Swine Flu Alert

Swine Flu Alert — Shocking Vaccine Miscarriage Horror
Stories
Posted by: Dr.
Mercola

November 28 2009 | 92,357 views

U.S. health authorities
have made pregnant women one of the highest priority groups for getting the H1N1
swine flu vaccine, but is it actually safe for pregnant women and their
babies?

In fact, the package inserts for the swine flu vaccines actually say that the
safety of these vaccines for pregnant women has not been established. And
miscarriage reports from pregnant women who have taken the H1N1 swine flu
vaccine are starting to pour in from all over the nation.

The link below contains stories that will shock and anger you. If you are a
pregnant mother, please do not take the H1N1 swine flu vaccine.  Instead, do
everything that you can do to avoid public places and make sure to wash your
hands more than you usually would.  Research the many great natural ways there
are for fighting the flu.

Sources:

TYH

FORBES.comPublish entry

Your Health


An Apple A Day Could Keep Colon Cancer Away

Randy Dotinga for HealthDayNews
Randy Dotinga for HealthDayNews,

An apple skin a day could keep colon cancer away, and a common gout drug might also help, two new studies claim.

The findings about the drug allopurinol are
too preliminary to be applied to patients. But the apple advice,
gleaned from laboratory tests, is ready for prime time because the
fruits are already considered part of a healthy diet.

"This is one more piece of evidence showing
that whole foods–especially the skin of an apple–have benefits in
preventing cancer," said Dr. Steve Pratt, author of SuperFoods Rx: Fourteen Foods That Will Change Your Life.

French researchers studied the health benefits
of several kinds of apple-based antioxidants by exposing cancer cells
to them. They tested the cells to see if the antioxidants, known as
polyphenols, cut down on tumor growth.


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READ FULL ARTICLE CLICK HERE


INFECTION CONTROL

  EMAXHEALTH    
Health & Wellness Conditions Insurance & Money

Preventive Tips As MRSA Infections Rise
Submitted by Ramona Bates MD on Nov 27th, 2009
General Health Articles

The news has been filled this week with the disturbing news of a sharp increase in community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) driving the rise of resistance within hospitals. This news came from a study published in the December issue of Emerging Infectious Diseases.

CA-MRSA causes serious skin and soft tissue infections in otherwise healthy persons who in the past had most often not been recently hospitalized or undergone invasive medical procedures. This is changing as the report indicates.

CA-MRSA has been identified most frequently among specific populations, including prisoners, athletes, children, men who have sex with men, military recruits, Pacific Islanders, Alaskan Natives and Native Americans.

Here are some ways to help PREVENT getting or spreading CA-MRSA.

1. Clean your hands frequently with soap and warm water or an alcohol-based hand rub.

2. Keep your linens and clothes clean. Wash sports clothing and washable athletic gear with laundry detergent after each use (not after a week or two of use).

3. Do not share personal care items. At home this includes washcloths, towels, and razors. At the gym or school this includes sports towels, sports equipment (helmets, gym mats), uniforms/clothing. Equipment that can’t be washed should be cleaned with an antibacterial solution after each use.

4. Take care of skin cuts or abrasions before they get infected. Wash them with soap and water, then cover with a dry, sterile bandage daily. Promptly throw away the old bandage. Wash your hands before and after changing the bandages.

If you are given antibiotics for an infection, it is important to take ALL of the doses. Don’t quit "when you feel better" or the skin "looks better". Finish all the doses. The bacteria that don’t get killed by the missed doses can morph into tomorrow’s superbugs.
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Copyright eMaxhealth.com 2005-2009. All rights reserved.

PlayThings

Trouble in Toyland

Posted: Nov 24, 2009 06:10 PM

Check those toys for hazards before they go under
the holiday tree.  Consumer advocates are warning shoppers to look out
for small parts, loud sounds, soft plastics and lead contamination. 
The warning comes in the U.S. Public Interest Research Group’s annual
"Trouble in Toyland" report.  The report says choking is the number one
cause of toy-related deaths and injuries.  The group’s Elizabeth
Hitchcock says not all toys carry the required choking warning.  If a
toy can fit into a toilet paper tube it’s too small for children under
three.  The group focused on loud toys because nearly 15 percent of
children between 6 and 17 years old show signs of hearing loss. 
Another hazard, lead contamination, can cause learning disabilities
and, at very high levels, seizures, coma and death.  You’ll find a
complete list of the "Trouble in Toyland" by heading to Toysafety.mobi or Toysafety.net.

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Crib Recall

  MSNBC.com
CPSC chief: Agency moved too slowly on crib safety
Regulators recalled 2.1 million drop-side cribs after child deaths
The Associated Press
updated 6:10 a.m. PT, Tues., Nov . 24, 2009
 

WASHINGTON - The head of the Consumer Product Safety Commission conceded Tuesday the agency "hasn’t been acting as quickly as it should" on crib safety problems.

Interviewed on morning news shows in the wake of the largest-ever recall of cribs, Chairman Inez Tenenbaum pledged that the CPSC would "firmly but fairly" enforce a law Congress passed last year giving regulators greater authority to police the industry.

More than 2.1 million drop-side cribs by Stork Craft Manufacturing of Canada are being recalled following reports of four infant suffocations. The CPSC said the recall involves 1.2 million cribs in the United States and almost 1 million in Canada, where Stork Craft is based. Sales of the cribs being recalled go back to 1993 and nearly 150,000 of the cribs carry the Fisher-Price logo.

The agency said the drop-side cribs have a side that moves up and down to allow parents to lift children from the cribs more easily. It also said there have been 110 incidents of drop-sides detaching from the cribs.

Asked Tuesday whether people should abandon such cribs, Tenenbaum said she recommends that. And she said consumers also could order plastic kits from the manufacturer to immobilize crib sides.

"The commission will write regulations in the next few months and we will look at this issue about drop-sides," Tenenbaum said. "But I don’t think drop-sides will be a part of cribs in the future."

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FULL ARTICLE URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34125890/ns/health-kids_and_parenting/

Something to Consider

Smoking Cessation Blog

By Terry Martin, About.com Guide to Smoking Cessatio

Quit Smoking Monday Messages

Monday November 23, 2009

Gratitude Heals

Of all human emotions, gratitude is one of the most beneficial for our bodies and minds. A grateful heart knows no bounds, and for people who are recovering from nicotine addiction, gratitude plays an important role in the health of their quit programs.

With Thanksgiving just about upon us here in the U.S., it seems like a good time to take stock of the blessings in our lives. Members of the About.com Smoking Cessation support forum are quick to share those things they’re most grateful for since quitting tobacco, and I’ve included a sampling of their thoughts below:

"I’m thankful for the chance to slow my COPD. If I were still smoking, I might be on O2 continually. The pride and thankfulness I feel by taking control are tremendous." ~Gaylene~

"I am so thankful to be free of cigarettes and to be a non-smoker. My life is so simple now compared to the way it was, always trying to find a place to smoke and hiding behind the smoke." ~AnotherLinda~

"I’m thankful to be able to laugh again without worrying if it will bring on my asthma symptoms; I am thankful that when I wake up in the morning, my chest doesn’t hurt; I am thankful that within just a couple days of my quit, I have not had to use an inhaler or any asthma medication." ~Cap’n~

"I’m thankful for the feeling of freedom, peace and empowerment quitting tobacco has given me, and I know it is going to get better with time. I can breathe and have more energy, plus much more." ~Dar~

"I am thankful to be smoke-free today and to have the confidence to tackle my holiday jitters without depending on nicotine to be my substitute backbone. I have restored my dignity and boosted my self-esteem 1000% percent." ~Trish~

"I am thankful for today! I am here, healthy, alive and feeling strong. I am thankful for my family who have stood by me and encouraged me to quit smoking. I didn’t think I had the courage to do it!" ~Sheba~

"I really like who I have become since I quit smoking. There’s no more shame! I’m proud to be a healthy woman, wife and mother!" ~Carol~

"I am grateful for the inner strength that I have found to battle this addiction, which gives me power to battle so much more." ~Sue~

"I am grateful to my son who loved me enough to ask me to quit. I took a long hard look at that request and said to myself…"I can and I will do this for Daxie." ~Daxie~

"I am grateful for my good health, and for the awareness of how precious that really is." ~Terry~

If you’ve quit smoking, breathe deep and be grateful. If you want to quit but haven’t done it yet, there is no time like the present to get started. Grab hold of our hands here at About.com Smoking Cessation — we’ve got the tools and the support to help you put tobacco behind you…permanently.

Have a grateful, smoke-free Thanksgiving!

Image © Stockxpert

Cranberry and Fresh Pear Cobbler

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*** Healthy Recipes ***

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This is a wonderful after-dinner treat that provides a great
combination of flavors and health benefits to your Healthiest Way of Eating!
Cranberries, like blueberries, rate high in their concentration of antioxidants
to combat free radical activity, while the walnuts give you an extra boost of
health-promoting omega-3 fatty acids.

Prep and Cook Time: 30 minutes
Serves 2

Ingredients:

  • 1 medium orange*
  • 1/2 cup dried cranberries
  • 2 tsp honey
  • 1/2 ripe pear (Bosc or other firm variety)
  • 1/4 cup + 2 TBS walnuts * Use organic
    oranges, if possible, to avoid wax coating.

Directions:

    1. Grate enough orange rind to make 1 tsp zest and place in a mixing
    bowl.
    2. Cut the orange in half and juice both halves into the same bowl as
    the rind.
    3. Add the cranberries and honey. Mix until the honey is dissolved.
    Let sit for 1/2 hour to allow cranberries to soften.
    4. After the cranberries
    have softened, cut the pear into 1/4-inch cubes and add to the bowl.
    5. Add
    1/4 cup walnuts.
    6. Divide the mixture into 2 dessert dishes and sprinkle
    each with 1 TBS of the chopped walnuts.

Healthy Cooking Tips:
Enjoy this
dish right away, before the pear starts to brown.

Recipes are from the www.whfoods.org
website, a very popular website which comes up #1 on a "Google" search for
"healthiest foods" and "healthiest recipes." The website provides unbiased
information with no commercial interests by the not-for-profit George Mateljan
Foundation. George Mateljan is the founder of Health Valley Foods and author of
six best-selling books on the Healthiest Way of Eating.

** Do you have a healthy recipe? Email
editors@naturalhealthweb.com

=============================================

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To submit articles or information, please send us an email
at editors@naturalhealthweb.com, or
visit our Article Submission page at http://www.naturalhealthweb.com/nhwarticles/submitarticle.html

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be removed from this newsletter, please click the Unsubscribe link
at the very bottom of this
email.

 

“…as you think…”

The Biology of Belief from Bruce Lipton Challenges Medical ConventioN
Submitted by Kathleen Blanchard RN on Nov 21st, 2009
All about:
Book Reviews

 The Biology of Belief: Unleashing the Power of Consciousness, Matter and Miracles from Bruce Lipton, PhD, maintains that we can change our bodies by changing the way we think. The notion that we are not controlled by our DNA, but that our own thoughts control our health, and subsequently the way DNA is expressed, is great reading and provides new horizons for managing health, for those willing to think freely.
 
Lipton had a profound turnaround in his professional career as a medical school professor and research scientist when he came to realize that how we think controls our DNA. He views our cellular structure as a mini universe, and challenges the notion that we have no control over our own health. Bruce Lipton discusses how he came to his conclusions in depth, but also in a way that is easily digested. The Biology of Belief is easy to understand, even for the most scientifically challenged individual.
 
At first, Lipton was perceived as totally unconventional, but he moved forward, and he is now way ahead of the pack. His tenets are being explored by other researchers, and he has become the recipient of the 2009 Goi Peace Award. The Biology of Belief challenges conventional medicine by looking at the mind-body connection that is now the subject of much research.
 
Lipton uses the premise of epigenetics, a blossoming area of research, to explain our inner workings, calling it "the new science of self-empowerment" – something we all crave, and that also produces an instant attraction for free thinking individuals. In his ongoing work, he encourages us to “think beyond your genes”.
 
Bruce Lipton has a story to tell, and expertise that he is willing to share, for those willing to listen – the Biology of Belief: Unleashing the Power of Consciousness, Matter, & Miracles looks at the power of the mind, and how our own thinking can control our cell membranes producing empowering changes toward better health. The idea is not new, but with Lipton’s help and scientific expertise, the whole “mind over matter” theory becomes quite palatable. Visit Bruce Lipton’s website for a whole lot more.
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READ FULL ARTICLE CLICK HERE

SWINE FLU (H1N1) FIGHTERS

Can Onions and Garlic Fight the H1N1 Flu?
Submitted by Tyler Woods Ph.D. on Nov 20th, 2009

All about:  Flu and Cold

The Associated Press recently reported that 24 out of 6,500 Moldovan soldiers have developed the H1N1 influenza in the past few weeks. To help stave off this illness, the army is adding the equivalent of a small onion and a few cloves of garlic to their diets each day. This small country has received a supply of the H1N1 vaccine but it is unclean whether any of the armed forces received it.
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READ FULL ARTICLE CLICK HERE
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Consider This

 

The War on Soy: Why the ‘Miracle Food’ May Be a Health Risk and Environmental Nightmare

By Tara Lohan, AlterNet
Posted on November 21, 2009, Printed on November 21, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/story/144074/

These days, you can get soy versions of just about any meat — from hot dogs to buffalo wings. If you’re lactose-intolerant you can still enjoy soy ice-cream and soy milk on your cereal. If you’re out for a hike and need a quick boost of energy, you can nibble on soy candy bars.

Soy is a lucrative industry. According to Soyfoods Association of North America, from 1992 to 2008, sales of soy foods have increased from $300 million to $4 billion. From sales numbers to medical endorsements, it would seem that soy has reached a kind of miracle food status.

In 2000 the American Heart Association gave soy the thumbs up and the FDA proclaimed: "Diets low in saturated fat and cholesterol that include 25 grams of soy protein a day may reduce the risk of heart disease." Over the course of the last decade medical professionals have touted its benefits in fighting not just cardiovascular disease, but cancers, osteoporosis and diabetes.

But soy’s glory days may be coming to an end. New research is questioning its health benefits and even pointing out some potential risks. Although definitive evidence may be many years down the road, the American Heart Association has quietly withdrawn its support. And some groups are waging an all-out war, warning that soy can lead to certain kinds of cancers, lowered testosterone levels, and early-onset puberty in girls.

Most of the soy eaten today is also genetically modified, which may pose another set of health risks. The environmental implications of soy production, including massive deforestation, increased use of pesticides and threats to water and soil, are providing more fodder for soy’s detractors.

All of this has many people wondering if they should even be eating it at all. And you are most likely eating it. Even if you’re not a vegetarian or an avid tofu fan, there is a good chance you’re still eating soy. Raj Patel, author of Stuffed and Starved, explains that soy is now an ingredient in three-quarters of processed food on the market and just about everything you’d find in a fast food restaurant. It’s used as filler in hamburgers, as vegetable oil and an emulsifier. It’s in salad dressing, macaroni and cheese, and chicken nuggets.

"Even if you read every label and avoid cardboard boxes, you are likely to find soy in your supplements and vitamins (look out for vitamin E derived from soy oil), in foods such as canned tuna, soups, sauces, breads, meats (injected under poultry skin), and chocolate, and in pet food and body-care products," wrote Mary Vance for Terrain Magazine. "It hides in tofu dogs under aliases such as textured vegetable protein, hydrolyzed vegetable protein, and lecithin–which is troubling, since the processing required to hydrolyze soy protein into vegetable protein produces excitotoxins such as glutamate (think MSG) and aspartate (a component of aspartame), which cause brain-cell death."

Health Risks or Rewards?

"I grew up in Houston on po’ boys and the Wall Street Journal," said Robyn O’Brien. "I trusted our food system." But all that changed when one of her kids developed a food allergy and O’Brien began doing research to find out what’s actually in our food and the companies behind it.

Her work led to the book,The Unhealthy Truth: How Our Food Is Making Us Sick and What We Can Do About It, and she’s become an incredible crusader on multiple fronts when it comes to food. She’s also been educating consumers about soy’s double-edged sword.

To understand why, it helps to know a little history about soy. It’s been cultivated, starting in China, for 3,000 years. While Asian diets have generally included soy it has been in small amounts eaten fermented — primarily via miso, natto and tempeh. "Fermenting soy creates health-promoting probiotics, the good bacteria our bodies need to maintain digestive and overall wellness,"  wrote Vance. "By contrast, in the United States, processed soy food snacks or shakes can contain over 20 grams of nonfermented soy protein in one serving."

It’s not that all soy is bad; in fact, eating it in small doses can be quite healthy, if it’s fermented. But when it’s not, that’s where the problems begin. Soy is a legume, which contains high amounts of phytic acid. Phytic acid binds to minerals (like calcium, magnesium, copper, iron and zinc), interfering with the body’s ability to absorb them (which is usually a bad thing). Soy is also known to contain "antinutrients," among them enzyme inhibitors that interfere with protein digestion. The Chinese figured out about 2,000 years ago that antinutrients and phytic acid could be deactivated during fermentation, but in the processed-food laden land of the West, we’ve chosen cultural ignorance in favor of quick and cheap. Most of the soy we eat is unfermented.

Another issue with soy is its high amounts of isoflavones, which can be good and bad (hence the double-edged sword). Isoflavones are a powerful antioxidant, writes Robyn O’Brien in her book, that can help boost immunity. They also impact estrogen levels and have been shown to have positive effects on easing symptoms of menopause. "But that plus can also be a minus," writes O’Brien, "because isoflavones’ very ability to boost estrogen production can also pose hazards to our health. For example, the FDA scientists point out, during pregnancy, isoflavones could boost estrogen levels even higher, ‘which could be a risk factor for abnormal brain and reproductive tract development.’" There is also a risk of breast and other reproductive cancers for women and the potential for testicular cancer and infertility in men.

While there was much news about the American Heart Association endorsing soy in 2000, there was little attention given when the AHA changed its mind and quietly withdrew its pro-soy claims in 2006, O’Brien points out. She also learned that they were not the only ones who expressed concerned about soy. A study in the British medical journal Lancet in 1996 warned of the effects of soy in infant formula. The study found babies had levels of isoflavones that were five to 10 times higher than women taking soy supplements for menopause. The effects in girls could be early-onset puberty, obesity, breast and reproductive cancers. Boys could face testicular cancer, undescended testicles and infertility. Additionally, O’Brien says, a 2003 British study conducted by Gideon Lack of St. Mary’s Hospital at Imperial College London followed 14,000 children from the womb through age 6 and found that kids who had been given soy formula as infants seemed almost three times as likely to develop a peanut allergy later on.

As if all this weren’t disturbing enough, there’s also another reason to be alarmed — most of the soy we eat is genetically modified to withstand increasing doses of weed-killing herbicides, and really, we have no idea what the long-term affects of that might be. So, what’s a person to do? Stay away from soy as much as possible, which also means avoiding processed foods. And, even if we choose not to eat those things, some of us may end up getting them anyway. "There are different sales channels that these companies are using to sell soy with little regard for the cost to people down the road," said O’Brien. "Soy that is not used in grocery stores, in restaurants, or consumed by livestock, is disposed of in school lunch programs, hospitals, and prisons."

One organization, the Weston A. Price Foundation, is actually engaged in a lawsuit on behalf of Illinois state prisoners who say they’re eating a diet made of largely soy protein. "In their letters, the prisoners have described deliberate indifference to a myriad of serious health problems caused by the large amounts of soy in the diet," the WAP Foundation writes. "Complaints include chronic and painful constipation alternating with debilitating diarrhea, vomiting after eating, sharp pains in the digestive tract after consuming soy, passing out after soy-based meals, heart palpitations, rashes, acne, insomnia, panic attacks, depression and symptoms of hypothyroidism, such as low body temperature (feeling cold all the time), brain fog, fatigue, weight gain, frequent infections and an enlarged thyroid gland."

While the soy industry has profited from the widespread adoption of its products here in the United States, other developed countries have taken a more precautionary approach and not allowed soy to become as pervasive in their food supplies in an effort to protect the health of their citizens, says O’Brien. But it’s not just people who are at risk. The deleterious effects of soy can start with the seed.

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Read full story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/144074/

ThinkP

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