National Infertility Awareness Week

April 28, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Health

This week, April 25 – May 2, is National Infertility Awareness Week®, a movement sponsored by RESOLVE to raise awareness about the disease of infertility which affects 7.3 million Americans. Click, to learn more about infertility.

To help others understand infertility’s physical and emotional challenges FertilityAuthority is asking people to join their “ONE THING” campaign to raise awareness and de-stigmatize infertility.

If you could tell a non-infertile friend, relative, co-worker or stranger ONE THING about your struggle with infertility what would it be?  To post your comments, visit Fertility Authority’s National Infertility Awareness Week page.

Fertility Authority was launched in late February by an all-female team led by media veteran, Gina Bartasi.  It is the only web portal dedicated to fertility.  A rich online experience educates women and men on the need to be proactive regarding their fertility and provides the tools and information to do so.  Features include: best-of-breed content written by healthcare writers and journalists, vetted by reproductive endocrinologists; a robust interactive community of bloggers, columnists and message boards; a growing video library of patient testimonials; breaking fertility news; and proprietary databases of doctors, clinics and fertility professionals. Fertility Authority will also be introducing their e-newsletter, The Daily Shot, in a few weeks.

So visit Fertility Authority to share your “one thing” or to learn more about fertility issues, and know that you are not alone.

Yourway Transport meets special transportation needs in cornea transplant

April 20, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Health

I always found it so fascinating when watching transplant surgeries on medical shows and you see the helicopter land on the roof, and the guy runs out with a cooler into the O.R., but I always wondered if they did that for every type of transplant.  They actually don’t.  I found this interesting article about a company that handles the transportation of organs such as eyes.

Yourway Transport (www.yourwaytransport.com), a premium global courier that provides customized transportation solutions for special handling needs in the pharmaceutical, biotechnology and medical/healthcare industries, will exhibit at the Eye Bank Association of America’s (EBAA) Annual Meeting to be held at the Westin Seattle Hotel, June 17-20, 2009 in Seattle.

Yourway works with a majority of eye banks nationwide, meeting the special transportation needs involved in cornea transplant. Yourway will exhibit these special handling and customized transportation solutions at the EBAA Annual Meeting.

5 Simple Ways to Save Your Heart

April 6, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Health

How women can save their hearts.  New research reveals that with a few lifestyle tweaks you can slash your odds of becoming one of the 8 million women with cardiovascular disease.

  1. Know your numbers – Do you know what your blood pressure was the last time you were at the doctor?  If your doctor didn’t tell you that your blood pressure was high, don’t assume you are in the clear.  Nearly 20 percent of people under the age of 35 have pre-hypertension (reading between normal 120/80 and 139/89) reveals research from the University of California, San Francisco.  The study also found that these young adults were more likely to develop high blood pressure, or hypertension, over the next 2 decades than those who had healthy readings.  At your next doctors visit find out your reading, and if your numbers are above 119/79, start making changes, such as lowering your sodium.  Also consider the DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet, which has been shown to make a difference in two weeks.
  2. Go bananas -  Research at Osaka University in Japan found that people who took in the lowest levels of potassium had a 35 percent greater risk of death from cardiovascular disease than those who got the most.  Most women only get about half the 4,700 milligrams of potassium they need daily, and potassium is important for heart health since it works with sodium to regulate the water balance in the body, which promotes normal blood pressure.  In addition to eating bananas, try eating halibut, tomato sauce, lima beans, or papaya.
  3. Get 8 hours of shut-eye – Harvard research reveals that people who slept five or fewer hours a night had a 39 percent greater risk of having heart disease than those who got at least eight.  Sleep is crucial for the body to repair itself.  According to Dr. Edward Suarez, at Duke University Medical Center, “Not spending enough time in bed means your body can’t repair the daily damage to cells and tissues.  This can lead to inflammation, the immune system’s response to injury.”  This build up of inflammation may cause fatty deposits to build up in arteries.  Can’t find time to get 8 hours of rest a night, then try to find time to take a 30 minute nap at least 3 times a week.  Not only will napping slash your risk of heart disease by one-third, it can also help to reduce stress levels.
  4. Make a peanut butter sandwich – Peanut butter is packed with magnesium; “Magnesium may battle harmful free radical molecules that attack the tissues, blood vessels, and heart,” says Dana King, M.D.  Some other great sources of magnesium include beans, spinach, and artichokes.  When eating your peanut butter sandwiches, be sure to eat it on a high fiber bread (at least 3 grams per slice).
  5. Rethink your birth control – The same hormones that prevent pregnancy (estrogen & progestin) may also make your blood vessels less flexible, and over time, raise your blood pressure.  For instance, women who use the birth control patch have double the risk for blood clots versus those who take oral contraceptives.  For most women, the benefits outweigh the risks, but if you smoke, have hypertension, or pre-hypertension, monitor your blood pressure weekly.  It is important to speak with your gynecologist to find the properly birth control method for you.

This full article can be found in Shape Magazine February 2009 health report by Richard Laliberte.

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