Thursday, April 30, 2015

Doctors Dissected and NHS for Sale: Myths, Lies and Deception – reviews

What is your doctor really thinking? And what does the future hold for the NHS?

We trust our doctors. Polls tell us that we have greater faith in them than in most other professionals (including politicians and journalists, of course). How many of us have experienced a wave of relief in the consulting room, face to face with a calm but caring GP? Doctors Dissected, by the psychotherapist Jane Haynes and GP Martin Scurr should come with a health warning: read this book and you may never feel the same way about your doctor again.

Of course, we know that doctors are human beings like everybody else. But those selected for this book of highly personal interviews appear to be more damaged by life than most of us and sometimes even in need of help. Some have been traumatised by their own upbringing and several talk of their parents not understanding them. But most perturbing of all is the anxiety many of these doctors have about their own medical conditions and the very procedures they would urge on us. “I would be terrified of having an anaesthetic. I’d hate it,” says – yes – an aspiring anaesthetist. Another had to undergo an operation and threw a fit when she realised the anaesthetist was going to be someone who had trained with her not very long ago. The consultant had to step in instead. Is one doctor Haynes talks to a hypochondriac? “Oh, I am too frightened to go to the doctor,” comes the reply, “but I believe in my symptoms 100%.”

Continue reading...

Breast Reconstruction Often Involves Multiple Operations

Study finds most breast cancer patients will need two or more procedures to complete process

Private GP out-of-hours care 'worse'

GP out-of-hours services provided by commercial companies perform slightly worse than NHS or not-for-profit equivalents, an analysis shows.

Want to Stay Slim? Keep Food Out of Sight

Low self-esteem is also linked to obesity, study finds

Choosing water instead of sugary drinks could cut diabetes 2 risk by a quarter

Study suggests replacing soft drinks and sweetened milky drinks with water or unsweetened tea or coffee is practical way to reduce rising incidence of disease

Forgoing a sugary drink a day and drinking water or unsweetened tea or coffee instead could cut the risk of developing type 2 diabetes by up to a quarter, say researchers.

The research was based on a study of a week’s food diary compiled by 25,000 men and women aged 40 to 79 in Norfolk, England, more than a decade ago.

Continue reading...

Can vitamin D level increase your pancreatic cancer risk?

Pancreatic cancer is one of the most difficult cancers to detect early on and treat effectively because many patients do not develop symptoms until they are in the advanced stages of the disease. The symptoms can sometimes be very vague, but they may include upper abdominal pain radiating through your back, changes in skin color, […]

The post Can vitamin D level increase your pancreatic cancer risk? appeared first on Womens Health AskDrManny.

Indiana governor to sign needle exchange bill to curb HIV outbreak

  • State governor Mike Pence issued public health emergency last month
  • Disease linked to intravenous drug use, particularly in rural communities

Related: Indiana HIV outbreak triggers national alert

Indiana governor Mike Pence is set to sign a bill passed Wednesday by the state’s assembly that will allow local governments to set up needle exchange programs in an effort to combat the spread of HIV.

Continue reading...

Women still do most of the cleaning: is it putting their health at risk?

A California proposal to label all ingredients in cleaning products draws fire from manufacturers and support from women’s health advocates

In February, California’s legislature began considering AB 708, a bill that would require cleaning product manufacturers to disclose all ingredients on product labels. Although the bill doesn’t directly address female exposure to chemicals, if it passes, it could have had significant and wide-ranging impacts on women – the primary users of cleaning products.

While gender roles have changed in the last few decades, a 2014 survey by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that women still perform about 55-70% of household cleaning, about 30% more of the cleaning than men. In addition to eating up time, this extra work could leave women more susceptible to any negative impacts of chemicals in cleaning products.

Continue reading...

A walk to remember: Raising awareness about pancreatic cancer

How many times have you seen an ad for a walk to help raise money for a cause, and thought how nice it would be to take part, but didn't have the time?

Study links low vitamin D to increased risk of pancreatic cancer

While it’s clear that too much sun can increase the risk for skin cancer, a new study has found that too little vitamin D can increase the risk of pancreatic cancer.

Cancer death rate declines worldwide

The rate of deaths from cancer appears to be declining worldwide, a new study suggests

Not so pretty: the high health cost of women's products

On average, women use twice as many personal care products as men, applying an average of 168 chemicals to their bodies every day

Between cosmetics, perfumes, personal care products and feminine hygiene products, women in the US apply an average of 168 chemicals to their faces and bodies every day, according to new research by the nonprofit Environmental Working Group.

Some of these chemicals are completely harmless, but others are endocrine disruptors, carcinogens and neurotoxins, most of which have not been independently reviewed for safety before hitting store shelves. And there is growing concern that the combined chemical burden from these products may be directly related to increased rates of reproductive issues and cancer among women.

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists wrote in a 2013 report that there is “robust” evidence linking “toxic environmental agents” to “adverse reproductive and developmental health outcomes”.

Related: Defining moments: share an experience that has shaped your values

Related: Untested chemicals are everywhere, thanks to a 39-year-old US law. Will the Senate finally act?

Related: Will the US ever pass a new chemical safety law?

Related: Chemical enemy number one: how bad are phthalates really?

Related: Disposable tampons aren't sustainable, but do women want to talk about it?

Continue reading...

US says no to modifying embryo DNA

Modifying the DNA of embryos is a "line that should not be crossed" and poses serious safety and ethical issues, a leading figure in US research says.

Many patients unaware of risks that go with some medical scans

Over half of people receiving medical scans such as X-rays do not know if they are exposed to radiation and many have unanswered questions even as they are waiting to undergo the test, a small U.S. survey found.

Choice in books may help kids' reading score over summer

Allowing young children to choose books they'd like to read over the summer break from school may hone their reading skills and prevent “summer slide” in reading scores, suggests new research.

Health Highlights: April 30, 2015

German Measles Eliminated From the Americas: WHO Meat Producer Tyson Will Stop Using Antibiotics in Chickens by 2017 Weight Watchers Founder Jean Nidetch Die

Car seats are for traveling, not sleeping

In a new study of young child deaths in sitting devices like car seats, swings or bouncers, most were due to asphyxiation by improper positioning or strangulation in straps.

Drop in Drunk Driving Crashes May Have Boosted U.S. Economy

Study tallied savings from fewer medical bills, lower legal costs, lost productivity and property damage

Female genital mutilation increase in England 'only tip of iceberg'

Number of girls being treated for FGM rises to 578 in March, as campaigners warn month-on-month increase looks set to continue

The number of girls treated for female genital mutilation in England last month rose to 578 in what campaigners said was just the tip of the iceberg.

The latest figures, from the Health and Social Care Information Centre, bring the total of identified cases to 3,963 since data began to be collected on FGM in September. Sixty of the newly identified cases reported involved under-18s.

Related: UN calls for FGM zero tolerance after a year in which the world woke up

Related: Doctor found not guilty of FGM on patient at London hospital

Continue reading...

Germans switch sausage for soya over green, health concerns

Germans, known for their love of sausages, are eating less meat and more vegetarian food as concerns grow about health, animal welfare and the environmental cost of livestock farming.

Health Tip: Muscle Up Your Memory

You're never too old to learn

Autism is not a tragedy. Take it from me | Sarah Kurchak

Autism awareness groups push fear-mongering messages that deny our lives the value they deserve

The existence of autistic people like me is not a “tragedy”. Yet many autism awareness narratives insist it is because they prioritize the feelings of neurotypicals (non-autistic people) and dismisses the rest of us as little more than zombies. And when people buy into this idea, it actively hurts autistic people.

When I was finally diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder six years ago, I wouldn’t shut up about it. In part, this was because I, like many autistics, tend to perseverate about the things that intensely fascinate me and, at that moment, there was nothing more fascinating to me than discovering that there was an explanation for all of my sensory sensitivities, social issues, repetitive behaviors and obsessive interests. I also believed in the importance of autism awareness.

Continue reading...

Inside the Whole30 health craze: Does it really work?

Search #Whole30 on Instagram or Twitter and you’ll find millions of food pictures and recipes, and dramatic before and after photos. We sat down with the creators of the health craze that's taking social media by storm.

 

5 random ways to prevent hair loss

Losing sleep over your receding hairline or thinning mane? You're not the only one. By the age of 35, two-thirds of American men will experience some degree of considerable hair loss, according to the American Hair Loss Association. 

Northern Ireland midwives strike over pay

Country’s midwives hold first-ever strike over exclusion from 1% pay rise awarded to colleagues in England and Wales

Midwives in Northern Ireland have gone on strike in a dispute over pay.

The industrial action, the first time midwives in Northern Ireland have gone on strike, began at 8am on Thursday and is due to end at midday.

Continue reading...

Integration is not a cure-all for health and care – look at Northern Ireland

Health and social care have different cultures, values and funding systems, which cause difficulties when promoting community-based care

In 1965 the Seebohm committee was appointed to consider how best to shape social welfare. In the same year I qualified as a social worker. In the half-century since, there have been numerous attempts to secure better integration of services. Now the belated realisation that the scale of cuts in adult social care has contributed greatly to the pressures on the NHS has again directed attention to the boundaries between health and social care.

In this discussion there has been little examination of Northern Ireland, with its 45 years experience of an integrated system. There, integration has failed to address a reliance on hospitals and institutional care which is significantly greater than elsewhere in the UK. A model based on community-based services remains an aspiration.

Related: Vanguard sites: new models of integration in health and social care

Related: The Manchester experiment is not the way to integration

Continue reading...

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

GPs are exhausted, A&E is overrun and hospitals are broke. What went wrong?

The Big Issue: Each day this week we are looking at key election issues. Today we examine the NHS, and the claim that the coalition’s plan for market-based healthcare was based on a mistaken belief that doctors are driven by self-interest

When Stephanie Di Georgio, a Kent GP, sat down at a medical conference last year in Liverpool to hear the health secretary, Jeremy Hunt, she expected to be annoyed. A partner in a busy practice by the sea in Deal, Kent, she had almost given up on medicine because of the stress of dealing with shrinking budgets while the pressure built up to do more.

Related: Immigration: in Enoch Powell's former seat jobs and the economy matter more

So much was done so fast in an unprecedented squeeze

Related: Schools' hidden funding crisis: teachers take drastic action as cuts hit hard

Continue reading...

Group representing 1m medical students backs fossil fuel divestment

Fossil fuel industry is a bigger threat to global health than tobacco, says open letter to the Wellcome Trust and Gates Foundation from future doctors

The fossil fuel industry is a bigger threat to global health than tobacco and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Wellcome Trust have a moral obligation to divest from it, an international organisation that represents 1 million medical students has said.

A letter to the charities from the International Federation of Medical Students’ Associations (IFMSA) called on the charities to drop their fossil fuel company interests, which amount to almost £1.5bn.

Continue reading...

Surge in Pollen May Spur Many Cases of Dry Eye

Both are at their worst this time of year, study says

Men 'catching up on life expectancy'

Men are narrowing the gap on women when it comes to life expectancy in England and Wales, research in the Lancet indicates.

Kybella Approved for Double Chin

Drug mimics body's own fat-destroying chemical

Fossil fuels are the new tobacco when it comes to health risk | Letter from Lucas Scherdel and 53 others

As future doctors we call on the Wellcome Trust and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to remove their investments from fossil fuel companies. We share a responsibility to our future patients to address unmitigated climate change – described as “the biggest health threat of the 21st century” – and to advocate for a transition to a healthier, more sustainable economy. The British Medical Association has already divested and many other medical and health organisations are following suit. Continued investment in the fossil fuel industry violates health workers’ obligations to do no harm and grants the industry the social licence to explore and exploit still further reserves, resulting in catastrophic global warming.

Of currently listed fossil fuel reserves 80% must remain unburned to keep surface temperature warming below 2C above pre-industrial levels. Climate change threatens health both directly through frequent flooding, heatwaves and natural disasters, and indirectly by worsening food insecurity, conflict and mental health. Fossil fuels also directly harm workers and local communities by toxic exposures, air pollution and local environmental degradation. A transition to renewable energy generation and low-carbon, active transport would prevent millions of deaths worldwide from cardiovascular, respiratory, and other diseases.

Continue reading...

Hispanic Women's Upbeat Outlook May Boost Heart Health

Study finds they worry less about weight, diet than whites, and have better cardiac profiles

Rubella eradicated from Americas

North and South America become the first regions to completely eradicate rubella, or German measles, after no cases in five years

Traumatic Life Events May Harm Women's Hearts, Study Suggests

Managing stress as important as lowering blood pressure to prevent heart attack, expert says

Scientists find chemical clues on obesity in urine samples

Scientists have identified chemical markers in urine that are linked to body mass, offering clues about why people who are obese are more likely to develop illnesses such as cancer, stroke, diabetes and heart disease.

Alcohol research finds Australians support greater restrictions on industry

Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education says four-fifths of voters want bars to close at 3am, but Australian Hotels Association dismisses findings

Four out of five Australians believe pubs, clubs and bars should close by 3am, while more than half believe governments are not doing enough to reduce alcohol-related harms, a comprehensive annual alcohol poll has found.

But the findings have been dismissed by the peak body for employers in the hotel and liquor industry, who say the poll was a ploy to “prop up more taxpayer-funded public health researchers”.

Related: Assaults in Kings Cross and Sydney CBD drop after year of liquor law reforms

Continue reading...

Dynamic MRI helps scientists study over 100 muscles involved in sound

Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to study how muscles collaborate to produce song and speech has proved challenging for scientists in the past, as typical technology can capture only about 10 frames per second.

Antibiotics 'not being protected'

Three-quarters of countries do not have plans in place to preserve antimicrobial medicines, the World Health Organization says.

Münchausen by internet: the sickness bloggers who fake it online

Australian blogger Belle Gibson has been exposed for fabricating her tragic cancer story. But her strange behaviour is more common that you’d think – faking disease in return for online fame is now a recognised medical condition

How would you fake cancer? Shave your head? Pluck your eyebrows? Install a chemo port into your neck? These days you don’t need to. Belle Gibson’s story is a masterclass on faking cancer in the modern age. She fooled Apple, Cosmopolitan, Elle and Penguin. She fooled the hundreds of thousands who bought her app, read her blog and believed that her story could be their story.

Diagnosed with a brain tumour aged 20, Gibson had four months to live. She blogged her journey of radiotherapy and chemotherapy, treatments she shunned after eight weeks. Instead, she cut gluten and dairy and turned to oxygen therapy, craniosacral treatments and colonic irrigation. Against all odds, she made it. Her followers were inspired. If Belle could make it, maybe they could too.

Related: Sick note: Faking illness online | Münchausen by internet

Related: Munchausen by internet can be bad for your health forum | Marc D Feldman

Continue reading...

3-D printed device used to treat life-threatening airway disease in infants

For the first time, doctors were able to treat infants with a rare, life-threatening airway disease by using a 3-D printed device, reveals a new study published Wednesday in Science Transitional Medicine.

My plea to the NHS: decide whether or not my life is worth saving, and call me | Stacie Lewis

I have leukaemia. I’m a mum. A second bone marrow tranplant is my only chance but the NHS must approve it. Six weeks on I’m still in the dark, waiting …

Two years ago, my world fell out from under me when I was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukaemia.

I had no idea. The day my GP phoned and asked me casually if I might be able to make my way up to King’s College hospital that afternoon for further tests, I had been on my way to the leisure centre. I continued on and swam 30 laps before I arrived [at the hospital].

Are decisions made within NHS England based on money, or what is the best treatment to save my life?

Every time I get that call, I think it is THE call. My heart rips open in my chest

Continue reading...

NYC hotel, spa offer personalized sleep services

People having trouble getting enough shut-eye may try adjusting their diet or exercise routine, or even go so far as to pop a sleeping pill on the regular.

Climate change will significantly affect Australians’ health, report finds

Report by the Australian Academy of Science warns extreme weather events will contribute to the spread of disease and disrupt food and water supplies

Climate change will have significant repercussions for Australians’ health as warming temperatures fuel extreme weather events, help spread disease and disrupt food and water supplies, according to a report backed by the country’s peak scientific and medical bodies.

The Climate change challenges to health report, released by the Australian Academy of Science, warns that vulnerable people, particularly the sick, elderly and poor, will “suffer disproportionately from the worst impacts of climate change.”

Most doctors think we are well beyond debating whether climate change is an issue

Continue reading...

Program teaches martial arts to visually impaired

A Long Island, New York, man with degenerative eye disease is using his skill as a second-degree black belt nijitsu sensei to teach martial arts to others with visual impairment, My Fox NY reported.

Tracing the bird flu outbreak in US poultry flocks

Two highly pathogenic strains of avian influenza (HPAI) have been found in 14 U.S. states since December, prompting partial to total bans on imports of U.S. poultry and egg products to other countries that were valued at more than $6 billion last year.

Health Tip: Promoting Independence in Children

Establish specific rules

From New York to Beijing, where in the world can you still smoke in a bar?

New Orleans has become the latest city to introduce a smoking ban – which got us wondering: where are you still allowed to light up freely?

We’ve reached the point where it seems quicker to count the cities that actually let people smoke in their bars than the ones where it is banned. Even the sybaritic city of New Orleans finally outlawed smoking last week. But when you look into it (as determined smokers no doubt have), there are still many few bars and cafes around the world – and even in the US – in which they may freely enjoy their unhealthy habit. For example ...

New York

Continue reading...

How to get a body like a Viking

Those villages aren’t going to pillage themselves.

Jeni's to destroy 265 tons of ice cream after listeria found

Jeni's Splendid Ice Creams is destroying more than 265 tons of ice cream after listeria was found in the production facility and in products last week.

Digital revolution brings data challenges for NHS

Digital health technology could redefine healthcare for the better, but data security remains the greatest challenge

Alongside its industrial cousin, the digital revolution has created fundamental and irreversible changes to our way of life. Those changes are particularly apparent in the healthcare sector and from a UK perspective, digitally enabled services are a vital element in the strategy that the NHS is using to head off the £30bn black hole that will otherwise exist in its budget by 2020.

While the majority of us expect that goods and services be available within a couple of taps of a smartphone or tablet, in a healthcare context, a sizeable group of the population are either late adopters or remain seriously concerned about data security. Add to that the moral concerns that exist in relation to the commercialisation of patient data and you see the extent of the challenge that the NHS needs to overcome before it is able to realise substantial savings through use of digital health technology.

Continue reading...

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

What will the election mean for the UK's public services?

With a hung parliament likely, our experts analyse key pledges, from health to housing, by those who may form the next government

Related: Labour pulls ahead of Tories on NHS

Related: Britain's first titan-sized prison gets green light

Related: Conservative manifesto pledges: what the experts say

Related: What the 2015 UK party manifesto pledges would mean for councils

Related: Housing policies in the general election – what do the experts think?

Continue reading...

Worried parents 'put pressure on A&E'

Worried parents are putting "extra pressure" on A&E departments, leading doctors and nurses warn.

Breast-Feeding May Lower Breast Cancer Recurrence, Death: Study

Strongest benefit seen in most common types of tumors, researchers say

Well: The New Logic of Calorie-Counting: Take the Quiz

Can you determine which of these foods’ reported calorie counts are off?






4 first-aid remedies in your kitchen

Some of the best first-aid tools can be found in your kitchen. While you should always have some Band-Aids and first-aid ointment in your bathroom cabinet, there are some things in your house you may not have thought about that could help out in a health crisis

Well: On Food Labels, Calorie Miscounts

The most common method overstates the energy provided by proteins, nuts and high-fiber foods by as much as 25 percent, some experts say.






Parties need a dose of realism over NHS funding promises | Letters

A notable feature of this election campaign has been the NHS bidding war between the political parties (Lib Dems outline mission to make mental health a funding priority, 31 March; Tories pledge extra £8bn a year for NHS, 11 April; Miliband vows to train 1,000 more nurses, 21 April). Promises of additional funding are welcome, but it is important to be clear about what they will pay for.

First, promises of jam tomorrow are not enough when the NHS is under severe pressure today. All the parties must spell out when their pledges of extra funding will translate into hard cash to address the growing black hole in NHS finances.

Continue reading...

US-African diet swap has dramatic impact on colon cancer risk

Black Americans who switched to a high-fiber African diet for just two weeks saw a dramatic drop in risk factors for colon cancer, a study published on Tuesday found.

The King's warning: expert says George VI should be anti-smoking image

Top surgeon suggests images of the Queen’s father, who died at 56 of coronary thrombosis – 90% due to smoking – should serve as warning on cigarette packets

Images of the Queen’s father, George VI, should appear on cigarette packets as warning of the perils of smoking, one of Britain’s leading surgeons has suggested.

Speaking to the Royal College of Surgeons on Tuesday, Professor Harold Ellis said George VI’s death in 1952 at the age of only 56 should serve as a national reminder of the health problems caused by smoking.

Continue reading...

Diet swap study shows junk food harm

A two-week diet swap experiment hints at just how damaging a junk food diet might be to our guts.

Bullying may leave worse mental scars than child abuse

Being bullied during childhood may have even graver consequences for mental health in adulthood than being neglected or sexually abused, according to the first-ever study to tease out the effects of peer abuse from childhood maltreatment

Air pollution costs Europe $1.6tn a year in early deaths and disease, say WHO

Costs of dirty air are equivalent to about a tenth of Europe’s GDP, with Germany, UK and Italy among the hardest hit economically

The financial cost of air pollution in Europe stands at more than $1.6tn (£1.5tn) a year, a study by the World Health Organisation (WHO) has found, equating to about a tenth of the GDP of the continent.

While air pollution has long been known to be a major environmental burden, the costs in human and economic terms have not been categorised before.

Continue reading...

Nurse undergoes unnecessary breast surgery after medical mix-up

A mom in the UK has been left physically and emotionally scarred after the hospital where she worked as a breast care oncology nurse mixed up her own test results with another patient's and told her to undergo surgery to remove aggressive breast cancer.

Bowel cancer risk may be reduced by rural African diet, study finds

Tests on subjects who swapped a fatty, meat-heavy diet for foods rich in beans and vegetables found a drop in biological markers for cancer in just two weeks

Swapping a western diet for traditional African meals may reduce the risk of colon cancer, scientists have found.

Tests on African Americans who replaced their fatty, meat-heavy diets with rural African foods rich in beans and vegetables found that in just two weeks, biological markers pointed to a drop in their disease risk.

Continue reading...

Tinkling spoons can trigger seizures in cats

The United Kingdom-based charity International Cat Care reached out to veterinary specialists after receiving surprising complaints from cat owners: Their feline companions were apparently having seizures in response to high-pitched sounds

Women's Brains May Have Tougher Time Recovering From Concussion

MRI study suggests working memory doesn't bounce back quickly as it does in men

GSK readies 'bubble boy' drug as big pharma bets on gene therapy

GlaxoSmithKline is close to seeking European approval for a gene therapy drug to fight adenosine deaminase severe combined immune deficiency (ADA-SCID) in the latest sign of a renaissance in the technology to fix faulty genes.

Liz Kendall: ‘The hospital of the future will start in people’s homes’ | Denis Campbell

Shadow minister for care and older people Liz Kendall is a huge NHS fan, but says it needs fundamental change to be fit for the future

After just one term as an MP, Liz Kendall already attends Labour’s shadow cabinet meetings, as shadow minister for care and older people. It’s a sign of her stock in the party and importance to Ed Miliband of her brief. Her knowledge of health policy and refreshing ability to talk plain English rather than NHS wonkspeak makes her an articulate advocate of Labour’s 10-year plan for the NHS, to offer “whole-person care” through the integration of health and social care services in England. She helped Miliband and the shadow health secretary, Andy Burnham, launch Labour’s health manifesto this month in Pudsey, Yorkshire, and is mentioned as a possible contender for the role of health secretary if Labour wins the electionand Miliband puts Burnham in a different job.

A huge fan of the NHS – “it’s the embodiment of British values and Labour values” – she also believes it needs to change. A couple she met while campaigning locally illustrates why, she says. “It was a mum and dad in a park with their kids. The dad hadn’t wanted to talk, really. But he came to see me a while later at one of my community drop-ins. He was really upset and told me that his wife had diabetes and had had a foot amputated because of that. They’d needed a grab-rail so she could have a bath. But it hadn’t turned up for nine months. She’d ended up going into hospital [again] and when she came out, things had changed and she needed a wetroom downstairs. But when they finally came round to instal it, it was four days after she’d died. I don’t know if that situation could have been prevented, but I’m pretty damn sure it could have been.

Related: Ex-NHS boss questions Tory and Lib Dem health service funding plans

Continue reading...

Girls diagnosed with autism later than boys, study finds

Current statistics on autism spectrum disorder (ASD) show that boys are nearly five times more likely than girls to have autism. Now a new study proves that in addition to being diagnosed less, girls are also diagnosed at a later age than boys.

Milder Autism Typically Diagnosed Later in Girls

They're more likely to show social awkwardness rather than physical symptoms, study finds

Don't treat students as customers when it comes to mental health

Applying customer service metrics to student mental health is potentially dangerous and ignores the complexity of care needed

“Who are your customers, and how well have you served them?” The question, newly introduced into our annual performance review, knotted my stomach.

As a psychiatrist in an American university counselling centre, I provide clinical care to college, graduate and professional school students who come to me for difficulties such as mood swings, anxiety, and relationship problem. I consider them patients, people, students.

Related: Dark thoughts: why mental illness is on the rise in academia

Related: Overworked and isolated - work pressure fuels mental illness in academia

For a population managing distress on their own for the first time, isn’t learning to plan through making and keeping appointments, and learning to tolerate emotional distress when a plan unexpectedly falls through, part of the very purpose of higher education?

Continue reading...

New cataract surgery eliminates need for glasses

Cataracts, a natural part of aging, will affect everyone at some point, but surgery can help treat the condition. 

Welcome to the UK's latest national park … London

Ambitions to re-brand Greater London as a national park sounds like a gimmick, but organisers say it could benefit businesses and the city’s growing population

In London, one in seven children has not visited a green space in the last year and many more enjoy that pleasure just once a year. It is a form of environmental inequality with the poorest children most likely to suffer from what has now been dubbed “nature deficit disorder”. Schemes to connect young Londoners to nature are reportedly failing, having reached just 4% of those aged 11 or younger in the capital.

These statistics, and more like them, are forcing environmental campaigners and businesses to ask searching questions about what kind of place London might become in the next three decades. With city populations rising exponentially, what quality of life can its residents expect if they become so disconnected with the natural world?

Related: Toronto's underground city: a solution to crowded megacities?

Related: Turning our cities from lifestyle slums to health laboratories

Related: Ten quirky ideas for making our cities more sustainable

Continue reading...

Bullied children have 'greater mental health risks' than those maltreated by adults

Long-term study by US and UK universities argues that peer bullying must be taken more seriously by united front of institutions and advocacy groups

Children who are bullied are at greater risk of mental health problems in later life than those who are maltreated by adults, according to new research.

The authors of the study say it is time that bullying is taken more seriously. They found children who were bullied were five times more likely to experience anxiety and twice as likely to talk of suffering depression and self-harm as those who were maltreated at home.

Continue reading...

Monday, April 27, 2015

New Drug Class Slashes 'Bad' Cholesterol, Review Finds

If approved, medications could be used by people who don't respond to statins

Chinese doctor took more than $18m worth of bribes, say reports

Wang Tianchao, head of a hospital in Yunnan province, is alleged to have received bribes in cash, properties and car parking spaces

China’s top prosecutor is investigating a senior doctor in the country’s western Yunnan province for taking more than US$18m worth of bribes in cash, real estate and parking spots, the official China Daily reported on Tuesday.

Wang Tianchao, the head of Yunnan’s No. 1 People’s hospital, used his position to seek bribes related to construction projects, medical device procurement and doctor positions, according to a statement from the country’s top prosecutor.

Related: GlaxoSmithKline to pay £297m fine over China bribery network

Continue reading...

Connecticut teen who fought chemotherapy treatment home from hospital

A 17-year-old girl forced by the courts to undergo chemotherapy for her cancer has finished that treatment and was released Monday from a hospital where she had been confined since December.

Organic and UHT milk could put unborn babies at risk, says study

Other types of milk, perceived as having health benefits, contain less iodine, which is essential for brain development in foetuses

Pregnant women who switch to “healthier” organic milk may be putting the brain development of their unborn babies at risk, experts have claimed. Milk certified as organic contains about a third less iodine than conventionally produced milk, according to a new study. The same was found to be true for “ultra-high temperature” (UHT) processed long-life milk.

Since milk is the primary source of iodine in the UK diet, the discovery is said to have potentially serious health implications. Iodine is known to be important for the healthy brain development of babies, especially in the early stages of pregnancy. Previous research has shown that mothers-to-be who are iodine-deficient during this critical time can give birth to children with reduced IQs.

Continue reading...

Child obesity may have 'two phases'

There may be two distinct child obesity epidemics - one among infants and one among adolescents - research suggests.

Organic and UHT milk could put unborn babies at risk

Other types of milk, perceived as having health benefits, contain less iodine, which is essential for brain development in foetuses

Pregnant women who switch to “healthier” organic milk may be putting the brain development of their unborn babies at risk, experts have claimed. Milk certified as organic contains about a third less iodine than conventionally produced milk, according to a new study. The same was found to be true for “ultra-high temperature” (UHT) processed long-life milk.

Since milk is the primary source of iodine in the UK diet, the discovery is said to have potentially serious health implications. Iodine is known to be important for the healthy brain development of babies, especially in the early stages of pregnancy. Previous research has shown that mothers-to-be who are iodine-deficient during this critical time can give birth to children with reduced IQs.

Continue reading...

Smartphone App Blocks Teens From Texting, Phoning While Driving

New study suggests experimental device might reduce distracted-driving accidents

Well: Admitted to Your Bedroom: Some Hospitals Try Treating Patients at Home

Under pressure to reduce costs and improve quality, a handful of health care systems are hospitalizing patients in their homes.






Pediatrics Group Advises Doctors on How to Spot Child Abuse

New guidance offers suggestions on protecting children, too

FDA enforces new drug safety labeling system for pregnant women

A new labeling system for prescription drugs will take effect in June, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), marking a radical change in the information available to doctors when prescribing medications to pregnant patients. When you look at the vast amount of chronic medical conditions women deal with today -- from depression […]

The post FDA enforces new drug safety labeling system for pregnant women appeared first on Womens Health AskDrManny.

Tiny heart wanted: one family's experience with infant organ donation

Where does one find such a small heart? After the surgery meant to fix their baby’s heart defect didn’t take, the Ploggers learned the heart finds you

She tried to imagine how the heart would arrive.

He’d left her at midnight, her tiny, blue-gray boy. They’d taken him to the operating room to prep. The heart, they told her, should be there by 5am.

Continue reading...

Majority of American women aren’t aware of stroke risk factors, survey suggests

Stroke is the third leading cause of death for American women, but a survey conducted by Ohio State University researchers suggests only a fraction of women know the top risk factors for the condition.

Surgeons remove African man’s life-threatening 16.5-pound tumor

A 60-year-old man in Madagascar can stand strong and tall after about 35 years of coping with a 16.5-pound tumor that progressively overcame the left side of his neck.

HIV self-testing kit goes on sale in UK

BioSure is first legally approved self-testing kit, with 99.7% accuracy rate

The first legally approved HIV self-testing kit has gone on sale in the UK.

The BioSure HIV Self Test will enable people to test themselves when and where they like, with a 99.7% accuracy rate.

Continue reading...

HPV Vaccine Produces Early Benefits for Teen Girls: Study

Risk of precancerous changes dropped 44 percent several years after immunization

Photos of mother with cancer breastfeeding after single mastectomy go viral

Photos of an unidentified mother breastfeeding her newborn after undergoing a left-breast mastectomy have gone viral after a Florida photographer posted them on her Facebook page. 

 

 

Prostate cancer risk linked to baldness

Men who are losing their hair due to male pattern baldness may be at increased risk of dying from prostate cancer, a new study suggests.