Minggu, 06 Oktober 2013

'Strides Against Breast Cancer' walk draws many thousands / Photos

'Strides Against Breast Cancer' walk draws many thousands / Photos

PROVIDENCE, R.I -- Simone Melo, of Rehoboth, Mass., was among the many thousands who gathered Sunday morning at the Rhode Island Convention Center for the start of the American Cancer Society Making Strides Against Breast Cancer fundraising walk. Melo's mother, Elisabete Peixinho, who was also walking, is a survivor of the disease.

"I do it for my mom. See, now you're going to make me cry," said Melo, a hairdresser at the family business, Peixinho's Barber Salon in East Providence.

Joining the women on "Team Peixinho" was Melo's friend, Laura Amaral and her husband George and son Colin, of Blackstone, Mass.

"There's a threat of some showers but I think we're all prepared for it," said Amaral. "If we get a little wet, it's all good."

The 9 o'clock hour struck.

"All right," said Melo.

The te am headed off, into a crowd of walkers wearing pink, the color of the breast-cancer research and treatment cause.

Carroll Township woman said she relied on her family and friends to help beat ...

Carroll Township woman said she relied on her family and friends to help beat ...

The four words, “You have breast cancer,” change a life forever. It can be a terrifying, soul searching, gut wrenching time and it can also be the “aha” moment in life when the lens focuses sharply on what matters and who supports through all the changes.

Many women who get diagnosed with breast cancer say they enter a sisterhood that, though they may not have chosen to join, becomes a source of courage and an impetus to give back some of the same support they received.

In recognition of October as National Breast Cancer Awareness Month, we talked candidly to five midstate women about their experience. You’ll read how Gwen Linton, Reba Myers, Alexis Isenberg, Kathy Bellon and Dotty Benton faced their fears and found support and enduring hope.

Meet. . . Reba Myers

Reba Myers had just come through one of the most heartbreaking experiences of her life â€" walking a years-long journey through Alzhei mer’s disease with her husband that ended with his death in August 2006.

Less than six months later, in January 2007, the Carroll Township woman was diagnosed with Stage 2 breast cancer.

Although it was shocking news, Myers, a retired sales clerk, said she knew she had to step up and fight. Her three daughters had just watched their father die and the 74-year-old was determined they would not watch her die as well.

Myers had a partial mastectomy with removal of 16 lymph nodes, followed by eight chemotherapy sessions over five months and 33 radiation treatments.

Q: How did you find out you had breast cancer?

A: I went for my annual mammogram and an abnormality was found. After two more mammograms, an ultrasound and a biopsy, I was told the lump was cancerous and needed to be removed. It was quite shocking.

Q: How did you break the news to your family and friends?

A: My husband, who was my best friend, h ad just passed away in August. Going through this without his love and support was very difficult. My daughters were with me for the procedures and received the news along with me. Friends were told over the phone or in person.

Q: What sustained you and help you cope during your treatment?

A: I drew strength from my family. I knew they wanted me to stand up and fight and I wanted to because I wasn’t done living yet. I relied on the help and compassion of family and friends, especially my daughters.

Upon picking me up for my treatments, my daughters would say, “Come on, get in the car, we are leaving for Florida.” It was important to have a sense of humor. They tried to make it an adventure instead of something to dread.

One thing that also really helped me was when Pastor (Lila) Harold from Filey’s Christ Lutheran Church, who is also a cancer survivor, told me, “Cook meals ahead of time and freeze them, otherwise the cooking aromas will make you very nauseated.” My pastor was right!

I was on several prayer chains at local churches. This was very comforting.

Q: What one thing surprised you mostâ€" either positively or negatively â€" about walking this difficult journey?

A: The “How can I help?” attitude from family and friends. I didn’t even need to ask for help; it was just there and all I had to do was accept it. People didn’t ask if I wanted food; they just brought it.

Q: How can people be truly helpful to a woman being treated for breast cancer?

A: Ask what you can do to help them when they are going through treatments. If you have gone through treatments, give hints you found helpful for your comfort. I stayed home, laid around and tried to sleep. Give yourself permission to do that or do whatever makes yo u feel most comfortable. 

It’s helpful when people offer to drive to appointments and make meals. It’s also helpful to be informed of local non-profit organizations that offer services and support. I found the American Cancer Society of Harrisburg and York to be helpful. All Breast Cancer Survivors (ABC’s) meet at the YWCA in Carlisle. If needed, they offer turbans and wigs and other items at no charge.

Q: What would you tell other women who have been diagnosed recently?

A: There are so many new procedures and medicines that are out there to help you; be positive that you can be cured.

Sabtu, 05 Oktober 2013

Pitt County residents paint the town pink for breast cancer awareness

Pitt County residents paint the town pink for breast cancer awareness

GREENVILLE, N.C. -

Pink is taking over Pitt County and the nation. It’s all in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

In our state alone it is estimated that more than 9,000 women will get breast cancer this year. As the number rises, the need for a cure becomes even more important.

Hundreds of people gathered at Eastern Radiology in Greenville for the 7th annual “Ride For a Cure.” Survivors and their families came together to raise money for breast cancer awareness.

For the second year in a row, car owners decked out their best classic and modern cars for the event. People also got the chance to put their artistic skills to work in a bra decorating competition.

All the money raised stays to support the local community. Event organizers hope to raise $15 ,000.

Sabtu, 28 September 2013

FDA: Criminal case shows food safety is paramount

FDA: Criminal case shows food safety is paramount

DENVER â€" Criminal charges against two cantaloupe farmers over a dead ly food-borne illness send an emphatic message to fruit and vegetable growers to crack down on safety, federal regulators said Friday.

Colorado farmers Eric and Ryan Jensen appeared in shackles in a Denver federal court this week and pleaded not guilty to charges of introducing adulterated food into interstate commerce.

The federal Food and Drug Administration has said conditions at Jensen Farms in southeast Colorado led to a 2011 listeria outbreak that killed 33 people. Officials said people in 28 states ate the contaminated fruit, and 147 required hospitalization.

The criminal prosecution "sends the message that absolute care must be taken to ensure that deadly pathogens do not enter our food supply chain," the FDA said in a statement Friday.

Criminal charges are rare in food-borne illnesses, but the FDA under President Obama has been more aggressive in pursuing farmers and food processors for alleged lapses, said Michael Doyle, director of Universi ty of Georgia's Center for Food Safety.

"I think the FDA is sending a strong message that the produce industry is going to have to raise the bar to ensure the safety of the, basically, ready-to-consume foods," he said.

It's the second such warning from the agency, Doyle said. In February, four former employees of a peanut company were charged in Georgia federal court with scheming to manufacture and ship tainted peanuts. A 2009 salmonella outbreak blamed on the peanuts killed nine people and sickened hundreds.

The four pleaded not guilty.

STORY: Colo. farmers arrested in listeria outbreak that killed 33

The listeria epidemic traced to Jensen Farms was the nation's deadliest outbreak of food-borne illness in 25 years.

The FDA conclud ed the melons likely were contaminated in Jensen Farms' packing house. It said dirty water on a floor, and old, hard-to-clean equipment probably were to blame.

The Jensens' trial is scheduled to start Dec. 1. The brothers could face up to six years in prison and $1.5 million in fines each if convicted.

Produce farmers don't have a "true-kill" step to eliminate bacteria, the way dairies and other food producers do, Doyle said.

Pasteurization and proper storage can assure the safety of milk, he said. "We cannot say that with bag salads because we don't have that true-kill step that will kill harmful bacteria," Doyle said.

Higher safety standards are possible for produce, he said, but it will take time and money to develop them, and produce is a l ow-profit business.

Improved safety practices are economically feasible, said Michael Hirakata, president of the Rocky Ford Growers Association. Colorado cantaloupe farmers launched the association after the listeria epidemic to protect the reputation of Rocky Ford cantaloupes, sought-after for their distinct sweetness.

The Jensens farmed 90 miles from the Rocky Ford area, but they used the Rocky Ford name. Hirakata's group registered Rocky Ford as a trademark, hired a full-time food safety manager and built a central packing operation where melons are washed and rinsed.

The group said it passed an unannounced FDA safety audit last month.

"This was the business we're in and we wanted to keep doing it, so for us, it was feasible," Hirakata said. "I know there's several smaller farmers in our association (that have) done it. The consumer confidence is there, so it's working."

The Rocky Ford Growers Association sought advice from universities and f rom the state and federal agriculture departments and reviewed California's cantaloupe safety rules to develop their standards.

Hirakata, a fourth-generation farmer, said the intensified focus on safety has changed farming.

At the end of the growing season, farmers used to say, "The freeze is coming. We've got to work hard and get done," Hirakata said. "Now, it's 'We've got to look back at our operations and see where the risks are.'"

"It's not my grandpa's farm. It's not even my dad's farm anymore," he said. "The face of produce is changing even as we speak."

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Jumat, 27 September 2013

As critical phase near, Obama stumps for healthcare law

As critical phase near, Obama stumps for healthcare law

WASHINGTON | Fri Sep 27, 2013 7:08am EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama visits a local college on Thursday to promote his signature healthcare program as it nears a critical enrollment phase, even as the law faces stiff political opposition and a wary public.

In remarks at Prince George's Community College in suburban Maryland, Obama will seek to focus attention on the sign-up period for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act, popularly called "Obamacare." Starting on Tuesday, Americans who lack insurance will have six months to shop online for health coverage.

The administration's goal is for the registration period to pull in 7 million uninsured people, including 2.7 million adults aged 18 to 35.

"President Obama will talk about a key cornerstone of what it means to be middle-class in America: having access to affordable healthcare that you can count on," a White House official said. "The president will cut through all the noise coming out of Washington and speak directly, in plain and honest terms, about what the Affordable Care Act means for consumers."

The president is also facing a Tuesday deadline for Congress to approve a federal budget and avoid a government shutdown and a mid-October date to raise the nation's borrowing cap or face a default.

Republicans have sought to make cutbacks to the health law a condition for both steps, but the president has refused to allow Obamacare to be used as a bargaining chip in fiscal disputes.

Republicans, conservatives and business groups have made delaying or scuttling the health program a top priority. They have launched an aggressive advertising program slamming Obamacare as tantamount to socialized medicine, saying it will raise costs for businesses, eliminate thousands of jobs and make already insured people pay more.

The White House and Democrats in Congress say Obamacare will provide millions of Americans with health insurance that they otherwise could not afford, while potentially pushing down healthcare costs.

The administration is rolling out what it hopes will be a forceful public edu cation campaign, drawing on popular figures such as former President Bill Clinton and social media promotions targeted at young adults.

The administration's efforts coincide with an expected $1 billion marketing initiative from health insurers, hospitals and health systems, as well as public outreach steps by groups ranging from churches, charities and the AARP advocacy group for seniors to the Walgreen and CVS pharmacy chains.

Obama faces an uphill struggle to convince skeptical Americans to use the online tools to sign up for healthcare coverage.

A Real Clear Politics average of polls conducted over three weeks up to Tuesday indicated a 38.7 percent approval rating for Obamacare, versus a 52 percent disapproval rate.

(Reporting by Mark Felsenthal; Editing by Peter Cooney)

Kamis, 26 September 2013

First Bionic Leg Allows Mind to Control Movement in Study

First Bionic Leg Allows Mind to Control Movement in Study

Zac Vawter, a software engineer who lives in the Seattle area, already knew about advances in bionic technology when a motorcycle wreck led to the amputation of his right leg just above the knee in 2009.

As doctors at Harbor View Medical Center in Seattle battled for three days to try to save his leg, Vawter asked about the method that uses the mind to move a prosthetic limb. The technology had previously been used only in arms.

Four years and an $8 million grant from the U.S. Army’s Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center later, Vawter is considered the “test pilot” of the bionic leg that can tackle slopes, stairs and in-chair movement markedly better than existing devices. A team of researchers led by Levi Hargrove from the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago’s Center for Bionic Medicine reported their results with the novel prosthetic in the New England Journal of Medicine.

“In my mind, it’s still the same thing in terms of moving my ankle down or up, or extending my leg forward or back,” Vawter said in a telephone interview. “It’s just walk like I would normally walk. It’s not special training or buttons or tricks. That’s a big piece of what I think is groundbreaking and phenomenal about this work.”

Additional refinements are needed to make the thought-controlled bionic leg commercially viable, Hargrove said in a telephone interview. Vawter is allowed to use the machine only a week at a time during visits every few months to the clinic in Chicago. Freedom Innovations LLC, a closely held company based in Irvine, California, is working on making the motorized machine smaller, quieter and more robust.

Prosthetic Evolution

It’s been an evolutionary process. Most prosthetic legs work like a walking stick with springs, giving the patient something on which to balance. The next step up, robotic prosthetics, are further advanced with remote controls and embedded sensors that measure how much weight they must bear, the knee position and the way a person is turning, like mobile phones determine orientation. The thought-controlled device goes further, harnessing nerves that formerly regulated the leg’s movement to maneuver the prosthetic leg.

The new leg allows Vawter to seamlessly transiti on between walking and standing, with the biggest difference showing up when he is climbing stairs. With a standard prosthetic leg, Vawter always steps up first with his healthy left leg, then pulls the right leg along. With the thought-controlled leg, he is able to walk foot-over-foot, he said. Someone watching him climb wouldn’t know he had a prosthesis based on his gait, Hargrove said, though they may hear the motor whirring.

‘Dramatic Improvement’

“It’s still a prosthetic, but it’s in between the leg I wear every day and prior to amputation,” said Vawter, who can’t yet jump to the rim of a basketball net with the robotic leg, as he could before the amputation. “It’s a dramatic improvement over my current prosthetic, but there is still a long way to go.”

The rate of errors, including the risk of falls, was shaved to just 1.8 percent with the new device, down from 12.9 percent with the standard robotic leg prosthesis.

The new device may be available within three to five years for the 1 million Americans with leg amputations, Hargrove said. The approach may benefit the 1,200 soldiers injured while serving in the U.S. military, many of whom are young and want to continue active lives. It may also help older people who want to remain at home, particularly those who have trouble standing and caring for themselves because of amputations, he said.

The researchers started with an advanced motorized knee and ankle prosthesis developed at Vanderbilt University. Their goal was to improve the “steering” of the device, using only the mind.

Natural Signaling

The first thing was to recreate the natural signaling process used to move, which was disconnected when the leg was severed. The signal in the brain that m oves through the spinal cord, down the peripheral nerves and into the muscles remains intact until the spot of the amputation, Hargrove said.

The researchers “rewired” Vawter, redirecting two of the critical severed nerves into his hamstring, the muscle at the back of the leg. When he thinks about moving his knee or ankle, those nerves still fire, releasing a tiny burst of electricity.

Sensors taped on to the legs capture the signals. That data is added to a pattern-detection computer system that takes information from the robotic leg to predict the patient’s intended movement. While the researchers expected the additional information to make the leg operate more smoothly, the magnitude of the benefit was unexpected, they wrote in the N ew England Journal. Many errors weren’t even noticeable.

The researchers measured nine muscles in the leg and analyzed the activities that were most important for regular function, Hargrove said. When Vawter performs any of those activities, the computer program predicts what he is doing.

Reinnervation Expert

Vawter became the test pilot of the device through his surgeon, Douglas Smith. A contributor on the paper, Smith is an expert on the use of targeted muscle reinnervation, when the nerves are repurposed to improve the control of a motorized arm prosthesis. He performed Vawter’s amputation, and identified him as a good candidate for helping develop the thought-controlled leg prosthesis.

The researchers adjusted the leg and the computer systems based on Vawter†™s feedback. It has gone through major revisions of the hardware and many little changes to the software, said Vawter, who works at Engineered Software Inc. in Lacey, Washington.

Current prosthetic legs cost a few thousand dollars, with robotic devices as much as $100,000, Hargrove said. There is no price target yet for the thought-controlled bionic leg, he said.

“The value it will provide to the people who use it will be enormous,” Hargrove said. “We feel we’ve been able to eliminate the vast majority of safety critical errors. You can never predict how they will use these devices in their own lives, but we are making fantastic progress.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Michelle Fay Cortez in Minneapolis at mcortez@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Reg Gale at rgal e5@bloomberg.net

Enlarge image Software Engineer Zac Vawter

Software Engineer Zac Vawter

Software Engineer Zac Vawter

Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago via Bloomberg

Software Engineer Zac Vawter is considered the “test pilot” of a bionic leg that can tackle slopes, stairs and in-chair movement markedly better than existing devices.

Software Engineer Zac Vawter is considered the “test pilot” of a bionic leg that can tackle slopes, stairs and in-chair movement markedly better than existing devices. Source: Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago via Bloomberg

Rabu, 25 September 2013

Report: Obamacare premiums in Arizona among lowest in nation

Report: Obamacare premiums in Arizona among lowest in nation

What can I do to prevent this in the future?

If you are on a personal connection, like at home, you can run an anti-virus scan on your device to make sure it is not infected with malware.

If you are at an office or shared network, you can ask the network administrator to run a scan across the network looking for misconfigured or infected devices.

Zoeller Calls On FDA To Regulate E-Cigs, Prohibit Sales To Minors

Zoeller Calls On FDA To Regulate E-Cigs, Prohibit Sales To Minors

September 25, 2013 Updated Sep 25, 2013 at 11:49 AM EDT

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (21Alive) -- Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller and 39 other attorneys general are calling on the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to place restrictions on the sale of electronic cigarettes.

Below is a release from the Attorney General's office:

In a bipartisan letter, the attorneys general urged the FDA to take all available measures to regulate e-cigarettes as tobacco products under the Tobacco Control Act. E-cigarettes are battery operated products that heat liquid nicotine, derived from tobacco plants, into a vapor that is inhaled by the user.

“Some smokers see e-cigarettes as a way to wean themselves off of other tobacco products, but the health effects of these popular alternatives have not been adequately studied and the ingredients are not regulated,” Zoeller said. “Nicotine is highly addictive and, if e-cigarettes are left unregulated, our state’s youth may use them as a gateway to smoking.”

State Attorneys General have fought for years to protect people from the dangers of tobacco products. In 1998, the attorneys general of 52 states and territories signed a landmark agreement with the four largest tobacco companies in the United States to recover billions of dollars in costs associated with smoking-related illnesses, and restrict cigarette advertising to prevent youth smoking.

Zoeller said unlike traditional tobacco products, there are no federal age restrictions that would prevent children from obtaining e-cigarettes. Noting the growing use of e-cigarettes, and the growing prevalence of advertising, the letter highlights the need to protect youth from becoming addicted to nicotine through these new products.

A survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that from 2011 to 2012, the percentages of youth who have tried or currently use e-cigarettes both roughly doubled. The survey estimates that nearly 1.8 million middle and high school students have tried e-cigarettes in 2012.

According to the U.S. Surgeon General, nicotine is highly addictive and has immediate bio-chemical effects on the brain and body at any dosage, and is toxic in high doses.

E-cigarette manufacturers are using marketing tactics similar to those big tobacco used in the last 50 to 100 years to attract new smokers. Celebrity endorsements, television advertising, cartoons, fruit flavors, attractive packaging and cheap prices all serve to encourage youth consumption of these dangerous products.

Additionally, some marketing claims that these products do not contain the same level of toxins and carcinogens found in traditional cigarettes, cigars, and other tobacco products. These claims imply that e-cigarettes are a safe alternative to smoking, when in fact nicotine is highly addictive, the health effects of e-cigarettes have not been adequately studied, and the ingredients are not regulated and may still contain carcinogens.

Selasa, 24 September 2013

World continues 'enormous progress' against AIDS

World continues 'enormous progress' against AIDS

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Have it the Healthier Way: Burger King Reveals Low-Fat Satisfries

Have it the Healthier Way: Burger King Reveals Low-Fat Satisfries

Noel Barnhurst
Noel Barnhurst

We tasted them, and you may not miss the 40% fat and 30% calories stripped from the spuds.

When I was invited to taste test Satisfries, I was skeptical. A healthier fry? (The company is very careful not to say that their latest spuds are healthy, just healthier than the regular version.) Frying up anything isn’t the best way to make them good for you, and fries are sacred in that regard. So I was curious, but realistic.

The hotel rooftop for the french fry unveiling was decked out with Burger King crowns (but no King) and large-than-life cutouts of friesâ€"and plenty of ketchup, which made me a little wary about just how appetizing this next generation fried potato would be. As soon as we were seated, Burger King’s North American CMO Eric Hirschhorn informed us that Burger King is rolling out a better-for-you fry.

(MORE: Don’t Be So Quick to Shun the French Fry)

So the next time you’re at a Burger King and asked ‘Do you want fries with that?’ you might feel a little less guilty about saying yes. Just over half of the the fast food chain’s 100 million monthly customers orders fries. And while most of them aren’t expecting to get a health boost from their meal, heightened awareness about diets and nutrition, and the role that fried foods play in obesity, are starting to weigh on customers’ choices. And the fast food industry is aware of changing dietary demands too. It’s not entirely realistic to expect a healthy, nutritious meal delivered at a fast food counter, but it does makes sense that their menu developers start listening to what people want.

“We couldn’t not address these changes,” says Hirschhorn. “We decided to meet people halfway.”

That’s why quick service restaurants are all offering healthier fare. There is a grilled chicken option for nearly every fried item, and salads freshen up the menu boards of all fast food chains now. But it turns out visitors to these restaurants want only one thing â€" the food that made these chains so popular in the first place â€" burgers, fries and shakes.

(MORE: Forget the Food: Fast Food Ads Aimed at Kids Feature Lots of Giveaways)

So Hirschhorn says that when he and his team decided to adapt their menu, they turned away from adding another healthy item (which past history showed most of their customers don’t order) and focused their attention on re-fashioning their tried and true staples. And where better to start than with the beloved fry?

The SatisFry looks and tastes just like the chain’s regular crinkle fries. They are battered and deep fried in vegetable oil, and they maintain that distinct Burger King flavor (If you’re a fast food fry aficionado, you know what that means). But here’s the secret â€" they don’t absorb as much fat from their deep-fried bath. When I peeked inside my fry carton, I was surprised to see few grease stains and very little soggy cardboard.

(MORE: Nutrition at Fast Food Restaurants Still Leaves Much to be Desired)

It’s important to note that although Burger King cleaned up its recipe with the oil-shunning batter, a fry is still a fry. Which is why the company says it will not be promoting Satisfries as a healthy food. ”Baking fries lacks attributes like the crunchiness,” says Hirschhorn explaining why they didn’t want to change ingredients or process. “Fries are still indulgent, [and] these taste great. It’s the small changes.”

Getting people to eat healthier food at fast food joints is a major challenge for the industry. Burger King’s market research, for example, showed that people who walk into a restaurant intending to order grilled chicken change their minds at the register and consistently order fried. “We know that attitudes are changing and our consumers are becoming more mindful of the foods that they eat. But changing attitudes is much different than changing behavior. We have seen time and time again that consumers don’t want to sacrifice the foods that they love,” says Hirschhorn. “We set out to introduce a great tasting french fry with all the french fry attributes that people expect â€" crispy on the outside and fluffy on the inside.”

Satisfries are made with the same oil and equipment as the traditional french fries, and, not surprisingly, Burger King won’t reveal the oil-repelling agent responsible. But we consulted some food science experts who say that lowering fat content in fried food is more an engineering trick than a nutritional one.

(MORE: Why French Fries Are Such Good Comfort Food)

“There are several patents out there now. It’s actually kind of an old technology,” says Mary Ellen Camire, the president-elect of the Institute of Food Technologists of the fat-fighting batter technique.

Adding modified starches to the surface of foods like potato chips, or adding ingredients to wet batters like proteins, gellan gum, methylcellulose and hydroxypropylmethyl cellulose and soy and pea flours, are well known ways to make fried foods less absorbant.

The challenge however, is in maintaining the taste of the deep-fried food. “I always wonder how good they are going to taste. Because when the fat goes in, the water goes out. That’s how you get the crispiness. So different products vary in how well they still maintain taste,” says Camire, a professor of food science and human nutrition at the University of Maine.

(MORE: A Heart-Healthier Way to Eat Fried Food?)

Camire says many fast food industry efforts to lower fat content costs them customers because the loss of fat leads to loss of taste or texture or both. “The big concern is, will consumers notice a difference? People have an expectation for a certain fast food chain fry,” she says. “Fried foods are a part of the international cuisine. There is something people like about that crispy golden brown fat. Trying to keep that while making it lower fat is really a challenge. You can make it, but you may trade off for what you want to have in terms of quality.”

The Satisfry seems to have overcome that the taste hurdle. And the timing couldn’t be better for Burger King, since the U.S Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is requiring restaurant chains with over 20 locations in the U.S. to post calorie counts on their menus by 2014. The company’s execs deny that’s the reason they’re releasing the new fry line, pointing out that since the fries absorb less oil, the company will save on oil costs.

I don’t claim to be a french fry connoisseur, but I couldn’t tell the difference between the SatisFries and the regular fries I remember. (Oh, did I forget to mention that the taste test did not include a head-to-head comparison with the full fat version?) For a while, you’ll be able to choose between the Burger King fries you’re used to and the new version. But if the Satisfries take off, the same batter may find its way to their other fried fare.

Satisfries Nutrition info: 190 calories, 8 grams of fat and 210 milligrams of sodium per value-size serving.

Senin, 23 September 2013

Marriage and its impact on cancer survival

Marriage and its impact on cancer survival

our health news tonight is about the fight against cancer and a big new study that serves as confirmation for what a lot of folks have known themselves in their own household for a long time. being married and having your spouse as your partner and caregiver right there in the fight can drastically improve your odds of survival as much as medicine itself. our t report tonight from nbc's rehema ellis.

reporter: sue stone, a wife and mother of 12-year-old twins is a breast cancer survivor who is certain her husband's support helped save her life.

you're just overwhelmed. it's good to have someone as your advocate to ask the questions and find out and keep things clear.

we tried to encourage each other and do it as a team, as a family.

reporter: they're not alone. in a study published today, harvard researchers analyzed more than 700,000 patient records. across the ten leading causes of cancer deaths in the united states . they found married patients were 53% more likely to receive appropriate treatment and 20% more likely to survive cancer . the survival benefit for men was almost 50% greater than it was for women.

you can see a single man perhaps being not as willing to let people into his life and bring people with him to the doctor and accept support from people.

reporter: at a fund-raiser for cancer support --

for my dad.

mash out cancer .

team gambo!

reporter: tom survived testicular cancer and says his wife marge would not let him give up.

i don't know that i would have survived this long if it wasn't for her.

if you don't fight for anything, fight -- you know, fight for kids.

reporter: the study is encouraging news for everyone -- married or single.

if you have a friend or a loved one with cancer , you can make a difference in that person's outcome by going with them to their appointments snshs the stone family was at the mud race, too, sporting superhero costumes. living proof of the power of love in the fight against cancer . rehema ellis, nbc news, medford, new jersey.

Skin drug shows 'promising' results on type 1 diabetes

Skin drug shows 'promising' results on type 1 diabetes

A woman injecting herself with insulin

A drug that was used to treat a skin disorder has shown signs of being able to treat aspects of type 1 diabetes.

A small trial on US patients suggests that alefacept helps the body produce its own insulin, which is key for people with type 1 diabetes.

Type 1 diabetes affects around 400,000 people in the UK.

Researchers said the drug could be better than other treatments because it protects the immune system - but more research was needed.

The findings are published in The Lancet Diabetes Endocrinology.

Alefacept (sold as Amevive) was used to treat the skin disorder psoriasis in the US before it was withdrawn by its manufacturer in 2011. The drug was never approved for the European drug market.

Continue reading the main story

“Start Quote

Type 1 diabetes will one day be cured. It's a matter of time, money and excellent research”

End Quote Karen Addington Chief executive of JDRF

Psoriasis, like type 1 diabetes, is an autoimmune disorder that occurs when the immune system attacks healthy skin cells.

In clinical trials of the drug on psoriasis, the drug was found to attack specific types of T-cells that were also involved in attacking insulin-producing cells in type 1 diabetes.

So researchers, led by a team at Indiana University, Indianapolis, decided to investigate if it could have any effect on newly diagnosed type 1 patients.

Preserve insulin

In the trial, which is continuing, 33 patients received weekly injections of alefacept for 12 weeks, followed by a break of 12 weeks, and then another 12 weekly doses.

Another 16 participants were given placebo injections following the same schedule.

The researchers found no difference in how well the pancreas produced insulin two hours after eating food, but they did find "significant differences" between the two groups four hours after eating.

At this point, the group who received the drug showed they were able to preserve insulin while the placebo group's insulin levels decreased.

Continue reading the main story

What is type 1 diabetes?

Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune condition, where the immune system attacks the cells of the pancreas that produce insulin.

This results in insulin deficiency and the body being unable to regulate blood sugar.

It tends to affect people before the age of 40, and often follows a trigger such as a viral infection.

After 12 months, the same group showed no significant increase in insulin use, yet those in the placebo group did.

The first group also had fewer episodes of hypoglycaemia, low blood glucose levels. which are common in people with type 1 diabetes.

'Small successes'

Lead researcher Prof Mark Rigby, of Indiana University, said the first 12 months of the trial were encouraging.

"Although the primary endpoint was not met, several key secondary endpoints were significantly different between treatment groups, suggesting that alefacept might preserve pancreas cell function during the first 12 months after diagnosis."

He said the initial findings meant that in the future the drug "could be used to stabilise type 1 diabetes and prevent its progression" - but it was unlikely to be a cure.

He added that the trial would continue and further measurements would be taken after 18 months and 24 months.

Writing about the study in The Lancet, Dr Kevan Herold, of Yale University, said: "It is important to underscore these small successes since, as in other fields such as oncology and infectious diseases, the small achievements acquire greater significance when they are combined."

Karen Addington, chief executive of JDRF, the type 1 diabetes charity that helped fund the study, said the outcome was promising.

"The results of this study appear worthy of further exploration. Small steps forward such as this take us closer to a world without type 1 diabetes.

"It is a challenging and complex condition. But type 1 diabetes will one day be cured. It's a matter of time, money and excellent research."

Minggu, 22 September 2013

Fear can be calmed during sleep, study suggests

Fear can be calmed during sleep, study suggests

Tallying sleep's benefits can seem as endless as counting sheep. Now, researchers say they might have found another benefit of sleep â€" it may be a good time to calm fears.

A fear was reduced in people by repeatedly exposing them to the fear memory during sleep, according to a study published online Sunday in the journal Nature Neuroscience.

"It's a novel finding," says Katherina Hauner, the study's lead author. "We showed a small but significant decrease in fear. The bigger picture is that, perhaps, the treatment of phobias can be enhanced during sleep." Hauner conducted the research when she was a postdoctoral fellow in neurology at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.

The study included 15 healthy young adults who received mild electric shocks while viewing two faces. They were exposed to an odor when seeing each face and getting a shock. In doing so, the face and odor were associated with fear. When a subject was sleeping, an odor was continuously presented but without the associated faces and shocks. When the subjects woke up, they were shown both faces. Their fear reactions were lower for the face linked to the odor they smelled during their rest.

There may be an advantage to adding a nighttime component to exposure therapy, a treatment for phobias and post-traumatic stress disorder, says Hauner, assistant director of the Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago.

Exposure therapy involves exposing a patient to a feared object or situation without danger to reduce anxiety. A therapist usually uses this technique with a patient during the day.

It may be helpful for patients if they can experience changes in their fear responses during sleep when they are not aware of the process, Hauner says. In that way, they wouldn't have to go through confronting the feared object or situation as much as they would in current therapy, she says.

"This is a new area of research," she adds. Further testing could look at whether the approach would produce long-term effects, she says. Also, the study examined memories created in a lab so further research could look at whether the approach would have an effect on pre-existing fear memories, she says.

"The study is important and exciting because it's a reminder that sleep doesn't just improve or consolidate memory," says Mark Mahowald, an American Academy of Neurology member who was not involved in the research. "It can extinguish memories."

"The extinction of memory during sleep could be important for people with PTSD and chemical dependencies," says Mahowald, a professor of neurology at the University of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis. "Further research could look at relapse prevention."

Sabtu, 21 September 2013

Alzheimer's disease report focuses on long-term care challenge

Alzheimer's disease report focuses on long-term care challenge

Around the world, about 101 million people ages 60 and older need special care today. By 2050, that number will increase to 277 million, report author and King's College London psychiatrist Dr. Martin Prince and collaborators wrote, noting that most long-term care for the elderly is targeted at patients who suffer from dementia -- and that those patients present a particularly difficult challenge for the care system.

"People with dementia have special needs.  Compared with other long-term care users they need more personal care, more hours of care, and more supervision, all of which is associated with greater strain on caregivers and higher costs," Prince said in a statement issued by the Alzheimer's organization.

According to the publication, 13% of people 60 and older globally are dependent on caregivers, and the costs are steep: 2010 estimates suggest that the annual societal costs worldwide were $604 billion, or 1% of the aggregated worldwide Gross Domestic Product. 

"If dementia care were a country," the report suggested, "it would rank between Turkey and Indonesia and be the world's 18th largest economy."

In all, 80% of worldwide costs are racked up in high-income countries.  That's because patients in less-developed countries are more likely to receive informal care from family, and because cost in lost wages to those caregivers is lower than it would be for informal caregivers in wealthier nations.

The report argued that "'living well with dementia' is an attainable goal, and that maintaining or enhancing quality of life is the ultimate objective." It called for improved means of measuring and monitoring the quality of care dementia patients receive (at home or in care facilities), for giving patients and their caregivers the autonomy to choose how their care will be structured, for better coordination of systems to support dementia patients, and for programs to reward, support and develop the dementia care workforce.

"Undervaluing of caregivers impacts negatively on the quality of care," the team wrote.

The report, which was also supported by the London-based healthcare company Bupa, also recommended that governments pay more attention to managing long-term care availability and oversight. The authors argued that the impact of population aging on long-term care needs was predictable, because the people who will be elderly in the middle years of the 21st century have already been born.

"Governments and the societies that they represent have no excuse if they find themselves inadequately prepared," they wrote.

Return to Science Now.

DC Week: ACA Defunding Bill Dominates Talk

DC Week: ACA Defunding Bill Dominates Talk

Published: Sep 21, 2013

WASHINGTON -- Talk in Washington this week centered on the Affordable Care Act and congressional Republicans' efforts to link its defunding to keeping the government running.

Shutdown Looms Over ACA 'Defunding'

A spending bill passed by the House of Representatives on Friday strips funding from the Affordable Care Act and delays implementation for a year, but if the Senate doesn't go along, the ACA will survive a shutdown, health policy experts said.< /p>

The bill keeps the government running through mid-December, avoiding a shutdown Oct. 1. But it must now be approved by the Senate, and that Democratic-controlled body -- as well as President Obama -- is having no part of the Republicans' anti-ACA effort.

If the government does shut down, many parts of the ACA would continue to roll out since many of the staples of the ACA are mandatory spending -- such as Medicaid expansion and the health insurance exchange subsidies. They, like Medicare, will roll on whether or not the rest of the federal government is operating, several health policy experts said.

GOP Debuts ACA-Replacement Bill

After more than 40 votes to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and now a brewing fight to shut down the federal government over its continuation, Republicans have released their plan for replacing the 2010 health law.

The Republican Study Committee on Wednesday released the American Health Care Reform Act, which ties many GOP-fostered ideas into a 181-page bill.

The bill, a product of the Health Care Working Group Chairman Phil Roe, MD (R-Tenn.), brings medical liability reform, increases use of health savings accounts, and provides tax deductions to purchase insurance.

6% Hike in Health Spending Forecast by CMS

Healthcare spending is projected to grow at 4% through this year but increase by 6.1% next year, ending a string of historically slow growth, government economists said Wednesday.

The uptick in spending comes from expanded health coverage under the Affor dable Care Act, which will cause physician services to grow by 7.1% next year, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said in the report published online in Health Affairs.

Those newly covered are expected to be younger and healthier and, therefore, devote a higher percentage of their medical spending to physician services and prescription drugs than currently insured individuals, economists said.

ACA 'Navigators' Called Qualified, Fraud Ridden

Political opponents of the ACA have drawn dramatically different conclusions about the worthiness of the ACA's "navigator" program to help consumers enroll in expanded coverage options under the 2010 health law.

On Wednesday, the Hou se Oversight and Government Reform Committee issued a report saying the program lacked proper safeguards like background checks on workers to ensure fraud and abuse prevention.

The same day, Democrats on the House Energy and Commerce Committee released preliminary findings from a report calling the navigators "well qualified to do their job."

Contraception Coverage Decision Appealed to High Court

The Obama administration on Thursday asked the Supreme Court to determine the legality of the ACA's mandate that employers provide coverage for contraception to their employees.

The move comes after a series of legal victories for arts-and-crafts retail giant Hobby Lobby, who opposes t he move saying it violates its religious freedoms.

The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty in Washington, lead attorney for Oklahoma-based Hobby Lobby, counts 67 cases and more than 200 plaintiffs opposing the ACA birth control mandate, but not all of them represent for-profits like Hobby Lobby.

Census: More People With Health Insurance

The percentage and number of people with health insurance increased in 2012, the U.S. Census Bureau said Tuesday.

Overall, the percentage of people with health coverage jumped from 84.3% in 2011 to 84.6% in 2012 as nearly 3 million more people had coverage last year.

Private health coverage -- including employer-sponsored and individual health plans -- remained consistent at 63.9%, while government-funded coverage jumped to 32.6% in 201 2 from 32.2% in 2011. (Those numbers combined exceed the overall percentage of people covered because some people might have had more than one type of coverage during the year.)

Health IT Resources Launched

Health information technology officials took the opportunity to launch several programs during "National Health IT Week."

HHS launched Tuesday an online resource called Meaningful Consent which it says will help providers help engage patients on the effective sharing their health information.

On Thursday, CMS launched a new ICD-10 implementation guide, which includes a step-by-step guidance to transition to ICD-10.

FDA Finalizes Major Device Rule

The FDA on Friday released the long-awaited final rule on its unique device identification system (UDI) that will help identify individual devices.

Medical groups have said a UDI system will help regulators and providers better indentify safety and efficacy issues with specific products.

"Implementation of the UDI system will take place over several years, beginning with devices that pose higher risks to patients â€" such as heart valves and hip prostheses (also known as artificial hips)," Jeffrey Shuren, MD, JD, director of the FDA's Center for Devices and Radiological Health, blogged. "Other devices, such as powered wh eelchairs and blood glucose meters, will follow."

Next Week

Congress is expected to be back in session next week to negotiate passage of a spending bill.

The FDA will host a public meeting on Monday and Tuesday on enhancing safety monitoring of dietary supplements.

CMS Administrator Marilyn Tavenner will speak Tuesday on the future of Medicare at a conference hosted by America's Health Insurance Plans.

On Tuesday, the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee will hold a hearing on reducing healthcare-associated infections.


David Pittman

open bio

Jumat, 20 September 2013

Mom sparks outcry after photo of lifting weights at 8 months pregnant

Mom sparks outcry after photo of lifting weights at 8 months pregnant

A California mom sparked an online firestorm when a picture of the bodybuilder lifting weights at 8 months pregnant were posted on Facebook.

Lea-Anne Ellison, 35, was just two weeks shy of her due date when a photo of her posing with a barbell over her head was posted to a group page on the social media site on Sunday.

“8 months pregnant with baby number 3 and CrossFit has been my sanity,” Ellison wrote in the caption. “I have been CrossFitting for 2 1/2 years and...strongly believe that pregnancy is not an illness, but a time to relish in your body’s capabilities to kick ass.”

RELATED: NEW MOM RUNS MARATHON, THEN GIVES BIRTH

But a slew of commenters posted angry greivances on the picture â€" which boasted more than 16,000 likes and almost 3,000 shares by Friday morning.

“This is actually sickening, I hope pregnant around the world do not do this kind of crap,” one woman wrote. “I am a crossfit enthusiast but I DO NOT recommend this at all.”

The person continued by claiming the image gives “people the wrong message that this is OKAY when it’s not!!!!”

Ellison â€

NSB/ZOJ/Nick Stern/WENN.com

Ellison â€" the mother of an 8-year-old boy and a 12-year-old daughter â€" said she trains to maintain her 'HOT mom' image.

“If anything happens to your baby due to your stupidity, I hope you’ll be able to handle your guilt,” another person wrote. “Pregnancy is NOT the time to be taking stupid risks.”

But several fitness enthusiasts rallied support for the Los Angeles woman, who in an earlier post on her personal profile wrote that she trains in an effort to be a “HOT mom.”

“The key is listening to your body! As a medical professional, I find it appalling the number of people who treat pregnancy as an illness,” another woman wrote. “Multiple studies have shown that you can continue to safely workout, including lifting weights as long as you did it prepregnancy!!”

RELATED: PREGNANT MALAYSIAN ATHLETE WILL COMPETE IN LONDON OLYMPICS

According to the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, 30 minutes or more of exercise a day is recommended so long as there are no medical or obstetric complications.

The group stresses on its website that all sports should be reviewed by a medical expert for potential risks, but activities like scuba diving â€" which would expose the fetus to possible decompression sickness â€" and other high-impact sports should be avoided. However, weightlifting is not listed as a problematic sport.

Scores of commenters were angered by the photos, but several supporters claim regular exercise is good for pregnant women.

NSB/ZOJ/Nick Stern/WENN.com

Scores of commenters were angered by the photos, but several supporters claim regular exercise is good for pregnant women.

“In general, participation in a wide range of recreational activities appears to be safe,” the site reads.

PHOTOS: PREGNANT POSES

Ellison â€" the mother of an 8-year-old boy and 12-year-old daughter â€" is the latest woman to stir controversy when they continued rigorous physical activities while pregnant.

Amber Miller faced a public outcry she decided to run the Chicago Marathon in 2011 at 38 weeks and five days pregnant. Miller, then 27, gave birth to a healthy baby girl just hours after she crossed the finish line.

Ellison claimed to be surprised that the photograph prompted such a controversy.

“Thank you to all who posted and continue to post positive, supportive comments regarding my photo,” she wrote. “I had NO IDEA what a stir this would create....It makes me feel proud and loved and STRONGER!!!!”

jkemp@nydailynews.com

@joekemp

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Alzheimer's causes half of long-term care cases

Alzheimer's causes half of long-term care cases

David Hilfiker knows what's coming. He was diagnosed with Alzheimer's so early that he's had time to tell his family what he wants to happen once forgetfulness turns incapacitating.

"When it's time to put me in an institution, don't have me at home and destroy your own life," said the retired physician, who is still well enough that he blogs about the insidious progress of the disease. "Watching the Lights Go Out," it's titled.

Nearly half of all seniors who need some form of long-term care -â€" from help at home to full-time care in a facility â€" have dementia, the World Alzheimer Report said Thursday. It's a staggering problem as the global population ages, placing enormous strain on families who provide the bulk of that care at least early on, and on national economies alike.

Indeed, cognitive impairment is the strongest predictor of who will move into a care facility within the next two years, 7.5 times more likely than people with cancer, heart disease or other chronic ailments of older adults, the report found.

"It's astonishing," said Marc Wortmann, executive director of Alzheimer's Disease International, which commissioned the report and focused on the problems of caregiving. "What many countries try to do is keep people away from care homes because they say that's cheaper. Yes it's cheaper for the government or the health system, but it's not always the best solution."

And dropping birth rates mean there are fewer children in families to take care of aging parents, too, said Michael Hodin of the Global Coalition on Aging.

"Very shortly there will be more of us over 60 than under 15," he noted.

Alzheimer's cases to more than double by 2050

Today, more than 35 million people worldwide, including 5 million in the U.S., are estimated to have Alzheimer's. Barring a medical breakthrough, those numbers are expected to more than double by 2050.

This week, the U.S. National Institutes of Health announced $45 million in new Alzheimer's research, with most of the money focused on finding ways to prevent or at least delay the devastating disease. The Obama administration had hoped to invest $100 million in new Alzheimer's research this year, a move blocked by the budget cuts known as the sequester. Overall, the nation has been investing about $400 million a year in Alzheimer's research.

But the disease's financial toll is $200 billion a year in the U.S. alone, a tab expected to pass $1 trillion by 2050 in medical and nursing home expenditures â€" not counting unpaid family caregiving. The world report puts the global cost at $604 billion 

Thursday, families affected by Alzheimer's and aging advocates said it's time for a global push to end the brain disease, just like the world's governments and researchers came together to turn the AIDS virus from a death sentence into a chronic disease. 

"We need a war on Alzheimer's," said Sandy Halperin, 63, of Tallahassee, Fla., who was diagnosed with early-stage Alzheimer's three years ago. He now finds himself stumbling for words, but still visits lawmakers to urge more funding.

Meanwhile, the world report focuses on caregiving, stressing how the needs of people with dementia are so different than those of other ailments of aging, such as cancer and heart disease.

People with dementia begin needing some help to get through the day early on, to make sure they don't leave the stove on or get lost, for example. Eventually, patients lose the ability to do the simplest activities of daily life, and can survive that way for a decade or more. Often family members quit their jobs so they can provide round-the-clock care, and the stress can harm their own health.

The world report said families need early education about what services are available to help before they're in a crisis, plus training in how to handle the behavioural problems of the disease â€" such as not to argue if their loved one thinks Ronald Reagan is still president, or how to handle the agitation at dusk known as sundowning, or how to react when the patient hits someone.

Two-thirds of the calls that Home Instead Senior Care, which provides in-home personal care services, receives are from families that did no planning until the patient had a crisis, such as wandering or a fall, said its president, Jeff Huber.

Hilfiker, the blogger with early Alzheimer's, takes that education idea a step further. He tells everyone he knows that he has Alzheimer's as a way to break some of the stigma, "so when I make dumb mistakes, I don't need to be embarrassed," he said Thursday.

He urges other patients to plan their end-of-life care early, while they're still cognitively able to participate. He believes that telling his wife no extraordinary care â€" no feeding tubes, for example â€" will ease her burden.

Hilfiker's big unanswered question: "If I'm at peace with my disease, does that make it easier to care for me later?

Kamis, 19 September 2013

Rising Alzheimer's disease puts strain on caregivers

Rising Alzheimer's disease puts strain on caregivers

WASHINGTON â€" David Hilfiker knows what's coming. He was diagnosed with Alzheimer's so early that he's had time to tell his family what he wants to happen once forgetfulness turns incapacitating.

"When it's time to put me in an institution, don't have me at home and destroy your own life," said the retired physician, who is still well enough that he blogs about the insidious progress of the disease. "Watching the Lights Go Out," it's titled.

Nearly half of all seniors who need some form of long-term care â€" from help at home to full-time care in a facility â€" have dementia, the World Alzheimer Report said Thursday. It's a staggering problem as the global population ages, placing enormous strain on families who provide the bulk of that care at least early on, and on national economies alike.

Indeed, cognitive impairment is the strongest predictor of who will move into a care facility within the next two years, 7.5 times more likely tha n people with cancer, heart disease or other chronic ailments of older adults, the report found.

"It's astonishing," said Marc Wortmann, executive director of Alzheimer's Disease International, which commissioned the report and focused on the problems of caregiving. "What many countries try to do is keep people away from care homes because they say that's cheaper. Yes it's cheaper for the government or the health system, but it's not always the best solution."

And dropping birth rates mean there are fewer children in families to take care of aging parents, too, said Michael Hodin of the Global Coalition on Aging.

"Very shortly there will be more of us over 60 than under 15," he noted.

Today, more than 35 million people worldwide, including 5 million in the U.S., are estimated to have Alzheimer's. Barring a medical breakthrough, those numbers are expected to more than double by 2050.

This week, the U.S. National Institutes of Health announced $45 million in new Alzheimer's research, with most of the money focused on finding ways to prevent or at least delay the devastating disease. The Obama administration had hoped to invest $100 million in new Alzheimer's research this year, a move blocked by the budget cuts known as the sequester. Overall, the nation has been investing about $400 million a year in Alzheimer's research.

STORY: Alzheimer's research gets $45 million funding boost

But the disease's financial toll is $200 billion a year in the U.S. alone, a tab expected to pass $1 trillion by 2050 in medical and nursing home expenditures â€" not counting unpaid family caregiving. The world report puts the global cost at $604 billion.

Thursday, families affected by Alzheimer's and aging advocates said it's time for a global push to end the brain disease, just like the world's governments and researchers came together to turn the AIDS virus from a death sentence into a chronic disease.

"We need a war on Alzheimer's," said Sandy Halperin, 63, of Tallahassee, Fla., who was diagnosed with early-stage Alzheimer's three years ago. He now finds himself stumbling for words, but still visits lawmakers to urge more funding.

Meanwhile, the world report focuses on caregiving, stressing how the needs of people with dementia are so different than those of other ailments of aging, such as cancer and heart disease. People with dementia begin needing some help to get through the day early on, to make sure they don't leave the stove on or get lost, for example. Eventually, patients lose the ability to do the simplest activities of daily life, and can survive that way for a decade or more. Often family members quit their jobs so they can provide round-the-c lock care, and the stress can harm their own health.

The world report said families need early education about what services are available to help before they're in a crisis, plus training in how to handle the behavioral problems of the disease â€" such as not to argue if their loved one thinks Ronald Reagan is still president, or how to handle the agitation at dusk known as sundowning, or how to react when the patient hits someone.

Two-thirds of the calls that Home Instead Senior Care, which provides in-home personal care services, receives are from families that did no planning until the patient had a crisis, such as wandering or a fall, said its president, Jeff Huber.

Hilfiker, the blogger with early Alzheimer's, takes that education idea a step further. He tells everyone he knows that he has Alzheimer's as a way to break some of the stigma, "so when I make dumb mistakes, I don't need to be embarrassed," he said Thursday.

He urges other patients to plan their end-of-life care early, while they're still cognitively able to participate. He believes that telling his wife no extraordinary care â€" no feeding tubes, for example â€" will ease her burden.

Hilfiker's big unanswered question: "If I'm at peace with my disease, does that make it easier to care for me later?

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Alzheimer's brain scan detects tau protein

Alzheimer's brain scan detects tau protein

Alzheimer's brain

Pioneering brain imaging that can detect the build-up of destructive proteins linked to Alzheimer's has been developed by Japanese scientists.

It could lead to new ways of diagnosing the condition and of testing the effectiveness of new drugs.

The technology, reported in the journal Neuron, can identify inside a living brain clumps of a protein called tau that is closely linked to the disease.

Alzheimer's Research UK said it was promising work.

Alzheimer's disease is a problem for researchers trying to come up with a cure. The brain starts to die years before any symptoms are detected, which means drugs are probably given too late.

A diagnosis of Alzheimer's cannot be made with absolute certainty until a patient has died and their brain is examined. It is also not 100% clear what is the cause of the dementia and what are just symptoms.

One protein, called tau, is very closely linked to the disease, with tangles of tau thought to be one way in which brain cells are killed.

The team, lead by the National Institute of Radiological Sciences in Chiba, used positron emission tomography to build a 3D picture of tau in the brain.

They developed a chemical that could bind to tau and then be detected during a brain scan.

Brain scanFinding tau in the brain

Tests on mice and people with suspected Alzheimer's showed the technology could detect tau.

Dr Makoto Higuchi, from the National Institute of Radiological Sciences in Japan, said: "Positron emission tomography images of tau accumulation... provide robust information on brain regions developing or at risk for tau-induced neuronal death."

The research is at an early stage, but it could eventually lead to an actual test for Alzheimer's disease.

It might also allow researchers to closely follow the impact drugs that affect tau have on the brain.

Another protein - beta amyloid - is also linked to Alzheimer's and can be detected in similar tests.

Dr Eric Karran, director of research at Alzheimer's Research UK, said: "This promising early study highlights a potential new method for detecting tau - a key player in both Alzheimer's and frontotemporal dementia - in the living brain.

"With new drugs in development designed to target tau, scans capable of visualising the protein inside the brain could be important for assessing whether treatments in clinical trials are hitting their target.

"If this method is shown to be effective, such a scan could also be a useful aid for providing people with an accurate diagnosis, as well as for monitoring disease progression."

Rabu, 18 September 2013

Average yearly cost for a child's food allergy: $4184

Average yearly cost for a child's food allergy: $4184

Food allergies in children are not only increasingly common, they are expensive â€" costing an average of $4,184 a c hild each year, with $931 coming straight out of parents' pockets, a new study finds.

The study, published this week in the journal JAMA Pediatrics, is the first to add up costs for the estimated 8% of U.S. children with allergies to peanuts, milk, eggs and other foods.

The study, based on surveys of 1,643 parents, puts the total cost to the nation at nearly $25 billion a year. That includes the cost of visits to doctors, hospitals and emergency rooms, much of which is covered by insurers. But it also includes the costs of special foods and of parents missing work or even changing or quitting jobs to care for children.

"Kids with food allergies don't tend to have long hospital stays, but your expenses come in other ways," says lead author Ruchi Gupta, a pediatrician at Ann Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago and a professor at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine. Parents "end up having to spend extra on foods to make su re they are safe," she says. Often, she says, that means relying on expensive specialty stores, such as Whole Foods, rather than cheaper grocery stores.

Safety signal: Temporary tattoos signal food allergies

The 37% of parents in the survey who said they spent money on special food spent an average of $756 a year on it. Other out-of-pocket expenses included medical bills and co-pays and the costs of everything from extra child care to special summer camps.

About 9% of parents in the survey said they restricted career choices or gave up, lost or changed jobs due to a child's food allergy. Those so-called "opportunity costs" were the largest in the survey, averaging $2,399 a year for each allergic child and more than $26,000 for families who made the changes. It' s possible that those parents had children with the most severe allergies or histories of severe reactions, Gupta says. Such parents may fear leaving their children with others and may want to be available to go to "every field trip and holiday party," to monitor food, she says.

Gupta says expenses could be cut if more schools had adequate allergy control and response plans, more grocery stores carried allergen-free food and if research to find cures accelerated.

Funding for the study came from Food Allergy Research Education, a not-for-profit advocacy group.

Selasa, 17 September 2013

Stephen Hawking on death, disability, and humour

Stephen Hawking on death, disability, and humour

A documentary about the life of Professor Stephen Hawking is to be released in cinemas.

When Professor Hawking was diagnosed with Motor Neurone disease aged 21, doctors gave him just three years to live.

In an interview with the BBC to mark the film's release Professor Hawking discussed his disability and gave his views on controversial issues such as the right to die.

"I think those who have a terminal illness and are in great pain should have the right to choose to end their lives, and those who help them should be free from prosecution", said Professor Hawking.

Tim Muffett went to meet him

Senin, 16 September 2013

The quest to reverse the human ageing process

The quest to reverse the human ageing process

Fergus Walsh, Medical correspondent Fergus Walsh Medical correspondent ChromosomeTelomeres are the caps on the end of chromosomes

Can we reverse the human ageing process? A small pilot study gives tantalising hints that it might just be possible.

This is not about applying fancy skin creams or scientists with a formula or eternal youth.

Rather, the research suggests that comprehensive lifestyle changes - reducing stress, improving diet and moderate exercise - may increase the length of telomeres, the ends of chromosomes that control cell ageing.

That lifestyle is not exactly that of a warrior monk - but keep that analogy in mind for later where we will discuss the cult 70s TV series 'Kung Fu'.

Let's deal first with telomeres. These are stretches of DNA which protect our genetic code. They are often compared to the tips on shoelaces as they stop chromosomes from fraying and unravelling and keep the code stable.

Biological ageing

But each time a cell divides the telomeres get shorter, until the point that the ageing cell can no longer divide and it becomes inactive or 'senescent' and dies.

Telomere length is one indicator of biological age. Shorter telomeres are associated with a range of age-related diseases including cancer, heart disease and dementia.

Researchers at the University of California followed a group of 10 men with prostate cancer and asked them to eat a plant-based diet, do exercise, and manage their stress with techniques such as meditation and yoga. They also had group support sessions and lectures on diet and health from medical staff.

The men's telomere length was measured at the start and then five years later. It was compared with a control group of 25 men who were not asked to make any changes to their lifestyle.

Whereas the telomeres of the control group had shortened by an average of 3%, those of the healthy lifestyle group had lengthened by an average of 10%.

You can read more about the research, published in The Lancet Oncology here.

That is a striking result, but we should not read too much into it. This was a tiny study, and the authors are careful to stress that a much bigger trial would need to replicate the findings before knowing whether the results are significant.

What's more, the changes did not show any direct positive health effect - some of the men may have had longer telomeres but whether they will live longer is another matter.

Dr Lynne Cox, lecturer in Biochemistry, University of Oxford said: "There are two things to bear in mind here: firstly, short telomeres that occur as result of chronic stress are highly associated with poor health, and studies in mice have shown improved tissue health when telomeres are restored experimentally.

"Secondly, by contrast, globally increasing telomere length in cancer-prone mice actually predisposes to more aggressive cancers. The small increases in telomere length in this new human study are more likely to correlate with improved health than cancer risk, though it is too early to be definite."

A monk's life

Forget about the genetics: it is simpler to examine the lifestyle changes that may be beneficial for health. No-one doubts that regular exercise carries a host of health benefits - from reducing cancer risk to cutting the chance of diabetes, heart problems and stroke.

Kung FuDavid Carradine in the 70s TV series Kung Fu

The healthy lifestyle men in the study did at least 30 minutes walking six days a week.

The other measures included a largely vegetarian, low-fat diet, yoga, meditation, relaxation and increased social support.

So what sort of people lead a life like that? The Press Association put it like this:

"Living like a warrior monk...may have a transcendental effect on your cells, a study has shown. Lifestyle changes that bring to mind David Carradine's "grasshopper" character in the cult 1970s TV series 'Kung Fu' have the power to reverse ageing at a fundamental level, evidence suggests."

'You are not ready grasshopper'

I remember 'Kung Fu' with great affection. In every episode the David Carradine character would turn the other cheek until - usually in the last few minutes - there would be a breathtaking display of martial arts...or general awesomeness (as Jack Black would say in 'Kung Fu Panda').

I have no memory whatsoever of the character being an advert for a long and healthy life - he continually escaped death by the narrowest margin. But it did make me and other devotees yearn to be able to do Kung Fu. For about five minutes.

A healthy lifestyle is a bit like that for most people - a great idea in theory - but in reality quite hard to put into practice.

Putting aside random illness and accidents, we all know pretty much what is needed to maximise our chances of a reaching a ripe old age in good nick. But few have the determination to live like a warrior Shaolin monk, let alone adopt a low-stress, low fat existence punctuated by regular bouts moderate exercise.

As the blind Kung Fu teacher Master Po used to say to his pupil Caine (David Carradine), after he had failed some superhuman feat of endurance: "You are not ready grasshopper". And neither are most of us either for the rigours of martial arts or the discipline that might lead to a longer and healthier life.

Three germs urgent threats to USA's health, CDC says

Three germs urgent threats to USA's health, CDC says

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The overuse of antibiotics has caused three kinds of bacteria, including one that causes life-threatening diarrhea, one that causes bloodstream infections and one that transmits sexually, to become urgent threats to human health in the United States, federal health officials say in a landmark report out Monday.

The report from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is the first to categorize the threats posed by such germs in order of immediate importance, from "urgent," to "serious," to "concerning." CDC says all of the germs together infect more than 2 million people and kill 23,000 each year.

"It's not too late," for the nation to respond, rein in the infections and keep antibiotics working â€" by reserving them for when they are truly needed â€" but several steps are needed right away, CDC director Tom Frieden said in a news conference. "If we are not careful and we don't take urgent action, the medicine cabinet may be empty for patients with life-threatening infections in the coming months and years."

On the urgent list:

  • Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), bacteria that cause 9,000 infections in hospitals and other health-care facilities each year. The CDC says nearly half of hospital patients who get CRE bloodstream infections die from them. It's a "nightmare infection," Frieden says.
  • Drug-resistant gonorrhea, a sexually transmitted infection that now resists several antibiotics that used to cure it. CDC estimates 30% of the 800,000 cases in the United States each year fit that description.
  • Clostridium difficile, a serious diarrhea-causing infection that is not highly resistant to antibiotics but does thrive when antibiotics are over-used. The bacteria cause 250,000 infections and 14,000 deaths each year.

The list of serious infections include 11 kinds of drug-resistant bacteria and one fungus (Candida); the list of concerning infections includes two kinds of Streptococcus bacteria and one kind of Staphylococcus bacteria. The bugs were categorized based on their health impact, economic impact, how common they are, how common they could become, how easily they spread, how well they still respo nd to medication and how difficult they are to prevent.

CDC says there are several ways to get a handle on the problem, but the most important is to "change the way antibiotics are used," by cutting unneeded use in humans and animals and using the right antibiotics in the right way when they are needed.

Other steps include preventing infections in the first place with tools such as vaccines, safe food handling, hand-washing and infection-control plans in hospitals and other health care settings; better tracking of resistant infections and developing new antibiotics and tests for drug resistance.

Patients and family members can do their part by asking about the medicines they are prescribed and questioning infection control in hospitals and other health care facilities, says Michael Bell, deputy director of CDC's division of health care quality promotion: "If you are not comfortable asking questions, force yourself anyway ... ask, 'What are you doing to make sure my mom doesn't get an antibiotic-resistant infection?' "

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