Archive for November, 2007

Diabetes death rates higher in black youths

In the United States, diabetes affects 18 per 10,000 children and adolescents younger than age 20. CDC investigators analyzed deaths between 1979 and 2004 with an underlying cause of diabetes among US children and teens 1 to 19 years old.

“Although diabetes deaths among youths were rare during 1979-2004, numbering less than an average of 80 per year for the entire period, diabetes death rates for black youths were consistently higher than those for white youths,” they report.

“Additionally, whereas diabetes mortality did not change substantially for white youths during 1994-2004, death rates for black youths increased significantly,” the investigators further report.

From 2003 to 2004, the annual average diabetes death rate per million youths was 2.46 for black youths compared with 0.91 for white youths.

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Posted on November 18th 2007 under Diabetes | No Comments »

Save Money on Health Insurance During Open Enrollment

(ARA) - It’s “open enrollment” season for many Americans, the time of year when employers make changes to their health insurance benefits. Unfortunately, this year many employees will learn that their health insurance costs are going up, or that their coverage will soon be discontinued.

The average cost of employer-sponsored health insurance premiums has increased over 80 percent since 2000, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. Fewer and fewer businesses are offering health insurance benefits at all. Businesses that continue to supply health insurance are being forced to shift a greater portion of the costs to their employees. With trends like this, what can you do to save on health insurance costs this season?

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Posted on November 14th 2007 under Health Insurance | No Comments »

Virus sickened Hawaii cruise ship’s passengers

Norwalk virus was the source of an outbreak that sickened about 225 passengers aboard the Norwegian Cruise Lines ship Pride of Hawaii, state health officials confirmed yesterday.

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Posted on November 13th 2007 under News & Viruses & Infections | 1 Comment »

Beta carotene protects memory in U.S. study

WASHINGTON, Nov 12 (Reuters) - Beta carotene taken as a dietary supplement for many years may protect against declines in memory, thinking and learning skills that often precede Alzheimer’s disease, researchers said on Monday.

The study, published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, pointed to a protective effect against cognitive decline in healthy men who look beta carotene for about 18 years, but not in men who took the supplements for an average of a year.

The findings indicate beta carotene may be an important weapon in warding off memory problems that may foreshadow Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia, the researchers said.

“This is the first trial that has found any way to help your memory if you’re healthy. I think it does tell us that we can change how our memory improves or worsens,” Francine Grodstein of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, who led the study, said in a telephone interview.

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Posted on November 13th 2007 under News | No Comments »

Viagra vision link raises red flag

Pfizer viagra pills in packages(CNN) — U.S. health officials are investigating reports that some men who use Viagra and other impotence drugs are getting a rare form of blindness.

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P. S. There are about 20 million users of the anti-impotence drug Viagra.

Posted on November 13th 2007 under Erectile Dysfunction & Men's Health | No Comments »

Smokers Urged to Kick Bad Habit in the Butt

“There are so many reasons for people to get motivated to quit smoking,” said Shawna Strickland, clinical assistant professor and respiratory therapy program director in the MU School of Health Professions. “The health benefits actually start within minutes of quitting. The cost savings of no longer buying cigarettes can be tremendous, and by quitting, smokers are helping other people who are being harmed by their second-hand smoke.”

According to the American Cancer Society, heart rate and blood pressure drop just 20 minutes after kicking the habit. The blood’s carbon monoxide level returns to normal in just 12 hours. Circulation improves and lung function increases within three months. Within a year, coughing and shortness of breath decrease. The excess risk of coronary heart disease drops to half of that of someone who smokes. Five years after quitting, the risk of a stroke drops to the same risk level of a non-smoker.

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Posted on November 13th 2007 under Stop Smoking | No Comments »

Soma (Carisoprodol): product description, how taken, side effects and more

Soma (Carisoprodol) drug description

Carisoprodol is a centrally-acting skeletal muscle relaxant. It works by blocking nerve impulses (or pain sensations) that are sent to your cerebral cortex. Some case reports have shown that carisoprodol has abuse potential, but it continues to be extensively established. Carisoprodol is a crystalline, colourless powder, having a bitter flavour and a mild, characteristic odor . It is freely solvable in alcohol, chloroform and acetone, but slightly solvable in water. Its solvability is practically independent of pH.

Carisoprodol is used, along with repose and physical therapy, to cure injuries and other painful muscular conditions. Because of its anodyne-sparing effect on opioid anodynes carisoprodol is especially useful against various types of pain (whether or not related to muscle cramp) . Carisoprodol is useful by itself or mixed with aspirin along with codeine and caffeine as well.

This is a backquote from the article Soma (Carisoprodol) on our blog. We hope this article’ll be usefull for our customers and readers.

Posted on November 12th 2007 under Muscle Relaxant & Pain Relief | No Comments »