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This Beauty Kit Has Everything You Need for Your Next Getaway

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Take your go-to beauty regimen to go with this exclusive travel kit from Health and TULA Skincare, the probiotic beauty line founded by Dr. Rajapaksa, who pens the monthly “Our Doc Will See You Now” column. “Taking time for yourself and being mindful of exercise, sleep, and eating habits will help you achieve balance, which is the foundation of health,” says Dr. Raj. “With TULA, I created a line that contains good-for-you ingredients that nourish and protect your skin.”

RELATED: 14 Ways to Age in Reverse

“Tula,” in fact, means “balance” in Sanskrit, and this kit delivers just that in a convenient pouch great for warm-weather travels. Bonus: It’s perfect for Mother’s Day! The kit contains all of this:

Deluxe Exfoliating Treatment Mask

A dual-phase treatment that gently exfoliates dead skin cells to reveal a hydrated, dewy complexion.

Deluxe Illuminating Face Serum

This easily absorbed formulation promotes even skin tone, helps diminish the appearance of dark spots and maintains a fresh, youthful-looking glow.

Hydrating Day & Night Cream

This lightweight moisturizer nourishes and hydrates skin while reducing the appearance of fine lines.

RELATED: How to Care for Your Sensitive Skin

To buy: Visit tula.com/healthmag to order the collection. And don’t miss this special offer: For a limited time, you can get the entire kit, which is valued at over $100, for just $72. Use code HEALTH25 to receive an additional 25% discount.




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Our 10 Favorite Items from Beyoncé’s New Athletic Line Ivy Park

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OK ladies, now let’s get in formation because Beyoncé’s new athletic line, Ivy Park, officially launched in stores and online today. (Note: We’re feeling ALL the feels over here!). Named in part for her daughter Blue Ivy, the rest of the brand’s moniker comes from a childhood memory of early morning runs in the, yep, park with her dad. (Aww!)

“I remember wanting to stop, but I would push myself to keep going,” the Grammy award-winning singer says in the voice-over for the collection’s promo video. “It taught me discipline.”

RELATED: Here’s How to Do 5 Beyonce-Inspired Dance Moves

Clearly it also taught her how to run the world—and Ivy Park, a joint venture between the singer and Arcadia Group Chairman Sir Phillip Green, is sure to cement her spot atop the thrown. The 200-piece collection, with prices ranging from $22 to $140, is part true fitness apparel with breathable, sweat-wicking, reflective, and waterproof properties; and part athleisure wear. And, yes, it is all kinds of fire.

“I was so specific about the things I feel I need in a garment as a curvy woman, and just as a woman in general, so you feel safe and covered but also sexy,” Queen Bey explained in an interview in Elle’s May issue. “Everything lifts and sucks in your waist and enhances the female form.”

So whether you are looking for leggings with a back zippered pocket to stash essentials while on the run, cute crop tops to show off those sculpted abs of yours, or curve-hugging body suits because, well, you got it like that, Beyoncé has got you covered. (You can get in on her fitness goods at Topshop, Nordstrom, and Net-a-Porter). The one thing not included, that banging body of hers; sorry ladies, you are going to have to work for that.

Instagram Photo

We carefully sifted through all things Ivy Park, and finally narrowed it down to 10 of our favorites. Now, get ready to slay!

04 Corded Sweat ($70; nordstrom.com)

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Biker Color Block Capri ($75; nordstrom.com)

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Logo Bodysuit ($50; topshop.com

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Reflective Linear Print Wrap Back Jacket ($220; nordstrom.com)

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Linear Print V Waist Ankle Legging ($70; topshop.com)

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Logo Mesh Longline Crew Neck Tee ($58; nordstrom.com)

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Logo Peach Sweat Long Sleeve ($48; nordstrom.com

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Seamless Crop Crew Neck Tee ($35; nordstrom.com)

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Seamless Racer Bra ($36; nordstrom.com)

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Allover Mesh V-Neck Vest ($35; topshop.com)

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Hepatitis C Therapy May Reduce Need for Liver Transplants

THURSDAY, April 14, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Treatment with antiviral drugs may reduce the need for a liver transplant for people with severe liver damage and hepatitis C, a new study suggests.

This study included 103 liver transplant candidates in Europe with severe liver damage and hepatitis C. They were treated with direct-acting antiviral drug combinations used to treat and cure people with hepatitis C.

Thirty-five percent of the patients improved to the point where they were no longer in urgent need of a liver transplant. And 20 percent got so much better that they no longer needed a transplant, researchers found.

Currently, more than 15,000 people in the United States are on the liver transplant waiting list. About 16 percent will die before receiving a new liver. And roughly 30 percent of adults on the liver transplant waiting list have severe liver damage and hepatitis C, the researchers said.

The study was to be presented Thursday at the International Liver Congress in Barcelona, Spain. Findings presented at meetings are generally viewed as preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

“The results of the study are very encouraging, but a word of caution is to be mentioned since it is presently unknown how long the clinical improvement will last,” study author Dr. Luca Belli said in an International Liver Congress news release. Belli is from the gastroenterology and hepatology liver unit at Niguarda Hospital in Milan, Italy.

Belli said international studies need to be done to see how patients taken off the transplant list fare. He said it’s critical to assess the long-term risk of death, development of liver cancer and further deterioration of the liver.

“These results show notable improvements in the outlook for some of these patients,” Laurent Castera, secretary general of the European Association for the Study of the Liver, said in the news release.

“Treating these patients with direct-acting antiviral therapy could result in those with a more pressing need for a liver transplant receiving the donation they need, potentially reducing the number of deaths that occur in patients on the waiting list,” Castera added.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more on hepatitis C.





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Hepatitis C-Infected Liver Transplants May Work Well for Those With the Virus

THURSDAY, April 14, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Here’s some potentially good news for people with hepatitis C who are waiting for liver transplants: Hepatitis C-infected livers seem to do as well as healthy livers in these patients, a new study indicates.

The findings suggest that using hepatitis C-infected (HCV-positive) livers could help reduce wait times for people with hepatitis C who need a transplant, the researchers said. Hepatitis C is a virus that can infect the liver, leading to inflammation, scarring and liver cancer.

More than 15,000 people in the United States are on the liver transplant waiting list, and about 16 percent will die before they receive a new liver, according to background notes with the study.

In the United States, use of HCV-positive livers for liver transplants in people with hepatitis C has tripled, from less than 3 percent in 1995 to more than 9 percent in 2013.

Researchers analyzed data from nearly almost 44,000 people with hepatitis C who received a liver transplant in the United States during that time. Almost 6 percent received an HCV-positive liver. There was no difference in time to death between those who received either a liver with hepatitis or a healthy liver, the study found.

The study was to be presented Thursday at the International Liver Congress in Barcelona, Spain.

“Over the past two decades, mainly due to shortages in organs, the use of HCV-positive organs for liver transplantation has tripled,” said study author Dr. Zobair Younossi, chair of the department of medicine at Inova Fairfax Hospital in Falls Church, Va.

“Our study clearly shows that people with HCV who received HCV-positive livers had the same medium- to long-term outcomes as people that received healthy livers. As highly effective treatments for HCV are available for transplanted patients, the future of these patients is bright,” Younossi added in a Congress news release.

This study demonstrates a greater opportunity for use of HCV-positive livers due to their comparable outcomes with healthy livers, Tom Hemming Karlsen, vice secretary of the European Association for the Study of the Liver, said in the news release.

“With the number of people waiting for a liver transplant expected to rise, the study results should give hope over the coming years for those on the waiting list,” he said.

Data and conclusions presented at meetings are usually considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed medical journal.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about hepatitis C.





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These New Anti-Gravity Products Promise to Tighten Sagging Skin

New spa services and skin-care products can supposedly combat gravity—and the wrinkles and sagging skin that go with it as we age. Too good to be true? Not necessarily: “Anti-gravity skin care works in a stepwise fashion,” says Dendy Engelman, MD, a dermatologist in New York City. “New collagen formation is induced, which leads to tightening, resulting in skin that’s stronger and more capable of fighting the detrimental effects of gravity.”

The light therapy used in the anti-gravity facial ($225) at George the Salon in Chicago is especially promising. “The ultrasonic stimulation can boost elasticity, leaving skin taut and toned,” says Dr. Engelman. For lifting perks that are more temporary, try:

Dior Capture Torale ($165; sephora.com)

This formula uses longoza plant extract to add plumpness to skin.

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Photo: sephora.com

Glamglow’s GravityMud ($69; at sephora.com)

The marine algae plasma in this treatment helps firm skin that has lost its suppleness.

glam glow gravity mud

Photo: sephora.com




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Hunger Sending Some Americans to the Hospital

By Karen Pallarito
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, April 13, 2016 (HealthDay News) — More than half of Americans with high rates of hospitalization either don’t have regular access to healthy food or are at risk of not having enough food at home, a small study suggests.

The study highlights obstacles to getting enough food, including people’s dependence on others to provide and prepare meals, and not knowing what food resources are available in their community, the researchers said.

Study co-author Etienne Phipps, director of the Center for Urban Health Policy and Research at Einstein Healthcare Network in Philadelphia, said patients with frequent hospital admissions often are frail or have difficulty walking.

“In our study, most of the people could not shop by themselves. They either couldn’t get there, they couldn’t carry the food [or] they couldn’t prepare it,” said Phipps, who led the investigation.

Inadequate nutrition can significantly affect health conditions such as diabetes, high blood pressure and heart disease, the researchers said in background notes.

They believe their analysis may be the first to examine hunger among people with high rates of hospital use.

Patients were considered high users of hospital services if they had three or more inpatient visits in a 12-month period.

The study authors cite a U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) report showing that roughly 15 percent of American households in 2014 reported problems accessing food.

Rocco Perla is president of Health Leads, a Boston-based organization that helps connect patients to community resources people need to be healthy, including things like food, electricity and transportation.

Having regular access to healthy food is a major health issue, not only in urban America but across the country, he said.

On a positive note, Perla sees the beginnings of a “quiet revolution” among health care organizations seeking to address patients’ unmet social needs. Doing what’s right for patients can significantly affect health care costs and hospital usage, he explained.

“If you can keep someone out of the hospital or health system because they have access to a food pantry, that’s a heck of a lot more cost effective than directing them through the machinery of the health care system,” Perla said.

For the study, researchers questioned 40 adult patients at Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia between March and May 2015.

The researchers used hospital billing data to identify high hospital users — those admitted at least three times in the previous year. Forty-three percent had five or more inpatient admissions in that time.

The majority of study participants were black women. Their average age was just over 60. Almost half lived in very poor neighborhoods, and most had six or more chronic conditions.

Only one was wheelchair-bound and only one was homeless, yet they all relied on outside help to get food, Phipps said.

“Everybody had somebody, whether it was a neighbor or a minister or a friend or a family member, who brought food to them,” she said.

Thirty percent of patients met the USDA’s definition of having problems obtaining healthy food while another 25 percent were at risk of having food access problems.

Survey results further revealed that:

  • Forty percent had worried in the past 30 days that their food would run out, while 35 percent said their food would not last.
  • Seventy-five percent reported being unable to shop for food on their own, and 58 percent were unable to prepare their own food.
  • Sixty percent received food from food pantries or other community services at some time.
  • Nearly one in five had gone a full day without eating in the previous 30 days.

As a first step, hospitals should begin communicating with patients to understand whether they have enough food and appropriate food, the study authors concluded.

The federal government, meanwhile, is leading an effort to build bridges between medical care and social services.

In January, the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services announced plans to invest up to $157 million in a five-year pilot program. It’s designed to help vulnerable Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries learn about and connect with community services to improve their access to food, housing, transportation and other health-related social services.

The study findings appeared online in the journal Population Health Management.

More information

Feeding America can help ” target =”_new”>find local food banks.





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Zika Virus Causes Brain Defects in Babies: CDC

By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, April 13, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Zika virus is a definite and direct cause of microcephaly and other brain-related birth defects, U.S. health officials announced Wednesday.

“It is now clear,” Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said at a midday media briefing. “The CDC has concluded that Zika does cause microcephaly.”

“There is still a lot that we don’t know, but there is no longer any doubt that Zika causes microcephaly,” Frieden added.

What’s more, it appears that the mosquito-borne Zika virus causes a particularly severe form of microcephaly that does terrible damage to infants’ brains, said Dr. Sonja Rasmussen, director of the CDC’s Division of Public Health Information and Dissemination.

The CDC made its announcement following what it described as a painstaking evidence review led by Rasmussen that was published on an expedited basis on Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine, Frieden said.

“This study marks a turning point in the Zika outbreak,” he said.

Until now, the CDC had said Zika appeared to be associated with microcephaly, but had been careful not to draw a direct causal link between the virus and the birth defect.

That’s because “this is an unprecedented association” between a mosquito-born virus and a horrifying birth defect, Frieden explained, and the agency wanted to proceed with caution.

“Never before in history has there been the situation where a bite from a mosquito could result in a devastating malformation,” Frieden said.

However, there’s still much that needs to be learned about Zika’s effect on fetal development, said Rasmussen, who’s also editor-in-chief of the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

For example, no one knows the exact risk of brain-related birth defects to the baby of a mother infected with Zika, she said, because some Zika-infected women have given birth to apparently healthy babies.

“We don’t know if the risk is somewhere in the range of 1 percent or in the range of 30 percent,” she said. “That’s one of the key questions we really want to answer.”

Researchers also don’t know if Zika will wind up causing learning disabilities to these apparently healthy children later in life, or if Zika also causes birth defects beyond those that are brain-related, Rasmussen added.

The CDC completed its work on the evidence review days ago, and as recently as Sunday was still working with the NEJM on revisions that would incorporate the latest scientific evidence, Rasmussen said.

Rasmussen said the CDC concluded that Zika causes microcephaly based on a checklist of specific criteria that included:

  • Women who deliver babies with microcephaly were infected with Zika during the first and second trimester of gestation.
  • A consistent pattern has developed where pregnant women infected with Zika have given birth to children with microcephaly and other brain-related defects.
  • The link makes sense biologically, with autopsies revealing the presence of Zika in the brains of babies with severe microcephaly who died.

The agency submitted its research to the NEJM for peer review because “we didn’t want this to just be something that was coming from the CDC,” Rasmussen said. “We wanted this to be something that was representing the public health community.”

The CDC’s declaration of a direct link is a stronger stance than that taken by the World Health Organization, which in its latest report cited a “scientific consensus that Zika virus is a cause of microcephaly.”

Nevertheless, Rasmussen said the CDC’s conclusion is consistent with the WHO’s approach to Zika.

“I think we are on the same page with them,” she said.

The CDC hopes that its findings will prompt pregnant women and women of child-bearing age to be even more careful regarding Zika, Rasmussen said.

Pregnant women should not travel to areas where Zika is being actively transmitted by mosquitoes, she said.

To date, most of the infections have occurred in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Women living in an active Zika region should protect themselves by wearing long-sleeved shirts and long pants, staying indoors with window and door screens to keep mosquitoes out, and using insect repellants.

People also can help cut down on mosquitoes in their neighborhoods by policing their properties and getting rid of any sources of standing water, she said.

“Mosquitoes breed in standing water, especially these mosquitoes,” Rasmussen said. “Even small amounts of standing water.”

As of April 6, there were 700 confirmed cases of Zika in U.S. states and territories, according to the CDC. However, none of the cases in the continental United States have occurred due to local transmission of the virus via mosquito bite. Nearly all these infections were acquired while traveling outside the country.

Public health officials expect Zika to become active in the United States with the onset of mosquito season in the spring and early summer. The Aedes aegypti mosquito is expected to be the primary carrier in the United States.

Florida, Texas and Hawaii are the states most at risk for local transmission of Zika, CDC officials have said. However, the A. aegypti mosquito ranges as far north as San Francisco, Kansas City and New York City, although health officials have said infections that far north are unlikely.

More information

For more on Zika virus, visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

To see the CDC list of sites where Zika virus is active and may pose a threat to pregnant women, click here.





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Spinal Fusion Not Always Necessary for Back Pain, Studies Say

By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, April 13, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Spinal fusion surgery is too often used to treat lower back pain when a simpler procedure would suffice for many patients, according to a pair of new clinical trials.

People suffering from spinal stenosis — pinched nerves caused by a narrowing of the spinal canal — received similar pain relief with fewer complications when doctors performed a simpler spine surgery called decompression, as opposed to a full-fledged spinal fusion, a study from Sweden found.

“Fusion was associated with longer operating time, longer hospital stay and was more expensive than decompression alone,” said lead researcher Dr. Peter Forsth, an orthopedic surgeon with the Stockholm Spine Center.

However, certain patients would do better with a spinal fusion, the other clinical trial concludes.

That trial found that spinal fusion provided better results for low-back pain patients who have pinched nerves because a spinal bone slipped forward and out of place, a condition called lumbar spondylolisthesis.

“Adding a lumbar fusion resulted in superior health-related quality of life two, three and four years after surgery” for patients with back pain due to a slipped vertebra, said lead researcher Dr. Zoher Ghogawala. He is a neurosurgeon with Lahey Hospital and Medical Center’s Spine Research Center in Burlington, Mass.

The upshot of the two clinical trials is that spinal fusion should not be used to treat every person with pinched nerves in their lower back, Ghogawala said.

Based on the Swedish results, “there’s really no benefit associated with adding a spinal fusion for patients who have stenosis without malalignment,” Ghogawala said. “What our study did was, we focused entirely on patients who had a malalignment of their spine, and we found they had better outcomes with spinal fusion.”

Lower back pain often occurs due to the aging and degeneration of the discs, ligaments and joints that hold the spine together, Ghogawala and Forsth said.

“A combination of those processes narrows the area of the spinal canal, where the nerves live, and those nerves that get crowded and compressed can cause pain,” Ghogawala said.

Decompression surgery relieves the pressure on those nerves by removing the lamina, or the back part of the vertebra that covers the spinal canal. This surgery is also known as laminectomy.

Surgeons often supplement decompression surgery with spinal fusion to reduce the risk that the spine will continue to degenerate and require another operation, the Swedish researchers said in background notes.

Spinal fusion permanently joins two or more bones in the spine, according to the U.S. National Institutes of Health. The fusion is done with bone grafts, using rods, screws or plates to keep the spinal bones from shifting until the grafts are healed.

The two new studies were published April 14 in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The Swedish trial involved 247 patients aged 50 to 80 years with back pain due to narrowing of the spinal canal (stenosis). About half also had a slipped vertebra (spondylolisthesis). All were randomly assigned to receive either decompression surgery alone or decompression with fusion.

Researchers found no significant differences in quality of life or ability to walk between the groups, at either two or five years following surgery. The proportion who required follow-up surgery was also about the same — 22 percent for fusion patients and 21 percent for decompression patients.

But fusion patients required 7.4 days of hospitalization on average versus 4.1 days for decompression patients. Fusion patients also needed longer time in the operating room, lost more blood, and had higher surgical costs, the study found.

In the U.S. trial, researchers assigned 66 patients, average age 67, to either fusion or decompression. But their trial focused solely on patients whose squeezed spinal nerves were caused by slipped vertebrae (spondylolisthesis).

The researchers found that the fusion group had a significantly better quality of life as much as four years following surgery, compared with the decompression group.

Ghogawala added that people who received spinal fusion were less likely to need a follow-up surgery: about 14 percent compared with 34 percent of those in the decompression-only group.

These studies demonstrate that spinal fusion is not automatically preferable to simple decompression surgery, said Dr. Alan Hilibrand, co-director of spine surgery for the Rothman Institute and a professor of orthopedic surgery at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia.

“It’s not a settled issue,” Hilibrand said. “A lot of people would say it’s a settled issue — if there’s a slip of the vertebrae, you do a fusion. These studies say, maybe not.”

Doctors in the United States likely will continue to lean towards fusion because there are better chances for durable results, Hilibrand said.

However, these studies show that use of fusion should be more nuanced, Hilibrand suggested.

“These studies are great, because they’re going to push people to look at this question,” he said. “We haven’t figured out which patients don’t need fusion and which do.”

More information

For more on spinal stenosis, visit the U.S. National Institutes of Health.





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Obesity in Teens Seems to Raise Risk for Illness, Death in Middle Age

By Amy Norton
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, April 13, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Overweight teenagers may face an increased risk of dying from heart disease or stroke by the time they reach middle age, a large new study suggests.

The study of more than 2 million Israelis found that those who were overweight or obese as teenagers were two to three times more likely to die prematurely of cardiovascular causes, compared to those who’d been thin as teens.

Experts called the findings, published online April 13 in the New England Journal of Medicine, worrisome, if not all that surprising.

The concern is largely related to the fact that teen obesity has become so prevalent. In the United States, about one-fifth of 12- to 19-year-olds are obese, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“This is an important study,” said Dr. Carl “Chip” Lavie, medical director of cardiac rehabilitation and prevention at Ochsner Medical Center, in New Orleans.

According to Lavie, who was not involved in the research, the findings are concerning for a number of reasons. For one, he pointed out, many people in the study were teenagers at a time when severe obesity was uncommon — and when teenagers, regardless of weight, were more physically active than they are now.

“The situation has now drastically changed, with kids only getting physical activity if they participate in organized sports,” Lavie said.

On top of that, he added, many teens spend a “substantial” amount of time being completely sedentary — in front of the TV or on their phones and computers — while eating more junk food compared with past generations.

“I am very concerned that overweight and obese teenagers will be in serious trouble 30 years down the road,” Lavie said. “Many will no longer be just overweight or mildly obese, but will likely have much more severe obesity.”

The findings are based on records from close to 2.3 million Israeli teenagers who underwent physical exams ahead of their mandatory military service between 1967 and 2010.

By 2011, just over 36,000 had died — at which point the oldest members of the group had been followed for about 40 years.

Since the study group was still fairly young, death rates from heart trouble and stroke were low across the board. But men and women who’d been obese as teens showed higher risks, especially when it came to heart disease — where fatty plaques build up in the arteries and can eventually cause a heart attack.

Obese teenagers were five times more likely to die of heart disease by middle age, versus those who were thin but not considered underweight. Their risk of death from any cardiovascular cause — including stroke and cardiac arrest — was more than tripled.

Similarly, overweight teenagers had a threefold higher risk of dying from coronary heart disease later in life, and a twofold higher risk of death from any cardiovascular cause, the findings showed.

The study does not, however, answer the question of why.

It’s not clear whether it’s the extra pounds early in life or other factors — such as a poor diet or lack of exercise — that raised people’s cardiovascular risks, according to Dr. Steven Heymsfield, a spokesperson for the Obesity Society. He is also a professor at Pennington Biomedical Research Center, in Baton Rouge, La.

Still, Heymsfield said the study is impressive in its size and careful measurements of teenagers’ body mass index (a measure of weight in relation to height).

“This gives us confirmation of something I think we knew,” Heymsfield said. “Being obese as a teenager is bad for you.”

It’s not certain whether childhood obesity carries a special health hazard, or whether heavy kids are at risk simply because they often become even heavier adults.

The study lacked information on adulthood weight, said lead researcher Dr. Gilad Twig, of Sheba Medical Center, in Tel Hashomer, Israel.

Regardless, he said, teen obesity is a “strong predictor” of premature death from cardiovascular disease — even if it is through effects on adulthood weight.

“This study stresses the importance of maintaining a healthy weight [during] childhood and adolescence,” Twig said.

Lavie and Heymsfield agreed, and emphasized that a healthy diet and regular exercise — which can boost cardiovascular fitness — are key.

Childhood is the “best time” to ward off obesity, Heymsfield said. But, he added, it’s never too late to adopt healthier habits, even if you’ve been overweight most of your life.

“The important things,” Heymsfield said, “are to not smoke, get your blood pressure down to normal levels, watch your lipid [cholesterol] levels, and be physically active.”

He noted that other studies have shown it’s possible to be “fat but fit,” with the help of regular exercise.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has tips on helping kids maintain a healthy weight.





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Health Care Workers Skipped Hand Washing One-Third of the Time: Study

WEDNESDAY, April 13, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Staff at many outpatient health care facilities in New Mexico failed to follow recommendations for hand hygiene more than one-third of the time, a new study found.

Many also fell short on injection safety, putting patients at increased risk for infection, the study authors said.

For the study, the researchers looked at 15 outpatient facilities. The investigators found 93 percent had U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention outpatient infection control policies in place.

Yet, staff at the facilities failed to follow proper hand hygiene 37 percent of the time, the study found.

And safe injection procedures weren’t followed one-third of the time, the research revealed.

“This project highlights the importance of assessing both the report of recommended infection prevention policies and practices, as well as behavior compliance through observational audits,” said study author Dr. Deborah Thompson, of the New Mexico Health Department, and colleagues.

The study authors said it’s critical to verify that infection safety procedures are in place and being followed. They added that there have been outbreaks and infection transmissions due to these types of infection prevention breaches. And, that includes hepatitis B and C infections, the researchers said.

“These findings highlight the need for ongoing quality improvement initiatives regarding infection prevention policies and practices in outpatient settings,” the study authors concluded.

The study appears in the April issue of the American Journal of Infection Control.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention outlines how to be a safe patient.





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