Health & WellnessS


Health

H1N1 kills 6 people, leaves 14 critically ill in Greater Houston area

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© ReutersThe H1N1 flu virus (red)
Health officials say there have been six confirmed deaths from H1N1 in the Houston area recently, KHOU 11 News confirmed Thursday afternoon. That includes the four deaths at Conroe Regional Medical Center.

At least 14 people have become critically ill in Harris, Montgomery and Jefferson counties, including the four patients at Conroe Regional Medical Center.

This is the same strain of H1N1 that caused a pandemic in 2009. Doctors have been seeing hundreds of new cases recently in Texas and nationwide. In fact, H1N1 is one of the viruses included in this year's flu shot.

Health officials from all over the region spent Thursday afternoon in a conference call comparing notes about all the cases. They suspect that all of the cases at the Conroe Regional Medical Center are H1N1, or what used to be called the "swine flu."

Syringe

Scotland is in grip of diabetes epidemic

Diabetes
© Herald Scotland

There are a quarter of a million sufferers north of the Border, and the number of new cases has risen by more than 25% since 2006, according to Diabetes UK Scotland.

The organisation warned in a report that the NHS faces an increasing financial burden to treat people with the condition, with the annual cost forecast to balloon from £87 million this year to £146m by 2030.

It also predicts that the number of diabetics living north of the Border will grow to 350,000 during the same period unless measures are introduced to bring the disease under control.

The findings are revealed in the charity's latest State of the Nation report.

It states that there are 258,570 diabetics in Scotland, a figure its national director Jane-Claire Judson described as "truly shocking".

Ms Judson said: "Diabetes continues to be a major challenge for the NHS in Scotland.

"Add to that the numbers of people who have diabetes but have not been diagnosed and the scale of the challenge is clear."

Scotland has the third highest incidence of Type 1 diabetes in the world, and this is likely to rise as the population grows older and people with diabetes live longer.

Two-and-a-half times more people have diabetes than all cancers combined.

Arrow Down

Broiler chickens found at grocery retailers grow three times faster than normal chickens, plagued with lameness and disease

Broiler Chickens
© Prevent Disease
Billions of chickens around the world suffer in the intensive farming systems every year. Broilers chickens have been selectively bred and genetically modified so that they are reared quickly and cheaply to have enough meat to fulfill demand. Most these chickens suffer from painful lameness and disease related to their growth rates.

Intensification of the broiler chicken industry started in the late 1950's, when the use of 'dual purpose' chickens for egg and meat production ceased and new poultry strains were produced specifically for meat production.

For example, in 1950, well under 50 million commercial broiler chickens were raised commercially, and now that number is well into the billions. When Kentucky Fried Chicken stores opened in the 1970s, production of these chickens skyrocketed over 40%.

The result of the narrowly focused breeding programs has been a bird which grows twice or three times as fast as a normal chicken and converts its food into meat in a much more efficient way. Most are raised under intensive systems and reach slaughter weight at 5-7 weeks of age. As a consequence the price of chicken meat has declined and consumption has risen several fold.

Evil Rays

WiFi detrimental to health, New Zealand study suggests


Many people can't imagine getting by without WiFi, but one group says it's coming at a cost more detrimental than people realise.

Safe Wireless Technology New Zealand says research confirms the negative health effects of electromagnetic radiation from WiFi, but that the Government is choosing to ignore it.

The radiation has the potential to cause headaches, nausea and even cancer SWTNZ chairman Greg Kasper told TV ONE's Breakfast.

"If you get too much of this stuff it's really bad for you," he said.

Syringe

Several vaccines are linked to dramatically increased infant mortality. Why? Because they are nothing but toxic concoctions

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A new study published in the journal Vaccine has brought to light an extremely disturbing though still virtually unreported dark side to immunization campaigns within low-income countries, namely, the observation that infant mortality sometimes increases when the number of co-administered vaccines increases; a finding diametrically opposed to the widely held belief that vaccination is always a life-saving intervention, and that the more vaccines administered to infants the better.

New Study Links DTP and Yellow Fever Vaccines To Infant Deaths

The new observational study from the West African country Guinea-Bissau titled, "Co-administration of live measles and yellow fever vaccines and inactivated pentavalent vaccines is associated with increased mortality compared with measles and yellow fever vaccines only,"[i] opens with a reference to the already consistent observation in the biomedical literature that the co-administration of inactivated diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (DTP) vaccine and live attenuated measles vaccine (MV) increases mortality compared with receiving MV only. [ii] [iii]

Health

Stress reaction gene linked to death, heart attacks

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© ZB
A genetic trait known to make some people especially sensitive to stress also appears to be responsible for a 38 percent increased risk of heart attack or death in patients with heart disease, scientists at Duke Medicine report.

The finding outlines a new biological explanation for why many people are predisposed to cardiovascular disease and death, and suggests that behavior modification and drug therapies could reduce deaths and disability from heart attacks.

The study appears in the Dec. 18, 2013, issue of the journal PLOS ONE.

"We've heard a lot about personalized medicine in cancer, but in cardiovascular disease we are not nearly as far along in finding the genetic variants that identify people at higher risk," said senior author Redford B. Williams Jr., M.D. director of the Behavioral Medicine Research Center at Duke University School of Medicine. "Here we have a paradigm for the move toward personalized medicine in cardiovascular disease."

2 + 2 = 4

Your wireless router could be murdering your houseplants

Are you slowly killing your houseplants? Probably! But there might be a reason (other than neglect) why they're all yellow and wilty: your Wi-Fi router.

An experiment by a handful of high school students in Denmark has sparked some serious international interest in the scientific community.

Five ninth-grade girls at Hjallerup School in North Jutland, Denmark, noticed they had trouble concentrating after sleeping with their mobile phones at their bedsides. They tried to figure out why. The school obviously doesn't have the equipment to test human brain waves, so the girls decided to do a more rudimentary experiment.

They placed six trays of garden cress seeds next to Wi-Fi routers that emitted roughly the same microwave radiation as a mobile phone. Then they placed six more trays of seeds in a separate room without routers. The girls controlled both environments for room temperature, sunlight and water.

After 12 days, they found the garden cress seeds in the routerless room had exploded into bushy greenery, while the seeds next to the Wi-Fi routers were brown, shriveled, and even mutated. See for yourself:

Arrow Down

Florida couple forced to dig up 17-year old organic garden

Organic Garden
© Natural Society
When we've lost the right to grow our own food, we've truly become subjects of the state. Lately it seems we've been hearing of more and more people being forced to dismantle their vegetable gardens in order to appease city ordinances or homeowner's association rules. These same policies don't ban things like pesticides, Christmas lights, or tacky lawn art - just edible landscaping. The most recent case comes to us from Florida, where a couple was forced to dig up a 17-year old organic garden.

Hermine Ricketts and Tom Carroll have gardened in their front yard for 17 years. Their back yard doesn't receive enough sunlight. But recently, their community in Miami Shores decided to make such front yard gardens off-limits. That new rule was enacted in May and the couple had until August to remove their vegetables or face fines. Other towns threaten with jail time for growing produce in the front yard.

While Real Farmacy reports the couple dug up the garden after appearing twice in front of the Code Enforcement Board and facing $50 each day the garden remained, there are also reports that they have filed a lawsuit targeted at overturning the zoning regulation that made their garden a battleground.

With the help of the Institute of Justice's National Food Freedom Initiative, the couple is arguing that the ordinance violates the states Constitution by stopping them from exercising their right to "acquire, possess, and protect" their property.
"The right to grow and harvest your own food on your very own property is certainly part of that right to acquire, possess, and protect property," said Ari Bargill, attorney for the Institute.
Their prospects don't look good, however, in light of a similar legal battle in which Florida's state courts upheld a zoning regulation in Coral Gables that banned homeowners from parking pickups in their driveways, an asinine law that was eventually overturned.

Health

Opioids and painkillers damage the immune system's ability to fight cancer cells

opioids and painkillers
© ReutersOpioids and painkillers given after prostate surgery can actually help spread cancerous cells.
In treating prostate cancer, surgery, also known as a radical prostatectomy, is the most common treatment for patients looking to stop the spread of the disease. Before, during, and after surgery, patients are given drugs such as opioids and painkillers to help control any pain they may experience. A study out of the Mayo Clinic found that the use of these pain drugs could be doing more harm than good by inhibiting the immune system's ability to fight off cancerous cells.

"We found a significant association between this opioid-sparing technique, reduced progression of the prostate tumor and overall mortality," says senior author Dr. Juraj Sprung, a Mayo Clinic anesthesiologist. "Provided future studies confirm what we've found in this study, maybe down the line this would be a standard of care for pain management in patients undergoing cancer surgery."

Dr. Sprung and his colleagues used information from the Mayo Clinic's prostatectomy registry to complete their study. This database includes the medical records of patients who underwent prostate gland surgery to treat adenocarcinoma, the most common type of prostate cancer, between January 1991 and December 2005. The information included whether the patient received anesthesia in the form of pain killers, if there was a cancer recurrence, if the cancer spread, or if the patient died.

Comment: In order to increase the effectivity of the immune system, especially with regard to battling any kind of cancer, consider following a ketogenic diet. See these articles for more information:
Ketogenic diet, calorie restriction and hyperbaric treatment offer hope for non-toxic cancer treatment and alleviation of multiple health issues
Solve Your Health Issues with a Ketogenic Diet
Is the Ketogenic Diet the cure for multiple diseases?
Eat Less, Live Longer? Gene Links Calorie Restriction To Longevity


Beaker

Forget that the planet is on the brink of a new Ice Age, instead let's blame humans for washing their hands in hot water!

It doesn't kill germs better than cooler water, but turning tap temperatures high, the U.S. burns carbon equal to the emissions of Barbados.

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© Gaetan Bally/Keystone/Cobris
It's cold and flu season, when many people are concerned about avoiding germs. But forget what you think you know about hand washing, say researchers at Vanderbilt University. Chances are good that how you clean up is not helping you stay healthy; it is helping to make the planet sick.


Comment: What a fine, guilt inducing paramoralism!


Amanda R. Carrico, a research assistant professor at the Vanderbilt Institute for Energy and Environment in Tennessee, told National Geographic that hand washing is often "a case where people act in ways that they think are in their best interest, but they in fact have inaccurate beliefs or outdated perceptions."

Carrico said, "It's certainly true that heat kills bacteria, but if you were going to use hot water to kill them it would have to be way too hot for you to tolerate."

She explained that boiling water, 212°F (99.98°C), is sometimes used to kill germs-for example, to disinfect drinking water that might be contaminated with pathogens. But "hot" water for hand washing is generally within 104°F to 131°F (40°C to 55°C.) At the high end of that range, heat could kill some pathogens, but the sustained contact that would be required would scald the skin.

Carrico said that after a review of the scientific literature, her team found "no evidence that using hot water that a person could stand would have any benefit in killing bacteria." Even water as cold as 40°F (4.4°C) appeared to reduce bacteria as well as hotter water, if hands were scrubbed, rinsed, and dried properly.

In fact, she noted that hot water can often have an adverse effect on hygiene. "Warmer water can irritate the skin and affect the protective layer on the outside, which can cause it to be less resistant to bacteria," said Carrico.

Comment: Regardless of the fact, that taking cold showers and doing creo therapy in general is quite beneficial for the health, we at SOTT can't ignore another blatant manipulation and bad science.

Scientist: Carbon Dioxide Doesn't Cause Global Warming

Watch out for the "carbon nightmare"? You have got to be kidding

Proof: Humans Cause Global Warming. Humans + Bad Science = Global Warming