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FDA Fails to Protect Consumers from Antibiotic Saturated Food Supply

A coalition of consumer groups filed a federal lawsuit Friday against the US Food and Drug Administration over the use of human antibiotics in animal feed, citing that it creates dangerous superbugs.

The suit alleges that the regulatory agency concluded in 1977 that the practice of feeding healthy animals low doses of penicillin and tetracycline could lead to the rise of antibiotic resistant bacteria in people.

“Accumulating evidence shows that antibiotics are becoming less effective, while our grocery store meat is increasingly laden with drug-resistant bacteria,” said Peter Lehner, NRDC executive director.

FDA did not immediately respond to an AFP request for comment.

Last year, the FDA authorities pressed farmers to give fewer antibiotics to livestock and poultry to reduce the risk of potentially harmful resistance to antimicrobial drugs.

Yet FDA officials stressed the drugs could play a key role when used properly.

Factory farming promotes illness for animals who live in filthy and over-crowded conditions and who are fed large amounts of corn which they can not digest which allows them to grow at an unatural and alarming rate causing a host of health problems requiring antibiotic use.

Protect Your Heart with Baked and Broiled Fish

Eating baked or broiled fish might just add years to your life by protecting your heart from cardio-vascular disease.

The key, however, is how you cook the fish.

Deep frying and heavy batters won’t do the job.

Make sure that fish is baked or broiled and not loaded with heavy sauces or accompanied by french fries or other fried and greasy sides.

The study followed the eating habits and health of about 85,000 postmenopausal women for an average of 10 years. Compared to women who rarely or never ate fish, those who ate five or more servings per week had a 30% lower risk of developing heart failure—but only if the fish was baked or broiled.

Try an easy and heart healthy Broiled Salmon and Quinoa salad dinner. Delicious and nutritious!

Orthopedic Surgeon Dr. Richard Rothman Replaces Joints to Keep People Working Longe

The hips and knees receive continuous stress from walking, running, sporting activities, or injury and are more commonly affected by the wearing of cartilage (degenerative arthritis) than the hand joints.

However, the joints of the hand do experience stress in everyday use, and because the hand joints are smaller, these stresses are concentrated over a smaller surface area.

The high ratio of stress to surface area can cause the smooth joint cartilage to wear over the years.

As the cartilage degenerates, the underlying bone becomes exposed.

When the deteriorated joint moves, bone rubs upon bone causing pain, swelling, limiting motion, and frequently causing a grinding or popping sensation.

Since performing one of the nation’s first total hip replacements 42 years ago, Rothman has replaced more than 25,000 hips and knees. The physically taxing procedure, which swaps the boney joint for a prosthetic usually made of titanium and hard plastic, revolutionized the treatment of arthritis.

“Prior to that, if you have a bad hip or bad knee there were no good options,” he said. “You got crutches or a wheelchair.”

Joint replacement surgery is on the rise and is expected to keep rising as the population ages. Between 1996 and 2006, the number of total hip and knee replacements increased by 30 percent and 70 percent respectively, according to a CDC report.

Treatments Offer Hope for Diagnosable Mental Disorders

Common Signs And Symptoms Of Depression
Is Depression Curable Or Is It Chronic?
What Is Bipolar Disorder?
Talk Therapy For Bipolar Disorder?’
Normal’ Anxiety Vs. Anxiety Disorders?
I Think A Friend Has An Anxiety Problem?
Relationship Between Work And Stress?
Why Do Some Feel ‘Less Stressed’?

A mental disorder or mental illness is a psychological or behavioral pattern generally associated with subjective distress or disability that occurs in an individual, and which is not a part of normal development or culture.

Mental disorders can arise from a combination of sources. In many cases there is no single accepted or consistent cause currently established.

A common belief even to this day is that disorders result from genetic vulnerabilities exposed by environmental stressors.

FDA Warns Against Food Thickener in Infant Formula

Many different types of milk (other than an infant formula) have been given to babies in the past, but we now know that a lot of these are not suitable for babies and can cause serious health problems.

The base in the majority of infant formulas comes from cow’s milk, goat’s milk or soy beans, which has been modified or changed with important nutrients added so that the formula is similar to breast milk in nutrient composition.

It’s not a perfect match because the exact chemical make-up of breast milk is unknown.

The Food and Drug Administration is telling parents, health care workers and people who take care of babies to avoid using a thickener for breast milk or formula fed to premature infants.

A product called SimplyThick may be causing life-threatening damage to children’s intestines, the agency said.

The FDA, which first learned about possible problems with SimplyThick on May 13, is now aware of 15 cases of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), including two deaths.

In all those cases, the FDA says SimplyThick gel was added to the formula or breast milk fed to the babies, who had trouble swallowing because of complications from their premature birth.

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