The resurgence of Ebola Virus Disease in Liberia has claimed a second victim. Deputy Health Minister Tolbert Nyenswah told The Associated Press the
woman in her early 20s who died on July 12 was linked to the 17-year-old boy who died last month. Three other confirmed cases are being treated in Monrovia.
He
said some of the more than 120 people under observation in Nedowein,
southeast of Monrovia, could be discharged once they complete 21 days of
quarantine and show no signs of infection.
Liberia lost more than 4,800 lives to Ebola before it contained transmission in May. These are the first known cases since then. The World Health Organization says the new cases are likely not linked to travel.
Meanwhile Prospective pilgrims for the 2015 Hajj
to Saudi Arabia from Jigawa State, in Nigeria, would undergo screening for Ebola
Virus and other diseases.
Executive Secretary of the state Pilgrims Welfare Board, Alhaji Alhassan Muhammad, disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria.
Muhammad said the screening was to ascertain the health status of the prospective pilgrims before they embark on the pilgrimage.
The executive secretary recalled that
Nigeria had been declared EVD-free by the World Health Organisation “but
the board is taking precautionary measures to protect the state’s
pilgrims from contracting the diseases.”
He said all prospective pilgrims in the state must be screened before they would be allowed to pay their fare.
He added that final screening would be conducted at the airport to stop pregnant women from embarking on the journey.
“All intending pilgrims must be screened by our medical team before they will be allowed to pay their fare.
However, concerned Nigerians who spoke with Nigeria Natural Health Online, said the directive from the Jigawa pilgrim board was as a result of the strict measure being taking by Saudi Arabia to make sure that people coming into that country are ebola free. The question now is: what measures are being taken by the Nigerian government to make sure that people coming into the country, especially from Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone, are certified ebola free before they come in?
More than 1.4 million birds were
destroyed to stamp out bird influenza that hit poultry farms early this
year, according to Dr. Mohammed Ahmed, the Executive Director, National
Veterinary Research Institute, Vom.
Ahmed told the News Agency of Nigeria, in
Vom on Sunday, that 18 states were affected by the flu whose last case
was reported on May 28.
He said that 800 suspicions were diagnosed in the institute’s laboratory out of which 500 tested positive to the disease.
The NVRI boss said that compensations for the destroyed birds were already being paid by the Federal Government.
“Payment of compensation for the
destroyed birds is already in progress; it started and stopped at a
point, but it has resumed,” he said.
He observed that the compensation was
being handled by the Federal Government and appealed to the states to
help by initiating steps to assist farmers.
“Since it is the economies of the
affected states that are being largely affected, the states should
augment the compensation as they did during the first outbreak years
ago.
“The states should specifically help in the design of poultry farms to encourage bio-security of the farms,” he explained.
Ahmed particularly warned against cluster farms, and blamed that trend for the large number of birds that had to be destroyed.
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The
NVRI boss singled out Plateau and Kano as states with the largest
concentration of cluster farms, and explained that the flu usually
spread faster and engulf more birds in cluster farms.
He expressed satisfaction that the flu was contained in few months compared to the first outbreak.
“More birds had to go because the
production of poultry has changed with the cluster farms. In Rantya, a
village in Jos South Local Government Area of Plateau State, for
instance, the cluster farms are so close and heavily concentrated in one
vicinity,” he said.
Ahmed said that the disease had subsided but “certainly not over yet.”
“We are not taking anything for granted and have therefore gone into active surveillance.
“We have already trained people to take
samples; their task is to buy and test chickens randomly from farms and
live birds markets all over the nation.
“We are virtually out of the passive, so
we must go to look for possible cases. There are states and federal
offices and officers to handle surveillance even in the remotest of the
rural settlements.
“Such surveillance is usually the most
expensive part of disease control, but Nigeria is being supported by
some interventions from the World Bank, FAO, USAID and other development
partners.”
Ahmed further said that the Federal Government
was also carrying out forensic investigation to ascertain how the
disease came into the country.
“We are forced to do that because what
was diagnosed in NVRI laboratories is not related with previous cases,
it is a new introduction all together,” explained.
He said that there were many speculations
with humans suspected to be possible carriers, while poultry
importations could also be a source of disease dissemination.
Ahmed, however, expressed happiness that
no human case had been found, saying that people tested, including farm
workers, proved negative.
The NVRI boss disclosed that another
poultry disease, known as Newcastle disease, was being zeroed in for
eradication by the international community through vaccinations like
Thermostable and MDV12 that is usually targeted at poultry farmers in
the hinterlands.
An easy way to begin
thinking about food combining is to consider the concept of time. Some foods
take a long time to digest. Others move through the body relatively quickly.
(On average, fruits take 30 to 60 minutes to digest; vegetables, grains, and beans take one to two hours; cooked
meat and fish take at least three to four hours; and shellfish takes four to
eight hours.)
When you combine
foods with varying transit times, trouble may ensue, because digestion isn’t as
efficient. For example, say you eat a meal that includes shrimp and pineapple.
Because the pineapple is combined with the slowly digesting shrimp, it sits in
the stomach hours longer than it would on its own. As a result, the sugars in
the sweet fruit ferment, which leads to bloating and gas.
And, says Alder, an expert in nutrition, the
problems only multiply from there. If food rots in the stomach or intestines
instead of being efficiently digested, we don’t absorb all of its nutrients.
“Anytime you have fermentation or putrefaction, it can create gases that are
toxic and even carcinogenic. These gases require energy because other organs
have to work harder to detox the body. These toxins in the system may also
cause fatigue, irritability, headaches, and foul breath
initially, then later may result in colitis, inflammation, constipation,
arthritis, high blood pressure, and other unpleasant issues.”
Ultimately, the key
to good and bad combinations is to listen to your body, not follow a set of
rules. “Why not try it?” says Alder. “It doesn’t cost any money. And sometimes
it helps alleviate symptoms.” After all, isn’t feeling better worth a little experimentation?
Below are some food
combinations to test, and if they don’t sit well, consider avoiding:
1. Fruit With or
After a Meal
Examples:
·Strawberries on your salad
·Mango salsa on fish
·Apple pie or fresh berries for dessert
Why: Fruit goes
quickly through the stomach and digests in the intestines. When you combine
fruit with foods that take longer to digest — such as meat, grains, and even
low-water fruits like bananas, dried fruit, and avocados — it stays too long in
your stomach and starts to ferment, because fruit, says Alder, really acts like
a sugar.
Bhaswati
Bhattacharya, MD, a holistic health counselor and physician in New York City,
agrees. “Sugars are actually not easy to digest, according to Ayurveda, because they are heavy and require good fire to
process. That is why fruits should be eaten alone.” Bhattacharya adds that
fruits (especially fresh, seasonal fruits) are also “energetically purifying
foods and complete foods,” and to combine them with proteins and carbs takes
away their pure energy.
Instead: Eat fruit 30 to
60 minutes before your meals. When fruit is eaten alone on an empty stomach
before a meal, it prepares the digestive tract for what’s to come. Water rinses
and hydrates the tract, fiber sweeps and cleanses it, and enzymes activate the
chemical process of digestion. That’s why, says Alder, eating fruit first makes
the digestive tract “more capable of absorbing nutrition.” After a meal, wait
at least three hours before eating fruit. It’s best to eat most fruits on their
own — especially melons, because they are high in sugar and enzymes specific to
each melon. If you want to experiment with food combining, eating fruit alone
is a great first step.
2. Animal Protein
Plus Starch
Examples:
·Meat and potatoes
·Chicken and pasta
·A turkey sandwich
Why: Alder believes
that if an animal protein is eaten with a carbohydrate, such as meat and a
piece of bread or a potato, the different digestive juices will nullify each
other’s effectiveness: “The protein will putrefy and the carbohydrate will
ferment. The result is gas and flatulence in the system.”
Adding protein
enzymes and carb enzymes into the same space and time basically makes
everything “unclean,” says Bhattacharya, but she also admits that many people’s
bodies are suited to traditional foods like rice and sushi, and, yes, meat and
potatoes. And combinations like beans and rice, which make a healthy, complete
protein, don’t apply to this “bad combo” category. “Rice and beans have a
synergistic effect, promoting better assimilation of each when they are
together,” says Bhattacharya.
Instead: Combine protein
or starches with nonstarchy vegetables. If you do have to mix animal protein
and starch, add leafy green vegetables to minimize the negative side effects.
3. Fats With Wrong
Foods
Examples:
·Olives with bread
·Tuna with mayonnaise
·Meat fried in vegetable oil
Why: Fats require
bile salts from the liver and gall bladder to break down; mixing them with
other digestive chemicals can cause distress. For example, large amounts of fat
with protein slows digestion, notes Donna Gates, author of The Body
Ecology Diet (Hay House, 2011). Bhattacharya says that fats and oils
need to be combined according to the digestive fire of the person eating them.
“If combined with foods properly, fats build a little fire and induce foods to
be carried to the liver better,” she says. “Fats are to be avoided when the
fire is too low in the gut, as they douse the fire.”
Instead: Gates recommends
using small amounts of fat — particularly, organic, unrefined oils like olive
or coconut — when cooking vegetables, grains, and protein. She also suggests
that protein fats like avocados, seeds, and nuts should be combined only with
non-starchy vegetables. Alder recommends always including a raw leafy green
vegetable when eating fats.
4. Liquid With Meals
Examples:
·Water during your meal
·Juice with your meal
·Tea right after your meal
Why: Water goes through
the stomach in about 10 minutes. Juice takes 15 to 30 minutes. Any liquid in
your stomach dilutes the enzymes your body needs to digest proteins,
carbohydrates, and fats.
Instead: Drink as much water
as you wish at least 10 minutes before you eat. After eating, wait about an
hour to have any liquid — or longer for a more complex meal.
5. Two Concentrated
Sources of Protein
Examples:
·Bacon and eggs
·Nuts and yogurt
·“Surf and turf”
Why: Concentrated
proteins take a long time to break down, taxing the digestive system and
depleting energy. In Ayurveda, the combination of different meats, or meats
with fish, is to be avoided.
Instead: It’s best to
eat meat in the last course of your meal. “The first course should not be meat;
it should be light vegetables or protein. Meat should be the last course, as
digestive fire and enzymes are at their peak,” says Bhattacharya. “Never wait
more than 10 minutes between courses in the same meal. Or else the digestive
appetite and enzymes start to shut off.” Alder says that if you have to eat two
concentrated protein sources together, it’s best to add high-water-content
vegetables such as onions, cauliflower, broccoli, or lettuce.
The following article is by Michael Booth, who decided to do a research and find out why the Okinawa people of Japan live longer than every other people in the world. We hope you will find it insightful and embrace the nutritional advice given - especially if you want to live over a hundred years.
I have long taken an interest in how I might eat myself to old age. I
visited the southern Japanese Okinawa islands whose population is said
to include the largest proportion of centenarians in the country and met
with some of them in what is supposedly the village with the oldest
demographic in the world, Ogimi,
little more than a dirt street lined with small houses, home to more
than a dozen centenarians. Old folk tended vegetable patches or sat on
porches watching a funeral procession go by. My family and I dined on
rice and tofu, bamboo shoots, seaweed, pickles, small cubes of braised
pork belly and a little cake at the local "longevity cafe" beneath
flowering dragon fruit plants. Butterflies the size of dinner plates
fluttered by and my youngest son asked if there was a KFC.
The next day I interviewed American gerontologist, Dr Craig Willcox,
who has spent many years investigating Okinawan longevity and co-wrote a
book, The Okinawa Program, outlining his findings (recommending that we "Eat as low down the food chain as possible" long before Michael Pollan's similarly veg-centric entreaty).
Willcox summarised the benefits of the local diet: "The Okinawans
have a low risk of arteriosclerosis and stomach cancer, a very low risk
of hormone-dependent cancers, such as breast and prostate cancer. They
eat three servings of fish a week, on average ... plenty of whole
grains, vegetables and soy products too, more tofu and more konbu
seaweed than anyone else in the world, as well as squid and octopus,
which are rich in taurine – that could lower cholesterol and blood pressure."
Okinawa's indigenous vegetables were particularly interesting: their
purple sweet potatoes are rich in flavonoids, carotenoids, vitamin E and
lycopene, and the local bitter cucumbers, or "goya", have been shown to
lower blood sugar in diabetics. Like most of us, I am familiar with
mainstream dietary advice – eat less sugar, salt and saturated fat, cut
down on the cronuts
and so on – but I much prefer the idea of discovering little-known
shortcuts to longevity; I'm more of a "silver bullet" kind of guy. With
this in mind, over a lunch of traditional goya chanpuru
– bitter cucumber, stir-fried with tofu, egg and pork – in a restaurant
that was little more than a tumbledown hut close to his campus, I asked
Willcox which elements of the Okinawan diet he had introduced to his
life. Turmeric and jasmine tea, he said; both potentially ward off
cancer. Needless to say, both now feature in my morning ritual. Of course, your destiny as a potential centenarian will also be
determined by your DNA, upbringing and temperament, as well as how
physically active and sociable you are; the climate where you live; the
standard of healthcare available; how relaxed you are about timekeeping;
whether you take naps and are religious;
wars, and so forth. Being born a girl helps: 85% of the world's
centenarians are female. But it is generally accepted that diet
determines around 30% of how long we live. Some argue it can add as much
as a decade to your life. So, the question then becomes, should we all
switch to a diet of tofu, sweet potatoes and squid?
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According to Professor John Mather, a director of the Institute for Ageing
and Health at Newcastle University, it probably wouldn't do any harm
but the prevailing scientific evidence weighs more heavily in favour of
the Mediterranean diet. "There is not enough research on people who
adopt the Japanese diet in non-Japanese settings," he tells me. "It is
true Japan holds the [longevity] record at the moment, but if you go
back a little it was Sweden or New Zealand." (The Chinese have referred
to Okinawa as the Land of the Immortals for centuries, but this probably
does not constitute strong epidemiological evidence.)
Mather, who has worked in nutrition for 40 years, adds that the
Nordic diet has made a late surge, with recent research pointing to the
benefits of its fish- and, more controversially, dairy-rich diet (the
latter is an anomaly in longevity diets: the Japanese eat little dairy,
and in the Mediterranean diet it is mostly limited to cheese and
yoghurt). But he still prefers to point to the well-documented longevity
of the people of the Nuoro province of Sardinia or the Greek island of
Ikaria, the latest destination on the fountain-of-youth trail.
Among the dietary factors cited for their Methuselean tendencies are
herbal teas rich in antioxidants (including wild mint, good for
digestion, and artemisia for blood circulation), gallons of olive oil,
plenty of fresh vegetables and little meat or dairy. The US's
longest-lived community, the Seventh Day Adventists of Loma Linda,
California, also eat a largely vegetarian diet, and the people of Costa
Rica's Nicoya peninsula – another of the world's so-called "blue zones",
places identified by longevity researchers where people live to a
notably riper age – apparently eat large quantities of beans.
It is surely no coincidence that Ikaria only got its first
supermarket three years ago, while, in contrast to the centenarians, the
generation of Okinawans born since the arrival of the US airbase and
its accompanying fast-food outlets have demonstrably declining health.
You know lack of sleep
can make you grumpy and foggy. You may not know what it can do to your sex life, memory,
health, looks, and even ability to lose weight.
Sleepiness
cause accident. Sleep deprivation was a factor in some of the
biggest disasters in recent history: the 1979 nuclear accident at Three
Mile Island, the massive Exxon Valdez oil spill, the 1986
nuclear meltdown at Chernobyl, and
others.
But sleep
loss is also a big public safety hazard every day on the road. Drowsiness can
slow reaction time as much as driving drunk. The National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration of the United States estimates that fatigue
is a cause in 100,000 auto crashes and 1,550 crash-related deaths a year in
that country. The problem is greatest among people under 25 years old.
Studies show that sleep loss and poor-quality sleep also lead to accidents
and injuries on the job. In one study, workers who complained about excessive
daytime sleepiness had significantly more work accidents, particularly repeated
work accidents. They also had more sick days per accident.
Sleep loss dumbs you down. Sleep also plays a critical role in thinking
and learning. Lack of sleep hurts these cognitive processes in many ways.
First, it impairs attention, alertness, concentration, reasoning, and problem
solving. This makes it more difficult to learn efficiently.
Second, during the night, various sleep cycles play a role in “consolidating”
memories in the mind. If you don’t get enough sleep, you won’t be able to
remember what you learned and experienced during the day.
Sleep Deprivation Can Lead to Serious Health Problems
Sleep disorders and chronic sleep loss can put you at risk for:
Diabetes.According to
some estimates, 90% of people with insomnia
-- a sleep disorder characterized by trouble falling and staying asleep --
also have another health condition.
Lack of Sleep Kills Sex Drive. Sleep
specialists say that sleep-deprived men and women report lower libidos and less
interest in sex.
Depleted energy, sleepiness, and increased tension may be largely to blame.
For men with sleep apnea,
a respiratory problem that interrupts sleep, there may be another factor in the
sexual slump. A study published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology
& Metabolism
suggests that many men with sleep
apnea also have low
testosterone levels. In the study, nearly half of the men who suffered from
severe sleep
apnea also secreted abnormally low levels of testosterone during the
night.
Dr Mrs Quincy Olasumbo Ayodele, MD/CEO Quincy Herbals
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Why You Must Fight Obesity Now!
Obesity is a term that means you weigh at least 20% more than what is considered a normal weight for your height. It makes you more likely to have conditions including:
Not everyone who is obese has all of those problems. The risk rises if you have a family history of one of those conditions.
Also, where your weight is may matter. If it's mostly around your stomach
(the "apple" shape), that may be riskier than if you have a "pear"
shape, meaning that your extra weight is mostly around your hips and
buttocks.
Here's a closer look at four conditions that are linked to being obese or overweight.
Heart Disease and Stroke
Extra weight makes you more likely to have high blood pressure and high cholesterol. Both of those conditions make heart disease or stroke more likely.
The good news is that losing a small amount of weight can reduce your chances of developing heart disease or a stroke. Losing 5%-10% of your weight is proven to lower your chance of developing heart disease.
Cancers of the colon, breast (after menopause), endometrium (the lining of the uterus), kidney, and esophagus are linked to obesity. Some studies have also reported links between obesity and cancers of the gallbladder, ovaries, and pancreas.
Gallbladder Disease
Gallbladder disease and gallstones are more common if you are overweight.
Ironically, weight loss itself, particularly rapid weight loss
or loss of a large amount of weight, can make you more likely to get
gallstones. Losing weight at a rate of about 1 pound a week is less
likely to cause gallstones.
Please, note that the health tips and products presented in this blog are to complement the therapist's or doctor's recommendation and are in no way intended to replace prescriptions from the doctor or therapist. Also note that all payments for products purchased on this platform should be made to our corporate account: Firstbank, 2026934271, Kimekwu Communications Concept Signed: Management