KOSHER v, NATURAL

Wednesday, December 26, 2007
"Kosher" beats "All Natural." Who knew?

American consumers, it seems, who made the "Kosher" label
the most popular claim found on product labels in 2007, beating
out  "All Natural" and "No Additives or Preservatives," according
 to figures from Mintel’s Global New Products Database, which
monitors worldwide product innovation in consumer packaged
goods markets.

This past year, 3,984 new kosher food products and 728 kosher
beverages were launched, the company reported.

The kosher marketplace has been growing 10-15 percent over the
 last 15-20 years, according to Rabbi Eliyahu Safran, senior rabbinic
coordinator at the Orthodox Union.

Americans spend $10.5 billion annually on kosher products,
the Jerusalem Post reported.

What is Kosher? Click here to find out.
http://www.oukosher.org/index.php/kosher/learn_what_is_kosher/

Read Full Article
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,318454,00.html

On Probiotics

Finally — Probiotics Becoming More Popular 

Friendly bacteria known as probiotics are growing in popularity in the United States,
as increasing numbers of people catch on to their benefits to your digestive system.

The food industry, eager to capitalize on the latest health food trends, has introduced
more than 150 probiotic and prebiotic (nutrients that feed probiotics) food products
 in 2007, compared with 100 in 2006 and just 40 in 2005.

You can now buy probiotic pills, yogurts, snack bars, baby formulas and even chocolate,
 all of which claim to “regulate your digestive health” or “strengthen your body’s defenses.”

The National Institutes of Health has even designated the research of gastrointestinal
 bacteria and probiotics as a major initiative, and other studies have already been
completed or are underway, such as:

A Canadian study that found fermented milk containing Lactobacillus acidophilus and
Lactobacillus caseii could help prevent antibiotic-related diarrhea. A study from Finland
that found an oat drink containing Bifidobacterium lactis bacteria helped bowel function
 in nursing home residents.

A study by researchers in Argentina, who are investigating whether milk fermented with
 lactic acid bacteria can reduce amounts of cancer-causing substances in your intestine.
Probiotic bacteria are beneficial because they help control the illness-causing bacteria
in your intestinal tract. When the bad bacteria proliferate beyond control, illness can arise
. High levels of good bacteria keep them in check.

U.S. retail sales of probiotic-containing foods and supplements totaled $764 million in
2005, and are expected to reach $1 billion in 2010, according to BCC Research.

Fermented yogurt drinks, which are full of probiotics, have been used since ancient times
 to cure intestinal illnesses and promote longevity.
Sources:

Yahoo News December 9, 2007
 

Cinnamon More Info

Reader’s Digest       

Health Bonus on Cinammon



The natural chemicals in cinnamon can help prevent blood platelets from clumping
together and forming dangerous clots that can trigger a heart attack. And studies
show that a mere whiff of cinnamon can boost brain activity and improve concentration.


Glycemic Load: Very low

Menu Magic

There are more ways than you can imagine to sprinkle cinnamon into your diet.

    * Add cinnamon to applesauce as the apples are cooking or use it to spice up baked apples.
  
    * Shake it on whole grain toast or whole grain English muffins.

    * Add a half teaspoon or so of cinnamon to ground coffee before starting the pot. You can
also add it to tea or drink chai, which contains cinnamon and other spices.

    * Mix it into hot cereals, especially oatmeal.

    * Sprinkle a little cinnamon on top of ice cream or frozen yogurt or add it to plain
 yogurt along with a little honey.

    * Mix some with low-fat cream cheese for a tasty bread spread.

    * Flavor winter squash or sweet potatoes with cinnamon.

Perfect Portion: 1/2 teaspoon

Just 1/2 teaspoon a day can benefit your health. If you like cinnamon, go
ahead and eat a couple of teaspoons a day, but don’t go overboard.
Cinnamon contains natural compounds that can be toxic in high doses.

Last Updated: 2007-03-16

Cinnamon

Cinnamon
Would you have imagined that cinnamon has health benefits?

Magic Foods
 http://www.rdstore.com/product_detail.cfm?pid=4039

Boost Your Health

When you think of cinnamon, you might conjure up images of hot apple pie or warm-
from-the-oven oatmeal cookies. And of course, there wouldn’t be cinnamon toast
without it. You’d probably never imagine, though, that cinnamon has health benefits.
In fact, researchers recently discovered that this warming spice can actually help lower
 your blood sugar. Some of the natural compounds in cinnamon have the ability to mimic
insulin, helping glucose get into cells, where it can be used for energy, and significantly
lowering blood sugar in the process.

One study involving 60 men and women found that taking as little as 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon
of cinnamon a day lowered blood sugar by 18 to 29 percent. It also reduced bad LDL
cholesterol by 7 to 27 percent in people with diabetes.

You probably also wouldn’t guess that cinnamon is a good source of fiber (although actually,
 it’s not so surprising when you consider that it comes from the bark of the cinnamon tree).
 Two teaspoons provides 2.5 grams of fiber—more than 1/2 cup of raw cabbage or bell
peppers or two dried apricot halves.

Cinnamon also contains the mineral manganese, which may help improve the way your
body uses blood sugar. Just 2 teaspoons can set you up with more than one-third of the
manganese you need for the day.

Health Bonus

The natural chemicals in cinnamon can help prevent blood platelets from clumping together
and forming dangerous clots that can trigger a heart attack. And studies show that a mere
whiff of cinnamon can boost brain activity and improve concentration.
———————————————————————
Magic Foods:   http://www.rdstore.com/product_detail.cfm?pid=4039

Products Recalls – Sunglasses & Cookies

Product Recalls
December 11, 2007
(The Associated Press) — The following recalls have been announced:

-About 260,000 children’s sunglasses, imported by FGX International Inc.
and made in China, because surface paint on the sunglasses can contain high levels
of lead, which is toxic if ingested  by young children.

No injuries or incidents have bbeen reported. The recall involves 15 styles of
children’s sunglasses, including some  that may have the name "Foster Grant"
on the sunglasses.  They were sold at stores  nationwide from January through
 November this year. For more  information, visit
http://www.fgxi.com or http://www.cpsc.gov.

——————————-
CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES
——————————

-Harry & David is recalling about 50 jars each of Oatmeal Chocolate Chip
Chocolate Peanut Butter
and Cranberry Vanilla Chip cookie mixes because
they may contain undeclared ingredients, including coconut, peanut, milk
and sulfites. People with an allergy or severe sensitivity to these ingredients run
the risk of serious or life-threatening allergic reaction if they consume these
products. No injuries have been reported, according to the company, based
in Medford, Ore. The company distributed the cookie mixes throughout the
United States in Harry & David stores beginning Nov. 27.
For more information, consumers can call 800-233-1101.
——————————————————–
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
——————————————————-

Fasting

Study: Monthly Fasting May Help Heart
December 11, 2007

(The Associated Press) — Mormons have less heart disease — something
doctors have long chalked up to their religion’s ban on smoking. New
research suggests that another of their "clean living" habits also may be
 helping their hearts: fasting for one day each month.

A study in Utah, where the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints is based,
found that people who skipped meals once a month were about 40 percent less
 likely to be diagnosed with clogged arteries than those who did not regularly fast.

People did not have to "get religion" to benefit: non-Mormons who regularly took
 breaks from food also were less likely to have clogged arteries, scientists found.

They concede that their study is far from proof that periodic fasting is good for
anyone, but said the benefit they observed poses a theory that deserves further
testing.
———————————————
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22186390/
——————————————–

Re: Honey

Study: Try Honey for Children’s Coughs
December 4, 2007

CHICAGO (AP) – A teaspoon of honey before bed seems to calm children’s
coughs and help them sleep better, according to a new study that relied on parents’
 reports of their children’s  symptoms.

The folk remedy did better than cough medicine or no treatment in a three-way
comparison.   Honey may work by coating and soothing an irritated throat, the
study authors said.

"Many families are going to relate to these findings and say that grandma was right,"
said lead author Dr. Ian Paul of Pennsylvania State University’s College of Medicine.

The research appears in December’s Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine

Federal health advisers have recently warned that over-the-counter cough and cold
 medicines shouldn’t be used in children younger than 6, and manufacturers are taking
some products for  babies off the market.

Three pediatricians who read the study said they would tell parents seeking alternative
 remedies  to try honey. They noted that honey should not be given to children under age
1 because of a rare but serious risk of botulism.

For the study, researchers recruited 105 children with upper respiratory infections from
a clinic in Pennsylvania. Parents were given a paper bag with a dosing device inside. Some
 were empty. Some contained an age-appropriate dose of honey-flavored cough medicine
containing dextromethorphan.
 And some contained a similar dose of honey.

The parents were asked about their children’s sleep and cough symptoms, once before the
bedtime  treatment and once after. They rated the symptoms on a seven-point scale.

All of the children got better, but honey consistently scored best in parents’ rating of their
 children’s cough symptoms.

"Give them a little time and they’ll get better," said Pat Jackson Allen, a professor at Yale
 University School of Nursing.

The study was funded by a grant from the National Honey Board, an industry-funded
agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The agency had no influence over the
study design, data or results, Paul said.
——————————————————-
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

 

    

Fat is the New Norm

FOXNews.com
Report: In America, Fat is the New ‘Normal’
Thursday , August 09, 2007
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,292746,00.html

America’s collectively growing waistline has made it more “socially acceptable”
for people, especially women, to carry a few extra pounds, a new report says.

Researchers from Florida State University and Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
 argue that this “acceptance” has fueled the ballooning weight of the population
 as the perception of what is considered a normal body size changes.

“This is a social force that we are trying to document because the rise in obesity
has occurred so rapidly over the past 30 years,” said FSU assistant professor
of economics Frank Heiland, in a news release from the university. “Medically
speaking, most agree that this trend is a dangerous one because of its connection
 to diabetes, cancer and other diseases. But psychologically, it may provide relief
 to know that you are not the only one packing on the pounds.”
————————————————————————–
FULL STORY:  http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,292746,00.html
—————————————————————————————-

WORKERS SICKENRF BY PIG BRAINS

ABC News
Minn. Slaughterhouse Workers Fall Ill
11 Minnesota Slaughterhouse Workers Fall Ill;
 Pig-Brain Removal Technique Is Suspected

By MARTIGA LOHN
The Associated Press

AUSTIN, Minn. On the slaughterhouse floor at Quality Pork Processors Inc.
 is an area known as the "head table," but not because it is the place of honor.
 It is where workers cut up pigs’ heads and then shoot compressed air into the
 skulls until the brains come spilling out.

But now the grisly practice has come under suspicion from health authorities.

Over eight months from last December through July, 11 workers at the plant
all of them employed at the head table developed numbness, tingling or other
neurological symptoms, and some scientists suspect inhaled airborne brain
matter may have somehow triggered the illnesses.

The use of compressed air to remove pig brains was suspended at Quality Pork
earlier this week while authorities try to get to the bottom of the mystery.

"I’m still in shock, I guess," said 37-year-old Susan Kruse, who worked at the
plant for 15 years until she got too weak to do her job last February. "But it was
 very surprising to hear that there was that many other people that have gotten this."

Five of the workers including Kruse, who has been told she may never work
again have been diagnosed with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy,
or CIDP, a rare immune disorder that attacks the nerves and produces tingling,
numbness and weakness in the arms and legs, sometimes causing lasting damage.

New cases of CIDP occur at the rate of one or two per 100,000 people each
 year, according to Dr. P. James B. Dyck of the Mayo Clinic.

State health officials said there is no evidence the public is at risk either from those
 afflicted or from any food leaving the plant, which supplies Hormel Foods Inc.

The working theory from two Mayo Clinic neurologists treating the workers:
Exposure to pig brain tissue scattered by the compressed air triggered the illnesses.

"As we’ve investigated these patients, we have information that suggests very
strongly that the immune system is activated very strongly in a very compelling
way," said Dr. Daniel Lachance.

Compressed air could turn some brain matter into a mist that could be inhaled
by workers, said Mike Doyle, a microbiologist who heads the University of Georgia’s
 Center for Food Safety. Or the workers may have come into contact with something
 dangerous and then touched their noses or mouths, he said.

Scientists have yet to figure out if there is something in the brain matter that could
 be causing the symptoms.

"The hard part will be identifying the causative agent and associating that with the
 animal, showing that the animal carries it," Doyle said.

Minnesota Health Department spokesman Doug Schultz said the agency is looking
 into the theory but has not ruled out other causes.

Quality Pork has not said what it does with the pork brains. Sold fresh and in cans,
pork brains are fried and eaten in sandwiches or gravy in some parts of the country.
But it is a small market, and the American Meat Institute, which represents most of
the nation’s pork processors, does not even track sales.

Exactly how many of the plant’s 1,300 employees worked at the head table is unclear;
 Quality Pork’s chief executive did not return calls. Kruse said there were 11 workers
 at the head table on any given shift, but the lineup changed because of turnover or
because people were assigned other jobs.

In a rapid-fire process that is noisy, smelly and bloody, severed pigs’ heads are cut up
at the head table at a rate of more than 1,100 an hour. Workers slice off the cheek and
 snout meat, then insert a nozzle in the head and blast air inside until the light pink mush
that is the brain tissue squirts out from the base of the skull.

Kruse, whose job was to remove meat from the back of the animals’ heads, said sh
e doesn’t recall any spray or mist from the de-braining. The head-table workers were
protected by safety glasses, helmets, gloves and belly guards, but none wore anything
 over their mouths or noses, she said.

Head-table workers are now required to wear plastic face shields and protective plastic
or rubber sleeves, the Health Department said.

The use of compressed air to remove hog brains is relatively uncommon, according to i
ndustry officials. That’s because many plants don’t even remove them. And some of the
 processors that do extract brains simply split the hogs’ skulls open.

Some of the biggest pork processors Tyson Foods Inc., JBS Swift & Co. and Cargill Inc.
 said they don’t handle brains because the market isn’t big enough. No pork workers at
Tyson, Cargill or JBS Swift have reported symptoms similar to those of the Quality Pork
 employees, the companies said.

CIDP attacks the lining around the nerves, slowing or blocking the brain’s signals to the
muscles. But exactly what triggers the attack is unknown.

Victims can recover fairly quickly if the illness is caught early, said Dr. Kenneth Gorson,
a neurologist at St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center in Boston.

In advanced cases, treatment arrests the disease but doesn’t reverse its effects, he said.
 Treatment involves infusions of immune globulin or a plasma-exchange technique that
removes antibodies from the patient’s blood. Another option is a steroid called prednisone.

American Meat Institute spokeswoman Janet Riley said: "We are watching the situation
 very closely and we’ve offered any help that the state health department would need.
But certainly if facts came to light that justified the change in practices, you could imagine
 protecting the workers is critical."

Workers are worried, said Richard Morgan, who heads the union local at Quality Pork.

"The process has stopped, where they assume it was at," he said. "It could have been
from something different. Nobody knows at this time. We can talk about gray matter
till we’re blue in the face."
————————————————–
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
————————————————–
Copyright © 2007 ABC News Internet Ventures

VACCINE ALERT!

Dud Vaccines Leave Children at Risk
By Thomas Hanson on
December 5, 2007 07:26 AM

According to news reports, each year thousands of American
children are administered vaccines that were duds, ruined by
poor refrigeration. That news emerges as a push also is occurring
 to examine the preservatives in vaccines as a potential cause of
autism in children.

Commentary: The news of dud vaccines is very troubling for
parents who essentially end up with two separate possibilities.
First, if the parent learns of the issue, their child must then go
through the trauma of receiving another shot to make up for
the failed dose. However, the greatest risk is of course that an
 under-strength dose is not discovered and the child is left at risk
 to an unnecessary health issue. In fact, one has to wonder if
 perhaps it is the under-strength doses in combination with the
preservatives that somehow contribute to the possibilities of
autism as well.

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