Tag Title: personal


Genetic diabetes counseling may not inspire change

September 6th, 2012

By Genevra Pittman NEW YORK | Thu Sep 6, 2012 2:44pm EDT NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Counseling people about their personal risk of diabetes based on their genes may not motivate them to take steps to prevent the blood sugar disease, a new study suggests.

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One-on-one training studios take fitness personally

August 20th, 2012

By Dorene Internicola NEW YORK | Mon Aug 20, 2012 5:02am EDT NEW YORK (Reuters) – Personalized fitness is no longer the domain of movie stars and world-class athletes. Studios providing one-on-one fitness are catering to clients who prefer their fitness far from the all-purpose gym crowd

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Interactive health records may boost preventive care

July 12th, 2012

By Amy Norton NEW YORK | Thu Jul 12, 2012 4:47pm EDT NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Medical records that patients can access online may encourage more people to get recommended screening tests and immunizations, a new study suggests.

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Doctors try to make sense of cancer’s genetic jumble

June 5th, 2012

By Julie Steenhuysen CHICAGO | Tue Jun 5, 2012 4:02pm EDT CHICAGO (Reuters) – Not too long ago, knowing the organ where a cancer first takes hold was generally all a doctor needed to determine what treatments to use. Not anymore.

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Fending off fitness fatigue

May 21st, 2012

By Dorene Internicola NEW YORK | Mon May 21, 2012 5:02am EDT NEW YORK (Reuters) – Runners stumble, yogis yawn, and even the bulkiest body builders get bored. But fitness experts say there are specific tricks to help people get and stay motivated. Connecticut-based exercise physiologist Tom Holland, who has coached clients on everything from losing weight to climbing mountains to running marathons, said set a date

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Chicago hospital doctors say iPads raise their efficiency

March 13th, 2012

A woman holds up an iPad with the iTunes U app after a news conference introducing a digital textbook service in New York in this January 19, 2012.

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Why online security is taxing our brains

March 9th, 2012

A cyber security analyst works in a watch and warning center at a Department of Homeland Security cyber security defense lab at the Idaho National Laboratory September 30, 2011. Credit: Reuters/Jim Urquhart By Chris Taylor NEW YORK | Thu Mar 8, 2012 11:28pm EST NEW YORK (Reuters) – Nathan Acosta is feeling a little overwhelmed. The 24-year-old from Raleigh, North Carolina, who works for a financial services firm, is trying his best to keep up with all the passwords and security questions he has to juggle, just to log onto his personal accounts. But sometimes it feels like a losing battle. It’s a battle millions of consumers can identify with. For a while it was just your mother’s maiden name, then your first pet, the street you grew up on or the make and model of your first car. As passwords and security questions multiply, so does the potential for things to go wrong, possibly locking you out of your own life. Unless you’re a savant with total recall, you need a system to manage that morphing body of login credentials necessary to navigate your virtual life. “They ask me about my favorite book, and I can’t remember how I answered that five years ago,” says Acosta. “If I answer anything wrong, then it’s red flags and tons of red tape,” he says. “I was born in Winston-Salem, but many programs don’t allow hyphens, so then I have to make up a fake city and remember that too.” His answer? An elaborate Excel spreadsheet that’s password-protected. Others go more old-school, like executive coach Darla Arni in Slater, Missouri. “I have an entire notebook that I keep all my passwords in, but its pages are filling up” and becoming increasingly disorganized, says the 55-year-old. “It’s so bad that if anything ever happens to me, my instructions are: Find the password notebook – or you will never be able to access anything of importance ever again.” If you’re at your wit’s end with the demands for encyclopedic recall, don’t despair: Some smartphone apps, like RoboForm, Keeper Password, and PasswordWallet, can help consumers manage password overload. UMPTEEN PASSWORDS You may as well get used to the Kafka-esque scenario of constantly having to prove you are who you say you are. According to one Microsoft research paper, the average computer user has 25 online accounts and 6.5 passwords – and that was tabulated back in 2007. “You might have different logins and passwords for Google, Facebook, Amazon, Flickr, your bank, your favorite retailers, and on and on,” says Chenxi Wang, a vice president and security analyst for technology consultants Forrester Research. “If you’re trying to remember all the different passwords and security questions and combinations, it can be a challenge – and I haven’t yet seen a concerted effort to help consumers manage that challenge.” To be sure, going through several layers of authentication is a good thing for consumers, helping reduce the risk of increasingly sophisticated hackers gaining access to their accounts and emptying them out. “Today, you have to have multiple levels of security, like those ‘challenge questions’ you have to answer whenever you’re using a new device,” says Keith Gordon, a security, identity and fraud executive with Bank of America. “It’s what helps us identify fraudsters in Eastern Europe who have stolen your online credentials.” But Gordon sympathizes with consumers who feel like they’re taking the SATs at every turn. In fact, he says the industry is moving towards challenge questions that focus more on recent behavior, rather than memory-challenging questions relating to childhood. “In future it will be more like, ‘You had a transaction this weekend at which one of these retailers?’” Gordon says. “Or ‘You owned a home a couple of years ago in Indianapolis; which one of these addresses is yours?’ Those are things that are a little more relevant and real-time, than the name of the dog you had when you were 10.” Forrester’s Wang predicts the tide will turn towards fewer passwords. Online retailers will likely gravitate to logins for the sites that “know you best” – like Facebook or Google – thereby cutting down on the reams of information you have to dredge up, she says. Nathan Acosta hopes things go the way of biometrics: Just apply your thumbprint to your smartphone screen, instead of having to recall the name of your old college mascot. Until that happens, be prepared to be quizzed ad nauseam about your birthplace, your favorite actor and where you went on your first date with your spouse. (Editing by Bernadette Baum and Beth Pinsker Gladstone) Link this Share this Digg this Email Reprints

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Bishops plan aggressive expansion of birth-control battle

February 14th, 2012

Bishops listen to proceedings during the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in Baltimore, Maryland November 14, 2011. Credit: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque By Stephanie Simon Tue Feb 14, 2012 5:23pm EST (Reuters) – Catholic bishops, energized by a battle over contraception funding, are planning an aggressive campaign to rally Americans against a long list of government measures which they say intrude on religious liberty. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops plans to work with other religious groups, including evangelical Christians, on an election-year public relations campaign that may include TV and radio ads, social media marketing and a push for pastors and priests to raise the subject from the pulpit. “We want to make it something that will get peoples’ attention,” said Bishop William Lori of Bridgeport, Conn. The bishops spent the past few weeks pressing President Barack Obama to exempt religious employers from a federal mandate that all health insurance plans offer free birth control. Obama agreed to modify the mandate a bit, so that religious employers wouldn’t have to pay for contraceptive coverage directly. That satisfied some Catholic groups, but the bishops were not mollified. They want the mandate repealed altogether. And now, they are aiming higher still, lobbying Congress to enact a law that would let any employer opt out of covering any medical treatment he disagreed with as a matter of his personal faith. So, for instance, a pizzeria owner who objected to childhood vaccinations on religious grounds would be able to request an insurance plan that did not cover them, in effect overriding a federal requirement that vaccinations be provided free with any health-insurance plan. Leaving coverage decisions up to each employers’ conscience might create chaos in the marketplace, “but chaos is sometimes the price you pay for freedom,” said Richard Land, the president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, who is backing the bishops whole-heartedly. Democrats, who control the Senate, are likely to block any bill with such broad opt-out provisions. But supporters, including prominent Republicans, say they will keep pushing for the change, which fits into a wider theme of defending individual freedoms against government intrusion which is expected to play prominently in the November election. MESSAGE FROM THE PULPIT Along with the Southern Baptist Convention, the National Association of Evangelicals stands ready to contribute money and manpower to the bishops’ campaign, said Galen Carey, an association vice president. The group is also considering the unprecedented step of asking pastors of every evangelical denomination across the country to read their congregations an open letter protesting the contraception mandate as an assault on religious liberty. Liberal groups are already launching counter-attacks. This week, NARAL Pro-Choice America, which works to keep abortion legal and expand contraceptive access, spent $250,000 to air radio ads in four swing states that will be crucial to the presidential election — Colorado, Florida, Virginia and Wisconsin. The ads urge support for Obama and his effort to ensure that “women of all faiths, no matter where they work,” can get free birth control with their health insurance. More than 30 organizations supporting Obama teamed up to create the Coalition to Protect Women’s Health Care, which has started an online petition and plans further action. The coalition includes two unions that represent millions of workers and have well-honed networks for getting out political messages, the Service Employees International Union and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees. Obama’s supporters say the president went far enough to accommodate religious institutions when he announced last week that they wouldn’t have to pay for free birth control as part of their insurance plans; he said instead their insurers would be required to pick up the costs. The bishops denounced this as a gimmick that doesn’t solve anything, especially for the many religious hospitals and schools that self-insure their employees. “Reasonable people should be able to work through the details of this and find common ground,” said John Gehring, Catholic outreach coordinator for the liberal group Faith in Public Life. “But election-year politics doesn’t make for cool heads.” BATTLE FOR RELIGIOUS FREEDOM The Conference of Catholic Bishops began preparing months ago for a battle royale over religious freedom. Last fall, the conference bulked up its staff, hiring a lawyer who had devoted his career to religious liberty cases and a lobbyist to press the cause in Washington. The group also created a special committee on religious liberty, chaired by Bishop Lori. In a September letter announcing the committee, Archbishop Timothy Dolan declared that religious freedom “is now increasingly and in unprecedented ways under assault in America.” He and other officials offer many examples of that perceived assault. On the federal level, the Obama administration has cancelled or threatened to cancel contracts awarded to Catholic charities for work to prevent HIV and to help victims of sex trafficking. The administration says the charities have to provide services such as condoms, emergency contraception and abortion referrals to maintain the contracts; the charities protest that such conditions violate their religious faith. Several states, meanwhile, have required adoption agencies that receive public funds to treat same-sex couples on par with any other prospective foster or adoptive parent. Catholic Charities object, saying the church doesn’t sanction gay and lesbian relationships. Rather than comply with the laws, bishops in Illinois, Massachusetts and Washington D.C. have shut down Catholic adoption agencies. The bishops portray this as an out-and-out war on free exercise of religion. But secular and liberal groups say no one’s assailing the freedom to worship, to proselytize — or even to perform social services, such as placing needy children in loving homes, according to religious precepts. It is only when a religious institution accepts taxpayer money to do such work that religious freedom must take a back seat to secular laws, said Marci Hamilton, a constitutional scholar at Cardozo School of Law. Courts nationwide have repeatedly ruled that religious groups must follow the same rules as everyone else when holding a government contract, Hamilton said. Any institution that can’t in good faith follow those rules shouldn’t apply for public funding, she said. GUARDING CONTRACEPTION With regard to contraceptive care, courts in New York and California have upheld state laws — similar to the federal mandate — that insurance plans, including those sponsored by religious employers, must cover birth control if they cover other prescription drugs. It is unclear whether such nuances will filter into the public debate over religious freedom and contraceptive coverage. Both sides say they believe public opinion is firmly in their corner — and they’re determined to keep it that way with a steady drumbeat of snappy soundbites. More than 100 university professors and religious leaders from different faiths released a letter of protest against the administration Tuesday that was headlined with a single word: “Unacceptable.” The letter called the Obama administration “morally obtuse” and blasted the contraceptive coverage mandate as “a grave violation of religious freedom.” On the other side, the American Civil Liberties Union held a press conference to accuse the bishops of playing politics in the name of faith. The bishops are promoting “a distorted view of religious liberty — one that has no basis in law or the Constitution,” said Daniel Mach, director of the ACLU Program on Freedom of Religion and Belief. (Reporting By Stephanie Simon in Denver,; additional reporting by Thomas Ferraro; Editing by David Storey and Marilyn Thompson) Link this Share this Digg this Email Reprints

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U.S. panel defends call to censor bird flu studies

January 31st, 2012

Ducklings are pictured at an incubating farm outside Hanoi September 7, 2011. Credit: Reuters/Kham By Julie Steenhuysen CHICAGO | Tue Jan 31, 2012 10:14am EST CHICAGO (Reuters) – A potentially deadlier form of the bird flu virus poses one of the gravest known threats to humans and justifies an unprecedented call to censor the research that produced it, a top U.S. biosecurity official said on Tuesday. The National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB) set off a furious debate in the scientific and public health communities in December when it asked the journals Nature and Science to censor two studies on new strains of the H5N1 virus that may make it more easily transmissible in people. “The potential of this pathogen, in theory, exceeds anything else I can imagine,” Paul Keim, acting chair of the NSABB, told Reuters in an e-mail. Keim explained his personal decision to support censorship in this case in a commentary published on Tuesday in mBio, the journal of the American Society for Microbiology. The panel also published an explanatory piece in Nature and Science. The panel cited fears that mutant versions of the H5N1 virus created by scientists at Erasmus Medical College in the Netherlands and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, could accidentally escape the lab or be used as a devastating form of bioterrorism. The censorship decision was a first for the panel, and it drew scathing criticism from many researchers who say withholding the information will set scientists back in the search for potential treatments and hamper public health efforts to track the virus. The researchers involved in the studies have agreed to a 60-day suspension of their work to allow governments and public health agencies to debate how it should best be handled. A meeting on the subject is scheduled for mid-February at the World Health Organization in Geneva. Keim, who chairs the microbiology department at Northern Arizona University, said the panel considered evidence that bird flu kills about half the people it infects, a much higher mortality rate than the devastating 1918-19 outbreak of Spanish flu that killed up to 40 million people. Making this deadly virus capable of easy transmission in people was “sobering,” Keim wrote in mBIO. “A pandemic by such a pathogen could reasonably be concluded to cause such devastation that it should be prevented at all costs.” The NSABB was formed after a series of anthrax attacks in the United States in 2001. It advises the Department of Health and Human Services and other federal agencies about “dual use” research that could serve public health but also be a potential bioterror threat. The National Institutes of Health, which funded some of the research, agreed with the panel’s assessment and made non-binding recommendations to Science and Nature to withhold key elements of the work. ‘WHY RISK A PANDEMIC?’ First detected in 1997 in Hong Kong, H5N1 has devastated duck and chicken flocks in Cambodia, China, Egypt, India, Indonesia and Iran, and has reached the Middle East and Europe through wild birds. So far, the virus cannot jump easily from person to person through airborne droplets, but scientists have been warning for years it could mutate into a deadlier flu strain. Experiments done by Yoshihiro Kawaoka of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and The University of Tokyo, and Dr. Ron Fouchier from the Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam showed how it could happen. With just a few mutations, the teams made the virus easily transmissible between ferrets, which are used in the lab to predict how flu viruses will behave in people. Vincent Racaniello of Columbia University, who wrote a commentary in mBio opposing the panel’s decision, points out that it is still not known whether the ferret-adapted virus is lethal or transmissible among humans. He said altering viruses so that they can live in lab animals is often used as a strategy for making a virus weaker and less suitable for living in people. And Racaniello worries about the precedent of publishing parts of studies without revealing how the work was done, making it harder for other scientists to validate the work. Keim said in an e-mail he agrees that ferrets are not 100 percent predictive of human disease, but that they are still the best model scientists have for predicting whether a flu virus will be capable of infecting people. “To gamble that this model is wrong on this issue is very dangerous,” Keim said. “Why would we risk a global pandemic saying that our best model is wrong?” (Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Paul Simao) Link this Share this Digg this Email Reprints

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Acupuncture little better than "sham" for migraine

January 9th, 2012

By Amy Norton NEW YORK | Mon Jan 9, 2012 12:26pm EST NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Traditional Chinese acupuncture seems little better than a “sham” version of the procedure when it comes to preventing migraines, a study published Monday suggests. The findings, reported in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, add to a pattern commonly seen in studies on acupuncture and migraines. Many have found that people with migraines can get relief from acupuncture. But often, “true” acupuncture has worked no better than “sham” acupuncture — where the needles are inserted only to a superficial depth in the skin, or into sites that are not considered acupuncture points in traditional medicine. That raises the question of whether acupuncture works by “non-specific” effects, according to the researchers on the new study, led by Dr. Ying Li of Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine in China. That is, some people might feel better because they expect to, or because of the personal attention from the acupuncturist. But other experts said that the findings do not mean that acupuncture offers nothing more than a “placebo effect” for migraine sufferers. For the study, Li’s team recruited 480 adults who had migraines at least twice a month. They randomly assigned people to one of four groups: In three, patients were given one of three different types of acupuncture that focused on traditional points, with electrical stimulation added to the needling; the fourth group received a sham version. In the sham group, needles were inserted in the skin at non-traditional sites, with electrical stimulation. But the needles were not manipulated to create a so-called “de qi” sensation. Patients in all four groups were offered 20 acupuncture sessions over four weeks. In the month after treatment ended, migraine sufferers in all four groups were reporting fewer headache days, Li’s team found. On average, they had migraine pain on about three days out of the month — down from around six days at the study’s start. In the third month after treatment, the “real” acupuncture groups were doing slightly better, while the sham group held steady at around three headache days. But the advantage was “clinically minor,” according to Li’s team, who did not respond to requests for comment. ‘SHAM’ MAY HAVE REAL EFFECTS So does that mean acupuncture’s benefits are all in your head? No, according to Dr. Albrecht Molsberger, of Ruhr University Bochum in Germany, who wrote an editorial published with the study. The problem, he told Reuters Health by email, is that sham acupuncture is not a true placebo — and may have real physiological effects. According to traditional Chinese medicine, acupuncture eases pain by stimulating certain points on the skin believed to affect the flow of energy, or “qi” (pronounced “chee”), through the body. But some modern research suggests that the needle stimulation triggers the release of pain- and inflammation-fighting chemicals in the body, even if it doesn’t strictly follow traditional principles. “The sham acupuncture effect is so strong and long lasting, that this suggests that other factors, like the stimulation of cytokines or endorphins, are important too,” Molsberger said. And even though real acupuncture has not clearly beaten the sham version, it has outperformed standard migraine treatments in some studies. A recent research review looked at four clinical trials that tested acupuncture against medications proven to prevent migraine attacks. Overall, acupuncture patients reported somewhat fewer migraines in the couple months after treatment, with fewer side effects. Dr. Jongbae J. Park, who directs Asian Medicine & Acupuncture Research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, agreed that the sham in this study was not a true placebo. “In my mind, it’s far from being a true ‘control,’” Park said in an interview. In fact, Park said, the issue with acupuncture research in general is that sham procedures vary from study to study. Researchers need to settle on a form of true placebo that is used consistently, according to Park — who acknowledged that questions about acupuncture’s effectiveness remain, and further studies are needed. But based on research overall, acupuncture “should be an option” for treating migraines, said Molsberger, who is also president of Forschungsgruppe Akupunktur, which profits by offering acupuncture training. Acupuncture is considered a generally low-risk procedure, with side effects like bruising at the needle site. The cost can vary widely — and may or may not be covered by insurance — but a session would typically start around $100. At his center, Park said a typical migraine patient might start with six weekly sessions, and then come monthly, tapering down to once every six months. But the acupuncture sessions would also involve “whole-person” care, with advice on diet, sleep and other lifestyle habits. There are, of course, other ways to tackle migraines. Several types of medications can prevent attacks, including a group of drugs known as triptans, certain antidepressants, high blood pressure drugs and anti-seizure medications. Another non-drug option is biofeedback, in which people learn to control the physical responses to stress, like muscle tension — which may help head off or ease migraine pain. SOURCE: bit.ly/wdot9I Canadian Medical Association Journal, online January 9, 2012. Link this Share this Digg this Email Reprints

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