Tuesday, August 5, 2008



HEALTH BLOG
10 Comments
179Views
A TV in the Bedroom Means an Unhealthy Teen
Researchers have found that adolescents who have a bedroom television are less likely to engage in healthy activities such as exercising, eating fruits or vegetables, and participating in family meals. They also read and study less, and eat more sweetened ...
8 hrs ago


5 Comments
189Views
Marketing, Not Research, is Now the Core of the Drug Industry
In 1950, George Merck, president of the company founded by his father and bearing his name, said, "We try never to forget that medicine is for the people. It is not for the profits." If that was ever true, it is certainly not true now. Drug companies ...
8 hrs ago


6 Comments
164Views
Mud Harnessed to Fight Infections
Dirt may one day be better than soap for keeping harmful bacteria at bay. Arizona scientists have found a host of anti-microbial minerals in mud that could result in unconventional but effective antibacterial creams. Antibiotic-resistant "superbugs" ...
8 hrs ago


5 Comments
149Views
Imitating Nature Makes GREAT Products for You
Andrew Parker, a research fellow at the Natural History Museum in London and at the University of Sydney, is a leading proponent of biomimetics, the concept of applying designs from nature to solve problems in engineering, materials science, medicine, ...
8 hrs ago


7 Comments
299Views
How Does Aspartame Damage Your Brain?
Excessive aspartame consumption may inhibit the ability of enzymes in your brain to function normally. A new review indicates that high doses of the sweetener may lead to neurodegeneration. It has also previously been found that aspartame consumption ...
8 hrs ago


5 Comments
252Views
Head of CDC Admits on CNN that Vaccines can Trigger Autism
Recently Julie Gerberding, the head of the CDC, appeared on Dr. Sanjay Gupta's show House Call and explained that vaccines can trigger autism in a vulnerable subset of children. This is the claim that many parents have been making since at least the 1980's, ...
8 hrs ago


9 Comments
270Views
Why the Dollar is Dropping Like a Rock
The value of the dollar is dropping precipitously, and this video shows how this is affecting the prices of everything from gas to milk. ...
8 hrs ago


16 Comments
440Views
Creativity Jazzes Your Brain
Scientists inspired by legendary jazz musicians Miles Davis and John Coltrane are looking inside the brains of today's improvisational jazz musicians to learn where creativity comes from. The neuroscience of music is a field that's booming as more researchers ...
April 07, 2008


10 Comments
584Views
Red Wine and Tea Can Help Regulate Your Blood Sugar
Researchers have shown that red wine and tea may both hold promise for regulating the blood sugar of people with type 2 diabetes. Levels of blood glucose rise sharply in patients with type 2 diabetes immediately following a meal. Red wine and tea contain ...
April 07, 2008


9 Comments
532Views
These Germs Eat Antibiotics for Breakfast
Antibiotics are supposed to kill bacteria, not feed them. But researchers have discovered hundreds of soil germs in soil that literally devour antibiotics, and thrive with the drugs as their sole source of nutrition. These bacteria outwit antibiotics ...
April 07, 2008


5 Comments
356Views
Can Nanoparticles Cause Disease?
Scientists are currently researching the role nanoparticles may play in disease conditions such as hardening of the arteries and the formation of kidney stones. Nanoparticles are a thousand times smaller than bacteria, but recent advances in microscopy ...
April 07, 2008


37 Comments
657Views
Vaccine-Autism Question Divides Parents, Scientists
13-year old Michelle Cedillo is at the center of a court case pitting thousands of families of children with autism against the medical establishment. While a number of prestigious medical institutions say there is no link between vaccines and autism, ...
April 07, 2008


22 Comments
361Views
A Nearly 500 Percent Rise in Teen Breast Surgeries in Ten Years
Statistics from the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ASAPS) indicate that, over the course of the previous decade, there has been an almost 500 percent increase in breast augmentation surgery for girls 18 or younger. There were one million ...
April 07, 2008


4 Comments
345Views
New and Deadly Virus Passed Through Sweet Food and Domestic Animals
Nipah virus, a new and deadly brain and lung disease, emerged from Singapore and Malaysia ten years ago, and it is now spreading into rural India and Bangladesh. It kills up to three-quarters of the people who become infected in some outbreaks. People ...
April 07, 2008


9 Comments
928Views
Changing Our Clocks: New Research Explores How Our Bodies Keep Time
Researchers have learned that circadian rhythms -- the 24-hour cycles that keep time for your body -- are involved in sleep, weight gain, mood disorders, and a variety of diseases. They have begun to make remarkable strides in identifying the genes and ...
April 04, 2008


39 Comments
1933Views
Do You Really Need Eight Glasses of Water a Day?
Drinking eight glasses of water a day might not be as beneficial for your health as had been previously believed. A review of studies dealing with the healthy benefits of drinking lots of water concluded that, while athletes and people in hot, dry climates ...
April 04, 2008


5 Comments
365Views
AIDS Drug Linked to Heart Attack Risk
Ziagen, a GlaxoSmithKline AIDS drug which is among the most widely-used worldwide, may boost heart attack risks. Ziagen (also known as abacavir) is a common component in the 'cocktail' of anti-retroviral treatments that keep the AIDS virus at bay. Researchers ...




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