Kids Are Getting Drunk Using Hand Sanitizer

Kids Are Getting Drunk Using Hand Sanitizer

Six-year-old Nhaijah Russell swallowed three or four squirts of seemingly innocuous liquid hand sanitizer at school. It tasted good, she said, like strawberry. It also contained enough alcohol to make her dangerously drunk. She arrived at the emergency room slurring her words and unable to walk. Many poison control center hotlines across the US has seen a nearly 500% increase in calls related to children younger than 12 ingesting hand sanitizer, according to new analysis by the Georgia Poison Center, which has been going on for awhile. 

Read More

NSAIDs may be more harmful than you think

NSAIDs may be more harmful than you think

Anti-inflammatory drugs are some of the most common drugs taken every day. We have all taken them at some point, including Advil, Aleve, and Ibuprofen. These medications are also known as NSAIDs, or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. They are commonly used to help with things like pain, fever, and muscle cramps. However, there have been studies popping up saying that NSAIDs are linked to an increased risk of conditions like heart attacks, stroke, kidney failure, and stomach ulcers.

Read More

Study suggests more aggressive high blood pressure treatment

Study suggests more aggressive high blood pressure treatment

new study recommends that doctors should take a more aggressive approach to treating high blood pressure. The study claims that treating high blood pressure more aggressively reduces the risk of heart disease and death. The study comes from the National Institute of Health and the Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial.

Read More

HIV Preventative Medicine Seemingly Works

HIV Preventative Medicine Seemingly Works

A new HIV preventative medicine called Truvada seems to be working better than people thought. New research around this medicine says so. Over 1.2 million Americans are estimated to have HIV. New research finds that HIV may be able to be prevented in some people with a daily pill. New pill called Truvada has been shown to reduce the risk of HIV infection in people who are at high risk by up to 92%. 

Read More

E-Cigs Are 95% Less Harmful Than Tobacco

E-Cigs Are 95% Less Harmful Than Tobacco

Electronic cigarettes are around 95 percent less harmful than tobacco and should be promoted as a tool to help smokers quit, according to a study by an agency of Britain's Department of Health. E-cigarettes, tobacco-free devices people use to inhale nicotine-laced vapor, have surged in popularity on both sides of the Atlantic but health organizations have so far been wary of advocating them as a safer alternative to tobacco and governments from California to India have tried to introduce bills to regulate their use more strictly.

Read More

FDA Criticizes Cigarette Makers: 'Your Products Aren't Natural'

FDA Criticizes Cigarette Makers: 'Your Products Aren't Natural'

The Food and Drug Administration scolded makers of three brands of cigarettes for labels saying they are "natural" or "additive-free". It issued warning letters to Winston maker ITG Brands LLC; Natural American Spirit maker Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company Inc.; and Nat Sherman maker Sherman's 1400 Broadway N.Y.C. Ltd.

Read More

Another Superbug Found at LA Area Hospital

Another Superbug Found at LA Area Hospital

Another antibiotic-resistant 'superbug' was found at Los Angeles-Area hospital where some of the patients contracted the disease that has been linked to a type of medical scope and infected dozens people around the United States. Huntington Memorial Hospital released in a statement to public health authorities after several patients who had procedures using the Olympus Corp duodenoscopes were found to have the resistant pseudomonas bacteria. The hospital quarantined the scopes while it investigates whether they may be linked to the infections. 

Read More

Diabetes Cases In The U.K. Up 60% In The Last Decade

Diabetes Cases In The U.K. Up 60% In The Last Decade

Cases of diabetes in the U.K. have increased dramatically in the past decade. The number living with the condition now up to 60%. Since 2005 there have been an additional 1.2 million people diagnosed with the disease, which is equivalent to the population of Cyprus. The charity Diabetes UK revealed these figures and they want effective care and improved preventative measures. This will help cut costs of worse conditions and improve quality of life.

Read More

Feel-Good Exercise Hormone Irisin Is Real

Feel-Good Exercise Hormone Irisin Is Real

Scientists in the US have found that a feel-good exercise hormone called irisin DOES exist. Previously thought to be a myth but new research team from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute used mass spectrometry to look for irisin in blood samples of individuals after exercise. The form of mass spectrometry used in the new study was far more accurate and reliable in measuring irisin. Found that these people had released the exercise hormone from their body, which activates fat cells to increase energy turn over

Read More

Scientists Genetically Engineer Yeast To Produce Morphine-Like Painkiller

Scientists Genetically Engineer Yeast To Produce Morphine-Like Painkiller

Normally takes around a year to create painkillers from opium poppies. First they have to be grown, harvested, shipped around the world and finally processed. Now researchers have been able to cut this time down to just a few days. Scientists can do this by genetically engineering yeast to do it instead. cientists get the chemical thebaine, which they then turn into the opioid hydrocodone (painkiller).

Read More

Researchers Falsely Claims Traces of Bubonic Plague on New York Subways

Researchers Falsely Claims Traces of Bubonic Plague on New York Subways

Almost half of these DNA sequences didn’t match any known species. Researchers associated some of these microbes with the bubonic plague and anthrax. Research team initially claimed that the bacteria Yersinia pestis, which causes the plague, was found on the subway. Suggested that they represent normal co-habitants of a shared urban infrastructure that may even be essential to maintaining such an environment.

Read More

GM Food Labels Do Not Act As A Warning To Consumers

GM Food Labels Do Not Act As A Warning To Consumers

Current economic and political battle taking place in America over the labeling of genetically modified (GM) foods. In 2015, 19 US states considered GM food labeling legislation. 3 States (Connecticut, Maine and Vermont) have passed mandatory GM labeling laws. July 23: US House passed the Safe and Accurate Food Labeling bill and will move to the Senate and, if passed, will prohibit both state-level legislation regarding GM labels and the labeling of products that contain GM ingredients.

Read More

White House funds ways to treat and identify heroin epidemic

White House funds ways to treat and identify heroin epidemic

The number of heroin overdose deaths in the U.S. continues to climb, so White House is funding efforts to prioritize treatment over punishment for heroin user. $13.4 million grant from the Office of National Drug Control Policy. They will partner public health and safety officials to trace the origin of the drugs and its distributors. The project will be funded for one year and will target high intensity drug trafficking areas in Appalachia, New England, New York, New Jersey, Philadelphia, Washington and Baltimore.

Read More

IBM TO BUY MERGE HEALTHCARE IN $1 BILLION DEAL

IBM TO BUY MERGE HEALTHCARE IN $1 BILLION DEAL

IBM Corp said it would buy medical image company Merge Healthcare Inc. in a $1 billion deal and combine it with its newly formed health analytics unit. IBM plans to combine data and images from Merge Healthcare's medical imaging management platform with Watson's cloud-based healthcare computing system. The system analyzes high volumes of data, understands complex questions posed in natural language and proposes evidence-based answers.

Read More

9 Risk Factors May Contribute to Most Alzheimer's Cases

9 Risk Factors May Contribute to Most Alzheimer's Cases

A new study published in the Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery and Psychiatry found that nine potentially modifiable risk factors may contribute to two thirds of Alzheimer's disease cases worldwide. The analysis shows how the risk factors vary because of the innate complexity of Alzheimer's disease development. But researchers suggest the preventive strategies targeting diet, drugs, body chemistry, mental health, pre-existing disease and lifestyle may help fight dementia. 

Read More

Our Health & Industry-Funded Research

Our Health & Industry-Funded Research

The New York Times blasted wide open an argument that highly affects the health industry in an article this past weekend. The problem? Three words: industry funded research. Coca Cola is a leader in this. The report was sparked after a newly-formed nonprofit organization claimed to be working on developing solutions to prevent and reduce chronic disease associated with poor diet and obesity. The issue is this organization has received significant funding from Coca-Cola. Another key issue is that the group suggests poor diet and health habits aren't to blame for obesity and weight gain. 

Read More

New Report: 47 Million Diagnosed With Dementia

New Report: 47 Million Diagnosed With Dementia

While often incorrectly considered a disease, dementia actually refers to a group of symptoms which negatively affect memory and social abilities, resulting in an interference with daily functioning. Primarily, problems with memory and impaired judgment or language are the two major areas affected by dementia.  However, numerous other causes and symptoms of dementia exist, which can make diagnosis and treatment difficult or even impossible. But now, health researchers have found that nearly 47 million people are living with dementia globally which is a major increased from 35 million in 2009. The question is why is this increasing so rapidly? They warned that there hasn't been a medical breakthrough and the numbers will likely continue to grow every 20 or so years. 

Read More

New study suggests bones heal differently than we thought

New study suggests bones heal differently than we thought

It turns out that broken bones do not heal like doctors thought they did. For years it has been thought that fibrin was essential for bone repair. Fibrin is a protein that aids in blood clotting and helps in repairing fractured bones. However, a recent study from Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee suggests that this is not exactly true. According to the researchers at Vanderbilt, it is not the fibrin itself that helps to heal bone fractures, but rather the way in which fibrin breaks down. This research is important because it could help find a way to treat adults and the elderly who suffer from bone fractures heal just as well as children. The study was published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.

Read More

FDA approves OxyContin for children as young as 11

FDA approves OxyContin for children as young as 11

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved OxyContin, a powerful and extremely addicting painkiller, for children as young as eleven years old. They claim the drug is safe for children as young as eleven who are suffering from chronic pain that cannot be successfully treated with other medications. The approval is a result of data that was submitted by Purdue Pharma, the drug’s manufacturer, to the FDA indicating that OxyContin is safe for children if used correctly.

Read More

Nigeria Celebrates One Year Without Polio Case

Nigeria Celebrates One Year Without Polio Case

Health officials in Nigeria are celebrating one year without a single case of polio. This is an impressive milestone. This indicates that the world is one step closer to making polio the second human infectious disease to be eradicated. Achieved with the use of an effective vaccination campaign.  The first disease to be eradicated was smallpox. Polio (poliomyelitis) is a paralyzing disease, which predominately affects children under five. 

Read More