Popular Articles

Our Psychological Well-Being Is Reflected In The Stories We Tell About National Trauma
A new study by psychologists at the University at Buffalo and the F. W. Olin College of Engineering finds that in the aftermath of national trauma, the ability to make sense out of what happened has implications for individual well-being and that the kinds of stories people tell about the incident predict very different psychological outcomes for them.

New Survey: Health Care Leaders Say Need For Reform Is Urgent; Broadly Support Public Health Care Option, Provider Payment Reform
By a wide margin, health care leaders believe that individuals should have a choice of public and private health plans, and strongly support other central components of health reform such as innovative provider payment reform and a national insurance health exchange with strong standard-setting authority. In addition, two-thirds (68%) of opinion leaders feel it is urgent to enact comprehensive health care reform this year, according to the latest Commonwealth Fund/Modern Healthcare Health Care Opinion Leaders Survey.
News of the day
House State-Foreign Operations Appropriations Subcommittee Approves FY10 Funding Measure
The House State-Foreign Operations Appropriations Subcommittee "unanimously approved its FY10 funding measure without any amendments" on Wednesday, "deferring expected fights for the full committee markup in a week," CongressDaily reports.
Cardiovascular

Diets High In Calcium And Dairy Products In Childhood May Lower Mortality

New evidence suggests that children who have a diet high in calcium and who consume dairy products may have a lower mortality rate compared with those who do not, according to research published ahead of print in the journal Heart. A 65-year follow up of a study into the eating habits of families carried out in the 1930s found that dairy products and a diet high in calcium made a difference to how long people lived. Heart disease risk factors and thickening of the arteries begins in childhood and existing evidence into what effect dairy consumption has, is limited. Some dairy products such as whole milk, butter and cheese have a high content of saturated fatty acids and cholesterol and some studies indicate that consumption of these in adulthood contributes to heart disease. Although the practice of giving extra milk to school children has been common in Europe since the 20th century, debate continues over the long term health effects of doing so and what are safe intake levels. Researchers from the Queensland Institute of Medical Research, Brisbane in Australia, and the Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol, carried out a 65-year follow-up of a study done in the 1930s. In 1937-39, children from 1,343 families in England and Scotland took part in a study of family food consumption assessed from 7-day household food inventories. The data came from the Carnegie ("Boyd Orr") survey of diet and health in pre-war Britain. The international team of researchers managed to ascertain what had happened to 4,374 of these children between 1948 and 2005. By 2005, 1,468 (34%) of them had died, including 378 deaths due to coronary heart disease and 121 deaths due to stroke. The researchers looked at two main outcomes - deaths due to stroke and cardiovascular disease - and analysed associations between total dairy intake and mortality, and associations between individual dairy food groups and mortality. The researchers found that there was no clear evidence that intake of dairy products was associated with coronary heart disease or stroke deaths. However, childhood calcium intake was inversely associated with stroke mortality but not heart disease mortality. Children who were in the group that had the highest calcium intake and dairy product consumption were found to have lower mortality rates than those in the lower intake groups. The authors conclude: "Children whose family diet in the 1930s was high in calcium were at reduced risk of death from stroke. Furthermore, childhood diets rich in dairy or calcium were associated with lower all-cause mortality in adulthood. Replication in other study populations is needed ò€¦. because other factors, such as socioeconomic differences, explain part of these findings." "Childhood dairy and calcium intake and cardiovascular mortality in adulthood: 65-year follow-up of the Boyd Orr cohort." Heart 2009; doi 10.1136/hrt.2009.168716 Heart


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