Namibia Internet Gateway

  Hello unlogged userLINK1 · LINK2 · LINK3 · LINK4 · LINK5 

   Register Domains
gTLD
.com
.net
.org
.biz
.info
.us
.in
.cn
.eu
.cc
.ws
.mobi
Christmas Island
.cx
.com.cc
.net.cc
Dominica
.dm
Kiribati
.ki
.biz.ki
.org.ki
.com.ki
.phone.ki
.info.ki
.tel.ki
.mobi.ki
.net.ki
Mauritius
.mu
Namibia
.na
.com.na
.org.na
.net.na
.co.na
.alt.na
.edu.na
.in.na
.ws.na
.mobi.na
.tv.na
Norfolk Island
.nf
South Georgia & South Sandwich Islands
.gs
Timor-Leste
.tl

   Namibian Towns

   Languages
Preferred language:


Topic: Health

The new items published under this topic are as follows.

<   11121222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748   >

   Why people eat the foods they do
Posted by: Admin on Tuesday, March 27, 2007 - 05:14 AM (128 Reads)
Health People purchase foods based on their income level, their belief in a food's health benefit and cost. However, ethnicity and gender also impact people's food choices, according to researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

 

Read full article: 'Why people eat the foods they do' (687 words more) Send this story to someone Printer-friendly page
 

   Happy schools lead to lower levels of substance abuse and teen pregnancy
Posted by: Admin on Tuesday, March 27, 2007 - 05:10 AM (122 Reads)
Health Promoting a positive ethos in schools, in which students are more engaged and enjoy good relationships with their teachers, can lead to lower levels of substance abuse and teen pregnancy, according to a study which appears in the British Medical Journal.

Note: A team led by Dr. Chris Bonell from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine's Centre for Research on Drugs and Alcohol Behaviour found that improving school ethos to combat disaffection among pupils should be viewed as a promising complement to classroom-based interventions such as substance-misuse and sex-education interventions. Such interventions are the norm in schools and can have positive effects, but systematic reviews have shown that these are small, inconsistent and generally not sustained.

Young people's substance abuse and teenage pregnancy are major public health problems. School-based surveys indicate that a third of English fifteen year olds have taken illegal drugs in the last year and about a quarter use them monthly or more. Among the 40% of fifteen year olds who drink alcohol, average weekly consumption is over ten units. A quarter of fifteen year olds smoke. Teenage pregnancy rates in the UK are the highest in western Europe.

The authors reviewed evidence from Scotland, Australia and the United States suggesting that interventions aiming to promote positive school ethos might offer an effective complement to existing approaches. The Scottish study showed that 'risky' health behaviour in secondary schools seemed to be linked to large school size and an independently-rated poor school ethos. The Gatehouse project in Australia aimed to promote a sense of social inclusion in schools, improve teacher-student interaction, and develop opportunities for student participation. Students who took part were found to be slightly less likely to report a range of risky health behaviours, including smoking, drinking and using marijuana. The US study, which had similar objectives and approaches to the Australian one, had led to a 34% drop in alcohol, tobacco and cannabis use among the boys.

Dr. Bonell comments: 'Our study has shown how policies aimed at improving school ethos could provide a promising complement to classroom-based interventions. A practical intervention package could be developed, informed by the trials reviewed, to help UK schools improve their ethos and reduce disaffection, and the consequent problems within health and education.

'These interventions, which need to be carefully tailored to and piloted within the UK context, would need to start as soon as young people start secondary school, if not before. They should involve staff, parents and students in both the development and implementation stages, and be supported by training programmes for teachers, aimed at improving interactive teaching and developing better relationships with students.



(454 words more) Send this story to someone Printer-friendly page
 

   25 per cent of new cases of schizophrenia in the UK may be due to cannabis
Posted by: Admin on Tuesday, March 27, 2007 - 05:08 AM (157 Reads)
Health If cannabis causes schizophrenia - and that remains in question - then by 2010 up to 25 per cent of new cases of schizophrenia in the UK may be due to cannabis, according to a new study by Dr Matthew Hickman of the University of Bristol and colleagues, published in Addiction journal.


 

Read full article: '25 per cent of new cases of schizophrenia in the UK may be due to cannabis' (369 words more) Send this story to someone Printer-friendly page
 

   Study describes how estradiol helps to maintain bone density
Posted by: Admin on Tuesday, March 27, 2007 - 05:06 AM (117 Reads)
Health Researchers at the University at Buffalo have described a novel pathway by which estradiol, the primary estrogen in humans, aids in maintaining bone density, a function critical to avoiding osteoporosis.

 

Read full article: 'Study describes how estradiol helps to maintain bone density' (491 words more) Send this story to someone Printer-friendly page
 

   Campaign to help schools prevent chemical accidents
Posted by: Admin on Tuesday, March 27, 2007 - 05:02 AM (145 Reads)
Health In a national kickoff, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced its Schools Chemical Cleanout Campaign to help schools prevent chemical accidents.

 

Read full article: 'Campaign to help schools prevent chemical accidents' (337 words more) Send this story to someone Printer-friendly page
 

   Drugs should be classified by the amount of harm that they do
Posted by: Admin on Tuesday, March 27, 2007 - 05:00 AM (144 Reads)
Health A new study published in The Lancet proposes that drugs should be classified by the amount of harm that they do, rather than the sharp A, B, and C divisions in the UK Misuse of Drugs Act.

 

Read full article: 'Drugs should be classified by the amount of harm that they do' (443 words more) Send this story to someone Printer-friendly page
 

   Technologies to improve prevention, tracking and detection of counterfeit medicines
Posted by: Admin on Tuesday, March 27, 2007 - 04:49 AM (129 Reads)
Health More than twenty technology companies are responding to a call to support the fight against counterfeit medicines spearheaded by the International Medical Products Anti-Counterfeiting Taskforce (IMPACT) set up by the World Health Organization (WHO) and partners.

 

Read full article: 'Technologies to improve prevention, tracking and detection of counterfeit medicines' (621 words more) Send this story to someone Printer-friendly page
 

   Tykerb (lapatinib) - new anti-cancer treatment approved
Posted by: Admin on Tuesday, March 27, 2007 - 04:47 AM (127 Reads)
Health The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved Tykerb (lapatinib), a new targeted anti-cancer treatment, to be used in combination with capectabine (Xeloda), another cancer drug, for patients with advanced, metastatic breast cancer that is HER2 positive (tumors that exhibit HER2 protein).

 

Read full article: 'Tykerb (lapatinib) - new anti-cancer treatment approved' (976 words more) Send this story to someone Printer-friendly page
 

   Promising new pain-killing drug
Posted by: Admin on Tuesday, March 27, 2007 - 04:46 AM (158 Reads)
Health A potential new pain-killing drug developed by medical scientists at the University of Leicester and Ferrara in Italy is to be discussed at a public lecture on 20th March.

 

Read full article: 'Promising new pain-killing drug' (297 words more) Send this story to someone Printer-friendly page
 

   Prescription drug safety legislation introduced in House
Posted by: Admin on Tuesday, March 27, 2007 - 04:44 AM (96 Reads)
Health Democratic Reps. Henry Waxman (Calif.) and Edward Markey (Mass.) have introduced legislation (HR 1561) that they say would make greater strides toward ensuring the safety of prescription drugs than Senate legislation (S 484) introduced by Sens. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Mike Enzi (R-Wyo.), CQ HealthBeat reports (CQ HealthBeat, 3/20).

 

Read full article: 'Prescription drug safety legislation introduced in House' (197 words more) Send this story to someone Printer-friendly page
 

<   11121222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748   >


   News Categories

   Main Menu

   Login




 


 Log in Problems?
 New User? Sign Up!

   Online
There are 3 unlogged users and 0 registered users online.

You can log-in or register for a user account here.

   Ads