VINEGAR

PERSONAL CARE

  • Nail polish – will go on smoother and stay longer if you clean your nails with white vinegar before applying it.
  • Skin and hair – rinse to remove soap and shampoo residues.
  • Remove perfume – swab unwanted perfume with vinegar to remove.
  • Skin moisturizer – wipe face, hands or feet with vinegar to soften. Can be used in place of after shave, and in place of acne medications.
  • Corn and callus remover – soak a cloth in vinegar, and tape over the callus or corn overnight.
  • Age spot fader – mix equal parts of onion juice and vinegar and use it daily on age spots. Allow a few weeks for results to appear.
  • Hiccups – a teaspoon to a tablespoon of vinegar.
  • Lice – put warm vinegar on the hair, dip a nit comb in vinegar to help remove nits. It is known to break down the glue the nits use to stay attached.
2848 Waxhaw Indian Trail Road

FLOURIDE

Fluoride is added to children’s milk in 42 primary schools

  •  October 26, 2008

     

This can’t be good for them.

A NEW strategy with the focus of preventing dental problems among children is be introduced in Sheffield.
Dentists in the city, who are currently paid according to how much treatment they carry out, will be asked to sign a new contract that will encourage them to carry out more preventive work.

The changes are part of NHS Sheffield’s Dental Health Commissioning Strategy, which outlines how services should be run up to 2011.

Key changes will come into force in March next year, when the current three-year dental contract comes to end.

The director of dental public health for Sheffield, John Green, said the current dental contract was very "activity focused."

He said: "It focuses on treatment, which can be a bit of a problem, so at the end of the three years there is an opportunity to revisit it all and focus on other things, such as prevention, to try and stop teeth going bad in the first place.

"There would still be recognition for carrying out treatment such as extractions and fillings, but dentists would also get rewarded for preventive work.

"This would not only be good for dentists, but good for patients."

Statistics reveal that, while the condition of children’s teeth in Sheffield is slightly worse than the national average, children in deprived areas suffer almost five times the number of decayed, missing and filled teeth than those in more affluent neighbourhoods.

The figures, which relate to the year 2005-6, show that five-year-old children in Sheffield as a whole have an average of 1.72 decayed, missing or filled teeth, slightly above the national average of 1.47. However, this increases to 4.21 in the city’s more deprived neighbourhoods.

Preventive work will therefore focus on those areas where children are more likely to develop dental problems, such as Burngreave, Darnall, Manor Castle, Gleadless Valley, Shiregreen, Brightside and Firth Park.

This will include increasing access to dental care, improving children’s diet and targeting oral health promotion at young children.

At present, fluoride is added to children’s milk in 42 primary schools in the city. This will continue, and the local NHS is also planning to begin talks on the possibility of adding fluoride to water.

New Oral Health Action Teams will be set up in certain neighbourhoods, to give out free toothpaste packs, introduce teeth brushing in before and after-school clubs and also offer support to health, social and education professionals working in these areas.

These teams will initially be piloted and evaluated in Lowedges, Batemoor, Jordanthorpe, Tinsley, Darnall and Acres Hill.

Mr Green added: "This financial year we’re hoping to improve access to dental services.

"Sheffield is pretty good anyway – we’re in the top 10 in the country for the number of people who get to see a dentist – but we need to be better.

"We’re hoping people who need to see a dentist will get a better service.

"The patients who need preventative help, who have a high risk of disease, are also going to get more help.

"We hope to lift the standard of care to a very high standard right across the board."

—————————————-

http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/localne…

BOTANICALS

Ancient Chinese Salad Plant Yields Cancer-Killing Compound

Researchers have used a traditional Chinese medicine to create a compound that is more than 1,200 times more specific in killing certain kinds of cancer cells than currently available drugs.

The new compound is derived from artemisinin, which is made from the sweet wormwood plant (Artemisia annua L), an herb that has been used in Chinese medicine for at least 2,000 years, and is eaten in salads in some Asian countries.

The scientists attached a chemical homing device to artemisinin that targets the drug selectively to cancer cells, sparing healthy cells. "The compound is like a special agent planting a bomb inside the cell," said chemistry professor Tomikazu Sasaki, who worked on developing the compound.

The compound Sasaki and his colleagues developed kills about 12,000 cancer cells for every healthy cell.

VINEGAR

COOKING

  • Freshen vegetables – soak wilted vegetables in a quart of cold water and a tablespoon of vinegar.
  • Boil better eggs – add 2 tablespoons of vinegar to each quart of water before boiling eggs, keeps them from cracking.
  • Poach eggs better – put a tablespoon of vinegar in the water when poaching eggs. It helps eggs to keep their shape.
  • Prepare fluffier rice – add a teaspoon of vinegar to the water when it boils.
  • Meat tenderizer – add a tablespoon to water when boiling ribs or meat for stews, and even the toughest meat will be so tender you can cut with fork.
  • Fruit and Vegetable Wash – one cup vinegar to one gallon of water and soak then rinse with water. Removes dirt, germs and pesticides.
  • Keep cheese longer – use a vinegar soaked cheesecloth to wrap cheeses, place them in a plastic storage container, and store in the refrigerator.
  • Make buttermilk. Add a tablespoon of vinegar to a cup of milk and let it stand 5 minutes to thicken.
  • Pasta – if you put a few drops of vinegar in pasta as it boils, the starch is cut way lower. This makes the pasta less sticky and makes it so much easier to handle.
  • Egg yolk substitute – if you are in the middle of baking and you find that you are running short on egg yolks you can substitute one tablespoon of white vinegar for each egg that you are short for the same great results!
  • Scrambled eggs – when scrambling eggs, add a tablespoon of vinegar to your mixture to boost the flavor of your eggs. While milk makes your eggs fluffy, vinegar adds zest.
  • Firmer jello – Firm up your jello using vinegar. Add one teaspoon of vinegar with every box of jello to keep your jello firmer.
  • Rubber bones – for a great trick to show your kids try this. Turn a chicken bone into rubber by soaking it in a glass of vinegar for three days. It will bend just like rubber!

MEDICINE

WASHINGTON (AP) — Children under 4 should not be given over-the-counter cough and cold remedies, drug companies said Tuesday in a concession to pediatricians who doubt the drugs do much good and worry about risks.
 
The voluntary change in advice to parents comes less than a week after federal health officials said they also saw little evidence that the drugs work. But government officials were afraid that taking the medicines off store shelves might prompt parents to give their children adult medicines.
 
The drug makers said they will also add a warning that parents should not give antihistamines to children to make them sleepy. These are allergy-relief medications often found in medicines that combine several ingredients to treat a variety of symptoms.
————————————

HOUSEHOD

Why You Want to Avoid Using Chemical Disinfectants
Chemicals used to kill bacteria could be making them stronger. Low levels of biocides, which are used in disinfectants and antiseptics to kill microbes, can make the potentially lethal bacterium Staphylococcus aureus remove toxic chemicals more efficiently, potentially making it resistant to being killed by some antibiotics.

Biocides are commonly used in cleaning hospitals and home environments, sterilizing medical equipment and decontaminating skin before surgery. At the correct strength, biocides kill bacteria and other microbes. But if lower levels are used, the bacteria can survive and become resistant to treatment.

Researchers exposed S. aureus taken from the blood of patients to low concentrations of several biocides. Exposure to low concentrations of a variety of biocides resulted in the appearance of resistant mutants.

VINEGAR

Mom’s Organic Guide to Vinegar

GENERAL CLEANING

(White vinegar is best for cleaning purposes)
 
  • Window cleaner – a quarter cup in a quart of water.
  • Fabric softener and static cling reducer – a half a cup added as you would fabric softener.
  • Air freshener – use 1 teaspoon baking soda, 1 tablespoon vinegar and 2 cups of water. After it stops foaming, mix well, and use in a (recycled) spray bottle and spray into the air.
  • Chewing gum dissolver – saturate the area with vinegar. If the vinegar is heated, it will work faster.
  • Stain remover – for stains caused by grass, coffee, tea, fruits and berries. Soak clothing in full strength vinegar.
  • Pet odors – use diluted 1:1 in water to remove pet odors out of carpets. Find the spot, and saturate it with about 1 1/2 times the original volume. Let set for awhile then blot up. Repeat if your cloth is very dirty after blotting.
  • Keep car windows frost free – coat the windows the night before with a solution of three parts vinegar to one part water.
  • Polish car chrome – apply full strength with a soft cloth.
  • Remove skunk odor – apply full strength in bath to remove from skin, soak clothes, or wash pet.
  • Cut grease and odor on dishes – add a tablespoon of vinegar to hot soapy water.
  • Clean the dishwasher – run a cup of vinegar through the whole cycle once a month to reduce soap build up on the inner mechanisms and on glassware.
  • Clean the microwave. Boil a solution of 1/4 cup of vinegar and 1 cup ofwater in the microwave. Will loosen splattered on food and deodorize.
  • Remove decals – brush with a couple coats of vinegar. Allow to soak in. Wash off.

 

TOXIC EFFECT

 

Why We Need
The Kid-Safe Chemicals Act 

 

The nation’s toxic chemical regulatory law, the Toxic Substances Control Act, is in drastic need of reform. Passed in 1976 and never amended since, TSCA is widely regarded as the weakest of all major environmental laws on the books today.

When passed, the Act declared safe some 62,000 chemicals already on the market, even though there were little or no data to support this policy. Since that time another 20,000 chemicals have been put into commerce in the United States, also with little or no data to support their safety.

The human race is now polluted with hundreds of industrial chemicals with little or no understanding of the consequences. Babies are born pre-polluted with as many as 300 industrial chemicals in their bodies when they enter the world. Testing by Environmental Working Group has identified 455 chemicals in people, and again, no one has any idea if these exposures are safe.

We are at a tipping point, where the pollution in people is increasingly associated with a range of serious diseases and conditions from childhood cancer, to autism, ADHD, learning deficits, infertility, and birth defects. Yet even as our knowledge about the link between chemical exposure and human disease grows, the government has almost no authority to protect people from even the most hazardous chemicals on the market.R

 

READ FULL ARTICLE CLICK HERE

COSMETICS

Hormonal Cosmetic Ingredients Found in Teens

We recently released the first look at teen exposures to hormone-disrupting chemicals in cosmetics. Yikes-in the blood of our 20 teens, labs found 16 chemicals that are commonly used in cosmetics and body care products.

We’re working with the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics to require the Food & Drug Administration to assess the safety of cosmetic ingredients, but in the meantime, you can minimize exposure by checking our shopper’s guide for ingredients and products to avoid.
Get our tips here.

WATER

Bottled Water: Buyer Beware

It’s just what we’ve all suspected – pure, "straight from the mountains" bottled water is not so pure after all. Yesterday, EWG released an industry-rattling report that reveals the dirty truth about bottled water.

We tested 10 brands and found an alarming array of contaminants, including cancer-causing byproducts of chlorination, fertilizer residue, industrial solvents and even caffeine.

In light of these disturbing findings, here’s what you can do:

1. We’re offering our loyal subscribers a chance to pre-order our Klean Kanteen holiday gift bags. Each gift bag comes with a Klean Kanteen reusable stainless steel bottle – they last forever and won’t leach chemicals into your drinking water.

The bag also includes other good-for-you goodies like Pyrex re-usable glass containers, guides for safe shopping, and even organic cookies. Go ahead, cross a few things off your list: get safe water bottle (check!), support EWG (check!), get someone a healthy holiday gift (check!). Click here to order your holiday gift bag today.

2. Next, check out our new report on bottled water and find more tips on safe drinking water here.

« Older entries

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 62 other followers