A Healthy Breakfast May Protect Against Heart Disease Breakfast is more than just an eye-opener that helps you transition from sleep to the day ahead. Eating breakfast, especially one that includes whole grains, reduces your risk for heart attack, stroke, type 2 diabetes, and heart failure, reports the May 2008 issue of the Harvard Heart Letter.A host of mostly small studies show that eating breakfast, as compared with skipping it, makes for smaller rises in blood sugar and insulin after all of the day's meals and snacks.
Source: www.medicalnewstoday.comAbout.com Health Launches Calorie Count Mobile About.com Health, the third-largest consumer health Web site in the U.S. (March 2008 Nielsen Online), announced today that it has launched Calorie Count Mobile, a free service that allows users to receive nutritional data and ratings of over 70,000 foods on their mobile devices. Calorie Count Mobile is an extension of About.com's Calorie Count Plus Web site (
Source: www.medicalnewstoday.comFoods Matter Magazine Launches First Ever 'Free-From' Food Awards Foods Matter magazine launches first ever 'free-from' (gluten, wheat, dairy, egg, nut) food awards to celebrate the 300% growth in the free-from food market.
Source: www.medicalnewstoday.com
HOODIA GORDONII PLUS
PURE HOODIA GORDONII
HOODIA LIQUID
First Comprehensive Study Into The Health Of Europe's Teens Reveals Concerning Trends After three years of work, the EU funded research programme HELENA has revealed its initial results. It concludes that amongst European adolescents, approximately 27% of males and 20% of females are either overweight or obese. It also reveals for the first time at European level, food intake and physical activity patterns for adolescents.
Source: www.medicalnewstoday.comFat Cell Hormone Linked To Kidney Disease Reduced levels of a hormone produced by fat cells and linked to the development of insulin resistance may also be related to a higher risk of kidney disease, according to a study led by researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and Thomas Jefferson University. Their study, to be published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation on April 22, could point the way to drug therapies that can protect renal and cardiac function in patients with obesity.
Source: www.medicalnewstoday.comBenefits Of Omega 3s Still Unclear For Bipolar Disorder Despite intriguing findings that omega 3 fatty acid supplements could alleviate depression symptoms, there is still not enough evidence to say whether omega 3s are useful treatments for people with bipolar disorder, according to a review of recent studies.
Source: www.medicalnewstoday.comA Healthy Breakfast May Protect Against Heart Disease Breakfast is more than just an eye-opener that helps you transition from sleep to the day ahead. Eating breakfast, especially one that includes whole grains, reduces your risk for heart attack, stroke, type 2 diabetes, and heart failure, reports the May 2008 issue of the Harvard Heart Letter.A host of mostly small studies show that eating breakfast, as compared with skipping it, makes for smaller rises in blood sugar and insulin after all of the day's meals and snacks.
Source: www.medicalnewstoday.comMost New Mothers Agree That Early Diet Is Important For The Long Term Health Of Their Babies A survey of new mothers in five different European countries has found that most of them (85 - 90%) agreed that the way they fed their babies was important for their babies' long term health. The preliminary results of the survey were presented at the International Symposium on Early Nutrition Programming held in Granada on 23rd April.
Source: www.medicalnewstoday.comFoods Matter Magazine Launches First Ever 'Free-From' Food Awards Foods Matter magazine launches first ever 'free-from' (gluten, wheat, dairy, egg, nut) food awards to celebrate the 300% growth in the free-from food market.
Source: www.medicalnewstoday.comModerately To Severely Obese Elderly Run Significant Risk Of Disability And Dependence On Long-Term Care Services, Finds Study Presented At AGS Among the growing number of obese older adults, those who are moderately and severely obese, but not those who are mildly obese, run a significantly increased risk of having disabilities serious enough to need long-term care, according to a study that will be presented here, at the American Geriatrics Society's Annual Scientific Meeting, on May 1. The meeting is the premier conference on aging research.
Source: www.medicalnewstoday.comWorld Food Programme Says High Food Prices A Silent Tsunami, Affecting Every Continent The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) said that high food prices are creating the biggest challenge that WFP has faced in its 45-year history, a silent tsunami threatening to plunge more than 100 million people on every continent into hunger.
Source: www.medicalnewstoday.com
HOODIA GORDONII PLUS
PURE HOODIA GORDONII
HOODIA LIQUID