Tag Archive | "2004"

The Militarization of Emergency Aid to Haiti: Is it a Humanitarian Operation or an Invasion?


Haiti has a longstanding history of US military intervention and occupation going back to the beginning of the 20th Century. US interventionism has contributed to the destruction of Haiti’s national economy and the impoverishment of its population.

The devastating earthquake is presented to World public opinion as the sole cause of the country’s predicament.

A country has been destroyed, its infrastructure demolished. Its people precipitated into abysmal poverty and despair.

Haiti’s history, its colonial past have been erased. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 10.0/10 (1 vote cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: +1 (from 1 vote)

Posted in Archive, Authors, Business, Environment, Featured, History, J.K., Politics, US Government, World WideComments (0)

Cosmic Explosion: Among the Brightest in Recorded History


Scientists have detected a flash of light from across the Galaxy so powerful that it bounced off the Moon and lit up the Earth’s upper atmosphere. The flash was brighter than anything ever detected from beyond our Solar System and lasted over a tenth of a second. NASA and European satellites and many radio telescopes detected the flash and its aftermath on December 27, 2004. Two science teams report about this event at a special press event today at NASA headquarters. A multitude of papers are planned for publication.

Artist conception of the December 27, 2004 gamma ray flare expanding from SGR 1806 20. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 8.0/10 (1 vote cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Archive, Authors, Cogent Nirvana, Cogent Nirvana, History, J.K., Science, Space, TechnologyComments (0)

Doctors: Recommend Medical Marjiuana For Minors With ADHD in California


Hey, hyperactive kids, in California you can get stoned — legally. California doctors are now recommending marijuana to children diagnosed with attention hyperactivity disorder, Sphere reports.

Since 2004, California has given out more than 36,000 medical marijuana cards.  The number of these cards going to children - it appears that all of the known cases are teenagers – is not known, as doctors are not required to report medical marijuana cases. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in ArchiveComments (0)

CIA: Secret ‘Torture’ Prison Found at Fancy Horseback Riding Academy


The CIA built one of its secret European prisons inside an exclusive riding academy outside Vilnius, Lithuania, a current Lithuanian government official and a former U.S. intelligence official told ABC News this week.

Where affluent Lithuanians once rode show horses and sipped coffee at a café, the CIA installed a concrete structure where it could use harsh tactics to interrogate up to eight suspected al-Qaeda terrorists at a time.

“The activities in that prison were illegal,” said human rights researcher John Sifton. “They included various forms of torture, including sleep deprivation, forced standing, painful stress positions.” Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 7.0/10 (2 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: +2 (from 2 votes)

Posted in Archive, Authors, Featured, J.K., Politics, US Government, World WideComments (0)

World Health Organization: Mobile Phones Cause Brain Cancer


The WHO has carried out a 10-year study that has evidence that heavy mobile users have a higher risk of developing brain tumours later in life, reports the Daily Telegraph.

The results of the £20m study are expected to be published.

Elisabeth Cardis, who heads the report team, said, “In the absence of definitive results and in the light of a number of studies which, though limited, suggest a possible effect of radio frequency radiation, precautions are important.” Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 7.0/10 (1 vote cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: +1 (from 1 vote)

Posted in Archive, Authors, J.K., Science, TechnologyComments (0)

Method Man: Arrested for Tax Evasion


STATEN ISLAND, NEW YORK (BNO NEWS) — Clifford Smith, better known as rapper “Method Man,” was arrested on tax evasion charges on Monday morning, officials said.

Smith surrendered himself to the NYPD Detective Squad of the Richmond County District Attorney’s Office this morning, District Attorney Danield Donovan, Jr. and New York State Department of Taxation and Finance Acting Commissioner Jamie Woodward announced. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Authors, J.K., Music, RapComments (0)

NCAA: Get Used To Losing During College Football Season


COLUMN: Get used to losing during college football season
Luke Atkinson/The Daily
Tuesday, September 29, 2009

There is a new craze sweeping college football, and as much as it is hated by hardcore fans who live week-to-week depending how their team performs, it may be here to stay.

Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in C.M., SportsComments (0)

Scientists: Debate the Normalcy of Ancient ‘Hobbits’


More than 1 1/2 years after discovering a race of ancient, “Hobbit”-like little people on a remote tropical island, scientists still do not know what to make of them. Are they a new species of human ancestor? Or were they modern humans suffering from a debilitating genetic deformity?

A Homo florensiensis skull, left, found on the island of Flores in Indonesia, is dwarfed by a modern human skull.

Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Education, History, J.K.Comments (0)

Found: Body of Murder Victim Brooke Wilberger


CORVALLIS, Ore. — After years of searching, the remains of Corvallis murder victim Brooke Wilberger have been found and on Monday, her accused killer changed his plea to guilty in the case.  Background: Wilberger murder

Wilberger’s killer, Joel Courtney was set go on trial for the 19-year-old’s death in February, 2010, but officially changed his plea to guilty Monday and was sentenced to life in prison after weeks of negotiations, the D.A. said. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in J.K., The WireComments (0)

Police: Yale Lab Worker Arrested in Student’s Killing


NEW HAVEN, Connecticut (CNN) — A Yale University lab technician was arrested Thursday and charged with murder in the slaying of a graduate student whose body was found in the basement wall of an off-campus medical research building, police said.

Raymond Clark was apprehended about 8:10 a.m. ET at a Super 8 motel in Cromwell, Connecticut, where he had spent the night after being released Wednesday following his submission to DNA testing.

Bond for Clark has been set at $3 million, New Haven Police Chief James Lewis said.

Hours after his arrest, Clark appeared in court and did not enter a plea. Standing with chains on his ankles and his palms on a table, he looked only at the judge and spoke only to acknowledge that his rights were read to him.

A court date of October 6 was set.

Lewis described the killing as an instance of “workplace violence” but did not elaborate. Video Watch chief, acquaintances talk about Clark »

Annie Le’s body was found in the basement wall of an off-campus medical research building Sunday. She had been strangled.

Le, 24, a pharmacology student, was last seen alive September 8, the day she appeared in a surveillance video entering a four-story lab at 10 Amistad St., about 10 blocks from the main campus.

Her body was found on what was to have been her wedding day.

Lewis said the arrest “went smoothly.” Video Watch the police chief announce the arrest »

He could not release details about the charges or whether DNA results led police to arrest Clark, who initially was described as a person of interest in the case.

“This arrest warrant has been sealed, so no further information can be released in order to comply with this court order,” Lewis said.

Clark could have been arrested Wednesday if he had declined to provide DNA samples and allow police to search his home, but he was released after complying, New Haven city spokeswoman Jessica Mayorga said. Police had been monitoring the motel where Clark was staying.

When asked about the arrest, Clark’s attorney David Dworski referred CNN to the statement he released earlier: “We are committed to proceeding appropriately with the authorities with whom we are in regular contact.”

Two other search warrants also were executed Wednesday — one on property belonging to Clark that was not named in the first warrant and a second for Clark’s vehicle, which was being processed Wednesday evening, Lewis said earlier.

He said Clark is a technician who does “custodial-type” work at the building. Clark answered police questions for a while but later retained an attorney and stopped, Lewis said.

Yale President Richard Levin said while the school’s administration is “relieved” by the news of Clark’s arrest, “we must resist the temptation to rush to judgment.”

Clark, a lab technician at Yale since December 2004, had nothing in his employment history that “gave an indication that his involvement in such a crime might be possible,” Levin said in a statement Thursday.

Lewis said Clark and Le worked in the same building and passed in the hallway, but he refused to comment further on whether they knew each other.

Investigators have collected about 250 pieces of evidence, Lewis said. Video Watch police discuss the investigation »

Lewis earlier said police had reviewed about 700 hours of video and interviewed more than 150 people, some more than once. Video Watch a timeline leading up to Le’s death »

Authorities have not released information on what DNA evidence may have been found, although investigators said earlier that bloody clothing was found hidden above tiles in a drop ceiling in another part of the building.

Police have not described the clothes that were found, nor said to whom they might have belonged. Teams of investigators at a Connecticut State Police lab worked through the weekend processing and examining the bloodstained garments.

But Thomas Kaplan, editor in chief of the Yale Daily News, said a Yale police official told the college paper that the clothes were not what Le was wearing when she entered the building.

Lewis said Wednesday that processing of the building was nearing completion and police would probably clear it Thursday morning. Video Watch a report on the police saying the killing was no random act »

Le was to have been married Sunday on New York’s Long Island to Jonathan Widawsky, a Columbia University graduate student.

Le was from Placerville, California, and seemed to have been aware of the risks of crime in a university town. In February, she compared crime and safety at Yale with other Ivy League schools for a piece for B magazine, published by the medical school.

Among the tips she offered: Keep a minimum amount on your person. When she walked over to the research building last week, she left her purse, credit cards and cell phone in her office.

http://www.cnn.com/

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in J.K., The WireComments (0)

Must Watch: FDA & Heart Disease


1.) Are You at Low Risk for Heart Disease? Probably Not

A new study released yesterday sounds pretty shocking: Fewer than 10 percent of Americans qualify as being at low risk for heart disease. Just 7.5 percent of us (to be exact) have none of the following risk factors that put our hearts in danger: being overweight (a body mass index above 25), being a smoker, having high cholesterol (above 200 mg/dL) or high blood pressure (above 120 mm Hg/80 mm Hg), or having diabetes, according to the study, which was published in the journal Circulation. That’s a decrease from 15 years ago, when 10.5 percent of us fell into the low-risk category. So the news here is that we’re going backward despite the fact that experts know a lot more today about preventing heart disease than they did a decade or two ago.

Starting in the late 1970s, when quitting smoking first came into fashion, an increasing number of us fell into the low-risk category. Blame the backsliding on our ever expanding waistlines. “Increasing adiposity is likely to be a major driver,” write Harvard Medical School researchers in an editorial that accompanied the study. This is just the tip of the iceberg, they warn. As the growing number of overweight kids reach adulthood, “low-risk” Americans will become an endangered species. And, yes, this will certainly drive up healthcare costs and the price tag of reform.

Women, though, fare better than men. More than 10 percent of us have no risk factors for heart disease, compared with fewer than 5 percent of men. We can thank our bodies’ production of the female hormone estrogen, which protects our hearts before menopause and is thought to explain why we develop heart disease, and accompanying risk factors, about a decade later than men, on average.

The question is: What can we do to keep our risk from creeping up as we age and our estrogen levels plummet?

For starters, young women need more encouragement not to smoke. Nearly 30 percent of those ages 25 to 44 are smokers compared with just 11 percent of folks over 65. Many women start smoking in their teens in the mistaken belief that it will help them control their weight. They then don’t want to quit for fear of gaining weight. While women typically gain about 5 to 10 pounds after quitting, there’s no question that smoking is a far greater risk to your heart health than being overweight, especially if you’re over 35 and take oral contraceptives.

Exercise can help offset the quitter’s weight gain, but a recent Temple University study found another surprising method that works: body image therapy. Former smokers who took a body image workshop, in which they talked about issues they had with their bodies, wound up, on average, losing a few pounds. They followed the book Body Image: A Handbook of Theory, Research, and Clinical Practice by Thomas F. Cash, Ph.D, and Thomas Pruzinsky, Ph.D., and attended group discussions every week. If you’re not into joining a support group, try to encourage a few friends to read the book along with you and discuss its themes like the influence of waiflike magazine models and how to retrain the brain to think differently about perceived body flaws. Over time, you’ll find yourself thinking about your body in a more positive light, and this can actually help dissuade you from overeating. (Contrary to what you might think, it’s the self-loathing that causes us to binge—usually after an episode of self-punishing starvation.) In fact, nonsmokers, too, can benefit from an improved body image to help ward off the midlife spread.

In addition to not smoking, we need to double our efforts to keep the scale steady as we age. We can do this by increasing our activity levels and cutting down on supersize portions. Check out this slide show for more tips.

http://health.usnews.com/

2.) Number of Americans at low risk of stroke, heart disease dropping, study finds

After nearly a quarter century of improvement, the number of Americans at low risk for heart disease and stroke has dropped substantially, raising fears about the future health of the country and the financial burden it faces, according to research published Monday.

The study found that only 7.5% of Americans between the ages of 25 and 74 could be considered at low risk, according to the latest national data. At its peak in the early 1990s, that number had reached 10.5% following dramatic improvements from the early 1970s.

Doctors attributed the country’s recent deteriorating heart health to an energy imbalance – too many calories and too little exercise – that has become a way of life for many Americans.

“We are starting to lose the battle against heart disease because as a society we are too overweight,” said James Stein, a professor of cardiovascular medicine at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. “It’s a tragedy that despite all of our medical advances and scientific understanding of this disease, our lifestyles are getting the worst of us.”

The news comes at a time when the country is debating a national health care plan as a way to slow spiraling medical costs. Because so few people are low risk, there is a huge potential for reducing heart disease and its cost through prevention efforts. But moving most adults into the low-risk group is a distant and challenging goal, the study authors wrote.

It is estimated that heart disease and stroke cost the nation $234 billion a year. Nearly 17 million Americans have heart disease and nearly 7 million have suffered a stroke.

Part of a dwindling group

Jason Rzepka, 37, of Pewaukee is a member of the small and shrinking group of Americans who are at low risk for developing cardiovascular disease. He doesn’t smoke or have diabetes; has good cholesterol and blood pressure numbers; and maintains a healthy weight.

Rzepka, who works as a surgical technician at Froedtert Hospital in Wauwatosa, said he has seen what happens when people don’t take care of themselves.

The father of two said he works out several times a week and eats a low-fat diet.

“We don’t keep snacks or cookies in the house,” he said. “For me to splurge would be to have a granola bar.”

The study, published in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association, analyzed data from large national health surveys taken every five years beginning in the early 1970s. The most recent survey data was obtained between 1999 and 2004, and it involved about 9,400 people.

To be considered at low risk for cardiovascular disease a person must meet five criteria: a non-smoker; never diagnosed with diabetes; not overweight (body mass index of less than 25); total cholesterol of less than 200 milligrams per deciliter and not using a cholesterol-lowering drug; and blood pressure of less than 120/80.

One of the biggest declines in cardiovascular health was in women. Between 1998 and 2004, 15.5% of women were in the low risk group. That number dropped to 10.5% between 1999 and 2004.

The 25- to 44-year-old age group also saw a significant decline from 17.2% to 12.1%.

Men, older people and minorities had the fewest people in the low-risk category.

“These are clearly not welcome developments,” said lead author Earl Ford, medical officer of the U.S. Public Health Services at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

Other studies had shown that being at low risk can reduce the chances of developing cardiovascular disease between 60% and 90%. That translates into another six to 10 years of life expectancy.

Only smoking has seen a consistent improvement over the last 25 years, according to the study.

Weight a big contributor

The decline in the number of people with a healthy body weight was the biggest contributor to the shrinking low-risk group, dropping from about 50% of adults in the 1970s to 32% between 1999 and 2004.

Blood pressure, cholesterol and diabetes also were headed in the wrong direction, but to a smaller degree, the study said.

“There has been a decline in how we are taking care of ourselves,” said Mark Obermyer, an internal medicine and pediatric specialist with Froedtert Hospital and the Medical College of Wisconsin.

Obermyer said many people who maintained a healthy lifestyle as young adults don’t realize that as they get older metabolic changes occur that require them to do a little more in order to remain at low risk for heart disease.

“What we used to do doesn’t cut it anymore,” he said.

An editorial that accompanied the study noted that there had been major declines in deaths from heart disease between 1980 and 2002, largely due to new therapies. However, the growing number of people who are overweight and have high blood pressure and diabetes suggests that the mortality rate may increase.

The editorial said more needs to be done to support better nutrition and physical activity for children.

If not, “medical costs will continue to burgeon and displace investments in education, parks and other public infrastructure,” the editorial said.

http://www.jsonline.com

3.) Study: More Americans at Higher Risk of Heart Disease

Epidemiologists love to crunch numbers — and Americans, on the whole, love to ignore them. Even the most health-conscious among us soon grow numb to the storm of statistics warning us about rising levels of obesity or falling levels of exercise or all the other numerical indicators that tell us how unwell we’re getting. But on Sept. 14, a team of researchers released a new finding that should cause even the most data-weary folks alarm.

According to a paper published Monday in Circulation, a journal of the American Heart Association, fewer than 8% of all Americans can now be considered at low risk for heart disease. No one needs a statistician’s help to know that that means more than 92% of us are not as healthy as we could be, and that’s worth paying attention to.

The study was actually the latest in a series of studies, all of which have been part of a program known as the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES). Administered by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the program is a four-decade attempt to evaluate the country’s health by conducting surveys and physical exams with a rotating sample group of about 10,000 Americans. The first NHANES study was conducted from 1971 to 1975, the second from 1976 to 1980, the next from 1988 to 1994, and the most recent — from which the heart-disease findings are only now being released — from 1999 to 2004.

For that portion of the survey, the investigators focused on people in the 25-to-74 age group and evaluated five different risk factors for cardiovascular disease: blood pressure, cholesterol, smoking history, obesity and diabetes. To be considered at low risk, subjects had to have a blood pressure reading of 120/80 mm Hg or lower without the aid of medication and a cholesterol level below 200 mg/dL, also without drugs. They had to be nonsmokers or at least former smokers, not be overweight or obese, and never have been diagnosed with diabetes. “From a prevention point of view, it’s important that Americans achieve as many of these goals as possible,” says the CDC’s Dr. Earl S. Ford, the lead author of the study.

That’s why it’s troubling that so few of us did. In the latest NHANES, just 7.5% of adults were considered low risk in all five areas. That’s a significant dip from the 10.5% in the 1988-94 survey — which was already a decidedly poor score. Within the adult population, there is no particular demographic slice that’s doing particularly well, but some are clearly faring better than others. Among women in the current study, 10.5% were considered low risk (a decrease from 15.5% in the previous survey), compared to just 4.8% of men (down from 5.7%). In the 25-to-44 age group, 12.1% came in at low risk, compared to 3.5% of 45-to-64-year-olds and just 0.8% in the 65-to-74 demographic. Whites, among whom 8.2% were at low risk of heart disease, did better than Mexican Americans (5.3%), and both did better than African Americans (4.6%). The racial gaps have much to do with socioeconomic disparities and unequal access to health care, but there are also genetic factors at play, with certain groups having a higher susceptibility to certain conditions.

Bad as the current numbers are, they are actually not historic lows. In the 1971-75 survey, just 4.4% of the entire sample group was considered low risk; that percentage climbed to 5.7% in the next survey before peaking in the third one. The trend was reversed this time around. “Until the 1990s, we were headed in a positive direction,” says Ford. “But then it took a turn.”

Surprisingly — and encouragingly — rising heart-disease risk does not necessarily translate to rising heart-disease deaths. Last year, the American Heart Association announced that since 1999, deaths from coronary heart disease fell a remarkable 25.8%. There are a lot of reasons for that happy development, but the leading ones are better drugs and technology, closer adherence to evidence-based practice guidelines and the simple precaution of getting people in cardiac distress to the hospital fast.

All the same, the best way not to need the hospital at all is not to get sick, and even the greatest advances in treatment will amount to little if we can’t bring the risk factors under control. The most important factors to attack, the Circulation paper explains, are not cholesterol or tobacco use. Both continue to drop, and with recent federal action to boost cigarette taxes and allow the Food and Drug Administration to regulate tobacco for the first time, the decline in smoking may actually accelerate. (Indeed, last year, the share of Americans who use tobacco fell below 20% for the first time in modern memory.)

The real problems are blood pressure, obesity and diabetes, all of which are relentlessly on the rise. Worse, there’s a time bomb in the trend lines. According to a 2008 survey by the CDC, 32% of American children are now overweight or obese, a number that at least appears to have plateaued after a long period of steady increase but one that’s shocking all the same. Once those children reach the 25-to-74 demographic, their heart-disease risk could cause the national numbers to explode. “As these children grow up, I expect to see a decrease in the number of people who qualify as low risk,” says Dr. Seema Kumar, a pediatric endocrinologist and medical director of the Weight Management Program for Children at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. “Our obese children are at high risk of becoming obese adults; some of them are already developing high blood pressure, high cholesterol and diabetes.”

The answer to much of this — as is so often the case — is better diet, more exercise and early detection. Such preventive measures form one of the cornerstones of the ongoing health-care debate — one of the few points on which nearly all sides can agree. The authors of the new study call for physicians to be reimbursed for heart-disease-prevention measures like working with their patients to develop weight-loss and smoking-cessation plans and to be allowed enough breathing room in their schedules to let them do good cardiac assessments. Schools and workplaces, the paper argues, should also be in on the prevention game. Since both are places where large numbers of people congregate, they are also places where simple measures like blood-pressure screenings could do the most good.

“Much potential exists to reverse ominous trends in cardiovascular health,” the authors write, “but this is unlikely to occur without making prevention of overweight and obesity a national priority.” There’s no way of knowing when Americans who have heard this refrain again and again will take notice — and take action — but when 92% of us are affected, now seems like a very good time.

http://www.time.com/

4.)Heart Disease a Risk Factor for Most Americans

It seems that most of us Americans now have at least a low-risk for heart disease. Many of us are at even higher risks – overweight, out-of-shape, hypertensive, or diabetic.

Earl S. Ford, MD, MPH, of the CDC’s Division of Adult and Community Health at the National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention in Atlanta, and colleagues published a report online yesterday in Circulation, Journal of the American Heart Association which looked at data from four national surveys of adults ages 25 to 74 to estimate the proportion of Americans who have a low risk factor burden.

The researchers found that Americans considered at low-risk for heart disease now make up less than 8% of the population. The age-adjusted prevalence of low risk factor burden increased from 4.4% [in 1971 to 1975] to 10.5% [in 1988 through 1994], before decreasing to 7.5% [in the most recent national survey].

The pattern was the same for men and women. Whites were more likely to be living heart-healthy lives than were blacks except for the period from 1976 to 1980, when there was no racial difference in low-risk factor burden.

Low risk of heart disease means the person is unlikely to develop cardiovascular disease or risk factors for cardiovascular disease. This person will have a total cholesterol less than 200 mg/dL and therefore not need lipid-lowering medications. This person’s blood pressure will have a systolic measurement <120 mm Hg and diastolic <80 mm Hg and therefore not need antihypertensive medications. This person will have a body mass index <25 kg/m2. This person will not be a diabetic and will not be a smoker.

The researchers suggest that a societal effort is needed to encourage healthy eating and physical activity to lower the risk factors not only for heart disease, but also for other conditions. They suggest adaptations to towns and cities that favor pedestrians and cyclists. Such initiatives should start in schools and the work place, and will require good collaboration between politicians and doctors for success.

Sources:
Ford ES, et al “Trends in the Prevalence of Low Risk Factor Burden for Cardiovascular Disease Among United States Adults” Circulation 2009; 120:000-000

http://www.emaxhealth.com/

5.) How Air Pollution Causes Heart Disease

It’s well known that measures such as exercise, a healthy diet and not smoking can help reduce high blood pressure, but researchers at the University of Michigan Health System have determined the very air we breathe can be an invisible catalyst to heart disease.

Inhaling air pollution over just two hours caused a significant increase in diastolic blood pressure, the lower number on blood pressure readings, according to new U-M research.

The study findings appear in the current issue of Hypertension, a publication of the American Heart Association.

Nearly one in three Americans suffer from hypertension, a significant health problem that can lead to heart attack, heart failure, stroke, and other life-threatening problems.

“Although this increase in diastolic blood pressure may pose little health risk to healthy people, in people with underlying coronary artery disease, this small increase may actually be able to a trigger heart attack or stroke,” says Robert D. Brook, M.D., lead author and assistant professor of medicine in the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine at the University of Michigan Health System.

In the study, researchers hoped to identify which air pollutants are harmful and how the pollutants work to damage the cardiovascular system.

Eighty-three people in Ann Arbor and Toronto were involved in testing and breathed air pollution, concentrated by a mobile air quality research facility, that was similar to what would be found in an urban environment near a roadway.

“We looked at their blood vessels and then their responses before and after breathing high levels of air pollution,” explains Robert Bard, M.S., co-author and clinical research manager at U-M.

Ozone gases, a well-known component of air pollution, were not the biggest culprit. Rather, small microscopic particles about a 10th of the diameter of a human hair caused the rise in blood pressure and impaired blood vessel function, tests showed. The blood pressure increase was rapid and occurred within 2 hours, while the impairment in blood vessel function occurred later but lasted as long as 24 hours.

It’s believed these fine particles deposit deep into the lungs and certain components may gain entrance to the blood stream, or cause an inflammatory response throughout the body. There is also evidence that functions in the body’s nervous system are also disrupted.

The research is the latest in the relatively new field of environmental cardiology which looks at the association between air pollution and heart disease. Brook says the findings support efforts to maintain current ambient air quality standards set by the Environmental Protection Agency.

“It really bolsters and strengthens the importance of maintaining air quality for human health,” says Brook.

There are practical ways to avoid exposure to high levels of air pollution, such as avoiding unnecessary travel or commutes and not exercising during rush hour, or near busy roadways, Brook says. In modern society, the burning of fossil fuels is the primary source for air pollution.

“If air pollution levels are forecasted to be high, those with heart disease, diabetes or lung disease should avoid unnecessary outdoor activity,” he says.

http://www.emaxhealth.com/

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 6.5/10 (2 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Education, Health & Fitness, J.K.Comments (2)

The Answer to the Eternal Mystery: What Makes up a Filet-O-Fish?


The answer to the eternal mystery of what makes up a Filet-O-Fish sandwich turns out to involve an ugly creature from the sunless depths of the Pacific, whose bounty, it seems, is not limitless.

The world’s insatiable appetite for fish, with its disastrous effects on populations of favorites like red snapper, monkfish and tuna, has driven commercial fleets to deeper waters in search of creatures unlikely to star on the Food Network.

One of the most popular is the hoki, or whiptail, a bug-eyed specimen found far down in the waters around New Zealand and transformed into a major export. McDonald’s alone at one time used roughly 15 million pounds of it each year. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Education, Health & Fitness, J.K.Comments (1)

Germany on Alert


In recent weeks intelligence officials in Germany have been inundated with a rush of terror-threat warnings, NEWSWEEK has learned. But investigators are not sure how much of the information is genuine, and suspect some sources are making up stories in an effort to scam money out of German spy and law enforcement agencies nervous about a possible attack in the run up to the country’s Sept. 27 elections.

Intelligence that has been flowing into German counterterrorism units includes jihadist video messages, electronic “chatter,” and information from informants who claim to have specific details about impending strikes. The video messages are among the most alarming indicators, said a European counterterrorism official, who like others quoted in this article, asked for anonymity when discussing sensitive information. Especially disturbing is the number of videos that make specific threats against Germany, the official said, noting that it is much higher than in the past.

European and American counterterrorism officials say that they are concerned about the possibility that jihadists may see Germany’s national elections, in which the future of Christian Democrat Chancellor Angela Merkel’s coalition government with Social Democrats is at stake, as an opportunity to make a political statement. The officials believe jihadists may see potential parallels between the preelection period in Germany and the period before the jihadist bombings of commuter trains in Madrid on March 11, 2004.

Quantcast

The Madrid attacks, which killed more than 190 people and injured nearly 10 times that many, were launched only a few days before national elections were to take place in Spain. Before the bombings, polls indicated that the conservative prime minister, José María Aznar, was slightly favored to win reelection. After the attacks, however, voters swept Aznar from office and installed as prime minister his socialist challenger, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero. Some German investigators worry that, even though would-be terrorists may harbor no specific grievance against Merkel or her coalition partners, they might want to attack before the election simply to demonstrate that they have the power to influence the outcome. It is unclear, however, whether the Germans have received any intelligence indicating that any such plot is in the works.

A U.S. counterterrorism official said that, based on the volume of intelligence, there is as much concern about a possible attack in the weeks after the election. A European counterterrorism official said that some of the intelligence the Germans have collected details the timing and location of possible preelection attacks. Law enforcement agencies are giving these threat alerts special attention. However, most, if not all, of the information the intel agencies received fell apart when authorities launched intense inquiries. Investigators now suspect that the information about specific attacks may well have been fabricated by informants to defraud intelligence officers, who are often willing to hand out generous payments to tipsters for hot tips about impending attacks.

© 2009

http://www.newsweek.com/

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in J.K., Politics, The Wire, World WideComments (0)

Former Super Bowl MVP: Eli Manning is Now NFL’s Highest Paid Player


Eli Manning

ALBANY, N.Y. — Eli Manning has agreed to a new six-year, $97 million contract extension with the New York Giants that will make him the highest paid player in the NFL with an average salary of roughly $15.3 million.

A person close to the talks who asked not to be identified says Manning is guaranteed $35 million under the deal that will keep him with the Giants through the 2015 season. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the deal was not signed and had not been announced. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in J.K., SportsComments (0)


advert

The Capsule (Click a word to learn more!)

The Katy Capsule

<ul><li><strong>woo_ads_rotate</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_ad_250_adsense</strong> - <script type=\"text/javascript\"><!--
google_ad_client = \"pub-0689640681309890\";
/* 250x250, created 8/4/09 */
google_ad_slot = \"2799027112\";
google_ad_width = 250;
google_ad_height = 250;
//-->
</script>
<script type=\"text/javascript\"
src=\"http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js\">
</script></li><li><strong>woo_ad_250_image</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/woothemes-250x250.gif</li><li><strong>woo_ad_250_url</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_content_adsense</strong> - <script type=\"text/javascript\"><!--
google_ad_client = \"pub-0689640681309890\";
/* 468x60, created 8/4/09 */
google_ad_slot = \"3383985217\";
google_ad_width = 468;
google_ad_height = 60;
//-->
</script>
<script type=\"text/javascript\"
src=\"http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js\">
</script></li><li><strong>woo_ad_content_disable</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_ad_content_image</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/woothemes-468x60-2.gif</li><li><strong>woo_ad_content_url</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_image_1</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/125x125a.jpg</li><li><strong>woo_ad_image_2</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/125x125b.jpg</li><li><strong>woo_ad_image_3</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/125x125c.jpg</li><li><strong>woo_ad_image_4</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/125x125d.jpg</li><li><strong>woo_ad_image_5</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/woothemes-125x125-4.gif</li><li><strong>woo_ad_image_6</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/woothemes-125x125-4.gif</li><li><strong>woo_ad_mpu_adsense</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_ad_mpu_disable</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_ad_mpu_image</strong> - http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/we-are-the-99-percent-occupy-houston-october-6-2011.jpg</li><li><strong>woo_ad_mpu_url</strong> - http://occupyhouston.org</li><li><strong>woo_ad_top_adsense</strong> - <script type=\"text/javascript\"><!--
google_ad_client = \"pub-9286382510395736\";
/* 468x60, created 11/8/09 */
google_ad_slot = \"9947229947\";
google_ad_width = 468;
google_ad_height = 60;
//-->
</script>
<script type=\"text/javascript\"
src=\"http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js\">
</script></li><li><strong>woo_ad_top_disable</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_ad_top_image</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/468x60a.jpg</li><li><strong>woo_ad_top_url</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_url_1</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_url_2</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_url_3</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_url_4</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_url_5</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_url_6</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_alt_stylesheet</strong> - darkblue.css</li><li><strong>woo_author</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_auto_img</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_cat_ex</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_comment_posts</strong> - 5</li><li><strong>woo_content</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_content_archives</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_content_feat</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_custom_css</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_custom_favicon</strong> - http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/15-LOGO.png</li><li><strong>woo_featured_category</strong> - Select a category:</li><li><strong>woo_featured_posts</strong> - 3</li><li><strong>woo_feat_entries</strong> - Select a number:</li><li><strong>woo_feedburner_id</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_feedburner_url</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_google_analytics</strong> - <script type=\"text/javascript\">
var gaJsHost = ((\"https:\" == document.location.protocol) ? \"https://ssl.\" : \"http://www.\");
document.write(unescape(\"%3Cscript src=\'\" + gaJsHost + \"google-analytics.com/ga.js\' type=\'text/javascript\'%3E%3C/script%3E\"));
</script>
<script type=\"text/javascript\">
try {
var pageTracker = _gat._getTracker(\"UA-9929195-1\");
pageTracker._trackPageview();
} catch(err) {}</script></li><li><strong>woo_home</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_home_arc</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_home_link</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_home_link_desc</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_home_link_text</strong> - Home</li><li><strong>woo_home_thumb_height</strong> - 130</li><li><strong>woo_home_thumb_width</strong> - 260</li><li><strong>woo_image_height</strong> - 15</li><li><strong>woo_image_single</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_image_width</strong> - 15</li><li><strong>woo_logo</strong> - http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/16-newheader_copy.jpg</li><li><strong>woo_manual</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/support/theme-documentation/gazette-edition/</li><li><strong>woo_popular_posts</strong> - 8</li><li><strong>woo_resize</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_shortname</strong> - woo</li><li><strong>woo_show_carousel</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_show_video</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_single_height</strong> - 400</li><li><strong>woo_single_width</strong> - 588</li><li><strong>woo_tabs</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_themename</strong> - Gazette</li><li><strong>woo_thumb_height</strong> - 15</li><li><strong>woo_thumb_width</strong> - 15</li><li><strong>woo_twitter</strong> - TheKatyCapsule</li><li><strong>woo_uploads</strong> - a:14:{i:0;s:80:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/16-newheader_copy.jpg";i:1;s:70:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/15-LOGO.png";i:2;s:73:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/14-Header1.png";i:3;s:73:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/13-Header1.png";i:4;s:73:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/12-Header1.png";i:5;s:78:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/11-header4_copy.png";i:6;s:73:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/10-Header1.png";i:7;s:77:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/9-HEADER2_copy.jpg";i:8;s:72:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/8-Header1.png";i:9;s:98:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/7-small-final-logo_black_for_banner.png";i:10;s:81:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/6-small-final-logo.jpg";i:11;s:98:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/5-small-final-logo_black_for_banner.png";i:12;s:98:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/4-small-final-logo_black_for_banner.png";i:13;s:75:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/3-logo-trans.png";}</li><li><strong>woo_video_category</strong> - Political</li></ul>