Health & WellnessS

Eye 2

Beware of the boss from the black lagoon

During this downturn watch out for the bully bosses who are relishing their power over you.

One can almost hear their tiny reptilian brains warming to the kill. You're not imagining things when you see their slime on the office floor. Catch the bully boss unawares and you will see him baring his blood-stained fangs.

Comment: For more on the psychological basis for the widespread evil in our society - ignored until now for so long - see the website Political Ponerology.


People

UK: Most people believe in life after death, study finds

A survey of 2,060 people showed 53 per cent believe in life after death, 55 per cent believe in heaven and 70 per cent believe in the human soul.

The study carried out between October and November last year for the public theology think tank Theos also showed nearly four in 10, or 39 per cent, believe in ghosts and more than a quarter (27 per cent) believe in reincarnation.

Red Flag

Health Agency Covered Up Lead Harm

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From 2001 to 2004, Washington, D.C., experienced what may have been the worst lead contamination of city water on record. Tens of thousands of homes had sky-high levels of lead at the tap, and in the worst cases, tap water contained enough lead to be classified as hazardous waste. Not that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the government oversight agency for public health, was worried.

A 2004 CDC report found that water contamination "might have contributed a small increase in blood lead levels." The study has been influential. School officials in New York and Seattle have used the CDC report as justification for not aggressively responding to high levels of lead in their water, and other cities have cited the report to dispel concerns about lead in tap water.

Mr. Potato

Workers "sucking up" is bad for business say experts

If there's a bit more false flattery and loud enthusiasm at the office than usual, don't be surprised.

Whether it's called buttering up the boss, brown-nosing, sucking up or managing up, experts say ingratiating behavior is bound to be on the rise in the workplace as workers fret about keeping their jobs in tough economic times.

But such behavior can be bad for business, they said.

Roses

Essential Oils Offer Many Health Benefits

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Essential oils are more than just a great addition to a relaxing massage. True essential oils are distilled from the bark, flowers, or leaves of a plant and can provide physical and psychological benefits. Internal ingestion of some oils, inhalation, and application to the skin are all methods of using essential oils. The use of essential oils can benefit mood, decrease stress, help prevent disease, and decrease pain.

Toys

Alternative Therapies Safely Help Kids

Alternative and complementary therapies are no longer written off as useless quackery or unproven folklore by a growing number of mainstream physicians. A case in point: Dolores Mendelow, M.D., clinical assistant professor of pediatrics and communicable diseases at the University of Michigan Medical School (UMHS), says these approaches can be successful against many illnesses in youngsters, including the common cold or skin rashes. In fact, they can work quicker and more safely than many typical over-the-counter medications.

Health

Hormone injections 'heal bone fractures and let elderly walk again'

A drug that boosts the body's production of stem cells can also "jump-start" the bone-healing process for older patients who have suffered a fracture, research suggests.

A study found that teriparatide, a hormone normally used to treat osteoporosis, increases the ability of older bones to heal themselves and could even "turn back the clock", making older bones heal as quickly as those of a younger person.

The American researchers described the effects of a daily injection as "miraculous" as, in some cases, patients who had been confined to wheelchairs were able to walk or leave full-time care when their broken bones finally healed.

Researchers at the University of Rochester Medical Center, New York, gave teriparatide, also known as Forteo, to 145 people who had bone fractures that had not healed, many for six months or more.

Light Saber

Germany to ban cultivation of GMO maize: Minister sez: "A Danger to the Environment"

Berlin/Hamburg - Germany will ban cultivation and sale of genetically modified (GMO) maize, German Agriculture Minister Ilse Aigner said on Tuesday.

The ban affects U.S. biotech company Monsanto's MON 810 maize which may no longer be sown for this summer's harvest, Aigner told a news conference. MON 810 maize is the only GM crop currently approved by the EU for commercial use.

"I have come to the conclusion that there is a justifiable reason to believe that genetically modified maize of the type MON 810 presents a danger to the environment," Aigner said.

Monsanto declined immediate comment.

Health

Echo vision: The man who sees with sound

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© djeyewater, stock.xchngDaniel Kish lost his sight in infancy, but taught himself to echolocate with dolphin-like clicks.
I am 6 years old and it's my first day at school. The bell rings for recess and all my classmates run gleefully away. But unlike them I cannot see. At least, not with my eyes. Instead, I click my tongue, listening for echoes from the wall to my left. I walk with my hands slightly outstretched to keep me from running into chairs that may have been left askew. I hear kids laughing and shouting through the open door, and by clicking I also hear the presence of the sides of the doorway in front of me. I go through it to the playground for the first time.

After a few steps, I stop to listen. I stand on a crack in the pavement that runs parallel to the building behind me. I click my tongue loudly and turn my head from side to side. The way is open, shot through with scurrying voices, balls bouncing and shoes scampering to and fro. What is around me? How do I get there? How do I get back?

Clicking my tongue quickly and scanning with my head, I move cautiously forward, catching fleeting images of bodies darting hither and thither. I follow spaces that are clear, avoiding clusters of bodies, keeping my distance from bouncing balls. I am not afraid - to me, this is a puzzle. I turn my head and click over my shoulder. I can still hear the wall of the building. As long as I can hear that, I can find my way back.

Info

Savant skills may be widespread in people with autism

Savant-like skills, such as astounding memory, perfect pitch or the ability to multiply very high numbers together, may be much more common among people with autism than previously thought.

A new study of about 100 adults with autism shows that one third have skills that stand out, both in comparison with their other abilities and with the skills of the general population. Previous studies put the prevalence of savantism in autistic people as around 1 in 10.

"People often focus on the things people with autism can't do," says Patricia Howlin of the Institute of Psychiatry at King's College in London, who led the study. "One of the things our study illustrates is that these are people who do have special skills but they are not being used."

The notion of the savant - someone who has a skill that is exceptional both compared to the general population and to that person's other skills - has long captured the imagination of cognitive scientists and the general public alike. But despite this fascination, the connection between autism and savantism remains mysterious.