offspring

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Scramble back to eggs!

Scramble back to eggs! Forget those high cholesterol warnings, they're healthier than ever, say experts

By Sophie Borland
Last updated at 10:39 AM on 14th February 2011

Good egg: The high cholesterol content which previously made eggs a health risk is now much lower compared to ten years ago 
Good egg: The high cholesterol content which previously made eggs a health risk is now much lower compared to ten years ago

If you're eyeing up your breakfast options and fancy going to work on an egg, there’s no need to hold back.
For after years of telling us to shun them as an everyday food, the health police now say that eggs have become better for us.

The cholesterol content of eggs – which was previously believed to be a health risk – is now much lower compared with ten years ago, a study  suggests.

Eggs also contain more vitamin D, which helps protect the bones, preventing diseases such as osteoporosis and rickets.

The reason eggs have become more nutritious over the past decade is that hens are no longer fed bone meal, which was banned in the Nineties following the BSE crisis, the researchers claim. Instead the birds are normally given a mixture of wheat, corn and high-protein formulated feed, which makes their eggs more wholesome.

A U.S. government study found that modern eggs contain 13 per cent less cholesterol and 64 per cent more vitamin D compared with a decade ago. 
This is backed by British research which shows that a medium-sized egg contains about 100mg of cholesterol, a third of the 300mg recommended daily limit.

Hen diet: Researchers claim that the reason that eggs have become so nutritious in the past decade is that hens eat more healthily since bone meal was banned in the 1990s following the BSE crisis 

Hen diet: Researchers claim that the reason that eggs have become so nutritious in the past decade is that hens eat more healthily since bone meal was banned in the 1990s following the BSE crisis

Andrew Joret, deputy chairman of the British Egg Industry Council, whose firm Noble Foods made the findings, said: ‘We believe the reduction is due to changes in the feeds used in British plants since the Nineties when the use of bone meal was banned.’ 


page 3 pugh.jpg 
Two years ago Canadian researchers claimed that eggs actually helped lower blood pressure. 

They suggested that when eggs are digested they produce proteins that mimic the action of powerful blood pressure-lowering drugs, known as Ace inhibitors. 

A recent Surrey University study found eating one or two eggs for breakfast could help with weight loss as the high protein content makes us feel fuller longer. 

The study, which involved volunteers eating two eggs a day for 12 weeks, also found that none had raised cholesterol. 

In the Sixties many Britons ate up to five eggs a day but by the Nineties this had dropped to two or three a week – in part due to warnings about high cholesterol levels.

Charles Saatchi, husband of TV chef Nigella Lawson, recently claimed to have lost five stone by eating eggs for breakfast, lunch and dinner.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Facebook leaves users 'anxious and stressed'

Facebook leaves users 'anxious and stressed' as they agonise over online friends

By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 8:33 AM on 17th February 2011


The more ‘friends’ you have on Facebook, the more likely you are to feel stressed, a study has found.
Psychologists believe that those who are most addicted to the website can develop ‘Facebook-related anxiety’.

And they said that for a significant number, the negative effects of using the site – which has more than 500million members – outweighed the benefits of staying in touch with friends and family.


Popular: The more friends you have on Facebook, the more likely you are to feel stressed, a study has found 

Popular: The more friends you have on Facebook, the more likely you are to feel stressed, a study has found

Researchers from Edinburgh Napier University questioned students on their use of the site.
Many said turning down friend requests left them feeling guilty, while more than one in ten found just being on the site a ‘nervous’ experience.

 
Others could not handle the pressure to be ‘entertaining’, while others became ‘envious’ of users who had more friends or seemed to be having more fun than them.

Dr Kathy Charles, who led the study, said: ‘We found it was actually those with the most contacts, those who had invested the most time in the site, who were the ones most likely to be stressed.’

Dr Charles added that many users could give no real reason why they used the site. 

But she said: ‘Many also told us they were anxious about withdrawing from the site for fear of missing important social information or offending contacts.’

Facebook refused to comment.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Soap and Water

Why soap and water is the best cure for a grazed knee

By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 7:42 AM on 23rd February 2011
It will be welcome news to any child who has squealed and squirmed while a caring parent dabs stinging antiseptic on to their cuts.

Washing playground wounds with soap and water may be more effective than applying antibiotic creams, according to a study. 

Scientists claim that cleaning a child’s cuts and grazes carefully under the tap helps the healing process more than using antibacterial lotions and treatments.

The researchers originally intended to compare two antibiotics commonly used to treat skin infections to find out which was more effective.

Cure: The best remedy for a grazed knee in the playground in soap and water according to a new study 

Cure: The best remedy for a grazed knee in the playground in soap and water according to a new study

After cleaning and dressing the wounds of 191 patients at a children’s hospital, they gave each child one of the treatments at random – but found that the choice of drug made no difference.

Within a week, 95 per cent of the participants had recovered completely, regardless of which antibiotic they had received.

The researchers concluded that the secret to successful healing was proper wound care and cleaning, not antibiotics.

The study’s lead author, Dr Aaron Chen, said: ‘The good news is that no matter which antibiotic we gave, nearly all skin infections cleared up fully within a week.

The better news might be that good low-tech wound care – cleaning, draining and keeping the infected area clean – is what truly makes the difference between rapid healing and persistent infection.’

Dr Chen added that keeping wounds clean had always been the cornerstone of skin infection treatment, but that more doctors had started prescribing antibiotics in recent years – despite the raised costs and risk of developing side effects or drug resistance.

Paediatrician Dr George Siberry said: ‘Many physicians understandably assume that antibiotics are always necessary for bacterial infections, but there is evidence to suggest this may not be the case.

‘We need studies that precisely measure the benefit of antibiotics to help us determine which cases warrant them and which ones would fare well without them.’

The 191 children in the study, aged from six months to 18 years, were treated for skin infections at Johns Hopkins Children’s Centre in Baltimore, Maryland, between 2006 and 2009.

Of these, 133 were infected with community-acquired MRSA bacteria, a virulent strain which does not respond to many antibiotics. The remainder had simple skin infections with non-resistant strains of the bacterium.

The researchers said a follow-up study was necessary to compare patients receiving a placebo with those on antibiotics, along with proper wound cleaning and dressing.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1359753/Why-soap-water-best-cure-grazed-knee.html#ixzz1En3PyH7E

Einstein

Socrates

Confucious

 

blogger templates 3 columns | Make Money Online