Month: August 2011 (Page 1 of 13)

More Colleges to Ban Smoking on Campus

Grass roots efforts driven by students and faculty have helped colleges to ban smoking.

The University of Kentucky is one of more than 500 college campuses across the country that have enacted 100% smoke-free or tobacco-free policies as of July 1. Although policy enforcement varies from school to school, most prohibit smoking on all campus grounds, including athletic stadiums, restaurants and parking lots.
An increasing number of colleges adopted smoke-free or tobacco-free policies in the past few years, according to American Nonsmokers’ Rights Foundation Project Manager Liz Williams. In the past year alone, 120 campuses were added to the smoke-free list.

The Japanese are No Longer Number One in Longevity

Japanese people no longer the most long lived, according to an extensive report on Japan’s health in the Lancet.

Smoking, growing obesity and a rising suicide rate are among some of the factors contributing to Japan’s declining health rating.

The aging population is ill prepared to deal with geriatric sickness.

With a median age of 40 years and a declining birth rate the health care system is inadequately funded to take care of all of the needs of it’s citizens.

In a country where people feel that they are responsible for their own health to benefit the society the answers to Japan’s problem may lie in it’s cultural values.

Erectile Dysfunction comes with other Sexual Problems

Men suffering with erectile dysfunction may discover that it comes with a host of other problems which Viagra can’t cure.

While medications may help some men maintain an erection, “our research suggests there are other common sexual issues that remain largely unaddressed,” said Dr. Darius Paduch, a urologist at New York-Presbyterian Hospital.

“We must expand the definition of quality of life when it comes to sexual performance,” Paduch said. “For the last few decades, we have focused on penile rigidity, with erection as a synonym of normal sexual function. However, many patients say that problems with ejaculation — like decreased force or volume or decreased sensation of orgasm — are just as critical.”

A healthy lifestyle including exercise and abstinence for drugs and alcohol will help where pharmaceuticals fail.

Bird Flu Rebounds Warns U.N. Agency

The Bird Flu or H5N1 strain is potentially making a resurgence.

The deadly flu is resistant to most recent vaccines and cases in China and Vietnam are causing concern.

The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) on Monday urged increased surveillance and preparation for a potential outbreak of the virus, which it says has infected 565 people since it first appeared in 2003, killing 331 of them.

The virus was eliminated from most of the 63 countries infected at its peak in 2006 after mass poultry culling, but since 2008 it has been expanding geographically in both poultry and wild birds, partly due to migration patterns.

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