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Childhood Vaccines Debate Rekindled at GOP Presidential Debate

By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Sept. 17, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Some parents’ long-simmering concerns over the safety of childhood vaccines received unexpected — and, in some quarters, unwelcome — notice during the second Republican presidential candidates’ debate.

While the link between vaccines and autism has long been discredited, an exchange toward the debate’s end addressed a more recent parental concern — whether children are receiving too many vaccines too soon.

And the potential fallout from that exchange has infectious-disease experts worried.

Candidates Ben Carson and Rand Paul — both doctors — both argued Wednesday night that children probably are receiving too many vaccinations in too short a time, and that parents ought to have the right to deviate from the recommended schedule.

The candidates said vaccines are safe and important, and dismissed fears that some vaccines might cause autism, but argued for parental freedom in scheduling vaccinations farther apart.

“We have extremely well-documented proof that there’s no autism associated with vaccination, but it is true that we are probably giving way too many in too short a period of time,” said Carson, a retired neurosurgeon. “I think a lot of pediatricians now recognize that and are cutting down on the number and the proximity in which those are done.”

Pediatricians and infectious-disease experts responded to the candidates’ remarks with dismay.

“It saddened me,” said Dr. Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center and an attending physician in the division of infectious diseases at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. “The candidates have been given a platform, and with that platform comes a certain responsibility to know the facts. Anyone who knows the facts about vaccines knows that the schedule in which they are given is safe and well-tested.”

Offit said he understands why some parents have become concerned. “We ask American citizens to give their children 14 different vaccines within the first few years of life, sometimes five at a time,” he said. “It’s not surprising there would be some pushback.”

Carson and Paul didn’t go as far as candidate Donald Trump, who contended during the debate that there’s a connection between vaccines and autism.

The roots of that fear rest in a small and long-since disproven study published in 1998 that linked the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine to an increased risk of autism. However, the study was later found to be fraudulent. And more than 20 studies have since shown that there’s no link between vaccines and autism, said Dr. Carol Baker, executive director of the Center for Vaccine Awareness and Research at Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston.

But while Carson and Paul affirmed the safety of vaccines, they also said there should be flexibility in the strict vaccination schedule that’s been crafted by the medical profession.

“One of the greatest medical discoveries of all time were vaccines,” said Paul, an ophthalmologist. “I’m for vaccines, but I’m also for freedom. Even if the science doesn’t say bunching them up is a problem, I ought to be able to spread my vaccines out a little bit, at the very least.”

As a result of these concerns, some pediatricians have promoted alternatives to the traditional vaccine schedule that either omits certain vaccines or stretches out the schedule.

“I was very happy to see the Republican candidates have some consensus over the importance of vaccines, but the importance of it being a free medical choice in America,” said Dr. Robert Sears, who lays out alternative schedules in his book, The Vaccine Book: Making the Right Decision for Your Child.

“I think parents should have the medical freedom to choose whether or not they vaccinate their child,” said Sears, a pediatrician and founder of the Immunity Education Group. “There is no research that shows that the number of vaccines they give today is a dangerous process. On the other side, the vaccine schedule has so recently been escalated, and we haven’t done the long-term safety research to show that what we’re doing today is safe.”

Parents who worry whether a young child can safely endure multiple immunizations at once are failing to take into consideration what children’s immune systems must deal with every day, said Dr. Jeff Duchin, a professor of infectious disease at the University of Washington School of Public Health in Seattle.

Starting with their trip down the birth canal, babies are confronted with millions of bacteria on a daily basis, Duchin said. Even in well-kept homes, these exposures continue as they crawl through rooms, handle objects, and stick their hands in their mouths.

“The American Academy of Pediatrics estimates that in one day, a child will encounter 10 to 20 times the number of immune stimulants in their environment than are in the entire vaccine schedule,” he said. “Really, vaccines provide a very insignificant stimulation from the immunological perspective, compared to what a child has to handle in their daily life.”

Texas Children’s Hospital’s Baker said children who don’t get their vaccinations on time are needlessly exposed to life-threatening illnesses.

“Why do we vaccinate so young? Because we want to protect our children as soon as possible,” she said. “We vaccinate at 2 months, 4 months and 6 months. You’re not protected until you have three doses. That’s just biology. So why would you want to wait longer for them to have protection?”

Offit agreed. “It’s a bad idea [delaying vaccines] because all you’re doing is increasing the period of time in which you’re susceptible to infections without any known benefit to your health,” he said.

Kids who don’t receive timely vaccinations also endanger “herd immunity” — the concept that everyone in a community enjoys general immunity against a disease if most people are immune to it, Baker added.

“I very much like the freedom we have in this country. I love that idea, until it comes to public health,” she said. “I would be happy to give parents many, many choices, but some of their personal choices affect the community around them. We don’t have any vaccines that are 100 percent effective, so we depend on herd immunity to protect the most vulnerable among us.”

Sears, the medical choice advocate, pointed to the recent Disneyland measles outbreak, saying it illustrated that parents should have some wiggle room when it comes to the immunization schedule. In that outbreak, 117 people across the United States were stricken with measles after a handful were exposed to the virus on vacation in southern California.

“The outbreak did not spread nearly as far as it should have, and it was quickly contained,” Sears said. “I know that’s a different opinion than some people hold, but it died off really quickly. They got it contained because enough of our population is vaccinated against it.”

Baker countered that there shouldn’t have been any measles outbreak at all, given that the virus has been eradicated in the United States since 2000.

“If we’d had enough herd immunity, we wouldn’t have had an outbreak at all,” she said. “We had years where we didn’t have outbreaks, and you want to know why? We had enough herd immunity in our communities.”

“Fortunately, nobody died,” Baker added. “But to me, that’s just luck. I’ve practiced long enough to see measles death, and it’s not pretty.”

More information

For more on childhood immunization, visit the U.S. National Institutes of Health.





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Diabetes Should Be a Factor in Weight-Loss Surgery Decision: Study

By Kathleen Doheny
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Sept. 17, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Obese patients with type 2 diabetes might reap greater health-care savings after weight-loss surgery than obese patients without diabetes, researchers say.

Most health-care systems use a high body mass index (BMI) to prioritize patients for weight-loss (“bariatric”) surgery. BMI is a measure of body fat based on height and weight.

But researchers who tracked thousands of obese Swedes for 15 years concluded that if containing health costs is the goal, then type 2 diabetes, especially newly diagnosed cases, should be added to the reasons to consider weight-loss surgery.

“In obese patients with type 2 diabetes, the costs of bariatric surgery are largely offset by prevention of future health care and drug use,” said study researcher Dr. Lena Carlsson, a researcher at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden.

“In contrast, obese patients without diabetes treated by bariatric surgery had higher total health-care costs compared to those who had conventional treatment,” Carlsson added.

Other research has found weight-loss surgery can help people reverse their type 2 diabetes, a condition characterized by abnormal blood sugar levels. This reduces the need for medicine and overall health care, the researchers said. And in this study, health-care savings were more apparent in people with more recent diabetes diagnoses.

“What they are saying is, we should use functional markers to determine who gets bariatric surgery, and BMI is not the best one to use,” said Dr. Mitchell Roslin, chief of obesity surgery at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City. “I would agree with that statement,” said Roslin, who was not involved in the study.

Because obesity is linked to serious diseases — including diabetes — weight-loss surgery is often recommended for severely obese people unable to lose weight through lifestyle changes or medication. Surgery can lead to weight loss by restricting the amount of food the stomach can hold. The most common bariatric procedures are gastric bypass, sleeve gastrectomy, adjustable gastric band and biliopancreatic diversion, according to the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

The current study involved about 2,000 obese adults who underwent bariatric surgery between 1987 and 2001, and more than 2,000 obese adults treated nonsurgically. Nearly 600 had prediabetes and another 600 had diabetes.

The study results were published online Sept. 17 in The Lancet: Diabetes & Endocrinology.

The researchers looked at patients’ drug costs, hospital costs and overall health-care costs for 15 years.

Drug costs were lower in the surgery patients with prediabetes (by about $3,300) or diabetes (by about $5,400) compared to surgical and nonsurgical patients without diabetes, the investigators found.

Hospital costs were higher in all surgical patients. (The surgery currently costs about $20,000 to $30,000, said Roslin.)

When compared with patients treated nonsurgically, total health-care costs were higher for surgery patients who had prediabetes (by more than $26,000) or no sign of diabetes (by more than $22,000), but not for those with diabetes at the time of surgery, the findings showed.

“The results of our study support prioritization of obese patients for bariatric surgery, especially those with recent diabetes onset,” Carlsson said.

Another study researcher, Dr. Martin Neovius of the Karolinska Institute in Sweden, said the idea of prioritizing patients with diabetes “makes not only sense from a health outcome perspective, but also economically.”

Criteria vary, he said, but some experts already suggest that people with a BMI of 30 to 35 and type 2 diabetes should be considered candidates for bariatric surgery. The society for metabolic and bariatric surgery recommends the surgery for someone with a BMI of 40 or higher (for example, 5 feet 11 and 290 pounds), or a BMI of 35 and higher with two other conditions (such as type 2 diabetes and high blood pressure).

In the United States, insurance companies typically have their own criteria for covering the surgery, Roslin said. The findings of the new report, he said, would apply to countries such as Canada, which have a national health plan and waiting lists.

More information

For more about weight-loss surgery, see the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.





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Tai Chi Might Help People With Long-Term Health Conditions

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Sept. 17, 2015 (HealthDay News) — The slow, fluid movements of tai chi — an ancient Chinese exercise — appear to help older adults with chronic conditions improve their physical function, a new review suggests.

Specifically, those with breast cancer, heart failure, osteoarthritis or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD, which includes emphysema) saw improvements in strength, balance and posture without worsening pain or being out of breath, researchers said.

“If you’re older and have one of the conditions mentioned in the study, tai chi may be an alternative you can use to increase your fitness level,” said senior researcher Darlene Reid, professor and chair of the Department of Physical Therapy at the University of Toronto in Canada.

Tai chi is a series of gentle, flowing movements that aim to improve muscle power, balance, posture and flexibility, she said.

In addition, tai chi has a mental aspect, Reid said. “Many types of tai chi have a strong spiritual component,” she said. “So it may appeal to people in a different way than other types of exercise.”

Reid said other advantages of tai chi are that it can be done in a variety of environments, alone or in groups, and doesn’t require any equipment.

Moreover, as one ages, vigorous exercise may be less appealing, Reid said. “Tai chi is slow, rhythmical movements that have been developed over thousands of years and includes movements that require strength of different muscle groups,” she said.

The review was published Sept. 17 in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

For the current review, researchers used data from 33 previously published studies. These studies included more than 1,500 people. The average age of people in the studies ranged from mid 50s to early 70s.

The average length of the tai chi training program was 12 weeks, and most sessions lasted an hour. Tai chi was usually done two to three times a week, the researchers said.

Tai chi resulted in improvement in a six-minute walking test; muscle strength (measured by bending and stretching the knees); the time it took to get up and move; and quality of life, the researchers said.

Tai chi was associated with improvement in physical ability and muscle strength in most of the four chronic conditions. But there was only a trend toward improvement in muscle strength for people with osteoarthritis who did tai chi, the study found.

Tai chi was also associated with an improvement in pain and stiffness in osteoarthritis, in breathlessness in COPD, and improved sit-to-stand times among patients with osteoarthritis, the researchers said. They noted only an association and not a cause-and-effect link was seen between tai chi and physical improvements.

Samantha Heller is a senior clinical nutritionist and exercise physiologist at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City. She reviewed the study and said, “The great thing about tai chi is that it is a gentle form of movement that is appropriate for many people suffering from medical conditions that preclude other, more rigorous forms of exercise.”

Tai chi is usually not expensive and many senior centers and other places offer free classes, she said.

“In addition there are videos and DVDs of tai chi so people can practice at home, though I would recommend initially working with a qualified instructor,” Heller said.

Dr. David Katz, director of the Yale University Prevention Research Center and president of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine, also reviewed the study. “Tai chi is accessible even to those who might think exercise out of reach due to their pain or functional limitations,” he said.

Other forms of exercise could likely offer the same benefit, he said.

“For now, though, we have evidence that tai chi confers the benefits of exercise on groups for whom physical activity is a challenge. That is reason enough to include it more routinely among doctor recommendations,” Katz said.

More information

To learn more about tai chi, visit the U.S. National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health.





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A High Salt and Potassium Diet May Accelerate Chronic Kidney Disease

THURSDAY, Sept. 17, 2015 (HealthDay News) — A diet high in sodium and potassium can make chronic kidney disease (CKD) worse, a new study claims.

“These data warrant future clinical trials to test the effect of a moderate reduction in dietary sodium and potassium intake on CKD progression in patients with high dietary sodium or potassium intake,” study leader Dr. Jiang He, from Tulane University, said in a news release from the American Society of Nephrology.

“The findings could ultimately impact dietary recommendations for patients with CKD to slow disease progression,” He added.

It’s estimated that 26 million people in the United States have chronic kidney disease, the researchers said. Chronic kidney disease can lead to kidney failure and also increases the risk for heart disease and early death, according to the study authors.

For the study, the researchers tested urine samples from almost 4,000 people with chronic kidney disease. They then estimated the daily intake of nutrients from these samples. They wanted to learn how sodium and potassium influence the progression of the disease.

High levels of sodium and potassium in the urine were linked with faster disease progression, the researchers found.

The study’s participants consumed much more sodium than the recommended daily limit of about 2,400 milligrams (mg). On average, they ate 3,700 mg per day. The researchers said their findings could lead to new guidelines for how much sodium and potassium people with chronic kidney disease should have on a daily basis.

The study was funded by the U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases and published online Sept. 17 in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.

More information

The U.S. National Kidney Foundation has more on chronic kidney disease.





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Many Parents Overlook Booster Seat Safety

THURSDAY, Sept. 17, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Kids old enough to use booster seats are twice as likely to be seriously injured or killed in car accidents as babies are. But, these bigger car seats are often overlooked during safety inspections, a new study finds.

Used correctly, booster seats can reduce the risk of injuries among kids between the ages of 4 and 8 by 45 percent, the researchers said.

“Booster seats seem less technical and complicated than installing an infant seat, which may lead parents and families to worry less about using them incorrectly,” said study senior author Dr. Michelle Macy, of the University of Michigan’s C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital and the hospital’s Child Health Evaluation and Research Unit.

“We know that older kids are at particular risk of injury from a car crash. Our study suggests it may be beneficial for certified child passenger safety technicians to focus more on providing education and guidance on prolonged use of booster seats,” she said in a hospital news release.

Researchers analyzed data from more than 4,500 car seat inspections in Michigan. They found just 11 percent of these safety checks involved booster seats for kids between the ages of 4 and 7, while about half of these inspections were for rear-facing infant car seats. Meanwhile, about one-third of the booster seats examined needed an adjustment that made them safer.

The findings were published recently in the Journal of Trauma.

Oftentimes, children aged 4 and older at these inspections were there because of a car seat check for a younger sibling — not to have their own seat checked.

The researchers pointed out many safety initiatives focus on car seat inspections for infants and toddlers, while few address safety issues associated with older kids’ booster seats.

Lead author Amber Kroeker, who conducted the study while a researcher at the University of Michigan, said, “Study after study shows that caregivers often need support and direction when choosing and installing child restraints and that they are often using them incorrectly, which puts child passengers at unnecessary risk of harm.”

“This gap can be addressed in car seat inspections, which are free and offered in most communities, but our findings indicate low use of this service by parents of older children,” she said in the news release.

Also, children between the ages of 4 and 12 who switch from booster seats to seat belts before they should are at risk for serious injuries to their abdomen, the researchers said. These injuries, known as “seat belt syndrome,” include internal injuries in the belly and spinal cord, as well as facial injuries.

A survey of 1,000 parents revealed that seven out of 10 parents are not aware that kids must be 57 inches tall before they meet the ideal fit requirements for a seat belt, the researchers pointed out. Nine out of 10 parents switched their kids from a booster seat to a seat belt too soon.

“Injury risk in motor vehicle accidents has been dramatically reduced for infants and toddlers because of an increased focus on proper restraints,” Kroeker said. “We want to see the same outcomes for older children.”

More information

The American Academy of Pediatrics provides more information on car seat safety.





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5 Products You’ll Love From Tory Burch’s New Fitness Line

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Great news for fashionable fitness fanatics: Tory Burch just launched a fitness and accessories line and it is AH-mazing. Named Tory Sport, of course, the upscale collection, which, according to the designer, draws inspiration from the 2001 film The Royal Tenenbaums has threads for running, tennis, swim, studio, and “coming & going” (think athleisure).

“I’ve wanted to do this for a long time,” Burch, who exercises four times a week, told Health. “I kept going back to pieces from high school and college, and just thought it would be really interesting to define real function and style in a more classic way, but that was cool and young.”

In other words, this line is not for folks looking for bright, funky colors and prints. Tory Sport is much more simplistic, seeking to return elegance to sport. To this point, the designer infused her collection with combinations of black and navy, which she says is “super chic together,” while throwing in some hints of sky blue, white and red for good measure.

RELATED: 10 Best Sports Bras for Women With Big Busts

What the collection lacks in color, though, it surely makes up for in function—Burch’s pieces are breathable, moisture-wicking and have SPF properties—and style.

“I think there is a shift in the way women are dressing and I wanted to give them options,” explains Bruch who says that tennis, paddle boarding, yoga, and running after her two sons are how she stays active. “It’s about combing the concept of sport with real clothes; people want to be comfortable and look chic as well.”

 

All Weather Run Jacket, $325

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Chevron Leggings, $125

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Neoprene Backpack, $295

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Shelf Bra Fitted Tank, $80

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V-Neck Tennis Dress, $195

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Global Impact of Tropical Disease Leptospirosis Underestimated: Study

THURSDAY, Sept. 17, 2015 (HealthDay News) — More than 1 million people contract a tropical disease known as leptospirosis each year, resulting in nearly 59,000 deaths, a new study shows.

That worldwide estimate of the impact of the illness, which typically affects underdeveloped areas in Latin America, Africa, Asia and island nations, is far greater than previously thought, the Yale School of Public Health researchers noted.

“The study identified an important health burden caused by this life-threatening disease, which has been long neglected because it occurs in the poorest segments of the world’s population,” study leader Albert Ko, chair of the department of epidemiology of microbial disease at Yale, said in a news release from the New Haven, Conn.-based university.

“At present, there are no effective control measures for leptospirosis. The study provides national and international decision makers with the evidence to invest in initiatives aimed at preventing the disease, such as development of new vaccines,” Ko added.

Spirochetal bacteria, which is found in the urine of rats and other mammals, causes leptospirosis. The germ can survive in soil and water, infecting people through cuts and scrapes on the skin. In developing countries, leptospirosis can lead to bleeding in the lungs and kidney failure.

The researchers said their estimates are likely conservative since people with leptospirosis are often misdiagnosed with malaria, dengue or other illnesses.

To calculate the global toll of the disease, the team analyzed morbidity and mortality studies and databases. Of all diseases that pass between animals and humans, leptospirosis is one of the leading causes of illness and death, the study published Sept. 17 in the journal PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases found.

As climate change affects global temperatures and urbanization accelerates, the study authors said, the prevalence of leptospirosis will likely rise.

Epidemics of the illness in urban slums are triggered when these areas, which have poor sanitation and inadequate sewage systems, experience severe weather and heavy rainfall. The researchers projected that the world’s slum population will double by 2030, reaching 2 billion people.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provides more information on the leptospirosis.





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New Blood Test May Help Predict Heart Disease Risks in Obese Black Teens

THURSDAY, Sept. 17, 2015 (HealthDay News) — A new blood test appears to help predict the risk for future heart disease among black teens struggling with obesity.

The test was designed to measure changes in the T-cell status of obese teens. T-cells are a key component of the immune system, and increased T-cell activation reflects the kind of systemic inflammation that is often triggered by obesity, the researchers explained. Inflammation has been linked to heart disease, they added.

A blood test trial involving both white and black teens revealed that obese black girls seem to be particularly prone to such increases in T-cell activity. Obese white boys and girls did not display a similar inflammatory response.

The finding, along with the blood test itself, raises the prospect that clinicians may be better able to spot signs of impending heart disease long before it strikes.

“Obesity in the formative years is already priming the system to develop cardiovascular disease later in life,” lead researcher Dr. Carmen De Miguel, a postdoctoral scholar at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, explained in an American Heart Association news release.

Being able to predict an increased risk for adult heart disease “could allow for preventive therapies and help changing exercise and diet habits to make the teen less prone to heart disease in adulthood,” De Miguel added.

“We think that the fact that the girls do not decrease the numbers of activated T-cells could be important in explaining the high risk that black females have of developing cardiovascular disease later in life,” she added.

The trial involved 100 public school students between the ages of 14 and 20 in Augusta, Ga. Some teens were obese, while others were “lean,” the researchers said.

De Miguel and her colleagues plan to present their findings Thursday at the American Heart Association’s latest High Blood Pressure Conference, in Washington, D.C.

Research presented at meetings should be viewed as preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

More information

There’s more on inflammation and heart disease at the American Heart Association.





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Hi-Tech Scans Spot Brain Damage in High Blood Pressure Patients

THURSDAY, Sept. 17, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Sophisticated scans can spot early signs of brain damage in patients who have high blood pressure, researchers say.

This type of brain damage may ultimately undermine the ability to think clearly, make decisions and control emotions, the scientists explained.

The finding is based on a small study involving 30 people whose brains were scanned using a highly sensitive imaging technology known as DTI, or diffusion tensor imaging. DTI is an enhanced form of MRI.

Among the study participants, half had high blood pressure and half did not.

“We already have clear ways to explore the damage high blood pressure can cause to the kidneys, eyes and heart. We wanted to find a way to assess brain damage that could predict the development of dementia associated with vascular diseases,” senior study author Daniela Carnevale said in a news release from the American Heart Association.

“DTI provides a way to evaluate pre-symptomatic brain damage in people with high blood pressure in order to identify possible therapies to help control brain damage and reduce the eventual development of dementia,” Carnevale explained.

In the study, standard MRI scans did not detect any brain abnormalities among the participants. In contrast, using the advanced DTI scans, the investigators found signs of nerve fiber damage in the brains of patients with high blood pressure. The damage seen would typically affect nonverbal function, emotional control, decision-making abilities and the ability to focus, they explained in the news release.

In addition, the high blood pressure patients also fared “significantly” worse on thinking tests, while the healthy volunteers did not display signs of impaired thinking or memory during testing, the researchers said.

That said, there was no evidence that the damage seen actually harmed verbal function or the ability to carry out daily routines. The study was only able to show an association, and not a cause-and-effect relationship.

Carnevale, an assistant professor at the Neuromed Institute at Sapienza University in Rome, is scheduled to present the findings Thursday at the American Heart Association’s High Blood Pressure Conference in Washington, D.C.

Research presented at medical meetings should be viewed as preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

More information

There’s more on high blood pressure at the U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.





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Most Smokers Haven’t Considered Quitting

THURSDAY, Sept. 17, 2015 (HealthDay News) — The idea of quitting doesn’t cross the minds of most smokers, and the few who do think about it don’t actively try to quit.

That’s the conclusion of a 21-country study released Sept. 17 and done by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, whose authors analyzed data on more than 57,000 smokers compiled between 2009 and 2013.

The prevalence of smoking among the countries ranged from 4 percent in Nigeria to 39 percent in Russia. The United States was not included in the study.

The study’s participants were then divided into three groups:

  • Pre-contemplation: these smokers did not feel the need to change their behavior
  • Contemplation: these people knew they should stop smoking but weren’t ready to quit
  • Preparation: these smokers were preparing to quit

The study revealed roughly three out of four smokers (nearly 75 percent) were in the “pre-contemplation” phase and hadn’t even considered kicking the habit.

The percentage of smokers in the “contemplation” stage ranged from 7 percent in Indonesia to 31 percent in Qatar. In all countries, the lowest percentage of smokers fell into the “preparation” category, at an average of nearly 7 percent.

The study’s authors said that their classification system for identifying smokers’ readiness and willingness to quit could help countries design more effective smoking cessation programs.

“Strategies may also include public education activities and media campaigns to motivate smokers at [the pre-contemplation] stage to think of quitting,” the researchers wrote.

More information

The American Cancer Society provides a guide on how to quit smoking.





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