People’s Health

May 31, 2009

Top Seven Health Myths

Filed under: World News, Hospital, Tips & Tricks, People, Controversial, Industry, Information - Administrator @ 4:53 pm

 Without a medical degree, sorting medical fact from fiction can be daunting: does reading in the dark actually hurt your vision? Do we really use only 10 percent of our brains? It turns out that even MDs have difficulty with widely held medical maxims like these. A study in the British Medical Journal’s December issue looked at seven medical myths that doctors often accept as truth. "The problem is that a lot of people take what [doctors] say as gospel, but sometimes it’s not backed up by science," says Aaron Carroll, an assistant professor of pediatrics at the Regenstrief Institute in Indianapolis and co-author of the study. "Patients and parents should feel free to ask about why the things they are being told are true. They should be upfront about it." To start your year off with a little less fiction and a little more fact, here are seven of the most common medical myths debunked:

1. Reading in dim light ruins your eyesight.

While this is one myth that parents around the world have loved for generations, it has very little scientific backing. Reading in the dark can cause a temporary strain on the eyes, but it rapidly goes away once you return to bright light. The practice has been blamed for increasing rates of myopia (nearsightedness), but Carroll says those claims don’t align with the evidence—we’re living in the best-lit conditions the world has ever seen. "Seventy years ago we were reading by candlelight and weren’t going blind," says Carroll. "There’s no evidence for this whatsoever."

2. Using cell phones in hospitals is dangerous.

Despite the signs in most emergency waiting rooms, studies have found little to no significant cell phone interference with medical devices. In 2005 the Mayo Clinic ran 510 tests with 16 medical devices and six cell phones. The incidence of clinically important interference was a mere 1.2 percent. A 2007 study on cell phones "used in a normal way" found no interference during 300 tests in 75 treatment rooms.

3. Fingernails and hair grow after death.

"Growing hair and fingernails is a very complex hormonal task," says Carroll, one that can’t happen after one has died. So how did this myth get off the ground? It could be because after death the skin begins to contract, which could give the appearance that the nails are growing.

4. We use only 10 percent of our brains.

The notion that our brains are not running at full speed simply doesn’t hold up. "Numerous types of brain imaging studies show that no area of the brain is completely silent or inactive. Detailed probing of the brain has failed to identify the ‘nonfunctioning’ 90 percent," Carroll and Rachel Vreeman, an assistant professor of pediatrics at the Indiana University School of Medicine, write in the British Medical Journal study. Carroll says the notion may go as far back as the snake-oil salesmen of the early 20th century, who used the myth to sell a tonic that would increase brainpower.

5. You should drink at least eight glasses of water a day.

The source for this myth may be a 1945 article from the National Research Council that claims that a "suitable allowance" of water for adults is 2.5 liters a day, although the last sentence of the article notes that much of that water is already contained in the food we eat. Existing studies suggest that that often-omitted fact is key to understanding water intake. We get enough fluids from our typical daily consumption of juice, milk and even caffeinated drinks. And drinking too much water can cause water intoxication, a severe electrolyte imbalance in which cells swell with excess fluid, and even death.

Miraculous pumpkin against acne and not only

Filed under: Women's Health, Social, Tips & Tricks, People, Recipes, Information - Administrator @ 4:19 pm

Miraculous pumpkin against acne and not onlyDo you know that to get clear of acne you have to eat pumpkin seeds every day? Pumpkin is irreplaceable mean in skin care, because of great content of zinc salts and vitamins E and T. It helps to increase metabolic processes. Also facial masks from pumpkin and pumpkin seeds have fine moistening and tonic effects. Today I offer some recipes of homemade facial masks from this useful vegetable.

For normal skin. Mince 200 gram pumpkin pulp and add 1 tablespoon non-fat sour cream. Mix everything and put on the face with thick layer. In 20 minutes wash the face with cool water. This mask cleans and tones skin very well.

For dry skin. Boil the piece of pumpkin and make puree. Add one grated apple, 1 tablespoon olive oil and mix everything. Put on the face and keep for 20 minutes. Then wash with warm water. This mask has moistening and emollient effect.
Grate a piece of fresh pumpkin and mix with 1 yolk and 1 tablespoon milk (for anti-aging effect change milk to vegetable oil). Put the mask on the face and neck. Wash with warm water in 15-20 minutes.

For greasy skin. Mix 2 tablespoons boiled pumpkin with 1 tablespoon olive oil. Put on the face and keep for 20 minutes. Then wash with cool water.
Mix 2 tablespoons pounded fresh pumpkin with egg-white and beat. Put on the face for 10 minutes and then wash with cool water.
Rub the face skin with a piece of fresh pumpkin some times a day to get rid of acne and pimples.

Anti-aging mask. Slice some pumpkin pulp and boil. Pound pumpkin and add a yolk, 1 teaspoon honey and mix carefully. Put the warm mask on the face and keep for 15-20 minutes. Then wash with cold water.

For all types of skin. Make puree from boiled pumpkin and add 1 tablespoon grated carrot and 1 tablespoon olive oil. Mix everything carefully and put on the face and neck for 15-20 minutes. Then wash mask with warm water.

Bleaching mask clears spots away and whitens freckles. Pound 2 tablespoons fresh cleaned pumpkin seeds adding boiled water (2 tablespoons). Then ass 2 tablespoons honey and mix carefully. Put the mask on the face, especially on the pigmental spots and freckles and keep for 30 minutes. Then wash mask with cool water. Keep the mixture in the fridge. Use this mask every day until desired result.

Moistening cream from pumpkin. Slice 150 gram of pumpkin pulp and boil in the steamer. Make a puree. Add 3 table-spoons milk and boil the mixture on the water bath until density of sour cream. Then add 1 tablespoon vegetable oil, mix carefully and put into glass can. Keep this cream in the fridge and use every morning.

May 27, 2009

Be Safe on the Water, At Any Age

Filed under: Tips & Tricks, People, Industry, Information - Administrator @ 10:15 am

 

National Safe Boating Week, May 16-22, is a good time for adults who boat to review safe and responsible practices for cruising our nation’s waterways. According to the U.S. Coast Guard, sponsor of National Safe Boating Week, some key safe practices include:

  • Ensuring life jackets are within reach and always on children and weak swimmers;
  • Completing a safe boating course;
  • Properly equipping and inspecting your vessel;
  • Maintaining safe speeds and respecting others on the water;
  • Never mixing alcohol and boating; and
  • Helping fellow boaters in distress, as well as mapping a plan to tell others where you will be boating.

At age 50 and older, it is also important to check your balance and other boating-related abilities that can change with age. The Coast Guard notes that adults age 50 and older are involved in 31 percent of boating-related deaths and 14 percent of injuries. The National Safety Council has partnered with the Coast Guard to create a pamphlet for boaters older than 50 years of age and a safety checklist for boaters of all ages. To request free safe boating materials, please call 800-621-7619.

Safety tips for boaters older than 50 years of age include:

  • Adding extra lighting for better onboard visibility;
  • Exercising to increase balance, flexibility, coordination and strength; and
  • Installing more safety rails, grab bars and hand rails to avoid slips and falls.

If you’re not 100% sure of his HIV status, use condoms…

If he says he’s positive – you know where you stand and can make an informed decision about what sex to have.

If he says he’s negative – he may not be.  If he’s had unsafe sex since his last test he can’t be sure of his status.  He could be HIV positive and not know it. 

If he says nothing, don’t just assume he’s the same status as you – he may not be.

Unless you’re both 100% sure of your own as well as each other’s HIV status there is a risk of passing on or picking up HIV if you fuck without condoms.   

Condoms and lube, lube and condoms…

Condoms and lube are the surest way to prevent HIV being picked up or passed on. And they reduce the chances of other STIs too. 

If you’re going to fuck without condoms, make sure you’re 100% certain of his and your HIV status. Don’t just assume.

ACON can help you…

ACON provides free safe packs of condom and lube in pubs, clubs and parties around NSW. Pick some up next time you’re out.

For more info on HIV/AIDS and safe sex, check outwww.acon.org.au/health

Traffic Safety Starts at Home

Filed under: World News, Social, Tips & Tricks, People, Information - Administrator @ 10:08 am

 

It only takes a few extra seconds to play it safe when you back up – and those seconds can make the difference between life and death. While hard to imagine, every year more than 100 children die and thousands more are injured by being backed over, sometimes in their own driveways.

Before driving, the National Safety Council urges parents and other drivers to walk completely around their cars to ensure the safety of children and pets.

Another danger that’s often not realized is the heat inside a car, which can quickly build up to a life-threatening degree. Even in 70º weather, heat-stroke can happen fast to children or animals left inside a vehicle and can result in injury, brain damage or death.

Sometimes heat stroke happens at work, when overworked parents forget to drop children at daycare and leave them in the car. Putting something beside parents in the front seat, like a stuffed animal, when children are in the back, can be a reminder that they are there.

The NSC offers free informational flyers, in both English and Spanish, with tips to prevent hot car deaths (English version, Spanish version) and unintentional backovers(English version, Spanish version). Flyers are also available for purchase in quantities of 100 (car deaths, unintentional backovers).

Can dentists/doctors refuse to care for HIV+ child?

Filed under: Uncategorized - Administrator @ 9:59 am

Under the ADA (Americans with Disabilites Act) HIV+ people are protected from health care discrimination. State and local laws may also protect HIV+ people from health care discrimination. Under the laws, your doctor or dentist cannot refuse to treat you because you have HIV.

Additionally, you do not have to disclose your HIV status to your dentist.

Doctors and dentists are supposed to use universal precautions when treating patients. Universal precautions protect medical providers by requiring them to treat all bodily fluids as potentially hazardous. Therefore, medical providers working with bodily fluids should wear gloves and masks, and use proper sterilization and disposal techniques when performing medical procedures involving bodily fluids for all patients.

Are all health care providers required to treat all persons with HIV/AIDS?

No. A health care provider is only required to treat a person who is seeking treatment or services within that provider’s area of expertise. If the patient falls outside the health care provider’s area of specialization, that provider can refer the patient with HIV/AIDS to another provider in an appropriate specialty.

The good news is that there are MANY wonderful, cooperative doctors out there who are more than willing to work with HIV+ patients.

HIV in Relationships

Filed under: Social, People, Sexual Health and Relationships - Administrator @ 9:58 am


 

Know your HIV status and talk about all the sex you have…

It might come as a surprise that 25% of HIV infections in gay men  happen in relationships.

HIV transmissions in relationships can occur for lots of reasons:

  • Some couples stop using condoms early in the relationship before they’ve talked about HIV or had an HIV test together,
  • If either partner breaks their guidelines for sex outside the relationship and aren’t able to or don’t tell their partner they have been put at risk,
  • If the couple are in a positive/negative relationship and occasionally have sex without condoms.

Know your status and talk to each other…

If you decide to stop using condoms because you’ve both tested negative, make sure you set up a clear agreement for sex with each other and with other people.

If either of you takes a risk, go back to condoms until you’ve both been tested again.

Talking to each other about the sex you have inside and outside your relationship is vital for protecting each other from HIV and other STIs.

If you’re in a positive/negative relationship remember that condoms are the best way to prevent HIV transmission and know about PEP in case you need it.  

ACON can help you…

ACON runs workshops on relationships covering a range of topics including sex, negotiation and communication skills and expectations.

There are specific workshops for, gay men, gay men under 26 and HIV negative partners of HIV positive men.

ACON also has counsellors who you can talk to either on your own or with your partner. Call us on 9206 2000 or 1800 063 060 to find out more.

Or check out M8 Magazine for hints and tips about relationships, including info on improving your negotiation skills.

If you’re outside of Sydney, then you can get in touch with the staff at one of ACON’s regional offices in the Hunter, Illawarra, Northern Rivers or on the Mid North Coast

Working Nights May Cause Cancer

Filed under: Hospital, Tips & Tricks, People, Information - Administrator @ 9:57 am

The Nurses’ Health Studies are among the largest and longest running investigations of factors that influence women’s health. Started in 1976 and expanded in 1989, the information provided by the 238,000 dedicated nurse-participants has led to many new insights on health and disease. While the prevention of cancer is still a primary focus, the study has also produced landmark data on cardiovascular disease, diabetes and many other conditions. Most importantly, these studies have shown that diet, physical activity and other lifestyle factors can powerfully promote better health.

The NHS is just one of many that’s studied the effects of working the night shift only to find there is a strong link between obesity, cancer, reproductive health problems, mental illness and gastrointestinal disorders and working the graveyard shift.

Big surprise? Not to me.

I’ve linked my working the graveyard shift to my development of CFS. If you read my book, The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Fighting Fatigue or this blog you know that I believe it’s the cumulative effect of stressors over time that so weakens and disrupts your central nervous system, your adrenals, and your immune system that you’re unable to cope with any demands and you essentially crash and burn.

Working the graveyard shift is an enormous unnatural stressor due to the disrupted circadian rhythms and chronic sleep deprivation.

Because the evidence for an increased cancer risk is so strong, in December 2008 the International Agency for Research on Cancer, a unit of the World Health Organization, declared that shift work is "probably carcinogenic to humans."

Graveyard work is now in the same category as carcinogens like diesel engine exhaust, anabolic steroids, and ultraviolet radiation. We’re not meant to be exposed to light at night because it suppresses the physiologic production of melatonin, a hormone that has antiproliferative (cells that grow wildly out of control) effects on intestinal cancers. The lack of endogenous melatonin is also related to Alzheimer’s disease, glucose intolerance, and impaired immune function.

Animals that have their light-dark-day-night schedules switched develop more cancerous tumors and die earlier. Now we know that women working the night shift over many years are more prone to breast cancer and there’s evidence that men working at night may have a higher rate of prostate cancer.

People used to think it was a ridiculous notion that smoking caused cancer. Today people are failing to connect other unnatural stressors and toxins like sleep deprivation, the obsessive use of fragrance and chemicals so widely used in personal care and household products, and the chemicals and other biologically injurious substances added to processed foods to illness and disease. They don’t see how you can’t stress the body in unnatural ways year after year without terrible consequences.

I WISH that someone would have told me years ago when I was valiantly trying to work nights and not getting any sleep that it would lead to my CFS and my having to exit my work and my life. I didn’t know that I couldn’t mind over matter it. Yes I was SICK with sleep deprivation but I thought if I could just get through it I could move on when I got off of nights. But that stressor was so enormous to me that it caused an ingrained and lasting sleep disorder and it was an added weight on top of all my other stressors.

I can’t tell you how many doctors I told, "I used to do 50 mile bike rides and then go work a double shift in intensive care." I was trying to emphasize to them how healthy I had been and how it didn’t make sense that I had gotten so ill. I also talked about my inability to sleep and working the night shift. Although on top of this I was very thin NO BELLS AND WHISTLES WENT OFF and I never had a doctor sit me down and tell me how my behaviors and lifestyle were the cause of my illness because doctors aren’t looking at imbalance. Instead they look at things like your labs and listen to your breath sounds and heart in order to determine if you’re sick. If someone came to me now and told me any of that I would tell them, "You have sleep deprivation, you are obsessively exercising in a way that is unhealthy, you are too thin to be working that hard both exercising and at work. Those are the reasons you are sick." Then I would tell them what to do to get well.

If you work nights and you are suffering with chronic fatigue, continual disrupted sleep patterns even while not on the night shift, and you begin to feel unable to deal with other stressors its time for you to re-evaluate whether whatever work you’re doing is worth the risk of developing CFS.

Cancer aside, CFS takes away your life and is extremely difficult to recover from. Working nights is hazardous to your health and like all things if the risks outweigh the benefits then it’s not worth it.

Sexual Health Tests For Women

Filed under: Women's Health, Sexual Health and Relationships - Administrator @ 9:52 am


 

Get the sexual health checks you need…

Lots of lesbians, especially young queer women, think that sexually transmitted infections (STIs) can’t happen to them. 

According to Australian research, almost one in ten young women who are same sex attracted have been diagnosed with an STI.

Sometimes, STIs will cause symptoms like itchiness or a discharge.  With some STIs, you get no symptoms at all.

If you’re not diagnosed and treated early, you could be at risk of complications later on. Most STIs are easily treatable.

Have check-ups, get treatment…

Have a full sexual health check up at least once a year, or whenever you notice any symptoms or changes to your genital area.

Most of the time, a sexual health check up will include:

  • a blood sample to check for HIV, syphilis and immunity to hepatitis A and B,
  • a urine sample to check for chlamydia and other STIs,
  • a vaginal examination to check for lumps, discharges and other abnormalities as well as crabs, warts, syphilis and herpes.

Depending on your recent sexual history, a vaginal, throat and/or anal swab may also be required (a swab is like a cotton bud you would use to clean the inside of your ears).

Talk to you health care provider about the sex you have to determine exactly what tests you need.

ACON can help you…

ACON can refer you to a lesbian-friendly GP, women’s health centre or sexual health centre for a check up.

For more info, contact Siri at smay@acon.org.au

Giving Small That Helps People Big Time

Filed under: World News, Social - Administrator @ 9:39 am

I just re-loaned money that was paid back to me from a businesswoman who applied for a micro-loan on Kiva. If you start out with $25 like I did you can continue to re-loan the money and help someone else.

You can go to Kiva’s website and lend to someone across the globe who needs a loan for their business - like raising goats, selling vegetables at market or making bricks. Each loan has a picture of the entrepreneur, a description of their business and how they plan to use the loan so you know exactly how your money is being spent - and you get updates letting you know how the entrepreneur is going.

The best part is, when the entrepreneur pays back their loan you get your money back - and Kiva’s loans are managed by microfinance institutions on the ground who have a lot of experience doing this, so you can trust that your money is being handled responsibly.

I just made a loan to this entrepreneur pictured named Juliana Manu in Ghanam, her business is fish selling, way to go Juliana, selling great real food!!!! They still need another $575.00 to complete their loan request of $625.00 (you can loan as little as $25.00!). Help me get this entrepreneur off the ground by clicking on the link below to make a loan to Juliana Manu too by going here.

It’s finally easy to actually do something about poverty - using Kiva I know exactly who my money is loaned to and what they’re using it for. And most of all, I know that I’m helping them build a sustainable business that will provide income to feed, clothe, house and educate their family long after my loan is paid back.

Join me in changing the world - one loan at a time.

Thanks!

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What others are saying about www.Kiva.org:

‘Revolutionising how donors and lenders in the US are connecting with small entrepreneurs in developing countries.’
– BBC

‘If you’ve got 25 bucks, a PC and a PayPal account, you’ve now got the wherewithal to be an international financier.’
– CNN Money

‘Smaller investors can make loans of as little as $25 to specific individual entrepreneurs through a service launched last fall by Kiva.org.’
– The Wall Street Journal

‘An inexpensive feel-good investment opportunity…All loaned funds go directly to the applicants, and most loans are repaid in full.’
– Entrepreneur Magazine

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