Friday, May 31, 2013

Researcher Seeks Decision Making Preferences Among Patients With Heart Attacks

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Researcher Seeks Decision Making Preferences Among Patients With Heart Attacks
May 31st 2013, 19:58

In a research letter, Harlan M. Krumholz, M.D., S.M. and his colleagues "sought to investigate preferences for participation in the decision-making process among individuals hospitalized with an acute myocardial infarction ([AMI] or heart attack)." Harlan M. Krumholz is from Yale University School of Medicine. The researchers combined data from two similar AMI registries (TRIUMPH and PREMIER) which resulted in 6,636 patients in the study sample who were asked about who should make decisions on treatment options.

"More than two-thirds of patients with AMI indicated a preference to play an active role in the decision-making process, and of those, about a quarter preferred that the decision be theirs alone rather than shared with their physician," the authors found. "Our findings indicate that physicians who aspire to provide patient-centered care should assess patients' decision-making preferences by directly asking each patient."

"Our challenge now is to develop systems that fully respect these preferences and ensure that patients who prefer an active role are given that opportunity," the authors conclude.

Source-Newswise

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New Diagnostic Technology may Lead to Individualized Treatments for Prostate Cancer: Research

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New Diagnostic Technology may Lead to Individualized Treatments for Prostate Cancer: Research
May 31st 2013, 19:58


If more studies confirm the technology's effectiveness, the NanoVelcro Chip device could enable doctors to access and identify cancerous cells in the bloodstream, which would provide the diagnostic information needed to create individually tailored treatments for patients with prostate cancer.

The researchers believe this technology may function as a "liquid biopsy," revolutionizing conventional biopsy practices and significantly advancing the field of personalized medicine. Today's biopsies require the removal of tissue samples through a needle inserted into a solid tumor, a procedure that is invasive and sometimes painful. Biopsies are extremely difficult in metastatic prostate cancer because the disease often spreads to bone, where the availability of the tissue is low.

The biggest challenges in the treatment of cancer are that every person's tumor differs greatly and often mutates over time, especially in response to treatment. Researchers hope that by analyzing these CTCs, doctors will be able to understand the tumor evolution in each individual. By monitoring the genetic changes in CTCs and their invasiveness in a tissue culture dish, doctors may be able to quickly adjust their treatment plans in response.

"We are optimistic that the use of our NanoVelcro CTC technology will revolutionize prostate cancer treatment. We know that cancers evolve over time and that every patient's cancer is a unique problem � the 'one-size-fits-all' approach is not going to allow us to cure prostate cancer or any other cancer," said Edwin M. Posadas, MD, medical director of the Urologic Oncology Program at Cedars-Sinai's Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute and senior author of the article in the March online issue of Advanced Materials.

"This evolution means that we need to be able to monitor these changes over time and to ensure a patient's treatment is individualized and optimized. The molecular characterizations of CTCs will provide real-time information allowing us to choose the right treatment for the right patient at the right time. This improvement will be a great step toward developing personalized medicine," he added.

The existence of CTCs and their role in cancer metastasis was first suspected more than 140 years ago, and the first test for the routine measurement of CTCs became available in 2004, but earlier methods have produced low capture efficiencies and limited capability of captured cells to be utilized for later molecular analysis.

"Our technology is the combination of three state-of-the-art technologies: the NanoVelcro CTC chip, laser capture microdissection and whole exome sequencing," said Yi-Tsung Lu, MD, a postdoctoral scientist at the Cedars-Sinai Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute, and one of the article's first authors. "This advancement will, in principle, allow us to track the genomic evolution of prostate cancer after we initiate a therapy and will allow us to better understand the mechanism of drug resistance that is common in prostate cancer patients. We hope the comprehensive understanding of cancer biology at the individual level will ultimately lead to better therapy choice for patients suffering from advanced cancer."

With the new system, a patient's blood is pumped through the NanoVelcro Chip � the microvilli protruding from the cancer cells will stick to the nanofiber structures on the device's surface, much like Velcro. This phenomenon facilitates the capture of rare CTCs in the blood stream. Next, laser capture microdissection technology allows the scientists to selectively cut out and pick up the CTCs from the NanoVelcro Chip, virtually eliminating any trace of any contamination from white blood cells, which can complicate analysis. Finally, the isolated and purified CTCs are subjected to single cell "next-generation" sequencing, which reveals mutations in the genetic material of the cells and may help doctors personalize therapies to a patient's unique cancer.

"To date, CTC capture technologies have been able to do little more than count the number of CTCs, which is informative but not very useful from a treatment planning perspective. It is a scientific breakthrough to have the ability to isolate pure CTCs and maintain their integrity for sophisticated genomic and behavioral analyses," said Hsian-Rong Tseng, PhD, associate professor of molecular and medical pharmacology at UCLA and the inventor of the NanoVelcro Chip concept and device. His enthusiasm is echoed by Leland W. K. Chung, PhD, director of the Urologic Oncology Research Program at the Cedars-Sinai Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute.

Source-Eurekalert

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In Common Medical Emergencies on Flights Travelers Play Valuable Role Assisting Crew: Study

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In Common Medical Emergencies on Flights Travelers Play Valuable Role Assisting Crew: Study
May 31st 2013, 19:58


Led by Christian Martin-Gill, M.D., M.P.H., assistant professor of emergency medicine, the study examined records of in-flight medical calls from five domestic and international airlines to UPMC's STAT-MD Communications Center, a 24-hour, physician-directed medical command center, from Jan. 1, 2008, through Oct. 31, 2010. Although not required to by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), many airlines use a medical communications facility to consult with physicians on the ground. STAT-MD handled 11,920 in-flight medical calls during the study period. The most common in-flight problems reported were syncope (fainting) or near-syncope, respiratory symptoms, nausea or vomiting, and cardiac symptoms.

Physician passengers provided medical assistance in nearly half of those calls, according to the researchers. Other medical professionals, such as nurses and emergency medical technicians, provided help in another 28 percent of the calls. Flights were diverted to alternate destinations because of medical concerns in only 7.3 percent of the incidents.

Most of the passengers who were treated in-flight had favorable outcomes. According to data for nearly 11,000 of those patients, 25.8 percent were transported to a hospital by emergency medical services; 8.6 percent were admitted, and 0.3 percent died, either on board the aircraft or upon transport to the hospital. The most common causes for admission to a hospital were stroke, respiratory and cardiac symptoms.

The study found that most calls could be managed by the flight attendants, who are trained in emergency protocols and have access to an FAA-required emergency medical kit, along with medical volunteers in the majority of cases. In these cases, ground-based physician consultants provided additional guidance, including use of specific medications in the kit, and assisting the pilot and crew in making decisions regarding need for diversion of the aircraft.

"We wanted to provide a description of the type of emergencies commonly treated on an aircraft, identify the outcomes of these patients and provide an understanding of the treatment capabilities available on the aircraft in the medical kit and through experts on the ground," said Dr. Martin-Gill.

The researchers suggest physicians and others obtain a basic knowledge and awareness of the resources available to them in this unfamiliar and cramped setting to be effective volunteers during an in-flight emergency.

"Commercial air travel is generally safe, and in-flight deaths are rare," said Dr. Martin-Gill. "We hope to look more closely at the most common conditions and which ones require follow-up care so we can better tailor treatment recommendations for passengers."

Source-Eurekalert

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Most Comprehensive Analyses of NSAIDs and Coxibs Published With Collaboration From A Professor

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Most Comprehensive Analyses of NSAIDs and Coxibs Published With Collaboration From A Professor
May 31st 2013, 19:58

The most comprehensive analyses of the benefits and risks of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), which include cyclo-oxygenase-2 inhibitors (coxibs) was published in the current issue of the Lancet by Charles H.Hennekens, MD, DrPH, the first Sir Richard Doll professor and senior academic advisor to the dean in the Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine at Florida Atlantic University.

Hennekens and colleagues from around the world, under the direction of the Clinical Trial Service and Epidemiology Studies Unit at the University of Oxford, conducted a world-wide meta-analyses using individual participant data from 280 trials of NSAIDs vs. placebo and 474 trials of NSAID vs. another NSAID, which involved a total of 353,809 participants and a total of 233,798 person-years. These results address risks and benefits of drugs used for relief of inflammatory arthritis including cardiovascular disease and other relevant outcomes such as gastrointestinal effects.

"The vascular risks of high-dose diclofenac and ibuprofen are comparable to coxibs, while high-dose naproxen is associated with less vascular risk than other NSAIDs," said Hennekens. "Although NSAIDs increase vascular and gastrointestinal risks, their magnitude can be predicted, which may help guide clinical decision-making."

David J. Bjorkman, MD, MSPH, dean of the Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine at FAU and a gastroenterologist noted that "these are the most comprehensive analyses ever conducted of the benefits and risks of NSAIDs, which include coxibs, and should help guide healthcare providers in their prescribing patterns."

Hennekens concluded that "from a clinical and policy perspective, the available data suggest that for relief of pain of inflammatory arthritis, naproxen may have the best benefit-to-risk ratio on cardiovascular disease (CVD). In contrast to naproxen, other traditional NSAIDS and coxibs confer similar moderately increased risks of CVD. At present, individual clinical judgments about coxibs and nonselective NSAIDs should not be limited to risks of CVD. They should also include concerns about non-CVD risks, such as gastrointestinal bleeding and other benefits, including improved quality of life resulting from decreases in impairment from musculoskeletal pain syndromes."

Science Watch ranked Hennekens as the third most widely cited medical researcher in the world from 1995-2005, and five of the top 20 were his former trainees and/or fellows. In addition, in 2012 Science Heroes, ranked Hennekens No. 81 in the history of the world for having saved more than 1.1 million lives.

Source-Eurekalert

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Saturated Fats Do Not Yield Better Bacon: Research

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Saturated Fats Do Not Yield Better Bacon: Research
May 31st 2013, 19:58


But researchers from the University of Illinois found that including saturated fats in DDGS diets makes no difference in fat quality.

The researchers formulated six corn-soybean meal diets to test the effects of saturated fat additives on carcass fat quality in pigs. Five of these diets contained DDGS.

According to the researchers, pork produced from pigs fed DDGS have reduced shelf life and increased susceptibility to oxidative damage. Oxidative damage affects texture, color, juiciness and the overall flavor of pork products.

"Distillers dried grains contain unsaturated fatty acids and those fatty acids are deposited into the fat of the animal," said Hans-Henrik Stein, study co-author and Department of Animal Science professor at the University of Illinois. "From a health standpoint, that's a good thing, but it can be a problem when producing pork products like bacon."

According to Stein, high levels of unsaturated fats make pork belly fat too soft to slice for bacon. To counteract this problem, producers have included saturated fats such as corn germ, beef tallow, palm kernel oil and glycerol in diets containing DDGS in order to make the fat firmer.

For this study, corn germ, beef tallow, palm kernel oil and glycerol were each added to a diet containing DDGS. The researchers compared the performance of pigs fed each of these diets to the performance of pigs fed a diet containing DDGS with no saturated fats added and a control diet containing corn-soybean meal but no DDGS.

Firmness of fat was tested by measuring the distance of "belly flop." This was done by draping the belly of the carcasses over a metal rod with the skin facing down. Ten centimeters below the rod, distance was measured between the two sides. The larger the distance was, the firmer the fat.

The researchers found that pigs fed the control diet containing no DDGS had greater belly flop distances than the pigs fed the other diets. There was no difference among the pigs fed the five diets containing DDGS.

This led researchers to conclude that adding saturated fats to diets containing DDGS has no effect on the fat quality of pigs.

Stein suggested that producers feeding high levels of DDGS reduce the amount fed in the last 3 to 4 weeks before harvest to avoid the softening of fat.

Source-Eurekalert

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Cholesterol Sets Off Chaotic Blood Vessel Growth: Study

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Cholesterol Sets Off Chaotic Blood Vessel Growth: Study
May 31st 2013, 19:58


The work, led by Yury Miller, MD, PhD, associate professor of medicine at UC San Diego, will be published in the advance online edition of the journal Nature on May 29.

Cholesterol is a structural component of the cell and is indispensable for normal cellular function, although its excess often leads to abnormal proliferation, migration, inflammatory responses or cell death. The researchers studied how the removal of cholesterol from endothelial cells (cells that line the blood vessels) impacts the development of new blood vessels, the process called angiogenesis.

According to Miller, removal of excess cholesterol from endothelial cells is essential for restraining excessive growth of blood vessels.

"Too much cholesterol increases the abundance of lipid rafts, areas in the plasma membrane where surface receptors initiate signaling events leading to angiogenesis," Miller said. VEGFR2 is such a receptor, playing a central role in the development of blood vessels. Research into the process of angiogenesis suggests that VEGF-induced signaling within endothelial cells is important to tumor growth.

In this study, the scientists show that apoA-I binding protein (AIBP) is secreted by surrounding tissues and facilitates cholesterol removal from endothelial cells. This process interferes with the VEGFR2 receptor function, in turn inhibiting angiogenesis.

"Studying the process in zebrafish, we found that the timing and the pattern of AIBP expression is such that it helps guide segmental arteries to grow strictly in the dorsal direction, instead of an aberrant sideways direction," said first author Longhou Fang, who added that future studies will explore if AIBP or its derivatives can be used to inhibit pathologic angiogenesis in tumors. Alternatively, blocking AIBP activity in the heart may, in principle, stimulate re-growth of blood vessels after a heart attack.

Source-Eurekalert

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Salvadoran Woman Denied Abortion to Undergo C-Section

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Salvadoran Woman Denied Abortion to Undergo C-Section
May 31st 2013, 17:56


"I feel very well, because now they are going to do it," she told AFP by telephone, referring to the premature delivery that has been scheduled to take place when she is 26 weeks pregnant in a country with strict abortion laws.

The woman, 22, suffers from lupus, a disease that weakens her immune system, and doctors said that the fetus she carries has anencephaly, a total or partial absence of the brain and the skull, and likely will die upon birth.

The woman, who goes by the name Beatriz, had asked to have an abortion on grounds her own life was in danger, but authorities in El Salvador -- where abortions are strictly forbidden -- refused.

On Wednesday, the Supreme Court rejected her petition to terminate the pregnancy, saying the rights of the mother cannot take precedence over those of the unborn child.

Health Minister Maria Isabel Rodriguez gave her blessing for the premature delivery, saying on Thursday that the decision to act "is in the hands of high-level doctors."

"It is very clear at this time that the pregnancy intervention is not an abortion, it is an induced birth, which is something else," Rodriguez told a news conference.

"If there's symptom that shows a serious situation, action must be taken," she said. "For me the decisive factor is protect the life of Beatriz."

Beatriz told AFP on Thursday that she was "very nervous" but wanted the Caesarean section to ensure her own health and because "the child is not going to live."

"What they did to me was not right. They made me suffer by waiting all this time here in the hospital," she said from the National Maternity Hospital in San Salvador.

She said that so far no one from the government has been in contact regarding next week's surgery, and said that that she was putting her trust "first and foremost in God" that everything will work out.

Beatriz, who is already the mother of a one-year-old son, said her mother and partner support her decision.

The sentence for violating the abortion ban is 50 years in prison.

The case has been highly controversial. The archbishop of San Salvador, Jose Luis Escobar, asked the court several times not to allow the woman to have an abortion, arguing it would open the gates to more such requests.

Feminist groups meanwhile said the high court's ruling "trampled on the right to life" of Beatriz and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) on Thursday urged El Salvador to take "urgent measures" to protect the woman's rights.

The IACHR also called on the San Salvador government to allow Beatriz to be seen "by doctors of her choosing," and to protect the rights of her physicians treating her.

Source-AFP

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Pulitzer Photo Prize Awarded To AFP Freelancer

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Pulitzer Photo Prize Awarded To AFP Freelancer
May 31st 2013, 17:56


The ceremony at Columbia University was attended by several hundred people celebrating America's highest journalism award, as well as prizes for literature, theater and music.

Manzano, 37, said he was "honored" by his feature photography nod for the picture taken in October, showing rebel fighters lit up by sunlight coming through bullet holes in the side of a warehouse.

"It is also mixed feelings and lots of my colleagues can relate to that," he said.

"You are receiving an award in recognition for a war that is still going on and will still go on for the foreseeable future, with horrible consequences for both sides. I hope that this furthers the message of Syria and what is going on there on a daily basis."

He received a $10,000 cash award, along with the certificate.

Paul Tash, chairman of the Pulitzer Prize board, said the quality of entries was high, despite crashing budgets for news organizations.

"My first Pulitzer board meeting was in 2006, a high-water mark in advertising revenues for American newspapers," he said.

"Since then, the combination of economic crisis and competition from digital alternatives has sent advertising revenues plummeting by more than half. Today, 15,000 fewer journalists have jobs at American newspapers than in 2006."

Manzano, who is unmarried and calls Istanbul home for now, said he does not have any immediate plans for the future. But he hopes to return to Syria and head for other hotspots in the region "for the next couple of years."

He has been a freelancer, covering the drug war in Mexico and the wars in Afghanistan and Syria since his last employer, the Rocky Mountain News, shut down in 2009.

Source-AFP

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Women Less at Risk Than Men for Health-care-associated Infections: Columbia Nursing Study

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Women Less at Risk Than Men for Health-care-associated Infections: Columbia Nursing Study
May 31st 2013, 17:56


Researchers investigated the incidence of infection in thousands of hospitalized patients and found the odds for women succumbing to a bloodstream infection (BSI) and surgical-site infection (SSI) were significantly lower than for men. The odds of community-associated BSI were 30% higher in men compared to women, for healthcare-associated BSI, 60% higher in men compared to women, and for SSI, 60% higher in men compared to women.

Results also showed the differences in gender for infection rates were less in young children less than twelve years old and in adults over the age of seventy.

The study, "Gender Differences in Risk of Bloodstream and Surgical Site Infections," was published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.

"By understanding the factors that put patients at risk for infections, clinicians may be able to design targeted prevention and surveillance strategies to improve infection rates and outcomes," says Bevin Cohen, MPH, Program Director, Center for Interdisciplinary Research to Prevent Infections (CIRI) at Columbia University School of Nursing, and the lead author of the study.

All study data were collected retrospectively from electronic sources shared by a tertiary care hospital, a pediatric acute care hospital, and a community hospital within a large, academically affiliated hospital network in New York City.

A possible reason for the gender differences in both BSI and SSI incidence may be the biological differences between men and women's skin. The authors reference several studies that have found that bacterial colonization of the skin surrounding a central venous catheter at the insertion site is greater on men than on women.

Says Cohen: "In addition to using enhanced infection risk profiles to improve infection rates, it may be sensible to conduct specialized preoperative skin decontamination procedures and postoperative wound care for men to further reduce the risk of infection."

Source-Eurekalert

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Faster Disease Diagnosis Possible Via New Single Virus Detection Techniques

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Faster Disease Diagnosis Possible Via New Single Virus Detection Techniques
May 31st 2013, 17:56


However, the standard methods used for these tests are only able to estimate the number of viruses in a given volume of fluid. Now two independent teams have developed new optics-based methods for determining the exact viral load of a sample by counting individual virus particles. These new methods are faster and cheaper than standard tests and they offer the potential to conduct the measurements in a medical office or hospital instead of a laboratory. The teams will present their latest results at the Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics (CLEO: 2013), to be held June 9-14, in San Jose, Calif.

One research group, led by electrical engineer and bioengineer Aydogan Ozcan of UCLA, is working to directly image single virus particles using holographic microscopy. The other, led by electrical engineer Holger Schmidt of the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC), is detecting single particles tagged with fluorescent labels on a microfluidic chip. Both teams expect to use their work to develop commercial instruments useful for on-site diagnosis and monitoring with rapid results and fast turnaround.

Ozcan's UCLA team has demonstrated the ability to capture optical images of single viruses and nanoparticles over a comparatively large field of view - about the size of a postage stamp - using nanolenses that self-assemble around the virus particles like little magnifying glasses.

"Because viruses are very small--less than 100 billionths of a meter--compared to the wavelength of light, conventional light microscopy has difficulty producing an image due to weak scattering of sub-wavelength particles," Ozcan says. When lighted, the team's new nanolens-nanoparticle assembly projects a hologram that can be recorded using a CMOS imager chip (a type of semiconductor-based light detector) and digitally reconstructed to form an optical image of the particle. "The resulting image improves the field-of-view of a conventional optical microscope by two orders of magnitude," says Ozcan.

This wide field of view allows the device to form images of many nanoparticles in a single photograph and provides a high-throughput platform for a direct and accurate viral load count. The instrument can be made sufficiently compact and lightweight for field applications and, attached to a cell phone, could become useful even in remote locations.

Source-Eurekalert

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Experts: Better Diagnosis Detects More Multiple Sclerosis Cases

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Experts: Better Diagnosis Detects More Multiple Sclerosis Cases
May 31st 2013, 17:56


"There has been a steady increase in the number of MS cases in the last two-three years. Even children are prone to this disorder and are showing MS symptoms," said Arabinda Mukherjee, professor of neurology, Vivekananda Institute of Medical Sciences, Kolkata.

"The reason why MS cases have grown in India is because of better diagnosis through MRI scans. It existed earlier as well, but it was not diagnosed properly," said Mukherjee.

MS is an auto-immune disease in which the body attacks its own cells and tissues. The most common symptoms are numbness, weakness in the limbs, sudden loss of balance, blurred vision and muscle fatigue. There is no specific cure for the disease and current treatments use the disease modification approach to hinder recurrent attacks and disability.

Genetic and environmental factors are known to contribute to MS, but a specific cause for the disease cannot be identified.

There are two lakh MS patients in India, with most being in the 20 to 30 age group.

"The disorder is not as common in India as it is in Europe and other parts of the world. However, we still observe one to two new cases every year. Most of them are in the 20 to 30 age group. MS was thought to be a disease of the developed countries, and not a tropical disease, but now that has changed," said Mukherjee.

"MS can range in intensity from being relatively benign to devastating. Because diagnosis of MS is difficult, especially during the earlier stages as symptoms are indistinct, early diagnosis and treatment is crucial to slow disease progression and minimise associated disability, particularly because the condition can cause irreversible damage," said Ashish Dutta, consultant neurologist of the Institute of Neurosciences, Kolkata.

Peer support is of utmost importance in helping MS patients cope with its irreversible nature.

Anuradha Goswami, honorary secretary, Multiple Sclerosis Society of India, Kolkata, said: "There's no cure for MS, so dealing with a diagnosis can be tough but with community help and support, many people with the condition can go on to live full lives. Since public awareness about this disorder is very limited, there is need for more awareness and education in the community."

May 29 is World MS Day.

Source-IANS

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Relief for Locals at Free Health Camp in Maoist Affected Area in Odisha

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Relief for Locals at Free Health Camp in Maoist Affected Area in Odisha
May 31st 2013, 17:56


Musan Nayak, a local said, "Those who have money can go to the district headquarter of Malkangiri. We are poor farmers only. This camp is helping people like us, who don't have money. The farmers are, moreover, not educated and they do not take the patients to the doctors. So, this camp is educating them and providing them medical facilities."

"There are nine specialists and they visit villages comprising of poor people and tribals. Since it is a Maoist affected area, adivasis (tribals) cannot come here so we visit such villages and provide them free medical service," said additional district medical officer, Sasibhusan Mahapatara.

This initiative was taken by the provincial authorities for the first time, in a bid to provide free medicines and quality remedial facilities to the poor villagers of Maoist-infested Malkangiri.

Malkangiri is one of the worse affected by activities of left wing extremists. Most of its area is inaccessible and out of reach due to lack of communication facilities. The people of these areas are mostly deprived of the health services.

The health camp run by the provincial government also provides free medicines worth 100 thousand rupees to the poor.

Public health centers were there in these remote areas but most of the time they remained shut due to lack of doctors and fear of Maoists.

These mega health facilities have come as a blessing for the deprived poor and tribals of the area.

Free medicines and quality remedial facilities to the poor villagers remained the main highlights of the camp.

The health camps were organized in two other villages, Vejaguda and Kursiguda.

Recently, the deadly killing of 19 people, including some regional leaders of India's federal ruling Congress party in Chhattisgarh, has put the spotlight back on the Maoist insurgency, termed by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh as the biggest internal threat to the security of the country.

Source-ANI

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Fats That Don't Make You Fat!

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Fats That Don't Make You Fat!
May 31st 2013, 12:52


The vitamins A, D, E and K are fat soluble - which means the body can absorb them only when there is fat present. There are basically two types of fats, the good unsaturated fats and the bad saturated fats.

Fat is structurally important for every cell in our body, it is also very important as it required by each cell to properly digest all the fat soluble vitamins. For example - the fat in egg yolks allows the body to access vitamins and cannot be compared to the absorption by fortified skimmed milk or egg whites without egg yolks.

Fat is an important source of slow and steady energy, which is completely different to the sudden and quick spikes given by sugar.

During the 1990's - store shelves abounded with food labeled 'low fat yogurt, low fat cookies, low fat butter etc'. In the recent years, people have come to understand that moderate consumption of fats have offered positive results.

There are good types of fat that keep you healthy and can actually help you to lose weight:

Olive Oil- This is surprisingly healthy - it is mono-unsaturated and is used as a dressing for salads or light cooking.

Antioxidants, carotenoids and Vitamin E are present in this fat. It also contains the satiety hormone - serotonin, which gives a feeling of fullness and prevents weight gain.

Olive oil controls blood pressure, prevents various cancers and is said to manage diabetes, asthma and arthritis.

Coconut oil- This oil has anti-bacterial, anti-microbial and anti-cancer properties. It improves digestion, nutrient absorption and intestinal health. This oil also helps cardiovascular functions along with improving kidney and liver health.

Coconut oil is used for weight management as it is composed of saturated fats; the fatty acids in coconut oil differ from animal products. The medium chain triglycerides are easily metabolized and used as energy. It increases the HDL or the good cholesterol. It is added to smoothies to aid weight reduction.

Avocados- These are packed with nutrients and according to studies conducted some nutrients known as carotenoids are absorbed efficiently when eaten with avocados. They are packed with anti-oxidants, mineral and fiber. Avocados are also an excellent source of glutathione which can cleanse, and protect the body from heavy metals and detoxify the body while maintaining a healthy immune system. The folate in avocados is good for heart health and prevents strokes. Eaten in moderation it can be added as a flavor to salads or smoothies and will give a feeling of satiety.

Nuts- A study conducted in 2009 showed that eating a fistful of nuts - three times a week, showed a lower risk of weight gain and obesity. Nuts are popular source of protein, fiber, vitamins and minerals and also maintain blood sugar.

Seeds- There are some seeds which are great when added to the diet as they are rich in omega-3 fatty acids, fiber and protein. These seeds are a rich source of anti-oxidants, fiber, magnesium, phosphorous, manganese, copper, iron and zinc. Some of the seeds like flax, chia, pumpkin and sunflower seeds are known as super foods. They can be added to salads, baked products, nutrition bars and smoothies.

These fats are healthy - moderation is the key word, you cannot afford to fry snacks in olive or coconut oil - even though they are healthy fats.

Eating fat does not make you fat - eating sugar makes you fat.

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China Toilet Baby's Mother Near Mental Collapse, Says Report

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China Toilet Baby's Mother Near Mental Collapse, Says Report
May 31st 2013, 09:43


"Now the baby is healthy and carrying on with its life, the entire family thanks everyone for their help, along with those who cared for the child. We will use all our love to protect the baby as it grows older," the grandfather was quoted as saying.

"We ask society to give our family a quiet living environment," he added.

The family come from Jinhua, in the eastern province of Zhejiang, and the paper is based in the same province.

Another report, by the state-run China News Network, cited local police as saying they had found the baby's suspected father, but would need to carry out a DNA test to confirm his paternity.

"Although the mother says she has found the father, we need to be sure... he is not sure if he is the father, and requested a DNA test," the report quoted local policeman Zhang Jianbo as saying.

"He said that if the baby was his, he would take responsibility for it," he added.

Despite early speculation that the baby was flushed down the toilet on purpose, police said that he fell into the pipe by accident, and that the mother will not face prosecution as she did not drop him on purpose.

The child, dubbed "Baby No. 59" by nurses after the number of his incubator, was released from hospital on Wednesday, hospital staff said.

The 2.3-kilogram (five-pound) baby was trapped for at least two to three hours, authorities and media reports said previously, and suffered some cuts to his face and limbs.

Chinese babies born out of wedlock are sometimes abandoned because of social and financial pressures. The country's one-child policy can also mean heavy fines for couples who have more than one baby.

Source-AFP

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'Superman' Henry Cavill was a Fat Kid

Medindia Health News
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'Superman' Henry Cavill was a Fat Kid
May 31st 2013, 09:43

Henry Cavill has revealed that he was fat during his childhood.

Weight has always been a struggle for Cavill, who admits to the Details magazine that he was on the heavier side during his childhood, the New York Daily News reported.


"I was fat," he said. "I was Fat Cavill."

After landing his first role in the 2002 film adaptation of 'The Count of Monte Cristo' at age 17, Cavill got whipped into shape.

But to play the Man of Steel on the big screen, the actor was forced to bulk up with help from a diet that included consuming 5,000 calories a day.

Source-ANI

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80,000 Chinese Orphans Get Free Health Insurance, Says Official

Medindia Health News
Medindia largest health website in india. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
80,000 Chinese Orphans Get Free Health Insurance, Says Official
May 31st 2013, 09:43

About 80,000 orphan children were given free insurance contracts to cover the costs of treating 12 critical illnesses, says official.

The latest beneficiaries are from the cities of Beijing and Tianjin, as well as Qinghai and Henan provinces, reported Xinhua.


An insurance fund that was raised through donations will be accessible for one year starting from June 1, according to Heidi Hu, managing director of the China Children Insurance Foundation (CCIF).

"The insurance contracts are our best gift for them (the orphans)," she said.

Unlike previous years in which funds was mainly raised by large enterprises, Hu said online micro-donations now account for a greater share of the fund and have helped to keep the project sustainable.

The foundation launched the joint program in cooperation with the Ministry of Civil Affairs in 2009 to provide free insurance for the children of poor families and 712,000 orphans under the age of 18 who are registered with it.

"We have distributed about 750,000 insurance contracts to children in more than 20 provincial regions, including the quake-hit province of Sichuan and the plateau areas of Qinghai and Tibet," Hu said.

Source-IANS

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Australia: World's Happiest Nation

Medindia Health News
Medindia largest health website in india. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Australia: World's Happiest Nation
May 31st 2013, 09:43


The OECD Better Life Index compares the well-being of 34 developed and emerging countries based on eleven categories including housing, income, jobs, education, life satisfaction and work-life balance.

In an update launched Tuesday morning at OECD Week 2013 in Paris, the Better Life Index found that 84 percent of Australians are satisfied with their lives-better than the OECD average of 80 percent.

Participants said they have more positive experiences, such as feelings of rest, pride in accomplishment and enjoyment, in an average day than negative ones.

Australians' happiness was even greater than that of Canada and Sweden, also known for high standards of living.

The survey also found that Australians are living longer, with life expectancy at almost 82 years-two years higher than the average.

Employment levels are also stronger-at 73 percent compared with an average of 66 percent for people aged 15 to 64.

Australia also performed well in the areas of civic engagement, with a strong sense of community and high levels of civic participation, and health, having achieved "remarkable progress" in reducing the number of smokers in the population.

Source-ANI

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Psychological Intervention can Help Quit Smoking, Say Experts

Medindia Health News
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Psychological Intervention can Help Quit Smoking, Say Experts
May 31st 2013, 07:42


On the eve of World No Tobacco Day, Sunil Mittal, leading psychiatrist and director of Cosmos Institute of Mental Health and Behavioural Science (CIMBS) here, said that the effectiveness of psychological intervention in smoking cessation is well established.

"Each year smoking kills more than a million people. In India alone, we have found evidence that psychosocial intervention increased quitting rates," he said.

"Based on research, it has been confirmed that nicotine is a drug as hard as heroin or cocaine. Tobacco consumption along with alcohol and other substances worsen the effect of tobacco," added Mittal.

According to the doctor, 42 percent of male cancer deaths in India are tobacco-related, while the figure for women deaths stand at 18.3 percent. India has the largest group of smokers in the world after China.

"Managing unpleasant feelings such as stress, depression, loneliness, fear and anxiety are some of the most common reasons why adults smoke. It is important to remember that there are healthier ways to keep these feelings in check like exercising, meditating, using sensory relaxation strategies and practicing simple breathing exercises," said Rosely Jacob, clinical psychologist at CIMBS.

Source-IANS

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Twitter: Popular Source for Vaccination Information

Medindia Health News
Medindia largest health website in india. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Twitter: Popular Source for Vaccination Information
May 31st 2013, 07:42


Researchers from the University of Texas at Austin analyzed 9,510 vaccination-related tweets from one week in January, 2012 to determine the most popular and influential messages. A final sample of 2,580 tweets that had received engagement through re-posting and sharing was then coded for frequency of sharing, tone toward vaccinations, links to sources (e.g., news outlets, advocacy groups, or healthcare providers), and whether the claims being made in each tweet were scientifically substantiated.

Overall, 33 percent of the 2,580 tweets carried a positive tone about vaccines, 54 percent were neutral, and 13 percent were negative. Of the 14 percent of tweets that contained medical information, more than two-thirds offered content substantiated by scientific research.

The most popular messages concerned a potential children's malaria vaccine, development of the NeuVax E-75 vaccine for breast cancer, the effectiveness of a herpes vaccine in women, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's recommendation of a human papilloma virus vaccination for boys, potential approval for a lung cancer vaccine, and a blog post discrediting vaccine-autism connections.

Frequent information sources shared through tweets included health-specific sites such as WebMD (16 percent of 341 links), national media such as The New York Times (13 percent), medical organizations such as the American Medical Association (12 percent), and digital news aggregators including the Huffington Post (10 percent). The specific outlets mentioned are representative examples, though did dominate their categories.

"News and health organizations received mostly positive attention in comparison with political or advocacy groups, indicating users are favorably viewing established sources in their health-information seeking," state the authors. "In this sample, it appears that Twitter users share mostly reputable information and sources while actively mobilizing others to seek reliable health information. Results of the snapshot can help explain what social media content patients consume and respond to, as well as help determine directions for educational campaigns."

Source-Eurekalert

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