KATHERINE JACKSON, MICHAEL JACKSON’S MOTHER, MISSING

Paris Jackson waited at home Sunday, hoping for a phone call from her grandmother, the woman who has cared for her since her father, Michael Jackson, died three years ago.

“yes, my grandmother is missing,” Paris Jackson, 14, tweeted Sunday morning. “i haven’t spoken with her in a week i want her home now.”

A nephew reported Jackson family matriarch Katherine Jackson, 82, missing late Saturday after her grandchildren were unable to get in touch with her for a week.

It is the latest chapter in a messy dispute between several of Jackson’s children and her advisers over her finances and legal affairs.

Jackson’s nephew, Trent, filed the report with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Office. But one of her sons involved in the dispute said in a series of Twitter postings Friday that Katherine Jackson was fine and resting in Arizona.

“I want to reassure everyone (inc all sudden medical experts) that Mother is fine but is resting up in AZ on the orders of a doctor, not us,” Jermaine Jackson tweeted.

“This is our mother and her health is paramount. We are not inventing or plotting anything. We are following doctor’s advice. Period,” he added.

Paris Jackson’s responded to her uncle’s claim with her own tweet early Sunday. “the same doctor that testified on behalf of dr murray saying my father was a drug addict (a lie) is caring for my grandmother… just saying” she tweeted.

The doctor who examined Jackson at her home on July 14 was Dr. Allan Metzger, according to Katherine Jackson attorney Sandra Ribera. Metzger was a defense expert witness for Dr. Conrad Murray last year. Murray was subsequently convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Michael Jackson’s death.

Dr. Metzger was brought into Jackson’s Calabasas, California, home “under false pretenses” by saying he was sent by her primary care physician, Ribera said. “We came to find out that her doctor has no association with Dr. Metzger.”

The doctor advised Jackson that it was better for her to take a plane on a trip planned for the next day, rather than ride in a RV driven by Trent Jackson, Ribera said.

Jackson left with her oldest daughter, Rebbie, the next day to fly to Albuquerque, New Mexico, to attend a Jackson brothers concert two days later, she said. But she never arrived at the concert, Ribera said.

When Paris Jackson called her aunts Rebbie and Janet over the past several days to find her grandmother, she was told each time she could not speak to her, Ribera said.

In another tweet, Paris Jackson gave out her bodyguard’s phone number and asked people to call the authorities if they saw her grandmother.

“The kids were trying to get a hold of their grandmother and they haven’t been able to reach her for almost a week,” Ribera said. “They are told she’s unavailable.”

“I’m concerned that she’s not safe,” Ribera added.

Jackson “has never gone 24 hours without talking to her kids,” she said. “I’m concerned that she would never do this. We have no idea what’s going on with her. No one has talked to her.”

CNN reached out to Janet Jackson’s representatives several times but did not hear back.

The sheriff’s homicide-missing persons unit has been asked to investigate, Ribera said.

A letter was made public Wednesday in which two daughters, Rebbie and Janet, and three sons — Jermaine, Randy and Tito — charge that Katherine Jackson was being mistreated by the executors of Michael Jackson’s estate and mis-advised by her manager and lawyer.

From CNN.com

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NO GLOVE NO LOVE: NEW STD RESISTANT TO ANTIBIOTICS, MAJOR CRISIS

A major public health crisis is emerging, in the form of a sexually-transmitted disease that doesn’t respond to antibiotics, World Health Organization officials said Wednesday.

Gonorrhea is one of the most common sexually-transmitted infections. It is spread through oral, vaginal and anal sex. About 106 million people worldwide become infected every year.

“Once this organism develops full resistance to this last antibiotic that we have, we have nothing else to offer to these patients,” says Dr. Manjula Lusti-Narasimhan, scientist at the Department of Reproductive Health and Research at WHO.

The consequences of an untreated infection are harsh. In both men and women, it can cause infertility. Up to half of babies born from mothers with gonorrhea have severe eye infections, which could lead to blindness. Women who are pregnant may have spontaneous abortions or ectopic pregnancies. If the bacteria gets to other parts of the body, joint pain, swelling and stiffness are possible.

The organization has just released a global action plan encouraging greater awareness and advocacy, research, increased prevention efforts and monitoring of gonorrhea treatment failure. The same sorts of prevention messages apply for gonorrhea as for HIV/AIDS: Practice safe sex – correct and consistent use of condoms – and limit the number of sexual partners.

Bacteria may become resistant to antibiotics as a result of overuse or improper use of antimicrobial agents as well as poor-quality versions of these drugs. Strains of gonorrhea in particular appear to have a particularly good ability to become resistant.

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HOW DO YOU KNOW THE PLANE YOU ARE BOARDING IS SAFE?

Read this before you get on that flight. There’s a lot that you do not know about the airline your’re flying.

(CNN) – Beyond a vague familiarity with the world’s major airlines, most travelers know little about the hundreds of carriers transporting passengers across the globe. Sunday’s deadly air crash in Nigeria raises questions about the safety of international airlines. So how do passengers find safety information?

There are several things travelers should look for to gauge an airline’s safety, according to Bill Voss, CEO of the Flight Safety Foundation, an international nonprofit organization.

In short, you’re looking for a Category 1 ranking from the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration and registration with theInternational Air Transport Association, an international trade group. Membership with a major airline alliance helps, and you likely want to avoid airlines banned by the European Union.

The Federal Aviation Administration looks at international aviation regulators. The FAA program assesses the safety standards of the civil aviation authorities of countries with airlines operating in the United States.

“We look at the ability of the aviation authority in the country to administer its aviation community in accordance with international regulations. We don’t look at individual airlines,” said FAA spokesman Les Dorr.

Countries with aviation authorities that meet standards set by the International Civil Aviation Organization receive a Category 1 ranking. Those that don’t receive a Category 2 designation.

Nigeria, the site of the crash that killed more than 160 people, has a Category 1 ranking.

Twenty-five nations, nearly a quarter of those assessed, hold a Category 2 ranking, including the Philippines, Bangladesh, Barbados, Cote D’Ivoire, Ghana, Indonesia and Israel.

The International Civil Aviation Organization, the U.N. agency that defines international standards, also focuses oversight on regulators rather than airlines. The agency has conducted mandatory safety audits of the civil aviation authorities of member countries since 1999. Most countries publish the audits, but it’s not mandatory, “and the ones that you really want to see are the ones that don’t publish,” Voss said.

Despite occasional catastrophic crashes, airline accident rates have seen “massive improvements” in the last few decades, he said.

The global accident rate for commercial air service fluctuated between 3.9 and 4.6 accidents per million departures between 2005 and 2010, according to International Civil Aviation Organization. The agency’s 2011 figures have not been released. In 2010, the global rate was four accidents per million departures.

Africa had the highest regional accident rate in 2010 of 16.8, four times the global average, but Africa accounts for the lowest percentage of global traffic volume. North America’s accident rate, 3.3 per million departures, was below the world average in 2010. The region had the highest number of accidents — 35 — but no fatalities. Europe also had an accident rate of 3.3 per million departures with 24 accidents, two of which included fatalities.

The trade group International Air Transport Association does its own safety audits on air carriers. The organization’s registry is searchable by airline. All of the association’s more than 240 member airlines must meet audit standards to maintain membership.

“(Airlines) who are IATA member carriers actually have a far better safety rate than the industry standard,” Voss said.

Dana Air, the Nigerian carrier involved in Sunday’s crash, does not appear on the registry. Voss said the carrier may have chosen not to be audited or may not have passed.

The cause of Sunday’s accident in Nigeria is still unknown.

The European Union’s “black list” provides another safety benchmark.

The EU takes a more aggressive approach to screening individual carriers and has banned more than 280 airlines from 25 nations from operating within the EU since 2006. African, Indonesian and Philippine airlines figure prominently on the EU’s banned list, as do carriers in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. The EU also has a list of carriers subject to operational restrictions. No Nigerian airlines appear on either list.

Membership in a major alliance, including Star Alliance, SkyTeamand oneworld, can also be considered a reassurance to nervous travelers, Voss said. Member airlines tend to monitor each other, reinforcing high safety standards.

There are no guarantees, but air travel is still much safer than other means of transportation.

“Particularly in the developing world, you have to look at how extraordinarily safe aviation is. Even though an airline might appear a little risky by your Western standards, it could easily be 1,000 times safer than taking the same trip on the road,” Voss said.