Posts Tagged ‘General Health’

Good Foods for General Health

Back in the 1990s, the evidence that fruit and veg played an important role in protecting against cancer seemed compelling. But as time has moved on, so has the science.

A new review published this week casts renewed doubt on the role of fruit and vegetables. Looking at the evidence overall, including the results of several long-term studies on fruit and veg, the review concludes that cutting down drinking and keeping a healthy bodyweight are far more important in protecting against the disease rather than eating more fruit and veg.

So what exactly does the new review show?

The author, Cancer Research UK’s Professor Tim Key, reviewed large, high-quality studies of the effect of fruit and vegetables on cancer risk published over the last 10 years.

He delved into the evidence about cancers of the mouth, throat, stomach, bowel, lung, breast, prostate, and overall cancer risk to assess the strength of the findings.

He focused particularly on four large, recent, good-quality studies. These studies all looked at how eating fruit and vegetables affects overall cancer risk – and yet only one found hard evidence of a link – and even then the effect was tiny. The team behind this study, from the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer (EPIC), concluded that it could have been a chance finding, caused by the way their research was conducted.  We blogged about this last April.

In the new review, Professor Key went on to examine the effect of fruit and vegetables on risk of different types of cancer. He concluded that for breast, prostate and stomach cancers there was little or no link. For lung and bowel cancer the evidence was weak and inconsistent.

The evidence was strongest in the case of cancers of the mouth and throat, but the effects were relatively small compared to the effects of smoking and drinking – the main causes of these cancers. But people who smoke and drink heavily generally eat fewer fruits and vegetables.

Professor Key argues that what these studies actually measured wasn’t the effects of a lack of fruit and veg, but the effects of too much alcohol and tobacco. Large studies like EPIC try to make allowances for these things, but when the effects of smoking and drinking are so big, it can be hard to fully adjust for them. This is known as “residual confounding”.

Overall, the new review suggests  that intake of fruit and vegetables does not have a significant impact on overall cancer risk. As Professor Key writes,

It is unlikely that fruit and vegetables have a ‘broad spectrum’ protective effect against cancer, and likely that some of the associations observed for particular cancer sites are simply due to confounding, particularly by smoking.

This conclusion implies that, at least in relatively well-nourished westernised populations, a general increase in total fruit and vegetable intake will not have a large impact on cancer rates.

How does the new study change things?

General recommendations for people to eat plenty of fruit and vegetables will not, and should not, change in response to this study. There is plenty of evidence that fruits and vegetables play an important role in reducing the risk of high blood pressure and coronary heart disease. Also, fruit and vegetables contain many of the nutrients needed for general health.

Even in terms of cancer, this study isn’t a big shift. Much of the original evidence linking fruit and vegetables to a lower cancer risk came from “case-control studies”. These studies ask people with cancer and healthy volunteers (controls) to remember their diets over previous years. They can all too easily be influenced by people’s beliefs about cancer affecting what they recall.

Over the last decade, these have been all but replaced by very large “cohort studies”, like those reviewed by Professor Key. These recruit healthy individuals and ask them to record their diet and lifestyle before cancer develops. These have found that fruit and vegetables are only associated with lower risks of mouth and throat cancers, and as Professor Key says, it’s not clear whether these protective effects are real.

But there are still many unanswered questions. It may be that certain nutrients found in fruits and vegetables do affect cancer risk, but that the effect is restricted to certain groups of people or certain types of fruits or vegetable. This could explain why these effects haven’t been seen in existing studies. Professor Key points out that more research into the basic nuts and bolts of how cancer develops could yield clues in this direction.

This won’t be the end of research into fruit and vegetables and cancer. But scientists may now need to consider taking a different tack to unravel any small but significant effects. In the meantime, efforts to address tobacco use, obesity and alcohol have a far greater potential to reduce cancer rates.  Or, as Professor Key concludes in the paper.

Current advice in relation to diet and cancer should include the recommendation to consume adequate amounts of fruit and vegetables, but should put most emphasis on the well-established adverse effects of obesity and high alcohol intakes.

Hazel

Source:  http://scienceblog.cancerresearchuk.org

Enviroment and Health

A clean environment is essential to human health and welfare. However, the interactions between environment and human health are very complex and difficult to assess. This makes the use of the precautionary principle particularly useful. The health impacts most popular are related to air pollution, unsafe water and poor sanitation. Much less is known about the health impacts of hazardous chemicals. Noise is a new environment and health. Climate change, stratospheric ozone depletion, loss of biodiversity and land degradation can also affect human health.

In Europe, the main concerns relating to environmental health are related to air pollution indoors and outdoors, unsafe water, poor sanitation and dangerous chemicals. The impacts related to health are respiratory and cardiovascular diseases, cancer, asthma and allergies, as well as reproductive disorders and neurological development.

Fine particles and ozone at ground level are the main threats to human health of air pollution. Clean Air of the EU for Europe (CAFE) estimated that a total of 348 000 premature deaths per year due to exposure to fine particles (PM2.5). At this level of exposure, the average life expectancy is reduced by approximately one year.

The EU Green Paper states that exposure to noise at around 20% of the EU population suffer from noise levels that health experts believe that this is unacceptable, which can lead to annoyance, disturbance Sleep and adverse health effects.

Transport, especially in urban areas is a major contributor to human exposure to air pollution and noise.

Much less is known about the health impacts of chemicals. There is growing concern about the effects of exposure to mixtures of chemicals at low levels for long periods throughout life, particularly during infancy and pregnancy.

The persistent long-term effects, such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), and those used in long-lasting structures – such as building materials – may present risks, even after production has been removed.

Many pollutants are known to affect human health are increasingly going under the regulatory control. However, there are emerging issues for the environmental pathways and effects on health are still poorly understood. Examples are electromagnetic fields (EMF), pharmaceuticals in the environment and infectious diseases (the broadcast which may be affected by climate change). The development of “early warning” should be encouraged to reduce the time between detecting a potential hazard and political action and intervention.

Source: European Enviroment Agency.

How to Maintain a Beautiful Body

Undergoing surgical or non-surgical procedures is one of the ways that can help

Flickr: body beach

us to improve our confidence in our bodies. We all have something that we dislike about our bodies and fortunately, there will often be an intervention available to correct this.

For those of us who suffer with `bingo wings` liposuction will remove the excess fat from the upper arms and then a surgical `lift` can be used to remove excess skin and re-sculpt the shape of the arms. Liposuction is also suitable for other areas of the body, such as the back, thighs and buttocks and is often done with `lift` procedures. Liposuction is also common alongside a tummy tuck, the procedure that will remove excess fat and skin from the abdomen. This is especially helpful in removing the stubborn fat that will not tone through exercise and diet.

Liposculpture is also becoming popular as a procedure to re-sculpt the body. Also known as tumescent liposuction, the procedure is carried out under local anaesthetic rather than general and it is less traumatic for the body.

Breast augmentation, or enlargement remains one of the most popular procedures and for many women, this gives their confidence a massive boost. If you are concerned with sagging, which is common after breast-feeding, then you may wish to consider a mastopexy to lift the breasts. There is also a procedure available to reduce the size of the breasts.

There are many other procedures to help us to maintain that beautiful body. Options for the neck include liposuction that will remove the excess fat around the jaw line. The sagging skin can also be removed and muscles tightened, helping to lift the neck. A belt lipectomy or lower body lift will lift the lower areas of the body, including stomach, thighs, buttocks and back, whereas the upper lift includes the chest, breasts and middle of the back. A total body lift procedure is the belt and upper lift carried out together.

There are different weight loss procedures such as gastric bands and gastric balloons that are available for those who require assistance with managing their weight. Laser treatment offers a selection of non-surgical procedures for permanent hair removal, blemish removal as well as the removal of thread veins on the body.

These are just a few of the many surgical and non-surgical options that are available and The Hospital Group should be your first stop to find out more about what can be done to assist you to maintain that beautiful body.

Health in a changing climate

In August 2007, local health authorities in Italy detected a high incidence of disease in Castiglione di Cervia unusual and Castiglione di Ravenna, two small villages divided by a river. Nearly 200 people were affected and died an old man (Angelini et al., 2007).

After detailed research, the disease was found to be Chikungunya, a virus of insect origin transmitted to humans by the Aedes mosquito or more common “tiger” in Africa and Asia. The source of infection was attributed to a man on holiday in the region.

It is believed that the patient was infected before traveling to Europe, but was bitten by a tiger mosquito in Italy. The tiger mosquito is a vector or carrier of the virus and the insect in question is believed that the spread of the virus to another person in the village. This triggered a chain reaction with tiger mosquito bites the infected and spreading the virus to a mini-epidemic developed.

A network of interactions

The outbreak of chikungunya depends on a complex web of interactions and conditions that reveal some of the health risks and the challenges we face in a globalized world. Tourism, climate change, trade, movement of species and public health played an important role in the situation.

The tiger mosquito is believed to have been introduced into Europe through a wide range of imported goods – from ornamental plants, such as “Lucky Bamboo” used tires. The larva of the mosquito has been found in many parts of Europe, but only survive outdoors in warmer climates, the South and in greenhouses farther north – in the Netherlands, for example.

Dengue and West Nile fever is also now in Europe and also transmitted by mosquito bites. According to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) in Stockholm, Sweden, as the first large outbreak in Romania in 1996, infection with West Nile virus has been recognized as a major cause of concern for public health Europe. There is no vaccine available and the main preventive measures are aimed at reducing exposure to mosquito bites.

Intensive food production

We may be creating conditions for the spread of infectious diseases – conditions that did not exist before. The industrialization of food production, for example, is a major concern.

For the farming of one type of animal, we run the risk of producing “monoculture” with little genetic variability. These animals are very susceptible to diseases created by poor hygiene or infection of the wild animals, including birds. Once inside the monoculture, disease can mutate and spread, even to people who work with animals in question. Overuse of antibiotics has become an accepted method to compensate for the lack of natural resistance – a practice that can cause its own problems.

“Modern agriculture and efficient, like public health, looks to science and medicine to meet some of the demands of a globalized world. Although modern agriculture has benefited many of us with supplies of cheaper foods and abundant, may also lead to unexpected pressures and problems, “says Dr. Marc Sprenger, Director of ECDC.

“For example, as a result of the widespread use of antibiotics in agriculture, their effectiveness may diminish as more bacteria become resistant, which could potentially have an impact on human beings too,” says Dr. Sprenger.

Innovation: the environment and health

Efforts to combat climate change will improve air quality

EU climate package and Renewable Energy (CARE) aims to:

• reduce emissions of greenhouse gases by 20% in 2020

• increase the share of renewable energies by 20% in 2020

• improve energy efficiency by 20% in 2020.

The efforts required to meet these goals will also reduce air pollution in Europe. For example, improvements in energy efficiency and greater use of renewable energies thus lead to reduced combustion of fossil fuels – a major source of air pollution. These positive effects are referred to as “co-benefits” of climate change policy.

It is estimated that the previous packet was reduced annual cost of meeting EU targets on air pollution billions of euros. And the savings of European health services could be up to six times higher.
Joining the points in Europe

New species and new diseases arriving in Europe are just some of the health impacts of climate change. Many of the environmental and social impacts ultimately affect human health through changes in the quality and quantity of water, air and food, and altered weather patterns, ecosystems, agriculture and the media subsistence.

Climate change may exacerbate existing environmental problems such as pollution of air, disrupt sustainable water supply and sanitation.

The heat wave in Europe in the summer of 2003, killing more than 70 000, stressed the need for adaptation to climate change. The elderly and people with certain diseases are more at risk and deprived population groups most vulnerable. In congested urban areas with soil sealing and heat-absorbent surface, the effects of heat waves may be exacerbated due to insufficient cooling of the night and poor drafts.

For stocks in the EU, mortality has been estimated an increase of 4.1% per degree increase in temperature over a (locally specific) cutoff. In the 2020s, the estimated increase in heat-related mortality resulting from projected climate change could exceed 25 000 per year, mainly in the regions of Central and Southern Europe.

Discussion connection health, land use, agriculture, tourism, trade and climate change needs to develop an imaginative way. Unable to connect public health and the environment and climate change right now, “says Dr. Sprenger.

“For example, recently visited the health department and asked who was in charge of climate change related issues and they said no one was there. This is not to judge any department or authority, but show that we must change our thinking about these problems, since they are all connected,” says Dr. Sprenger.
“Public health systems must begin to adapt and open to the possibility of new diseases and new climatic conditions. People may be misdiagnosed at the time because your doctor is unfamiliar with a new virus. Many look and feel like the flu. We need new tools to address new challenges such as training, and facilities such as laboratories need to be flexible and adaptable”, he says.

Source: European Enviroment Agency.