Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Local Author and Homeopath Hosts a Community Health Talk with a Fresh New Twist on How to Enhance Longevity and Prevent Disease


Local Author and Homeopath Hosts a Community Health Talk with a Fresh New Twist on How to Enhance Longevity and Prevent Disease

Heather Caruso, a local of Guelph Ontario and author of ``Your Drug Free Guide to Digestive Health, A Handbook of Homeopathic, Dietary and Other Natural Treatments for Common Digestive Disorders`` is hosting a community event to educate the public on the many health benefits of keeping your digestion in top shape.
This health workshop will cover the following:
· Learn how to eat well to enhance your health and longevity.
· What supplements have been researched and found useful to promote immunity through the digestive tract.
· Prevent common diseases through natural remedies and diet.
Date: Saturday March 28th, 10am until 11:30am.
Location: Ann Street Family Chiropractic, 595 Woolwich Street, Guelph Ontario
Space is limited to ten people please call ahead to ensure a spot.
Contact: 519 827 9237 Email: carusohomeopathic@bellnet.ca

It is now illegal in Ontario to smoke in cars with children

I was delighted to hear, on the way to work that it is illegal to smoke with children in the car in Ontario as of today!

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Study finds anti-psychotic meds related to heart problems

NEW YORK - Newer anti-psychotic drugs are no safer than older ones for the risk of suddenly dying from a heart problem, says a study that finds they roughly double that hazard.
http://healthandfitness.sympatico.msn.ca/News/ContentPosting?newsitemid=53895028&feedname=CP-HEALTH&show=True&number=5&showbyline=True&subtitle=&detect=&abc=abc&date=True

Commonly Prescribed Blood Pressure Meds Shouldn't be Combined

Commonly combined blood pressure drugs shouldn't be taken together

THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO - A commonly prescribed combination of blood pressure drugs should not be taken together, the Heart and Stroke Foundation warned Friday in updated blood pressure management guidelines.

The new advice is based on the results of a large Canadian-led trial that found combining a so-called ACE inhibitor with an angiotensin receptor blocker actually increases the user's risk of sudden cardiac death, kidney disease and the need for dialysis.

"These two popular categories of hypertension medication are each safe and effective treatments - but not together," said Dr. Sheldon Tobe, a Heart and Stroke spokesperson and an executive member of the committee that revised the blood pressure management guidelines.

As many as 175,000 Canadians with high blood pressure may be currently taking the combination of the two medications, the group said in a statement.

Read more: http://healthandfitness.sympatico.msn.ca/News/ContentPosting?newsitemid=51708034&feedname=CP-HEALTH&show=False&number=0&showbyline=True&subtitle=&detect=&abc=abc&date=True

A touching video

I saw this video and thought it could touch many of us and offer us inspiration.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Employer Sponsored Workouts Boost Employees Health

Taken from medicinenet.com
http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=95457

TUESDAY, Jan. 6 (HealthDay News) -- Encouraging your workers to work out works, a new study says.
Home Depot employees who participated in a company-sponsored program to support workers in setting exercise goals notably increased their levels of moderate or vigorous physical activity.
The findings were published in the February edition of American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
For three months, 1,442 participants set weekly personal and team physical activity goals and reaped incentives for meeting them. After six weeks, slightly more than half of the participants did at least five 30-minute moderate exercise sessions or two 20-minute vigorous exercise sessions weekly -- up from about 30% at the study's start. Meanwhile, only 25% of those in a control group of non-participants logged similar exercise sessions.
Throughout the study, the participants maintained their increased levels of activity, and few people dropped out.
"The biggest pleasant surprise was the steady and sustained progress. That can probably be explained by the social incentives and support from personal goals and achievements that had direct impact on team success," study lead author Rod Dishman, a professor of exercise science at the University of Georgia, said in a news release issued by Health Behavior News Service.
Key to the program's success may have been the use of group and organizational goal-setting along with individual goals, because they provide vital peer encouragement, Katherine Alaimo, an assistant professor at Michigan State University, said in the same news release.
"Personal and team goals work best when they are self-set, specific about how much activity and when, realistic but attainable and easily assessed, such as by weekly logs or pedometer steps," Dishman added.
-- Kevin McKeever
SOURCE: American Journal of Preventive Medicine, news release, Jan. 6, 2009

Low Levels of Vitamin D linked to Diabtes, Arthritis and Cancer...

Another great article put out by Life Extension;
http://www.lef.org/news/LefDailyNews.htm?NewsID=7779&Section=DISEASE
Experts: Paucity of vitamin D is a crisis: Low levels linked to diabetes, arthritis, cancer, experts say
McClatchy-Tribune Information Services -- Unrestricted
01-14-09
Here's one more reason to detest the gloom of winter: It zaps the body's natural supply of a vitamin linked to everything from bone health to cancer survival.
Loads of Americans aren't getting enough vitamin D, and those who live under frequently gray skies are hit harder. Studies have shown that as many as half of adults and four in 10 children in this country have too little of the nutrient in their bodies.
The problem is even worse for African-Americans, Latinos and others with dark skin. Other high-risk groups include women of childbearing age, breast-fed infants who aren't receiving vitamin-D supplements and the elderly.
Doctors and scientists are becoming increasingly aware of the importance of the vitamin and the likelihood that patients aren't getting enough. The American Public Health Association recently issued a policy statement on the topic, calling for action by multiple federal agencies and by Congress.
"Vitamin D is much more than bone health," said Azzie Young, who wrote the statement and is president and chief executive officer of Mattapan Community Health Center in Boston.
"It's linked to all kinds of chronic diseases diabetes, high blood pressure, muscle stiffness, most cancers, arthritis."
The group wants to increase education of health professionals and the public, promote research involving diverse populations and add vitamin D to the list of nutrients that manufacturers must include on nutrition labels.
Vitamin D comes in the most bountiful dose from sunshine.
When sun hits the skin, it triggers production of vitamin D in the body. Sunscreen impedes that process.
Experts most often recommend vitamin supplements, given concerns about harmful effects of sun exposure, the absence of sun in some parts of the world for days and weeks on end and the paltry amount found naturally in foods.
The government recommends at least 200 international units of the vitamin a day for children and adults through age 50, 400 units for those ages 51 to 70 and 600 units for those older than 70.
In November, the American Academy of Pediatrics increased its recommendation for infants and children to 400 units a day, beginning soon after birth.
The Institute of Medicine is studying calcium and vitamin D and might adjust its recommendations, spokeswoman Christine Stencel said.
Many experts think that a daily dose of 1,000 units or more would be beneficial for everyone. Garden-variety multivitamins typically contain 400 units.
"It's a public-health epidemic, and it's easy to treat," Young said.
"It's simple, it's effective, it's safe and it's relatively inexpensive."
Prices vary, but the cost of a 1,000-unit vitamin-D tablet is about 5 cents. Excess vitamin D rarely causes problems.
Dr. Elena Christofides, an endocrinologist with Endocrinology Associates in Columbus, is passionate about decreasing the incidence of vitamin-D deficiency and ardently recommends supplements to all her patients.
"This is one of the greatest public-health issues that's going to be facing us for some time," she said.
Dr. Velimir Matkovic, an Ohio State University Medical Center internist who specializes in bone disease, has studied vitamin D and found that Columbus residents, thanks to our cloudy skies, have severe deficiencies from November to April. Levels peak in July and August and begin to fall again after that, he said.
Matkovic said it's safe to take up to 2,000 international units a day in supplements. He also advocates some sun exposure, although not during peak hours.
mcrane@dispatch.com To see more of The Columbus Dispatch, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.columbusdispatch.com. Copyright (c) 2009, The Columbus Dispatch, Ohio Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services. For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.