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Tampilkan postingan dengan label Healty. Tampilkan semua postingan

Sabtu, 03 Desember 2011

bone marrow donor is paid now

A father who believes that the lack of bone marrow donors have contributed to the death of her son from leukemia, said a ruling by the Federal Court, the majority of bone marrow donors to pay will save lives and reduce treatment costs.

Jumat, 02 Desember 2011

Study: health risks can be sourced from apple juice

And 'apple juice is a real risk to health. Traces of arsenic, but not necessarily that people are fighting.

Despite the government's account of the new limits for arsenic, nutrition experts say the real danger of juice is the circle of life and children's teeth. Apple juice has few natural nutrients, high in calories and, in some cases, more sugar soft drinks a. It 'a child to love the sweet drinks and food moving better, and obesity contributes to the problem, say critics.

Selasa, 29 November 2011

Making sure kidney donors fare as well as promised

More and more donate a kidney to a relative, friend, even a stranger, and now a move to actually make sure that donors same success that was promised.
Surgeons stress rarely brings serious complications for the donor. What is less certain is the risk of long-term health effects, partly because transplant centers may lose track of donors after their return home.

Minggu, 27 November 2011

Understand the brain Autism

Cells of people with a rare syndrome associated with autism may help to explain the emergence of the disease, scientists suggest.

Decision to use the Vaccine for Cervical


The Ministry of Health decided to use the vaccine to protect girls against cancer of the cervix in the United Kingdom for change.

Jumat, 25 November 2011

obesity advisory group was disbanded by the minister of health

The government has terminated its advisory panel of experts in obesity, most members have criticized the decision by the health minister Andrew Lansley to the epidemic by working closely with the food industry and drinks.

Many group members have argued in meetings "taking care of responsibility" with the likes of PepsiCo and McDonald labeling and the reduction of fat and sugar is not the obesity epidemic to run, but their advice is largely ignored. Some were openly critical of the government.

Kamis, 24 November 2011

Asian gecko: it can cure aids?

It argues that a lizard night in Asia can be used to treat HIV has led to a strong tree in smuggling reptiles, which he makes at risk, an environmental organization said Tuesday.

The question for the Tokay Gecko has skyrocketed in recent years after the online blogs, newspaper articles, and wildlife traders praised the use of the language of the lizard and the internal organs, as a miracle cure for the 'HIV, TRAFFIC Southeast Asia said in a report.

Progesterone Cream Side Effects

"The side effects of progesterone cream" is the subject of this article, we consider to be, in plain language.
What is progesterone?

The progesterone is actually the sex hormone produced in women for their corpus luteum fertilized egg. It can also be described as a steroid hormone produced in the ovaries of the woman by the corpus luteum during ovulation. Natural progesterone product is generally considered a sign of other vital hormones such as cortisol, androstenedione, testosterone and estrogen. According to medical researchers, from 20 to 30 mg of progesterone naturally produced in the female body during the menstrual phase (luteal aka).
What is progesterone cream?

Senin, 21 November 2011

UN: AIDS is stable for now

The AIDS epidemic is stable and the number of people infected with the virus that causes remained unchanged since 2007, the UN said in a report Monday.
Critics say that the goal of eradicating diseases of the body that is too optimistic, but because there are vaccines, millions of untreated and donations have fallen in the midst of economic crisis.
There were 2.7 million new HIV infections last year, roughly the same in the last three years, the report said that UNAIDS, the United Nations Joint Programme on HIV and AIDS. The data largely confirm the results previously released by the group in June.

Minggu, 20 November 2011

study: blood type affects the chance of stroke

Your blood type may affect the risk of stroke. People with AB and B were women with a bit more likely to suffer from an O blood than those with _ the most common form, a study found.
The study can not prove a link. But it suits other work to bind A, B and AB to increase the risk of blood clots in the legs and heart attacks. Blood type O is also associated with an increased risk of bleeding, less chance of blood clots, the cause of the most successful means.

U.S Reject anti Abortion

Mississippi State voters constitutional amendment aimed at banning abortion refused, a defeat for opponents of abortion want a Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion in the overthrow of the United States.
With 85% of the reports of the temple, 58% of voters rejected the measure and 42% of the votes, according to the Clarion-Ledger newspaper in the capital, Jackson.

Jumat, 18 November 2011

Tips : To overcome the Cold

While the cold is very contagious, stimulated by more than 100 viruses that spread from contaminated surfaces or inhalation took it and rubbed it in your eye or mouth or a nostril. But beyond washing hands frequently, there are a number of ways you can raise their immunity:

Kamis, 17 November 2011

women are more often exposed to a broken heart syndrome

A woman's heart breaks more easily than a man.
Females are 7-9 times more likely to suffer from "broken heart syndrome", when all of a sudden or prolonged stress due to relationship problems or death from heart attack or heart failure such extraordinary symptoms, the first national study findings Usually these patients. recovered without permanent sequelae.

Rabu, 16 November 2011

20 PERCENT adult in USA have drug habbit

More than 20 percent of U.S. adults take at least one medication for conditions such as anxiety and depression in 2010, according to an analysis of prescription data, including more than one in four women.
The report, released Wednesday by the pharmacy benefits manager Medco Health Solutions Inc., has found that the use of drugs for psychiatric and behavioral disorders increased by 22 percent in 2001. The drugs most often prescribed for women aged 45 years, but its use in men and in young adults has increased significantly. Among adults 20-44, the use of antipsychotic drugs and treatment for hyperactivity with attention deficit more than tripled, and the use of anti-anxiety drugs like Xanax, Valium and Ativan have increased by 30 percent a decade ago .

Today many Patients avoid heart medications for free

Giving people drug-free and many of them still do not care to take their medications.
The doctor was surprised to see the resort of people occurred in a large study Involving Heart Attack Victims. Patient well-established sources of drugs available to prevent the recurrence of heart problems, including cholesterol-lowering drugs called statins, which slow the heart and helps pump more efficiently.
"My God, we've given people the idea of ​​drug free and only take half," said one study author, Dr. Elliott Antman of Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women Hospital in Boston.

Senin, 14 November 2011

Fasting

Short-term fasting could help protect cancer patients against the effects of chemotherapy, a study suggests.
Scientists found that fasting toughens up healthy cells but not cancer cells, raising hopes that, if the finding can be confirmed in clinical trials, it could be used to improve cancer treatment.
Chemotherapy has many side-effects because the drugs also kill healthy body cells. Scientists have long been looking for ways to improve the body's defences against the drugs.

Cancer

A cancer patient has given birth to a healthy baby boy after a 1.5-tonne shield was designed and built to protect her and the unborn child while she underwent radiotherapy.
Sarah Best is believed to be the first woman in Britain to have a baby after receiving such a course of radiotherapy and chemotherapy during a pregnancy.
Best went into labour minutes after completing her treatment and her son, Jake, was born more than a month earlier than expected. Both mother and child are thriving. Thirty-year-old Best was four months pregnant with her first child when doctors told her she had mouth cancer. Surgeons removed a tumour from her tongue but discovered the cancer had spread to her lymph nodes. Best, from Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, was told the cancer could spread if she did not have radiotherapy. To protect the unborn child two lead shields, each 5cm thick, were built to encase her bump during daily 20-minute long radiotherapy sessions.