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A Simple Guided Breathing Meditation

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Meditating on the breath is one of the simplest contemplative techniques and it’s also one of the most profound. Because the breath is always with us, it serves as an anchor into the present moment, which we can tap into at any given time. The breath is always fresh. Paying attention to the breath physiologically grounds us and has a soothing effect on the body and mind. When meditating on the breath, the idea is to relinquish all thoughts as you focus on your inhales and exhales. Emptying the mind can be difficult in practice, but the guided meditation above can help you get started. Watch the video to ease into the present moment and better understand this wonderful technique.

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An Expert Guide to Learn Crow Pose

The Real Reason Sustaining Meditation Practice Is So Hard

A Sleep Meditation from Deepak Chopra

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5 Things to Know About Exercising During Your Period

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

If you tend to ditch the gym during that time of the month, here’s something to think about: A woman named Kiran Gandhi recently made news for running the London Marathon during her period—without a tampon. She did it to raise awareness for women who lack access to feminine care products, and crossed the finish line with blood-soaked tights. So if she could run 26.2 miles bleeding freely, then the rest of us can probably handle a 45-minute Spin class, right? Yes, absolutely—in fact, multiple studies show menstruating women feel better when they get moving.

Here, everything you need to know about exercising on your period (your call whether you want to raise awareness about it).

RELATED: 10 Things That Mess With Your Period

It helps with annoying period-related symptoms

It may seem like the last thing you want to do when you have your period, but working out can help relieve the symptoms that make getting your period so annoying in the first place.”The more active you are [overall] and more regular you are with your activity, the better your periods end up beingless cramping, less heavy flow,” explains Stacy Sims, PhD, an exercise physiologist for USA Cycling Women’s Track Endurance Program and co-founder of Osmo Nutrition.

Case in point: when you sweat, water leaves the body, which can relieve uncomfortable belly bloat. Exercise also releases mood-boosting endorphins, which anecdotal evidence suggests might at least take your mind off discomfort or pain. And, a recent study revealed a correlation between higher levels of physical fitness and fewer PMS symptoms.

It may be the best time to do HIIT

The best workout to do during your period? High-intensity interval training, Sims says. “When your period starts, your estrogen and progesterone levels drop. And because of this, women can access carbohydrate/glycogen easily, as compared to high-estrogen time periods [when we] rely more on the slow breakdown of fat.” In other words, this hormone shift makes fuel more accessible to your body, allowing you to push harder and get more out of short, fast-paced workouts than you would during other times of the month.

RELATED: 6 Things You Should Know About Having Sex During Your Period

It keeps you cool

Really. Turns out your body temperature is actually lower during your period, which is a low-hormone phase. “This increases time to fatigue, and allows the body to store more heat without hitting the tipping point of central nervous system fatigue,” Sims says. Not to mention, during this time we can tolerate hotter and more humid climates (hello, hot yoga!),  Sims adds.

You can make it more comfortable

Know your period is coming up? Don’t let the pain sneak up on you. It’s totally fine to take an over-the-counter NSAID pain reliever, like naproxen or ibuprofen, 24 to 48 hours before your period is due. This way, you can sidestep your symptoms before they keep you home from the gym. If you forget, be sure to take them at the first twinge of pain.

If you’re like Gandhi and find tampons uncomfortable during exercise, there’s no shortage of products to try: pads, liners, and now menstrual cups and even specialized period-proof underwear.

It’s okay to give yourself a break

All this said, if you’re really just not feeling it, don’t beat yourself up for not going all out. Even just a gentle stroll counts as exercise, and it may help you feel better. “Your best bet is to do some light and easy movement that helps reduce inflammation via blood flow,” Sims says. “If you really feel terrible, it’s all right to take a day or two off.”

A final note, if you’re regularly sidelined by your periods, consider talking to your doctor; prescription remedies like the birth control pill might be helpful. Plus, it’s a good idea to have major aches and super heavy periods investigated because those could signal a health problem like endometriosis.

RELATED: Does Period Sex Raise Your Risk of Endometriosis?




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Move of the Week: Alternating Jump Lunge

Don’t have a gym membership? No worries, you don’t need equipment to get a great workout. In fact, this single plyometric exercise will burn fat, tone your glutes and thighs, and get your heart rate up. Check out how it’s done, demonstrated by Health‘s contributing editor, Kristin McGee.

RELATED: How to Do a Perfect Lunge

Here’s how to do it: Start with your feet hip distance apart, extend your right foot forward about 2 feet and lower into a lunge. Drive your body off of the ground and switch the position of your legs in the air. You should land in a lunge with your left foot forward. Keep alternating sides as you repeat this exercise for 30 to 60 seconds.

Trainer tip: To prevent injury, don’t let your knee go past your ankle.

Now try the full workout: 4 Fat-Blasting Jumping Exercises

RELATED: 4 Calorie-Torching Leg and Butt Exercises




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New Hope for Vaccine Against Germ That Causes ‘Mono’



THURSDAY, Aug. 13, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Mononucleosis: It’s a fatiguing disease that lays low thousands of Americans — usually young people — each year. But new, early research offers hope for a vaccine against the virus that’s thought to trigger most cases of the illness.

The Epstein-Barr virus is also believed to help drive a number of types of cancer.

In mice and monkeys, the nanoparticle-based vaccine triggered the animals’ immune system to release powerful antibodies against Epstein-Barr, according to a study published Aug. 13 in the journal Cell.

Nanoparticles are microscopic particles being investigated as potential delivery vehicles for vaccines. The new findings suggest that this could be a promising approach for developing an Epstein-Barr virus vaccine for people, according to researchers led by virologist Dr. Jeffrey Cohen at the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).

While the work is promising, “there is still a long way to go before a vaccine that shows promise in mice and non-human primates will be ready for safe and effective protection of people,” said infectious disease expert Dr. Paul Lee, who was not involved in the new research.

According to NIAID, the Epstein-Barr virus was first identified in 1964 and is one of the most common human viruses, infecting 90 percent of people worldwide at some point in their lives. It is most commonly spread through saliva.

Most people infected with the virus do not get ill or have only mild symptoms, and Epstein-Barr is a major cause of infectious mononucleosis. It’s also linked with nearly 200,000 cases of cancer worldwide each year, including stomach and nasopharyngeal cancers, Burkitt and Hodgkin lymphoma, and non-Hodgkin lymphoma, the agency said.

Currently, there is no approved vaccine to protect people against Epstein-Barr virus.

Lee said while most cases of mononucleosis linked to Epstein-Barr are “mild,” about one in 10 cases are “very significant, and sometimes have prolonged symptoms.”

“Typically, this infection occurs in adolescents and young adults — usually the most healthy segment of the population,” said Lee, who works in the Infectious Diseases Program at Winthrop-University Hospital in Mineola, N.Y.

“There is also the fatigue which Epstein-Barr virus is notorious for — that can be severe and prolonged, and can take a month or more to resolve,” he said.

“In some studies, more than 10 percent of patients are still experiencing significant fatigue six months later,” Lee noted. “This can have a huge impact on adolescents and young adults who may be trying to graduate, apply to college or graduate school, or even work at a job, where poor performance can negatively affect their future lives, hopes and potential.”

According to the NIAID team, the nanoparticle vaccine design might also be used to create or redesign vaccines against other types of infections.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about Epstein-Barr virus.





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Could Your Smartphone Help Boost Your Heart Health?



THURSDAY, Aug. 13, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Smartphones could become a high-tech tool to help boost heart health, experts say.

The apps and wearable sensors on many cellphones can track exercise, activity and heart rates, and while evidence of their effectiveness in reducing risk factors for heart disease and stroke is limited, they could prove useful, a new American Heart Association scientific statement said.

Currently, 20 percent of American adults use some type of technology to track their health data. The most popular health apps are associated with exercise, counting steps or tracking your heart rate, the heart association said.

The authors of the statement reviewed the small number of published, peer-reviewed studies about the effectiveness of mobile health technologies in managing weight, boosting physical activity, quitting smoking, and controlling high blood pressure, high cholesterol and diabetes.

“The fact that mobile health technologies haven’t been fully studied doesn’t mean that they are not effective. Self-monitoring is one of the core strategies for changing cardiovascular health behaviors,” statement lead author Lora Burke, professor of nursing and epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh, said in an AHA news release.

“If a mobile health technology, such as a smartphone app for self-monitoring diet, weight or physical activity, is helping you improve your behavior, then stick with it,” Burke added.

She and her colleagues found that people who used mobile technology as part of an overall weight-loss program had more short-term weight loss than those who tried to lose weight on their own.

Many studies found that people who used an online program for physical activity had larger increases in exercise than those who didn’t use such programs, but the effectiveness of wearable exercise monitoring devices was unclear.

The statement authors also found that the use of mobile phone apps that use text messaging to help people quit smoking nearly doubled the chances of quitting, but 90 percent of people who used these apps did not quit smoking after six months.

The statement was published Aug. 13 in the journal Circulation.

If you’re interested in trying a mobile health technology, Burke recommended talking to a health care provider, fitness instructor, registered dietitian or other expert to help find an effective program for your needs.

More information

The American Heart Association outlines how to reduce heart risks.





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Poorly Maintained Plumbing Often Leads to Legionnaires’ Disease, CDC Says



THURSDAY, Aug. 13, 2015 (HealthDay News) — As New York City struggles to contain an outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease, two new U.S. government reports show the bacteria that causes the potentially deadly illness can take root in a myriad of water sources.

Those sources can include poorly maintained hot tubs, water fountains and cooling towers, the researchers said.

“The variety of settings and water sources implicated in the Legionella outbreaks reported here highlights the complexity of Legionella control . . . particularly in settings where susceptible persons congregate, such as hospitals, long-term care facilities, and other health-care settings,” Karlyn Beer, of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and colleagues wrote.

The New York investigation has pinpointed cooling towers used for air conditioning as the source of more than 100 illnesses and 12 deaths in the South Bronx. But across the nation, improperly treated drinking water accounts for a rising proportion of outbreaks, the CDC team said in one of their two reports.

Two-thirds of 32 outbreaks of drinking water-related illness reported in 2011-2012 were traced to Legionella bacteria — twice the figure documented in 2007-2008, the researchers said.

Improperly maintained building plumbing and private groundwater — not publicly regulated water supplies — were the culprits in those 2011-2012 outbreaks, according to the agency. Fourteen deaths and more than 430 illnesses occurred from Legionella in that period.

“The key to preventing these outbreaks is maintenance of building plumbing systems,” according to Beer and her colleagues. Beer’s group conducted both studies published in the Aug. 14 issue of the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, a CDC publication.

Outbreaks often occur in hospitals or health-care facilities, “illustrating the disproportionate disease burden among hospitalized persons, who are more likely to be older or have underlying conditions that increase their risk of developing Legionnaire’s disease,” the team said in background notes.

A type of pneumonia, Legionnaire’s disease strikes vulnerable people, especially the elderly and those with other underlying medical conditions, the hardest. It can cause coughing, wheezing and breathing problems, but it is not spread from person to person. It is typically treated with antibiotics, according to the CDC.

Identifying and correcting flaws in plumbing systems, private wells and contaminated groundwater supplies could prevent many outbreaks and illnesses, the authors noted.

New York officials and legislators are already working on tougher laws and regulations for cooling towers in response to the outbreak there.

In the second report, the researchers said Legionella bacteria caused 15 of 18 outbreaks and 10 deaths associated with environmental or undetermined water exposures in 2011-2012.

Four outbreaks occurred in hotels and motels, three in hospital settings and three in long-term care facilities. An office, a factory and a mobile home park also experienced outbreaks, the findings showed.

Ornamental fountains were implicated in three of the outbreaks, the researchers found.

Maintenance of water systems — including drinking water systems, hot tubs, decorative fountains and cooling towers — is necessary to prevent Legionella and other bacteria from growing, the study authors said.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about Legionnaires’ disease.





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A Definitive Guide to Detangling Curly Hair

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

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OK, curly girls: You got co-washing down to a science, met your curl cream match, and mastered the art of diffusing. But detangling your hair is one of the first steps for achieving bouncy, frizz-free curls and chances are you’ve been doing it all wrong.

With summer’s swim and sweat sessions at an all-time high, your lather, rinse, repeat regimen has likely been kicked into overdrive. And by now you’re well aware that excessive cleansing can dehydrate and strip your hair of its natural oils — especially for someone who’s limited their cleansing routine to twice a week during the cooler months — eliciting dryness, frizz, and before you know it, a head full of knots.

That said, it’s important to use your in-shower time wisely and all it takes is a little teamwork from some super hydrating products and surprisingly, your hands! We consulted Jacqueline Walent, a senior stylist at NYC’s curl sanctuary, Devachan Salon and L.A.-based celeb stylist Shai Amiel of Capella Salon (AKA the “Curl Dr.”), on the right way to detangle curly hair. The resounding verdict? Finger combing is the only way to avoid disrupting your curl pattern or causing breakage. “Finger combing is the gentlest way of detangling, whether your hair is wavy, super curly, or coarse,” says Walent. So, save your paddle brushes and wide-tooth combs for your blowouts and bring on the spirit fingers (see what we did there?). Here, Walent and Amiel teach you exactly how to get to work.

1. Start with an ultra-hydrating conditioner.

Amiel and Walent agree that the key to getting your hair into its softest state is by saturating your strands with water and dousing them in a moisture-rich conditioner. “Ideally, your conditioner should be silicone and paraben-free, and lightweight — not oily,” says Amiel who has worked with celebs like Zendaya, Tia Mowry, Christina Milian, and more. That’s not to say there’s no room for a botanic oil-infused conditioner in your shower. However, it’s important to know exactly how to use oils to your advantage. “A lot of girls like to apply oil to wet hair, but if you think about it, oil and water don’t mix!” says Amiel. “Instead, you end up with a greasy film that can weigh your curls down. Try pre-conditioning by applying coconut oil to dry hair, and then move on to your normal shampoo and conditioning routine. That’s the best way to let the oil absorb, making your hair even more manageable once it’s time to detangle.” Simple science.

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DevaCurl One Condition, $19.95, sephora.com.

2. Work in sections.

If you’ve got coarse or really thick, tight coils, we don’t blame you for being skeptical about finger combing through all of your hair. However, with Amiel’s piece-by-piece strategy and a little patience, you too can make it work — promise. “If you have a lot of hair, separate it into small, manageable sections saturated in your conditioner,” says Amiel. Then, spread your fingers apart to mimic the spaces between the teeth of a wide-tooth comb and carefully rake through any tangles you find in each section. “Once you rinse the conditioner, don’t comb through it anymore or that’ll disturb the curl pattern.” You heard the man — don’t touch!

3. Resist the urge to defer to your brush or comb.

“Yes, you might get through the tangles quicker with a paddle brush or wide-tooth comb but that’ll only create further damage,” says Walent. “Even if you’re as gentle as possible, with a manmade tool, your hair can snag on even the slightest nick in the plastic. The more breakage you have, the more tangling you’ll notice later on.”

4. Know the difference between ripping and shedding.

According to Amiel and Walent, your hair sheds around 100 strands per day, so do the math: If you wash your hair every other day this summer, you can expect to see 200 strands between your fingers (or in your drain!) after detangling. Just be sure to eyeball whether the ball of hair is a result of natural shedding or breakage from being too harsh while combing through it. “Natural shedding happens at the root, so the hairs that you accumulate while finger combing should be full strands rather than short pieces,” says Walent. “It’s all about hydration. If your hair is not moisturized well enough, you’re going to experience breakage—whether you’re finger combing, paddle brushing, or wide-tooth combing your hair.” Duly noted.

This post originally appeared on MIMIchatter.com.

More from MIMI:

Meet the Product Changing This Curly Girl’s Life

5 Things Every Curly-Haired Girl Needs

How Often You Really Need to Wash Your Hair

popsugarblack_small.jpg MIMI Chatter is an endless stream of beauty content. We bring together the must-knows and the how-tos from your favorite sites, beauty influencers, our editors, and YOU.



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Yeast’s New Use: Making Narcotic Painkillers



THURSDAY, Aug. 13, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Scientists say they have genetically engineered baker’s yeast to create powerful narcotic painkillers.

The painkillers in question are called opioids, and include opiate-containing medicines such as morphine, Oxycontin and Vicodin, most commonly sourced from the opium poppy.

But the new technology might bypass the poppy, leading to faster and possibly cheaper methods of creating many types of plant-based medicines, according to the Stanford University team.

“This is only the beginning,” said study senior author Christina Smolke, an associate professor of bioengineering. “The techniques we developed and demonstrate for opioid [narcotic] pain relievers can be adapted to produce many plant-derived compounds to fight cancers, infectious diseases and chronic conditions such as high blood pressure and arthritis.”

The finding does have a potential downside, however: “home-brewed” narcotics could crop up once this technology becomes easily reproduced.

Other labs have been working on poppy-free opioid production. In May, a University of California, Berkeley team published a study in the journal Nature Chemical Biology describing all but one step of a process to use genetically modified yeast to convert simple sugar into morphine.

In this new study, the Stanford team reprogrammed the genetics of standard baker’s yeast — used for thousands of years to leaven bread — so that the organism’s fast-growing cells were able to convert sugar into the painkiller hydrocodone (found in Vicodin) in just three to five days. They report their feat in the Aug. 13 issue of the journal Science.

Currently, it can take more than a year to produce these drugs, the researchers explained. That’s because poppies are grown on licensed farms, harvested, processed and sent to factories, where the material is refined into medicines, the researchers explained.

“When we started work a decade ago, many experts thought it would be impossible to engineer yeast to replace the entire farm-to-factory process,” Smolke said in a Stanford news release.

And scenarios where narcotics from yeast are manufactured in illicit labs aren’t on the horizon anytime soon, the Stanford team said. That’s because, right now, it would take 4,400 gallons of bioengineered yeast to produce a single dose of pain medicine, Smolke’s team said.

However, they believe the new study is proof-of-principle that such yeast can be used to make complex plant-based medicines. Stanford has patented the new technology, and Smolke and her team have formed a company.

They hope the technology will become more efficient in the future — and that’s when safeguards may be needed, Smolke said.

“We want there to be an open deliberative process to bring researchers and policymakers together,” she said. “We need options to help ensure that the bio-based production of medicinal compounds is developed in the most responsible way.”

In May, at the time the Berkeley breakthrough was reported, experts writing in the journal Nature Chemical Biology offered up guidelines on safeguarding yeast-based opioid production from criminals.

According to a group led by Kenneth Oye, director of policy and practices at the Synthetic Biology Engineering Research Center at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Boston, those safeguards should include four key points:

  • Engineer the yeast strains to make them less appealing to criminals. They can be designed to produce only opiates with limited street value. Or, they could be made to be so difficult to process that it’s not worth the effort. Opiate-producing yeast strains also could include a DNA watermark to make them more easily traced by law enforcement.
  • Tighten security around narcotic-producing yeast strains, similar to that now used with prescription painkillers.
  • Make sure that DNA synthesis companies screen all orders for DNA sequences, watching for those that could be used by criminals to generate opiate-producing yeast.
  • Extend current narcotics laws to cover opiate-producing yeast strains.

“We have a little time, so let’s take time now to come up with ways to make it easier to protect public health,” Oye told HealthDay at the time.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about opioid drugs.





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Low-Fat May Beat Low-Carb Diet for Trimming Body Fat: Study



By Alan Mozes
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, Aug. 13, 2015 (HealthDay News) — When it comes to slimming down, a diet low in fat seems to beat a diet low in carbohydrates for body fat loss, new research suggests.

The finding stems from a small U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) investigation that tracked each approach to weight loss among 19 obese adults.

“These results counter the claims of the popular theory that has been influencing many people to adopt low-carb diets,” said study lead author Kevin Hall, a senior investigator with the U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases in Bethesda, Md.

That theory focuses on the notion that carb-cutting triggers a decrease in insulin levels, while cutting fat does not. The hormonal plunge should, in turn, boost fat-burning and increase fat loss, he explained.

“[But] while all of these things happened during the reduced carbohydrate diet,” Hall added, “the reduced fat diet also led to loss of body fat and at a greater rate than the reduced carb diet, despite being equal in calories and having no observable effect on insulin production.”

The study was published Aug. 13 in Cell Metabolism.

The 10 men and nine women who participated in the study had an average body mass index (BMI) of nearly 36. BMI is a rough estimate of a person’s body fat based on their height and weight. A BMI of 30 or more indicates obesity, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

While residing in the NIH Clinical Center’s “metabolic unit,” the study volunteers participated in a two-week low-fat diet, followed by a two-week low-carb diet.

The first five days of each diet consisted of a “baseline” menu made up of 50 percent carbs, 35 percent fat, and 15 percent protein. Next, either carbohydrate intake or fat intake was cut by 30 percent for the remaining six days of each session. Both restriction menus were composed of 30 percent fewer calories than the baseline menus, the study said.

The researchers found that the low-carbohydrate diet led to a loss of 53 grams of body fat daily. The low-fat diet prompted a body fat loss of 89 grams daily. During the short-term study, people on the low-carb arm lost slightly more weight than those on the low-fat diet — about 4 pounds versus 3 pounds. This could be due to differences in the amount of water lost, researchers said. They also said the loss of fat was a more important measure of success in the treatment of obesity.

The researchers also said that the small leg up in weight loss afforded by cutting carbs appeared to dissipate over time, with total caloric restriction being more important to weight loss than the type of calories consumed.

“[And] in the real world, people couldn’t possibly control or monitor their food intake as carefully as was done in our study,” Hall noted. “Therefore, it is likely more important to choose a diet that leads to a reduction in calorie intake that can be sustained for long periods of time.

“In other words,” he said, “our study suggests that [total] calories are the primary driver of fat loss.”

Lona Sandon, a registered dietician and an assistant professor of clinical nutrition at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, agreed.

“Reducing calories, no matter the source, [whether] carbs or fats, is most important for weight loss overall,” she said. “If you decrease fat to create a calorie deficit, the body will use stored carbs for energy until those stores are used. Then it will take from fat stores. If you reduce carbs for a calorie deficit, the body will use up the stored carb energy and then tap into fat sources.

“But that does not mean people should not pay attention to the type of calories they are getting,” Sandon added. “Quality calories from nutrient-rich foods are still the best.”

Susan Roberts, the author of an editorial accompanying the study, expressed the hope the current effort will “finally debunk the incorrect notion that all carbs are bad for weight control.” Roberts is professor of nutrition and psychiatry, and senior scientist and director of the Energy Metabolism Laboratory at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University in Boston.

“The whole question of whether low-carb diets are helpful for weight or not is a toxic swamp of commercial interests and bad science, and this new study is finally providing some sanity,” she said.

“Do you have to eat low-carb to lose weight, because if you eat carbs, that prevents fat release from fat cells?” Roberts asked rhetorically. “The answer is clearly no from this study. If you cut calories, even if that diet is high in carbs, you will lose fat.”

More information

There’s more on healthy eating at U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.





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U.S. Bike Deaths Fall for Kids, But Rise for Adults



THURSDAY, Aug. 13, 2015 (HealthDay News) — The rising popularity of bicycling among adult men for pleasure or as a means of commuting may have a downside: More fatal bike-related accidents, according to a new report.

The report did have some good news, however: Fewer U.S. children are dying as a result of bike-related accidents, although that may be due to the fact that today’s kids are simply less likely to be riding bikes than in generations past.

Overall, the study points to the need for “expanding traditional road safety interventions” — which have typically focused on motor vehicles — to focus on the safety of bicyclists, as well, the report’s authors said.

The study, led by Jason Vargo of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, looked at U.S. federal data for the years 1975 to 2012. The researchers pointed out that the profile of the typical bike rider has changed a lot during that time, with fewer kids riding a bicycle every day and more adults — especially men — doing so.

“Recent years have seen the largest increase in bicycling [among adults],” the authors wrote. “For instance, during 2000-2012, the number of U.S. workers who traveled to work by bicycle increased 61 percent,” they said.

Most of that growth occurred among men aged 25 to 64. In the meantime, “cycling rates have remained steady for women and have fallen among children,” Vargo’s team said.

Those trends seem to be reflected in bike accident-related fatality rates, also. The analysis showed that nearly 30,000 cyclists died between 1975 and 2012, and overall, the number of cyclists killed each year fell from a high of 955 in 1975 to 717 in 2012.

But while death rates for cyclists younger than 15 fell by 92 percent between 1975 and 2012, there was a large increase in death rates for cyclists between the ages of 35 to 74, the report said.

The largest rise in bike-related deaths occurred among cyclists aged 35 to 54, Vargo’s team said, with the rate nearly tripling between 1975 and 2012. And by 2012, men made up 87 percent of all of these bike-related deaths in adults.

Fatality rates varied widely between states, with Vermont having the lowest rate and Florida having the highest, according to the study.

So how can biking be made safer for all Americans? The report’s authors said tried-and-true methods have already been successful in bringing overall death rates down. These include improvements in “road design and engineering, traffic law enforcement, driver and bicyclist behavior, helmet use, and traffic volume,” they wrote.

But much more must be done. Even though the decline in child deaths linked to bike use is heartening, it is most likely “attributable to fewer child bicycle trips” occurring now versus generations past, the researchers said, although the increased use of child bike helmets has also been a factor.

And as more adults hop on their bikes to commute, visit friends or shop, more should be done to protect their safety. The research team noted that many “bike-friendly” U.S. cities have already launched successful interventions, initiatives such as: dedicated bike lanes that are physically separated from car traffic; lowered speed limits; more speed bumps; and better education on safer bike/motorist behaviors.

In other words, they said, “multifaceted approaches to bicycle road safety are likely needed to ensure bicycling safety for all.”

The study was published in the Aug. 14 issue of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

More information

The U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has more about bicycles.





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