Good workplace environment means fewer cases of health-related problems

Washington, May 4 (ANI): A new study has suggested that the way people”s work is organised is related to their health.

According to the research, a poor way of working can harm workers’ health by causing a range of ailments, from cardiovascular disease to problems with mental health.

The new study has shown that the best way of working allows employees a greater level of participation, as well as providing greater possibilities for adapting working conditions to their needs, greater recognition of their work and fair treatment.

“We have studied the relationship between exposure to psychosocial risks and the kind of labour management practices used to hire, use, develop, hold onto or dismiss workers”, Clara Llorens Serrano, lead author of the study and a researcher at the Trade Union Institute of Labour, Environment and Health (ISTAS-CCOO), said.

The study shows that a good working environment is related to participatory employment methods that enable employees to learn new skills, work under permanent contracts that do not make them feel easily expendable or at risk of being fired, salaries paid according to the number of hours worked and tasks carried out, as well as a working week of between 31 to 40 hours, finishing at 2pm.

The survey, carried out between October 2004 and July 2005 on 7,612 people employed by others in Spain, showed that “the better the labour management practices used in organising work, the better the psychosocial environment of the workplace will be, with fewer cases of health-related problems”.

“Our analysis and previous evidence shows that psychosocial risks are related to the labour management practices used. These can be a key factor in the link between psychosocial risks and health, and are a prime target in terms of preventing the appearance of workplace stress and making changes to the organisation of work”, Llorens said.

The study has been published in the journal Scandinavian Journal of Public Health. (ANI)

Now, tiny gold probes to tell how disease develops

Washington, Mar 29 (ANI): Taking a leap in diagnosing ailments, researchers have now developed tiny probes comprising gold-coated particles that can be implanted into patients and tell how a disease is progressing.

After being inserted into cells, the gold particles could enable diseases to be detected and monitored remotely using light from a laser.

Once the probe is inside a cell, laser light shone on to it is absorbed then re-emitted, causing nearby proteins in the cell to vibrate according to their shape.

As molecules change shape with disease progression, they give rise to different vibrational frequencies.

Scientists can measure and interpret these vibrations, to understand how the cell is responding to disease.

Gold is used to coat the sensor because it is an unreactive metal, preventing the body from rejecting the implant.

The laser technique is highly sensitive, fast and uses a low-power laser.

by observing how molecules interact, the probes could be a useful tool to learn more about diseases at a very small scale, say researchers.

Further studies will look at diseases linked to the immune system in the first instance, but researchers say the technique has potential to help doctors diagnose and monitor a range of conditions.

“By creating a sensor that can safely be implanted into tissue and combining this with a sensitive light-measurement technique, we have developed a useful device that will help diagnose and track disease in patients,” said Dr Colin Campbell, who led the research.

The research was published in the journals Chemical Communications, the Journal of Biophotonics and ACSNano. (ANI)

MJ’s ‘This Is It’ comeback concert contract leaked online

London, Aug 21 (ANI): The contract for late King of Pop Michael Jackson’s ‘This Is It’ comeback concert has been leaked online, with documents confirming the tragic star had no “known medical problems” which would have jeopardised the London shows.

The contract with tour promoters AEG, obtained by RadarOnline, stated the star had no “known health conditions, injuries or ailments that would reasonably be expected to interfere with Artist’s first class performance at each of the shows during the term,” reports the Daily Express.

The documents also reveal that singer did in fact agree to play more than the original 10 concerts, but stipulated that he would perform no more than “3.5 times” during a seven-day period.

The papers also dismiss rumours that Jackson was too frail to perform his full set.

Many internet gossips speculated he was only contracted to appear on stage for a small portion of each gig, but the contract states he was obliged to perform for at least 80 minutes at each show.

Jackson signed the documents on behalf of his company, The Michael Jackson Company LLC, and as the artist, Michael Jackson, while AEG Live CEO Brandon Phillips also signed the contract. (ANI)

Otzi the iceman’s ancient tattoos were etched in soot

London, July 16 (ANI): A new analysis has concluded that the world’s oldest tattoos, belonging to Otzi the 5300-year-old Tyrolean iceman, were etched in soot.

The simple tattoos may have served a medicinal purpose, not a decorative one, Maria Anna Pabst, a researcher at the Medical University of Graz, Austria, told the New Scientist.

Pabst trained optical and electron microscopes on biopsies of Otzi’s preserved flesh.

Clothing would have obscured most of the designs, which are of crosses and bands of lines. Some are located near acupuncture points.

Alpine climbers discovered Otzi near the Italian-Austrian border in 1991.

Since then, scientists have analyzed his clothing, diagnosed him with various ailments – arthritis, back and stomach problems – and even sequenced his mitochondrial genome.

To work out what Otzi’s tattoos were made of, Pabst’s team applied light and electron microscopes to minutely thin sections of several tattoos as well as a non-tattooed flesh from his inner thigh.

A close look at his tattooed skin revealed numerous fine particles, interspersed with elongated crystals.

Chemical analysis indicated that the particles were made of double-bonded carbon atoms found in soot, while the crystals were made of silicate.

His tattoo-free skin, on the other hand, showed no trace of soot particles.

“Otzi’s “ink” could have been scraped off silicate-containing rocks surrounding a fireplace,” Pabst said.

“When you look at the b taken out – you can’t see anything that tells you how the tattoos were made,” she added.

Perhaps, Otzi’s brethren used thorns to pierce the skin deeply enough to inject a soot ink, according to the researchers. (ANI)

Men who have sex daily with younger women ‘live longer’

Melbourne, July 6 (ANI): Men who have sex daily, especially with younger women, are more likely to live longer, according to a new study.

The study, conducted by researchers at Germany’s Max Plank Institute, found that a man’s chances of dying early are cut by 20 per cent if their bride is between 15 and 17 years their junior, reports the Daily Telegraph.

The average life expectancy of a man is 77, but the last seven years are marked by serious illness or ailments for the majority of men.

However, experts say that sex rates highest among the simple and often bizarre ways to keep men healthy – including cutting down on pain killers, eating five apples a day, brushing teeth with your wrong hand and carrying wallets in the breast pocket.

The researchers also found that men with younger women – who look after the children and put food on the table – help extend their lives.

The study, which examined deaths between 1990 and 2005 for the entire population of Denmark, concluded that the higher life expectancy was either caused by younger women caring for men better or natural selection. (ANI)

Tyeb Mehta – Tyeb Mehta Died – Tyeb Mehta Dead – Tyeb Mehta passed away in Mumbai

Tyeb Mehta – Tyeb Mehta Died – Tyeb Mehta Dead – Tyeb Mehta passed away in Mumbai

Noted artist and Padma Bhushan award winner, Tyeb Mehta died today 2nd July 2009 in Mumbai due to cardiac ailments. He was 84  years old. He holds the record for the highest price an Indian painting has ever sold in a public auction.

Born in 1925, in Gujarat, Tyeb Mehra is an alumni of Sir J J School of Art, Mumbai. He is survived by his wife Sakina, a son and a daughter.

Tyeb Mehta’s noted painting include ‘Kali’, ‘Mahishasura’ , Gesture etc.

Doctors Day – Doctors Day 2009 – Doctors Day India: July 1, 2009 Doctors – About Doctors Day

Doctors Day – Doctors Day 2009 – Doctors Day India: July 1, 2009 Doctors – About Doctors Day

National Doctor’s Day is a time for people to show appreciation and say thanks to the doctors who care for them. Doctors perform vital diagnosis and treatment. They care and cure their patients to keep them well. Doctors are the life saviors who work relentlessly to cure the ailments of the patients. When you are sick, there is no other person more important to you, than a doctor.

Doctor’s Day is celebrated in India on July 1st every year. Doctor’s Day celebrations started in 1991 when the Government of India recognised July 1, the birth anniversary as well as the date of demise of famous physician, Dr. Bidhan Chandra Roy (BC Roy).

Doctor’s Day is celebrated in the US and other western countries on March 30 – the day when Dr. Crawford W. Long first used ether anaesthesia in surgery.

Chennai hospital hostage drama involving ex-Guyana First Lady ends

Chennai, June 27 (ANI): The 48-hour-long hostage drama at Chennai’s Frontier Lifeline Hospital ended on Saturday after both the NGO and the hospital authorities reached an agreement to allow the ten children with heart-related ailments to return to Guyana on condition that the NGO would clear all medical expenses within the next six months.

The ten children were set to return to Guyana after heart surgeries. The West Indian republic’s former First Lady, Varshnie Singh, who is representing the NGO that sponsored the treatment, was earlier not permitted to leave the hospital following a dispute over the payment of bills.

Dr. K M Cherian, the hospital’s chairman, had earlier said that the patients would not be released. He said the patients had paid the money to the Guyanese NGO, but the latter had not forwarded the payments to the hospital.

The children and two adults brought by Singh under the aegis of the NGO, KidsFirst Fund, were about to leave the hospital on Friday night when they were stopped by hospital officials who insisted Singh settle the bills for surgeries before they left.

The Guyana-based NGO has been sending children to the hospital for heart surgeries for the last four years and used to settle bills after they return, Singh told reporters.

“We have come here five times before and have always paid later. This time, the hospital gave us a letter about a week after we arrived on June 9 asking us to pay,” she had said adding she had ignored it in view of the past practice.

Singh claimed that she could not meet Cherian as she was informed he had gone abroad for a meeting, but hospital authorities said she had avoided meeting him on arrival.

Hospital Chief Administrative Officer Jose Manavalan said a sum of USD 13,000 was pending from the NGOs last visit and the hospital had waived it. (ANI)

For kids, more than medicines to heal!

NEW DELHI: Prolonged stays at a hospital is not an attractive option for adults, let alone
kids.

Now, a new concept explores whether children being treated for serious ailments can have something to look forward to in their otherwise drab routine of medicines and check ups.

A pharmaceutical company in partnership with a leading hospital has set up a ‘fun centre’ for patients admitted to the paediatrics ward, so that recuperating kids do not miss out on fun.

Billed as the first in India, the ‘fun centre’ set up at Apollo Hospital here is equipped with games, toys and a host of other recreational activities and aims at providing children a refreshing break from their treatment regimen.

In a child-friendly playroom, a decorated area integrated with the paediatrics unit, children, some of them suffering from serious ailments, can take their minds off their dull routine to enjoy playing with toys, board games, reading comic books, quizzes and make friends with other kids.

“Most of the kids admitted to the paediatrics unit are in for a long duration sometimes stretching to months. We can imagine they are suffering from serious problems. A recreation facility at the hospital thus helps them have fun and recover faster,” said Aparna Thomas of Sanofi Aventis, which has partnered Apollo in the venture.

Water crisis in Gwalior

Gwalior, May 27 (ANI): Faced with acute water crisis, residents in Gwalior are forced to queue from midnight at the community taps to collect water for their use.

Besides rising mercury level and surging temperature, improper timings of water supply has made life more miserable for them.

“There is no proper timings for the water supply. Sometimes it came at 1:00 a.m.,sometime at 2:00 or 3:00 a.m. or sometimes even we don’t get water at all. But we will have to wake up the whole night for water,” said Saraswati Devi, a resident.

Residents have to fill water till late night and leave for the work place next morning. This has led to many physical problems.

“We are suffering from various ailments due to this. There is no time for rest due to which we are suffering from various problems, ” said Mukesh Khalate, another resident.

But, city mayor said that the water supply condition would improve once the ‘Project Uday’, a project aimed at improving city’s water supply and sanitation, would be completed.

“We have started a special project named ‘Project Uday’ which is in its final phase. Once the project is over, the problem would be solved. We can call this period as a transition period,” said Vivek Narain Shejwalkar, Mayor of Gwalior.(ANI)

Women more concerned with weight than overall health, says poll

New York, May 13 (ANI): Majority of women are more concerned about their weight than overall health, says a new US poll.

The new Associated Press-iVillage poll found that half of the women aren’t down with their weight – even the 26 percent of respondents whose body mass index (BMI) is in the normal range.

Of the 1,000 respondents, just one third said they don’t like their physical condition – despite the fact that obesity and a sedentary lifestyle increase the risk of ailments like heart disease and Type 2 diabetes.

“So many women think more about the number on the scale than whether their blood pressure or cholesterol is normal,” the New York Daily News quoted registered dietitian Keri Gans, a spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association, as saying.

“They really don’t think about disease risk as much as they do about their weight,” Gans added.

The survey also revealed that women exercise for a median of just 80 minutes per week, which means that half the women do even less exercise.

A mere eight percent of the women surveyed say they eat the minimum recommended servings of fruit and vegetables (five a day) and a full 28 percent said they consume those five servings just once a week or less. (ANI)

Catherine Zeta-Jones being treated for sinus problems

Washington, May 4 (ANI): Welsh actress Catherine Zeta-Jones has revealed that she has been visiting the hospital on the tropical island where she stays for treatment of her sinus problem.

Zeta-Jones, 39, has also been nursing her husband Michael Douglas after he recently underwent knee replacement surgery.

The actress, who has to make daily trips to the hospital for her own ailments, has nothing but praise for the staff there.

“I have been at the hospital for so many days with my sinus problems and I must say they have done a good job. I’m telling you, I have been there every day for the last four weeks, but now I feel fine,” Contactmusic quoted her as saying. (ANI)

NGO holds seminar for elderly

KOLKATA: Life, they say, begins at 40. Yet, at 60, it suddenly hits a jarring note. Faced with a multiplicity of problems and an unfamiliar
situation, many succumb to bouts of depression. The psychological trauma at times push some into believing that only in death lies the resolution of life’s crisis.

While coping with retirement, financial problems and children getting busy with their own lives are tough to deal with, ill health like cardiac ailments, high blood pressure and diabetes is the biggest concern. But this cannot be addressed by medical treatment alone. It requires gerontology a relatively new medical science that makes life of the elderly more harmonious and enjoyable in the last phase of life.

A Salt Lake-based NGO, Thikana, which is engaged in social work, particularly with the elderly people, organized a seminar on gerentology at the Bidhannagar Municipality auditorium on Saturday.

Speaking at the seminar, Calcutta Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology director Indrani Chakravarty said modernization of urban life, age-related problems would increase. “The attitude of people is changing rapidly. With their children working outside, many elderly people now prefer to live the rest of their lives in old age homes. Our challenge is to better their lives by involving trained professionals in the field,” she said.

Narrating his own experience, elderly medicine consultant Kausik Majumdar said it was in 1995 that he noticed an elderly person crying outside the ward while on duty at the outdoor patients department of NRS Hospital.

“When I asked him what had happened, he said he had come from a remote village and that he was waiting for the whole day outside the ward but nobody came forward to attend to him. I realised that such elderly people need special care. If we can use the science of gerontology and unite specialists from various medical sciences and look after them, their problem could be solved,” he added.

People laugh away their ailments in Raipur

Raipur, Apr 5 (ANI): ‘Laughter is the best medicine’ – with the belief in the truism, men and women in Raipur are laughing away all their ailments, doing it for an hour every day.

Every morning, around 150 men and women, mostly senior citizens, assemble at a park near the office of State District Collector, and start their day on a positive note.

The idea of the laughter club was first started in 1995 by Dr Madan Kataria Lokendwala.

The club believes that laughter is the best medicine to bust stress and tension, ubiquitous and synonymous with modern life style.

“Laughing helps our internal system like heart, kidney, lungs and pancreas to become more active. It helps fight depression and other ailments also. Laughing helps improve our immune system as well,” said Govinda, an official, Laughing Club.

74-year-old Dr Praveen Chandra Patel spends his morning laughing with many others like him. He said that his health has shown remarkable improvement ever since he joined the club.

“I have been suffering from diabetes for the last 40 years, but I don’t have problems. I am leading a very normal life. I had even undergone a bypass surgery 15 years ago, but due to the grace of Almighty and also due to the laughter club, I am all healthy,” said Dr Praveen Chandra Patel.

Studies have shown that laughter increases hormones that alleviate depression and enhance immunity.

Laughter therapy is medically proved to control negative hormones in the body that leads to increase in stress and anxiety.

Apart from helping to relax, laughter therapy also increases oxygen intake in the body. Several benefits of laughter therapy have been medically proved.

It helps reduce stress, which in turn reduces blood pressure, heart disease and diabetes. By Shiv Shankar Sarthi (ANI)

Punjab villagers take up yoga

Ferozpur, Mar 27 (ANI): Believing in the truism “Health is Wealth”, the villagers of Punjab’s Ferozpur District are promoting a yoga campaign in their community.

For many of them, their day starts at dawn and the first task of the day is to practise yoga.

This yoga drive has been taken up by the rural folk of Begawali village. They are not backed by the government or supported by any NGO.

Most of the villagers are engaged in farming whole day and in their free time they practice yoga

The credit for promoting yoga in the village goes to Lal Chand, who taught and spread awareness about yoga.

“Nobody in the village used to practice yoga before. I was practicing it alone. Now slowly, everybody has joined in and every family practices it. Earlier, villagers were suffering with several ailments, but now as they are practicing yoga, they are fine and healthy”, said Lal Chand.

Yoga has become a part of their daily routine. They have treated many ailments by practicing yoga regularly.

They keep fast once a week and do yoga everyday. Even womenfolk of the village are practicing it actively.

” I was taking medicines before, but it was not helpful. Rather, I was feeling more unwell. Then I started doing yoga and it helped very much. I am absolutely healthy now and actively managing household chores”, said Raj Rani , a villager.
They have also collectively banned alcohol in their village. A local store, which used to sell liquor, is closed now. They have vouched to adopt healthy options for improving their lifestyle. By Avtar Gill (ANI)

Tibetan Government in-exile launches mass programme to counter tuberculosis

Dharamsala, Mar 25 (ANI): The Health Department of the Tibetan Government in-exile here has launched a mass-based Tuberculosis Control Programme on the occasion of World Tuberculosis Day on Tuesday.

The programme is as per the guidelines spelt out in the revised National Tuberculosis Control Programme of the Government of India.

“The entire Tibetan community throughout India and Nepal will rededicate to fight the disease,” said Paljor Tsering Chope, Health Minister of Tibetan Government in-exile.

The aim of launching the programme has been to highlight the seriousness of the ailments caused due to tuberculosis and create mass awareness about the preventive measures.

While tuberculosis is found predominantly in developing countries, the XDR-strain has been reported in both rich and poor nations, partly because developed economies have better screening and diagnostic technology to identify it.

According to experts of the World Health Organisation (WHO), people with weakened immune systems face the biggest risks from highly drug-resistant tuberculosis. (ANI)

Polluted River Ami poses an environmental threat to people of eastern UP

Gorakhpur, Mar 15 (ANI): People in Gorakhpur have lodged complaints about several ailments that they suffer from because of the polluted Ami river that flows through the district.

The industrial waste and chemicals flowing in the waters have not only proved lethal for animals, but also to villagers living on its banks.

“Earlier, we used to take bath, wash our utensils and cook food using this water. But now we will die if we drink this water. All the animals have started dying after drinking this water. A lot of diseases have spread due to this water,” said Vishwa Vijay Singh, a resident.

The waters of the Ami River flows across eastern Uttar Pradesh’s Siddarthnagar, Basti and Gorakhpur Districts.

It has been referred to in Buddhist era texts, and said to be on the verge of extinction. Units located in the Gorakhpur Industrial Development Authority (GIDA), which do not have purification plants, are the main cause of pollution in the river.

“Among all the rivers in our area, Ami’s water is the most polluted. Common diseases like diarrhoea are caused due to polluted water. Therefore Ami’s water is really harmful for the people of that area,” said Trilok Ranjan, a doctor.

Several campaigns were initiated in the past to save the Ami, but the continued apathy of the authorities has resulted in further deterioration of the river.

Residents allege that the government’s pollution control bodies have taken no initiative. Industrial units attached to GIDA provide employment to a section of villagers who do not raise their voices against the pollution.

Other villagers have formed committees to make the river pollution-free and this campaign is gathering momentum. (ANI)

ROUNDUP: Bolivian president defends, chews coca leaf at UN drug meet

Vienna – Bolivian President Evo Morales on Wednesday chewed a coca leaf at a United Nations drug conference in Vienna, underscoring his view that the plant should not be on the UN list of narcotic substances.

Morales was speaking at a conference of the UN Commission on Narcotic Drugs, which is expected to adopt an action plan Thursday to tackle the global drug problem in the coming decade, against the backdrop of limited progress over the last 10 years.

“It’s not a drug, it’s a medicine,” the president said, holding up a coca leaf, which he put into his mouth minutes later.

The leaves should be removed from the international list of narcotic substances, while forms of cocaine should be included instead, Morales told reporters.

Under the UN Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, coca leaf chewing should have been banned by 1989 in all countries.

While Bolivia would continue to limit coca plant farming, Morales also said that the traditional plant “represents the culture of peoples in the Andean region” and has been used for 5,000 years, to treat ailments such as altitude sickness.

Bolivia’s president, who comes from an indigenous family, drew comparisons between himself and Barack Obama, the first black president of the United States, expressing hope that Obama would help decriminalize the coca leaf and would help end the zero-production policy.

The action plan to be adopted in Vienna calls on countries to find a better balance between measures to curb supply and demand, for example by strengthening health care services.

UN goals adopted in 1998 to significantly reduce drug supply and demand by 2008 “have been attained only to a limited extent,” the draft of the action plan said.

Taking a larger view of history, the head of the UN Office on Drugs and Crimes (UNODC) noted Wednesday that there had been large improvements since 1909, when he first international conference to control drugs met in Shanghai.

Since then opium production has fallen by 75 per cent, UNODC Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa said.

On Tuesday, the European Commission issued a report that painted a bleak picture of global drug policy, saying it had “no more than a marginal positive influence” in the past decade, as drug prices fell and opium production grew.

One of the sticking points regarding the action plan is whether to include measures for so-called harm reduction, such as providing substitution drugs or needles to addicts. While non-governmental groups support the concept, most UN members are opposed, diplomats said. (dpa)

Four die while queuing at child healer clinic

Four die while queuing at child healer clinicJakarta – Police in East Java province have closed a clinic run by a nine-year-old child believed to possess healing powers after four people died while queuing for treatment, an officer said Tuesday.

Two patients died on Monday while lining up with thousands of others at the house of Muhammad Ponari, who has been called “child witch doctor” by locals, in Jombang district, said police officer Muhammad Indra.

Two other patients died last week in a stampede, he said.

“They queued for many hours because there were too many patients. Most of the victims had breathing problems,” he said.

Ponari caused a stir among locals after he found a stone believed to have healing powers after he was struck by a lightning last month, Indra said.

Since then thousands of people with various ailments have thronged to his house every day to seek cures for various ailments.

Ponari treated his patients by dipping the stone in water and having them drink the liquid.

It was not clear if anyone has been cured.

Modern medical services are too costly for million of Indonesians, forcing them to seek treatment from traditional healers. (dpa)

Data on over 6,000 prisoners in UK lost

London, Jan.10 (ANI): The British Government has done it again! It has lost a computer memory stick that contained the data of more than 6,000 prisoners in the country, besides some of their medical records.

The culprit, according to The Telegraph, is a health worker of the Central Lancashire Primary Care Trust.

The device was lost last month by a member of staff and contained details on 6,360 prisoners from HMP Preston and was lost on December 30.

It is the latest in a long series of data losses to hit the Government and prison and health staff are now having to trawl records to track those affected down and inform them.

It contains details of some prisoners’ ailments, such as diabetes, asthma, mental health and sexual health, but not full medical history, as well as prisoner surnames, their age range, cell location, prison number and clinic appointment times.

The member of staff has been suspended while the investigation is carried out. (ANI)