Health & Wellness
When the pills are swallowed the "edible" microchips react with the acid in the stomach sending a message to a sticking plaster containing a sensor strapped to the shoulder. If the patient has forgotten a dose, the sensor delivers a text message to the patient's phone reminding them to take their pills.
Researchers found that in the two years after the end of an abusive relationship, mothers showed poorer mental health, became more depressed and maintained high levels of anxiety. In those areas, they were no better off than women who stayed in abusive relationships.
However, abused mothers who had more social support fared better after the end of their relationship than did similar mothers with less help from friends and family.
"Our findings really help us understand how unstable those first few years are for mothers who leave violent or controlling relationships," said Kate Adkins, lead author of the study, who did the work as a doctoral student at Ohio State University.
"Even though getting out of the relationship may be good in the long run, they first have to deal with multiple sources of stress, including financial problems, single parenting and sharing custody with the abuser."
Adkins conducted the study with Claire Kamp Dush, assistant professor of human development and family science at Ohio State. Their results appear online in the journal Social Science Research and will be published in a future print edition.
The findings don't suggest that women shouldn't leave abusive partners, Kamp Dush emphasized.
Such premonitions are nothing new: In 2007 The Washington Post reported that one in four adults had not read one book that year, and in 2003 the Jenkins Group, an independent publishing firm, reported that 70 percent of adults had not entered a bookstore for five years. What should really be unnerving is the following: On Aug. 19, The Chronicle of Higher Education reported that Rice University will close its campus press in September, consequently dismantling an essential medium for community and communication amongst the student body. Its closure obstructs a vital, time-honored bridge of correspondence between student and institution.
Why has it skyrocketed to now surpass heart disease as number one?
Is it because people live longer and have to die of something? That's a factor, but not the prime reason as reflected by the jump in age-adjusted cancer being far above what could be expected from increased longevity. And it certainly doesn't explain the steep hike in childhood cancers. Is it lifestyle, diet and genetics, as we have often been told? They are factors, but not key reasons.
The cause of the cancer epidemic, as numerous studies have now documented, is largely environmental - the result of toxic substances in the water we drink, the food we eat, the consumer products we use, the air we breathe.

If you're looking for antioxidants in tea, you're better brewing your own rather than buying the bottled stuff.
Some even put the amount of antioxidants on the label. But if you think that you're getting a big dose of these natural chemicals from your favorite bottled brew, think again.
Reseachers tested bottled teas for antioxidants called polyphenols and found that most brands contain very little of them.
"Out of 49 samples, half of the bottle teas contain less then 10 milligrams of polyphenols," says Shiming Li, a natural products chemist at WellGen, a company that's working to develop foods for medical use.
Rates of inflammatory disease have been rising for decades among adults and children alike. Puzzlingly, this increase has occurred largely in developed countries, bypassing poorer places. (Rural poverty brings many hardships; inflammatory bowel disease is not among them.) This has left scientists struggling to pinpoint exactly what about the rich world is making people sick. New data from Paolo Lionetti, of the University of Florence in Italy, supports the view that diet may be the culprit.
There is evidence to support health food fraud with canola oil. Not buying it by the bottle is easy enough, but it appears in many prepared or processed foods, even those in health food stores. Because of Canola's marketing itself as a healthy option, it is recommended by many health food experts. Meanwhile, the health food industry sells and uses it as a healthy alternative despite growing evidence of toxic dangers.
Research Shows: Drug Addicts Get Hooked via Prescriptions, Keep Using 'To Feel Like a Better Person'
Thirty-one of 75 patients hospitalized for opioid detoxification told University at Buffalo physicians they first got hooked on drugs legitimately prescribed for pain.
Another 24 began with a friend's left-over prescription pills or pilfered from a parent's
medicine cabinet. The remaining 20 patients said they got hooked on street drugs.
However, 92 percent of the patients in the study said they eventually bought drugs off the street, primarily heroin, because it is less expensive and more effective than prescriptions.
They continued using drugs because they "helped to take away my emotional pain and stress," "to feel normal," "to feel like a better person."

Integrative body-mind training boosts neuron connectivity in the part of the brain which regulates emotions and behavior
Even a brief course of meditation strengthens connections between the regions of the brain that regulate our emotional responses, they found.
This could make it easier for us to keep calm, they said.
Chinese and U.S. researchers at the University of Oregon focused on effects of a meditation technique known as integrative body mind training, or IBMT.
Based on ancient Chinese medicine, IBMT combines posture, mental imagery and body relaxation and breathing techniques.
Despite their widely varying political and personal experiences, all three of these powerful women do not have children, and some experts think this fact may have contributed directly to their successes.
A new study from the University of Chicago claims that childless women become more successful in the workplace than women with children.








Comment: To learn more about the President's Cancer Panel read the following articles carried on SOTT:
New Alarm Bells About Chemicals and Cancer
New Research Revealed: Environmentally Caused Cancers Are 'Grossly Underestimated'