Monday, June 30, 2014

Popular with celebrities but could that manuka honey in your cupboard be fake?

Manuka honey is known for its antiviral and antibacterial properties, and jars can cost in excess of £30. The 'liquid gold' nectar is popular with Scarlett Johansson, Katherine Jenkins and tennis star Novak Djokovic.

Dr Hoyland's comments come after an investigation by Minerva Scientific for The Grocer magazine which looked at randomly selected manuka honeys.

They conducted two different tests on seven samples - one for Non-Peroxide Activity (NPA) and one for Total Activity (TA).

Non-Peroxide Activity is the measurement for the antibacterial qualities of manuka honey. All honeys can be 'active' but this differs from the manuka honey's special NPA.

Some of the products tested referred to activity which could potentially be confusing as consumer do not know the difference between TA and NPA.

According to the Food Standards Agency, there is no legal definition of the 'activity' or 'total activity' of manuka honey.

But a spokesman said: "The FSA is aware that the use of such terms is potentially confusing for consumers. That is why we have been working closely with the New Zealand authorities and welcome their new guidelines, which we expect soon, to give us greater clarity over the definitions used to market Manuka honey."

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said they were working with the FSA to tackle the issue.

Although none of the products tested violated any law, their NPA levels were not significantly high and only one jar had significant levels of the unique NPA which differentiates manuka honey and provides its celebrated healing properties.

It was the Medi-Bee Manuka Honey stocked by Amazon, Costco and Holland & Barrett which made label claims directly relating to the Unique Manuka Factor trademark, created by the New Zealand-based Unique Manuka Factor Honey Association (UMFHA) and the NPA.

The Grocer quoted a source it called 'Manuka Man' who explained in an email: "From high street shops to online retailers, manuka honey is on sale across the UK and the UK consumer is being misled. However a lot of the industry does not understand the complexity of manuka enough to understand that what they are buying is fake manuka."

Following the tests, Dr Hoyland said: "It would appear there could be some misleading activities with the best interests of consumers not at heart. From my experience, anywhere there are premium products, there's likely to be an element of malpractice. Personally I would say it is unethical."

The commercial director called for clearer legislation on the issue and said he was glad awareness of the issue had been raised.

"The honey regulations are not entirely appropriate but we are working with groups in New Zealand [to address the issue]."

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568612/s/3c05b3eb/sc/26/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Chealth0Chealthnews0C10A9357790CPopular0Ewith0Ecelebrities0Ebut0Ecould0Ethat0Emanuka0Ehoney0Ein0Eyour0Ecupboard0Ebe0Efake0Bhtml/story01.htm

Friday, June 27, 2014

What's on this week: Wimbledon on the big screen and Goodwood

Tickets are £43.99 from Eventbrite

Ludlow Arts Festival

June 28-July 6

Ludlow Castle, Shropshire

Ray Mears, Milton Jones and David Essex will be appearing at a week of theatre shows and outdoor concerts in the beautiful Ludlow Castle.

01584 819005

Lost Sheep in Pink Jerseys

Until September 20

North York Moors

Lost sheep – models, toys, sculptures of all sizes, all wearing pink jerseys – are waiting to be found all over the Moors area. Locate three and win a prize.

Wimbledon on the big screen

Fans gather on 'Murray Mount' to watch Wimbledon - but you don't have to be there to enjoy it (GETTY)

Nationwide locations

Until July 6, match times vary

You don't have to be in London SW19 to be served top tennis. Matches from Wimbledon are being shown live on 21 BBC Big Screens all over the country – Bradford, Bristol and Cardiff, to name but three.

Floridita's Rum Island

100 Wardour St, London W1

A Latin-American beach club style pop-up has arrived in the middle of Soho, serving rum-based cocktails all summer long.

The Ruinart Salon 1764

Until July 3

The Goring Hotel, Beeston Place, London SW1

Escape the crowds in the Goring's back garden, where a delightful, rose-decorated champagne tent (selling nothing but Ruinart Rosé NV Champagne) has popped up for a few weeks.

The Great Manchester Cycle

June 29, 8am

SportCity, Ashton New Road, Manchester

Cheer on your pedalling heroes as they pound around a 13-mile circuit in a fast and furious fundraising frenzy.

Edinburgh International Magic Festival

Until July 4

Multiple venues

Astounding feats of conjuring and confounding instances of illusion from an amazing international assemblage of magicians. Thrill to the War of the Wizards! Take your sides in the International Magic-Off! And watch out for unexpectedly materialising rabbits.

Goodwood Festival of Speed


Car extravaganza: Goodwood

June 29

Goodwood House, Chichester, West Sussex

Sunday is the final day of the world's greatest motoring garden party: extraordinary vehicles and celebrated drivers in a setting of great charm and glamour.

WHAT'S TRENDING


Old-fashioned charm: soap (ALAMY)

Mumsnet this week has been inundated with posts extolling the virtues of, wait for it, soap: its cheapness, efficacy, environmental benefits and good old-fashioned smell. "Soap and a flannel," said one Mumsnetter. "Why does anyone need anything else?"

WE'RE WATCHING (APART FROM THE WORLD CUP AND WIMBLEDON)

The Secret Life of Students, Thursday, 10pm, Channel 4

The first of a fly-on-the-wall four-parter following a dozen freshers at Leicester. Parents beware.

WE'RE EATING

Blueberries anointed with thick Greek yogurt – it's the new strawberries and cream, popular with Scots on account of the colour combination.

WE'RE DRINKING

Chilled Tapada de Villar Vinho Verde (M & S, £7.99), a spritzy white from Portugal, as recommended in this week's summer wines guide by Victoria Moore. Vinho Verde is Portuguese for "green wine", but don't let that put you off.

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/564649/s/3bed4977/sc/4/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Clifestyle0C10A9285320CWhats0Eon0Ethis0Eweek0EWimbledon0Eon0Ethe0Ebigscreen0Eand0EGoodwood0Bhtml/story01.htm

Full siblings are more violent to each other than half or step siblings, study finds

Half and unrelated siblings, such as step, fostered or adopted siblings, used less violence with less severity, it was revealed.

In families made up of both blood-related and unrelated siblings, those surveyed used more violence towards their related – full and half - brothers and sisters, even using weapons such as heavy objects and knives, the study by Dr Roxanne Khan, Dr Vanlal Thanzami and Jennifer Bowling from University of Central Lancashire concluded.

"This study focused on the 'Cinderella Effect' that, according to evolutionary theories, suggests that stepchildren are more likely to experience neglect or abuse than those related by blood. We wanted to explore whether this was the case between full, half and unrelated siblings," Dr Khan said.

"Contrary to what we expected, this study did not support the 'Cinderella Effect' occurring within siblinghood.

"Sibling relationships are very complex so we expect a number of other factors may have influenced our results.

"It could be the case that full siblings expect less retaliation for using violence against their blood brothers and sisters, compared to the uncertain revenge of half or unrelated siblings, and this could explain the friction."

The team asked to 315 brothers and sisters, aged 16 to 55, how they fought with their siblings and about the severity of the violence.

Participants provided information about 456 full siblings, 123 half siblings and 39 unrelated siblings.

The findings will be presented at the British Psychological Society Division of the Forensic Psychology annual conference in Glasgow on Friday, June 27.

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568612/s/3be9429c/sc/36/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Chealth0Chealthnews0C10A9284740CFull0Esiblings0Eare0Emore0Eviolent0Eto0Eeach0Eother0Ethan0Ehalf0Eor0Estep0Esiblings0Estudy0Efinds0Bhtml/story01.htm

North Carolina 'Sexy Schoolgirl' footrace canceled over objections

Thu Jun 26, 2014 7:50pm EDT

(Reuters) - A schoolgirl-themed footrace planned for Raleigh, North Carolina, with participants encouraged to dress as nerdy-but-comely coeds, has been canceled after a community backlash, city officials said on social media on Thursday.

The event, dubbed the Sexy Schoolgirl 5K, was set to take place in August but was canceled by organizers after community members voiced objections, said Raleigh City Councilwoman May-Ann Baldwin, writing on Twitter.

Baldwin and a second city councilor who announced the development on Twitter, Bonner Gaylord, did not immediately respond to messages seeking comment.

Other Sexy Schoolgirl races are planned in Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Virginia Beach, Virginia, and Tampa, Florida, according to the organization's website.

The website, which features a pair of buxom brunettes wearing glasses and tank tops, encourages both men and women to participate in the races, which are all to be followed by visits to multiple drinking establishments.

"Calling all school girls and nerds!" the organization's website says. "It's time to break out the suspenders, nerd glasses, skirts and ponytails."

An email message sent to an address on the organization's website was returned unread.

(Reporting by Jonathan Kaminsky; Editing by Sandra Maler)


Source : http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/lifestyle/~3/SY-RpZrOCpQ/story01.htm

Will you donate money to save the rainforest?

WLT is in the business of creating plant and wildlife sanctuaries around the world by funding the purchase of land. It always does this in partnership with a local organisation in each country, transferring the ownership of the land to that local organisation, which takes on its management and protection – with continuing support from WLT, including help to fund park rangers, where required. A number of the reserves also build tourist lodges to generate income and provide further local employment. WLT is not a household name but its formula is so successful – aided by its pared-down staffing and a lack of bureaucracy which enables it to make decisions fast – that Sir David Attenborough writes: "The money that is given to the World Land Trust, in my estimation, has more effect on the wild world than almost anything I can think of."

In its 25 years of existence, WLT has helped to fund and protect more than half a million acres across more than 20 countries. But many of the land purchases have been very small, smaller than many National Trust gardens – one in Ecuador was 10 acres, others in India just six acres. They were bought because they are ecological hot spots or because they help to piece together fragmented bits of forest, adding to existing reserves or, as for the elephants in India, creating corridors between reserves. And when WLT goes for a big purchase – 110,000 acres of tropical forest in Belize, for example – it still thinks small, encouraging lots of people to Buy An Acre, their contribution securing a real plot of land of imaginable size (slightly more than half the size of a football pitch). When the Belize forest was acquired in 1989, an acre cost £25; an acre in Central and South America now usually costs WLT around £100.

After purchase, the land needs management. "There is almost no such thing as pristine natural habitat any longer. Even in the most remote areas there has been human activity, some of it sustainable but much of it, such as tree felling and burning, not. So all our land needs some sort of intervention, whether policing or fencing against cattle, or a more major restoration and reforestation," says John.

"Wildlife gardening on a big scale," adds Bill.

As an example of successful habitat recreation, John cites the Guapi Assu Reserve, 80km northeast of Rio de Janeiro's World Cup stadium, which protects 18,000 acres of Atlantic rainforest, one of the most biodiverse habitats on Earth, of which 93 per cent has already been lost. Since 2010, when WLT drew attention to it with a gold medal-winning exhibit at the Chelsea Flower Show, restoration of its wetlands has attracted back caiman and capybara, and there has been encouraging regeneration of the rich flora, which once bristled with orchids and bromeliads.

The Great Garden Give campaign is raising funds for four projects: an area of temperate and cloud forest in Mexico which John says has one of the highest numbers of oak species on Earth; an area of wet savannah in Bolivia, home to rare animals such as the maned wolf and the blue-throated macaw; a tract of high-altitude forest, including some remarkable elfin forest, in Ecuador, which is one of the world's great hot spots for bird species; and an area of rainforest in Colombia, famous for its poison frogs, which John says "was doing OK while the Farc guerrillas were there, but now that it is safer, the developers are moving in".

The idea behind the Great Garden Give is that gardeners measure the size of their plot and give an amount which would buy an area of rainforest of equivalent size. At 2.5p per square metre, owners of average sized gardens would be donating £2.50. "I have already measured my little Hampstead garden and got my 3p ready," says Bill.

It is encouraging to realise that doing your bit for nature in the garden at home adds up to something significant, and by similar small steps, a significant chunk of the world's wild flora and wildlife can be given sanctuary too.

*For more information visit Worldland Trust

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/564649/s/3bed4979/sc/36/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cgardening0Cgardenprojects0C10A9263360CWill0Eyou0Edonate0Emoney0Eto0Esave0Ethe0Erainforest0Bhtml/story01.htm

eBay rejects auction of Nazi chief's car

MIAMI Thu Jun 26, 2014 6:14pm EDT

An eBay sign is seen at an office building in San Jose, California May 28, 2014. REUTERS/Beck Diefenbach

An eBay sign is seen at an office building in San Jose, California May 28, 2014.

Credit: Reuters/Beck Diefenbach

MIAMI (Reuters) - Auction website eBay has refused to list a World War II-era Mercedes Benz once owned Hermann Goering, a Nazi leader who commanded the German air force, citing a policy prohibiting the sale of offensive items.

The 1941 Mercedes Benz 540 K Cabriolet B, custom built by Daimler-Benz for Adolf Hitler’s close confidant, is currently in pieces in a high-end south Florida automobile shop, where owners said they plan to spend about $750,000 to restore it to working condition.

“We’ve located all the replacement parts and we can make parts,” said High Velocity Classics co-owner David Rathbun.

eBay, however, asked the owners to take down the auction after learning it would go live in early July.

“eBay has policies in place that prohibit the sale of offensive materials and content, which includes listings that promote or glorify hatred, violence or racial, sexual or religious intolerance,” spokesman Ryan Moore wrote in an email.

According to Rathbun, the car was seized by the U.S. Army’s 7th Infantry Division in Berchtesgaden, a town in the Bavarian Alps where Hitler built a sprawling residence.

After the war it became army surplus and was eventually sold by the head of a psychology institution in Heilbronn to Master Sergeant Sam Hosier, who drove it in occupied Germany. Hosier brought it to the United States and in 1955 sold it to a North Carolina man, who owned it until this year.

The owners would not say how much they paid for the car, only that they hope it will sell for $5 million to $7 million.

Another of Goering's cars, a convertible Mercedes 540 K nicknamed the Blue Goose, was auctioned in 2011 in Italy by Ontario, Canada-based RM Auctions for about $2 million.

The owners lamented having to turn to traditional high-end auto sales auctions to sell the stretch coupe once work is finished.

“eBay is all over the world, it has hundreds of millions of users, and it was the biggest venue anyone could find,” Rathbun said.

(Editing by David Adams and Jim Loney)


Source : http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/lifestyle/~3/FqALUWtA-U8/story01.htm

India's Ranbaxy gains; U.S. drug regulator approves generic version of Novartis drug

A general view of the office of Ranbaxy Laboratories is pictured at Gurgaon, on the outskirts of New Delhi, June 13, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Adnan Abidi

Source : http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/healthNews/~3/9conIXjxUqM/story01.htm

EU agency recommends Roche drug for type of ovarian cancer

The logo of Swiss pharmaceutical company Roche is seen outside the Shanghai Roche Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd. headquarters in Shanghai May 22, 2014.

Credit: Reuters/Aly Song

Source : http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/healthNews/~3/Hiq2VXLEuZU/story01.htm

Juice could no longer count towards 'five a day'

Officials will publish their new recommendations early next year.

Earlier this year, Prof Susan Jebb, the Government's chief obesity advisor, said she would support removing fruit juices from "five a day" and encouraging people to eat a piece of fruit instead.

Investigations by the Telegraph have identified some smoothies with at least three times the new recommended limit, which equates to around 6 to 7 teaspoons of sugar for women, and 7 to 8 teaspoons for men.

Many fruit juices sold by major brands provide 6 to 7 teaspoons per serving – meaning the daily limits would be reached without any other sugar in the diet.

Health officials also pledged to take on a "supersize culture" which has seen portion sizes soar over the years.

Public Health England said it would seek changes from manufacturers so that smaller portions of chocolate bars and fizzy drinks become the "default" on offer, and will draw up measures to restrict promotion of unhealthy foods.

Officials are considering a raft of measures, including taxes on sugary foods, restrictions on advertising, including online, and bans on "upselling" of products – so that customers are asked whether they want to "supersize" their purchase, or add an additional product, such as chocolate or cake.

Local authorities could introduce bans on vending machines selling unhealthy snacks in leisure centres, under the proposals.

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568612/s/3beb5da7/sc/14/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Chealth0Chealthnews0C10A9289920CJuice0Ecould0Eno0Elonger0Ecount0Etowards0Efive0Ea0Eday0Bhtml/story01.htm

Thursday, June 26, 2014

Jeremy Hunt apologises for Jimmy Savile's 'sickening' abuse in hospitals

Staff interviewed by investigators said the decisions not to make formal complaints about Savile reflected the "culture at the time" as well as how the entertainer had masked his abuse with "pretend humour" that misled onlookers into thinking "nothing was amiss".

Mr Hunt said: "I want to apologise on behalf of the Government and the NHS to all the victims who were abused by Savile in NHS-run institutions.

"We let them down badly and however long ago it may have been, many of them are still reliving the pain they went through."

Mr Hunt insisted he "hasn't ruled out anything" after MPs called for politicians and others linked to Savile to be "called to book" for anything they did that may have aided Savile's abuse.

Among the most disturbing findings were "macabre accounts" of claims that the presenter, who died in 2011, performed sex acts on dead bodies in the mortuary at Leeds General Infirmary (LGI) and at least one other hospital.

Investigators were told that Savile claimed to have "interfered with the bodies of deceased patients" at the LGI mortuary, while a patient of Barnet General Hospital overheard nurses discussing how they had seen Savile have sex with a dead body at another hospital. Dr Sue Proctor, who led the investigation into Savile's abuse at the LGI, said Savile also claimed that large rings he wore were "made from the glass eyes of dead bodies at the mortuary". A witness told officials Savile had claimed that he used to "wheel the dead bodies around at night".

The inquiry began with his first contact with the hospital in 1960 and included the testimonies of 60 people, 33 of them patients. The age range of the victims was five to 75. Three of these incidents were rapes, the investigators said.

Nine victims reported incidents to staff but no complaints were passed on to more senior officials.

The 28 investigations, which also included a review into Savile's links to Broadmoor Hospital, were overseen by Kate Lampard, the former chairman of the Financial Ombudsman Service.

At Broadmoor investigators found "clear failings" in security as Savile had keys allowing him unrestricted access to ward areas. Savile sexually abused at least five individuals there.

The report also said that an ex-patient had reported passing on complaints about Savile's behaviour to Alan Franey, then the general manager of Broadmoor and a friend of Savile's, in the 1990s, from three female patients - although there was no record of the complaint and Franey said he could not recall handling it.

NHS chiefs described the findings of the investigations as "truly awful", while both current chief executives of the trusts covering LGI and Broadmoor apologised to victims.

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568612/s/3be94f79/sc/3/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cnews0Cuknews0Ccrime0Cjimmy0Esavile0C10A9287530CJeremy0EHunt0Eapologises0Efor0EJimmy0ESaviles0Esickening0Eabuse0Ein0Ehospitals0Bhtml/story01.htm

Monday, June 23, 2014

Brazil takes advantage of World Cup crowds to test for HIV

Reuters
A child flies a kite with a red ribbon during a World AIDS Day event in Beijing

A child flies a kite with a red ribbon during a World AIDS Day event in Beijing November 30, 2008. REUTERS/Jason …

Source : http://news.yahoo.com/brazil-takes-advantage-world-cup-crowds-test-hiv-205519302--spt.html

Apple, Google, Samsung vie to bring health apps to wearables

Reuters
Model presents Samsung Galaxy Gear smartwatch after its launch at the IFA consumer electronics fair in Berlin

A model presents a Samsung Galaxy Gear smartwatch after its launch at the IFA consumer electronics fair …

Source : http://news.yahoo.com/apple-google-samsung-vie-bring-health-apps-wearables-050748414--finance.html

Car industry struggles to solve air bag explosions despite mass recalls

Reuters
Logo of Takata Corp is seen through a car window outside the company's headquarter building in Tokyo

A logo of Takata Corp is seen through a car window outside the company's headquarter building in …

Source : http://news.yahoo.com/car-industry-struggles-solve-air-bag-explosions-despite-010557269--finance.html

Sunday, June 22, 2014

Brazil takes advantage of World Cup crowds to test for HIV

Reuters
A child flies a kite with a red ribbon during a World AIDS Day event in Beijing

A child flies a kite with a red ribbon during a World AIDS Day event in Beijing November 30, 2008. REUTERS/Jason …

Source : http://news.yahoo.com/brazil-takes-advantage-world-cup-crowds-test-hiv-205519302--spt.html

French politics trump business over Alstom

Reuters
The logo of French power and transport engineering company Alstom is pictured on the roof of the company's plant in Reichshoffen

The logo of French power and transport engineering company Alstom is pictured on the roof of the company's …

Source : http://news.yahoo.com/french-politics-trump-business-over-alstom-132139675--sector.html

Brazil takes advantage of World Cup crowds to test for HIV

Reuters
A child flies a kite with a red ribbon during a World AIDS Day event in Beijing

A child flies a kite with a red ribbon during a World AIDS Day event in Beijing November 30, 2008. REUTERS/Jason …

Source : http://news.yahoo.com/brazil-takes-advantage-world-cup-crowds-test-hiv-205519302--spt.html

Multiple protocol breaches behind anthrax exposure at U.S. federal labs

Reuters
The Centers for Disease Control sign is seen at its main facility in Atlanta

The Centers for Disease Control sign is seen at its main facility in Atlanta, Georgia June 20, 2014. …

Source : http://news.yahoo.com/multiple-protocol-breaches-behind-anthrax-exposure-u-federal-193945711.html

Friday, June 20, 2014

What God does to your brain

"When people speak in tongues, they're gone, they're in a completely altered state. But most of the time they're ­normal people like us, with jobs and children – they don't show any sign of being delusional," says Newberg. "Scans of their brains – when they're 'possessed' – show very different results to scans of Buddhist monks or Carmelite nuns in prayer or meditation. There you see increased frontal lobe activity in the areas concerned with concentration, but the speakers in tongues had decreased activity in the same area, which would give them the sensation that someone else was 'running the show'."

And what about me? "I wouldn't be surprised if you have a harder time letting go of frontal lobe activity, so you tend to observe and take a more critical eye of events, while other people's brains allow them to simply surrender to events around them."

Newberg is director of research at the Jefferson Myrna Brind Centre of Integrative Medicine, in Philadelphia, and co-author of, among other books, The Metaphysical Mind: Probing the Biology of Philosophical Thought. He is a leading neurotheologist, pioneering a new and highly controversial science that investigates whether – as many sceptics have long suspected – God didn't create us, but we created God.

During brain scans of those involved in various types of meditation and prayer, Newberg noticed increased activity in the limbic system, which regulates emotion. He also noted decreased activity in the parietal lobe, the part of the brain responsible for orienting oneself in space and time.

"When this happens, you lose your sense of self," he says. "You have a notion of a great interconnectedness of things. It could be a sense where the self dissolves into nothingness, or dissolves into God or the universe."

Such "mystical", self-blurring experiences are central to almost all religions – from the unio mystica experienced by Carmelite nuns during prayer, when they claim their soul has mingled with the godhead, to Buddhists striving for unity with the universe through focusing on sacred objects. But if Newberg and his colleagues are correct, such experiences are not proof of being touched by a supreme being, but mere blips in brain chemistry.

"It seems that the brain is built in such a way that allows us as human beings to have transcendent experiences extremely easily, furthering our belief in a greater power," Newberg says. This would explain why some type of religion exists in every culture, arguably making spirituality one of the defining characteristics of our species.

Depending on your religious views, such discoveries are either deeply fascinating or profoundly disturbing. Throughout history, spirituality has been viewed as something outside science, just as the soul is separate from the body; both ineffable essences, transcending the materialist universe.

No wonder, then, that neurotheology (or biotheology), with its implications that the brain is merely a "computer of meat", is hugely contentious in the US, where only 1.6 per cent and 2.4 per cent of the population declare themselves "atheist" or "agnostic", respectively.

Some theologians, however, welcome the research, seeing it as proof that God equipped our bodies with the ability to believe.

"I get attacked by everyone," says Patrick McNamara, associate professor of neurology at Boston University and author of The Neuroscience of Religious Experience. "Atheists hate me because I'm saying religion has some basis in the brain and fundamentalist Christians hate me because I'm saying religion is nothing but brain impulses."

Graham Ward, Regius Professor of Divinity at Oxford University and author of the forthcoming Unbelievable: Why We Believe and Why We Don't, is sceptical about many neuroscientific attempts to explain God, pointing out that recent advances have weakened the theory that only one area of the brain is responsible for certain functions. "In any case," he says, "the temporal lobes light up for any kind of excitement, not just religious experience."

However, he agrees that it is imperative to examine religion scientifically. "Religion is at the root both of so many great civilisations and of so many wars, it has so much mythological power, we have to understand how it works and be alert to how dangerous it can be."

If religion is merely a product of the mind, then perhaps its effects can be simulated artificially – with potentially powerful results. In the Nineties, Canadian cognitive neuro­scientist Michael Persinger invented a "God helmet", which, he claimed, simulated religious experiences by directing complex magnetic fields to the parts of the brain that include the parietal lobe.

Evangelical Christians demonstrated outside the lab where Persinger tested the helmet, outraged at his suggestion that God could be replicated via a machine. But more than 80 per cent of those who wore the helmet reported sensing a presence in the room that many took to be their deity. They also became deeply emotional and, after the experiment, were filled with a sense of loss.

READ: Nuns prove God is NOT a figment of the mind

This led Persinger to conclude that divine visions – not to mention every other type of out-of-body experience, from the Virgin Mary being visited by the Holy Spirit to UFO sightings – were probably nothing more than people being subjected to energy fields connected to shifts in the Earth's plates or environmental disturbances.

In 2001, Persinger tried the helmet on possibly the world's most vocal atheist, Prof Richard Dawkins, who reported that his breathing and sensation in his limbs were affected, but insisted he had not seen God. Still upbeat, Persinger argued that earlier tests had shown Dawkins had far less sensitivity than others in the temporal lobes.

Persinger vs Dawkins: The God Helmet from Tommy Decentralized on Vimeo.

Or, perhaps Dawkins is simply lacking the "God gene" or VMAT2, to be precise, that controls the flow of mood-regulating chemicals, called monoamines, in the brain. According to US molecular geneticist Dr Dean Hamer, subjects with this gene were more susceptible to self-transcendent, spiritual experiences. Many neuroscientists now think spiritual tendencies involve genes relating to the brain's dopamine and serotonin neurotransmitters.

Another, more recent, study by researchers at Auburn University in Alabama showed that subjects who perceived supernatural agents at work in their daily lives tended to use brain pathways associated with fear when asked to contemplate their religious beliefs. Those with beliefs based on doctrine tended to use pathways associated with language. On the other hand, atheists tended to use pathways connected with visual imagery.

Perhaps, the team suggested, non-believers try visually to imagine a supernatural agent as a test of its existence and subsequently reject the idea as unlikely when that image does not fit with any known image in their memory.

The researchers also found individuals with a stronger ability to attribute mental states – such as beliefs, desires and intents – to themselves and to understand that others may have different mental states from their own. This ability, known as the "theory of mind", is thought to have evolved in humans over thousands of years – suggesting religion is a by-product of human evolution.

Spirituality, after all, serves a vital human purpose. Numerous studies show that religious belief is medically and psychologically (not to mention socially) beneficial. Reports have shown that churchgoers live an average seven years longer than heathens. They report lower blood pressure, recover quicker from breast cancer, have better outcomes from coronary disease and rheumatoid arthritis, have greater success with IVF and are less likely to have children with meningitis.

Patients with a strong "intrinsic faith" (a deep personal belief, not just a social inclination to go to a place of worship) recover 70 per cent faster from depression than those who are not deeply religious.

Changes in brain chemistry can also make people lose their religion. McNamara has used MRI scans on people with Parkinson's disease.

"We discovered a subgroup who were quite religious but, as the disease progressed, lost some aspects of their religiosity," he says. Sufferers' brains lack the neurotransmitter dopamine, making McNamara suspect that religiosity is linked to dopamine activity in the prefrontal lobes. "These areas of the brain handle complexity best, so it may be that people with Parkinson's find it harder to access complex religious experiences."

Buddhist monks say they feel at one with the universe, but it may just be a chemical shift in their brains

"When religion is operating the way it ought – when we're not talking about fanatics blowing up non-believers – it strengthens the prefrontal lobes, which helps inhibit impulses better," McNamara says. "Religious activities such as prayer, ritual, abstaining from alcohol, strengthen the ability of frontal lobes to control primitive impulses."

Such advantages aside, religions give their followers the benefits of a supportive social network – since research has shown lack of social contact can be more harmful to health than obesity, alcoholism and smoking 15 cigarettes a day. "Being part of a group is very important psychologically. In times of prosperity, people tend to question large movements, but during periods of economic stress, fundamentalist movements flourish," says McNamara.

Interestingly, those who describe themselves as born-again do not show any evidence of this particular benefit in experiments. On the contrary, recent research by the Centre for the Study of Ageing at Duke University, North Carolina, revealed that there was significantly greater hippocampal atrophy (brain damage associated with depression, Alzheimer's and dementia) in people who reported a life-changing religious experience, compared to religious people who did not describe themselves as born again.

The human psyche hates any form of cognitive dissonance – or challenge to ingrained beliefs – and so scientists think the struggles through which born-again Christians go in order to overcome their old modes of thinking cause severe stress to their brains.

In general, though, it seems that, if I want to be psychologically healthy, I need to ape the faithful. And it turns out I'm already working along the right lines. A few years ago, conscious of lacking regular social ties (before I worked from home, an office provided that), I made an effort to join community groups. I've also, recently, like many other people become interested in subjects such as yoga and mindfulness, a secular type of meditation.

Sceptics such as me used to consider such fields flaky, but now their health benefits are proven – not least in the way they strengthen prefrontal lobes – it would be foolish to dismiss them.

"We've granted quasi-religious status to well-being pursuits such as mindfulness; it's like soft Buddhism, and it's no bad thing," says Ward. "We are so busy, so wound up, so the recognition that we are not machines and need to find therapeutic ways to deal with our stress is very welcome, however it comes about."

Amen to that.

How God Changes Your Brain by Andrew Newberg is available here

RICHARD DAWKINS: We are winning the war against religion

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568612/s/3bb60c35/sc/29/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cculture0Cbooks0C10A9141370CWhat0EGod0Edoes0Eto0Eyour0Ebrain0Bhtml/story01.htm

Monday, June 16, 2014

Half who miscarry 'wait 24 hours for a scan' - Mumsnet

"I had to wait six months to get counselling and lost six months of my life as I was not coping with the loss," one woman wrote.

And while 58 per cent of respondents wanted further medical care, just 26 per cent were offered it.

"The hospital said they'd ask a health visitor to contact me. That was two months ago; nobody has been in touch," replied another.

The survey found that aftercare following miscarriage is woefully inadequate. Photo: ALAMY

In 2012, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidance stated that miscarrying at home would be the default clinical response for women undergoing miscarriage before the 13th week of pregnancy. But these results show this policy is leaving women without the support they need: only 15 per cent of women who miscarried at home, following a scan, felt they had the right support, information and pain relief to cope.

"I was told, over the phone, to 'just sit on the toilet and hopefully it will all come out'," recalled one Mumsnet user.

Eleven women were asked to store their miscarried foetus at home – some reportedly in the fridge – prior to further tests being carried out.

Only a quarter of the women surveyed spoke of their experiences to friends and only 13 per cent told wider family.

A campaign for better care

Mumsnet users are campaigning for better care in case of miscarriage. They are calling for straightforward improvements in the treatment patients receive including: supportive staff, access to scanning, safe and appropriate places for treatment, good information and effective treatment and joined-up care.

Many of the points are included in best-practice guidance from the Department of Health. But the research shows that, too often, it's not being implemented.

Mumsnet is now asking for a parliamentary commitment to improving miscarriage care.

Mumsnet founder Justine Roberts (right) is campaigning for better miscarriage care. Photo: ABBIE TRAYLER-SMITH.

Justine Roberts, the founder of Mumsnet, said: "There's no escaping the pain of a miscarriage. But for this to be compounded by lack of treatment, pain relief, good care – or just plain human kindness – is completely unacceptable.

"We are calling on the three main parties to include a pledge in their manifestos to improve miscarriage care, based on the principles in our code."

Cathy Warwick, chief executive of the Royal College of Midwives, added: "Midwives and other health professionals have an important role to play in supporting women and families through the physical and psychological impact of miscarriage.

"Kind, compassionate and empathetic communication around care and treatment is an essential step to support families. It is particularly important that there is effective communication between the hospital, GP and midwife to provide ongoing support or advice, as needed."

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568612/s/3b8f1c09/sc/14/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cwomen0Cmother0Etongue0C10A90A32960CHalf0Ewho0Emiscarry0Ewait0E240Ehours0Efor0Ea0Escan0EMumsnet0Bhtml/story01.htm

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Jeff Howell: why does my boiler keep turning on and off?

Read more: Jeff Howell: should I get underfloor heating?

Read more: Jeff Howell: how can I insulate beneath the floor space?

A: If the central heating works but not the hot water, then the usual reason is that the gas supply pipe isn't big enough. It should be at least 22mm diameter rather than 15mm.

A combi boiler heats cold mains water "on demand" as it flows through the boiler's heat exchanger. As you can imagine, heating cold water to shower temperature in a few seconds requires a large and hot flame, so the hot water function utilises more burners and uses up more gas than is needed for the central heating.

In a subsequent email exchange, you told me that you already knew this, because the gas engineer who installed your shower had pointed out that the gas supply pipe was too small. But you had decided to write to me anyway, asking if there might be a "cost-efficient" way to resolve the problem.

The only cost-efficient solution I am aware of would be to get the 15mm gas pipe replaced with a 22mm pipe.

MIND THE GAP

Q: I have recently replaced one strip of decking on my patio, located on part of the flat roof of the sitting room extension. The new strip is narrower than the old, by a small amount. A friend insists that all gaps between decking should be sealed with something like roof sealant. I think the gaps should be left to allow rain to fall through on to the waterproof covering of the flat roof below, and this will then flow away to the guttering. I believe the roof and the decking are slightly inclined to allow this, and prevent ponding. My friend counters by stating that this would lead to rotting of the joists, but I believe they would last until the waterproofing needed renewal. What do you think?

ME, by email

A: In the first place, I have to repeat my opinion that outdoor timber decking in the British climate is a bad idea. The chemically treated softwood timber will rot away after a few years, but before it does, it will harbour slippery green vegetative growth on its top surface, and allow a build-up of leaf mould and other litter below it, potentially causing dampness problems in adjoining house walls. This can also provide a welcoming habitat for unwanted insects and vermin.

Joints between outdoor timbers need to have a gap of at least 5mm, to allow rainwater to drip through. Any smaller than 5mm and the water will be trapped by surface tension, which will hasten the rotting process in the decking timbers.

If I understand your question correctly, your friend is also concerned about rotting of the roof joists in the flat roof below the decking. You are right in surmising that this flat roof will be protected by its waterproof covering. Once your decking has reached the end of its short life and been removed, your flat roof should still be sound.

Send your questions to Jeff at Life, The Sunday Telegraph, 111 Buckingham Palace Road, London SW1W 0DT, email askjeff@telegraph.co.uk. Also visit Ask Jeff

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/564649/s/3b55d47d/sc/13/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cproperty0Cpropertyadvice0C10A8790A0A40CJeff0EHowell0Ewhy0Edoes0Emy0Eboiler0Ekeep0Eturning0Eon0Eand0Eoff0Bhtml/story01.htm

Rose Prince's baking club: Toad in the hole

Having unravelled the spelling (Daisy is appalling) and agreed how much nicer a TITH is with ale added to the batter, comfort of an even greater kind than a gratin has been delivered. The way this summer is going, the bikini will be staying in the drawer anyway, so do take Daisy's advice while the TITH cooks: "Dispose extraneous beer down throat."

Serves 6

Equipment

20cm x 30cm/8in x 12in non-stick pan

Ingredients

12 plain pork sausages

1 tbsp lard or dripping

A handful of sage leaves

For the batter

240g/8 oz strong white flour

A pinch of salt

3 eggs

200ml/7fl oz whole milk – approximately

300ml/10 ½ fl oz ale

Preheat the oven to 220C/425F/Gas 7. Heat a pan and lightly brown the sausages.

Put the flour and salt in a big bowl, make a well in the centre and add the eggs. Using a whisk to stir, gradually add enough of the milk to make a thick paste, then add the ale or beer. The batter should have the consistency of single cream. Allow the mixture to sit for 20 minutes for the gluten to develop, which will help the batter to rise in the oven.

Rub a little dripping on to the base and sides of the tin. Add a thin layer of the batter and place in the oven to set – about three minutes. Take the pan out of the oven and place the sausages on the set batter. Pour in the remaining batter, being careful to pour around and not over the sausages. Scatter over the sage leaves and bake for about 45 minutes, until it is well puffed up. Serve immediately.

Your letters

What is the difference in quality between sea salt and table salt, asks Bryony Dean. "It's confusing but do chefs use sea salt because it tastes better, if that is possible, or because it is eco-friendly?" There is a snob factor to salt, and I am dubious about the flavour aspect. The food writer Jeffrey Steingarten once lab-tested a number of chic salts against plain old table and found no taste difference in any but one practically unobtainable Japanese variety. There is an environmental benefit to sea salt, in terms of the way that it is produced. I suspect the chefs still believe sea salt to have a better flavour – so let them. As for me, I am delighted by the appearance of sea salt and agree with Steingarten that it is the way you find the large crystals in your mouth when it is sprinkled on the food that makes it more pleasant, and not the taste. In breadmaking, sea salt seems a more natural if rather more pricey ingredient to use.

*Wild Wood by Jan Needle (Golden Duck) is available from Telegraph Books (0844 871 1514) for £9.99 plus £1.10 p & p

Next week: Burger buns. You need strong white flour, yeast, eggs, butter, sesame seeds.

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/564649/s/3b55d47c/sc/17/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cfoodanddrink0Crecipes0C10A8780A50A0CRose0EPrinces0Ebaking0Eclub0EToad0Ein0Ethe0Ehole0Bhtml/story01.htm

Houston zoo puts pregnant elephant on jumbo weight-loss plan

HOUSTON Mon Jun 9, 2014 6:23pm EDT

HOUSTON (Reuters) - Zookeepers in Houston have placed a pregnant Asian elephant named Tess on a weight loss and exercise regimen, trying to help the pudgy pachyderm cut 500 pounds (228 kgs) in time for delivery of the baby in about a year.

"Part of the reason we're doing it now is to get ahead of the game. When she gets closer to delivery she'll move less and be less active," said Daryl Hoffman, curator of large mammals at the Houston Zoo.

At about 7,700 pounds (3,500 kg), Tess is roughly 6 percent overweight. The elephant's weight is already at the amount it should be at the end of a healthy pregnancy - and if Tess gets any larger, she may have trouble giving birth, zoo officials said.

Along with a lower-calorie diet, Tess is going for a brisk two-mile (3.2 km) walk inside her habitat each morning before visitors arrive. She also does leg exercises to improve muscle tone that zoo staff refer to as "elephant yoga."

Zookeepers said her planned weight cut would be like a 200-pound (91 kg) person dropping 12 pounds (5.4 kg). Asian elephants can weigh up to 11,000 pounds (5,000 kg), according to data provided by various zoos.

(Writing by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Will Dunham)


Source : http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/lifestyle/~3/X6uJs0KJYoU/story01.htm

Miss Nevada wins Miss USA beauty pageant

1 of 3. Miss Nevada Nia Sanchez reacts after winning the 2014 Miss USA beauty pageant in Baton Rouge, Louisiana June 8, 2014.

Credit: Reuters/Adrees Latif

Source : http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/lifestyle/~3/rP59N66k8vU/story01.htm

The Fault In Our Stars: 'Jane Eyre doesn't always go swimmingly'

Theirs is a textbook teen romance, only here the verbal interplay is cancer slang – his pet name for her is "Nosetube Girl" and losing their virginity is less a case of bra-strap fumbling than getting tangled up in oxygen tubes.

The Fault In Our Stars may be good, but it's far from being an easy read. So bleak and unflinching is the subject matter that it has even been criticised for augmenting a new genre of "sick lit."

"It's hard to take that personally when some of the things that have been said about the book didn't even line up with the plot line," shrugs Indianapolis-born Green, who points out that, in any case, adults make up a huge percentage of its readership. "I don't buy the idea that things are made worse by reading about illness or violence. As long as those subjects are treated honestly and authentically, I don't see that we have to protect teenagers from the reality of them. They are living in the same world as us, after all, and while I understand that urge to maintain their innocence, I don't think that there is any way to do that."

Today's young adult readers certainly don't seem inclined to be spared the harrowing details of real-life tragedy. Jenny Downham's 2007 novel Before I Die, which tells the story of a 16-year-old British girl dying of cancer, sold 70,000 copies in its first four months and has been made into a film, Now is Good, starring Dakota Fanning. Never Eighteen by Megan Bostic, published last year, features a leukemia-stricken hero in a race against time to tell his best friend he loves her. And Jay Asher's Thirteen Reasons Why – about a teenage girl who leaves 13 recordings explaining why she killed herself – was also a bestseller.

"I haven't read Thirteen Reasons," says Green, when I ask whether such subject matter is irresponsible, "so I can't speak to it directly. I do think that romanticising illness is dangerous and that novels about illness can be exploitative, but I tried very hard not to do that.

"Plus," he adds sardonically, "I don't think these books are among our larger social problems. I'm encouraged by teenagers reading for pleasure: I don't think that books are going to make their lives worse. And isn't it a bit odd to talk about contemporary literature that way when these kids are in school reading Dickens and Austen and Charlotte Brontë? I mean Jane Eyre doesn't go so swimmingly all the time."

With teenage fiction sales up almost 150 per cent in the past six years, Green feels that any kind of censorship wouldn't just be unnecessary but harmful. "I feel it has been pretty destructive for films, actually – and counter-productive. Because instead of getting the most honest, interesting movies, we get movies where they're very careful to use the word f-word only once, where they're allowed to use lots of violence but no breasts. I'm very troubled by that. And I'm far more worried about what kids are seeing on the internet than by what they're reading. The internet is a tool – I don't think it's good or evil in itself – but if you feel what's being sold in a bookstore is the most problematic thing around, then you should think again."

An ability to tap into the emotional intensity and curiosity of teenagers is just one of the qualities behind the praise ladled on Green for The Fault In Our Stars. Far from being a "kidult", however, this father of two describes himself as "living a very able, slightly pear-shaped middle-aged life in Indianapolis – the 137th nicest city in America."

He does, however, "remember being a teenager very well", first in Orlando, Florida, and then Birmingham, Alabama, where he asked his parents – Green's father was the director of a nature conservatory and his mother worked with underprivileged children – to send him to boarding school. Like the protagonists of his earlier books, An Abundance of Katherines, and Paper Towns – as well as Hazel and Gus in The Fault In Our Stars – Green was "a misfit".

"I was a bad student and a miserable presence in the classroom and at home," he says. He began to suffer from depression as a child and lives with it to this day. "Back then, I was never diagnosed. Now, although I would never say that I am in remission, I am able to manage it."

The idea for The Fault In Our Stars sprang from Green's work as a chaplain in a children's hospice when he was 21, having studied religion at Chicago's Divinity School. "I suppose I felt useful," he muses, "but to be fair I have great admiration for people who do that and don't, like me, leave after six months."

It was, he explains, "unbearable, being confronted by kids dying from illness and serious accidents. It's a very difficult thing to be a witness to every day and not take home with you. I would get home and just stare at the ceiling." Green had been thinking of getting ordained, but the experience made that impossible. "All the pseudo fancy ideas that I carried with me into that hospice were completely irrelevant in the face of actual children actually needlessly suffering and then dying. I emerged from it very angry and very annihilistic."

It wasn't until years later when he became a father that the author was able to draw on the experience in The Fault In Our Stars. "From the moment my son Henry was born, I understood that as long as either of us were alive – and beyond – I was going to be his father and he was going to be my son. And in that way love really is stronger than death. I found a lot of comfort and hope in that. And it seemed like the kind of hope that wasn't cheap."

The scores of letters from terminally ill children that Green has received since the book was first published in 2012 would imply that the chord he has struck rings true. "As a result of the book, I've become friends with young people who are sick or dying. On a few occasions, people have made it their 'wish' to meet me and I will always accommodate that.

"But I also get letters and emails almost every day from kids who say, 'I'm just like Hazel but without the cancer' – which is a strange thing to say because cancer defines her life. But by the end of the book, although cancer is part of her, it's not all of her."

He may be living every writer's dream, but as the countdown to the film's release begins and Green-mania is at its peak, the author isn't so much in a permanent state of jubilation as extreme caution. With depression, he says soberly: "All change is bad. The brain isn't very good at differentiating between good and bad stress. And, of course, it is hard to write in the shadow of something like The Fault In Our Stars…" Which is perhaps why Green remains vague on the subject of his next book. "Hopefully there will be something in 2015…" he says. "And no, it won't be a prequel. I want to try not to claim ownership over Fault. I think it should live with its readers now."

'The Fault In Our Stars' by John Green (Puffin, RRP £7.99) is available from Telegraph Books at £7.99 + £1.10 p&p. Call 0844 871 1514 or visit books.telegraph.co.uk

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568612/s/3b566a86/sc/8/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cculture0Cbooks0C10A8868780CThe0EFault0EIn0EOur0EStars0EJane0EEyre0Edoesnt0Ealways0Ego0Eswimmingly0Bhtml/story01.htm

Costs of autism add up: study

NEW YORK Mon Jun 9, 2014 4:40pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The cost of supporting people with autism spectrum disorders throughout their lives could be as high as $2.4 million per person, according to a new estimate.

The main drivers of costs among children with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) were special education and lost productivity for parents, researchers found. Among adults, the main drivers of costs were residential care and their own lost productivity.

“I think they really are the most thorough and trustworthy estimates that we have,” Tristram Smith said.

Smith, who was not involved with the new analysis, is an autism specialist at the University of Rochester Medical Center in Rochester, New York.

The researchers write in JAMA Pediatrics that previous cost estimates typically looked at individual areas, such as healthcare. The new study takes several other factors into account, including productivity, societal costs and other indirect costs.

For the analysis, the authors searched the medical literature for studies about costs associated with ASDs.

They compiled the data and found that the lifetime cost of supporting a person with an ASD and intellectual disability - formerly referred to as mental retardation - added up to $2.4 million in the U.S. and about $2.2 million in the UK.

For those without an intellectual disability, the lifetime cost was about $1.4 million in both the U.S. and the UK.

“These costs are much higher than previously suggested,” the researchers write. “Much of the high cost associated with ASDs is due to the cost of special education in childhood and to costs associated with residential accommodation, medical care, and productivity losses in adulthood.”

“My hope is that this is the beginning of a conversation - not the end,” David Mandell said. “And the things that will drive the conversation are those specific cost drivers.”

Mandell is the study’s senior author and director of the Center for Mental Health Policy and Services Research at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

“We can be more effective and more efficient about service delivery,” he told Reuters Health. “This is the case where being consistent with our values as a society and lowering costs work completely hand in hand.”

While it’s hard to make comparisons, Smith said it appears that the lifetime cost of supporting someone with an ASD is higher than the cost of supporting people with intellectual disabilities.

“I think we’ve had a sense that especially as the individual enters adulthood, things like residential care are going to be the main cost drivers,” he said. “I think in a general way we’ve suspected it all along. We’ve been slow to respond to that so I think there has been more focus on the transition between youth and adulthood.”

In an editorial accompanying the new study, Paul Shattuck and Anne Roux of the A.J. Drexel Autism Institute at Drexel University in Philadelphia write that the analysis is “remarkable” given the lack of information on costs and outcomes among people with ASDs.

“For the person with autism, diagnosis is a doorway into a social role as a potential lifelong service user,” they write. “For families, an autism diagnosis can also mean a lifetime of absorbing many of the financial and caregiving burdens associated with the disorder, especially in adulthood when the availability of societal supports diminishes.”

Smith said the study points to areas that need additional research, such as the average life expectancy of people with autism and whether they’re at an increased risk of other conditions.

“I think it is a big step forward because they incorporate everything we know - which isn’t a lot - but it’s a big step forward over previous estimates,” he said.

SOURCE: bit.ly/17hF0sY JAMA Pediatrics, online June 9, 2014.


Source : http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/healthNews/~3/3gTuN0fkTX4/story01.htm

U.S. says infant formula makers must test for germs, nutrients

WASHINGTON Mon Jun 9, 2014 8:44pm EDT

Jars of baby food from Gerber, a subsidiary of Nestle, are lined up at a store in Mexico City, January 24, 2014. REUTERS/Edgard Garrido

Jars of baby food from Gerber, a subsidiary of Nestle, are lined up at a store in Mexico City, January 24, 2014.

Credit: Reuters/Edgard Garrido

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. health officials on Monday finalized manufacturing guidelines for infant formula makers that aim to ensure products sold for babies meet certain quality controls to keep them safe.

The rule, to be officially released on Tuesday, includes requiring companies to test for salmonella and cronobacter, two bacteria that can cause particularly severe illness in babies, the Food and Drug Administration said.

The move follows several, high-profile nationwide recalls of various formula products in the past several years that have hit the multi-billion-dollar industry, which has increasingly sought to expand by selling formulas aimed at older infants and toddlers.

In 2010, Abbott Laboratories recalled 5 million containers of its Similac products because of possible contamination from insect parts. Mead Johnson Nutrition Co in 2011 saw its shares fall when stores pulled some powdered versions of its Enfamil product over concerns about infection, although the FDA later said a recall was not needed.

While public health officials generally say breast milk is best for babies, they acknowledge that many infants get all or part of their nutrition through formula. The new rule, the FDA said, is aimed at establishing "good manufacturing practices" that many companies have already adopted voluntarily.

It only applies to formula marketed for "for use by healthy infants without unusual medical or dietary problems," the FDA said in a statement.

Under the regulation, companies must screen formula for salmonella, which can cause diarrhea and fever resulting in particularly severe problems for babies. They must also check for cronobacter, which is known to live in dry conditions such as powdered formula and cause swelling of the brain known as meningitis in infants.

While the FDA does not approve infant formula products before they can be sold, companies under the rule must also test their products' nutrient content and show that their formulas can "support normal physical growth," the agency said. The International Formula Council said it strongly supported finalization of the regulation.

“As an industry, we are proud of our record and support any effort that further advances infant formula safety and quality,” Mardi Mountford, executive vice president of the industry group, said in a statement.

The American Academy of Pediatrics, which represents physicians who treat babies and children, also welcomed the regulation.Other infant formula manufacturers include Nestle SA, which makes Gerber brand formula, and Hain Celestial Group Inc, maker of Earth's Best. Perrigo Co manufactures many store-brand formulas.

(Reporting by Susan Heavey; Editing by Andrew Hay, Peter Cooney and Leslie Adler)


Source : http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/healthNews/~3/0ldJC1d6bfQ/story01.htm

Ketchup with everything: tomato sauce helps fight heart disease

Of 36 patients with heart disease, those taking the pill every day for two months saw their blood vessels widen by 53 per cent.

This was due to improved functioning of the endothelium, the inner wall cell lining of blood vessels, scientists believe.

The tomato pill had no effect on healthy volunteers whose blood vessels were already "normal".

Constriction of blood vessels reduces blood flow and is one of the main factors that can lead to heart attacks and strokes.

The study involved randomised trials to measure the function of blood vessels, called forearm blood flow, which is predictive of future cardiovascular risk.

Thirty-six cardiovascular disease patients and thirty-six healthy volunteers were given either an off-the-shelf supplement containing 7mg of lycopene called Ateronon or a placebo.

The patients with cardiovascular disease were all on cholesterol-lowering statins.

However, despite this, they still had a relatively impaired function of the endothelium - the inner lining of blood vessels - compared to healthy volunteers.

This function is determined by the response of blood vessels in the forearm to a naturally occurring molecule called acetylcholine.

Endothelial function predicts future events, so having a healthy endothelium is an important factor in preventing the evolution of heart disease.

The researchers found that 7mg of oral lycopene supplementation improved and normalised endothelial function in the patients, but not in healthy volunteers.

Lycopene improved the widening of the blood vessels by over half. (53 per cent).

Constriction of the blood vessels is one of the key factors that can lead to heart attack and stroke. However, the supplement had no effect on blood pressure, arterial stiffness or levels of lipids.

Lead scientist Dr Joseph Cheriyan, from Addenbrooke's Hospital and Cambridge University, said: "There's a wealth of research that suggests that the Mediterranean diet - which includes lycopene found in tomatoes and other fruit as a component - is good for our cardiovascular health. But so far, it's been a mystery what the underlying mechanisms could be.

"We've shown quite clearly that lycopene improves the function of blood vessels in cardiovascular disease patients. It reinforces the need for a healthy diet in people at risk from heart disease and stroke.

"A daily 'tomato pill' is not a substitute for other treatments, but may provide added benefits when taken alongside other medication. However, we cannot answer if this may reduce heart disease - this would need much larger trials to investigate outcomes more carefully."

Professor Jeremy Pearson, associate medical director at the British Heart Foundation, which helped to fund the study, said: "Impaired endothelial function is a known predictor of increased risk of future heart disease. Further work is needed to understand whether the beneficial effects seen in this small study translate into clinical benefit for at-risk patients."

Lycopene has been promoted for its anti-cancer properties, especially in relation to prostate cancer.

However, convincing evidence that the compound really can fight cancer in patients is lacking.

Lycopene capsules can be bought from health food chain Holland and Barrett for £11.55.

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568612/s/3b53b3e9/sc/14/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cscience0C10A8873690CKetchup0Ewith0Eeverything0Etomato0Esauce0Ehelps0Efight0Eheart0Edisease0Bhtml/story01.htm

Monday, June 9, 2014

Audit: More than 57,000 await initial VA visits

Associated Press
FILE This April 28, 2014 file photos shows the Phoenix VA Health Care Center in Phoenix. The Veterans Affairs Department says more than 57,000 patients are still waiting for initial medical appointments at VA hospitals and clinics 90 days or more after requesting them. An additional 64,000 who enrolled in the VA health care system over the past 10 years have never had appointments. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File)

FILE This April 28, 2014 file photos shows the Phoenix VA Health Care Center in Phoenix. The Veterans Affairs Department says more than 57,000 patients are still waiting for initial medical appointments at VA hospitals and clinics 90 days or more after requesting them. An additional 64,000 who enrolled in the VA health care system over the past 10 years have never had appointments. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File)

Source : http://news.yahoo.com/audit-more-57-000-await-initial-va-visits-164406627--politics.html

'I had to buy two new wardrobes after a year on the 5:2 diet'

Roger had half-heartedly slimmed in the past – regimes like the Atkins protein-heavy diet. But as we all know, he says: "You go on and for a week or two it's great. But then, you stop losing weight, it feels pointless, you stop, and the weight piles back on."

Even when he was diagnosed with high blood pressure, and put on medication, Roger couldn't shift enough weight to make a difference.

And then came his daughter's book. 'I started in the January and by the end of month one, I had lost seven pounds. I felt: 'This is working'.'

He fasted two days a week consistently for the next six months, and was delighted to find he had lost two stone and nine pounds. He was 14 stone – and at the halfway mark.

"Now of course I had to face the downside of dieting," he laughs. "I had to get my jackets re-tailored, plus new trousers and new shirts."

Every Monday and Thursday, adjusted occasionally for his social life, Roger fasted until Christmas when he hit his 12 stone 7lb target. "And on New Year's Eve, my delighted cardiologist friend told me he thought I could lose another half a stone safely. So I did."

By the start of this year, not only had Roger lost four stone and nine pounds. He was told his blood pressure had fallen to normal levels so he no longer needed to take medication.

He had also lost nearly 10 points from his Body Mass Index (BMI) – the index calculated on height to weight which doctors use to assess our health. "I went from a BMI of 33.09, which is termed obese, to a BMI of 24.6, which is normal."

He adds: "Mimi describes it as me losing a child of eight." Mimi herself has said she is thrilled to throw her arms around her Daddy's waist and find they meet.

Roger is still following her diet – fasting one day a week for maintenance. "I've completely changed my eating habits," he admits. "I don't eat cakes or biscuits any more, and I don't know how Frys stay in business now I have stopped eating its Chocolate Crèmes."

Mimi has now written another book – The Fast Beach Diet, a six week kick-start to the diet – which I am following for the Daily Telegraph.

So for me, and all the other 5:2-readers, what's the secret, Roger?

"Don't think about it all the time," he cautions. "There are times you seem to go backwards – analyse them – what did you do?"

He adds: "Be active – go for a walk or get immersed in work; you'll find time has flowed."

Roger is, of course, proud as punch of Mimi (and her sister Debbie – who with Julie – contributed to the recipes for both books). But there has been one downside.

All those new and re-tailored clothes from last summer – Roger has had to replace and renew his wardrobe a second time. I don't think he would have it any other way.

The Fast Beach Diet by Mimi Spencer (Short Books, RRP £6.99) is available to order from Telegraph Books at £3.99 + £1.10 p&p. Call 0844 871 1514 or visit books.telegraph.co.uk

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/564649/s/3b4d4f2b/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Chealth0Cdietandfitness0C10A875550A0CI0Ehad0Eto0Ebuy0Etwo0Enew0Ewardrobes0Eafter0Ea0Eyear0Eon0Ethe0E520Ediet0Bhtml/story01.htm

Glassboat, Bristol, restaurant review

Be that as it may, we eschewed the snails in favour of two well-crafted and imaginative starters. A tiny drum of steak tartare, complete with a raw quail's egg on top, was accompanied by a slab of what was artlessly described as "corned beef" – in fact almost a species of rillettes, unctuous and tender – and a beetroot remoulade (there was a comma of beetroot purée as well, as if the chunkier remoulade had leapt on the plate and skidded on landing). We enjoyed the individual elements, but felt that the acidity and chilli heat of the tartare didn't marry up well with the earthiness of the beetroot. We also evinced disappointment that the singular "nasturtium" in the menu was intended literally (I remember experiencing a similar tristesse over the solitary anchovy I was given at Pizza Express once).

More fully resolved was John's seared scallop with "charred cauliflower" and Bayonne ham. "It looks like an aquarium!" he exclaimed, mistaking an upstanding "trunk" of de-floretted cauliflower for the tentacle of some giant mollusc. The creamy, ever so slightly rank sweetness of the cauliflower was a perfect match for the little queen scallops, robustly seasoned, cooked furiously but quickly and still moist and translucent within.

We were extemporising a Don DeLillo novel about Bristol ("The city beats to its own occult energies, moi loverr") when our main courses arrived. Our alcoholic needs were being more than adequately met by two 500ml carafes: a Picpoul de Pinet, dry as a peach stone, and a soft and tarmacky VDP d'Oc (the latter is currently the house red at £11.50 a half-litre). John had opted for a "cannon" of lamb ("Eet ees, 'ow you say … ze back part," said one of our three Modern European waiters), with sweetbreads done more or less alla Romana – that is, whizzed up into little polpetti and deep-fried in breadcrumbs – and a glossy reduction of the juices. This was delicious, though we agreed that whereas the beefy starter had had maybe one flavour too many, this had one too few.

I had turbot, a little on the salty side like the scallops, and quite scantily cooked so it retained a silky firmness and a kind of opalescence. This came with an excellent creamy cucumber sauce.

Sides were generous in quantity and hearty in character: herby Jersey royals, crispy "heritage carrots" (cue a snort from the other side of the table), fresh cabbage simply tossed in butter.

Next came a good cheese board with a lovely spiced fig preserve and a Brillat-Savarin (a sort of superbrie devised in 1930, and for my money one of the best "industrial" as opposed to artisanal cheeses in the world). We felt the puddings were a bit Eighties (the Lavender Panna Cotta Early Warning System kicked in promptly) but we did try a white chocolate "delice" ("Eet ees, 'ow you say, like a mousse"), made lip-tingling and almost medicinal by the addition of pink peppercorns; and a couple of glasses of banyuls, a full-bodied sweetish red wine from south-western France. Leaning backwards, we framed our closing arguments.

John felt the food was too fussy ("It's nouvelle cuisine all over again") and the portions too small for the price (though he conceded the sides were generous). I countered that by London/MasterChef standards Glassboat was understated: bourgeois rather than hipsterish, an intelligent and passably up-to-date fusion of classic French and Italian dishes and techniques with good British ingredients; and I wished there were more places like it at home.

Welsh Back, Bristol, BS1 4SB, 0117 332 3971; glassboat.co.uk. Three courses with wine and coffee:

*Matthew Norman is away

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/564649/s/3b4d4f2a/sc/10/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cfoodanddrink0Crestaurants0C10A8780A750CGlassboat0EBristol0Erestaurant0Ereview0Bhtml/story01.htm

Thousands of naked bicyclists stage festive Portland protest ride

PORTLAND Oregon Sun Jun 8, 2014 2:22am EDT

PORTLAND Oregon (Reuters) - Thousands of bicyclists, many of them stark naked, poured into the streets of Portland, Oregon on Saturday night for the 11th annual World Naked Bike Ride, a protest that promotes bike riding as an alternative to driving cars.

Nude cyclists with lights flashing in their tire spokes rang bells as they barreled down avenues lined with cheering spectators, while a naked, apparently pregnant woman rode in a bike trailer.

"This is a party, but it's also a protest," said Carl Larson, a ride spokesman. "It is about oil dependence, cycling vulnerability and body" image.

Cyclists showed up in Normandale Park an hour before the ride, shedding garments according to the ride theme "as bare as you dare".

The rides are held in more than 75 U.S. cities and in more than 20 other countries, but Portland's is believed to be the largest, with more than 8,000 participants last year.

But unlike events in other cities, the Portland ride works with local police, being considered as a protest. Officers direct traffic during what is generally a trouble-free event.

"We've had a few complaints from neighbors but overall not many issues of concern," said police spokesman Sgt. Peter Simpson before the ride, adding "for residents who don't want to see it, the best advice is to just not go outside."

Jennifer Young, 40, who was at the ride with her 16-year-old son and was painted blue head to toe with fairy wings on her back, saw the goal as showing cyclists' vulnerability, saying "I think it's a little more evident when we're naked."

Neighbors looked on as a marching band played and dancers kicked off the start. Later a naked punk band jammed from the sidelines as bikers rolled past.

Fred Tebo, 90, wasn't sure want to think of the hoards of naked people in the park across the street from the house he has lived in since 1971.

"It's entertaining and it's stupid at the same time," he said, sitting on his steps. But a few minutes later he let a young woman and man clad in their underwear use his bathroom.

(Editing by Chris Michaud; Editing by Michael Perry)


Source : http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/lifestyle/~3/HfxLuzm_GwI/story01.htm