittsburgh up by 24 hours ? leaving on the day she was supposed to run the NYC Marathon.

Many of the runners who had descended on the city from all over the globe worked out their frustrations with a jog Saturday through Central Park, site of a finish line that will never be crossed. Some scrambled to rebook return flights. Others made sightseeing plans for the unexpected free time.

Whether from Europe, South America or Pennsylvania, their sentiment was the same. Sympathy for the victims of Superstorm Sandy. Understanding of why city officials canceled Sunday's race. But bitterness that the decision was made Friday instead of earlier in the week, before they boarded planes.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-11-03-Superstorm-Marathon/id-1400d195cf44446f9920d390e4cbf34e

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Non-Stick Surface On Med Devices Could Keep Bacteria At Bay

60-Second Science

In lab tests, catheters coated with a non-stick surface harbored far fewer Staph bacteria than conventional devices. Gretchen Cuda Kroen reports.

More 60-Second Science

Nasty bacteria cling to the surfaces of countertops. They also stick to medical devices?like catheters?that are placed inside the human body, where they can become a dangerous source of infection.

Individually, bacteria are fairly easily killed. But if they multiply on a surface, they eventually form a biofilm?a tightly organized bacterial community that can fight off antibiotics and the body?s immune system.

Now, researchers have come up with a way to give those nasty bugs the ?slip?? a non-stick surface that stops the biofilm from forming. The material hasn?t been tested in humans yet. But in the lab, catheters coated with the non-stick surface stayed almost completely free of Staphylococcus aureus bacteria. The findings were presented at the October, 2012, AVS International symposium in Tampa, which covers materials, interfaces and processing. [Andrew Hook et al, Combinatorial Discovery of Materials That Resist Bacterial Adhesion]

By denying bacteria a grip on medical devices without resorting to antibiotics, the researchers also hope to help doctors get a grip on antibiotic resistance?one of medicine?s stickiest problems.

?Gretchen Cuda Kroen

[The above text is a transcript of this podcast]


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