Saturday, March 31, 2012
Diabetes Drug Metformin Might Also Help Fight Cancer
U.S. Advisers Say It's Now Safe to Publish Bird Flu Studies
SATURDAY, March 31 (HealthDay News) -- Research on a mutated, more contagious form of the bird flu virus can be published in full, U.S. government biosecurity advisers said Friday, despite initial concerns that bioterrorists could use the information to start a pandemic.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Friday, March 30, 2012
Facial Masks Made From Home: 4 Recipes With Honey, Banana, Papaya and Carrot
CDC: Ads spark huge increase to quit smoking line
More than twice as many people called a toll-free number to help them quit smoking a week after the launch of a $54 million ad campaign that shows graphic images of diseased smokers, federal health officials said Friday.
Source: news.yahoo.com
The Danger Of Making Conclusions From Single Patients
By Gary Stix
(Click here for the original article)
Our current understanding of how the brain works often borrows from observations of the anomalous patient. The iron rod that penetrated Phineas Gage’s head made the once emotionally balanced railroad foreman impulsive and profane. But it gave neurologists clues as to the role of the brain’s frontal lobes in exercising self-control. The epilepsy surgery that removed Henry Molaison’s hippocampus opened a whole new line of research about memory.
Still, conclusions about mental processes from single patients arrive freighted with unavoidable risk. Neuroscientists can’t replicate what they find in neurologically damaged patients by removing a frontal lobe or hippocampus from other research subjects without planning for significant downtime in a state or federal prison.
That means that what we think we learn from an initial examination of a Gage or a Molaison may be less than meets the eye. The cautionary lessons of single-case neuroscience were underlined in a recent paper in Neuropsychologia by Marc Himmelbach and two colleagues at the Hertie-Institute for Clinical Brain Research, part of Eberhard Karls University in Tübingen, Germany.
The team took another look at the well-known case of D.F., a woman who suffered brain damage more than 20 years ago from carbon monoxide. D.F.’s entry into the case history annals came about because, as a result of her injuries, she could not recognize everyday objects, a condition called visual agnosia, yet she was still able to grasp them.
The observed disparity between recognition and motor skill control is the basis for what is called “action-perception dissociation.” This separation of visual processing purports to explain why, for instance, even though you cannot perceive a fly ball decelerating, your motor control system still responds accordingly so that you can snag it in your glove.
In D.F.’s case, after her visual cortex, located at the back of your head, receives inputs from the eye, it appears to relay a faulty signal to the temporal lobes on both sides of the brain, which impedes recognition of an object. By contrast, a second signal seems to travel unimpaired from the visual cortex to the parietal lobe at the top of the head, enabling the object to be grasped.
Himmelbach and his collaborators reran the experiment by taking 20 healthy women and putting them through the same set of tests administered to D.F., including tasks such as grasping blocks. They then compared the results from these new experiments with the original tests on D.F. and discovered that she was substantially impaired, not just on recognition, but on tasks involving motor skills as well. That finding undercuts the theory that the two pathways function independently and suggests that there may be significant overlap between them. “The problem was that the main motif of the theory built on D.F., the action vs. perception disassociation, is so simple and straightforward that it can be easily be communicated to a wider non-specialist audience,” Himmelbach says in an e-mail. The paper adds that there has been other work that confirms this neurophysiological model. But, again, the case of D.F. complicates this picture as well. “…many of these findings do not provide unequivocal evidence in favor of or against the dual visual steam hypothesis without reference to D.F. and could also be integrated by alternative models that do not explicitly state an action-perception disassociation,” the authors write.
Other famous single-cases have also come up for second looks. Molaison, often referred to as simply HM, could generally not store new memories of an event or a building’s spatial layout, but could learn new skills. Himmelbach pointed out that a reassessment of Molaison’s impairment showed that he eventually learned to negotiate the rooms of the house he lived in, proof that he could sometimes form spatial memories. “He had problems whenever he had to learn something in a limited time with a limited number of repetitions and he was better whenever he was allowed to learn the very same thing over and over again for a long time,” Himmelbach says. Similarly, Gage’s accident-acquired social ineptness reportedly diminished as time passed, though he was never adequately examined to determine the extent of change in his cognitive abilities.
In every instance, the outcome was probably not as clear-cut as the textbook accounts suggest. “The main problem of single-case research lies in the selective reporting of data and simplification of equivocal findings, Himmelbach says. “This is a problem for all research techniques, but for single-case research the independent replication of original findings is a particular problem as it is very unlikely that an independent group of researchers gets access to another single case with more or less identical characteristics.” The message conveyed: Looking at a single individual, though often vitally useful, can turn perilous if over-reliance on these observations becomes the foundation for new models of how complex brain circuits function.
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Source: www.huffingtonpost.com
Two-Thirds of Kids With Autism Have Been Bullied: Study
FRIDAY, March 30 (HealthDay News) -- Nearly two-thirds of American children with autism have been bullied at some point in their lives, and these kids are bullied three times more often than their siblings without autism, a new survey finds.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Collagen, Natures Glue
Thursday, March 29, 2012
New York Bans Synthetic Pot; Nation Should Follow Suit
Electroacupuncture may be effective for depression: study
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Boosting the effect of acupuncture needles with small electric currents may be effective in treating depression, a study in Hong Kong has found. Led by Zhang Zhang-jin at the School of Chinese Medicine, University of Hong Kong, the researchers used electroacupuncture to stimulate seven spots on the heads of 73 participants, who had suffered several bouts of depression in the last 7 years. The electroacupuncture was given in addition to medication that the patients were already taking and meant to augment their treatment, Zhang told a news conference. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
U.S. Cancer Death Rates Continue to Fall: Report
First Person: Our Long-Term Retirement Planning Goals
Like most people who invest, my wife and I suffered through two very bad financial years in 2008 and 2011. Our retirement accounts fell as much as others' did, and we wondered each time if we should take our money out to protect it. Our financial adviser reminded us each time to remember the long-term goals. Trends fluctuate, but over the twenty-five years that we will have the fund before retiring, the money will grow even considering some down times.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Gynecologists urged to screen for heart disease
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Screening women for heart disease at obstetrics and gynecology clinics may detect cardiovascular risk and head off heart problems for women who do not see a primary care physician, researchers said. Many women do not have a primary care physician but seek out basic OB/GYN services, the researchers said. Women often are undertreated or unaware of risk factors for heart disease, yet it is the leading cause of death among women in the United States. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
Mild Sunburn Remedies
In the northern hemisphere throughout the summer, when the sun's at its highest level, people are at the highest risk of developing a sunburn. We spend hours out on the beach perfecting our tans and pay the price for it if we're not careful enough to protect ourselves. Even a few minutes for fair skinned individuals can be enough to get a hot pink luminance across our hides. What can we do to both prevent sunburns and what can be applied to heal them when they occur? This article will outline some mild sunburn remedies that can be used for people who suffer from them.
Source: EzineArticles.com
Painkiller Opana, new scourge of rural America
AUSTIN, Indiana (Reuters) - Back in high school in Houston, Texas, C.J. Coomer got good grades and played football. He was dark-haired and handsome, popular with his friends and doted on by his family. But when his mother got divorced and moved to be near family in rural Scott County, Indiana, Coomer began running with a crowd there that abused prescription painkillers to get high. His weight dropped from 210 pounds to just 140 pounds (64 kg), he couldn't work, and was constantly borrowing money. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Mild Sunburn Remedies
In the northern hemisphere throughout the summer, when the sun's at its highest level, people are at the highest risk of developing a sunburn. We spend hours out on the beach perfecting our tans and pay the price for it if we're not careful enough to protect ourselves. Even a few minutes for fair skinned individuals can be enough to get a hot pink luminance across our hides. What can we do to both prevent sunburns and what can be applied to heal them when they occur? This article will outline some mild sunburn remedies that can be used for people who suffer from them.
Source: EzineArticles.com
Supreme Court reviews Obama health care law
Monday, March 26, 2012
Many young cancer patients don't discuss fertility
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Young women with cancer often aren't counseled about the risk of losing their fertility due to treatment or their options for saving their eggs, a new study from California suggests. Researchers found that since the early 1990s, only one in every 25 women diagnosed with cancer at age 40 or younger decided to go through with egg- or embryo-freezing procedures, even though at least half said they'd like to have kids after treatment. "More times than not it's still the patient that is basically saying, 'This is important to me,'" said Dr. ...
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'Freezing' Secondary Breast Cancer Tumors Shows Promise
MONDAY, March 26 (HealthDay News) -- In a small and preliminary study, researchers report that they successfully froze secondary tumors in patients with incurable breast cancer.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Some drugs less harsh than others for IBS: study
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A new look at past research suggests that certain drugs used to treat irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) may come with fewer side effects as a price for providing relief. The new findings are based on 26 studies that compared benefits and "harms" of five different drugs used to treat IBS, a condition in which patients experience stomach pain with either diarrhea or constipation. "We do know that a lot of these drugs have side effects," said Dr. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Sunday, March 25, 2012
Daily headaches common in soldiers after concussion
Low 'Bad' Cholesterol Levels May Be Linked to Cancer Risk
SUNDAY, March 25 (HealthDay News) -- There may be a link between low levels of "bad" low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol and increased cancer risk, according to new research.
Source: news.yahoo.com
China diabetics raise stakes for healthcare reform
BEIJING (Reuters) - In 30 years, the Chinese people have gone from having barely enough to eat to worrying about spreading waistlines, leaving the healthcare system struggling to keep up with an exponential rise in "nobleman diseases" like diabetes. The soaring cost of chronic disease could tax China's effort to offer basic healthcare to 1.4 billion people. Almost one out of every eight Chinese households was racked by catastrophic health expenses in 2011, according to a paper published in medical journal The Lancet. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
China diabetics raise stakes for healthcare reform
BEIJING (Reuters) - In 30 years, the Chinese people have gone from having barely enough to eat to worrying about spreading waistlines, leaving the healthcare system struggling to keep up with an exponential rise in "nobleman diseases" like diabetes. The soaring cost of chronic disease could tax China's effort to offer basic healthcare to 1.4 billion people. Almost one out of every eight Chinese households was racked by catastrophic health expenses in 2011, according to a paper published in medical journal The Lancet. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Cheney recovering after heart transplant: spokeswoman
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former Vice President Dick Cheney is recovering in a Virginia hospital after undergoing a heart transplant on Saturday, a spokeswoman for Cheney said in an email. Cheney, 71, who served as vice president in the George W. Bush administration, has had a long history of heart trouble. The spokeswoman said Cheney was recovering in the intensive care unit of Inova Fairfax Hospital in Falls Church, Virginia, a suburb of Washington. The statement said Cheney and his family do not know the identity of the donor, but "they will be forever grateful for this lifesaving gift. ...
Credit of the story
Breast cancer fundraising lags after abortion dispute
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. breast cancer charity Susan G. Komen for the Cure is feeling a pinch on donations following a controversy over its funding for Planned Parenthood, a leading provider of birth-control and abortion services. A few of the group's flagship "Race for the Cure" fundraising events have failed to meet targets, a Komen spokeswoman said on Friday. Separately, at least five of the group's leaders have stepped down in recent weeks. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Friday, March 23, 2012
Patient Sexual History Key to Good Ob-Gyn Care
Treating Gum Disease May Help Diabetics Avoid Complications
FRIDAY, March 23 (HealthDay News) -- Treating gum disease in people with diabetes reduces their medical costs and hospitalizations, new research shows.
Source: news.yahoo.com
How To Achieve And Maintain Clear Skin
Everyone would love to have healthy and clear skin. The number of products available in the market today is a testament to the importance people attach to having healthy layer of skin. Both women and men are constantly trying to learn tips on how to keep up or make good skin conditions.
Source: EzineArticles.com
Roche to cut prices of two cancer drugs in India: report
(Reuters) - Roche Holding AG will cut the price of two cancer drugs in India from 2013, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday, days after an Indian drugmaker was allowed to make and sell a blockbuster cancer drug at a fraction of its market price. Tuygan Goeker, head of Middle East and Asian markets at Roche, named the drugs as Herceptin and Mabthera, the wholesale costs of which are about $3,000 to $4,500 a month per patient. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Funding cuts put 3.4 million TB patients at risk: NGOs
What To Look For In A Good Psoriasis Cream
New Guidelines: No Antibiotics for Sinus Infections
Secondhand smoke again tied to asthma in kids
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A fresh look at past studies suggests kids who live with a smoker are more likely to wheeze or get asthma, providing more evidence for the link between secondhand smoke and breathing problems. Researchers found that the biggest effect on wheeze and asthma symptoms was seen in babies and toddlers whose moms smoked while they were pregnant or soon after kids were born. The findings don't prove that secondhand smoke caused kids to get asthma, but they add to other research suggesting smoke exposure may trigger respiratory problems in youngsters, researchers said. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Bloomberg to give $220M to world tobacco control
Michael Bloomberg, the billionaire who has made reducing smoking one of his signature causes as mayor of New York City, is committing $220 million to his charity to go toward reducing tobacco use in countries that are home to millions of smokers.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Research Spots Potential New Target in Fight Against Baldness
WEDNESDAY, March 21 (HealthDay News) -- Men worried about encroaching baldness, take heart: A genetic analysis of tissue taken from both bald and hairier spots on men's scalps has identified a protein involved in male pattern hair loss.
Source: news.yahoo.com
All-Natural Facial Mask Recipe Just for You
More Evidence Shows That Daily Aspirin Might Combat Cancer
TUESDAY, March 20 (HealthDay News) -- Aspirin, a popular weapon in the war against heart attacks, may also play a role in cancer prevention and treatment, three new British studies suggest.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Fatty Meals Could Trigger Inflammation for Diabetics
98% Of Sinus Infections Caused By Viruses, New Guidelines Say
Have a sinus infection? Antibiotics shouldn't be your go-to treatment, according to a new set of guidelines from the Infectious Diseases Society of America. Turns out, anywhere from 90 to 90 percent of the infections aren't caused by bacteria, meaning antibiotics won't work.
"There is no simple test that will easily and quickly determine whether a sinus infection is viral or bacterial, so many physicians prescribe antibiotics 'just in case,'" guidelines panel chair Dr. Anthony W. Chow, MD, a professor emeritus of infectious diseases at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, explained in a statement.
The panel included experts from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the American College of Physicians and the Society of Academic Medicine. The guidelines will be published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.
But if the sinus infection is actually caused by a virus, taking antibiotics wouldn't help at all and could even increase antibiotic resistance, he added.
According to the Infectious Diseases Society of America, sinus infections -- also known as acute rhinosinusitis -- are diagnosed in nearly one out of every seven people each year, and are the No. 5 reason people are prescribed antibiotics. They are caused by nasal and sinus passage inflammation, and most often occur after a person has experienced a cold or cold-like sickness.
Symptoms of a sinus infection include headache, sore throat, stuffed-up nose and/or a runny nose, bad breath, fatigue, postnasal drip, cough and even fever, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The CDC notes on its page on sinus infections that people should see a doctor if they have symptoms lasting more than 10 days, or regular OTC medicines aren't helping at all. Kids who have a fever of 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit or higher should also see a doctor.
The new guidelines urge doctors to treat sinus infections by prescribing amoxicillin-clavulanate to patients instead of just amoxicillin (which is how sinus infections are currently treated) in order to help overcome antibiotic resistance. The guidelines also urge doctors not to use other commonly prescribed antibiotics, such as clarithromycin, azithromycin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole because of antibiotic resistance.
The guidelines also include ways for doctors to tell the difference between virus-caused sinus infections and bacteria-caused sinus infections. A bacteria-caused sinus infection -- which deserves treatment with antibiotics -- is one that has symptoms lasting longer than 10 days without getting any better. Other signs include when severe symptoms last for three or four consecutive days, or when the symptoms get worse.
The guidelines also urge doctors to treat with antibiotics for just five to seven days, rather than the previously recommended 10 to 14 days.
Recently, the Journal of the American Medical Association published a study showing that antibiotics don't work most of the time against sinus infections, Reuters reported.
"Rather than give everybody an antibiotic hoping to find the ones with bacteria, our findings would suggest refraining from antibiotics and doing what we call watchful waiting," study researcher Dr. Jane Garbutt, of the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, told Reuters.
Just last week, World Health Organization Director General Dr. Margaret Chan spoke at a conference, explaining how antibiotic resistance is making diseases more difficult to treat, ABC News reported.
"We are losing our first-line antimicrobials," ABC News reported Chan saying. "Replacement treatments are more costly, more toxic, need much longer durations of treatment, and may require treatment in intensive care units."
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Tuesday, March 20, 2012
White Rice Type 2 Diabetes Scare Should Be Kept in Perspective
COMMENTARY | The British Medical Journal found links between white rice and Type 2 diabetes, News Inferno reports. Rice is high on the glycemic index. The more white rice consumed, the greater the risk. In Asian countries that's a concern. In the U.S., we eat far less rice. Type 2 diabetes links are a cause for concern, but we need to keep it in perspective.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Despite GOP Claims, High Gas Prices Are Not Obama's Fault
Monday, March 19, 2012
Clooney's Cell Mate: Actor Gave Brad Pitt's Name During Arrest
When George Clooney was arrested on Friday during a protest at the Sudanese Embassy in Washington, D.C., the actor allegedly tried to pin his crime on pal Brad Pitt.
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Appeals Court Backs FDA Move for Graphic Images on Cigarette Packs
MONDAY, March 19 (HealthDay News) -- In the latest salvo in the battle over U.S. government plans to put graphic anti-smoking images on cigarette packs, a federal appeals court has upheld the proposed changes.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Working out in the early hours
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Night owls, insomniacs, shift workers and other denizens of the dark are finding less need to fit their workout time into the nine-to-five world. More gyms are remaining open round the clock, experts say, spurred by advances in surveillance and security technology, clients' ever more fluid work habits and a generation of multi-tasking consumers. "A lot of people work untraditional times and they take advantage of clubs open at all hours," said Carl Liebert, CEO of 24 Hour Fitness, an international chain of health clubs, most of them open around the clock. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Meth Babies Have Higher Risk For Behavior Problems, Study Finds
CHICAGO -- The first study to look at methamphetamine's potential lasting effects on children whose mothers used it in pregnancy finds these kids at higher risk for behavior problems than other children.
The behavior differences – anxiety, depression, moodiness – weren't huge, but lead researcher Linda LaGasse called them "very worrisome."
Methamphetamine is a stimulant like crack cocaine, and earlier research showed meth babies have similarities to so-called "crack babies" – smaller in size and prone to drowsiness and stress. Results in long-term studies conflict on whether children of cocaine-using mothers have lasting behavior problems.
Whether problems persist in young children of meth users is unknown. But LaGasse, who does research at Brown University's Center of the Study of Children at Risk, said methamphetamine has stronger effects on the brain so it may be more likely to cause lasting effects in children.
The study was published online Monday in Pediatrics. The National Institutes of Health paid for the research, including a grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
Government data suggest more than 10 million Americans have used meth; fewer than 1 percent of pregnant women are users.
Joseph Frascella, who heads a behavioral division at the National Institute on Drug Abuse, said the research is among "groundbreaking" studies examining effects of substance abuse during pregnancy.
But because the study is a first, the results should be viewed cautiously and need to be repeated, he said.
The study of children tracked from age 3 through 5 builds on earlier research by LaGasse on the same group – 330 youngsters tracked in the Midwest and West, areas where meth use is most common. Mothers were recruited shortly after giving birth in Des Moines, Iowa; Honolulu, Los Angeles, and Tulsa, Okla. They were asked about prenatal meth use and newborns' stools were tested for evidence of the drug. Effects in children exposed to the drug were compared with those whose mothers didn't use meth. Both groups were high-risk children, with many living in disadvantaged homes.
Mothers or other caregivers completed a widely used checklist asking how often kids showed many kinds of troublesome behavior.
At age 3, scores for anxiety, depression and moodiness were slightly higher in meth-users' children. These differences persisted at age 5. The older children who'd been exposed to meth also had more aggression and attention problems similar to ADHD, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Mothers were asked about symptoms, but not if their kids had ever been diagnosed with behavior disorders.
More than half of the mothers who'd used meth during pregnancy also used it afterwards. These women also were more likely to use other drugs during and after pregnancy and to be single mothers. But the researchers said accounting for those differences and others in the two groups' family lives didn't change the results.
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Active seniors may outlive sedentary peers
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A new study provides more evidence that physically active seniors may have a better overall health outlook. Out of 893 people around 80 years old, researchers found that the most active seniors had a lower risk of dying over the four-year study compared to those who moved the least. "It's another strong piece of evidence that all seniors should be participating in physical activities," said Dr. Catherine Sarkisian, director of the Los Angeles Community Academic Partnership for Research in Aging. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Sunday, March 18, 2012
History of Skincare Part 17: Queen Victoria and the Romantic Era, 1850-1899
The ideal Romantic lady wanted to appear pale, frail and helpless, liable to faint at any time. Women went to great lengths to protect their skin from the sun and applied small amounts of lip rouge, lampblack eyeshadow and zinc oxide skin whitener. By the end of the century, soap was widely available and every middle class family had a bathroom in their home.
Source: EzineArticles.com
Doctors' life-support skills fade after training
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Doctors and nurses are trained in how to save a cardiac arrest victim's life, but those skills can fade quickly if they're not used, a new study shows. In a review of 11 international studies, researchers found that health providers' skills in advanced life support typically deteriorated six months to a year after training, based on test performance. That's concerning, since the standard guideline calls for re-training every two years, note the researchers, led by Dr. Matthew Huei-Ming Ma of National Taiwan University Hospital. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Saturday, March 17, 2012
Doctors' life-support skills fade after training
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Doctors and nurses are trained in how to save a cardiac arrest victim's life, but those skills can fade quickly if they're not used, a new study shows. In a review of 11 international studies, researchers found that health providers' skills in advanced life support typically deteriorated six months to a year after training, based on test performance. That's concerning, since the standard guideline calls for re-training every two years, note the researchers, led by Dr. Matthew Huei-Ming Ma of National Taiwan University Hospital. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
US government readies new contraceptives language
Utah Governor Vetoes Abstinence-Only Sex Education Bill
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Chavez back in Venezuela after cancer surgery
President Hugo Chavez returned home to Venezuela looking haggard but expressing optimism he will survive after undergoing cancer surgery in Cuba.
Original Source
Friday, March 16, 2012
Ford: 1,700 workers take early retirement offer
DETROIT (Reuters) - About 1,700 Ford Motor Co's workers accepted early retirement offers and most of them will leave the No. 2 U.S. automaker by June 1. The buyouts were offered as part of the Ford's contract talks with the United Auto Workers last fall. Ford employs 41,000 UAW-represented workers. Ford offered $50,000 to eligible production workers who retired by March 31, 2012. The company also offered a $100,000 bonus for skilled trade workers who retired by that date. Ford spokeswoman Marcey Evans said Ford expects the "majority" of employees who agreed to the buyout to leave by June 1. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
A Midsummer Night's Facial Serum
Arianna Huffington To Speak At The Aging In America Conference
How will the coming boomer "gerontocracy" change America? On April 1, a panel of five experts, including Arianna Huffington, President and Editor-in-Chief of AOL Huffington Post Media Group, will discuss the topic at the American Society on Aging's annual conference in Washington, D.C.
The session titled "How the Boomers Will Transform Aging and How Aging Will Transform the Boomers" is free and open to the first 200 people to RSVP. The session will be held at the Marriott Wardman Park Ballroom from 9:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. To reserve your seat, send an email to info@asaging.org.
The panel will address a number of topics, including: How will maturity change as tens of millions of us live to 80, 90 or 100+? How will the boomers’ celebration of “middlescence” shift the cultural epicenter while redefining all of life’s stages? Who will pay for the multiplying needs of a multiplying cohort of older adults? Are we prepared to reengineer many of our products and services to meet the needs of maturing boomer consumers? Will boomers become more self-indulgent or more socially generous as they age? How will boomers deal with “right-to-death” issues? Can our political system handle the demands that tens of millions of elder boomers will place on our social and economic infrastructure?
The other panelists include Ken Dychtwald, President and CEO, Age Wave; Gail Sheehy, Author and Columnist; Fernando Torres-Gil, MSW, PhD, Professor of Social Welfare and Public Policy and Director, UCLA Center for Policy Research on Aging, UCLA School of Public Affairs; and Rhonda L. Randall, D.O., Chief Medical Officer, UnitedHealthcare Medicare & Retirement.
Source: www.huffingtonpost.com
Health Tip: Celiac Disease May Trigger These Symptoms
(HealthDay News) -- Celiac disease is caused by an intolerance to gluten, a protein found in wheat, rye, barley and many other foods.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Cost body backs Novartis MS pill in about-turn
LONDON (Reuters) - Novartis's multiple sclerosis pill Gilenya, one of its top new drug hopes, has been recommended for use in the state health service after a change of heart by the country's healthcare cost-effectiveness watchdog. Friday's verdict from the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE), whose opinions are also watched closely in other countries, is welcome news for a product that has run into problems recently. ...
Courtesy of Yahoo News
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Common medicines may cut cancer drug potency: study
(Reuters) - Many patients taking a widely prescribed class of oral cancer drugs are also using a variety of medications that could reduce the effectiveness of the cancer treatment or increase its toxic side effects, according to research by Medco Health Solutions Inc. For example, 43 percent of patients taking the highly effective leukemia drug Gleevec were also on another medicine that could diminish its efficacy, while 68 percent were taking something that could potentially raise the toxicity level, the study found. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
7 Anti Cellulite Products
Today, there are many anti cellulite products in the market. You will get anti cellulite gels, creams, lotions, pills among other products in almost every store around you. This page has only mentioned a few of the uncountable anti cellulite products.
Source: EzineArticles.com
Get up off from the couch
The subsequent finest approach to shed weight would be to get up off in the couch and get moving! Regardless of whether you take a power walk outside or invest inside a treadmill, attempt to spend a minimum of 10 to 15 minutes every day moving around. Walk around your neighborhood and say hello to some neighbors that you forgot existed. Don’t want to venture outside for some reason? Get on the treadmill for at least ten minutes. Don’t kill oneself – but get moving. Before you know it, the alterations that you commit to creating won’t only enable you to shed weight, but just could change your life in numerous other healthful ways at the same time.
One more health concern is about how to prevent arthritis.
Tags: arthritis, cure arthritis, how to prevent arthritis, prevent, prevent arthritis
Source: www.articlesannounced.com
The Body Politic: This campaign needs more women and less gynecology
It's time we sidelined the fine points of obstetrics from public discourse in an election year. Just as girlie magazines are marketed to male readers, public discourse that features women's body parts should be clearly labeled—as Playboy used to be—"Entertainment for Men."
Source: news.yahoo.com
Diseases from imported food on the rise: CDC
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Food-borne disease outbreaks in the United States caused by imports seemed to rise in 2009 and 2010, with fish and spices the most common sources, the Centers for Disease Control said. Almost half of the outbreaks, or localized epidemics, pointed to foods imported from areas that had not been linked to outbreaks before, the CDC said in a statement. ...
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Gates Foundation gives $220 mln for TB research
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Chuck Schumer Says Senate Will Vote On Violence Against Women Act
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Source: www.huffingtonpost.com
Watching Movie Stars Light Up May Spur Kids to Smoke
Bishops, White House talks snarl on treatment of faith-based groups
Bayer sees healthcare business driving growth
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - German chemicals and drugs group Bayer expects higher profit margins and sales at its healthcare division over the next three years, where product launches are set to boost prescription drug sales by 16 percent. The healthcare division, which also makes non-prescription and animal health drugs, contrast agents and blood glucose meters, is aiming for sales of roughly 20 billion euros ($26.2 billion) in 2014, up from 17.2 billion euros last year, Germany's largest drugmaker said on Wednesday. ...
Courtesy of Yahoo News
No rise in heart deaths after 2008 market crash-in LA
(Reuters) - The 2008 stock market crash generated a lot of stress, but it did not trigger a spike in heart attack deaths -- at least, not in Los Angeles, according to a study. Past studies have found upswings in heart-related deaths after a stressful mass event, anything from natural disasters such as earthquakes to sports disasters like a home team losing the Super Bowl. But the current study, published in the American Journal of Cardiology, found no evidence that the October 2008 crash led to a spike in deaths, from heart problems or otherwise, in Los Angeles. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
Consumer Reports taps ire over bad medical devices
Gov. to cut Texas women's health funds over abortion
AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - The federal government will withdraw funding for a Texas program providing more than 100,000 poor women with birth control and other health services because Planned Parenthood clinics are not allowed to participate, a Health and Human Services spokeswoman said on Friday. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced the decision in Houston on Friday, prompting a furious response from Texas Governor Rick Perry, who called it an "egregious federal overreach. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Natural Makeup Solutions for Oily Skin
What can be done if you have oily skin and are looking for natural makeup and cosmetic solutions for this? Please read on to see how you can cure the problem of oily skin by natural methods.
Source: EzineArticles.com
Pfizer scraps insulin deal with India's Biocon
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Pfizer Inc, the world's largest drugmaker, has scrapped a deal to sell insulin products made by Biocon Ltd, leaving India's biggest biotech company without a partner to sell the drugs in key global markets such as the United States. The companies cited "individual priorities" as the reason for the split, which immediately ends a relationship that stood to earn Biocon hundreds of millions of dollars in royalties. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
U.S. News Ranks The Top 10 Medical Schools For Primary Care
By Christopher J. Gearon, for U.S. News
Job prospects in healthcare are among the brightest anywhere. Even before health reform promised to add 32 million people to insurance rolls, the government's employment prognosticators had predicted upward of 3 million new jobs between 2008 and 2018.
"Even when the economy slowed down, people kept hiring physicians," says Tommy Bohannon, a vice president at Merritt Hawkins, a Dallas-based physician recruiting firm. "I do not see it changing."
There are openings at every level, from home health aide and medical technician to highly specialized physician. But primary care practitioners are particularly hot.
[Explore U.S. News's Best Health Schools rankings.]
Lower incomes and unfriendly hours compared to those of specialists have long swayed many medical students against a career in primary care. Family practice and internal medicine doctors are the top two most requested searches for Merritt Hawkins, and hospitalists—the primary care-trained physicians who work exclusively in a hospital—came in third last year.
In fourth place: psychiatrists, thanks to the profession's graying ranks, improved mental health coverage, and the woes brought on by a foul economy and two wars.
But a significant shift in career paths, from independence to on-staff employment, is unfolding as health systems struggle to contain costs and private practice physicians grow increasingly overwhelmed.
[See how medical schools are investing in primary care.]
"The two big reasons were money and quality of life. I have a 2-year-old," says pediatrician Marty Thomas, 38, who gave up her private practice in Searcy, Ark., late last year to take a job with North Texas Medical Center in Gainesville.
As a solo doctor, she'd found it too hard "to make ends meet and to treat patients the way I felt they need to be treated." Now, as a medical center employee, Thomas makes $180,000 to $200,000 annually and works from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with half days on Thursdays.
"I am very happy," notes urologist Ken Weisman, who, after 26 years of late nights running his Pennsylvania and Connecticut private practices, moved last year to take a salaried position at a group affiliated with Marietta Memorial Hospital in Ohio. Some 56 percent of Merritt Hawkins's physician search assignments are for employee positions, up from 11 percent in 2004.
[Follow a day in the life of a primary care physician.]
Not surprisingly, given the shortage of primary care docs, nurse practitioners and physician assistants are enjoying a seller's market, too. These providers increasingly are seeing and treating more patients themselves and are taking on traditional physician duties such as writing prescriptions.
And nurse practitioners cost an employer about half what internists do; their average pay now runs around $99,000. They also tend to be pros at coordinating patient care to avoid mistakes and gaps in treatment, a cornerstone of health reform.
"The demand will be there for care coordination alone," says Peter McMenamin, senior policy fellow with the American Nurses Association in Silver Spring, Md. Advocate Health Care, a multi-hospital system in Oak Brook, Ill., has recently hired more than 60 care managers, many of them nurse practitioners.
And "we could hire 60 nurse practitioners within the year," says spokeswoman Stephanie Johnson. As doctors leave, some will be replaced with nurse practitioners, she predicts. "Strategically, that's where we are going."
Searching for a medical school? Get our complete rankings of Best Medical Schools.
For U.S. News' ranking of the top 10 medical schools for primary care, click through the slideshow:
10. University of California, Los Angeles
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10. University of California, Los Angeles
Source: www.huffingtonpost.com
Monday, March 12, 2012
Venezuela's Chavez home in a week facing more cancer therapy
CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said on Sunday he will be home from Cuba in a week and start radiation therapy for cancer that could leave him weakened ahead of his re-election bid on October 7. Chatting for more than two hours in a televised address from Havana, where he is recovering from a third surgery to treat cancer in his pelvic area, Chavez seemed eager to show he is fully in command of the government despite his illness. ...
Original Source
Child injuries on U.S. farms cost $1.4 billion a year
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - More than 26,000 kids and adolescents get injured on farms and ranches in the U.S. every year, racking up costs of more than $1.4 billion, according to new research. The study, released Monday in the journal Pediatrics, is the first to give an overall estimate of fatal and non-fatal child injuries related to farm life in America. Less than a third of the accidents were work-related and only 84 were fatal, researchers found based on 2001-2006 Childhood Agricultural Injury Surveys. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
A Happy Reason To Go Veggie
By Elizabeth Nolan Brown, for Blisstree.com
Omnivores, take note: Embracing a vegetarian diet could make you happier and less stressed, according to new research published in Nutrition Journal.
The reason comes down to fatty acids: Diets that include meat and fish are higher in arachidonic acid (AA), an animal source of omega-6 fatty acids. Much of the meat Americans eat today is quite high in AA: The average omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acid profile of modern grain-fed meat is 5 times higher than grass-fed meat, like our ancestors ate. And previous research has shown high levels of AA can cause mood-disturbing brain changes.
More from Blisstree.com:
Meatless Monday: 10 Vegetarian Comfort Food Recipes
Does Going Vegan Change Your Metabolism?
6 Ways to Sneak More Omega-3s Into Your Diet (Even If You're Vegan)
High-fish diets also mean higher levels of long-chain, or omega-3 fatty acids, like eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA). Both EPA and DHA combat the negative effects of AA. High dietary levels of omega-3 fatty acids are linked to better brain health, better mood and a host of other health benefits. Most health experts recommend an omega-6/omega-3 ratio of about 4:1.
In theory, then, frequent fish eaters should have be protected against the damaging effects of AA because of their higher intake of omega-3 acids. But an earlier study found omnivores reported significantly worse moods than vegetarians, despite higher intakes of EPA and DHA.
In this follow-up study, 39 meat-eating participants were assigned to one of three diets. A control group ate meat, fish or poultry daily; a second group ate fish 3-4 times weekly but no meat; and a third group ate strictly vegetarian. After two weeks, mood scores were unchanged for the fish- and meat-eating groups, but vegetarians reported significantly better moods and less stress.
“Restricting meat, fish, and poultry improved … short-term mood state in modern omnivores,” the researchers concluded.
After two weeks on a vegetarian diet, participants had “negligible amounts” of EPA, DHA and AA in their bodies. Fatty acid levels in the control group were unchanged. Participants in the fish eating group showed 95 to 100% higher levels of EPA and DHA fatty acids—but their omega-6 to omega-3 ratios were still heavily skewed toward omega-6′s.
To work plant sources of omega-3 fatty acids (called ALA) into your diet, try chia seeds, hemp seed, cauliflower and purslane.
Also on HuffPost:
Source: www.huffingtonpost.com
Circumcision tied to lower prostate cancer risk
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Circumcised men may have a slightly lower risk of developing prostate cancer than those who still have their foreskin, according to a new study. The World Health Organization already recommends the controversial procedure based on research showing it lowers heterosexual men's risk of contracting HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Last year, scientists also reported that wives and girlfriends of circumcised men had lower rates of infection with human papillomavirus or HPV, which in rare cases may lead to cervical and other cancers. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Sunday, March 11, 2012
Progress, no big breakthrough, in hunt for HIV cure
(Reuters) - Scientists, stymied for decades by the complexity of the human immunodeficiency virus, are making progress on several fronts in the search for a cure for HIV infections, a leading medical research conference was told this week in Seattle. Promising tactics range from flushing hidden HIV from cells to changing out a person's own immune system cells, making them resistant to HIV and then putting them back into the patient's body. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
Gas Engines May Be Dirtier Than Diesels in One Respect
SUNDAY, March 11 (HealthDay News) -- Gasoline engines produce far more of a particular type of air pollution than diesel engines, according to a new study.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Friday, March 9, 2012
Health Tip: Protect Yourself From Heart Disease
FDA rejects AstraZeneca move on generic Seroquel
Thursday, March 8, 2012
FDA links once-promising pain drugs to bone decay
Some of the world's largest drugmakers will face an uphill battle next week in their bid to revive a class of experimental pain drugs that have been sidelined by safety concerns for nearly two years.
Source: news.yahoo.com
The Tiny Secret You Didn't Know About Bearberry And How It Can Lighten Your Skin
Cured Meat Products Linked to Lung Disease Flare-Ups
Group asks FDA to treat superbugs like rare diseases
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A research group is proposing a new tool in the fight against drug-resistant bacteria: turn infections into a rare disease. The Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) offered a plan on Thursday that would allow the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to review certain kinds of antibiotics like it reviews "orphan" drugs for rare diseases, making it easier for companies to gain approval. Misuse of medications and other factors have fueled the evolution of multi-drug resistant bacteria, or "superbugs", for which there are few treatment options. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com
'Anderson': Unique Twins, One Of Whom Is A Primordial Dwarf
On "Anderson" (Weeknights, 7 p.m. EST on Fox), viewers were introduced to Sienna and Sierra Bernal.
The 13 year-olds are the only known pair of twins in which one (Sierra) is average size and the other (Sienna) is a primordial dwarf.
The girls and their parents talked about their family life and the unique challenges that face someone with primordial dwarfism.
Mom Chrissy said that Sienna lags behind her sister in terms of emotional development, something she thought was caused by the inappropriate ways other people react to her small stature.
Sienna's emotional delay was becoming more noticeable as the girls have gotten older. Although they still dress alike, Sierra said "She's always wanting to do little kid things, I'm always wanting to do older things."
Standing less than four feet tall, Sienna needs help with many everyday tasks, and even thought she hates it, she still has to ride in a car seat.
Plus, Chrissy said, people tend to treat her like a much younger child: "[they] talk to her like a baby, they pick her up. She's thirteen, she doesn't need to be picked up."
Except, joked stepfather Joe Johnston, by him.
"Anderson" airs weeknights at 7 p.m. EST on Fox.
TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.
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Wednesday, March 7, 2012
Fetal Cocaine Exposure May Not Affect Kids' Academics: Study
WEDNESDAY, March 7 (HealthDay News) -- Exposure to cocaine, tobacco or marijuana before birth does not cause children to score lower on academic tests, according to a new study.
Source: news.yahoo.com
Health Tip: Skip TV and Get Active
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Many vets with PTSD prescribed opioid painkillers
Democrats’ ‘End Medicare’ Whopper, Again
Can the "Lie of the Year" still be used to defeat Republicans? Democrats hope so, and a super PAC is using an Iowa congressional race to retest the claim that House Republicans voted to "end Medicare." But we find the Iowa ads to be little improved from last year, when ... More >>
Source: news.yahoo.com
Little Girl Swallows 37 Magnets
Monday, March 5, 2012
Court blocks DEA's Florida suspension of Cardinal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. appeals court has agreed to temporarily allow Cardinal Health Inc to continue distributing strictly-controlled prescription drugs from a Florida facility, blocking a Drug Enforcement Administration order to suspend shipments. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit issued an order late on Friday temporarily lifting a February 3 DEA suspension that was issued because of concerns that Cardinal was not adequately watching for prescription abuse. ...
Source: news.yahoo.com