Saturday, May 15, 2010

Tap Your Body's Hidden Talents

There are stupid human tricks, and then there are these five awesome physiological feats.
 
Stop Needle Pain!

Make your next flu shot feel less piercing by putting pressure around the area that's about to be stuck, says Ross I. Donaldson, M.D., M.P.H., assistant clinical professor of medicine at UCLA's David Geffen School of Medicine. "Make a circle with your thumb and forefinger and push down for a few seconds as you're receiving the shot," he says. By stimulating receptors for pressure or touch, you can override nearby pain receptors in your skin. "It confuses your nerves, so a shot feels more like a gentle poke than a sharp jab," Donaldson says.

Silence Hiccups!

Take the deepest breath you can, hold it for 10 seconds, then, without exhaling, suck in more air and hold it for five more seconds. Finally—still without exhaling!—breathe in as much more air as you can squeeze in, hold for another five seconds, and exhale. Then breathe normally. This technique immobilizes the diaphragm (the muscle at the base of your lungs), preventing the spasms. Luc Morris, M.D., and his colleagues at the New York University School of Medicine tested the method on 30 patients who were prone to frequent hiccups. "It worked immediately on everyone who could do it," he says.

Break A Fainting Spell!

Cross your legs, squeeze your thighs, and contract your abs. You can feel faint when your blood pressure drops and blood pools in your extremities. By tensing muscles, you keep your BP up and divert blood back to your heart and brain. University of Amsterdam researchers who tested muscle-tightening exercises found that they reduced the risk of passing out by 30 percent.

Heal Nighttime Heartburn!

Feeling the fire? Sleep on your left side. This preserves the natural curve of the esophagus, which helps keep stomach acid from creeping up. (When you sleep on your back or on your right side, gravity straightens out the curve.) A study by Graduate Hospital in Philadelphia found that frequent heartburn sufferers had fewer episodes when they slept on their left sides than when they slept on their backs or right sides.

Hold Back Tears!

If you're tearing up at an inappropriate moment, just clear your throat. "It interrupts the mechanism in the nasal passage and larynx that controls crying," says Rebecca Nagy, a Charlotte, N.C.-based meditation expert. Plus, after you clear your throat, you tend to swallow. This lifts your tongue to the roof of your mouth, which blocks the soft palate, making you unable to cry. "I've suggested this technique many times to brides and grooms who had trouble getting through their vows," Nagy says.

Thanks to Madonna Behen, Women's Health - Health MSN

Health Benefits of Green Tea

Experts explain green tea's potential benefits for everything from fighting cancer to helping your heart. It's difficult not to gush about green tea.

More than a decade's worth of research about green tea's health benefits -- particularly its potential to fight cancer and heart disease -- has been more than intriguing, as have limited studies about green tea's role in lowering cholesterol, burning fat, preventing diabetes and stroke, and staving off dementia.

"I believe in green tea based on everything written about it," says Katherine Tallmadge, RD, LD, a nutritionist and spokeswoman for the American Dietetic Association. "Green tea, white tea, black tea -- I like all of them."

Still, real-world evidence is lacking; most of the consistent findings about green tea's health benefits have come out of the lab.

The few large-scale human studies that have focused on green tea's impact on heart disease and cancer are promising, but many of those were conducted in the East, where green tea is a dietary mainstay. The outcomes are likely influenced by other lifestyle factors such as high consumption of fish and soy protein, says cardiologist Nieca Goldberg, MD, a spokeswoman for the American Heart Association and medical director of the New York University Women's Heart Center.

But Goldberg agrees with other health professionals: green tea has important antioxidants and compounds that help in maintaining good health.

Green Tea's Powerful Antioxidants

Green tea's antioxidants, called catechins, scavenge for free radicals that can damage DNA and contribute to cancer, blood clots, and atherosclerosis. Grapes and berries, red wine, and dark chocolate also have potent antioxidants.

Because of green tea's minimal processing -- its leaves are withered and steamed, not fermented like black and oolong teas -- green tea's unique catechins, especially epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), are more concentrated.

But there's still a question of how much green tea you need to drink to reap its health benefits. EGCG is not readily "available" to the body; in other words, EGCG is not always fully used by the body.

"We must overcome the issue of poor bioavailability [and other issues] in order to get the most out of their benefits," says Tak-Hang Chan, PhD, professor emeritus in the department of chemistry at McGill University in Montreal. Chan has studied the use of a synthetic form of EGCG in shrinking prostate cancer tumors in mice, with success.

Green Tea Vs. Cancer

Marji McCullough, ScD, RD, the American Cancer Society's strategic director of nutritional epidemiology, says human studies haven't yet proven what researchers like Chan have discovered in the lab: green tea's EGCG regulates and inhibits cancer growth and kills cells that are growing inappropriately.

"Epidemiologically, one of the challenges is finding populations that drink enough green tea and have for a long time," she says. "With cancer, it's always difficult to find the exposure time," or the point at which cancer cells begin to develop.

Still, it's difficult not to be intrigued by a few human studies that have shown that drinking at least two cups of green tea daily inhibits cancer growth.

One of them, a study conducted in Japan that involved nearly 500 Japanese women with Stage I and Stage II breast cancer, found that increased green tea consumption before and after surgery was associated with lower recurrence of the cancers.

Studies in China have shown that the more green tea that participants drank, the less the risk of developing stomach cancer, esophageal cancer, prostate cancer, pancreatic cancer, and colorectal cancer.

Finally, a recent analysis of 22 studies that probed the correlation between high tea consumption and reduced risk for lung cancer concluded that by increasing your daily intake of green (not black) tea by two cups may reduce the risk of developing lung cancer by 18%.

Is Green Tea Good for Your Heart?

It seems to be, but there are conflicting results of a few epidemiological studies conducted in the East and West.

In a study that involved 500 Japanese men and women, researchers found that drinking at least four cups of green tea every day may be related to the reduced severity of coronary heart disease among the male participants.

A Dutch study of more than 3,000 men and women found that the more tea consumed, the less severe the clogging of the heart's blood vessels, especially in women.

As Goldberg suggests, lifestyle and overall diet are critical to the outcomes of these studies.

But green tea's antioxidants are dilators, she says, because they improve the flexibility of blood vessels and make them less vulnerable to clogging -- and antioxidant-rich blueberries and pomegranates do the same.

"I think people should know these are important studies, that everyday foods that are an option may actually have health benefits," Goldberg says. "I think green tea, because of its antioxidant value, may have heart benefits, but it's not something we regularly prescribe to people, because there isn't as much evidence as there is in exercise's ability to improve heart health."

Green Tea and Weight

Green tea and its extract have been shown to fight obesity and lower LDL "bad" cholesterol -- two risk factors for heart disease and diabetes -- but in very limited studies. One study in the Netherlands and a study in Japan showed that green tea did both.

In the Dutch study, participants who drank caffeinated green tea lost more weight, but even those who typically drank the decaf variety saw a decrease in their waistlines and body weight. Researchers speculated that the caffeine helps with fat oxidation.

In the Japanese study, 240 men and women were given varying amounts of green tea extract for three months. Those who got the highest amount lost fat and weight and had lower blood pressure and lower LDL "bad" cholesterol.

Green Tea Straight Up

Taking weight loss supplements that contain green tea extract probably won't hurt, unless you have liver problems.

But the best way to get the most out of green tea -- even if your main goal is losing weight -- is to drink it.

"Taken altogether, the evidence certainly suggests that incorporating at least a few cups of green tea every day will positively affect your health," says Diane McKay, PhD, a Tufts University scientist who studies antioxidants. "It's not going to cure anything and it shouldn't be consumed as a drug, but it can complement the rest of the diet."

McCullough bears the same reminder: eat your fruits, vegetables, grains, seeds, and nuts -- and go ahead, drink as much green tea as you want.

"I don't think it can hurt to drink it. I'd focus on dietary sources rather than supplements because there are several compounds in green tea that might need to be consumed together. We just don't know yet," she says.

Thanks:- By Julie Edgar / WebMD Feature / Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD

Thursday, May 6, 2010

The Request For A Day Off

An employee comes into her manager's office to take a day off from work. The manager replies, "So you want a day off. Let's take a look at what you are asking for.
 
There are 365 days per year available for work.
 
There are 52 weeks per year in which you already have 2 days off per week, leaving 261 days available for work.
 
Since you spend 16 hours each day away from work, you have used up 170 days, leaving only 91 days available.
 
You spend 30 minutes each day on coffee break, which counts for 23 days each year, leaving only 68 days available.
 
With a 1-hour lunch each day, you used up another 46 days, leaving only 22 days available for work.
 
You normally spend 2 days per year on sick leave.
 
This leaves you only 20 days per year available for work.
 
We are off 5 holidays per year, so your available working time is down to 15 days.
 
We generously give 14 days vacation per year which leaves only 1 day available for work and I'll be darned if you are going to take that day off!"
 
Thanks to ManageTrainLearn

Panadol / Paracetamol

My husband was working in a hospital as an IT engineer, as the hospital is planning to set up a database of its patients and he knows some of   the doctors quite well. The doctors used to tell him that whenever they  have a headache, they are not willing to take PANADOL / PARACETAMOL.    
                                                   
In fact, they will turn Herbal Medicine or find other alternatives. This is because Panadol is toxic to the body, and it harms the liver. According to the doctor, Panadol will remain in the body for at least 5 years.
                                                    

And according to the doctor, there was an air-hostess who consumed lots of Panadol as she needed to stand all the time and work under lots of pressure. She's now in her early 30's, and she is undergoing kidney cleaning (DIALYSIS) every month.                             

Whenever we have a headache, that's because it is due to the electron / Ion imbalance in the brain. Some  alternative solution to cope with this matter is "Drink lots of water".
                                  
Another method will be to submerge your feet in a basin of warm water so that it brings the blood pressure down from your throbbing head.       
                                                   
As Panadol is a pain killer, the more Panadol you take, the lesser would  be your threshold for pain (your endurance level for pain).  We all will 
fall ill as we age.    
                                                   
Imagine that we had spent our entire life popping quite a substantial amount of Panadol (Pain Killer), when you need to have a surgery or    
operation, you will need a much more amount of general anesthesia.            
                                                 
If you have a very high intake of Panadol  throughout your life  (Migraine, Menstrual cramps ) it is very likely that  normal general anesthetics will have no effects on you  as your body is pumped / full with Panadol and your body is so used  to pain killer  that you would need a much stronger pain killer, Morphine???                          
                                                   
The thought is scary enough to turn me to Herbal Medicine or other healthier alternative. Value your health, value your life, THINK TWICE      
before you easily pop that familiar pill into your mouth again.       

Please don't take PANADOL always.

Monday, May 3, 2010

CEOs of the F500

In Europe only nine of the top 500 companies are led by a female CEO (1.8%). In Australia only four (2%) of ASX200 companies are led by a woman. In the US, 13 (2.6%) of the Fortune 500 companies have a female CEO.
 
In Blink, Malcolm Gladwell mentions the over-representation of white tall males in CEO roles. In the general American population only 3.9% of adult men are six feet two or taller, but among CEOs of the F500 companies almost 33% are six feet two or taller.
 
Thanks to Andrew O'Keeffe / Hardwired Humans 

What Is Democracy

"Democracy is a form of government that substitutes 'election by the incompetent-many' for 'appointment by the corrupt-few'."
~~~ George Bernard Shaw

"Democracy is a device that ensures we shall be governed no better than we deserve."
~~~ George Bernard Shaw
 
"Political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give the appearance of solidity to pure wind."
~~~ George Orwell

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Sleep Tight, Stay Safe

Health experts say that the average adult needs at least 7 to 8 hours of sleep a night. Why? Because people who don't get enough sleep are at greater risk of obesity and diseases like diabetes, stroke, heart disease, depression, and high blood pressure. Workers who suffer from these conditions may be absent more often and may be more at risk when they are on the job.
 
Furthermore, Lack Of Sleep Can Lead to Poor Concentration, Poor Judgment, Lessened Attentiveness, and More Mistakes, all of which can make workers less safe. Studies show that people suffering from too little sleep are apt to follow certain unhealthy behaviors, such as:

  • Eating foods high in sugar or carbohydrates
  • Smoking cigarettes or using tobacco
  • Using alcohol or sleeping pills to help them get to sleep
These actions, in turn, can lead to safety problems if your workers are groggy from the side effects of sleeping pills or alcohol, or jittery from too much sugar. If you notice workers who are often yawning or working slowly, mention that they seem particularly tired and remind them that their safety and the safety of others require them to be alert when they're on the job. 

Poor Sleep Quality Affects Safety Performance In Other Ways As Well. Many workers who sleep less than 6 hours per night report symptoms such as:

  • Becoming impatient with others
  • Finding it difficult to concentrate
  • Making errors in their work
  • Having trouble organizing or failing to finish assigned tasks on schedule
Lack of sleep also leads to drowsy driving, which is estimated to cause thousands of accidents each year.

Night Shifts Have Been Found to be Particularly Risky Because They Interfere With the Body's Normal 24-Hour Sleep Patterns. Both shift work and long work hours have been associated with health and safety risks.

Keep Your Workers Wide Awake And Safe On the Job By Giving Them the Following Suggestions to improve their sleeping habits.

  • Set a regular schedule for going to bed every day—they can't make up for a big deficit on weekends.
  • Create an environment that promotes comfortable sleeping—quiet, dark, and cool, with a comfortable mattress and pillows.
  • Get regular daily exercise, but not right before going to bed.
  • Avoid caffeine, alcohol, nicotine, or heavy meals close to bedtime.
  • Establish a soothing bedtime routine such as soaking in a warm tub, reading, or listening to soft music.
  • Don't use bedtime to start planning—or worrying.
  • Make a point of organizing their lives so they can get the 7 to 8 hours of sleep a night that most people require.
Why It Matters

  • Recent polls show that during the last 9 years, the number of Americans who sleep less than 6 hours a night jumped from 13 percent to 20 percent.
  • Polls also find that more than one-half of adults—potentially 110 million licensed drivers—have driven when drowsy at least once in the past year.
  • Nearly one-third of drivers polled (28 percent) say that they have nodded off or fallen asleep while driving a vehicle.
  • Another study reports that workers on the graveyard shift are likely to make five times the number of serious mistakes and are 20 percent more likely to suffer a serious injury.
Thanks to SafetyDailyAdvisor