Friday, 7 February 2014

Enene Akonjom Foundation Maternal Program

Maternal health talk for less privileged women in Gida Mangoro community FCT Abuja.

"Enene Akonjom Foundation is an non-governmental organizations which as impacted a lot in peoples life globally"

In space of 9years a lady which has been the CEO of EA Foundation name Enene Akonjom from south east region in Nigeria has been the hero's to the needed.

Despite the good work she has made to the helpless one's, the evil of man heart wants her good work to stop by attacking her in several occasions, also because God love the people who give to the poor, she was save again in the hands of an arm men previous.
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Latest Jobs in Nigeria

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From: "JobRIB.com - Nigerian job portal!" <jobribteam@gmail.com>
Sender: noreply+feedproxy@google.com
Date: Sat, 08 Feb 2014 06:02:00 +0000
To: <cwizard123@gmail.com>
Subject: Latest Jobs in Nigeria

Latest Jobs in Nigeria


Head Strategy and Planning - Nigeria Job at Chams Plc

Posted: 07 Feb 2014 01:54 PM PST

Job Title: Head Strategy and Planning
Location: Lagos, Nigeria
Employer: Chams Plc

Job description:
1)Provides up to date research to the leadership of the company in the following areas;
• Keeps management updated on information of external environmental trends such as; information on political, social, economic, technological and industry trends which may impact the organization.
• Updates on business trends which includes information on strategies adopted by global competitors which may include benchmarking or best practices
• Updates on changing customer needs and expectations which may consist of formal research outsourced to market research companies.
• Analyzes the industry trend and updates on new alliances, new market entrants, new products and services and changes to distribution channels
• Updates on customer analysis and informs on how existing customers view the organization through; the monitoring of social networks and platforms created for customer complaints. Survey on existing customers to determine their perception of the company’s strength and weaknesses.
• Executes competitor research by tracking competitor strategies and compiling information on their; finances, marketing ,human resources ,production, distribution, promotion, culture, structure, alliances and technologies
• Keeps up to date with new techniques and creative ways of executing strategy. And even when balancing the I.Q (intelligence quotient), E.Q(emotional quotient), and S.Q(spiritual quotient), he maintains excitement and inspiration in the people when they develop new powerful strategies.

2)Education in strategic learning and thinking
• Organizes monthly education sessions for management and in each month he gets a guest speaker to present information on new trends which may impact the organization.
• Circulates newsletters and interesting articles to SBU and subsidiary heads, HOD’S on strategy implementation and related strategy topics
• Speaking at retreats organized by different departments in the organization and organizing in-house retreats
• Send key strategic staff on external training courses where the need arises

3)Provider of strategic tools
• Provides the MD, Heads of; SBUS, subsidiaries and overall management with tools designed to make it easier for them to develop strategic plans together with their teams

4)Facilitator of strategy sessions
• Organizes the strategy review session and ensures that SBUs and subsidiaries develop strategy plans aligned to the organization’s new strategic plans. The following results will be achieved;
• Management team to think outside the box
• Organization to develop strategic plan
• The plan to be communicated to the rest of the staff
SBUs and subsidiaries to develop their plans aligned with the organization’s plan and to communicate it.
• Identify and manage the changes needed to support the new strategic plan
• Recommends objective external facilitators to facilitate these sessions where necessary
• Uses the same workshop tools to facilitate the strategy sessions at the SBU and subsidiary levels in order to promote alignment between the SBU, subsidiaries and corporate strategic plans

5)Systems integrator and coordinator
• Ensures that the organization’s systems, structure and culture are all aligned with the organization’s strategic plan and values
• Works closely with the finance, performance management and human resource departments to ensure that all planning and measurement systems use the same language and terminology
• Analyses all the strategic plans in the organization to ensure no duplication occurs between departments and subsidiaries
• Ensures that all new projects are designed and implemented in a way that supports the organization’s strategies and values

6)Monitoring of strategy
• Works with change management professionals to ensure that both the content and spirit of the strategic plan are being implemented.
• Works with teams to ensure barriers to the plan are removed.

7)Muse to the MD or Chairman
• Does one-off researches and feasibility studies for the MD into areas outside of the mandate of the subsidiaries to help the MD make confidential strategic decisions
• May act sometimes as high-level personal assistant to the MD on strategic matters
• May act as internal consultant to the HODs in the different departments and subsidiaries

Desired Skills and Experience:
• A good first degree in any business related field or the social sciences
• Must have a wide range of knowledge and experience in 3-4 different areas of the organization
• A formal business qualification such as an MBA is an added advantage
• A two year post-graduate experience in a similar or related function
• An ACCA will be an added advantage
• Must be a master at team playing. Ability to work with teams of people within and outside the organization, across all departments and with external alliance partners
• Passion for innovation and new ways of doing things
• A good sense of humor and fun-loving.
• Credible and trustworthy in working at all levels of the organization
• Must be self-confident yet humble
• Should be able to manage people and pressure.
• Excellent facilitation skills
• Strong rational, emotional and spiritual intelligence
• A learning culture with a willingness and desire to continuously acquire new knowledge and techniques

Candidates willing to apply should quote job title as reference. All applications close two weeks from date of post.



Apply to this job

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Must Read: An open Letter to Silverbird Television [STV]

If you think we Nigerians are Jobless or fools, then you must be out of your minds. You want the rich to get richer? Even when MTN told us to text to "Win" to win an Aeroplane we
never did it, now you're telling us to vote for people like: Aliko Dangote, Ngozi Okonjo – Iweala, etc as Silverbird Man of the year award
Winner.

For God's Sake these people are made and yet you ask ordinary Hustling Citizens to still use our #50 (Money for Bread) to vote for these people….
If they need it so bad, it should be a toll-free texting paid by them. We have no business with who ever is the Man of the year.

If you are alive, feeding yourself and your Family, trust me, you are THE MAN OF THE YEAR. If you are taking care of your Husband very well, training your Kids well, also your
house is in order and your Family is pleased with you, then, you are also
"WOMAN OF THE YEAR" God Bless our Hustle

Written by Booqee
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APC TARGETS 1M MEMBERSHIP IN IMO, AS OKOROCHA DECLARES REGISTRATION OPEN

Gov. Rochas Okorocha of Imo has said that he was targeting over one million people to register in the ongoing All Progressives Congress (APC) membership registration in the state.

Okorocha expressed the hope while kick starting the APC membership registration exercise at the Ahiajioku Convention Centre, Owerri, on Thursday.

He said that the exercise had commenced in full in all the polling units and called on Imo residents to identify with the party.

"Identifying with APC will ensure continuity of free education with 305 modern primary schools, massive road construction and rehabilitation, improved healthcare delivery, youth and women empowerment and adequate security to lives and property."

"APC as a party is free and fair in all its dealings especially in the selection of candidates for elections, he said."

He expressed optimism that over one million members would be registered in the state but warned against double  registration.

The governor also charged officials handling the registration to guard  against manipulation in the discharge of their duties

Contributing, the Chairman, APC Registration Committee in the State, Dr. Alex Ibe explained that the members would be provided with temporary identity cards before the state congress scheduled for March.

He said that only card-carrying members would participate in the party's congress and convention and expressed the hope that the exercise would be a huge success.
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JIGAWA COLLEGE MATRICULATES 1,864 STUDENTS

The Bilyaminu Usman College of Agriculture, Hadejia, Jigawa, on Friday matriculated  1,864 students for the 2013/2014 academic session.

The Provost of the college, Prof. Muhammad Hussein, said this this while inducting the new intake in Hadejia.

Hussein said the students were admitted to pursue Ordinary National Diploma (OND), Higher National Diploma (HND) and certificate programmes.

Hussein, represented by Garba Isah, the Registrar of the college, urged the students to be of good moral conduct and abide by the rules governing the institution.

He said the college had executed various school and teacher development programmes to create enabling teaching and learning environment.

According to him, the college has recorded remarkable achievements since its establishment in 1992 and urged the students to be dedicated to achieve academic excellence.

Hussein also commended the state government for its support to the college.

The Deputy Registrar of the college, Malam Mujjittafa Ubaji, warned the students against examination malpractice, saying that  the college would not condone erring students.
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SHEKARAU ADVISES PDP AGAINST LOCALISING THE PRESIDENCY TO ANY REGION

A former Governor of Kano State, Malam Ibrahim Shekarau, on Thursday advised the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) against the nomination of its 2015 Presidential candidate based on the candidate's geo-political background.

Shekarau told State House correspondents after a close-door meeting with Vice President Namadi Sambo that the PDP should ignore the issue of rotational presidency while deciding its presidential candidate in the forthcoming elections.

''I have never subscribed to the argument of localising the Presidency to any region.

''If you had followed my arguments and my presentations, my debates in the presidential election, I said so.

''My concern is, what we do to get the right leadership regardless of where ever the leadership has come. This issue of rotational (presidency) is not the issue.

What we should be talking about is balancing, balancing so that we carry people along.

''If today, I am a presidential candidate from Kano and I tell you my running mate is from Katsina, won't you think I am crazy?

''Will I have to have that written in any document, in any constitution or in any guideline for me to know that if I am from Kano and I' m a presidential candidate, my running mate or my Vice President has to come from the other side of the country?

"There is the law and constitution of common sense."

"So, this argument (that) it has to be my town's man, it has to be my village man, it has to be my region, is all rubbish."

Shekarau pledged to support and campaign for any candidate that emerged as PDP presidential candidate in the 2015 general elections.

On his recent defection to PDP from All Progressives Congress (APC), Shekarau stated that his decision was informed by the fact some principal actors in the merger (that brought up the APC) did not mean well for the party.
 
He said his meeting with the Vice President was a continuation of robbing of minds.

"I am now part and parcel of the PDP family. I will always be meeting with one party functionary or the other to continue to rob minds on how we will move the party and the nation forward,"
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SSS releases Asari DokuboPo

The President of the Niger Delta Peoples Volunteer Force, Asari Dokubo has been released by the
Department of State Security Services, SSS, hours after he was picked up for repeatedly making inciting comments.

His personal assistant (Media) and
younger brother, Rex Asari, confirmed his release to the media.
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Pres. Jonathan appoints new Special Advisers & Chief Executives for NTA, FRCN, NAN & SURE-P

In furtherance of efforts to continually strengthen his administration on all fronts, President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan has approved the following appointments to fill existing vacancies:

1. Gen. Martin Luther Agwai – Chairman of SURE-P

2. Mrs. Tanwa Olusi – Deputy
Chairman of SURE-P

3. Mrs. Fidelia Njeze – Special
Adviser (NEPAD)

4. Senator Suleiman M. Ajadi – Special Adviser (NASS)

5. Mr. Sola Omole – DG, NTA

6. Alhaji Ladan Salihu – DG, FRCN

7. Mr. Ima Niboro – MD, News
Agency of Nigeria Gen. Martin Agwai (rtd.) was until now the Deputy
Chairman and Acting Chairman of SURE-P while Mrs. Njeze is the current Nigerian Ambassador to
Switzerland.

All the appointments are with immediate effect.
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Warning of possible toothpaste tube bombs

The United States is advising airlines with direct flights serving Russia to be aware of the possibility that explosive materials could be concealed in toothpaste or cosmetic tubes, the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee said Wednesday night.

Rep. Michael McCaul said the Department of Homeland Security issued a bulletin to airlines flying into Russia warning of the potential threat.

The bulletin, the Texas Republican said, indicated that officials believed the explosives might be used during flights or smuggled into the city of Sochi, where competition at the Winter Olympics begins Thursday. The opening ceremony is Friday.

A U.S. law enforcement official told CNN that the cause for the Homeland Security alert was specific to the imminent start of the games.

According to the source, authorities have increasing confidence about the safety of Sochi and the Olympic venues. Still, U.S. intelligence is picking up increasing chatter that causes worry about targets outside the Sochi area, including regional transportation links.

The biggest ongoing worry outside this new concern -- as expected -- is groups based in southern Russia's Caucasus region, in particular the restive Dagestan republic.

However, U.S. officials also are worried that al Qaeda-linked groups from elsewhere could take advantage of the attention being focused on Russian militant groups.

The concern about the use of toothpaste tubes is mostly focused on flights from Europe and neighboring Asian countries -- in part because the United States has less intelligence-sharing with those nations.

A separate U.S. official with knowledge of the current situation, who would not speak on the record because of the sensitivity of the situation, said the U.S. intelligence community is still assessing the credibility and scope of the threat.

The official said the Russians brought some information to the United States. Two senior administration officials told CNN that U.S. authorities had intelligence that they shared with the Russians.
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Opening ceremony marks start of Olympics

Russia kicks off the opening ceremony Friday in Sochi as the world turns its attention to the costliest Olympic Games in history.

Spectators from all over the world will watch the lavish event and introduction of athletes, marking the official start of the Winter Olympics.

Light shows and music, lots of it, will fill the air.

"Most of the ceremony focuses heavily on Russian classical music," said Konstantin Ernst, the main creative producer of the ceremony.

"Unfortunately, unlike London, we cannot boast a plethora of famous world-known pop performers. This is why we are now focusing on what Russia is best known for musically around the world; namely, classical music."

Despite anxiety about terror strikes, controversy over gay rights and ridicule for poor preparations, the nation's officials have maintained that the sites in Sochi are secure.

It will be "the safest place on Earth during the Olympics," said Dmitry Chernyshenko, head of the Games.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, who pushed the International Olympic Committee to hold the Games in the nation, will attend the ceremony.

"The head of state is expected to declare the Games open during the ceremony," Ernst said. "It is a requirement. And naturally, Mr. Putin will be doing just that."

The ceremony, the only event scheduled for the day, will last about two and a half hours.
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Sochi Olympics: 10 defining moments

Thousands of athletes from over 80 different countries are ready to descend on Sochi as the 2014 Winter Olympics begin in Russia.

The 17-day sporting extravaganza is being dubbed as the most expensive Olympics ever, with the Russians having spent $50 billion on turning the faded Black Sea resort into a rejuvenated host venue.

It promises to be another memorable occasion -- but will it beat Winters Games gone past?

Here at CNN, we've put our heads together and come up with our top 10 definitive moments in Winter Olympics history.

Do you agree? What have we missed? Give us your views on Facebook and Twitter and enjoy the Games!

'The Miracle on Ice'

It is the moment that all American ice hockey fans still talk about.

At the 1980 Lake Placid Games, the U.S. team -- made up of college students and amateurs -- produced one of the greatest shocks in the sport's history.

Facing the Soviet Union in the semifinals -- a team which had won the four previous gold medals -- the U.S. was expected to be swept aside easily.
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Syria to participate in peace talks

Syria's government said on Friday that it will participate in a second round of peace talks in Geneva, the state-run SANA news agency reported.


"Restoring security and stability to Syria makes it necessary to discuss putting an end to terrorism and violence as stated in Geneva Communique and underlines the need for agreement of both Syrian sides on that for protecting the Syrian citizens and stopping the Syrian bloodshed at the hands of regionally and internationally-backed armed terrorist groups," said Deputy Foreign and Expatriates Minister Dr. Faisal Mikdad.

The talks will build upon the first round of discussions, he said. The Syrian conflict, which has left more than 100,000 people dead and millions more displaced, has raged for nearly three years.

Meanwhile, at least 200 people are expected to be evacuated from the besieged city of Homs, according to the Homs Governor, SANA reported.

The evacuations are due to take place in the neighborhood of Jouret al-Shiah towards al-Mimas area, Homs governor Talal al-Barazi said.

All necessary arrangements for evacuating civilians, including children, women, wounded and elderly people, in the old Homs neighborhoods were completed, SANA reported.

The United Nations and the United States had confirmed an agreement announced by rebels and the Syrian government of a planned cease-fire in the besieged Old City of Homs that would allow some people to flee and humanitarian aid to arrive for the first time in over a year.

"We welcome the news that a deal has been reached," U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said of what she called "a local humanitarian pause" to begin Friday.

An opposition spokesman in Homs, Abu Rami, said the agreement called for a cease-fire at a time to be set by the government and expected imminently.

Once the fighting halts, women, civilians over 55 and children under 15 can choose to leave the Old City if they agree not to take up arms against the government, he said.
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Sochi 2014: 98 gold medals awarded over 16 days of competition

Hundreds of thousands of spectators are expected in Sochi. They'll cheer on athletes from around the world as they vie for 98 gold medals up for grabs during 16 days of competition.

It's been a long wait for spectators trying to buy tickets for the Olympic Games events, already underway in Sochi, one day before the official opening on Friday. However, very few complain.

Following a series of suicide bombings in the city of Volgograd late last year, which killed 34 people, government introduced unprecedented security measures in the area. Some 40,000 police and soldiers are safeguarding the Games, along with hidden cameras, numerous checkpoints and high-tech military equipment.

Russia has reportedly spent a record 50 billion dollars on hosting the Games, making them the most expensive Olympics in history. Almost the entire Olympic infrastructure was built from scratch, in addition to roads, power grids and hotels.
While some sports competitions have already begun, the games don't open until Friday evening local time.

Details of the opening ceremony are kept secret, with some reports suggesting that it will include tributes to Russian ballet, art and architecture. Some 3 billion people are expected to watch the performance worldwide.
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"We’re so sure you’ll lose weight"

we'll stake free maintenance on it!
If you've tried every diet under the sun without much success, you'll be familiar with the sense of dread when the scales don't move, or you put all the weight back on.

Wouldn't it be awesome with a diet that really does work – and requires minimum effort? If that sounds too good to be true, you've obviously never tried Diet Chef.

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Subscribe to our 4, 8 or 12 week plan today and enjoy losing weight, then claim your free month on one of our maintenance plans. Diet Chef is proven to be three times more effective than a self-devised diet*, for losing weight and keeping it off – so what are you waiting for?

http://www.dietchef.co.uk/latest-offers.php

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How much weight do you want to lose?

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**Email customer service on info@dietchef.co.uk or use LiveHelp to arrange pausing the 8 week or 12 week plan.
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Erin's Diet Chef story

Life has changed for the better and that's really great. I can finally get into the clothes I want to wear and show who I am.

I'm 39 years old and married with two little boys. Originally from Canada and I now live in Windsor. Like most mums-to-be I gained some weight during my second pregnancy. I was also running my own business, a parenting consultancy which is all about helping mums with stress-free parenting technique.

I was keen to find a diet that would fit into my busy lifestyle and not demand lots of time planning, calorie counting and cooking. I saw an advert for Diet Chef on TV and thought it was the way to lose weight that I was looking for. Diet Chef was perfect for me because it's so much about eating the right food rather than doing exercise, and after my second son, I don't have time to work out as much.

The programme is so easy and it fits in with my lifestyle. I'm so busy with business and of course I now have two children. My consultancy is all about find stress-free solutions in life and that's what Diet Chef is!

The only thing that I worried about was that the fact that Diet Chef allowed me to have pasta and rice, which I love. But learning about portion control meant I ate the right amount of carbs without gaining weight. I loved the covenience too – just take your meal out of the box, add the rice and you're ready. And everything tastes fresh and natural, whether it Paella or Chicken Tikka Masala.

When I started Diet Chef I was a dress size 16 and weighed 10st 11lbs. After three months I was wearing size 12 clothes and weighed 9st 2lbs.

Life has changed for the better and that's really great. I can finally get into the clothes I want to wear and show who I am. That means a lot to me, especially in my work, when I got out and speak to mothers all over the world, and I have to present a confident image. I wasn't shy before, but thanks to Diet Chef I'm really, really in my groove.

Thank you!
Erin

*Weight loss results may vary and are different for each individual.
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Decline of Antibiotic Use Among Kids Seems To Be Leveling Off: Study

Ear infections most common reason for prescriptions in children under 6; trends vary by region

(HealthDay News) -- A downward trend in antibiotic use among children may have leveled off in certain areas of the United States, a new study shows.

Researchers from Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School reviewed data from three health plans across the country -- in New England, the Midwest and the Mountain West -- from 2000 to 2010 to better understand how antibiotics are being prescribed in children and to learn if use is still dropping.

"This latest report finds that the decline in antibiotic use may have leveled out," said Dr. Louise Elaine Vaz, a clinical fellow in pediatric infectious disease and a health services research fellow at Boston Children's Hospital.

The 10-year study included children between the ages of 3 months and 18 years. The researchers collected information on diagnoses as well as the type of antibiotics used, although certain antibiotics and some topical forms were excluded.

The overall annual antibiotic-dispensing rates in each age group and each health plan were lower from 2009 to 2010 than they were from 2000 to 2001, but there wasn't a straight downward trend, Vaz said.

In the early part of the decade, rates declined relatively rapidly, particularly in the youngest age group -- children younger than 3 years. Later in the decade, this decline slowed and even reversed in the 12- to 18-year-old age group, Vaz said. Children aged 3 and under were the highest users of antibiotics in all years of the study.

Antibiotic dispensing varied a lot between the three health plans, said Vaz, but the Mountain West group consistently had lower visit rates and antibiotic-dispensing rates compared to the other two.

The findings were published in the February issue of the journal Pediatrics.

"When we saw that the rates were leveling off, our next question was: Are there ways that we can still improve?" Vaz said.

"I think one of the interesting things we saw was that one health plan was a low prescriber," she said. "That ... suggested that although the rates are stabilized, some plans have lower prescribing rates than others and we may not have reached our optimal prescribing level."

One expert agreed.

"The study shows we've chipped away at the problem," said Dr. Wendy Sue Swanson, executive director of digital health at Seattle Children's Hospital. "In clinic, I don't feel the pressure from parents any longer the way I did in medical school when they were coming in looking for an antibiotic cure. I believe the public is more informed, but I think this data serves as a moment of pause."

In a commentary accompanying the study, Dr. Ateev Mehrotra, from the department of health care policy at Harvard Medical School, said some of the decline in use is due to better education about antibiotic overuse and to vaccines for pneumonia and the flu. But he said experts shouldn't get too comfortable with the news.

"While efforts to reduce over-prescribing of antibiotics have been successful over the last 20 years -- roughly a 25 percent drop in antibiotics prescribed per child -- the new study offers a cautionary note," he said.

Prescriptions are leveling off, but there is still overuse of broad-spectrum antibiotics, Mehrotra said.

Limiting over-the-phone prescriptions, cutting back on prescriptions for viral infections that do not clear up with antibiotics and encouraging parents to do more to treat their kids at home would help continue the downward trend in overuse, Mehrotra said in his commentary.

Swanson said she likes the idea of parents treating at home, but that doesn't mean parents have to feel alone. They can run questions by their doctor in a new way, she said.

"I'm such a technology enthusiast. Maybe we can get a mom on for a Skype visit or on email," Swanson said. "I think it's the beginning of something that allows patients and families to be stewards of their own health."

Swanson also said more doctors should consider pain relievers as the first line of defense against ear infections. In the study, ear infections were the most common reason for prescribing an antibiotic, accounting for more than 60 percent of all antibiotic prescriptions for kids under age 6.

There are many avenues for future research, Vaz said.

"We can learn why these differences persist in terms of geographic variation, and really hone in on how we can improve prescribing behavior," Vaz said. "I would love to see what's going on in these low-prescribing areas."
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INFECTIOUS DISEASE INFORMATION

An infectious disease is one that's caused by another organism, typically a germ. Germs can be many different types of organisms, including viruses, bacteria, fungi and protozoa. Infectious diseases are often passed from one person to another, and they also can be spread through contaminated food, soil and water, as well as insect or animal bites.

Types of Infectious Diseases
There are a wide variety of infectious diseases, ranging from some that are a mild inconvenience to others than are life-threatening conditions. Colds and flu, for example, are infectious diseases caused by viruses. HIV/AIDS is also an infectious disease caused by a virus. People can get sick from bacteria like salmonella found in contaminated food. Bacteria can also be passed along by sexual contact, causing diseases such as chlamydia and gonorrhea. These are just a few of the many different infectious diseases that people can develop.

Some infectious diseases are easier to spread among humans than others. A cold virus, for example, can be obtained very easily by breathing air that contains the virus. The HIV virus, on the other hand, is typically passed only through sexual contact or contact with contaminated blood.

Preventing Infectious Diseases
The primary way to protect against infectious diseases is to practice good hygiene. This includes washing hands frequently and avoiding contact with contaminated items. To avoid contracting sexually transmitted diseases, condoms should be used during sex and people should avoid having sex with those who are infected. It's also important to not share such things as drugs needles, toothbrushes, razors and other personal items, as sharing these items can also spread infectious diseases.

Vaccinations have helped immensely in preventing the spread of infectious diseases in the United States and other parts of the world. Rates of diseases such as measles, mumps, rubella, whooping cough and many others have dropped substantially in the United States thanks to the widespread use of vaccinations against these diseases.
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MEN'S HEALTH INFORMATION

Men and women share a number of similar health concerns. Heart disease, cancer, stroke and diabetes are high on the list of potential diseases for both men and women. But a number of other health concerns are more prevalent among men. And some problems are totally unique to men due to their anatomy.

Health Issues Facing Men
Men seem especially prone to accidents, or unintentional injuries. This is the third leading cause of death among men. It's an issue for men that encompasses a variety of factors, including car accidents, falls, drug overdoses, safety problems at home and at the workplace and violence.

Problems with the prostate, a gland located below the bladder in men that makes semen, can also occur. Prostatitis (inflammation of the prostate), an enlarged prostate and prostate cancer are the three main problems that men can experience related to the prostate gland. Men can also experience unique sexual problems such as erectile dysfunction or low testosterone. Both men and women can become infected with HIV and develop AIDS, but gay men and black men have the highest rates of the disease.

Prevention of Men's Health Problems
Though some health problems are unique to men, many of the steps for maintaining men's health are about the same for men as they are for women. These include achieving a healthy weight through good diet and exercise practices, not smoking, avoiding heavy drinking and managing stress. Having a good relationship with a health care provider is also important as this helps to prompt men to get any necessary exams and screenings as they get older.
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WOMEN'S HEALTH INFORMATION

Ovarian cancer, menopause and the health changes of pregnancy are just a few of the health concerns that women face. Other health issues can affect both men and women but occur more frequently in women, such as breast cancer, depression and osteoporosis.

Unique Women's Health Concerns
One of the most prevalent women's health issues is breast cancer. This form of cancer, which affects one in every eight women, is the second leading cancer killer among women, preceded only by lung cancer. Women also run the risk for other cancers that are unique to them, such as ovarian and uterine cancers.

Some women's health issues are experienced by almost all women. Pregnancy, for example, creates a number of changes to the body as a woman prepares to give birth. And women go through menopause at some point in their lives, when their menstrual periods stop and a number of other changes begin to take place in the body.

Though the bone disease osteoporosis affects both men and women, eight of every 10 cases of osteoporosis occur in women. This is partially due to the hormonal changes that occur during menopause. Some mental health issues are also more common in women than in men. Women are twice as likely as men to develop depression, and women are also at risk for unique mental disorders such as premenstrual syndrome and postpartum depression, which can develop after giving birth to a child. Women also are more likely to be in abusive relationships and have violence committed against them by a spouse or another member of their household.

Preserving Women's Health
Though many women's health issues are unique, some of the general tips for preserving good health into old age are the same for women as they are for men. This includes maintaining a healthy weight, eating a healthy diet, exercising regularly and abstaining from smoking. Having a good relationship with a trusted health care provider is also very important. This helps ensure that women get the care, physical exams and screenings that they need as they age.
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KIDS' HEALTH INFORMATION

Children have a number of unique health concerns. Because children have not been exposed to as many germs as adults, they may be more susceptible to certain illnesses. Also, children are growing at a rapid rate. As their bodies change and develop, a number of health concerns can arise as a result of this process.

Childhood is a critical time for health, and parents can play a big role in establishing healthy habits that children can carry with them throughout their life. This includes things such as eating a healthy diet, being active and making good choices to preserve their health well into adulthood.

Childhood Diseases
Childhood is a time when many illnesses can develop as kids get their first exposures to germs. Vaccinations can help children avoid many serious illnesses like polio or even the flu, but other illnesses -- including colds and ear infections -- are common during childhood.

Some childhood illnesses can develop before a child is even born. These can be congenital or developmental abnormalities such as Down syndrome or cerebral palsy. Childhood is when parents also might see the development of asthma or allergies. Mental problems, neurological disorders and behavioral conditions can also occur at times in children, including learning disabilities and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. Parents can usually work to find solutions to these problems through good relationships with trusted health care providers.

Healthy Habits for Childhood
Parents can also take a number of steps not only to preserve their children's health but also instill healthy habits for the future. One important step in preserving health and preventing many major illnesses is to have children vaccinated in accordance with recommendations from their doctor. As children grow and develop, it's important to keep the home safe and free from potential dangers, particularly for toddlers and young children.

Childhood is also when many of the habits related to diet and exercise are developed. Parents can instill healthy habits by eating healthy foods at meals and making play and activity a regular part of their routine.
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"China's New Bird Flu Might Put People at Risk, Report Says"

Genetic analysis after woman's death finds virus may 'replicate efficiently in humans'

(HealthDay News) -- Chinese scientists reporting on the first confirmed human death from a new bird flu virus say the strain has gene mutations that could increase its ability to infect people.

An elderly woman living in Nanchang City, China, recently died from infection with a new strain of H10N8 bird flu virus. Testing revealed the virus contained genes from H9N2 viruses circulating in poultry in China, according to the report published Feb. 4 in the journal The Lancet.

"A genetic analysis of the H10N8 virus shows a virus that is distinct from previously reported H10N8 viruses having evolved some genetic characteristics that may allow it to replicate efficiently in humans," study author Dr. Yuelong Shu, from the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a journal news release. "Notably, H9N2 virus provided the internal genes not only for the H10N8 virus, but also for H7N9 and H5N1 viruses."

On Nov. 30, the 73-year-old woman arrived at the hospital with fever and severe pneumonia. She received antibiotic and antiviral treatments but developed multiple organ failure. She died nine days later.

Investigators discovered that the woman had visited a live poultry market a few days before she developed symptoms. This suggests that the incubation time for the new strain of H10N8 is about four days, which is similar to other bird flu virus infections, the researchers said.

However, no evidence of the new H10N8 virus was found in samples gathered from the poultry market, and the source of the infection remains unknown, the scientists said.

This new strain of H10N8 was previously found in a water sample taken from Dongting Lake in Hunan province in 2007. It was also found at a live poultry market in Guangdong province in 2012.

The danger posed by this virus should not be underestimated, warned study co-author Dr. Mingbin Liu, of the Nanchang City Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

"A second case of H10N8 was identified in Jiangxi Province on Jan. 26," Liu said in the news release. "This is of great concern because it reveals that the H10N8 virus has continued to circulate and may cause more human infections in the future."
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"Fewer U.S. Kids Killed in Car Crashes; Safety Restraints Still an Issue"

Too many youngsters ride without a car seat, booster seat or seat belt, says CDC

(HealthDay News) -- One-third of the children who died in car crashes on U.S. roads in 2011 weren't properly buckled in, U.S. health officials reported Tuesday.

Although collision-related deaths of children 12 years old and younger dropped 43 percent between 2002 and 2011, new figures from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that more than 9,000 children died from crashes during those years. And many weren't using car seats or seat belts.

"We have made a lot of progress in reducing motor vehicle fatalities in the U.S. in the past decade, but still there are far too many deaths," CDC director Tom Frieden said during a noon press briefing.

"These are troubling numbers, especially since so many of these deaths could have been prevented by buckling children in age- and size-appropriate child restraints -- car seats, booster seats and seat belts -- on every trip," Frieden said.

The problem is particularly severe among black and Hispanic children, Frieden said.

The CDC found that 45 percent of black children and 46 percent of Hispanic children who died in crashes in 2009-2010 were not properly buckled in. Among whites, 26 percent weren't using appropriate restraints.

One reason for this disparity is economic, Frieden said. "There can be difficulty paying for a car seat or an appropriately sized car seat," Frieden said. Some communities make car seats and booster seats available to those who can't afford them, he added, noting the CDC supports such programs.

Erin Sauber-Schatz, leader of the transportation safety team in CDC's division of unintentional injury prevention, said more needs to be done to protect young passengers. In 2011, more than 650 children 12 and under were killed in crashes, she noted.

"That's more than a dozen children every week," she said. "Too many child passengers are riding unprotected."

Sauber-Schatz credited safer cars and safer child restraints with much of the overall decline in crash-related deaths of children.

Another factor, Frieden noted, is that more states have graduated driver licenses. "We have fewer teenagers driving unsafely on the road, and that's made both their cars and the roads in general safer," he said.

Other report highlights:

Only two out of every 100 children live in states that mandate car seats or booster seats for children age 8 and under.
Child restraint laws result in more children being buckled up. A recent study showed that in five states that tightened their laws, car seat use tripled and deaths and serious injuries dropped 17 percent.
The CDC recommends:

Using car seats, booster seats, and seat belts on every trip, no matter how short.
Rear-facing car seats from birth up to age 2 or until the child reaches the upper weight or height limit of the seat.
Using a forward-facing car seat from age 2 up to at least 5 years.
Using a booster seat from age 5 and up until seat belts fit properly. The recommended height for proper seat belt fit is 57 inches tall. Seat belts fit properly when the lap belt is across the upper thighs (not the stomach) and the shoulder belt is across the chest (not the neck).
Installing car seats according to the owner's manual or with help from a certified safety technician.
Buckling children aged 12 and under in the back seat.
A Florida safety expert said it's unconscionable for parents to ignore the recommendations. "There is no excuse for parents not putting the child in restraints," said Malvina Duncan, a child passenger safety instructor at Miami Children's Hospital.

"It's just changing a mindset that 'it's not going to happen to me.' That is just a poor excuse. Parents have to do the right thing," she said.

Duncan also said laws need to be stricter across the country. "It is embarrassing that Florida is only one of two states that doesn't have a booster seat law," she said.

For the report, CDC researchers analyzed 2002-2011 data from the Fatality Analysis Reporting System.

The findings are published in the CDC's February edition of Vital Signs.
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CDC to Launch Latest Graphic Anti-Smoking Campaign

"It will include now-deceased North Carolina woman whose appearance in first initiative stunned many viewers"

(HealthDay News) -- For the third year in a row, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is poised to deliver a bold, no-holds-barred, anti-tobacco message to the American public.

Starting Monday, the agency will launch the 2014 phase of "Tips From Former Smokers" (Tips), an ambitious annual TV, radio and print campaign.

As was the case during its first two incarnations, the upcoming Tips campaign, which will last nine weeks, will feature real people speaking in frank and often frightening terms about the high price paid for a lifetime of exposure to cigarettes.

"Over 20 million Americans have died because of smoking since 1964," said Dr. Tim McAfee, the Atlanta-based director of the CDC's office on smoking and health. "Now think about that number -- it's huge. It's the number of people in the Soviet Union who died during World War II. But when you talk about a number that big, people have no way to put their hands around it.

"So we thought that for smokers and non-smokers," McAfee added, "we needed to put a face on this. Because we felt that if we gave the American people an opportunity to get to know the suffering one person has had to go through because of smoking, it could have an enormous impact."

With that in mind, the 2012 Tips campaign was designed to grab the attention of 18- to 54-year-olds by exposing them to about a dozen audio-visual messages from former smokers who spoke in stark terms about how tobacco had crippled their health.

One such speaker was Terrie Hall, then a 52-year-old Lexington, N.C., woman who had struggled with a two-pack-a-day habit for 23 years. In her first ad, she was shown putting on a wig, inserting false teeth and using a scarf to cover a hole in her throat.

"Everything that's happened to me has come from the fact that I smoked cigarettes," Hall said at the time. By "everything" Hall meant repeated bouts of throat cancer that ultimately led to surgery to remove her voice box. The operation left her unable to speak without mechanical assistance, and required her to breathe through the hole in her neck.

Though nearing the end of her life, Hall said she was proud to be able to participate in the Tips effort.

"When I was a teenager there was no tobacco education," she explained shortly after the first campaign concluded. "I wish I had had someone like me come visit my school and show me how tobacco would affect my body. Maybe I would have made a more educated decision about what I would do with cigarettes."

Hall's struggle -- witnessed by more than 2.8 million viewers on YouTube in 2012 -- ended on Sept. 16, 2013, when she died at the age of 53.

But Hall's participation with Tips continues. This year she will be featured in two new ads, shot during the final days of her life.

"We discussed the circumstances with Terrie, and she was beyond enthusiastic," said McAfee, who remembers driving up from Atlanta to a Winston-Salem community hospital -- at Hall's insistence -- to shoot one of the new spots.

"She essentially single-handedly talked this hospital into letting a film crew come in and film her bedside because she didn't want anyone to have to go through this," McAfee recalled. "She said, 'I want 15-year-olds to not start. And I want 25-year-olds to quit. Because this isn't some statistic. This is happening to real people. This is happening to me.'"

As a standard-bearer for the anti-tobacco campaign, Hall's experience gives a voice to all those smokers who have been struck down by smoking-related diseases like lung cancer, heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma and diabetic complications, Tips organizers said.

And new to this year's campaign will be an additional focus this summer on smoking-related cancers, as well as the impact of cigarettes on the health of pregnant women and those with HIV.

Other TV and radio ads this year will highlight the dangers of second-hand smoke. One will feature a Native-American man who died from lung damage last year due to exposure to smoke on the job, McAfee said.

McAfee and his colleagues hope this year's campaign will have as much impact as the initial effort, which saw calls to the CDC's 1-800-QUIT-NOW phone line skyrocket. The result: the first Tips is believed to have prompted approximately 1.6 million Americans to try to quit smoking. And an estimated 100,000 are thought to have succeeded.

Statistics released by the CDC earlier this month suggest that the campaign is making a difference. Also helping: 2009 federal legislation that gave the U.S. Food and Drug Administration the power to regulate tobacco, and recent rises in federal and state cigarette taxes.

According to the CDC, the most recent figures indicate that fewer than one-fifth of Americans (18.1 percent) now smoke.
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Controlling Blood Pressure, Cholesterol May Not Boost Brain Health for Diabetics

"Study found no effect, but longer-term trials may be needed to see a benefit, experts add"

(HealthDay News) -- It's well known that having type 2 diabetes can increase a person's chances of impaired memory and thinking. But a new study suggests that intensive treatment of blood pressure and cholesterol levels in people with diabetes won't help lower that risk.

"The finding that intensive blood pressure lowering did not impact [mental] decline in patients with diabetes seems to be consistent with recent trials in patients with diabetes that [showed that] lower is not necessarily better," said one expert, Dr. Kevin Marzo, chief of cardiology at Winthrop-University Hospital in Mineola, N.Y. Marzo was not involved in the new research.

The study, published online Feb. 3 in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine, tracked outcomes for nearly 3,000 people with type 2 diabetes who had no deficits in memory or thinking and showed no other signs of dementia at the beginning of the study.

The patients had taken part in the Action to Control Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes (ACCORD) trial. Some of them got "intensive" therapy to lower their systolic blood pressure -- the top number in a reading -- to below 120 millimeters of mercury (mm/Hg), while a comparison group got "standard" blood pressure therapy with a goal of lower than 140 mm/Hg.

Other patients in the trial received intensive therapy to battle high cholesterol, which meant adding a fibrate drug to a statin medication to try to bring blood cholesterol levels to below 100 milligrams per deciliter. A comparison group got standard cholesterol treatment -- the statin alone -- plus a placebo.

After more than three years of follow-up, the researchers, led by Dr. Jeff Williamson of the Wake Forest School of Medicine, said they observed no differences in the mental function of people who got intensive therapies versus those who got the standard treatments.

The researchers also looked at the total brain volume of some people in each group, because lessening brain volume has been linked to mental decline.

People in the intensive blood-pressure-lowering group seemed to have less reduction in brain volume than those who got standard blood pressure care, Williamson's team found. Adding the fibrate drug to cholesterol care appeared to have no impact on brain volume, however.

The study authors said there has been a lot of attention given to the possibility that better control of blood pressure and cholesterol might help people with diabetes avoid mental decline.

But although these types of treatments might be helpful for people with heart disease or stroke, the researchers said, the current study showed no overall reduction in the rate of mental decline linked to type 2 diabetes after intensive blood pressure and cholesterol control.

Other experts in diabetes and its relationship to heart health said more research might be necessary, however.

"Diabetes, along with its associated hypertension and cholesterol disorders, can significantly affect the small blood vessels in the brain," said Dr. Valentin Fuster, director of the division of cardiology at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City. "However, diabetes, hypertension and cholesterol disorders take years to cause effects on the brain."

That means a study that followed patients for only about three years might simply be too short, said Fuster, who is also upcoming editor-in-chief of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

"Furthermore, the damage exerted in the brain by diabetes and its associated hypertension and cholesterol disorders may already be irreversible," he said. "If so, one could not expect significant changes with treatment."

Dr. Spyros Mezitis is an endocrinologist and diabetes specialist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City. He agreed with Fuster that the Wake Forest findings "may come as a surprise to many physicians who know there is decreased risk for stroke and heart attacks in diabetic patients with intensively controlled hypertension and high cholesterol."

"More studies need to be performed in this area of diabetic research," Mezitis said.

For his part, Marzo said the new study "supports present recommendations that physicians have their diabetic patients live a healthy lifestyle with diet and exercise, control blood pressure to a goal of 140/90 mmHg and treat cholesterol with a statin."
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New Guidelines Aim to Lower Stroke Risk in Women

"Pregnancy, childbirth, female hormones can all influence lifelong risk, experts say"

(HealthDay News) -- For the first time, guidelines have been created to help prevent stroke in women.

The author of the new guidelines, published online Feb. 6 and in the May print issue of the journal Stroke, said women share a lot of stroke risk factors with men -- namely high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, smoking and obesity -- but they also have a set of unique concerns that need to be addressed.

Pregnancy, childbirth and hormones play a role in stroke risk for women, explained Dr. Cheryl Bushnell, director of the Stroke Center at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, in Winston-Salem, N.C.

"The basic message is that women live longer, and so they actually have a higher lifetime risk of stroke," Bushnell said. "They also tend to do worse after they have had a stroke. They're more likely to end up in long-term nursing care and have a worse quality of life. For those reasons, we thought it was important to emphasize prevention and to start those strategies early in the childbearing years for women."

A stroke happens when a blood vessel that carries oxygen and nutrients to the brain is either blocked by a clot or it bursts, keeping oxygen from reaching the brain, and killing brain cells, according to the American Stroke Association.

Each year, about 55,000 more women than men experience a stroke, and non-Hispanic black women are most at risk, the American Heart Association reports.

According to Dr. Andrew Russman, a neurologist at the Cleveland Clinic's Cerebrovascular Center, "They did a good job putting the guidelines on paper. I think it's terribly important that there's now a set of guidelines that help women understand some of their unique stroke risks, which change throughout life -- from pregnancy, through menopause and later in life."

Bushnell said she and colleagues scoured the existing scientific literature to develop the new guidelines, which include recommendations for women of all ages.

"There's risk across a woman's lifespan," said Bushnell. "Without a doubt, the highest risk is as women get older, especially as they accumulate other risk factors," such as high blood pressure.

But, she added, while complications from stroke are rare during pregnancy, that's when the first signs of vascular disease can appear. She said women who have eclampsia and preeclampsia during pregnancy (a dangerous condition marked by high blood pressure), for example, are at twice the risk for stroke later in life and four times the risk for high blood pressure later.

Bushnell added that taking birth control pills can raise a woman's risk for stroke, especially in middle age. And women who get migraines with aura are also at higher risk, so they need to consider preventive strategies earlier in life.

Some recommendations in the new guidelines include:

Women with a history of high blood pressure before pregnancy should be considered for low-dose aspirin therapy or calcium supplementation while pregnant.
Pregnant women with elevated blood pressure (150-159 mm Hg/100-109 mm Hg) should talk with their doctor about possible blood pressure medication.
Pregnant women with severe high blood pressure (160/110 mm Hg or above) should take medication.
Women should be screened for high blood pressure before taking birth control pills.
Women who suffer from migraines with aura should quit smoking.
Women over 75 should be screened for atrial fibrillation risks.
"There isn't a specific prevention strategy for women because we haven't studied it enough to find one," Bushnell said. "But all of the healthy lifestyle recommendations apply equally to men and women."

Dr. Suzanne Steinbaum, director of Women's Heart Health at the Heart and Vascular Institute at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, said she hopes the new guidelines will help women be more aware of stroke risk and cardiovascular health.

"Whenever I give a talk, I ask what people think is the greatest risk to women's health and they say breast cancer," Steinbaum said. "I don't think stroke is on the same level of consciousness. Awareness is the first step," she noted.

"The first step is, if you have any risks for cardiovascular disease, heart disease or stroke, it's important to visit your doctor," Steinbaum said. "Then, know your numbers: your blood pressure, your cholesterol, your blood sugar, your BMI [which is a score based on height and weight]. Knowing your family history is also very important. To prevent stroke it comes down to the basics, lifestyle changes. These are critical issues to address in order to reduce cardiovascular disease and prevent stroke."
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Boosting Access to Healthier Grocery Stores Might Not Improve Eating Habits

Study suggests putting stores in poor neighborhoods isn't enough; promotional efforts also needed

(HealthDay News) -- "If you build it, they will come" might not apply to putting more grocery stores in poor Americans' neighborhoods.

Doing so doesn't necessarily improve residents' eating habits or reduce obesity rates, a new study suggests.

Healthy foods can be hard to find in poor neighborhoods. To address the problem, some recently introduced programs in the United States use loans and grants to boost the number of local grocery stores in these areas. However, the effectiveness of these programs in improving diet and reducing obesity has not been closely examined.

In the new study, researchers from Penn State University and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine assessed the impact of a new supermarket that opened in a poor neighborhood in Philadelphia. The store was one of 88 new or expanded food retail outlets opened in the area under the Pennsylvania Fresh Food Financing Initiative.

Researchers followed 650 neighborhood residents for four years and found that they didn't make significant changes to their diets despite being aware that healthier foods were available.

Only 27 percent of the residents used the new supermarket as their main food store, and only 51 percent used the store at all. The supermarket's presence had little effect on the residents' fruit and vegetable intakes or obesity rates, according to the study, which was published in the February issue of the journal Health Affairs.

The findings are similar to those of previous studies in the United Kingdom, the researchers said.

"Though these interventions are plausible and well-meaning, this study suggests that they are only effective in taking us part of the way in changing dietary behavior," study lead author Steven Cummins, a professor of population health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said in a school news release. "In order to realize their full potential we need to better understand how to translate changes in perception to changes in behavior."

Increasing the number of grocery stores in poor neighborhoods needs to be accompanied by sales and marketing to encourage residents to use these stores, the researchers said.
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Want to Keep the Weight Off? Weekday Meals May Be Key

Study found most people weighed more after weekend, but those who cut back during week were thinner

(HealthDay News) -- People trying to lose weight should pay close attention to what they eat during the week, and not worry as much about enjoying themselves during the weekend, a new study suggests.

Nearly everyone gradually loses weight during the week and then gains it back over the weekend, a team of American and Finnish researchers reported.

"Almost to a person, we weigh the most Sunday night and we weigh the least Friday morning," said study co-author Brian Wansink, a professor of consumer behavior at Cornell University and author of the book Slim By Design.

But people who successfully lose weight and keep it off are those who maintain healthy eating habits during the week, the researchers found.

Those who consistently lost weight in the study tended to compensate more strictly during the week for their weekend weight gain, the researchers said. Their weight began decreasing immediately on Monday and continued downward until Friday, while people who tended to gain weight showed a weaker weekday compensation for the weekend's indulgences.

"The ones who are big winners are those who lose a little bit of weight from Monday to Tuesday to Wednesday to Thursday," Wansink said.

The study, published online Jan. 31 in the journal Obesity Facts, involved 80 people aged 25 to 62. Researchers asked them to weigh themselves before breakfast every day for anywhere from two weeks to nearly a year.

The study found that everyone -- whether they were losing or gaining pounds -- had fluctuation in their weight over the course of a week.

Wansink said he believes this occurs because weekdays are more regimented, making it easier for people to watch what they eat. Meanwhile, the weekends offer many temptations.

"There's a lot of variety and fluctuation in what you do during the weekend, but the weekdays have a pattern and a rhythm," he said.

But tracking weight day by day showed that what is a steep weekday decline for weight losers appears to be a more gentle curving slope for people experiencing weight gain.

People who lost weight reached their highest weight of the week on Sunday and Monday three-fifths of the time. They hit their lowest weight on Friday or Saturday at the same rate.

Weight gainers had no such clear pattern. Although the overall trend was downward during the week, individual minimum and maximum weights did not systematically appear on specific days.

Registered dietitian Joy Dubost said the study "confirms suspicions that many dietitians have had for a while that your weight does fluctuate and it's OK to forgive that because fluctuation occurs naturally."

Many people will adopt a healthy eating plan and then abandon it in frustration when they see they put on a little weight over the weekend, she said.

"This shows it truly is about the journey, rather than the one-time splurge where you gain a couple of pounds," said Dubost, who practices in Washington, D.C., and is a spokeswoman for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.

"If you're too restrictive and you don't allow any flexibility and you don't allow those short-term splurges, that may not set you up for success long-term," she said. "People who are successful at weight loss are those who see it as a lifetime journey."
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Could Low-Fat Yogurt Help Ward Off Diabetes?

British study also found reduced risk with other fermented dairy products

(HealthDay News) -- People looking to avoid type 2 diabetes might want to increase the amount of yogurt they eat, a new study by British researchers suggests.

According to the results, eating yogurt could reduce the risk of developing diabetes by 28 percent, compared to not eating any yogurt. Additionally, eating some other fermented dairy products, such as low-fat cheeses, could cut the risk by 24 percent.

"What our study shows is that yogurt should be part of a healthy diet," said lead researcher Dr. Nita Forouhi, group leader of the nutritional epidemiology program at the Medical Research Council at the University of Cambridge.

Although this study did not directly address the nutrients in yogurt or low-fat fermented dairy products that are most beneficial, previous information suggests what they're likely to be, she said.

"These include calcium, magnesium, vitamin D (in fortified dairy products) and potentially beneficial fatty acids, which are present in dairy products generally," Forouhi said. "Fermented dairy products, including yogurt, are likely to have the further benefits of specific types of vitamin K and probiotic bacteria."

She cautioned that this study "does not prove a cause-and-effect relationship, but highlights the importance of considering food group subtypes in diet/disease associations. Much past research has focused on overall total dairy products intake, whereas our research was able to examine subtypes of dairy products."

The university-funded study was published Feb. 5 in the journal Diabetologia.

Samantha Heller, a senior clinical nutritionist at NYU Langone Medical Center, in New York City, said the new study "appears to echo what some studies, but not all, have found, which is that low-fat dairy foods may help reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes."

Emerging research suggests that gut microbes play important roles in the development of type 2 diabetes, inflammation and other diseases, she said.

"Scientists are also looking at the effects of fermented soybean products in preventing or in delaying the onset of type 2 diabetes," Heller said. "Fermented foods contain probiotic bacteria that are good for the gastrointestinal tract. Fermented foods include yogurt and cottage cheese with live, active cultures, miso, kimchi, kefir [a yogurt-based drink], sauerkraut and tempeh."

For the study, Forouhi and colleagues collected data on 4,255 men and women who were part of a larger British study. This group included 753 people who developed type 2 diabetes over 11 years of follow-up and 3,502 randomly selected people for comparison.

Looking at these people's diets, the researchers found that the amount of high-fat dairy or total low-fat dairy was not linked to the risk of developing diabetes -- once factors like healthy lifestyles, education, obesity, other eating habits and total calorie intake were taken into account.

Milk and cheese consumption was also not associated with the risk of developing diabetes.

But what was significant was the amount of low-fat fermented dairy products, such as yogurt, fromage frais (a fresh, low-fat curd cheese similar to cottage cheese), and low-fat cottage cheese participants ate, Forouhi's group found.

For those who ate the most of these foods, the risk of developing diabetes shrank 24 percent, compared with those who didn't eat any, the study found.

When the investigators looked specifically at yogurt, the risk of developing diabetes was reduced by 28 percent.

The lowered risk was seen among people who ate about 4.5 standard 125-gram cups (about 4.4 ounces each) of yogurt a week. This was also the case for other low-fat fermented dairy products, such as low-fat unripened cheeses, including fromage frais and low-fat cottage cheese, the researchers reported.

In addition, eating yogurt instead of other snacks, such as chips, further cut the risk of developing type 2 diabetes, they noted.

Including fermented foods like yogurt as part of an overall healthy diet is a good idea but is not the whole story, nutritionist Heller said.

"A primary risk factor for type 2 diabetes is being overweight or obese," Heller said. "Regular exercise, shifting to a more plant-based diet and reaching and maintaining a healthy weight will go a long way in helping to prevent type 2 diabetes."

More information
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How to Save 95% on an iPad 4 or iPhone 5?

You've probably noticed a new phenomenon spreading like wildfire across Europe and North America: auction sites selling warehouse clearouts & overstocked products for huge discounts.

In blogs all over the net, you can read the stories of happy winners who won fabulous, very expensive items - usually for a fraction of their normal price. We weren't 100% sure that these amazing deals were real, so we decided to test them out. And what better reason to ensure that the test worked, by buying something that we really wanted.

I wanted to buy a new Apple iPad 4, so I was responsible for the test.

I started doing a ton of research on the subject to determine which of these sites was the most reliable, and therefore more suitable for my test. After hours of research, I came to the conclusion that, because of its wide range of products and excellent reputation - MadBid was the site for testing.

To use these sites, you buy credits to bid against other users in online auctions. Then if you win - you enjoy a MASSIVE discount on the price of the item.

MadBid are so confident they can prove to users that it works that they were offering a limited-time promotion for new customers. They'll give you free credits - double whatever you buy on your first purchase! This was ideal for a first time buyer like me, and I now had the credits needed to test the site in detail.

What can you buy at auction?

I saw everything from cars to phones to computers, laptops, TVs, cameras, stereo equipment and pretty much everything you could look for.

Madbid passes the test!

After a simple registration, I received my free credits from MadBid. I was now ready to try and win one of the items up for auction. Before I joined, I wasn't too sure how the site worked, but all became clear once I created my account.

I started with a bid on the item I'd wanted for so long... a brand, spanking new iPad. After a relatively short auction, and much to my surprise... I won!

For only £28.22 in total I got an iPad worth £499!

To make sure it was no fluke, I decided to try and win something else. Much more to my surprise, I won again! This time, the savings were even more startling. In the end, I paid only £79.22 for a MacBook Pro worth £2,000. Very impressive! There's no way that you can find savings like this anywhere else!

Delivery - Having won and paid for the items, I received them a few days later. It was just awesome, from start to finish.

In the end, I was completely satisfied with my experience.

Detailed instructions for MadBid

Now that you're set on trying to get your own savings on MadBid - you're probably wondering exactly how the site works. Don't worry, I'll explain everything. Here's a detailed guide to help you get started. (If it looks short, it's because it's so simple!)

Step 1: Create an account on MadBid and get your free credits. Click our exclusive link to get a discount and the same offer as I did!
This offer expires: Saturday, 08 February 2014
Code : starter24

Step 2: Look for an auction that you are interested in and start bidding.

Step 3: If you win an auction, you'll be redirected to the payment page where you proudly buy your item at a massive discount!

Conclusion

In the end, I had an extremely positive experience with MadBid. Savings of 95% on the normal retail price had long seemed impossible, but now I know there's a way!

Everyone here now uses MadBid now for their personal purchases. It's that simple!
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