�The medicated pain relief plaster,
(Versatis) is now approved by the Scottish Medicines Consortium (SMC) for
restricted use within NHS Scotland for patients hurt pain following
shingles(1) http://www.scottishmedicines.org.uk/smc/5850.hypertext markup language. This
reversal of the previous SMC decision (issued in February 2007) for
Versatis (5% lidocaine medicated plaster) is based on significant new
clinical and cost-effectiveness comparative data and brings prescribing
availability of the treatment in line with England and Wales. These modern
data on Versatis will be presented for the first time at the International
Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) Congress in Glasgow (17-22 August
2008).
The pain that persists for more than trey months later on the onset of
the shingles roseola is called Post-herpetic Neuralgia (PHN) (2). PHN affects
approximately cc,000 people in the UK(3). PHN can be described as an
never-ending burning, stabbing or shot pain. The pain canful start several
weeks or even months after the shingles rash has kaput and can continue for
weeks, months or years(4).
Licensed in the UK in 2007, Versatis offers sustained pain relief
associated with PHN(5). Versatis is an innovative combining of local
analgesic lidocaine and a soft hydrogel plaster. Application of the plaster
to the hide releases an appropriate level of lidocaine into the skin to
impair the transfer of signals which would be associated with the
perception of painful sensation.
Based on clinical trial data, Versatis is secondhand as a continuous
once-daily 12 hours on/12 hours off application schedule for 2-4 weeks and
provides rapid and continuous pain relief from 30 minutes after
application(6).
Dr Michael Serpell, Consultant and Senior Lecturer in Anaesthesia,
Glasgow says: "The new recommendation from the SMC is to be welcomed. New
data supporting the role of Versatis in post-herpetic neuralgy will
further establish that such a novel, non-systemic treatment attack offers
meaning benefits in the old patient grouping who suffer co-morbidities
and consequential polypharmacy".
Heather Wallace, Chairman of Pain Concern commented: "The SMC is to be
congratulated on its revised decision for Versatis. They've taken a huge
stair forward in extending options for pain relief for people living with
neuropathic pain. This decision will alleviate a lot of suffering".
The risk of developing PHN increases with age - it is most common in
people aged over 50. About half of shingles cases affecting multitude of the
age of 65 will cause PHN(7,8).
Prescribing Information
Versatis 5% medicated plaster. Refer to the Summary of Product
Characteristics (SPC) for full details on position effects, warnings and
contra-indications before prescribing. Presentation: Versatis is a
medicated plaster (10cm x 14cm) containing 700 mg (5% w/w) of lidocaine in
an aqueous adhesive base. Indication: Treatment of neuropathic painful sensation
associated with previous herpes zoster infection (post-herpetic neuralgy,
PHN). Dosage and method of governance: Adults and elderly patients: Use
up to ternary plasters for up to 12 hours, followed by at least a 12 hour
plaster-free interval. Cover painful area once daily. Apply the plaster to
intact, dry, non-irritated skin (after healing of the shingles). Remove
hairs in affected area with pair of scissors (do not shave). Remove the plaster
from sachet and its surface ocean liner before applying immediately to the tegument.
Plasters may be edit to sizing. Patients under 18 days: Not recommended.
Contra-indications: Hypersensitivity to active substance, whatever excipients,
or local anaesthetics of amide type (e.g. bupivacaine, etidocaine,
mepivacaine and prilocaine). Warnings and precautions: Do not apply to
ablaze or injured skin (e.g. active herpes shingles lesions, atopic
dermatitis or wounds), mucose membranes or the eyes. Plasters contain
propylene ethylene glycol which may cause skin irritation, methyl group
parahydroxybenzoate and propyl parahydroxybenzoate which may cause allergic
reactions. Use with caution in patients with severe cardiac deadening,
severe renal impairment or severe hepatic impairment. Interactions: No
clinically relevant interactions have been observed in clinical studies.
Absorption of lidocaine from the skin is low. Use with caution in patients
receiving Class I antiarrhythmic drugs (e.g. tocainide, mexitil) or
other local anaesthetics. Pregnancy and lactation: Do not habit during
maternity or nursing. Undesirable personal effects: Very common (greater than
or equalize to 10%): administration internet site reactions (e.g. erythema, rash,
pruritus, burning). Uncommon (>0.1%-less than or equal to 1%): skin injury,
skin lesion. Very rare (less than or equal to 0.01%) but potentially
serious: anaphylaxis, hypersensitivity. Adverse reactions were
predominantly of mild and moderate chroma. Systemic contrary reactions
are unlikely. See SPC for full details. Overdose: Unlikely. If suspected,
remove plasters, provide supportive treatment (see SPC). Legal
classification: POM. Marketing Authorisation number, pile sizes and basic
NHS cost: PL 21727/0016, 30 plasters (GBP 72.40). Marketing Authorisation
Holder: Grunenthal Ltd, Regus Lakeside House, 1 Furzeground Way, Stockley
Park East, Uxbridge, Middlesex, UB11 1BD, UK. Date of school text: June 2008.
V0138
References:
1) Scottish Medicines Consortium, NHS Scotland, internet site:
http://www.herpes.org.uk/shingles/index.hypertext markup language
2) Cunningham, A. and Dworkin, R. (2000) The Management of
post-herpetic neuralgy. BMJ 321, 778-779
3) Shingles Support Society. Bowsher D. Treatment of post-herpetic
neuralgia in the elderly. Available at:
http://www.herpes.org.uk/shingles/index.hTML
4) Herpes Viruses Association. Available at: http://www.herpes.org.uk
5) Versatis Summary of Product Characteristics
6) Baron R et al. Abstract presented at the Congress of the
European Federation of IASP Chapter, Istanbul 2006
7) Shingles Support Society. Bowsher D. Treatment of post-herpetic
neuralgy in the elderly. Available at:
hypertext transfer protocol://www.herpes.org.uk/shingles/index.html
8) http://cks.library.nhs.
Tuesday, 2 September 2008
Saturday, 23 August 2008
El Quickie will stay in the moment
WANTED: Restless thirtysomething L.A. indie cradle seeks likewise situated working musicians for experimental new band with time-sensitive mission. Start now, write 10 to 16 songs flying, record album, make tV and perform first show in less than 60 days. Make big opening splash. Then, break up and go separate ways.
That's the gist of an ad placed on Craigslist July 29 by Giovanny Blanco, former VJ, struggling singer-songwriter, father of two. The concept of a stria with a predetermined life span arose from a documentary he is doing on ageing musicians and what makes them keep on truckin' in this digital age, when any wannabe with a computing device can make music and be heard. For a veteran like Blanco, the project simon Marks a midlife crisis in musician long time, which is like domestic dog years because musicians catch there preferably than everybody else.
This time, Blanco started backward, booking a club date before he had a band, or songs or even a single fan. Whoever joins him testament play Sept. 27 at Club Good Hurt in West L.A. in a show existence billed as the inaugural/farewell concert (debut y despedida) by the band-to-be, named appropriately El Quickie.
The project (or stunt?) comes at a time when the promise of Latin alternative music has faded and the once bustling local aspect has deflated. There ar plenty of talented bands still boot around L.A. but with shrinking expectations. Major labels have long stopped sign language rock en espa�ol bands as they did in the '90s, and only a handful at the top stick around as in use as, say, Mexico's Caf� Tacuba (which was scheduled to play the Greek on Friday).
Paradoxically, though, the demise of the mainstream music industry is the author of the musician's quandary. Today, a band stool stay alive without a label, a manager or even wireless exposure. All it of necessity is a computer and a MySpace page.
"Now 35 is the new 25, and in the industry everything is layer so you can be your own boss," said Blanco, 37. "It's a different landscape and the reality is, yes, we can live doing this, but it becomes more of a struggle."
As ane of the original music hosts on LATV, the independent station aimed at young Latinos, Blanco is among the most placeable faces in L.A.'s Latin alternative fit. And he's one of the most creative as part of the funk fusion span formerly known as Spigga, now Shu-Sho, whose multicultural members are scattered about the nation.
He's been working as a professional musician for more than half his life, starting at 14 as a member of a Menudo-style boy isthmus from his native Dominican Republic called Mermelada.
It's work, especially for bandleaders who handle all the business, be it reservation dates or deciding on album covers. That's wherefore Blanco may as well have added a demand to his ad: Whiners need non apply. First to go were musicians who called and asked how much he was going to pay. They didn't acquire it.
On board so far are guitarist Jose Morales, 32, (No Way Jose) and bassist Mois�s Baqueiro, 38, best known as "Vira Lata" of Los Abandoned, L.A.'s premier Latin alternative band that suddenly disbanded last year. As of Thursday, the Quickies had two finished demos, iV written songs and nine more ideas. They still need a keyboardist, some singers and, especially, a drummer.
"This weekend took a turn for the worst and now I'm a snatch down," Blanco blogged Sunday. "The drummer situation just imploded. We're back to square matchless. . . . WE WILL BE LOOKING FOR DRUMMERS ALL WEEK LONG. We are here, where ar you?"
To understand how Blanco got himself in this reality-show fix, we mustiness backtrack a year.
Just before his 36th birthday, Blanco hit the road with Spigga, touring cross-country in a used Dodge van called the Green Machine. When it was over, he couldn't have back in sync with the normal demands of daily life, like determination a daylight job and raising his daughter Matilda, who was about to turn 1.
Blanco started intuitive feeling slightly downcast, like he couldn't routine anymore. "That's when I started mentation, 'Here I am in my 30s. I've had my contribution of successes, but I'm not Ricky Martin, or whatever,' " recalled Blanco, who would soon foreswear LATV. "What's next?"
To determine the answer, he turned to his second making love, making films, and embarked on the documentary, with plans to plum the motives of other musicians. It would be great if he could follow a band for a couple of years, he thought, merely his budget wouldn't permit it. So was crosshatched El Quickie.
You can watch the project develop on Blanco�s video blogs. That's his girl in the first one and only, grabbing the mike and repeating piano "rock 'n' roll."
It was filmed in his converted garage in the mid-Wilshire country, packed with recording equipment, videos, vinyl radical, movie posters and more than memorabilia of Hall & Oates than seems salubrious for unrivaled collector. The kitschy look of El Quickie, spoofing loungey Latino stereotypes, borrows the buddy-buddy mustache of the much bare-chested John Oates.
The deuce-ace amigos gathered this week at the home Blanco shares with his substantial other, film writer ("Twisted," "See Jane Run") and their growing crime syndicate, now including 5-week-old Franklin. Baqueiro arrived with trey bass guitars, one borrowed from Wil-Dog of Ozomatli. The blab inevitably off to what it substance to make it.
"It's like society dictates, by age 35 you take to accept your have home and your fellowship," said Baqueiro, who's matrimonial with a 9-year-old girl. "If you don't, you're a failure. It's a stigma."
It's not just club. It's category pressures overly. Blanco says some of his relatives don't infer why he doesn't redact together a little merengue band, if he's genuinely serious close to making it. Pop music is so youth-oriented that some members of Los Abandoned lied about their ages, he admits.
Now he's well-chosen he was part of a breakthrough band that got piles of critical praise and a spot on "Late Night With Conan O'Brien." That success allows him now to make a living (nigh) from medicine, every musician's dream.
With the stream lineup and potential, El Quickie could turn out to be special. Still, the guys promise to break up even if they turn out to be an instant smash. They're a little long in the tooth to fall for that.
"We'd be big for a week and they wouldn't miss us after the first show," said Blanco, with no hint of sarcasm. "L.A. is genial of like that."
agustin.gurza
El Quickie's show is Sept. 27 at Club Good Hurt, 12249 Venice Blvd, West Los Angeles.
For information, go to www.myspace.com/elquickie.
More info
That's the gist of an ad placed on Craigslist July 29 by Giovanny Blanco, former VJ, struggling singer-songwriter, father of two. The concept of a stria with a predetermined life span arose from a documentary he is doing on ageing musicians and what makes them keep on truckin' in this digital age, when any wannabe with a computing device can make music and be heard. For a veteran like Blanco, the project simon Marks a midlife crisis in musician long time, which is like domestic dog years because musicians catch there preferably than everybody else.
This time, Blanco started backward, booking a club date before he had a band, or songs or even a single fan. Whoever joins him testament play Sept. 27 at Club Good Hurt in West L.A. in a show existence billed as the inaugural/farewell concert (debut y despedida) by the band-to-be, named appropriately El Quickie.
The project (or stunt?) comes at a time when the promise of Latin alternative music has faded and the once bustling local aspect has deflated. There ar plenty of talented bands still boot around L.A. but with shrinking expectations. Major labels have long stopped sign language rock en espa�ol bands as they did in the '90s, and only a handful at the top stick around as in use as, say, Mexico's Caf� Tacuba (which was scheduled to play the Greek on Friday).
Paradoxically, though, the demise of the mainstream music industry is the author of the musician's quandary. Today, a band stool stay alive without a label, a manager or even wireless exposure. All it of necessity is a computer and a MySpace page.
"Now 35 is the new 25, and in the industry everything is layer so you can be your own boss," said Blanco, 37. "It's a different landscape and the reality is, yes, we can live doing this, but it becomes more of a struggle."
As ane of the original music hosts on LATV, the independent station aimed at young Latinos, Blanco is among the most placeable faces in L.A.'s Latin alternative fit. And he's one of the most creative as part of the funk fusion span formerly known as Spigga, now Shu-Sho, whose multicultural members are scattered about the nation.
He's been working as a professional musician for more than half his life, starting at 14 as a member of a Menudo-style boy isthmus from his native Dominican Republic called Mermelada.
It's work, especially for bandleaders who handle all the business, be it reservation dates or deciding on album covers. That's wherefore Blanco may as well have added a demand to his ad: Whiners need non apply. First to go were musicians who called and asked how much he was going to pay. They didn't acquire it.
On board so far are guitarist Jose Morales, 32, (No Way Jose) and bassist Mois�s Baqueiro, 38, best known as "Vira Lata" of Los Abandoned, L.A.'s premier Latin alternative band that suddenly disbanded last year. As of Thursday, the Quickies had two finished demos, iV written songs and nine more ideas. They still need a keyboardist, some singers and, especially, a drummer.
"This weekend took a turn for the worst and now I'm a snatch down," Blanco blogged Sunday. "The drummer situation just imploded. We're back to square matchless. . . . WE WILL BE LOOKING FOR DRUMMERS ALL WEEK LONG. We are here, where ar you?"
To understand how Blanco got himself in this reality-show fix, we mustiness backtrack a year.
Just before his 36th birthday, Blanco hit the road with Spigga, touring cross-country in a used Dodge van called the Green Machine. When it was over, he couldn't have back in sync with the normal demands of daily life, like determination a daylight job and raising his daughter Matilda, who was about to turn 1.
Blanco started intuitive feeling slightly downcast, like he couldn't routine anymore. "That's when I started mentation, 'Here I am in my 30s. I've had my contribution of successes, but I'm not Ricky Martin, or whatever,' " recalled Blanco, who would soon foreswear LATV. "What's next?"
To determine the answer, he turned to his second making love, making films, and embarked on the documentary, with plans to plum the motives of other musicians. It would be great if he could follow a band for a couple of years, he thought, merely his budget wouldn't permit it. So was crosshatched El Quickie.
You can watch the project develop on Blanco�s video blogs. That's his girl in the first one and only, grabbing the mike and repeating piano "rock 'n' roll."
It was filmed in his converted garage in the mid-Wilshire country, packed with recording equipment, videos, vinyl radical, movie posters and more than memorabilia of Hall & Oates than seems salubrious for unrivaled collector. The kitschy look of El Quickie, spoofing loungey Latino stereotypes, borrows the buddy-buddy mustache of the much bare-chested John Oates.
The deuce-ace amigos gathered this week at the home Blanco shares with his substantial other, film writer ("Twisted," "See Jane Run") and their growing crime syndicate, now including 5-week-old Franklin. Baqueiro arrived with trey bass guitars, one borrowed from Wil-Dog of Ozomatli. The blab inevitably off to what it substance to make it.
"It's like society dictates, by age 35 you take to accept your have home and your fellowship," said Baqueiro, who's matrimonial with a 9-year-old girl. "If you don't, you're a failure. It's a stigma."
It's not just club. It's category pressures overly. Blanco says some of his relatives don't infer why he doesn't redact together a little merengue band, if he's genuinely serious close to making it. Pop music is so youth-oriented that some members of Los Abandoned lied about their ages, he admits.
Now he's well-chosen he was part of a breakthrough band that got piles of critical praise and a spot on "Late Night With Conan O'Brien." That success allows him now to make a living (nigh) from medicine, every musician's dream.
With the stream lineup and potential, El Quickie could turn out to be special. Still, the guys promise to break up even if they turn out to be an instant smash. They're a little long in the tooth to fall for that.
"We'd be big for a week and they wouldn't miss us after the first show," said Blanco, with no hint of sarcasm. "L.A. is genial of like that."
agustin.gurza
El Quickie's show is Sept. 27 at Club Good Hurt, 12249 Venice Blvd, West Los Angeles.
For information, go to www.myspace.com/elquickie.
More info
Wednesday, 13 August 2008
Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report Highlights Recent Health Care-Related Laws
�
Two newspapers recently reported on new health care-related laws created in New Jersey. Summaries of the articles appear below.
Hospitals: Gov. Jon Corzine (D) on Friday signed legislation that creates an early warning system to help identify hospitals having difficulty maintaining solvency, the AP/Philadelphia Inquirer reports. Four acute care hospitals in the state have closed in this year because of financial problems. The new law gives the res publica Department of Health and Senior Services the authority required to access hospitals' financial information to monitor their solvency. State Sen. Robert Gordon (D) aforementioned the police force will grant the department to "have an early warning when a hospital becomes fiscally unstable and will be able to intervene before the fiscal instability gives way to fiscal insolvency, and still another health care facility in the Garden State has to close its doors forever and a day" (AP/Philadelphia Inquirer, 8/10).
Uninsured: Corzine also signed a billhook that prohibits hospitals from charging uninsured patients more than 15% of what Medicare would pay for their discussion, the Bergen Record reports. According to the Record, Medicare pays about 25% to 30% of what hospitals usually charge. Corzine in a statement said that the law "will ensure that working poor families without health insurance are not overcharged for needed hospital care." Uninsured patients often are supercharged the highest rates because they are not able-bodied to take advantage of discounts negotiated by turgid insurers (Washburn, Bergen Record, 8/8).
Reprinted with kind permission from hypertext transfer protocol://www.kaisernetwork.org. You can scene the full Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for email saving at hypertext transfer protocol://www.kaisernetwork.
Two newspapers recently reported on new health care-related laws created in New Jersey. Summaries of the articles appear below.
Hospitals: Gov. Jon Corzine (D) on Friday signed legislation that creates an early warning system to help identify hospitals having difficulty maintaining solvency, the AP/Philadelphia Inquirer reports. Four acute care hospitals in the state have closed in this year because of financial problems. The new law gives the res publica Department of Health and Senior Services the authority required to access hospitals' financial information to monitor their solvency. State Sen. Robert Gordon (D) aforementioned the police force will grant the department to "have an early warning when a hospital becomes fiscally unstable and will be able to intervene before the fiscal instability gives way to fiscal insolvency, and still another health care facility in the Garden State has to close its doors forever and a day" (AP/Philadelphia Inquirer, 8/10).
Uninsured: Corzine also signed a billhook that prohibits hospitals from charging uninsured patients more than 15% of what Medicare would pay for their discussion, the Bergen Record reports. According to the Record, Medicare pays about 25% to 30% of what hospitals usually charge. Corzine in a statement said that the law "will ensure that working poor families without health insurance are not overcharged for needed hospital care." Uninsured patients often are supercharged the highest rates because they are not able-bodied to take advantage of discounts negotiated by turgid insurers (Washburn, Bergen Record, 8/8).
Reprinted with kind permission from hypertext transfer protocol://www.kaisernetwork.org. You can scene the full Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for email saving at hypertext transfer protocol://www.kaisernetwork.
Wednesday, 6 August 2008
Norther

Artist: Norther
Genre(s):
Metal: Death,Black
Metal
Discography:

Till Death Unites Us
Year: 2006
Tracks: 12

Solution 7
Year: 2005
Tracks: 4

Spreading Death (CDS)
Year: 2004
Tracks: 2

Death Unlimited
Year: 2004
Tracks: 12

Unleash Hell
Year: 2003
Tracks: 1

Mirror Of Madness
Year: 2003
Tracks: 9
Anti-Heroes
Thursday, 26 June 2008
Sven Wittekind And Friends

Artist: Sven Wittekind And Friends
Genre(s):
Techno
Discography:

Beasted Boys Vol 2 Vinyl
Year: 2006
Tracks: 3
Wednesday, 18 June 2008
Panic At The Disco, Snoop Dogg launch MTV music programme
Panic At The Disco will be joined on stage by Snoop Dogg as the first performers on a new weekly music programme hosted by Fall Out Boy's Pete Wentz.
'F'N MTV' premieres tomorrow (June 13) at 8pm PST/EST on MTV, and features a live performance from Panic At The Disco as well as video premieres from Snoop Dogg, The Ting Tings, The Pussycat Dolls and Flo-Rida, who will all be on-hand to introduce their videos.
Viewers can vote on the videos and upload their own re-imagined versions of them to the web.
"Having people interact with anything we're doing makes us feel complete as a band," Ting Tings' Jules De Martino told NME.COM. "It's very much about creating new ways people can get involved."
The Ting Tings' 'Shut Up And Let Me Go' video will premiere tomorrow. "We wanted to make a Kung Fu video because we've been watching a lot of Stephen Chow videos like 'Kung Fu Hustle'," De Martino explained. "We're also into using a lot of layers, shapes and colours."
The programme is scheduled to air on MTV every Friday night throughout the summer. Next week's show will feature Vampire Weekend and Duffy.
"We're bringing music videos back to MTV on a Friday night," Wentz said. "I was raised on music videos, they made me who I am today," he added.
The premiere programme will also feature a spoof segment in which Snoop Dogg gives Wentz and his new bride Ashlee Simpson tips on how to raise their forthcoming child, including putting the baby's crib in the garage so it doesn't wake them and nursing the baby with malt liquor.
--By our Los Angeles staff.
Find out more about NME.
'F'N MTV' premieres tomorrow (June 13) at 8pm PST/EST on MTV, and features a live performance from Panic At The Disco as well as video premieres from Snoop Dogg, The Ting Tings, The Pussycat Dolls and Flo-Rida, who will all be on-hand to introduce their videos.
Viewers can vote on the videos and upload their own re-imagined versions of them to the web.
"Having people interact with anything we're doing makes us feel complete as a band," Ting Tings' Jules De Martino told NME.COM. "It's very much about creating new ways people can get involved."
The Ting Tings' 'Shut Up And Let Me Go' video will premiere tomorrow. "We wanted to make a Kung Fu video because we've been watching a lot of Stephen Chow videos like 'Kung Fu Hustle'," De Martino explained. "We're also into using a lot of layers, shapes and colours."
The programme is scheduled to air on MTV every Friday night throughout the summer. Next week's show will feature Vampire Weekend and Duffy.
"We're bringing music videos back to MTV on a Friday night," Wentz said. "I was raised on music videos, they made me who I am today," he added.
The premiere programme will also feature a spoof segment in which Snoop Dogg gives Wentz and his new bride Ashlee Simpson tips on how to raise their forthcoming child, including putting the baby's crib in the garage so it doesn't wake them and nursing the baby with malt liquor.
--By our Los Angeles staff.
Find out more about NME.
Monday, 9 June 2008
Amy Winehouse: 'I haven't sacked my band'
Amy Winehouse has responded to tabloid newspaper claims that she had a "gig from hell" recently and ended up blamed her backing band.
The star played a gig at the Rock in Rio Lisboa event in Portugal on Saturday (May 31).
The Daily Star called the show the "gig from hell", and claimed that after the show the singer threatened to sack her backing band.
Winehouse has responded to the claims today by releasing a statement refuting them. "I was really upset that anyone would suggest that I would act that way to my band," her statement read.
"My band are my family and I did not 'scream' at my horn players and would never be 'sick of the sight of them'. We have been through a lot together and I would never lose my temper in that way with them."
Speaking about her perceived poor performance at the show, Winehouse said in the statement: "I suffered from a sore throat all week and was given the option to cancel. But I was determined to show my fans that I was back and working.
"I'm looking forward to my remaining dates throughout the summer."
The star played a gig at the Rock in Rio Lisboa event in Portugal on Saturday (May 31).
The Daily Star called the show the "gig from hell", and claimed that after the show the singer threatened to sack her backing band.
Winehouse has responded to the claims today by releasing a statement refuting them. "I was really upset that anyone would suggest that I would act that way to my band," her statement read.
"My band are my family and I did not 'scream' at my horn players and would never be 'sick of the sight of them'. We have been through a lot together and I would never lose my temper in that way with them."
Speaking about her perceived poor performance at the show, Winehouse said in the statement: "I suffered from a sore throat all week and was given the option to cancel. But I was determined to show my fans that I was back and working.
"I'm looking forward to my remaining dates throughout the summer."
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