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Why Organic Food Might Be Worth the High Price

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

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The most infamous fact about organic food is that it’s expensive—about 47% more expensive, according to a recent analysis from Consumer Reports. But a new review study published in Nature Plants analyzed everything research currently knows about organic farming versus the conventional kind and found that organic offers a lot of good that outweighs its sticker shock.

When organic farming first began, it was derided as an idealistic and inefficient way of feeding people. Not surprisingly, there was little research about it. “There were just a couple handfuls of studies back in the ‘80s,” says John Reganold, professor of soil science and agroecology at Washington State University and co-author of the new study. Reganold has been studying organic agriculture for more than 30 years. “At the turn of the century, it just skyrocketed, and now there are probably at least 1,000 studies,” he says.

Reganold analyzed 40 years of available data and focused on how organic farming impacts several types of sustainability: productivity, impact on the environment, economic viability and social wellbeing.

“If I had to put it in one sentence, organic agriculture has been able to provide jobs, be profitable, benefit the soil and environment and support social interactions between farmers and consumers,” Reganold says. “In some ways, there are practices in organic agriculture that really are ideal blueprints for us to look at feeding the world in the future.”

Organic may even be our best bet to help feed the world in an increasingly volatile climate, he says.

At first, this might sound unlikely, given that the crop yields of organic agriculture are typically 10-20% lower than conventional. That’s because conventional growers can use synthetic fertilizers, most of which aren’t allowed in organic food production. “When farmers add fertilizers, those nutrients are immediately available to the plant, and the plants can grow faster,” Reganold explains. Organic crops, on the other hand, are fertilized by organic matter like compost or animal manure, which takes more time to decompose and release its nutrients. (This slow, steady approach is called building the soil.)

RELATED: 17 Cheap Organic Foods You Should Be Buying

But Reganold found one scenario where the research shows that organic yields are consistently greater than conventional: during periods of drought. Organic soil is built up with organic material, which can hold onto water, he says. That means that by the time a farmer plants and grows a crop, the plant has access to more water, so yields increase. For every inch of rainwater soaked up by soil, a plant can produce another 7-8 bushels of wheat, Reganold says.

Organic farming typically uses less energy, too. “When you look at ecosystem services, organic agriculture really shines,” he says. “The value they bring in areas like biodiversity, pollination, soil quality—if you were to put an economic value on those, and some researchers have, then it more than makes up for the higher price or price premium of organic food.”

A 2015 meta-analysis about the economics of organic farming, published in the journal PNAS, even determined that organic farming is more profitable than conventional, earning farmers 22% to 35% more money. They determined that the organic price premium (which was around 30% in the study) only had to be about 5% for organic profits to break even with conventional.

There’s a lot left to learn about organic food, including whether or not it’s healthier than conventional in a meaningful way. The latest study points out that of the 15 or so scientific reviews focusing on nutrition, 12 studies have found evidence that organic is more nutritious than conventional by having more vitamin C, antioxidants and omega-3 fatty acids. Other studies indicate that children who eat organic foods have lower levels of pesticide metabolites in their bodies than those who eat conventional.

The popularity of organic food is growing fast. Back in 1997, less than 1% of the food and beverage market was organic, and now it’s 5%, Reganold says. But organic faces several setbacks. “We have policies that support the more conventional model,” Reganold says, along with a relative dearth in research about organic agriculture.

“The challenge facing policymakers is to create an enabling environment for scaling-up organic and other innovative farming systems to move towards truly sustainable production systems,” the study concludes. “This is no small task, but the con- sequences for food and ecosystem security could not be bigger.”

This article originally appeared on Time.com.




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Wildfires May Boost Ozone Levels in Cities: Study

FRIDAY, Feb. 5, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Wildfire smoke may boost levels of dangerous ozone air pollution, researchers report.

Colorado State University scientists analyzed data collected over nearly 10 years at hundreds of air monitoring sites across the United States.

They found that ozone levels were higher on days when there was wildfire smoke in the air than on days without the smoke.

This association was particularly evident in certain areas, including the Northeast corridor, Dallas, Houston, Atlanta, Birmingham and Kansas City, according to the study published recently in the journal Environmental Science and Technology.

This is “not what you’d expect,” because most wildfires don’t occur near cities, study co-author Emily Fischer, an assistant professor of atmospheric science, noted in a university news release. However, the study data showed that as wildfire smoke plumes travel, higher levels of ozone are more likely to occur in cities than in rural areas.

That suggests that wildfire smoke interacts with pollutants in city air to create ozone, the researchers explained.

Ozone air pollution can harm the lungs, and poses the greatest threat to the young, elderly and people with asthma. It also damages crops and ecosystems, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Climate change is expected to increase the frequency and intensity of wildfires, the researchers added.

More information

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has more about ozone air pollution.





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CDC: Black Americans With HIV Still Less Likely to Get Ongoing Medical Care

FRIDAY, Feb. 5, 2016 (HealthDay News) — While HIV diagnoses dropped significantly over the past decade in the United States, blacks with HIV are less likely than whites or Hispanics to receive routine, ongoing care, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

From 2005 to 2014, annual HIV diagnoses fell 19 percent in the United States. Infections among black women dropped 42 percent during this period. Despite this progress in the fight against HIV, racial disparities persist, the CDC found. While black people make up 12 percent of the U.S. population, they accounted for nearly half of all HIV diagnoses in 2014.

“CDC has been working for many years to eliminate the HIV disparities that exist within the black community,” Dr. Eugene McCray, director of the CDC’s Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, said in an agency news release. “While we are seeing signs of success, we must continue our focus on prevention strategies that will have the greatest impact on African American communities and the nation overall. A key area of focus is ensuring that people living with HIV are diagnosed early, quickly linked to care and receive consistent care that improves their lives and protects the health of their partners.”

In addition to helping people with the virus improve their health, ongoing care can prevent new HIV infections. The CDC pointed out that HIV is most often spread by infected people who are not being treated and those who are unaware that they have the virus.

Dr. Jonathan Mermin is director of CDC’s National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention. “Consistent care matters. It enables people with HIV to live longer, healthier lives, and it prevents new infections,” he said in the news release. “And closing this gap in care will be essential if we are to see the narrowing racial divide in HIV diagnoses close completely.”

From 2011 to 2013, only 38 percent of black HIV patients received consistent treatment. During this period, however, about 50 percent of whites and Hispanics with the virus had continuous care, according to the CDC’s Feb. 4 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

Black women with HIV fared better than black men, the CDC noted. While 44 percent of black women benefitted from routine care, just 35 percent of black men did the same. Most of the black HIV patients who received ongoing care were infected during heterosexual contact.

Health officials in the United States are striving for a more coordinated response to the HIV epidemic, the CDC said. These efforts include using HIV prevention strategies that target blacks and others at greatest risk to ensure those who are diagnosed receive continuous medical care. State health departments will also receive funding to expand HIV prevention services and treatment to black people, particularly gay, bisexual and transgender youth.

More information

The U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease provides more information on HIV/AIDS.





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Breast Cancer Survivors Vulnerable for Thyroid Tumors, and Vice Versa: Study

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

FRIDAY, Feb. 5, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Women who survive breast or thyroid cancer are linked to an increased risk for the other, according to a new analysis.

University of Chicago researchers who reviewed 37 published studies found breast cancer survivors were 1.55 times more likely to develop thyroid cancer than women who hadn’t had breast cancer. And, female thyroid cancer survivors were 1.18 times more likely to get breast cancer than women who hadn’t had thyroid cancer, researchers said.

“This is a real risk,” said study lead author Dr. Raymon Grogan, director of the university’s endocrine surgery research program.

“People who have had one of these cancers need to be aware that they are at higher risk for developing the other cancer,” he said.

Thyroid cancer cases have nearly tripled in the United States over the past 30 years, and breast cancer is the most common cancer among women, according to background notes with the study. Thanks to medical advances, more women are surviving each cancer, Grogan said.

Doctors need to be more aware of the link between the two cancers, Grogan said.

“It should just become one of the common discussions between a patient and her doctor,” he said. “It doesn’t change the recommendations for screening, but people need to be aware and be screened at the appropriate time.”

The report was published Feb. 5 in the journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention.

Carol DeSantis, director of breast and gynecological cancer surveillance at the American Cancer Society, said the connection between thyroid and breast cancer is known.

She said her concern with this new report is that by lumping together so many studies that differ in their methods and findings, it’s impossible to come up with a single number that accurately reflects the risk of having one cancer after having had the other.

“The review of different studies is helpful to see that there is that link, but combining them all together, I am not sure who that would be applicable to,” DeSantis said.

Grogan said the research team tried to control for those differences as best they could.

Nineteen of the studies analyzed breast cancer patients and their risk of thyroid cancer. Another 18 looked at thyroid cancer cases and their incidence of breast cancer.

The researchers then combined these data and calculated the odds of a women having thyroid cancer after breast cancer and vice versa.

In addition, the researchers combed through the studies to find reasons why these cancers seemed related. One explanation was that women who survive either cancer were more likely to be screened and examined so that other cancers were found early.

Another possible connection was that breast and thyroid cancers share hormonal risk factors. There is some evidence that exposure to estrogens and to thyroid-stimulating hormones may contribute to both cancers, Grogan said.

A third theory points to radiation therapy, which has been shown to increase the risk for lung, esophageal and blood cancers, and sarcomas. Also, earlier research found that radioactive iodine, used to treat thyroid cancer, may play a small role in the development of other cancers, including breast cancer, but that is not clear, Grogan said.

Finally, it is possible that a genetic mutation might be responsible for the connection, Grogan said.

DeSantis said that cancer survivors should be aware of the increased risk of developing other cancers.

“Generally, cancer survivors are at risk for developing a second cancer,” she said. “Breast cancer survivors are at risk for blood cancers, uterine cancer, ovarian cancer and other cancers. Likewise, thyroid cancer survivors are at risk for a number of other cancers, including breast cancer.”

More information

For more on cancer, visit the U.S. National Cancer Institute.





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5 Non-Dairy Ice Creams That Taste As Great As the Real Thing

Photo: Ben and Jerry's

Photo: Ben and Jerry’s

Well, if you live in the world, you know that Ben & Jerry’s released four vegan ice cream flavors this week, and nearly broke the Internet. But there are plenty of other non-dairy frozen, creamy treats out there to love! Below, we’ve rounded up five of our favorite make-you-want-to-eat-the-whole-pint brands. (Just remember, they’re dairy free not sugar free, so, you know, go easy.)

So Delicious

Whether you prefer almond-, coconut- or cashew-based ice cream, you’ll find just the pint for you made by So Delicious. With flavors like Salted Caramel Cluster, Cherry Amaretto and Butter Pecan (alongside the classic vanilla, chocolate, mint chip, etc.), there’s plenty to dig your spoon into.

Try it: $52 for 8 pints, amazon.com

Photo: amazon.com

Photo: amazon.com

Luna & Larry’s Coconut Bliss

Three words: Chocolate Hazelnut Fudge. If we had to pick one flavor among Luna & Larry’s aptly named Coconut Bliss pints, this would be … oh wait, there’s also Mocha Maca Crunch. And Ginger Cookie Caramel. And Summer Berry Swirl. Never mind, we can’t pick just one. One caveat: These luscious, organic, and gluten-free concoctions do taste of coconut (some more strongly than others), so that’s something to consider if you don’t care for the flavor.

Try it: $7, wholefoodsmarket.com

Photo: wholefoodsmarket.com

Photo: wholefoodsmarket.com

RELATED: 14 Non-Dairy Foods That Are High in Calcium

Steve’s Ice Cream

We remember going to Steve’s Ice Cream shop when mix-ins in ice cream were the newest thing. These days, thankfully, you don’t have to wait on line at one store in New York City for Steve’s. Even better, the non-dairy flavors, which are organic and coconut-based, include the likes of Burnt Sugar Vanilla, Blackberry Honey, and Speculoos Cookie Butter.

Try it: $6, wholefoodsmarket.com

Photo: wholefoodsmarket.com

Photo: wholefoodsmarket.com

AlmondLicious Ice Supreme

It’s a given that this almond- and cashew-based ice cream is smooth and luscious, and comes in fantastic flavors (Chocolate Nibs, Coconut Supreme, Pecan Passion, Strawberry Bliss…). But what we love most is what it doesn’t have— namely, gums and stabilizers. We can pronounce all of the ingredients in these treats, which is a huge plus in our book.

Try it: $30 for 4 pints, amazon.com

Photo: amazon.com

Photo: amazon.com

RELATED: 14 Best Vegan and Vegetarian Protein Sources

Laloo’s Goat Milk Ice Cream

If you’re reading this and thinking, Wait a minute. Isn’t goat milk considered dairy? Yes, you’re right. But we wanted to include this ice cream because a) it’s delicious and b) some people who can’t tolerate cow’s milk do fine with goat’s milk. Goat’s milk more closely resembles mother’s milk than cow’s milk, so it’s easier to digest. (Of course, if you’re allergic to milk or have a very strong lactose intolerance, a truly nondairy milk is a better choice for you.) We love the yogurt-y tang of Laloo’s, which works beautifully in traditional flavors like Vanilla Snowflake, Deep Chocolate and Mystic Strawberry, as well as more exotic ones. That’s you, Black Mission Fig and “Capraccino” Almond Fudge.

Try it: $8, icecreamsource.com

Photo: icecreamsource.com

Photo: icecreamsource.com




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3 Reasons You Feel Awkward When Someone Compliments You

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

At the Producers Guild Awards last month, Shonda Rhimes began her acceptance speech for the Norman Lear Award for Achievement in Television by deadpanning, “I’m going to be totally honest with you, I completely deserve this.”

She was kidding, and she wasn’t. That night the mega-talent behind some of prime-time’s buzziest shows went on to deliver a powerful message about diversity on TV. (“It’s not trailblazing to write the world as it actually is,” she told the room full of industry influencers.) But she managed to do it while simultaneously owning her success in a way that we rarely get to see.

From her memoir, Year of Yes: How to Dance It Out, Stand in the Sun and Be Your Own Person ($25; amazon.com), we know that Rhimes wasn’t born with such “badassery,” as she would call it. She has worked hard to learn to appreciate praise without negating it, or laughing it off, as if it were a big, fat joke. That struggle, Rhimes points out, is one that a lot of women share. When faced with a compliment, many of us duck our heads, embarrassed, when all that’s really necessary is a “thank you” and a smile.

via GIPHY

Here, Health’s contributing psychology editor, Gail Saltz, MD, explains some of the possible reasons for this ingrained habit—and why it’s so important to start accepting praise with grace.

You’re highly attuned to others

Women are the more empathetic sex, says Dr. Saltz. We are more likely to put ourselves in another person’s shoes (be it a sister, friend, classmate or coworker) to imagine that person’s internal reaction to our own success—and whatever insecurity or jealousy or frustration it may bring up for them. It might be hard for you to bask in our own glory because you’re afraid of throwing others into your shadow, explains Dr. Saltz. But the bottom line? It’s never a good idea to make yourself smaller to make somebody else feel better.

RELATED: 5 Habits to Steal from Powerful People

You don’t want to come off as conceited

So you downplay your achievements, and wave off the praise. You don’t want others to think that you think that you’re better than them. As a result, you’re quick to second guess your confidence, says Dr. Saltz. You wonder, Am I acting confident or am I acting arrogant? But “knowing the difference for yourself, as a woman, is really important,” she says. Because there is a big difference between the healthy recognition, I accomplished this fantastic thing; and the egotistical fantasy, Everything I do is amazing because I’m me.

You’re afraid you don’t deserve it

You might be suffering from the “extremely common” fear of being a fraud, says Dr. Saltz, which means that “every time you achieve [something], you are overcome by this feeling of, ‘That was a fluke.’” The underlying anxiety is that you don’t belong where you are, among your peers; and when you fall into that kind of negative thought trap, you brush off every victory as a lucky break before you allow yourself a moment enjoy it.

RELATED: 12 Worst Habits for Your Mental Health

The lesson

“Accomplishments feed self-esteem,” says Dr. Saltz. That’s why acknowledging your achievements—and accepting the praise that comes your way—can be so powerful. “What’s important is not necessarily what [others think of you], but what you know yourself,” she explains. So the next time someone tries to compliment you, go on and let them. Take the praise, and appreciate it for what it is: a reminder of that great thing you did that you really deserve to celebrate.

 

 

 




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Do More ‘Selfies’ Mean More Relationship Woes?

FRIDAY, Feb. 5, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Posting too many “selfies” on social media might lead to serious problems with your romantic partner, according to a new study.

Researchers conducted an online survey of 420 users of the social media site Instagram. The users were aged 18 to 62. The investigators found that those who believed they were good-looking were more likely to post selfies, which are photographic self-portraits.

But the more selfies someone posted, the more likely the behavior was tied to jealousy and arguments in their romantic relationship, along with emotional or physical infidelity, breakups and divorces, the findings showed.

“Although we cannot directly assume cause-and-effect due to the [study’s design], the results here show that body-image satisfaction can be detrimental to Instagram users’ romantic relationships, especially when users’ body-image satisfaction is promoted in the form of Instagram selfie posts,” study co-author Russell Clayton, an assistant professor at Florida State University in Tallahassee, said in a school news release.

The study was published recently in the journal Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking.

According study author Jessica Ridgway, “the results from this study provide an avenue for future body-image research.” Ridgway is a visiting professor of retail merchandising and product development at Florida State.

“For instance,” she said in the news release, “future research could examine whether social media users post images of their actual selves or their virtual ideal selves, and whether such online behaviors are associated with similar negative outcomes found in our study.”

More information

The American Psychological Association offers tips for healthy romantic relationships.





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Many Donor Livers for Sickest Patients Rejected, Study Finds

FRIDAY, Feb. 5, 2016 (HealthDay News) — It’s common for transplant centers to reject donor livers for the sickest patients on the transplant waiting list, a new study suggests.

That means those patients have a higher risk of death while they wait for a lifesaving transplant, the researchers found.

The new study reviewed 23,000 donor liver offers to 13,255 U.S. patients on the liver transplant waiting list between May 2007 and June 2013. It found that only 37 percent of the organ offers were accepted for the sickest patients on the list.

“We found that not only is there a wide variation in acceptance rates for donor organs among transplant centers, these variations directly correlated with whether the sickest patients would die waiting for a lifesaving transplant, with patients 27 percent more likely to die without a transplant for every 5 percent decrease in a center’s adjusted organ offer acceptance rate,” said study leader Dr. David Goldberg. He is an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

The decision to accept or reject an organ is most often made by a transplant surgeon at a center. A number of factors go into the decision, including the donor’s age, how well the donor liver matches the recipient for size, and the opinion of whether or not a patient lower on the priority list has a greater risk of dying and would be a better match for the organ, the researchers explained.

The size of a transplant center didn’t predict whether a liver would be accepted. But, the researchers said they were surprised to find that centers in regions with more transplant centers were more likely to reject livers offered for the sickest patients.

Among transplant centers nationwide, acceptance rates of livers for the sickest patients ranged from 16 percent to 58 percent. The differences remained even when the researchers looked at the best-quality livers, according to the study published recently in the Journal of Hepatology.

“What this shows us is that these differences weren’t based on geography, as centers in the same area — in some cases, within a few miles of each other — varied dramatically in the probability that they would accept an organ for the sickest patient, which determined in many cases whether the patient would live or die,” Goldberg said in a university news release.

“The variability in life-or-death decisions among different transplant centers highlights that decisions of individual transplant centers, rather than geographic borders, are just as much of a source of inequities in transplant care,” he added.

Reducing the differences between transplant centers may help provide more equal access to liver transplants and reduce deaths among patients on transplant waiting lists, the researchers said.

They suggested one possible way to achieve that is to make data on centers’ organ acceptance rates public, and to include those rates when assessing center performance.

More information

The American Liver Foundation has more about liver transplants.





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Texting After Dark May Harm Teens’ Sleep, Grades

FRIDAY, Feb. 5, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Instant messaging can be a source of emotional support for teens and help them collaborate on school projects, but new research shows that texting after the lights go out takes a toll on students’ sleep quality and academic performance.

“We need to be aware that teenagers are using electronic devices excessively and have a unique physiology,” study author Xue Ming, a professor of neuroscience and neurology at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, said in a university news release. “They tend to go to sleep late and get up late. When we go against that natural rhythm, students become less efficient.”

During the study, researchers examined the link between instant messaging (such as texting) and academic and sleeping troubles among young people.

“During the last few years I have noticed an increased use of smartphones by my patients with sleep problems,” Ming said. “I wanted to isolate how messaging alone — especially after the lights are out — contributes to sleep-related problems and academic performance.”

The researchers surveyed students at three New Jersey high schools. The investigators examined more than 1,500 survey responses. Researchers compared the students’ grades and gender, as well as how long and when they engaged in instant messaging. Specifically, they considered if the teens were using instant messaging before or after they turned out their lights.

The study, published online recently in the Journal of Child Neurology, found the students who turned off their devices or messaged for less than 30 minutes after lights out had significantly better grades than those who messaged for more than 30 minutes in the dark.

Texting before lights out didn’t affect students’ academic performance, the researchers said. But those who continued to text in the dark slept fewer hours and were more tired during the day than those who stopped sending instant messages when they went to bed, the findings showed.

Overall, the young women in the study sent more messages and experienced more daytime sleepiness, but they performed better in school than the young men involved in the study.

“I attribute this to the fact that the girls texted primarily before turning off the light,” Ming said.

Short wavelength “blue light” can delay melatonin release, making it more difficult to fall asleep, the researchers explained. These effects are intensified when people look at smartphones and tablets in a dark room, the researchers added.

“When we turn the lights off, it should be to make a gradual transition from wakefulness to sleep,” Ming said. “If a person keeps getting text messages with alerts and light emission, that also can disrupt his circadian rhythm.” Circadian rhythm is regulated by the body’s internal clock.

“Rapid eye movement [REM] sleep is the period during sleep most important to learning, memory consolidation and social adjustment in adolescents. When falling asleep is delayed but rising time is not, REM sleep will be cut short, which can affect learning and memory,” the researcher said in the news release.

The study authors suggested that teachers incorporate sleep education into their curriculum so students realize its importance.

“Sleep is not a luxury; it’s a biological necessity,” said Ming. “Adolescents are not receiving the optimal amount of sleep; they should be getting 8-and-a-half hours a night. Sleep deprivation is a strong argument in favor of later start-times for high schools — like 9 a.m.”

More information

The National Sleep Foundation explains how technology affects sleep.





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Allergies, Asthma Tied to Lower Risk of Brain Cancer

FRIDAY, Feb. 5, 2016 (HealthDay News) — People with respiratory allergies, asthma and the skin condition eczema may be less likely to develop glioma brain cancer, a new study suggests.

The international team of researchers looked at more than 4,500 glioma patients and almost 4,200 people without brain cancer. The investigators found that a history of respiratory allergies, asthma and eczema was associated with a reduced risk for glioma.

People with respiratory allergies or eczema were 30 percent less likely to develop the deadly brain cancer than those without such conditions, the study found.

Although the study found an association between allergic conditions and a lower risk of gliomas, it wasn’t designed to prove a cause-and-effect relationship between those factors.

The study was released online Feb. 5 in the journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention.

“Many other studies have shown this relationship,” study author Melissa Bondy, associate director for cancer prevention and population science at Baylor College of Medicine’s Cancer Center, said in a college news release.

“We sought to verify this relationship in the largest study to date so that we could provide a scientific consensus statement on the topic. We feel it’s now time for the next steps to be taken in this research area,” she added.

And, that next step is figuring out the mechanism behind the association, Bondy said.

Glioma is the term used to describe tumors arising from the gluey or supportive tissue of the brain, according to the American Brain Tumor Association. Just over one-quarter of all brain tumors and 80 percent of all malignant brain tumors are gliomas.

More information

The American Brain Tumor Association has more about glioma.





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