The process of learning must continue

The process of learning must continue
Mr Sreeram Iyer is the CEO of Scope International and CIO of Standard Chartered Bank, India. An MBA from the UK, he is also a Chartered Financial Analyst, Company Secretary and a qualified Cost and Management Accountant. Here’s his take on four questions from Business Line:
Two things that my education/ training taught me:
The process of learning must continue regardless of success achieved.
Try and share your learning with your team members.
Two things I learnt from my work/real life:
There is no substitute to delivery, execution and action.
Every individual brings new talent and capabilities. Identify those and maximise returns.
One quality I look for the most in a new recruit:
Right attitude — to change, learning and ethics.
A book that I read recently:
Plato and a Platypus — Understanding Philosophy through jokes, by Thomas Cathcart.
Problems are not stop signs, they are guidelines

Problems are not stop signs, they are guidelines
Mr Ashish Kirpal Pandit is the CEO of Fortis HealthWorld Ltd, the retail arm of the Fortis Group. An MBA from Indiana State University, Mr Pandit’s tryst with Fortis HealthWorld began in early 2006. His focus on detail has been instrumental in powering the company to its current leading position. Mr Pandit is a traveller by spirit and an avid golfer. Here’s his take on four questions from Business Line:
Two things that my education/training taught me:
Honing my analytical skills — this has helped me in identifying trends.
Clear and effective communication is the key to success.
Two things I learnt from my work/real life:
To take up challenges and turn them into opportunities.
Problems are not stop signs, they are guidelines.
One quality I look for the most in a new recruit:
Energy, enthusiasm and eye for detail.
A book that I read recently:
The Pursuit of Wow!, by Tom Peters.
Principled life leads to success

Principled life leads to success
Himanshu Baid
Mr Himanshu Baid, Managing Director, Poly Medicure, started his business of manufacturing healthcare disposables in 1997 under the brand name Polymed. His aim is to build his company as the most reputed and trusted company in the medical disposables industry.
Mr Baid, after completing his BE, joined Philips in Germany where he gained vital experience in international trade. His stint in Philips helped him understand the psyche of international marketers.
An avid follower of tennis and cricket, Mr Baid likes spending time with his wife and two sons in his spare time. Here’s his take on four questions from Business Line:
Two things that my education/training taught me:
Principled life leads to success.
Punctuality and self-confidence.
Two things I learnt from my work/real life:
To be strong and face the challenges.
Passion and enthusiasm to learn from every aspect of life.
One quality I look for the most in a new recruit:
The ability to understand the needs and requirements of the organisation and being honest towards the company and to himself.
A book that I read recently:
The Tipping Point, by Malcolm Gladwell.
Be fact-based
Mr Pradeep Nevatia
Mr Pradeep Nevatia, President and CEO, Ninestars Information Technology Ltd, is credited for bringing the ‘Integrated Six-Sigma Program’ and TQM (Total Quality Management) practices from the manufacturing to the BPO industry. Mr Nevatia is a post-graduate in industrial engineering from NITIE, Mumbai, and a alumnus of Birla Institute of Technology, Ranchi. He has co-authored Brand-Wise, Leveraging People to Create Powerful Brands (2004, East West Publications). Here’s his take on four questions from Business Line:
Two things that my education/ training taught me:
Structured thinking.
Systemic planning and analysis.
Two things I learnt from my work/real life:
Be balanced.
Be fact-based.
One quality I look for the most in a new recruit:
The capability of the person to go beyond oneself.
A book that I read recently:
Lie and a Truth, by Nandan Gautam
Take success and failure in the right spirit

Take success and failure in the right spirit
Mr Hasan Abdul Kader
Mr Hasan Abdul Kader is the Managing Director of CCS Infotech Ltd. A BE (Computer Science) from National Institute of Technology (formerly Regional Engineering College), Tiruchi, he has more than 18 years of experience in management, public relations, product branding and overseas marketing. Here’s his take on four questions from Business Line.
Two things that my education/training taught me:
Improved analysing and decision-making abilities.
Believe in social responsibilities.
Two things I learnt from my work/real life:
Success and failure have to be taken in the right spirit.
Broad vision coupled with strategic effort will yield results.
One quality I look for the most in a new recruit: The ability to take/see every opportunity as a commitment and challenge.
A book that I read recently:
The Argumentative Indian, by Amartya Sen.
New treatment for back and neck pain
New treatment for back and neck pain
PTI
KOCHI: A centre for the treatment of back and neck pain here has introduced a new ‘painless treatment without surgery and spinal injection’.
Speaking to reporters here on Thursday, Dr Sasikumar, Physical Medicine Consultant at the Kumar International Back Pain Centre said this treatment was expected to boost medical tourism as the cost here would be around one-fifth compared to western countries.
The modern medical treatment being introduced here is for the treatment of back ailments specially for people suffering from disc-related problems, he said adding “the uniqueness of this painless treatment is that it is done without surgery and spinal injection”.
Latest advancements in physical medicine for the management of back and neck pain including IDD Therapay (USA), Electroceutical therapy (Germany), Class 4 laser (Italy) are combined with specific exercises and yoga and are brought under one roof for the first time in India, he said.
Former Medical Director of NMC Hospital, Dubai, Dr Sasikumar said this treatment has been 80 to 85 per cent effective in reducing pain from disc prolapse and spondylitis.
On the treatment, he said IDD machine distract precisely the affected disc thereby reducing the pressure and pain of nerves travelling to the arms and legs. Class 4 laser delivers energy and rejuvenates the damaged tissues and nerves.
While electroceutical tone signalling device that produces small pricking currents helps to relieve long standing pain due to blocking, he said.
He said plans are there to open similar non-surgical back and neck pain centres in other parts of Kerala, metro cities and also in Gulf countries.
Talking boosts your memory
Talking boosts your memory
NEW YORK: A friend or a neighbour may help you stay sharp just as much as a daily crossword — you only need to talk to him for ten minutes every day.
Researchers in the United States have carried out a study and found that spending ten minutes talking to another person helps improve the memory, the ‘ScienceDaily’ reported here on Friday.
“In our study, socialising was just as effective as more traditional kinds of mental exercise in boosting memory and intellectual performance,”lead researcher Oscar Ybarra at the University of Michigan was quoted as saying.
In fact, the researchers came to the conclusion after conducting a test on 76 college students, aged 18 to 21.
After controlling for a wide range of demographic variables, including age, education, race/ethnicity, gender, marital status and income, as well as for physical health and depression, the researchers looked at the connection between frequency of social contact and level of mental function on the mini-mental exam.
Each student was assigned to one of three groups. Those in the social interaction group engaged in a discussion of a social issue for 10 minutes before taking the tests.
Those in the intellectual activities group completed three tasks before taking the tests. These tasks included a reading comprehension exercise and a crossword puzzle.
Those in a control group watched a 10-minute clip of ‘Seinfeld’. Then all participants completed two different tests of intellectual performance that measured their mental processing speed and working memory.
Ybarra said, “We found that short-term social interaction lasting for just 10 minutes boosted participants’ intellectual performance as much as engaging in so-called ‘intellectual’ activities for the same amount of time.
The higher the level of participants’ social interaction, researchers found, the better their cognitive functioning. This relationship was reliable for all age groups, from the youngest through the oldest.
“To our knowledge, this experiment represents the only causal evidence showing that social interaction directly affects memory and mental performance in a positive way.”
The findings also suggest that social isolation may have a negative effect on intellectual abilities as well as emotional well-being. And for a society characterized by increasing levels of social isolation the effects could be far-reaching.
Breasts don’t sag by breastfeeding
Breasts don’t sag by breastfeeding
Breastfeeding won’t make a new mom’s breasts sag, but having more babies might, a new study indicates.
“A lot of times, if a woman comes in for a breast lift or a breast augmentation, she’ll say ‘I want to fix what breastfeeding did to my breasts’,” University of Kentucky plastic surgeon Brian Rinker told Livescience. So he decided to study any possible connection. Rinker and his colleagues interviewed 132 women who came in for breast lifts or augmentation between 1998 and 2006. On average, the women were 39 years old, and 93% had experienced at least one pregnancy. Among the mothers, 58% had breastfed at least one of their children. The average duration of breastfeeding was nine months.
The researchers evaluated the study particpants’ medical history, body mass index, pre-pregnancy bra cup size and smoking status.
The results of the study, presented this week at a conference of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, showed no difference in the degree of breast ptosis (or sagging) between women who breastfed and those who didn’t. The main factors that did affect sagging were age, smoking status and the number of pregnancies.
Rinker noted that the smoking connection made sense because “smoking breaks down a protein in the skin called elastin, which gives youthful skin its elastic appearance and supports the breast”.
Pregnancy also “has a very strong contribution to breast ptosis (sagging)”, Rinker said. “In fact, our study showed that those negative effects increase with each pregnancy.”
Rinker says this finding should alleviate the fears of new mothers over what nursing their child might do to their breasts in the long run and will encourage them to breastfeed because of the health benefits to their infant. “Women may be reluctant to breastfeed because of this unfounded myth that doing so means the end of youthful breasts,” Rinker said. “Now, expectant mothers can relax knowing breastfeeding does not sacrifice the appearance of their breasts.”
First 3 hours after stroke crucial
First 3 hours after stroke crucial
WASHINGTON: A new study has found that the first three hours at the start of a stroke are crucial for the treatment of the victim.
The study found that rhe damage caused by stroke can be reduced by giving tPA treatment, the only approved treatment for stroke caused by blood clots in the brain, to the patient. If given intravenously within the first three hours of the start of a stroke, or injected directly into the brain within six hours, tPA can break up clots and stop or slow the damage caused by strokes. The analysis showed that delay kept many patients away from receiving tPA.
“Efforts to speed up patients’ arrival at the hospital are absolutely crucial. We have very effective treatments; we just need to get patients to the hospital as fast as possible,” said Lewis Morgenstern, professor of neurology, emergency medicine and neurosurgery at the U-M Medical School. Morgenstern added a person experiencing a stroke really needed to get to a hospital within two hours of the start of a stroke to have the best chance of receiving tPA.




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