8/31/2007

Bird flu can be transmitted between humans

seattletimes.nwsource.com

Local researchers have now proven that bird flu has finally mutated and can be transmitted from person to person. The outbreak occurred in 2006 in Indonesia.

Experts at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research center in Seattle used statistical analysis and a computerized disease-transmission model to show the disease spread between a small number of people in one family.

The chain of infection involved a 10-year-old boy who likely caught the virus from his 37-year-old aunt who had been exposed to dead poultry and chicken feces.

Researchers say the boy then probably passed the virus to his father.

All but one of the flu victims died. All of those who contracted the disease had long, close contact with other ill family members prior to getting sick.

Health authorities eventually placed more than 50 surviving relatives and close contacts under quarantine in an attempt to contain the spread.

One of the authors of the study says that containment came late, so it was lucky the virus didn't spread any further.

"It went two generations and then just stopped, but it could have gotten out of control," said biostatistician Ira Longini, co-author of the study. "The world really may have dodged a bullet with that one, and the next time we might not be so lucky."

Longini says that if bird flu develops enough to cause sustained human-to-human contact, it could spread worldwide faster before enough vaccine could be made available.

The researchers estimate the rate of one infected person passing bird flu to another in Indonesia is 29 percent. That's similar to the spread of seasonal flu in the United States.

Researchers also say another bird flu case in eastern Turkey in 2006 that killed four people was probably spread person-to-person, but there wasn't enough statistical data to support the theory.

The study will be published Sept. 1 in Emerging Infectious Diseases, a journal of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Health Tip: Coping With Chronic Pain

www.forbes.com

Chronic pain persists for longer than six months. Besides pain medications, the American Academy of Family Physicians offers this list of additional treatment options:

  • Physical therapy, including stretching and strengthening exercises.
  • Low-impact exercise, including swimming, biking and walking.
  • Occupational therapy to learn how to change daily activities to avoid making pain worse.
  • Behavioral therapy, such as yoga and meditation, to increase relaxation and decrease stress.
  • Lifestyle changes, including quitting smoking, getting plenty of sleep, eating a proper diet, and getting enough exercise.

How to Relieve Pain Naturally

Zimbabwean Teachers To Instruct Life Skills To Avoid HIV Infection

http://www.voanews.com/

By Carole Gombakomba

The United Nations Children’s Fund, or UNICEF, is training 1,500 Zimbabwean teachers in new and practical methods to stop the spread of HIV/AIDS.

The week-long training exercise ending Friday stands to benefit more than 500,000 children. The teachers, from training colleges in Harare, Bulawayo, Mutare, Masvingo and Mutoko, will be teaching primary and secondary school children living skills to avoid HIV infection as well as fending off sexual molestation or exploitation.

Zimbabwe's Ministry of Education is rolling out the US$500,000 program.

UNICEF says the decline in Zimbabwe's HIV prevalence rate in recent years can be attributed to behavior changes including a later start of sexual activity for young girls in particular, faithfulness in sexual relations, and increased use of condoms.

Sex now primary cause of China HIV spread

Older adults don't give up on sex

Study links homelessness and mental health

www.canada.com

Alexandra Zabjek
Edmonton Journal

More than half of Edmonton's homeless population has reported having mental-health problems, reflecting a national trend that a new study shows could affect the health-care system.

The report, released Thursday by the Canadian Institute for Health Information, shows that mental health and behaviour disorders were responsible for 52 per cent of hospital stays among homeless people across the country in 2005-06, compared to five per cent of the general population. This is the first time an organization has published research on the number of hospital visits for homeless people in a given year. The analysis did not include Quebec hospitals.

"The homeless don't have family doctors so they're using either the on-site services at shelters, or they are using these emergency type services that are available," said Elizabeth Votta, the report's primary author.

The most common type of mental-health problem recorded for homeless patients was substance abuse, followed by schizophrenia or other delusional disorders.

The report also described the circle of circumstances that make people with mental-health issues more susceptible to homelessness, and homeless people more prone to poor mental health.

"The longer you're homeless, the greater you are at risk for developing mental-health issues," said Votta.

She noted that homeless Canadians experience high stress levels and have a lower perceived self-worth, which can contribute to depression, substance abuse and suicidal behaviour.

At the same time, people who suffer from mental-health problems may have difficulties maintaining a steady income, employment and housing, which puts them at greater risk for homelessness.

Psychologist Kathleen Cairns, who co-authored studies on homelessness in Edmonton and Calgary in 2004, said she is not surprised by the institute's findings.

"Both studies indicated there's a significant proportion of the chronically homeless population that have a clear mental illness," Cairns said.

"There are also high rates of active addiction....Very often addiction goes hand in hand with mental illness, so those two populations would overlap significantly, and an individual who's diagnosed with both a mental health problem and an addiction is more likely to require emergency attention."

Study Ties Moldy Homes to Depression

www.foxnews.com

A moldy home, especially one plagued with toxic black mold, has long been linked to health problems.

And a new public health study now links damp, moldy homes to depression.

The findings, published in the American Journal of Public Health, came as a complete surprise to lead author, Brown University epidemiologist Edmond Shenassa.

In fact, after a few U.K. studies published in the last decade had suggested a link, Shenassa and his team set out to debunk the notion that any link existed.

“We thought that once we statistically accounted for factors that could clearly contribute to depression – things like employment status and crowding – we would see any link vanish,” said Shenassa, an associate professor in the Department of Community Health at Brown, in a news release. “But the opposite was true. We found a solid association between depression and living in a damp, moldy home.”

Shenassa said the study, an analysis of data from nearly 6,000 European adults, does not prove that moldy homes cause depression.

The study wasn’t designed to draw that direct conclusion. But Shenassa’s team did find a connection. One likely driven by two factors: a perceived lack of control over the housing environment by the persons living there and mold-related health problems such as wheezing, fatigue and a cold or throat illness.

“Physical health, and perceptions of control, are linked with an elevated risk for depression,” Shenassa said, “and that makes sense. If you are sick from mold, and feel you can’t get rid of it, it may affect your mental health.”

The study was a statistical analysis of data from the Large Analysis and Review of European Housing and Health Status (LARES), a survey on housing, health and place of residence conducted in 2002 and 2003 by the World Health Organization (WHO).

To conduct the survey, WHO interviewers visited thousands of homes in eight European cities and asked residents a series of questions, including if they had depressive symptoms such as decreased appetite, low self-esteem, and sleep disturbances. WHO interviewers also made visual checks of each household, looking for spots on walls and ceilings that indicate mold.

Shenassa’s team analyzed LARES data from 5,882 adults in 2,982 households.

“What the study makes clear is the importance of housing as indicator of health, including mental health,” Shenassa said. “Healthy homes can promote healthy lives.”

Shenassa and his team are conducting follow-up research to see if mold directly causes depression.


How to Fall Asleep Easily & Naturally

Smokers' Cough Is Not Just a Smokers' Disease, Study Shows

www.bloomberg.com

By Angela Cullen

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, a preventable illness mostly caused by cigarettes, is wrongly perceived as a smokers' ailment, masking the public health threat and limiting treatment, scientists said.

The condition known as COPD is killing more and more non-smokers, and its prevalence is higher than previously estimated, according to a study in The Lancet medical journal today. Allergies, tuberculosis and poor ventilation can cause the disease, the fifth-leading cause of death in high-income countries. A shift in the way people view COPD may help save more lives, an accompanying editorial said.

More than 2.5 million people die of COPD every year, as many as die from HIV/AIDS, according to the World Health Organization. Aging populations and the continued use of tobacco may propel it to the third biggest killer by 2020, WHO estimates. Because of its stigma as a self-inflicted disease, COPD is often under-diagnosed and under-treated, scientists including A. Sonia Buist, a medical professor at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, said.

``If every smoker in the world were to stop smoking today, the rates of COPD would probably continue to increase for the next 20 years,'' Buist and colleague David M. Mannino wrote in the journal.

A study by the scientists of more than 9,000 volunteers, randomly selected, showed that one in 10 adults over the age of 40 suffered from advanced stages of COPD. Prevalence of the disease increased with age, and was similar among people who had never smoked compared with participants who had smoked for a certain period. The results showed a higher prevalence than previous studies of the disease, Buist said.

COPD causes inflammation of the main airways in the lungs and a build-up of mucus, leading to shortness of breath and a persistent cough. More than 15 percent of COPD occurs in people who have never smoked, according to The Lancet editorial.

Although smoking is the most important risk factor in high-income and middle-income countries, low-income nations have more indoor air pollution.

8/30/2007

Americans Growing Fatter

http://www.thetrumpet.com/

America’s obesity rate is spinning out of control, a Trust for America’s Health report says.

The obesity rate in America is higher than ever. “Two thirds of American adults are obese or overweight,” reports the Trust for America’s Health report “F as in Fat: How Obesity Policies Are Failing in America, 2007.” Perhaps more disturbing is the finding that the percentage of overweight children ranges from a low of 8.5 percent in Utah to a high of 22.8 percent in Washington, d.c.

Eighty-five percent of Americans now believe that obesity is an epidemic, a related survey found.

The problem is rapidly growing. The “F as in Fat” report shows that adult obesity rates rose in 31 states since last year. No state had a decrease in adult obesity rates.

And all this despite weight-loss products and services being a $35 million annual industry.

“We find this report to be a devastating indictment,” says Dr. James Marks, senior vice president of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, which funded the project. “We’re in the middle of a public health crisis that is still deteriorating rapidly, and we’re treating it like a mere inconvenience rather than the emergency it is.” Citing the discovery that the number of states whose obese residents make up over a quarter of the population has more than doubled in just two years, Dr. Mark says, “That’s not sending a wake-up call. We’re ringing the disaster alarm.”

“Poor nutrition and physical inactivity are robbing America of our health and productivity,” says Trust for America’s Health executive director Jeff Levi.

Funny Diet and Weight Loss Stories

Study says former smokers still at risk of lung cancer

http://www.cknw.com/

Bad news this morning for former smokers who think they're out of the woods for lung cancer because they've quit lighting up.

The BC cancer agency says 50-percent of new lung cancer cases are in former smokers as opposed to those who still partake in the habit and they now have a new study, which could explain why.

Researchers have found some former smokers are still susceptible to lung cancer even years after they've quit because of gene damage.

The study finds in former smokers, some genes return to normal levels, while others appear to be permanently damaged - including a number of genes never before associated with tobacco use.

It’s estimated nearly 2300 British Columbians will die of lung cancer this year alone.

Study: Shorter wait for Botox than skin cancer exams

abclocal.go.com

Concerns about cancer may be taking a back seat to cosmetics in some doctor's offices.

A new study finds that it's easier to get in to see a dermatologist for a Botox shot than it is to get checked for skin cancer.

Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco surveyed dermatologists in 12 major cities.

Patients looking to get a Botox shot for wrinkles typically only had to wait an average of eight days.

But the survey found it takes about 26 days to have a mole checked for skin cancer.

Researchers suspect financial incentives may be the reason for the difference in wait times.

Natural Skin Care by Revitol

8/27/2007

Smoking increases risks for head and neck cancers for men and women

http://www.eurekalert.org/

Smoking significantly increases the risk for head and neck cancers for both men and women, regardless of the anatomic site. Published in the October 1, 2007 issue of CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society, a large, prospective study confirmed strong associations between current and past cigarette smoking and malignancies of the head and neck in both genders.

Cancers of the head and neck include cancers of the larynx, nasal passages/nose, oral cavity, and pharynx. Worldwide, more than 500,000 people are diagnosed with these cancers every year. According to the National Cancer Institute (NCI), men are more than three times more likely than women to be diagnosed with head and neck cancer and almost twice as likely to die from their disease. While tobacco use has long been identified as an important risk factor for head and neck cancers, the new study finds that smoking plays a greater role in the development of head and neck cancer in women than men.

Dr. Neal Freedman from the NCI and co-investigators analyzed data from 476,211 men and women prospectively followed from 1995 to 2000 to assess gender differences in risk for cancer in specific head and neck sites. Analysis showed that the risk of smoking leading to any type of head and neck cancer was significantly greater in women than in men. While 45 percent of these cancers could be attributed to smoking in men, 75 percent could be attributed to smoking in women.

“Incidence rates of head and neck cancer were higher in men than in women in all categories examined,” conclude the authors, “but smoking was associated with a larger relative increase in head and neck cancer risk in women than in men.” To reduce the burden of head and neck cancer, public health efforts should continue to aim at eliminating smoking in both women and men.

How to quit smoking in just 30 days o less

Self-check blood sugar levels regularly

http://www.earthtimes.org/

Eschborn, Germany - Diabetics should test and evaluate their blood sugar levels as part of their regular routine, according to diabetes specialist Ruediger Landgraf in the Neue Apotheken Illustrierten. Self-testing helps patients understand how blood sugar levels are affected by lifestyle and new situations. They are even more important during travel, after a change in diet, during illness or when starting a new job, but less so for people with stable lives and metabolisms.

To check how to self-test, patients can ask most doctors, diabetes advisers and pharmacists about their testing devices.

Optimum Diabetics

FDA seeks stricter labeling requirements for sunscreen

www.chicagotribune.com

By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

The government proposed new "truth in labeling" requirements for sunscreen Thursday that are intended to give consumers clearer and more complete information about which products offer the best protection against cancer-causing ultraviolet rays from the sun and tanning beds.

The Food and Drug Administration action followed long-standing complaints from consumer groups -- as well as from lawsuits -- alleging shortcomings in the so-called sun protection factor, or SPF, ratings.

Under the new system, sunscreen lotions would be rated on how well they protected against two types of ultraviolet radiation, known as UVA and UVB. UVA light causes the skin to get tanned, whereas UVB causes sunburn. The current SPF ratings measure protection against UVB rays only. The lack of any UVA ratings has been seen as a major loophole.

Both UVA and UVB light can damage the skin and cause skin cancer, but UVA rays penetrate deeper into the skin. For years, scientists believed that UVB rays were primarily responsible for the kind of damage that leads to skin cancer, but they now think that UVA light also damages the skin, leading to premature aging and increased risk of cancer.

More than 1 million Americans are diagnosed with skin cancer each year. In most cases, the lesions are superficial and can be removed with no further complications. But one type of skin cancer, melanoma, develops in the pigment-producing cells of the skin and requires extensive treatment to avoid life-threatening consequences.

"For more than 30 years, consumers have been able to identify the level of UVB protection provided by sunscreens using only 'sunburn protection factor,'" FDA Commissioner Andrew von Eschenbach said in a statement. "Under today's proposal, consumers will also know the level of UVA protection in sunscreens, which will help them make informed decisions about protecting themselves and their children against the harmful effects of the sun."

Under the FDA proposal, sunscreen lotions would be tested for UVA protection as well as for UVB. They would then be assigned one to four stars, with four representing the highest level of protection.

The proposal also would make changes to the SPF ratings for protection against sunburn. Lotions providing up to SPF 50 -- or 50 times the skin's natural protection against sunburn -- would be recognized.

In addition, the FDA is calling for a new warning on sunscreen lotions saying that exposure to the sun increases the risk of skin cancer.

Rating system for UVA protection Under the proposed regulation, a UVA star rating would be prominently displayed on sunscreen labels, near the SPF rating.

*One star will represent low UVA protection

*Two stars, medium protection

*Three stars, high protection

*Four stars, the highest UVA protection available in an over-the-counter sunscreen product.

If a product does not rate at least one star, the FDA proposes that its labeling bear a "no UVA protection" marking on the front label, near the SPF value.

Natural Skin Care by Revitol

Deadly bird flu found in German poultry farm

www.sciam.com

An outbreak of deadly bird flu has been identified in a southern German poultry farm, a spokeswoman for Bavaria's environment ministry said on Saturday.

The spokeswoman said dead ducks from the farm in Wachenroth in Bavaria's Erlangen-Hoechstadt area had tested positive for the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain of the virus, which can be lethal for people living in close contact with birds.

All 160,000 birds in the farm would be culled, the ministry spokeswoman said. The farm has been sealed off.

Local authorities had earlier said the farm contained some 44,000 birds. Officials discovered the infection after more than 400 ducks at the farm died over a short period of time.

Germany identified several cases of the deadly H5N1 strain in wild birds in Bavaria in June. A string of bird flu infections were also registered in Germany last year.

Earlier this week, Russia banned poultry imports from Italy to prevent the spread of bird flu after outbreaks there.

Globally, the H5N1 virus has killed 195 people out of 322 known cases, according to the World Health Organization. Hundreds of millions of birds have died or been slaughtered.

The vast majority of bird flu deaths have been in Asia. No deaths have yet been registered in the European Union.

New warning issued for Indian toothpaste

Harmful bacteria found after earlier discovery of poisonous ingredient

www.thestar.com

Iain Marlow

A popular brand of toothpaste imported from India contains dangerously high levels of harmful bacteria, Health Canada says.

Yesterday's warning comes a month after the agency revealed Neem Active Toothpaste with Calcium also contains a poison used in antifreeze.

Tejinder Narula, owner of Bombay Grocers in Mississauga, stopped selling the toothpaste last week after a customer mentioned the earlier warning.

"I use it myself. For 10 years," Narula said.

Yesterday, several Indian grocers in Toronto said they too heard of the earlier Health Canada warning only from customers.

Health Canada scientists discovered the bacteria during tests conducted after they found the syrupy poison diethylene glycol in the toothpaste made by Calcutta Chemical Co.

The bacteria pose "additional significant health risks, especially to children and individuals with compromised immune systems."

A woman at the Indian Bazaar in Etobicoke initially said they sell Neem toothpaste but, after being told of the warning, added "Now it's, uh, not for sale."

Accidentally swallowing the toothpaste could result in "fever, urinary tract infection, and gastrointestinal symptoms such as vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal pain," Health Canada said.

Throughout the summer, there have been numerous warnings about counterfeit or poisonous toothpaste, many of them imported from China.

UK worst for stroke care

www.channel4.com

The UK has the worst outcome for stroke victims in western Europe and must improve, a senior doctor said.

Despite spending the same amount or more as other countries on care, the UK still lags behind, he argued.

Professor Hugh Markus, from the Centre for Clinical Neuroscience at St George's, University of London, said three different studies had put the UK at the bottom among several other Western European countries.

Writing in the British Medical Journal (BMJ), he called for medical professionals and the public to start seeing stroke as something that needs emergency action.

He also cited a "severe shortage" of specialists trained in acute stroke care and said that this would take years to turn around, despite Government efforts.

An estimated 150,000 people in the UK suffer a stroke each year, according to the Stroke Association.

Stroke is the third most common cause of death in the UK, accounting for more than 60,000 deaths a year. It is also the single most common cause of severe disability. More than 250,000 people live with disabilities caused by stroke.

Prof Markus detailed several interventions where the UK lags behind.

One - brain computed tomography (a CT brain scan) - is performed on admission to A&E in many European countries, he said. But in the UK, many units "struggle" to provide it within 24 hours, he added.

This was despite research showing that it was the most cost-effective strategy and could help tailor care.

8/24/2007

"Good" Cholesterol Not Always Good for Heart Health

Source: www.physorg.com

It’s yet another example of how a good thing can go bad: Researchers have found evidence in laboratory studies that ‘good’ cholesterol, renowned for its ability to protect against heart disease, can undergo detrimental changes in protein composition that make it ‘bad’ for the heart.

Scientists long have suspected that there may be dysfunctional forms of so-called ‘good’ cholesterol, also called high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, that can loose their heart-protective effect. But the exact chemical composition of HDL, both good forms and bad, has remained largely unknown, researchers say.

In a study presented today at the 234th national meeting of the American Chemical Society, researchers reported what is believed to be the most detailed analysis to date of the protein composition of HDL. They uncovered surprising new information about HDL, including previously unrecognized proteins that appear to play an important role in maintaining heart health. Their findings could one day lead to new, more accurate lab tests for heart disease as well as new, potentially life-saving treatments for the disease, which is the number one killer in the United States and other developed countries.

“Targeting HDL could represent a new horizon in heart disease diagnosis and treatment,” says study leader Jay Heinecke, M.D., of the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle. “But simply boosting HDL levels may not be enough to prevent heart disease. You might have to target the right proteins in HDL.”

HDL, which removes cholesterol from artery walls, is also suspected of having anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties. Its evil twin, low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL) deposits cholesterol in arteries. To further explore HDL’s role in the body, Heinecke and colleagues conducted a detailed analysis of the protein composition of HDL and found 48 proteins, including 22 proteins that play a role in cholesterol metabolism and 13 proteins not previously known to exist in HDL.

Of the proteins identified in HDL, some might play a previously unsuspected role in preventing atherosclerotic plaques from rupturing. The rupture of these plaques, followed by formation of an artery-plugging blood clot, causes most heart attacks, the researcher says. Other important protective proteins identified in HDL may protect heart cells from injury during a heart attack, Heinecke says.

But other components found in HDL have potentially destructive effects in the body by promoting cholesterol accumulation and inhibiting some of the heart-protective effects of other proteins, Heinecke says. Thus, boosting HDL cholesterol levels alone might not protect the heart, he says. Indeed, a major pharmaceutical company recently withdrew an experimental HDL-boosting drug when it was found that the drug caused an increase in deaths and heart problems, Heinecke notes.

A better understanding of the protein components of HDL could therefore lead to new, more accurate tests for predicting or evaluating heart disease, says Heinecke, whose study is funded by the National Institutes of Health. He notes that heart attacks can occur in people whose cholesterol levels appear normal and that conventional diagnostic tests for cholesterol levels do not always give a clear picture of the disease. More effective, targeted HDL-based interventions could potentially save lives, especially when used in combination with statin drugs that target low density lipoproteins (LDL), or bad cholesterol, says Heinecke, who notes that more studies are needed.

“There’s still a lot we don’t know about heart disease,” Heinecke says. “HDL is still a big mystery, but we’re closing in on it and we’re pretty excited.” Important interventions for fighting heart disease include exercise, a well-balanced diet, and taking heart medications as prescribed, experts say.

8/23/2007

Older adults don't give up on sex

Source: www.usatoday.com

Sharon Jayson

Americans pushing 60, 70, 80 or even 90 don't forgo sex just because they're aging, according to a study that shows many are having sex into their 70s and 80s.

The University of Chicago study published today in the New England Journal of Medicine is being called the first comprehensive look at the sex lives of older adults in the USA. It portrays an image that researchers say runs counter to the stereotypes of older people as either asexual or "dirty old men."

"Sexuality discussion in later life has long been a taboo subject," says Stacy Tessler Lindau, a gynecologist and the study's lead author. "This study for the first time provides information that allows people to see where their experiences align against others of similar health and age status. The data tell the world older people do not give up sexuality by virtue of their age."

Based on data collected from 3,005 adults ages 57 to 85 during two-hour face-to-face interviews from July 2005 to March 2006, the findings show many are sexually active as long as they're healthy.

In the preceding 12 months, 73% of those ages 57 to 64, 53% of those 65 to 74 and 26% of those 75 to 85 said they were sexually active. Among those who reported good or excellent health, 81% of men and 51% of women said they had been sexually active in the past year vs. 47% of men and 26% of women who reported fair or poor health.

What are the causes of decreased sexuality

8/22/2007

Obesity Risk for Prostate Cancer Recurrence, Death

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/

Men who are obese at the time of being diagnosed with prostate cancer are more likely to see the cancer recur and ultimately die from it, according to a new study.

The research, conducted by Seattle's Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and the University of Washington School of Public Health and Community Medicine, included 752 men aged 40-64 who were newly diagnosed with prostate cancer.

In interviews, the men provided their height and weight one year before their diagnosis. Researchers calculated the men's body mass indexes based on the height and weight figures and later compared survival rates to the men's BMIs.

The risk of death and recurrence in obese men was seen regardless of the treatment the men received for the cancer and was the same for men with low- or high-grade cancer.

"I was very surprised by the findings," said study author Dr. Alan Kristal, of the Fred Hutchinson center, in a news release.

Overall, men who had been obese one year before prostate cancer diagnosis were 2.6 times more likely than men with a normal BMI to die of prostate cancer, according to the study, which appears in the journal Cancer. Obesity also tripled the odds that men diagnosed with regional prostate cancer or cancer that had not spread, would see the cancer spread over the course of the year.

If the findings are correct, it could be one more reason for men to reach and maintain a normal weight, but further study is needed, Kristal said.

Prostacet supports healthy prostate function

Sex now primary cause of China HIV spread

Source: www.reuters.com

Unsafe sex has overtaken intravenous drug use as the primary cause of new HIV infections in China, suggesting that AIDS is spreading from high-risk groups to the general public, state media reported on Monday.

Of the 70,000 new HIV infections recorded in 2005, nearly half contracted the virus through sexual contact, the China Daily reported, citing a report released jointly by the Ministry of Health and the China Centre for Disease Control and Prevention.

"It's the first time since 1989, when the first HIV infection was detected, for sex to top the transmission list nationwide," the newspaper quoted Gao Qi, of the China HIV/AIDS Information Network, as saying.

China has an estimated 650,000 people living with HIV or AIDS, and while the government has become increasingly open about the problem, efforts to fight the spread of the virus are still hampered by conservative attitudes about sex and suspicion of grassroots activists and non-governmental organizations.

Surveys show that one in 10 sexually active men in China have been involved with prostitution at least once, and the government was taking measures to initiate condom use programs and AIDS education among sex workers, the newspaper said.

It is also focusing prevention efforts on gay men, who made up 7.3 percent of the new infections through sex.

A separate survey conducted by China's Centre for Disease Control and Prevention found that although teenagers in China were having sex at an earlier age, 40 percent did not use protection the first time and they had little AIDS education.

"They know little about HIV/AIDS, let alone preventative measures," the China Daily quoted An Jiaao, of the centre's National Institute for Health Education, as saying.

HIV/AIDS became a major problem for China in the 1990s when hundreds of thousands of poor farmers, mostly in the central province of Henan, became infected through botched blood-selling schemes.

8/21/2007

Usual cold virus could be making people fat

Mark Henderson

Source: www.timesonline.co.uk

A common virus from the group that often causes the common cold may also help to make some people obese, according to new research.

Scientists in the US have discovered that an adenovirus, known as Ad36, can transform adult stem cells in fat tissue into fully fledged fat cells.

Obese people are also much more likely to carry the virus than lean individuals, providing further evidence that it is a risk factor for putting on excess weight.

Though the findings do not reduce the centrality of diet and exercise to obesity, they do suggest that infections can also contribute to the accumulation of excess fat. This raises the prospect that antiviral drugs that kill this adenovirus could be a useful addition to weight loss programmes.

“We’re not saying that a virus is the only cause of obesity, but this study provides stronger evidence that some obesity cases may involve viral infections,” said Magdalena Pasarica, of Louisiana State University, who led the study, which was presented to the American Chemical Society conference in Boston, Massachusetts.

“Not all infected people will develop obesity. We would ultimately like to identify the underlying factors that predispose some obese people to develop this virus and eventually find a way to treat it.”

In a separate study a team led by Deborah Clegg, of the University of Cincinnati, has shown how the female hormone oestrogen can act on the brain to influence eating patterns and obesity. The findings support a link between oestrogen and suppression of obesity, which may explain why many women struggle to keep their weight down after the menopause.

How to manage weight loss with ease

Loneliness bad for your health

Michelle Magnan

Source: www.canada.com

Not only is loneliness a drag, but it appears it can be downright bad for your health - especially as you age.

According to findings published in the August issue of Current Directions in Psychological Science, loneliness may accelerate the rate of physical decline that occurs naturally with age.

"Physiological resilience declines with age. It happens with everybody. What we're proposing is that loneliness in effect accelerates the rate of that decline," said Louise Hawkley in a telephone interview. She and John Cacioppo, both psychologists at the University of Chicago, have studied loneliness and aging for about a decade.

Their studies involving two main subject groups - college-age people and middle-age people ranging in age from 50 to 68 - have shown that loneliness has a much stronger effect on older people.

"The lonely people in the older group have significantly higher blood pressure than the non-lonely," said Hawkley. "That wasn't true in the younger group, so it speaks to the decline. You don't see it in the young adults, but it's accumulating over time and showing up later in life."

And while lonely people seem to get as much sleep as the non-lonely, the quality of their sleep is not as good. Waking often during the night, they are often still tired when they get up in the morning. With less quality sleep, lonely people report more daytime dysfunction.

So what's the solution? It's not as easy as making a new friend or two.

"Loneliness is not what people typically think it is. It's not being alone. People can be alone and not be lonely. People can be surrounded by other people and yet feel lonely," said Hawkley. "What we're getting at is a sense of discontent with their social relationships."

While getting out and socializing is obviously encouraged, Hawkley says lonely people should be careful when selecting relationship partners, be they friend relationships or more intimate ones. Sometimes over-eagerness means choosing the wrong types of people.

Her best advice?


"Get out and volunteer. Help somebody else. Instead of trying to fill your own needs, you might ironically find your needs met by meeting somebody else's."