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There Are Now 5 FDA-Approved H1N1 Swine Flu Vaccines In The United States November 19, 2009 Many have read conflicting reports on which H1N1 vaccines are approved for use in the United States. Here is a summary of the 5 FDA-approved H1N1 vaccines, including their ingredients and toxicity.
Live Near An Airport? Elevated Pollution Levels Are A Hidden Threat November 19, 2009 Scientists are reporting evidence that air pollution - a well-recognized problem at major airports - may pose an important but largely overlooked health concern for people living near smaller regional airports.
Study Raises Concerns About Outdoor Second-Hand Smoke November 19, 2009 Indoor smoking bans have forced smokers at bars and restaurants onto outdoor patios, but a new University of Georgia study in collaboration with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggests that these outdoor smoking areas might be creating a new health hazard.
Surge in Anaphylactic Shock In B.C. As More People Report Reactions To H1N1 Vaccine November 18, 2009 As Canadian health officials assured the public that the pandemic H1N1 vaccine is safe, at least one province is reporting almost double the rate of severe allergic reactions.
Pregnant Women Are Refusing H1N1 Swine Flu Vaccine Over Safety Fears November 18, 2009 Millions of people are shunning the swine flu jab over fears about its safety, a survey of GPs suggests. It found that fewer than half of those offered the vaccination are taking it up - with pregnant women the most likely to say no.
Exercising In The Heat Helps You Eat Less November 18, 2009 Exercisers trying to cut down on calories might want to take a run in the sun instead of a climate-controlled gym, according to a small Australian study.
Exercise Makes You Stress Resistant November 18, 2009 Researchers at Princeton University recently made a remarkable discovery about the brains of rats that exercise. Some of their neurons respond differently to stress than the neurons of slothful rats.
Many Adverse Reactions Being Reported From Pandemrix H1N1 Swine Flu Vaccine November 18, 2009 The Pandemrix H1N1 vaccine manufactured by GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) is reportedly responsible for most of the adverse reactions taking place in the United Kingdom and most of Europe.
1.5 Million People Now Infected in Ukraine: What Will Happen To Other Countries? November 18, 2009 According to reports on the progression of regions affected, there are now approximately 1.5 million cases of people infected in the Ukraine with 328 dead from a still-to-be-characterized virus. What would happen in other countries if a virus with a similar transmission rate were to infect their population?
Remote-Controlled Nanocomposite Invented for Drug Delivery inside Body November 18, 2009 The article further illustrates evidence of ongoing efforts in nanotechnology and pharmacology to create methods of drug delivery via nanoparticles which can potentially cause DNA damage, and other risks.
50 Reasons to Protect Infants from Vaccines November 18, 2009 There are possibly thousands of reasons for protecting infants from dangerous, toxic vaccines. Here are just fifty.
Obese People Perceive Their Body Size as OK, Dismiss The Need to Lose Weight November 18, 2009 Some obese people misperceive that their body size is normal and think they don't need to lose weight, according to research presented at the American Heart Association's Scientific Sessions 2009.
Five Exercises Reduce Neck, Shoulder Pain November 18, 2009 Strength training exercises using dumbbells can reduce pain and improve function in the trapezius muscle, the large muscle which extends from the back of the head, down the neck and into the upper back.
Probiotics Prevent Infections In Children November 17, 2009 Lactobacillus GG (LGG) can decrease the risk of upper respiratory tract infections including rhinitis, pharyngitis, sinusitis, otitis, and the common cold in children attending day care centres, claims a new study.
Canada: Public Health Approves of Damaging The Health of One Third the Population November 17, 2009 Take a look at the damage the government knows to expect from the administration of the fifty million doses of flu vaccine in Canada.
Nanoparticles Used in Common Household Items Cause DNA Damage November 17, 2009 Titanium dioxide (TiO2) nanoparticles, found in everything from cosmetics to sunscreen to paint to vitamins, caused systemic genetic damage in mice, according to a comprehensive study conducted by researchers at UCLA's Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Reports of Adverse Reactions To The H1N1 Vaccine Are Pouring In November 17, 2009 Only a small portion of the population has been vaccinated for the H1N1 virus in most areas so far, and yet already there is an avalanche of reports of adverse reactions to vaccine.
Even In "Hot Spot" Infected Areas, GPs On The Frontline Are Refusing H1N1 Vaccine November 17, 2009 Many GPs and practice staff are refusing to be vaccinated against swine flu, even in 'hot-spot' areas where rates of infection are rising fastest.
Could Genetic Variation Influence Empathy And Stress Levels? November 17, 2009 Researchers have discovered a genetic variation that may contribute to how empathetic a human is, and how that person reacts to stress. In the first study of its kind, a variation in the hormone/neurotransmitter oxytocin's receptor was linked to a person's ability to infer the mental state of others.
British Scientists Testing Pneumonic Virus November 17, 2009 British scientists are examining the strain of swine flu behind a deadly Ukrainian outbreak to see if the virus has mutated.
Fluoridation Increases Infant Death Rates November 16, 2009 Fluoridation causes more premature births, one of the top causes of infant death in the USA. It poses the greatest risk to poor non-white mothers and babies. This is the finding State University of New York researchers from data spanning 1993 to 2002.
Low Vitamin D Levels Linked To Proliferation of H1N1 November 16, 2009 According to a recent study, as many as 77 percent of all Americans may be deficient in the vitamin essential for bone health and which may prevent H1N1 (Swine Flu) and seasonal flu, wheezing, winter-related eczema, upper respiratory infections and may help prevent cancer, autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis, Type 1 diabetes, certain infectious diseases, myocardial infarctions - heart attacks - and many other serious diseases.
Medical Doctor Retracts H1N1 Vaccine Advice After Reading Insert! November 16, 2009 Dr. Roby Mitchell, M.D. issues a retraction to nurses he originally advised to get the H1N1 flu vaccination. After reading the insert of the vaccine, he retracted his advice.
Ukraine Virus: Causes Cardiopulmonary Failure, Mix of H1N1 And Parainfluenza November 16, 2009 Based on autopsies, we have come to the conclusion: it's not pneumonia, but cardiopulmonary insufficiency and cardiogenic shock. The virus enters directly into the lungs, there is bleeding. Antibiotics should not be used.
Healthier Lifestyles Could Prevent Almost 80,000 Cancer Cases in the UK November 16, 2009 Research from the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF) found some 78,700 cases of cancer in the UK might not occur if people ate healthily, maintained a normal weight and took exercise.
Protect Yourself From Death By "Cytokine Storm" and Gross Criminal Negligence November 16, 2009 People worldwide now realize there is something foul brewing in the H1N1 swine flu vaccines, government prescribed drugs, and the mass media manufactured "emergency."
Daily Dose of Nuts Benefit Heart Health November 16, 2009 A daily dose of nuts-walnuts, almonds, pistachios- can make up for a heart-healthy diet, according to Mayo Clinic researchers.
Low Vitamin D Levels Linked To Cardiovascular Disease and Death November 16, 2009 While mothers have known that feeding their kids milk builds strong bones, a new study by researchers at the Heart Institute at Intermountain Medical Center in Salt Lake City suggests that Vitamin D contributes to a strong and healthy heart as well - and that inadequate levels of the vitamin may significantly increase a person's risk of stroke, heart disease, and death, even among people who've never had heart disease.
WHO Pushes Antivirals, Gives Contradictory Evidence At A Virtual Press Conference November 15, 2009 A virtual press conference held on November 12, 2009 is adding to the speculation that the World Health Organization (WHO) is misleading the world and purposely withholding evidence of changes that may have occurred on the H1N1 virus.
Connecting the Dots: Exposing RFID Documents and Plans For Surveilling November 15, 2009 Radio Frequency Implantable Device (RFID) use on humans can no longer be claimed as speculation or theory. There use is now well documented and integrated in several planned strategies for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and Health Care Bills. These disturbing initiatives will see microchip implants embedded inside every American, and possibly inside every human within the next few years.
Lack of Sleep Increases Diabetes Risk November 13, 2009 Short sleep times may contribute to the development of insulin resistance and reduced glucose tolerance, which in turn may elevate the risk of diabetes, concludes a new study.
First Evidence That Neurons Need To Erase Old Memories To Make Room For New Ones November 13, 2009 Short-term memory may depend in a surprising way on the ability of newly formed neurons to erase older connections.
Letter Released From FDA Fabricates H1N1 Vaccine Safety and Effectiveness November 13, 2009 The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner has released a letter to U.S. healthcare professionals which attempts to restore confidence in the H1N1 vaccine, while making outlandish claims on the vaccine's safety and effectiveness.
FDA Expands Use of Untested H1N1 Vaccines to Infants and Children November 13, 2009 The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has extended its sadistic badge of approval on untested CSL Ltd H1N1 influenza vaccines to include children ages 6 months and older. This vaccine was previously approved only for use in adults, ages 18 years and older.
Eating Certain Fish While Pregnant Linked to Poorer Cognitive Performance November 13, 2009 Children who eat fish more than 3 times per week show a worse performance in the general cognitive, executive and perceptual-manipulative areas. Those with higher levels of exposure to mercury show a generalised delay in cognitive, memory and verbal areas.
Vaccine Victims Blamed For National Emergency: Humanicide and What's Next November 13, 2009 The two most deadly myths in medical history is that: 1) vaccines, not mainly improvements in hygiene and nutrition, terminated polio and smallpox; and 2) vaccines are "safe and effective" when more than 90 percent of vaccine injuries and fatalities are criminally neglected, not surveyed nor reported.
Hospital Says Mothers-To-Be Will Be Turned Away If They're Too Fat November 12, 2009 Mothers-to-be who have a body mass index (BMI) of over 34, the equivalent of an average woman of 5ft 6ins weighing 15 stone, will be turned away from Weston General Hospital, Weston-super-Mare, Somerset.
Wise People In The UK Awakened To The Reality of Vaccines November 12, 2009 The vaccine control agendas that have taken over national governments are weakening under the growing masses who are awakening to the reality of toxic vaccinations. This demonstration in the UK is a prime example of what is happening around the world.
Overuse of Antibiotics and Widespread Resistance Threatens Modern Medicine November 12, 2009 Overuse of antibiotics in Europe is building widespread resistance and threatening to halt vital medical treatments such as hip replacements, intensive care for premature babies and cancer therapies, health experts say.
Mini Ice Age Took Hold of Europe in Months: Could A Similar Event Be Taking Place? November 12, 2009 Just months - that's how long it took for Europe to be engulfed by an ice age. The scenario, which comes straight out of Hollywood blockbuster The Day After Tomorrow, was revealed by the most precise record of the climate from palaeohistory ever generated.
The Swine Flu Boogeyman November 12, 2009 "The boogeyman will get you!" parents sometimes tell misbehaving children. With about 40% of parents saying “no!” to vaccinating their kids for swine flu, apparently health officials think turnabout is fair play. And the media seem happy to help.
Wireless Radiation Has A Long-Term Biological Effect On The Brain November 12, 2009 A study at Örebro University in Sweden indicates that mobile phones and other cordless telephones have a biological effect on the brain.
5 Easy Ways To Maintain Your Weight November 12, 2009 While losing weight is a Herculean task, maintaining it is no joke either. We all have heard about the thumb rule – eat less and exercise more, but it is not as easy as it sounds. Dieters would agree!
Polish Prime Minister Is The Only One Doing His Job To Protect Citizens From Vaccines November 12, 2009 After the Polish Health Minister announced that she would not authorize the use of untested vaccines, the Prime Minister Donald Tusk, said that his government won’t buy vaccines for swine flu that have not been properly tested or from producers who won’t take responsibility for possible side effects.
Western Diet Allows Stomach Bacteria To Facilitate Obesity November 12, 2009 Eating a Westernized diet with lots of sugar and carbohydrates caused almost instantaneous changes in the gut flora of mice -- changes that caused the mice to become obese, researchers have found.
6 Natural Juices That Offer Great Health Benefits November 12, 2009 Drinking juice on a daily basis can strengthen the body and keep the skin, glands and organs well hydrated. Furthermore, juices are easy to digest and make great dietary supplements.
Conventional Breast Cancer Treatment Leaves Patients With Lingering Pain November 11, 2009 Even three years after finishing treatment for breast cancer, almost 50 percent of women report long-term pain, a new Danish study finds.
The CDC and WHO March Forward With Further Manipulation of Swine Flu Data November 11, 2009 As the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and World Health Organization (WHO) are continuing their rampage of manipulation and deception on swine flu data, their crooked epidemiologists are now stating that 4,000 Americans - rather than about 1,200 - have died of swine flu since the manufactured disease emerged in April.
Expert Says Don't Worry About H1N1 Double Doses For Kids November 11, 2009 Families in several provinces were expressing outrage and concern after they said their children got double the recommended dose of the H1N1 Arepanrix vaccine, the untested swine flu vaccine which was rushed through regulatory processes so it could be approved in Canada. Now, medical experts say there's little need for concern.
New Evidence Suggests That Dark Chocolate Eases Emotional Stress November 11, 2009 The "chocolate cure" for emotional stress is getting new support from a clinical trial published online in ACS' Journal of Proteome Research. It found that eating about an ounce and a half of dark chocolate a day for two weeks reduced levels of stress hormones in the bodies of people feeling highly stressed.
Burn More Calories Walking November 11, 2009 By doing interval walking for a mere 20 minutes every other day, you can shift your metabolism into high gear so that you burn more calories and fat in less time than if you were working out at a steady pace.
Nearly A Quarter Million Flu Cases in Belarus: WHO Remains Silent on Ukraine Plague November 11, 2009 As flu cases in Belarus near the quarter million mark, the World Health Organization (WHO) still remains silent on the gene sequences and cause of the pneumonic plague that has infected well over one million people in the Ukraine.
What Are The Best Exercises for Healthy Bones? November 11, 2009 Several weeks ago, The Journal of the American Medical Association published a study that should give pause to anyone who plans to live a long and independent life.
Diets High In Fructose Increase The Risk of High Blood Pressure November 11, 2009 A diet high in fructose increases the risk of developing high blood pressure (hypertension), according to a paper being presented at the American Society of Nephrology's 42nd Annual Meeting and Scientific Exposition in San Diego, California.
Laugh Your Way To Good Health November 10, 2009 Some 400 clowns and doctors skilled at clowning took part in an international conference in Buenos Aires to present scientific evidence, backed by their own experience, to show why laughter was healthy.
Yoga Reduces Lower Back Pain November 10, 2009 Yoga may be more effective than standard treatment in reducing chronic low back pain in minority populations, according to a new study.
Vaccine Pusher, Dr. Oz Owns 150,000 Shares In A Vaccine Technology Company November 10, 2009 Dr. Mehmet Oz is a huge promoter of vaccines. He's been on television reinforcing fear about H1N1 swine flu and telling everyone to get vaccinated. But what he didn't tell his viewing audience is that he holds 150,000 option shares in a vaccine company that could earn him millions of dollars in profits as the stock price rises.
Your Mood May Benefit More From A Low-Fat Diet Rather Than Low-Carb November 10, 2009 People who lost weight by following a low-calorie, low-fat regime saw longer term effects on mood than those who used a low-carb approach, report researchers in Australia – but whether its down to social chemical reasons remain unclear.
Health Canada Warns Canadians To Stay Away From Natural Medicine To Fight H1N1 November 10, 2009 As flu activity picks up across Canada, federal authorities are warning Canadians not to buy natural remedies and to strictly confide in the anti-viral drugs and vaccines authorized by Health Canada.
Brief Training in Meditation May Help Manage Pain November 10, 2009 Living with pain is stressful, but a surprisingly short investment of time in mental training can help you cope.
Natural Infectious Disease Declines vs. Vaccination Effectiveness and Dangers November 10, 2009 In North America, Europe, and the South Pacific, major declines in life-threatening infectious diseases occurred historically either without, or far in advance of public immunization efforts for specific diseases as listed. This provides irrefutable evidence that vaccines are not necessary for the effective elimination of a wide range of infectious diseases.
Multiple Sclerosis Linked To Teenage Obesity November 10, 2009 Being obese as a teenager may be linked with an increased risk of multiple sclerosis as an adult, researchers say.
Are Geoengineering Initiatives Being Used To Accelerate The Pandemic? November 9, 2009 Geoengineering strategies, the aerosol spraying of our skies, or what is popularly known as chemtrails, have been witnessed and evidenced by millions around the world. They are also an admitted planetary operation by government and international agencies. There is now some disturbing but compelling evidence which suggests that these same geoengineering initiatives may be accelerating the global pandemic.
Number of Influenza, ARI and Hospitalized Cases In The Ukraine Exceed 1 Million November 9, 2009 The number of influenza, acute respiratory (ARI) and hospitalized cases in the Ukraine has been updated to 1,018,219 people infected. There are 14 regions which have now exceeded the epidemic threshold and 155 people have been reported dead.
Doctors Do Unneeded Pap Smears November 9, 2009 Many doctors are performing unnecessary Pap smears, ignoring guidelines issued by major medical organizations and adding to health care costs, a survey of physicians has found.
10 Reasons To Drink Coconut Water November 9, 2009 Coconut water is known to be more nutritious than any type of milk because it has no cholesterol and no fat. Here are 10 reasons to drink it t every day naturally.
Deadly Swine Flu Recombination Predicted by American Doctor November 9, 2009 Warnings that the H1N1 Swine Flu virus would mutate into a much more deadly strain have come true according to President Victor Yuschenko. The Ukrainian politician, vying for re-election, declared martial law last week in a move that reflects gross negligence and criminal malfeasance, according to intelligence sources provided by American public health expert, Dr. Leonard Horowitz.
Harmless Smells Make Some People Sick November 9, 2009 People who become ill from harmless smells are not being silly, says Dutch researcher Patricia Bulsing. Rather, they perceive these smells differently than other people.
12 Simple Aerobic Tips November 9, 2009 Regular aerobic exercise is vital for cardiovascular health, weight management, and is even an effective therapy for mild to moderate depression. But too many people quit, become injured, or simply find the process less enjoyable than they should. Here is Dr. Weil's advice for making aerobic exercise an ongoing, safe and rewarding part of your life
Dozens of People Die In India From Unknown Virus November 8, 2009 Doctors at Sassoon General Hospital in Pune, India are worried. Thirty-five patients with swine flu-like symptoms died in the last 45 days at the hospital, and not one of them tested positive for swine flu. The doctors still don't know what caused the death of these patients.
Everyday Chemicals in Clothes, Boots, Food, Creams, Linens Are Turning Boys Into Girls November 7, 2009 Denmark's government unveiled official research showing that two-year-old children are at risk from a bewildering array of gender-bending chemicals in such everyday items as waterproof clothes, rubber boots, bed linen, food, nappies, sunscreen lotion and moisturizing cream.
Nanometer and Micrometer Particles Cause DNA Damage Across Cell Barriers November 7, 2009 As nanotechnology continues to come under fire for lack of known effects, a study now finds that tiny metal particles have been shown to cause damage to DNA across a cellular barrier - without having to cross it.
More Cover-Ups in Ukraine: WHO Withholds Gene Sequences As Cases Double Again November 7, 2009 After infected cases double again in the Ukraine plague approaching the 1 million mark, the World Health Organization (WHO) is holding back gene sequences which could provide evidence of the mutation or recombination of the H1N1 or novel virus.
Reports of H1N1 Vaccine Causing Miscarriages November 7, 2009 Krissi Danielsson reporting from About.com quotes an article from the Minneapolis Star Tribune which showed how some pregnant women are skeptical of the new H1N1 vaccine. Several women blogging at the end of the article had experienced miscarriages with the H1N1 vaccine.
Air Pollution Increases Infants' Risk Of Bronchiolitis November 7, 2009 Infants who are exposed to higher levels of air pollution are at increased risk for bronchiolitis, according to a new study.
Catching The H1N1 Swine Flu Could Affect Your Life Insurance Plan and Eligibility November 6, 2009 Millions could come down with the H1N1 flu this season. If you're among them, and your brush with the deadly bug motivates you to take out life insurance, get ready for a shock. Insurance companies may treat you like you have the plague.
Less Than 1 in 3 Bystanders Who Witness a Heart Attack Try To Help November 6, 2009 A research team has found that only 30 per cent of bystanders in Toronto are willing to help victims of cardiac arrest, one of the lowest rates of bystanders helping others in the developed world.
Ukraine Health Minister Says New Strain of H1N1 Swine Flu: Possible Mutation November 6, 2009 The first deputy minister of Health in Ukraine said in a statement that they have a different H1N1 swine flu than the rest of the world. In 6 days 500,000 people have been infected and 109 deaths have been confirmed.
Western Habits of Frying, Grilling and Pasteurizing are Increasing Inflammation November 6, 2009 Compounds produced by frying, grilling, or pasteurizing may be driving inflammation and aging, according to a new study from the US.
WHO Claims H1N1 Will Cause More Deaths In Northern Winter November 6, 2009 The World Health Organisation (WHO) is claiming that the H1N1 swine flu virus has picked up steam in the northern hemisphere and is expected to cause more serious infections and deaths as cold weather sets in.
Choose Your Child's Clothing Wisely To Increase Physical Activity November 6, 2009 A study reported in BioMed Central's open access journal, International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity, suggests that inadequate or inappropriate clothing could restrict children's outdoor play.
Why is Glycemic Load More Siginificant Than Glycemic Index? November 6, 2009 The glycemic load (GL) is a relatively new way to assess the impact of carbohydrate consumption that takes the glycemic index into account, but gives a fuller picture than does glycemic index alone.
What You Smell As A Child Become Etched In The Brain November 6, 2009 Common experience tells us that particular scents of childhood can leave quite an impression, for better or for worse. Now, researchers reporting the results of a brain imaging study online on November 5th in Current Biology, a Cell Press publication, show that first scents really do enjoy a "privileged" status in the brain.
Pets Are Now Being Infected With the H1N1 Swine Flu Virus November 5, 2009 Vets in the US state of Iowa said Wednesday that a household cat had tested positive for swine flu - the first known case in the world of the new pandemic strain spreading to the feline population.
Scientists Continue Using Nanoparticles Without Knowing How They Affect Us November 5, 2009 Tiny, engineered nanomaterials can already be found in many consumer products, and have been hailed as having widespread future uses in areas ranging from medicine to industrial processes. However, little is known about what happens if these nanomaterials get into your body - where do they go? NC State researchers are working to answer that question under a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
WHO Continues To Deceive: Assumes That Ukraine Plague Is H1N1 Swine Flu November 5, 2009 The World Health Organization (WHO) is continuing to deceive the world by stating sweeping assumptions about the Ukraine pandemic. Despite huge differences in transmission and death rates, the agency stated Tuesday that it was valid to assume that most of the cases of influenza reportedly combing through the Ukraine were caused by the pandemic A(H1N1) virus.
Regular Yoga Can Help You Lose Weight November 5, 2009 The study, led by researchers at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Centre (FHCRC), is the first of its kind to measure the effects of yoga on weight.
The Protective Benefits of Green Tea Prevents Cancer November 5, 2009 Although scientists are reluctant to officially endorse green tea as a cancer prevention method, evidence continues to grow about its protective effects, including results of a new study published in Cancer Prevention Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research, which suggests some reduction in oral cancer.
TV Bombards Children With Commercials For High-fat And High-sugar Foods November 5, 2009 With more than one fourth of advertising on daytime and prime time television devoted to foods and beverages and continuing questions about the role television plays in obesity, a study in the November/December issue of the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior examines how food advertising aimed at children might be a large contributor to the problem.
Ukraine's Pneumonic Plague: A New Strain of Flu Many Times More Lethal Than H1N1 November 5, 2009 There is a very organized and structured system among us to coordinate the release of weaponized flu with the goal of killing people at unprecedented rates. The pneumonic plague now being witnessed in the Ukraine may be just the beginning of this global effort.
Defending The Right to Poison November 4, 2009 It continually breaks my heart that people have to take a bullet to the head before they find out bullets can be deadly...and they wish they had listened when they were warned not to play with loaded guns.
A Soda Tax to Fight Obesity? November 4, 2009 The latest proposal for a "soda tax" comes from a prestigious group of researchers. These scientists authored a review of studies examining the contribution that sweetened sodas, energy drinks, sports beverages, and iced tea have on obesity, and published it in the September 16, 2009, issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.
Low Vitamin D Levels Are Again Linked To Higher Mortality November 4, 2009 Low blood levels of vitamin D have again been linked to lower survival in the elderly - a study which strengthens calls to confirm if vitamin D supplements could offer protection.
The Verdict Is In: Eating Quickly Really Does Make You Eat More November 4, 2009 According to a new study accepted for publication in The Endocrine Society's Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM), eating a meal quickly, as compared to slowly, curtails the release of hormones in the gut that induce feelings of being full. The decreased release of these hormones, can often lead to overeating.
The Reversal of Reality: Publicizing H1N1 Vaccine Facts as Myths and Myths as Facts November 4, 2009 How deflating it must be, for conventional medicine and public health officials to feel the noose tightening around their unscientific balloon of unfounded vaccine principles. Dovetailing media reports which attempt to counter H1N1 vaccine opposition are exploding across the mainstream media in a frantic effort to stabilize criticism.
Boost Your Concentration With Meditation November 4, 2009 If you want to improve your focus and performance, then Boffins at the University of Pennsylvania recommend that you meditate daily, even if it happens to be in short doses.
This Is Your Brain on Fatty Acids November 4, 2009 Saturated fats have a deservedly bad reputation, but Johns Hopkins scientists have discovered that a sticky lipid occurring naturally at high levels in the brain may help us memorize grandma's recipe for cinnamon buns, as well as recall how, decades ago, she served them up steaming from the oven.
More Canadian Propaganda: Hyping H1N1 Vaccine Scarcity November 3, 2009 Opposition parties in Canada are having a field day hyping the scarcity of H1N1 vaccines and long line-ups in an effort to create a sense of urgency, panic and promote the polarization of political debates.
Vitamin D Levels Crucial To Prevent Heart Disease and Stroke November 3, 2009 Low vitamin D levels in the body may be deadly, according to a new study hinting that adults with lower, versus higher, blood levels of vitamin D may be more likely to die from heart disease or stroke.
Bad Moods Boost Memory and Judgement November 3, 2009 Being in a bad mood may not be all gloom and doom after Australian scientists found that negative feelings improved judgement, boosted memory and made people less gullible.
Multivitamins May Cut Food Allergies in Children November 3, 2009 Daily supplements of multivitamins do not have any effect on allergic disease in eight year old children, says a new study from Sweden.
Continuing Its Path of Health Destruction: Canada Approves Harmful Airport Scanners November 2, 2009 They're being approved all over the world. The U.S., U.K., Russia, Australia, Europe and now Canada. Scanners which have potentially devastating health effects have received the blessing of Canada's privacy czar.
IBM Internal Document Outlines Knowledge of Planned Pandemic With 100% Certainty November 2, 2009 An official inter-departmental document was distributed to upper-level management of IBM, France in 2006. Disclosed in this secret document was the prediction of a "planned" pandemic described as having a "100% chance of occurring within the next 5 years."
Fraud, Errors and Misconceptions in Medical Research November 2, 2009 Three years after being charged for fraud, misusing state funds and violating bioethics laws, disgraced South Korean stem cell researcher Hwang Woo-suk was convicted on some but not all charges.
Cell Phones Will Soon Cause A Spike In Brain Tumours November 2, 2009 Long-term mobile phone use could lead to 1,500 new cases of brain tumours a year over the next two decades a study shows.
Airport Body Scanners, New Generation of Cameras Can Create Bubbles In Our DNA November 1, 2009 Great things were expected of terahertz (THz) waves, the radiation that fills the slot in the electromagnetic spectrum between microwaves and the infrared. However, emerging evidence suggests that although the forces generated are tiny, resonant effects allow THz waves to unzip double-stranded DNA, creating bubbles in the double strand that could significantly interfere with processes such as gene expression and DNA replication.
HPV Vaccine Reportedly Causing Motor Neuron Disease November 1, 2009 Investigators are reporting a case of motor neuron disease after immunization with the quadrivalent vaccine Gardasil. The Merck product is supposedly designed to prevent infection with several types of human papillomavirus.
Researchers Hypothesize How To Best Pollute Earth Via Geoengineering Strategies November 1, 2009 A group of academics are considering engineering strategies to pollute the earth in an effort to stabilize climate.
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