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3 Mart 2017 Cuma

NHS England chief brings in new rules on ward bed closures

Simon Stevens, the chief executive of NHS England, has acted to make it much more difficult for hospitals to slash their supply of beds, after the dramatic loss of the facilities in recent years was widely blamed for exacerbating the winter crisis.


Stevens is introducing tough rules for hospitals concerning bed closures from April to ensure that patient care does not suffer.


His move comes after heavy criticism of the NHS for allowing the number of hospital beds in England to fall by 20% over the past 10 years at a time of growing demand. About 15,000 beds disappeared between 2010-11 and 2016-17, official NHS figures show.


Stevens stressed that his edict would not mean a complete moratorium on hospitals shrinking their tally of beds, but there was a need for tough criteria given the increasingly large number of beds being used by patients who could not be discharged yet were medically fit to leave.


In A Friday speech at the Nuffield Trust’s health policy summit, Stevens will say: “More older patients inevitably means more emergency admissions, and the pressures on A&E are being compounded by the sharp rise in patients stuck in beds awaiting home care and care home places, so there can no longer be an automatic assumption that it’s OK to slash many thousands of extra hospital beds, unless and until there really are better alternatives in place for patients.”


NHS trusts in England planning to cease provision of a particular service already have to pass four tests before doing so, including showing that GPs back their move and that the public has had a say.


Stevens’ intervention, in effect, creates a new fifth test that will have to be passed by NHS managers planning bed closures. They will get the go-ahead only if they can prove that NHS care in the local area outside the hospital can ensure patients will receive good care; permission could also be given if it can be shown that a new medical treatment for patients with a particular condition means beds can be safely deleted. Hospitals which are inefficient in their use of hospital beds will get the green light if they improve their performance to show that losing beds will not affect patients.


It is unclear what the impact of the new rules will have on the sustainability and transformation plans (STPs) developed recently by NHS chiefs in 44 areas of England. Many of the plans envisage a further loss of hospital beds by 2020-21 in efforts to help the NHS save £22bn. Also, the conditions will only apply to “significant bed closures”, which may not stop hospitals reducing their numbers gradually, a few at a time.


Prof Jane Dacre, president of the Royal College of Physicians, said Stevens’ plan was a step in the right direction. “However, the RCP would urge STPs to reduce the potential impact on patient care and have extra capacity in place before any bed closures occur,” she said.


Jonathan Ashworth, the shadow health secretary, said: “The number of hospital beds across the country is actually now forecast to drop again under the government’s STP proposals, with no convincing evidence that the necessary community care will be put in place to replace them. It’s not obvious therefore how health ministers will meet these new tests on bed closures Mr Stevens is setting.”



NHS England chief brings in new rules on ward bed closures

7 Şubat 2017 Salı

Successful male contraceptive gel trial brings new form of birth control closer

A male contraceptive gel has been found to work reliably in a trial in primates, bringing the prospect of an alternative form of birth control for humans closer.


The product, called Vasalgel, is designed to be a reversible and less invasive form of vasectomy and in the latest study was 100% effective at preventing conception. A blob of the gel is injected into the sperm-carrying tube, known as the vas deferens, and acts as a long-lasting barrier.


Previous tests in smaller animals showed the procedure could be easily reversed by breaking up the gel using ultrasound.


Catherine VandeVoort, of the California National Primate Research Centre and the study’s lead author, said: “Men’s options for contraception have not changed much in decades. There’s vasectomy, which is poorly reversible, and condoms. If they knew they could get a reliable contraceptive that could also be reversed I think it would be appealing to them.”


The Parsemus Foundation, a non-profit organisation that funded the work, said it plans to start a human trial as soon as funding is secured, based on the promising monkey results.


“One of the great things about the monkey model is that the male reproductive tract is very similar to humans and they have even more sperm than humans do,” said VandeVoort. “Chances are, it’s going to be effective in humans.”


How Vasalgel male contraceptive works

After decades of minimal progress on male contraceptives, a range of different approaches now appear to be showing promise. A World Health Organisation investigation, published last year, found that a male hormonal contraceptive jab was as effective as the female pill. However, scientists are still working to overcome unwanted side-effects including depression, acne and soaring libido that are linked to hormone-altering gels, pills and injections.


By contrast, the Vasalgel procedure does not interfere with sperm production and hormone levels in the body remain unchanged, meaning such side-effects are not an issue. As with a vasectomy, sperm continues to be produced in the testes, but rather than being ejaculated, it dissolves and is naturally absorbed by the body.


Unlike vasectomy though, in which the tube is snipped and the two ends cauterised, the Vasalgel procedure should be reversible, potentially making it an attractive option for a wider range of men.


“They wouldn’t have to worry about it on a day-to-day basis,” said VandeVoort. “This would be more akin to an IUD [the coil] in women.”


In the study, published in the journal Basic and Clinical Andrology, 16 male rhesus monkeys were given injections of the gel and then returned to their group, which included between three and nine breeding females.


The monkeys were monitored for at least one breeding season and about half the monkeys lived alongside females for two years, during which time there were no conceptions and side-effects, such as inflammation, were minimal.


Angela Colagross-Schouten, lead veterinarian on the project, said: “We were impressed that this alternative worked in every single monkey, even though this was our first time trying it.”


The same team are now hoping to confirm that the procedure is fully reversible in monkeys.



Successful male contraceptive gel trial brings new form of birth control closer

15 Aralık 2016 Perşembe

Andrew Marr says new stroke treatment brings "subtle" improvements

Broadcaster Andrew Marr said a new treatment he received after having a stroke has resulted in subtle changes, but not the “dramatic improvements” he hoped for.


The BBC presenter, who had a stroke almost four years ago and remains semi-paralysed on his left side, travelled to Florida to try a new anti-inflammatory drug called Etanercept.


Marr, who had described the treatment – which involved having the drug injected into the spinal fluid while hanging upside down – as a Christmas present to himself, said he will now work to build on the small changes he has seen.


Marr said in a statement: “Although I haven’t seen the dramatic improvements that I hoped for, there have been subtle and useful changes which I am going to work on through physiotherapy and exercise over the coming months.


“It hasn’t been ‘pick up thy bed and walk’ but it hasn’t been nothing, either. We will tell the fuller story in a BBC documentary scheduled to be broadcast in January.”


Marr’s stroke in January 2013 left him spending two months in hospital and undergoing extensive physiotherapy to help him walk.


In a piece for the Spectator recently, talking about the new treatment, he detailed some of the effects of the stroke.


He wrote: “I’m not complaining too much: I can work, drink, see friends, paint, listen to music and irritate my children like before. I’m a lucky fellow.


“But I can’t run or cycle or swim, and I walk very unsteadily and slowly. I drop things and take ages to get dressed.”



Andrew Marr says new stroke treatment brings "subtle" improvements

24 Ocak 2015 Cumartesi

Up All Evening? four Brings about of Insomnia and How to Beat Them

Continual insomnia can have a huge effect on your every day top quality of life. If you have a challenging time falling asleep or in fact staying asleep, it can sooner or later impact your general overall health as effectively as your operate efficiency and relationships.


Here are some of the most widespread elements that result in insomnia.


one. Anxiety and Tension


Do you have a great deal weighing on your mind? Worry can make your mind race at night and not let you sleep. Issues with household members or at perform or school can create anxiousness, which can make it challenging or occasionally not possible to get a good night’s rest. Also, traumatic occasions such as occupation reduction, divorce, or the death of a loved 1 can usually generate long-lasting anxiousness and tension. These important problems can result in a lot of sleepless nights. Another lead to of insomnia is snoring and even probably sleep apnea as a result of snoring. If you believe you could have sleep apnea, talk to your medical doctor considering that it can potentially turn into other severe wellness difficulties. CPAPMan and other companies also offer ventilation machines that fill your airways at evening to fight rest apnea.


2. Stimulants


Energy drinks, coffee, tea, and soft drinks include a significant amount of caffeine that operate to stimulate your brain, but it can also disturb regular sleep patterns. Consuming coffee later on in the day can prevent you from falling asleep at bedtime. The nicotine found in tobacco is another crucial stimulant that can interfere with rest as nicely.


3. Medications


Numerous above-the-counter medications lead to insomnia in individuals. Bodyweight-reduction merchandise, decongestants, and specified ache prescription drugs frequently have caffeine and potentially other stimulants.


Some common prescription drugs that are known to disrupt sleep patterns consist of the following:



  • Stimulants

  • Allergy medicines

  • Heart and blood stress medicines

  • Antidepressants


4. Depression


One more typical trigger of insomnia is depression. Researchers feel this could be due to specified imbalances relating to the chemical compounds in the brain that management sleep patterns. On the other hand, it is frequently brought on by distress alone, manifesting by means of the adverse thoughts or fears at evening that usually come with depression. Insomnia can also be a common symptom of other particular mood problems, this kind of as bipolar disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, or standard anxiousness.


Techniques to Beat Insomnia


If you have insomnia quite often, there are several items you can do to alter your life-style and behaviors to finally get some significantly essential rest. Right here are some effective ways to beat insomnia.



  • Try out to remove as much pressure as feasible from your life

  • Wake up every single day at the identical time

  • Restrict naptime

  • Lessen your consumption of alcohol and stimulants like caffeine and nicotine

  • Exercise on a standard basis

  • Generate a comfy sleep setting

  • Really do not eat or drink just prior to bedtime

  • Limit the variety of activities you do in bed—just rest


If you have persistent insomnia, speak to your doctor to establish the underlying brings about for your lack of sleep. At times insomnia is a disorder all on its very own, rather than a symptom of another current issue.



Up All Evening? four Brings about of Insomnia and How to Beat Them

29 Haziran 2014 Pazar

Musical interaction brings harmony to dementia individuals

music in mind therapy

Music therapist Greg Hunford and musicians from Manchester Camerata foremost a Music in Thoughts session in Crewe for elderly individuals with dementia Jack Burrow and his wife Vera who joined him in the session. Photograph: Christopher Thomond for the Guardian




Vera and Jack Burrows met as teenagers. “Childhood sweethearts,” explained Vera, brightly. “Then he dumped me when I was 17 and married somebody else and we didn’t see each other for 54 many years. We have been at a dance and he explained: ‘Is that you, Vera? I can recognise you from your thick ankles!’”


In spite of this risky chat-up line, the pair have been engaged within 4 months of their reunion – after Jack split up with 3 other lady friends. (Vera: “He utilized to get them identical Christmas presents so he didn’t get them mixed up.”)


5 and a half many years into their really happy marriage, Jack had a stroke although roasting a chicken, and has in no way returned residence. Ever since he’s been living in Station Home care house in Crewe. Now 86, he is lost his speech and has rising memory difficulties, but his bawdy sense of humour is very much intact.


Vera, a quite glamorous 84 with turquoise eye shadow and a cloud of blond hair, had accompanied Jack to a particular music session at the care house run by the music therapist Greg Hanford, director of MusAbility, and musicians from the Manchester Camerata chamber orchestra.


Overseen by Manchester University, it is element of a 10-week pilot project named Music in Thoughts, funded by the charity Care Uk, which runs 123 residential homes for elderly people. The aim is to locate out if classical music can enhance communication and interaction and lessen agitation for people in the United kingdom residing with dementia – estimated to number just in excess of 800,000 and set to rise rapidly as the population ages.


The Crewe project is the fourth Music in Mind pilot. An evaluation of the very first three, by the Manchester-based thinktank New Economic climate, located that some participants no longer had to be medicated soon after taking portion. Carers reported reduced agitation, much better moods and improved posture residents who had been slumped in their chairs raised their heads to get an energetic part.


“The energy of music treatment enables, excites, enthuses, entertains,” one musician informed New Economy. “It really is like opening the window of a stuffy space and allowing scented fresh air to waft in, lifting the spirits, altering the nature of the space.”


Jack’s session concerned flautist Amina Hussain and French horn player Naomi Atherton, two of 7 Camerata musicians qualified in dementia awareness by the Alzheimer’s Society, and a specialist nurse. Along with Hanford, two care staff and Jack (with Vera at his side), had been two other residents: Pete, who has only one particular leg, and Taff, a tattooed Welshman who was keen on the tambourine.


Proceedings began with Hanford strumming his guitar and singing hello to each participant in flip. Jack clucked a return greeting, Pete looked straight ahead and Taff managed a delayed hello.


To an outsider, it at first felt somewhat infantilising and all also reminiscent of a mom and little one singing group. But by the end of the half hour, the males were engaged in a rather moving overall performance, with Pete gently tapping out a rhythm on a cymbal, Taff shaking a rainstick and Jack on bells, all accompanied by globe-class horn and flute.


“There is a crossover, or at least parallels, between functioning with really youthful children and men and women with dementia,” said Hanford afterwards. “The ‘hello’ song is anything I use with all various kinds of men and women. But keeping dignity is at the heart of what we are performing.”


“We have to make confident we do not child anybody,” explained Hussain. “We have to don’t forget these are men and women who have led full lives, with jobs, families. At initial you do wonder if they believe you’re a appropriate plonker, coming in and providing them brightly coloured instruments.”


Gill Capewell, actions coordinator at Station Property, stated she initially anxious the knowledge may possibly be also daunting for residents. “I considered there would be a complete orchestra. I did not realise how subtle it would be.”


Atherton mentioned she volunteered partly as a outcome of the death of her father, who produced Alzheimer’s in his late 60s. The operate brought huge rewards for the most subtle developments, she mentioned: “Like Pete right now – when I put the ocean drum in front of him, his fingers have been twitching.” Yet another time, a resident with a extremely limited, fixed pattern of conversation finished her sentence in a way that showed she was engaged, she additional.


“It can be like viewing a flower open, at the danger of sounding dreadfully cheesy,” said Hussain.


The musicians encourage individuals to live in the current, rather than the past, exactly where several have typically taken refuge. “Typically in care residences they sing war songs, which could be really good but what if it triggers a undesirable memory? That’s the past. We want them to be residing in the second,” mentioned Atherton.


Most other music treatment with this group tended to be efficiency-based, mentioned Hanford. “The Liverpool Phil, for instance, plays to patients. What’s occurring right here is massively various due to the fact we’re employing music treatment as an intervention. It is like the distinction among watching Television and making use of the net. A single is interactive.”


But does it need to have expert musicians? Hanford explained Manchester Camerata’s involvement was a luxury, admitting this kind of perform mostly demanded persistence and creativity rather than virtuoso capacity. But Hussain said her knowledge was essential: “We are able to talk with music really subtly, in a way that, for example, a grade eight player might not be able to. It could be that subtle distinction that connects with a person.”




Musical interaction brings harmony to dementia individuals

9 Haziran 2014 Pazartesi

We Are Nowhere Near Comprehending The Brings about Of Obesity And How To Avoid It

Invoking the “usual suspects” only obscures how much we really don’t know.


The trend toward excess weight obtain above the past 3 decades is routinely characterized as an “epidemic” and even a “pandemic,” which requires an urgent response.


Very first evident in produced nations, this trend has turn into a throughout the world phenomenon. A significant paper in the Lancet final month estimated that obese and obesity are responsible for 3.four million deaths around the world, making weight problems a “major worldwide overall health challenge.” The authors mentioned that no country has succeeded in reducing its obesity charge in 33 years.


Funding for analysis and weight problems prevention applications has soared – NIH funding for weight problems analysis is currently almost $ 1B per yr — and there is no dearth of suggestions for how we must fight obesity.


The dilemma is that these seem to be based mostly a lot more on wishful thinking than on difficult scientific fact.  One proposed explanation often conflicts with another, and many explanations are tautological, primarily arguing that people get fat due to the fact they get body fat.


How can this be?


A number of recent content articles by scientists concerned in analysis on weight problems make a pointed case that, in spite of a lot of hundreds of thousands of dollars of funding, thousands of published scientific studies, and a consensus about the urgency of the problem, existing investigation to response the query “What causes obesity and how can we avoid it?” is woefully inadequate.


It’s unusual that you come across a systematic critique of a whole field – specifically 1 that is not recondite but rather which involves the wellness of hundreds of thousands and an massive burden on the healthcare care program and society as total — and one particular that is constantly in the information.


This kind of a paper came out a 12 months in the past in the Mayo Clinic Mayo Clinic Proceedings: “Scientific Determination Making, Policy Choices, and the Obesity Pandemic.”  The lead writer is James Hébert, a dietary epidemiologist at the University of South Carolina.  A short video discussing the paper can be witnessed here.


Hébert and his co-authors publish that, “Despite decades of analysis into the leads to of the weight problems pandemic, we seem to be no nearer to a resolution now than when the rise in physique weights was 1st chronicled decades in the past.”


Weight problems is a complicated phenomenon involving the interplay of fundamental human drives, the atmosphere, physiology, and genetics. Faced with this issue, there is a tendency for researchers to choose one particular factor of the puzzle, use methods that have significant limitations, and get results which are then often interpreted uncritically and provided as the basis for policy recommendations.


What Hébert and colleagues aim to give is a essential evaluation of the pitfalls of analysis on weight problems in purchase to lay the groundwork for a lot more imaginative and rigorous perform that may in fact lead to effective techniques.


They lay out a quantity of confusions and fallacies that impede understanding of obesity.



  1. Inadequate measures of obesity.


Weight problems, the excess accumulation of unwanted fat, is defined differently in various disciplines. For instance, physique mass index (kilograms/heighttwo), or BMI, is extensively utilized in epidemiologic studies because it is straightforward and inexpensive, requiring only measurement of bodyweight and height.  Nonetheless, BMI does not distinguish in between physique fat and lean mass (bone, muscle, blood, and so forth), nor does it reflect the distribution of excess fat deposits. In addition, BMI misclassifies a significant proportion of the population as regards their percentage of entire body fat.  Other more potent strategies of measuring excess fat location and kind (subcutaneous, visceral) are available but are used primarily in laboratory scientific studies.


The use of BMI as a measure of adiposity has resulted in a excellent deal of confusion and uninterpretable benefits.



  1. Weight problems is not a single pathologic condition.


Obesity is the result of the interplay of elements in the external surroundings (social milieu, meals vitality availability, behavioral processes) and the internal atmosphere (metabolic rate, genes, epigenetics) that regulate physique composition, energy consumption, vitality expenditure, and nutrient portioning. We know that genetics has an effect on obesity even so, a strong genetic predisposition seems to apply to a relatively modest proportion of the population. Weight problems also can stem from other processes such as thyroid and other metabolic ailments.  In otherwise regular folks, weight obtain and weight reduction are tightly regulated.  The a lot of methods in which totally free-living individuals (as opposed to laboratory subjects) can make adjustments to and recalibrate their vitality intake and expenditure defy straightforward explanations.



  1. Misapplication of physics to biology.


A favored explanation for obesity relates to “energy balance” (EB) and invokes the Very first Law of Thermodynamics (FLT), which states that energy can be converted from one state to yet another but  are not able to be destroyed.  This is utilised to argue that obesity is just the outcome of energy consumption (calories consumed) exceeding energy expenditure (calories burned). The explanation holds that excess vitality intake prospects to storage of excess vitality, mainly in the type of unwanted fat.


Whilst the FLT is absolutely true, Hébert and colleagues stage out that the imprecision of techniques for measuring energy consumption and vitality expenditure in huge population-primarily based scientific studies “precludes accurate quantification of the EB equation and as a result precludes definitive statements relating to the trigger of the obesity epidemic.”


They create that, “to realize the obesity epidemic, we require to search for potentially modifiable root elements that can be measured and modeled to see how nicely they fit the criteria for judging causality. We should not be satisfied with tautological statements primarily based on the FLT.”



  1. Inadequate measurement and review top quality.


The literature on obesity is replete with research that utilised much less rigorous research styles, rather than randomized controlled trials (which are hard and pricey to perform) or cautiously-made epidemiological studies.  For a variety of useful causes, most studies depend on low-cost, inaccurate, and imprecise measures of food intake and vitality expenditure. The authors comment that, “This fulfillment with inadequate measurement has stunted weight problems investigation and the discipline of nutritional epidemiology much more normally.”



  1. Simplistic and deterministic reasoning.


During the obesity literature, correlation is mistakenly interpreted as evidence of causation. The authors criticize the “invalid determinism,” which implies that economic forces right impact weight problems.



We Are Nowhere Near Comprehending The Brings about Of Obesity And How To Avoid It

29 Mayıs 2014 Perşembe

Biochemistry Brings Well being Management Up Shut And Private

We’re all painfully conscious that, in spite of the abundance of data supporting the advantages of a healthful diet, typical exercise, and moderate alcohol consumption, Americans are increasingly challenged by extra bodyweight, limited physical activity, and negative consuming routines.  These danger elements routinely lead to this kind of situations as cardiovascular ailment, diabetes, osteoporosis, depression, and cancer.  Exercise and diet are vital components of an individual’s lifestyle, but attempts to alter life-style are notoriously problematic in terms of compliance.


Next generation blood evaluation can support


For many people, obtaining far more data about the state of their overall health can inspire them to make life-style alterations and empower them to sustain these modifications in excess of time.  1 modern company that aims to offer that motivating data is InsideTracker.  Their up coming-generation overall health management equipment are tailored to the biochemistry of an personal.  We had the chance to speak with InsideTracker’s founder and Chief Scientific Officer, Gil Blander, about how in depth information on key blood biomarkers can be utilized by people to deal with and optimize their own wellness.


“Blood examination is a potent indicator of your existing overall health situation,” Blander explains, “but most folks don’t get the complete positive aspects of testing that they’ve currently carried out.  Do you have an yearly blood check at your doctor’s office?  If you do, then you are possibly employed to acquiring a follow-up postcard in the mail that says your blood check was ‘normal.’  You could not know which blood tests your physician ordered, let alone what your outcomes actually had been.”


Know your real data


Blood exams measure biomarkers that can give you a comprehensive picture of what is happening within your body.  But if all you get is that postcard that says your outcomes are “normal,” you do not discover extremely significantly.  If you know precisely what your benefits are more than time, you can see exactly where you are in the typical variety and no matter whether the degree of a distinct biomarker is rising or reducing.  The crucial is letting proven science guidebook an individual’s nutrition and conduct choices.  If buyers are supplied the data and context they can take acceptable action based on goal and precise insights.


Go past “normal” to “optimal”


The “normal” range for a biomarker usually applies to all grownups.  That indicates “normal” might be the same for everybody from a 22-yr-outdated who regularly competes in triathlons to an inactive, 78-year-previous retiree.  “Why do we accept ‘normal’ for our health final results,” asks Blander, “when in all other factors of our expert and private lives we want to be the very best we possibly can be?”


To make meaningful modifications to your well being risk behaviors you need to have to know not just your “normal” assortment for every single biomarker, but also your private “optimal” variety, primarily based on your distinctive qualities, such as age, gender, ethnicity, height, bodyweight, exercise level, and life-style objectives.


Research has proven that improving your biomarkers into your optimum zone can boost your effectively-being, performance, and, in some instances, longevity.  Knowing your optimized level provides you information to recognize which behavioral alterations can lessen your extended-phrase threat for chronic well being problems.  For instance, your glucose may possibly be “normal,” but greater than optimum.  Lowering your glucose degree to your optimal zone can improve your longevity and lessen your danger of building diabetes.


Bloodwork Graph

Representative blood perform graph evaluating an “optimized” zone versus a “normal” zone.



Concentrate on overall health, not on sickness


Blood perform, and healthcare in basic, has historically centered on identifying and treating current illnesses, rather than prevention and total wellness.  Some essential biomarkers that are not usually tested in the course of yearly physicals include C-reactive protein (CRP), vitamin D, and testosterone.  CRP can indicate low levels of continual inflammation, which has been linked to a assortment of conditions, such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes.  Your CRP ranges might rise prior to you have any noticeable signs and symptoms.  Low levels of vitamin D are related with minimal power, bad immune technique function, and difficulty in shedding bodyweight.  Minimal testosterone can have an effect on your general power and muscle improvement, generating it tougher to enhance your bodily exercise.


Employ life-style alterations


Measuring how “optimized” you are for crucial biomarkers is crucial.  Knowing how to further optimize them is even much more critical.  That’s in which nutrition and exercising physiology science come into perform.  In addition to showing your blood final results and how they examine to your optimum zone, new overall health management resources can give you suggestions for food, workout, lifestyle, and nutritional supplement adjustments that you can make to boost any biomarkers that are out of your optimal zone.


Sadly, there is a deluge of unsupported “advice” for what to eat and how to lose weight.  You need suggestions for changes tied to your biomarkers, and suggestions that are primarily based on evidence from peer-reviewed research.  Blander explains, “sophisticated blood analysis should serve as a determination help system, empowering you with massive amounts of scientific knowledge to understand exactly what you should consume, and do, to get your self optimized.”


Retest often


Your annual blood test is not sufficient to assistance an effort to change your health threat behaviors.  With suitable modifications, some biomarkers might change in just two months, although other individuals may consider 3-4 months.  Blander suggests “to stay on track, to fine-tune your system, and to carry on to make progress, you must have your blood examined 2-4 instances a year.”


Not only can typical blood analysis give you the data to help lower your threat of continual situations, this kind of as cardiovascular disease, stroke, weight problems, and diabetes, but it can also empower you with the insights to increase your all round wellness and properly-becoming.


Robert J. Szczerba is the CEO of X Tech Ventures and author of the Forbes column “Rocket Science Meets Brain Surgery.”  Follow him via TwitterFacebook, or LinkedIn.



Biochemistry Brings Well being Management Up Shut And Private

20 Mayıs 2014 Salı

Obamacare Brings Only "Slight" Increase In Individuals For Medical professional Practices

Just 24 percent of physician practices report a “slight increase” in individuals as physicians grapple with the new bureaucracy of 8 million people with personal wellness insurance beneath the Cost-effective Care Act, according to a new examination by the nation’s greatest association of health care groups.


Virtually 80 percent of doctor practices are participating in health insurance products sold on government-run marketplaces identified as exchanges, in accordance to a survey by the Health care Group Management Association that contains responses from more than 700 health care groups and more than 400,000 medical professionals in these practices across the U.S.


But a tiny much more than half of respondents, or 54 %, say they noticed no improve in their patient population as of April and just 24 % reported only a “slight increase” in these early days of the wellness law’s signature government-subsidized wellness benefit packages.


“These figures illustrate that most practices are not getting inundated by new ACA exchange patients, but do count on to deal with relatively more of these sufferers as the 12 months progresses,” MGMA stated in a statement accompanying the association’s report. “Practices expect a small shift in this trend via the end of the yr. Thirty percent of respondents projected no modify to their practice population by the finish of 2014 and 44 % predicted a slight boost.”


MGMA performed its analysis in April to assess the influence of the exchanges on medical group practices. The survey came inside of weeks of the just-finished six-month open enrollment period, which ended in March, when eligible Americans could signal up for this year’s coverage from an array of wellness programs such  as those offered by Aetna Aetna (AET), Cigna Cigna (CI), Humana Humana (HUM), UnitedHealth Group (UNH) and Blue Cross and Blue Shield strategies.


The excellent news for individuals is that 85 % of medical doctor practices in the survey are contracting with one to 5 goods and “almost 60 percent” are undertaking so “in buy to stay competitive in their regional market place.”


This competitors could be very good for likely pricing of wellness insurance coverage items in the potential, analysts say.


But there is function to be accomplished in making the new bureaucracy function for individuals and their medical professionals, according to the survey.


“Even although there hasn’t been a huge influx of patients into doctor offices as numerous predicted, basic tasks such as acquiring patient


insurance coverage information or locating experts for in-network referrals have proven to be significant difficulties,” explained Dr. Susan Turney, president and chief executive officer of the Health-related Group Management Association.


For illustration, practices are reporting “significant patient confusion” about the value-sharing of the exchange insurance goods. There were 75 percent of survey respondents who have been “very or very likely” to have substantial deductibles in contrast to their sufferers with standard commercial overall health insurance coverage coverage.


“Physician group practices are expressing dissatisfaction with the complexity and lack of info linked with insurance coverage products offered on ACA Exchanges,” Turney explained. “The much more administrative complexity launched into the healthcare system, the much less time and resources practices can dedicate to patient care.”


Pondering how Obamacare will have an effect on your physician? The Forbes eBook Within Obamacare: The Repair For America’s Ailing Wellness Care Method answers that question and a lot more. Available now at Amazon and Apple.



Obamacare Brings Only "Slight" Increase In Individuals For Medical professional Practices

13 Mart 2014 Perşembe

5 Top Brings about Of Auto Accidents To Stay away from

by Long Island Lawyer Paul A. Lauto, Esq.


Several of us know the most frequent triggers of automobile accidents, but far far more of us do not safeguard against them on a day-to-day basis.  In order to avoid these typical triggers or blunders, we need to have heighten our awareness of them.   A single of the best methods to heighten our awareness of them, is through practice and evaluation.  With that in thoughts, allow us examine five of the prime triggers of vehicle accidents.


1. Driver Fatigue: We typically reside our quickly paced lives with our own bodies operating on empty.  Sleep deprivation is the root cause of numerous problems like diminished function productivity, bad wellness and car accidents, to title a handful of.  All as well frequently, especially on prolonged journeys, we refuse to acknowledge just how exhausted we are when driving.  A common blunder is believing that you can drive a “little longer” just before needing to stop.  To avoid this pitfall, relinquish the driving to a licensed passenger at the first indicator of fatigue and if you are alone, cease and rest just before continuing on.


2. Weather:  Inclement climate is another prime result in of auto accidents.  Poor visibility coupled with moist and/or frozen street surfaces is a deadly blend. Reportedly, roughly eleven% of car accident fatalities are attributable to bad climate.  The very best way to avoid this statistic, is to remain house and not drive at all when the weather is bad.  If you should drive for the duration of negative weather, then do so with caution.


three. Driver Inattention:  When it comes to driving, maybe it is best to heed the motherly command to “pay interest.”  All to often drivers are distracted by talking on the cell mobile phone, texting, making music selections, conversations with passengers, consuming, smoking and more.  I when even witnessed a guy consuming a plate of spaghetti with a fork, while driving on the Grand Central Parkway!  Unfortunately, driver inattention is no joke and causes around 16% of automobile accident fatalities.  The greatest advice here, is to listen to your mother and focus.


four. Speeding/Aggressive Conduct:  We have pace limits for great reason, however all as well usually we disregard them in favor of our impatience.  Tailgating, unsafe lane modifications, extreme use of the horn and other aggressive conduct usually go hand in hand with speeding.  The unfortunate result is approximately 31% of car accident fatalities.  It is strongly recommended to obey the velocity limit, stay away from driving whilst angry and to remain out of the way of these exhibiting aggressive behavior behind the wheel.


5. Alcohol/Medication:  It need to come as no shock that alcohol and drug influence is 1 of the best triggers of auto accidents, accounting for approximately 1 third of all motor automobile fatalities.  If you are below the influence of medication  (prescription or otherwise) or alcohol and make the mistake of driving, you could not only end up in jail but might finish up not residing to see yet another day.  The maxim “Don’t Drink and Drive” nevertheless rings real and applies equally to drugs.


Whilst this article does not promulgate any new revelations when it comes to widespread leads to of vehicle accidents, it hopefully will serve as an essential reminder that will heighten our awareness.  Please drive securely and keep away from turning into yet another statistic.


Extended Island Lawyer
Paul A. Lauto, Esq.
liattorney.com



5 Top Brings about Of Auto Accidents To Stay away from

9 Şubat 2014 Pazar

Organ donation: A kidney donor dies – and brings new life to two people

As Mrs X begins to die in a lilac-painted hospital side room, surrounded by her husband and children who are perched on a semi-circle of purple plastic chairs, a team of surgeons and nurses is making preparations for her afterlife. In an operating theatre a few metres down the corridor, a six-person team of organ retrieval specialists has arrived to remove her kidneys, her liver and possibly her corneas.


Elsewhere, another possible recipient receives a midnight call, and is summoned to a third hospital to await the second kidney.


For the operations to be successful, the removal of the organs and the transplant must happen very swiftly. Complex arrangements begin around lunchtime when Mrs X’s family are made to understand that there is no hope of her recovering from the catastrophic heart attack that brought her to hospital two weeks earlier, and agree that it is time to let her die.


She has signed the organ donor register, and the family have supported her request, so a specialist nurse for organ donation (shortened with the ugly acronym Snod), has been paged in to help them, and to launch the laborious job of searching for the best recipients. If a recipient is found on the other side of the country, then air transport will have to be arranged, because once the kidney is out of the body there is only a 12-hour transplantation window, otherwise its functions begin to deteriorate.


The Snod is here before the donor has died, before the recipients even know their lives are about to be transformed by the long-awaited arrival of an organ. He will be here for a day’s work that won’t end until early the following morning, supporting the family through the process, performing the last offices on the donor, washing and dressing the body and placing her in a shroud once the organs have been removed.


The family has had two weeks coming to understand that their mother will not survive, so they are better prepared for the process than many. Doctors have scanned her head, established that there is an unsurvivable brain injury, and concluded that it would be in her best interests to withdraw treatment. In her late 50s, the dying patient is not too old to donate her organs. “Kidneys have no sell-by date,” a doctor says.


The nurse has spent much of the afternoon talking to them, explaining what will happen. Families find it easier to talk to nurses than doctors. “Sometimes you have to explain information again and again and again, because they are at a stage of such great grief that we have to ensure they have understood. Doctors are not very good at having this conversation. They use medical terms people don’t understand. It is a lot of information to take in. The consultant on the intensive care ward will be looking after 22 people. Nurses have more time. Families feel they can ask the silly question,” he says.


Some families are uncertain about what their relative would have wanted, and staff wish this was a subject people were more ready to discuss. “We are asking people to do something for others at a time that is so devastating for them. It is an awful time to be asking someone this information. A lot of families say no because they don’t know what their relatives would have wanted,” he says. NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT) figures show that despite the fact that most people either want to donate their organs, or would consider it, only half have talked to their families about it. Figures also show that seven out of 10 families opt not to give permission for their relative’s organs to be donated, if they don’t know their wishes.


Fortunately Mrs X’s family knows want she would have wanted and are anxious for as much of her body to be transplanted in new people as possible. “They are a lovely family. Really kind,” the nurse says.


operation to retrieve kidneys from a donor ‘It is the most rewarding type of operation you can do. You know at once if it has worked.’ Photograph: Sean Smith for the Guardian


Following the journey of a transplant is a uniquely challenging journalistic exercise, not least because the timing of an operation is impossible to predict in advance and depends on human tragedy. There are very strict rules governing confidentiality, to prevent the family of the donor and the recipient finding out too much about each other. Contact between the two is rare, and only happens at the end of a very supervised process. To adhere to these rules, all names, locations and dates have been removed from this account, making this an uncomfortably detail-free article.


But there is a parallel desire from NHSBT to focus attention on the need to sign up new organ donors and to highlight the extraordinary life-prolonging effect of a successful transplant. Although there has been a 30.5% increase in transplants in the past five years, there are still more than 7,000 on the transplant list, and last year more than 1,300 people either died while on the waiting list or became too sick to receive a transplant. The process of signing up to donate is simple and takes only a couple of minutes online.


Earlier this year, the law was changed in Wales to introduce a system of presumed consent for organ donation, which will give doctors the right, in principle, to remove people’s organs when they die unless they have registered an objection. Supporters of the new policy, which will be introduced in December 2015, believe that it will save lives; opponents worry that it could intensify the anguish of some grieving families. France, Spain, Sweden, Italy, Belgium and numerous other countries have already adopted the system. In England, the debate continues.


By early evening, the final medical checks are done on the dying woman, and the nurse sends out a list of possible body parts that might be suitable for transplant to an organ donation coordinating hub in Bristol. He receives back a list of hospitals, caring for possible recipients, and begins to call consultants to tell them what is on offer, and to see if they want to accept it on behalf of a patient.


Until this is all in place, the family must wait, before the breathing tubes are removed and their relative is allowed to begin the process of dying. They are encouraged to go home for a while, before returning to sit in the depressing waiting room, drinking cherry cola and Ribena, watching a muted television in the corner. A homemade sign, decorated with a sketch of a fluctuating heartbeat line, promises: “Throughout Your Loved One’s Journey, There May be Ups and Downs, However We Will Endeavour, To Make It as Smooth as Possible.”


a kidney ‘We do it like a plumbing job. It looks nice on paper, but it is a major ­operation …’ a kidney just after its removal from a living donor. Photograph: Sean Smith for the Guardian


Staff know that this wait can be agonising and try to prepare them for it. “Sometimes they withdraw consent if the process takes too long. We do tell them the process takes a long time,” the nurse says. By 10.30pm, recipients have been found for the two kidneys, but no home has been found for the liver.


He begins instructing the retrieval team on this basis, but is interrupted by his mobile phone. “Really? That’s fantastic. Anne, you have made my day. That is amazing,” he says, smiling into the phone. “The breathing is fading a bit. We’ll do the extubation between 11.30 and 12 …” The surgeon in Birmingham who was previously offered the liver has changed his mind, and decided to accept it. “That’s good news for two reasons. It could save someone’s life; also it helps the family who are very keen for the donation to happen,” he says.


At around midnight, the breathing tube is removed from Mrs X’s mouth, and the family is called back to be with her for the final process. “I don’t do anything to accelerate her death. We ensure that she is comfortable, but we don’t do anything else.” She lies on the bed, with a pile of soft toys on her feet, breathing independently. There is silence apart from the whir of the air conditioning, and the high chirruping from medical equipment in the room, echoed by cheeps in the ward across the corridor, like electronic birds answering each other’s call, wearyingly unceasing.


Her eyes are shut. The nurse notes that the oxygen levels are dropping quite quickly. At some point in this hospital’s long history, someone decided it would be soothing to paint the wards with a lavender paint. Now the pale pink is criss-crossed with old plug sockets, bits of dried-up Sellotape, and endless bossy public health instructions, hand-shaped stickers that instruct visitors to “Stop and Wash! Do your bit!” and to “Switch It Off! Making Business Sense of Climate Change”. She dies surrounded by scuffed grey lino, bright yellow binliners, a box screwed to the wall dispensing white plastic gloves, breakfast trolleys pushed into the corner, and the orange glow of street lights outside, rain dripping down the windows.


Family members come out to the corridor, for a break from the pressure. Something is ending here, but not quite ending. Naturally, there is none of the joy of a maternity ward, but there is a sense of expectation, of new life beginning.


In the cool ante-room outside the theatre, the young surgical team are briefed on her medical details and told which organs should be retrieved. The last stage of life turns out to be very quick, and is over within 30 minutes. Doctors start removing Mrs X’s organs at around 1am. It turns out that the liver is not good enough to transplant, but the kidneys look in very good condition.



A beautiful procedure


Later that night, in another hospital, somewhere else, Mr Y is mentally preparing himself for a major operation, which has inevitably come without warning. He is lying in a room that he has to himself, still dressed, a thin hospital blanket pulled over his clothes, when I’m taken in to meet him at around 4am. He is awake, but was initially (understandably) not desperate to talk to me. The prospect of having a major operation you were not expecting to have just a few hours ago is dispiriting enough without being asked to describe how you’re feeling to a journalist in the early hours of the morning.


After a reassuring conversation with the surgeon, he is very obliging, however, and explains how he went to the doctor a few years ago with swollen legs and a puffy face, and discovered he had high blood pressure and that his kidneys were no longer working. He hadn’t realised anything was seriously wrong. “It is the silent killer,” he says. He has been on dialysis for two years.


He had worked as a warehouse employee but lost his job recently. In any case, dialysis had made work exhausting. “I’m always tired. I feel very weak and sleepy as well. Dialysis is very, very time-consuming. You’re stuck to a machine all the time. I don’t feel happy, but you get used to it, because if you don’t, you can’t survive.”


He has been looking for new work, but a lot of jobs he can’t apply for because the three weekly visits he needs to make for dialysis eat into his working hours. His illness also makes interviews complicated. “If you disclose your sickness, they will not call you back, because they think your performance will be low. But if you don’t disclose your illness and they find out, they can terminate your contract. You are stuck between two positions.


“My mind was not on transplants at all. The doctor told me that it would be difficult and I would have to wait a long time,” he says.


He regrets not having taken his health more seriously. “The car goes to an MoT; every six months, you should get into the habit of doing the same, visiting your GP. I didn’t go to the doctor. I should have gone to the doctor.”


He isn’t curious about the donor family or the circumstances that have made the organ available. “I don’t want to know anything. I just don’t want to know.”


This is not unusual, a consultant at the hospital explains. “They tend not to ask. I suspect it is because they want to dehumanise it a little bit – take the organ now and deal with the human side later. It is emotionally challenging as it is, to be called in for a transplant, without thinking about the donor family’s grief. There’s a lot to cope with already.”


kidney courier The donated organs are taken for transplant … some 7,000 people in the UK are on the waiting list for a kidney transplant. Photograph: Sean Smith for the Guardian


The surgeon reports later that the procedure, which began at 8.30 the following morning and was over by 11.30, went “beautifully”. He was thrilled at the state of the kidney. “It was really a wonderful organ,” he says with unexpected delight.


His description highlights both the amazing simplicity of the process – pulling an organ out of one body and popping it in to someone else a few hours later – and the extraordinary sophistication required to make it work.


The host of the kidney has changed gender. It has left the body of the woman, where it has grown for the past five decades and been sewn into the body of a sick man. The surgeon could tell that the kidney was not in its first flush of youth – it had lost its pearly sheen, and there were traces of scarring – but it was functioning well. “The donor was a good donor. This was an excellent kidney, beautifully retrieved,” he says.


When the transplant box arrived, he had to check that it was the correct organ, coming from the hospital he expected, checking that it was the right kidney, as promised, and not the left one. The kidney was not ready for transplanting, so he worked with colleagues to trim it, remove all the fat, expose the anatomy, check the vein, the artery, the urethra, and repair anything that was damaged.


Transplanting an organ is less traumatic than removing one (several doctors use the word “harvesting”, although one corrects himself, apologetically: “Harvesting – I try not to use that word, it sounds like a 1970s cloning film”); the old kidneys are left in the body. The critical moment comes towards the end, when doctors release the clamps, the instruments that hold the blood flow, and allow the blood to rush into the new organ. “You don’t stop to think ‘this is fantastic’ and have a moment of happiness. It is a moment of attentiveness. You are too busy, you need to make sure you do a good job,” he says. “When you see the production of urine in recovery, that’s when we can start to relax, then things look good.”


Sometimes it can take days before the new organ starts functioning, but in Mr Y’s case, it was almost instantaneous. “When it works, I feel good. It is the most rewarding type of operation you can do. It is completely different from the feeling you have after a cancer operation, when the best you can hope for is that everything bad has been removed. This is something positive. You know immediately if it has worked. It is extremely satisfying.


“The speciality that I have the privilege to work in is the most exciting of any others – we are so exposed to the ethical, legal and emotional aspects. We are just immensely grateful to the families because it is extremely difficult to agree to donation when it is so sudden and so unexpected.”


That night Mrs X’s second kidney is also successfully transplanted into another sick individual. Her death has saved two lives.


Pretty incredible people


Things do not always go so smoothly. In a third hospital, Mrs Z, 53, who has been on dialysis for six years, has been called in at midnight to receive a new kidney. She has had a suitcase packed, ready by her front door for years, as she waits for the correct organ to come up. This is the fourth time she has been summoned; on the three previous occasions tests showed that her body was likely to reject the organ. She is calmly thrilled at the prospect of a transplant, which will free her from dialysis, and will enable her to make a long-postponed visit to her 90-year-old father in India.


She is at the end stage of kidney failure, and finds the thrice-weekly requirement to be in hospital for dialysis profoundly wearing. “Some days you feel depressed. You get emotional, very upset.” A surgeon comes in and draws a picture in ballpoint pen of how the operation will be done. “We do it like a plumbing job,” he says, explaining that it will take up to four hours. “It looks nice on paper, but it is a major operation. It takes one month to feel OK. Are you OK with that?”


She smiles and says she is. Staff have taken a blood sample to see whether there is anything to prevent the operation from going ahead. “It was very heartbreaking last time.”


Later that night, it turns out that the final tests have again shown a strong likelihood that she will reject the organ, and she is again sent home, with no option but to continue on dialysis.


Giving a tour of the dialysis unit at a busy London hospital, the clinical director of renal nephrology explains how exhausting the process is. There are 70 dialysis machines constantly in use here, over three shifts, seven days a week, cleaning the blood, sucking out its toxins, and returning it to the body. The process offers only the equivalent of 10% of normal kidney function.


“They will make light of it but these are pretty incredible people. It is hard work being on dialysis. It takes incredible patience. We circulate blood for four hours, which leaves them tied for four hours to the machine. During that time, we ask their heart and blood vessels to do things that are not unlike a 10-mile run for me. Then they have to go home on the tube, pick the kids up from school or go back to work. These are superhumans for what they endure,” he says. “The joy we get when people are transplanted is immense. It is a wonderful thing to see people get better, to see their quality of life go back up.”


He is undecided about whether England should follow Wales towards a policy of presumed consent. “Families often balk at the idea of somebody putting a knife to someone they barely think of as dead. I don’t think anyone would ever take an organ without consent. We want the public to tell us what to do; we want to know that the public is comfortable with what we are doing,” he says.


The assistant director of Organ Donation and Transplantation NHSBT, Anthony Clarkson, mostly wants people to discuss the issue with their families. “We know there is a reluctance to talk about organ donations among families – research shows that half of the population has never had this conversation. There are taboos around death. There is a reluctance to talk about this,” he says.


“For the revolution on consent for organ donation in the UK, we need it to become a normal part of end of life care, and we need it to become a normal part of society, where people expect to be asked about organ donation, and the expected response is that they will be a donor. People don’t talk about it enough.”


Ten days later, Mr Y is still recovering, but has come home after a week in hospital. He is still finding it painful to walk, and is a bit overwhelmed by the quantity of drugs he is required to take, but he hopes he will be well enough to start looking for work again in a couple of months.


He has had a very positive experience in hospital. “It started working straight away. It was amazing. The doctors answered my questions with dignity and respect. They are there to help you to live. The only question the doctor cannot answer properly is how many years the kidney can continue working.”


He still has no desire to find out anything about the donor whose organ has freed him from a life on dialysis. “I have the right to ask, but I decided not to. I’m a Christian. I feel it is a gift from God.”


Does it feel strange to be living with part of someone else inside? “That is the reason I don’t want to know anything about the source. It will play on my mind. I feel if I ask too many questions, I will get too much information. Somebody else’s body is in my stomach. Some people wouldn’t care, but I mind. I am not so keen to know. It makes me feel sad.”


• Join the NHS organ donor register at organdonation.nhs.uk or call 0300 123 23 23



Organ donation: A kidney donor dies – and brings new life to two people

1 Şubat 2014 Cumartesi

As ObamaCare Brings Individuals, Physicians Not Warm To Medicaid

Much less than half of medical professionals are accepting patients insured by Medicaid applications for the bad, according to a study of appointments for widespread specialties in 15 key U.S. cities.


The survey, by physician staffing and consulting company Merritt Hawkins showed just 45.seven % Medicaid acceptance as the Affordable Care Act provides a income infusion of far more than $ 900 billion in federal bucks from this year to 2022 to broaden Medicaid packages for states interested in the proposition. There are, even so, about two dozen states, with Republican governors or GOP legislatures opposed to the expansion that have turned down the federal dollars.


There is also separate federal funding to increase Medicaid payments for major care medical professionals to the level of payments from the Medicare well being insurance system for the elderly through this yr. That means an regular pay out improve of 73 percent for eligible primary care medical doctors.


Tetra Images/Getty Images/Brand X

Tetra Photographs/Getty Images/Brand X



It’s unclear specifically how a lot of much more medical doctors will see Medicaid sufferers under the enhanced payments, but Merritt Hawkins Hawkins analysts, citing their review, really do not see Medicaid acceptance altering significantly in portion because more individuals will have private coverage, which normally pays physicians more than Medicaid or Medicare.


“Medicaid is the worst and Medicare is not much far better and neither are as great as business insurance coverage,” said Travis Singleton, senior vice president at Merritt Hawkins, a subsidiary of AMN Healthcare (AMN).


Physicians, Singleton mentioned, will “cherry pick” individuals depending on what insurance coverage they have.


“To believe doctors are going to adjust their tune and commence accepting sufferers,” Singleton said. “It’s unlikely to come about.”


The Medicaid acceptance trend signifies it will consider a whole lot to get physicians to open their doors to Medicaid sufferers.


The average fee of acceptance amongst household physicians, dermatologists, cardiologists, orthopedic surgeons and obstetrician/gynecologists in all 15 markets surveyed was 45.7 percent final 12 months, according to information gathered from almost 1,400 healthcare offices final 12 months.


The 2014 survey showed a drop from 55.4 percent acceptance in 2009, Merritt Hawkins said. In 2004, 49.9 percent of doctors surveyed accepted Medicaid patients.


If Medicaid acceptance does not enhance, it could impact alternatives of medical professionals for overall health strategies that contract with the plan. Key health insurance firms like Aetna Aetna (AET), Humana Humana (HUM), Centene (CNC), Wellpoint (WLP) and numerous Blue Cross and Blue Shield programs contract with states and the federal government to supply wellness rewards to Medicaid individuals.



As ObamaCare Brings Individuals, Physicians Not Warm To Medicaid

10 Ocak 2014 Cuma

Lifesize cutouts of doctors and nurses brings about a spike in healthful meals product sales at supermarket

Damian Edwards, the study’s author, explained if the scheme was rolled out across supermarkets nationwide, it could enhance the well being of the two thirds of the population who are not at present eating five portions of fruit and veg daily.


He explained: “A 20 per cent improve in fruit purchases is significant in behaviour adjust research and a phase forward in public well being terms.


“This with each other with indications that other more healthy lines noticed uplifts, shows that we’ve managed to motivate healthier choices by means of the use of behavioural cues rather than training literature.”


David Haslam, chairman of the Nationwide Obesity Forum stated: “Many of the adjustments that will support fight the obesity epidemic in the Uk will take many generations just before a meaningful impact is observed.


“The Healthier Options Pilot is a landmark review because it is one particular of the quite few initiatives to present an instantaneous result and for that reason that an improvement towards a healthier diet regime and a more healthy population can be effected virtually overnight.”


David Scott, head of policy at Morrisons, said: “We are truly pleased to have taken element in this groundbreaking study and these first benefits have given us a lot to feel about.


“We are currently taking a assortment of measures to support our consumers make healthier alternatives, including product reformulation, clear nutritional information, new healthier ranges, and robust promotions on fresh fruit and veggies each week.


“This examine is part of our broader commitment to well being and wellbeing, which we know matters to our consumers.”



Lifesize cutouts of doctors and nurses brings about a spike in healthful meals product sales at supermarket

1 Ocak 2014 Çarşamba

Specs appeal: German physics instructor brings cost-effective glasses to Rwanda | Mark Tran

MDG : OneDollarGlasses

OneDollarGlasses technicians can be trained in a fortnight, although it can take two sessions to perfect their expertise. Photograph: Martin Aufmuth




It took Martin Aufmuth three years to bring to fruition his concept to generate a device that can make low cost glasses.


Aufmuth, who won prime prize at the Siemens Stiftung award in October, explained his OneDollarGlasses venture was inspired by the book Out of Poverty by Paul Polak, which he read in 2009.


Aufmuth, who teaches maths and physics in Erlangen, Germany, is a huge fan of Polak’s idea of developing useful options that harness the power of markets to lessen poverty. “It showed me the relevance of innovations that sell for about $ one [60p],” he says.


Costing only $ one to make, the glasses will be offered for in between $ two to $ seven, so OneDollarGlasses opticians can earn their living from them. The spectacles are created by hand on a specially developed bending and milling machine, which requires no electrical energy. Virtually servicing-free of charge, it is made to function in the most remote villages. All the products fits into a wooden box with outer dimensions of 30cm x 30cm x 30cm.


The light-weight and flexible frames are produced from rustproof, hypoallergenic 1mm-spring-steel wire,and the polished, unbreakable lenses are made of polycarbonate with a hardened surface.


The OneDollarGlasses optician has a box with 25 lenses (manufactured in China) varying in strength from -six. to +6. diopters in methods of .5 diopters (a diopter is a unit of measurement of the optical energy of a lens).


Polycarbonate is a lot much more resistant than glass or resin, which are typically utilized in glasses. The lenses, which have notches, can be simply clicked into the frame by hand. Since the glasses – individually adjustable and virtually unbreakable – are lightweight, they do not demand standard nose bridges.


Technicians can be educated in just 14 days, despite the fact that it can consider two sessions to excellent their skills. Eye testing is carried out with a straightforward chart that can be connected to a wall or a tree. Three to four people can operate one manufacturing unit to make 5,000-ten,000 pairs of glasses a yr, Aufmuth says. Following a pilot undertaking in Uganda, Aufmuth and his teams have been instruction individuals in Rwanda since April.


The device, like the bending machine, optical equipment and material for the very first 500 pairs of glasses, costs €2,400 (£2010). Aufmuth realises the startup expenses are unaffordable in target nations, so they are covered fully by donations.


In accordance to the World Well being Organisation (WHO), about 150million people suffer from defective eyesight that could be rectified with a pair of glasses.


“Extreme poverty does not only imply hunger, but also illness, hopelessness, missed opportunities in existence,” Aufmuth says on his site. “Many of them can not go to college for that explanation, can not work and can – as a consequence – not provide for themselves and their families. This is what I want to alter.”




Specs appeal: German physics instructor brings cost-effective glasses to Rwanda | Mark Tran