AMAZING HEALTH CONDITIONS TO WATCH IN OUR WORLD TODAY
LIFE-STYLE AND CANCER
Cancer is overwhelmingly caused by
where you are, what you do, and what happens to you in life, rather than by
what you are, a study of almost 90,000 twins has shown,” reports London’s
newspaper The Guardian.
Dr. Paul Lichtenstein of Sweden’s Karolinska
Institute led the research team for his study. He says: “Environmental factors
are more important than gene factors.” Scientists believe that smoking causes
about 35 percent of cancers, while another 30 percent appears to be related to
diet.
Genetic factors play a part in
prostate, colorectal, and breast cancer, but Dr. Tim Key of the Imperial Cancer
Research Fund in Oxford, England, advises: “Even if you have….. a family
history [of cancer] what you do with your life is much more important. You
should not smoke; you should care of your diet. Those things do make a
difference.
USE YOUR BRAIN
The brain’s vitality can remain intact
throughout our lives, as long as we keep exercising it,” states the Vancouver
Sun newspaper. “Read, read, read,” says Dr. Amir Soas of Case Western Reserve
University Medical School in Ohio, U.S.A.
To retain brainpower as you age,
choose mentally challenging hobbies, study a new language, and learn to play a
musical instrument, or engage in stimulating conversations. “Anything that
stimulates the brain to think,” says Dr. Soas. He also encourages cutting back
TV. “When you watch television, your brain goes into neutral,” he says.
The Sun adds that a healthy brain
also needs oxygen pumped through healthy arteries. Thus, exercise and proper
diet, the same things that help to prevent heart disease and diabetes, also
help the brain.
GERMS IN THE OFFICE
.
According to the
report, the average desktop is home to 100 times more bacteria than a kitchen
table and 400 times more than the average toilet seat.
University of Arizona
microbiologists measured bacteria in offices in a number of U.S. cities. They
found that the five most-contaminated spots were [in order] phones, desktops,
water fountain handles, microwave door handles and keyboards, says the Globe
and Mail newspaper.
According to the report, the average desktop is home to 100
times more bacteria than a kitchen table and 400 times more than the average
toilet seat.
SMOKING HAZARDS
One in every 8 lung cancer
deaths IS among nonsmokers. Scientists based their finding on a study of 52,000
people who died from lung cancer. Additionally, long-standing research shows
that toxic carbon monoxide and carcinogens are more prevalent in secondary
smoke than smoke directly inhaled by smokers.
In 1999 a government
study in Japan involving 14,000 people found that 35 percent of those at work
or at school was exposed to secondary smoke.
Smoking should be
aware they are harming non-smokers to such an extent a conscious effort should
be made to separate the two group. handles, microwave door handles and
keyboards, says the Globe and Mail newspaper.
According to the
report, the average desktop is home to 100 times more bacteria than a kitchen
table and 400 times more than the average toilet seat.
NARCOTIC DAMAGE
IN RECENT months, five people died in Peru as a direct result of
drinking water from jungle sources that were contaminated by cocoa cultivation
and cocaine processing.
Among other toxic chemicals,
kerosene, sulfuric acid, and ammonia are used to produce cocaine. These deaths
were caused by the consumption of water from springs or streams into which the
drug traffickers throw their highly toxic chemical wastes.
Even antinarcotics police who confiscate and destroy the hidden drug
laboratories have been adversely affected by contact with poisonous residues.
Many other jungle residents are also undergoing irreversible organic damage as
a result of consuming the polluted water.
The sad thing is that a large
part of these settlers are unaware of the danger many of them are in. no doubt
they are even people who have nothing to do with cocoa cultivation or
processing.
CHAGAS’ DISEASE SPREADING
CHAGAS’ disease comes from a
parasitic transmitted through the feces of a blood sucking insect commonly
called the kissing bug. The disease is endemic in rural areas from Mexico to
Argentina. An estimated one and a half two million Mexicans are affected with
parasite.
However, Chagas’ disease is
spreading to other part of the world. One way is through blood transfusions.
Mexicans biologist Bert Kohlmann explains: we have already got reports from
Australia, Europe, the United States of America and Canada of infections
through blood transfusions.
Migrants from the Americas who are usually
healthy give blood and nobody in those other places even thinks about screening
for chagas.
The world health organization
estimates that in the western hemisphere, 16 to 18 million people are infected
with the disease and 100 million more are at risk. At present, there is no cure
for the disease [chagas], which is often fatal.
SOFT DRINKS IN THE MEXICAN DIET
Mexico is the second-largest
consumer of bottled soft drinks in the world after the United States, and soft
drinks are among the ten most common products in the Mexican diet, consumed by
60 percent of families.
This concerns health experts who
would like to see families’ spending money on milk, fruit, vegetable, and other
foods that are essential to the growth and development of children.
Instead, too much of the family budget goes
toward a product that does not provide any nutrient to the body but does have a
large amount of carbohydrates, which in the long run contribute to the
development of obesity.
Other harmful effects of the high
consumption of soft drinks, particularly colas, include tooth decay and
osteoporosis
SILENT BABIES
SOME physicians in Japan say there is an
increase in the number of babies who neither cry nor smile. Pediatrician
Satoshi Yanagisawa calls them silent babies.
Why do the babies stop expressing
their emotions? Some doctors believe that the condition arises because babies
are deprived of parental contact.
The condition is called enforced
helplessness. One theory suggests that when needs for communications are
constantly ignored or misinterpreted, the infants eventually give up trying.
If a baby is not given proper stimulations at
the right time, the part of his brain that makes him emphatic may not develop,
suggests Dr. Bruce Perry, chief of psychiatry at Texas Children’s Hospital.
In cases of profound emotional neglect,
capacity to feel empathy may be irretrievably lost. Dr. Perry believes that in
some case substance abuse and adolescent violence can be linked to such early
life experiences.
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