বৃহস্পতিবার, ১৪ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Kid's consumption of sugared beverages linked to higher caloric intake of food

Mar. 12, 2013 ? A new study from the Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill reports that sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) are primarily responsible for higher caloric intakes of children that consume SSBs as compared to children that do not (on a given day). In addition, SSB consumption is also associated with higher intake of unhealthy foods. The results are published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

Over the past 20 years, consumption of SSBs -- sweetened sodas, fruit drinks, sports drinks, and energy drinks -- has risen, causing concern because higher consumption of SSBs is associated with high caloric intakes. Until recently it was unclear what portion of the diet was responsible for the higher caloric intakes of SSB consumers.

"The primary aims of our study," said lead investigator Kevin Mathias of the Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, "were to determine the extent to which SSBs contribute to higher caloric intake of SSB consumers and to identify food and beverage groups from the overall diet that are associated with increased SSB consumption."

Culling data from the 2003-2010 What We Eat in America, National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys, investigators analyzed a sample of 10,955 children ages 2 to 18, and reported results for three separate age groups: 2-5, 6-11, and 12-18 year olds. Results showed that while intake of food increased, intake of non-sweetened beverages decreased with higher consumption of SSBs. By examining both food and non-sweetened beverages the authors were able to conclude that SSBs are primarily responsible for higher caloric intakes among 2-5 and 6-11 year olds. A similar f?nding was observed among children aged 12-18 years; however, both food and SSBs contributed to higher caloric intakes of adolescents consuming greater than 500 kcal of SSBs.

Mr. Mathias stated that, "Among all age groups analyzed, the energy density (calories per gram) of food consumed increased with higher SSB intake." These findings suggest that higher consumption of SSBs is associated with consumption of foods with high caloric contents. "This is concerning because many foods that are associated with higher SSB consumption (e.g., pizza, cakes/cookies/pies, fried potatoes, and sweets) are also top sources of solid fats and added sugars; components of the diet that the 2010 Dietary Guidelines recommends Americans should limit."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Elsevier, via AlphaGalileo.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Kevin C. Mathias et al. ?Foods and Beverages Associated with Higher Intake of Sugar-Sweetened Beverages. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 2013 DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2012.11.036

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/nutrition/~3/TvgTnjPThqI/130312092541.htm

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মঙ্গলবার, ১২ মার্চ, ২০১৩

People, pooches team up to fight flab at Ill. gym

In this Feb. 14, 2013 photo, Cindy Rodkin, a member of the K9 Fit Club, works out with her golden retriever, Khaki, looking on during a class held in Chicago. Rodkin has lost 41 pounds since joining the K9 Fit Club in September 2012. (AP Photo/Teresa Crawford)

In this Feb. 14, 2013 photo, Cindy Rodkin, a member of the K9 Fit Club, works out with her golden retriever, Khaki, looking on during a class held in Chicago. Rodkin has lost 41 pounds since joining the K9 Fit Club in September 2012. (AP Photo/Teresa Crawford)

In this Feb. 14, 2013 photo, Lola, an Australian labradoodle, is seen playing with Karen McDillon during a class at the K9 Fit Club in Chicago as Jay Melnik, left, owner of the labradoodle, and McDillon's dog, a maltipoo named Teddy, look on. (AP Photo/Teresa Crawford)

In this Feb. 14, 2013 photo, owners and their dogs are seen during a class at the K9 Fit Club's Chicago location. (AP Photo/Teresa Crawford)

In this Feb. 8, 2013 photo, Tricia Montgomery, founder and president of the K9 Fit Club, poses with her 3-year-old, red nose pit bull, Zeus, in Hinsdale, Ill. (AP Photo/Teresa Crawford)

(AP) ? Can't get rid of that paunch?

A Chicago-area gym suggests working out with your pooch.

K9 Fit Club offers bow wow boot camps and other classes for people and their puppies to exercise together in Chicago and nearby Hinsdale, Ill.

The fitness center opened last year after founder Tricia Montgomery exercised with her dog and lost 130 pounds. Montgomery says her late basset hound, named Louie, lost 22 percent of his body weight.

Fans of the gym say classes are beneficial to both man and man's best friend.

Montgomery says dogs struggle with the same weight issues that people face, including heart problems and diabetes.

People who work out at K9 Fit Club say exercising with their dogs keeps them motivated.

Classes cost about $20.

Watch the video here: http://bit.ly/1687UdR

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2013-03-06-US-ODD-K9-Fit-Club/id-929ee10199434960961de1555944d86b

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Tunisian vendor immolates self ahead of govt vote | Morocco World ...

TUNIS, March 12, 2013 (AFP)

A vendor Tuesday was in a ?critical? state after torching himself in Tunis, hours before lawmakers were to vote on a new government to pull the country out of a deep political crisis and steer it to elections.

?This is a young man who sells cigarettes because of unemployment,? shouted the man, according to a witness, before immolating himself in front of the municipal building on Habib Bourguiba avenue, the Mecca of the 2011 uprising that toppled ex-dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.

?Allahu Akbar! (God is greatest!)? said the man as he set himself ablaze.

Passers-by rushed to douse the flames but not before the man, believed to be in his 20s, had suffered serious burn wounds. He was still conscious when he was rushed to hospital by emergency services.

A hospital source said he was ?in a critical condition and only his feet were not burned.?The number of people committing suicide or attempting to take their own lives has multiplied in Tunisia since a young street vendor set himself on fire on Dec.17, 2010, in a drastic act of protest against police harassment.

Mohamed Bouazizi?s death in the town of Sidi Bouzid ignited a mass uprising that toppled Ben Ali the following month and touched off the Arab Spring uprisings across several countries in the Middle East and North Africa.

Economic and social difficulties were the key factors that brought down Ben Ali?s regime and two years since he fled from Tunisia unemployment and poverty continue to plague the north African country.

The economy was badly affected by the revolution, which paralysed the strategic tourism sector, although the country is out of recession and posted 3.6% growth in 2012.

Unemployment remains high at about 17%, especially among young graduates.

Tunisia has also been struggling to emerge from a political crisis exacerbated by the daylight murder on Feb.6 of Chokri Belaid, a leftist opposition leader.

More than two years after the mass protests that toppled Ben Ali, Tunisia is still without a fixed political system due to a lack of consensus between the main parties.

The ruling Islamist Ennahda party is pushing for a pure parliamentary system while others are demanding that the president retain key powers.

Lawmakers were to vote later Tuesday on Islamist premier-designate Ali Larayedh?s new cabinet line-up, formed as part of efforts to resolve the political impasse, which last month brought down the government of Hamadi Jabali.

The MPs are also to vote on a timetable for the adoption of a new constitution and the staging of legislative elections.

The tight political calendar stipulates that the drafting of the constitution should be completed by Apr.27 with a final vote set for Jul.8, as each article must be first debated and then approved by an absolute majority of MPs.

A date of Oct.27 has been proposed for Tunisia?s next legislative and presidential polls, but some MPs have said this is unrealistic.

Several political timetables drawn up since the Ennahda?s sweeping election victory in the first post-revolution poll have not been respected.

Assembly speaker Ben Jaafar has called for an end to the tug-of-war, with the political uncertainty in Tunisia also exacerbated by the growing influence of militant Islamist groups.

Source: http://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2013/03/81978/tunisian-vendor-immolates-self-ahead-of-govt-vote/

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Yahsat to showcase latest offerings at Cabsat | Yahsat | AMEinfo.com

For the first time, visitors to the Yahsat stand will be able to gain real-time touch and feel of YahClick, enabling them to directly experience state of the art, affordable satellite broadband over the industry changing Ka band technology.

The arrival of cost effective Ka-band to the region finally puts satellite connectivity within the reach of home users and small businesses, not just for high end corporates as has been the norm in the satellite industry.

Already operational in Angola, Afghanistan, Iraq, Nigeria, and South Africa, YahClick is fast becoming one of the region's must have products due to its high speed, reliability and cost effectiveness that in some cases surpasses the quality of existing terrestrial services in these markets. With 25,000 terminals shipped in its first quarter of operation in key launch markets, the YahClick service is providing much needed broadband internet connectivity to urban, rural and remote communities across the Middle East, Africa, Central and South West Asia.

Commenting on Yahsat's participation at Cabsat, Shawkat Ahmed, Yahsat Chief Commercial Officer said: "This is our first Cabsat since going live with the YahClick service. We are here to invite the satellite community and prospective subscribers to experience the product they have been eagerly anticipating since the launch of Y1B in April 2012. Cabsat is a great opportunity for us to meet customers and potential prospects face to face, and this year we are pleased to announce we have delivered on our promise to bring cutting edge technology to the region. The exhibition also provides us the chance to further discuss our plans for 2013 including our in-market Service Partners helping to fully embed YahClick across our coverage area spanning 28 markets."

YahClick will complete service roll out by the end of 2013 in partnership with 30 in-market Service Partners.

In addition to high speed subscription service plans for primary connectivity for unserved or unserved home users, businesses, government entities, and NGOs, YahClick also offers a back-up connectivity solution. This service is designed for any entity that cannot risk being without continuous internet access for financial, security or legal reasons in case their primary link is disrupted due to undersea cable cuts, vandalism, congestion, or network outage.

Also on demonstration at Cabsat is YahClick Go, the vehicle mounted transportable service that instantly provides high speed internet connectivity in changing locations for broadcasters, businesses, government entities, and even private users camping or hunting in remote areas.

At significantly lower cost per Gigabyte transmitted, YahClick Go is an ideal alternative to existing technologies which often do not meet demand or cannot match connection speeds for uplink and downlink requirements.

Media visitors to Cabsat can view the live transmission service from YahClick Go at the Yahsat stand. YahClick Go can help broadcasters reduce transmission costs, avoid surprise bills through pre-paid data, and access the Internet while changing locations without the need to forecast or reserve bandwidth in advance while always managing fleet usage costs by paying only for data consumed, not waiting time.

The YahClick service is beamed through Yahsat's Y1B satellite, the first satellite in the region to offer internet connectivity through cutting edge Ka-band multi-spot beam technology, with reusable frequencies to maximize spectrum efficiency and reduce cost of satellite service.

The multi-spot beam technology means higher power on the ground, which enables use of a smaller antenna size, which reduces costs of hardware, installation and maintenance.

Since the launch of Y1B satellite, the full YahClick system has undergone comprehensive testing and validation to ensure the product is ready to achieve maximum performance.

Visitors to Cabsat can also learn more about Yahsat's service YahLink, a satellite connectivity service offering cost effective C-band or Ka-Band solutions to a number of entities including terrestrial internet service providers, large corporates and government agencies.

Yahsat's portfolio also includes YahService, a solutions provider of secure connectivity services including breach proof encryption and robust communication security for government agencies, and managed solutions capabilities for commercial and government entities.

Yahsat also has a satellite TV broadcasting offering called YahLive, a joint partnership with world renowned European satellite operator SES.

"We want to showcase products that suit a wide range of clientele and Cabsat is the perfect platform to do so," adds Ahmed.

Running from 12-14th of March, Cabsat is the region's largest broadcast digital media and satellite exhibition. Yahsat will be exhibiting its YahClick product with live demos in addition to several of their other products during Cabsat at its stand located at B2-10.

Source: http://www.ameinfo.com/yahsat-showcase-offerings-cabsat--332860

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Nuclear chief: US plants safer after Japan crisis

FILE - In this Jan.14, 2013, file photo provided by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Allison M. Macfarlane, second from right, the chair of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, listens to Richard St. Onge, Director of Nuclear Regulatory Affairs for Southern Cal Edison, third from right, speak during a tour of the troubled San Onofre Nuclear Power Station in San Juan Capistrano, Calif. As the Monday, March 11, 2013, two-year anniversary approaches of the the earthquake and tsunami that crippled Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, U.S. regulators, safety advocates and the industry are debating whether safety changes imposed after the disaster have made the nation's 65 nuclear plants safer. (AP Photo/Nuclear Regulatory Commission, File)

FILE - In this Jan.14, 2013, file photo provided by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Allison M. Macfarlane, second from right, the chair of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, listens to Richard St. Onge, Director of Nuclear Regulatory Affairs for Southern Cal Edison, third from right, speak during a tour of the troubled San Onofre Nuclear Power Station in San Juan Capistrano, Calif. As the Monday, March 11, 2013, two-year anniversary approaches of the the earthquake and tsunami that crippled Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, U.S. regulators, safety advocates and the industry are debating whether safety changes imposed after the disaster have made the nation's 65 nuclear plants safer. (AP Photo/Nuclear Regulatory Commission, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 14, 2013 file photo, Allison M. Macfarlane, the chair of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, talks about her tour of the troubled San Onofre Nuclear Power Station in San Juan Capistrano, Calif. The plant, located between Los Angeles and San Diego, hasn't produced electricity since January 2012 after a tiny radiation leak led to the discovery of excessive wear on hundreds of tubes that carry radioactive water. Macfarlane said in an interview that the agency won't let the San Onofre plant reopen until regulators are certain it can operate safely, which may take several months. She says performance of U.S. plants is "quite good.'' Macfarlane says all but five of the nation's 104 reactors were performing at acceptable safety levels at the end of last year. (AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi, File)

FILE - This Sept. 13, 2012 file photo shows the San Onofre nuclear power plant along the Pacific Ocean coastline in San Onofre, Calif. Two years after Japan?s nuclear crisis, Alison Macfarlane, the top U.S. regulator, says American nuclear power plants are safer than ever, but not trouble-free. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File)

(AP) ? Two years after the nuclear crisis in Japan, the top U.S. regulator says American nuclear power plants are safer than ever, though not trouble-free. A watchdog group calls that assessment overly rosy.

"The performance is quite good," Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chairman Allison Macfarlane said in an interview with The Associated Press.

All but five of the nation's 104 nuclear reactors were performing at acceptable safety levels at the end of 2012, Macfarlane said, citing a recent NRC report. "You can't engage that many reactors and not have a few that are going to have difficulty," she said.

But the watchdog group, the Union of Concerned Scientists, has issued a scathing report saying nearly one in six U.S. nuclear reactors experienced safety breaches last year, due in part to weak oversight. The group accused the NRC of "tolerating the intolerable."

Using the agency's own data, the scientists group said 14 serious incidents, ranging from broken or impaired safety equipment to a cooling water leak, were reported last year. Over the past three years, 40 of the 104 U.S. reactors experienced one or more serious safety-related incidents that required additional action by the NRC, the report said.

"The NRC has repeatedly failed to enforce essential safety regulations," wrote David Lochbaum, director of the group's Nuclear Safety Project and author of the study. "Failing to enforce existing safety regulations is literally a gamble that places lives at stake."

NRC officials disputed the report and said none of the reported incidents harmed workers or the public.

Monday marks the two-year anniversary of the 2011 earthquake and tsunami that crippled Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant. U.S. regulators, safety advocates and the industry are now debating whether safety changes imposed after the disaster have made the nation's 65 nuclear plants safer.

New rules imposed by the NRC require plant operators to install or improve venting systems to limit core damage in a serious accident and set up sophisticated equipment to monitor water levels in pools of spent nuclear fuel.

The plants also must improve protection of safety equipment installed after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks and make sure they can handle damage to multiple reactors at the same time.

Macfarlane, who took over as NRC chairwoman last July, said U.S. plants are operating safely and are making progress on the new rules, which impose a deadline for completion of 2016 ? five years after the Fukushima disaster. "So far, industry seems to be cooperating," she said.

The NRC has been working closely with plant operators "to make sure they understand what we are requiring and that we understand about their situation as well," Macfarlane said.

Even so, the U.S. industry faces a range of difficulties. Problem-plagued plants in Florida and Wisconsin are slated for closure, and four other reactors remain offline because of safety concerns. Shut-down reactors include two at the beleaguered San Onofre nuclear power plant in southern California, which hasn't produced electricity since January 2012, when a tiny radiation leak led to the discovery of damage to hundreds of tubes that carry radioactive water.

Macfarlane said the agency won't let the San Onofre plant reopen until regulators are certain it can operate safely, which may take several months.

Joseph Pollock, vice president of Nuclear Energy Institute, an industry trade association, said plant operators are "working aggressively" to meet the 2016 timeline set by the NRC and have already spent upwards of $40 million on safety efforts. Utilities have bought more than 1,500 pieces of equipment, from emergency diesel generators to sump pumps and satellite phones, Pollock said, and the industry is setting up two regional response centers in Memphis and Phoenix.

The industry expects to meet the 2016 timeline "with the current understood requirements," Pollock said. If the requirements change or new regulations are added, "then obviously we would have to review that," he said.

Even before the new rules are completely in place, the NRC is considering a new regulation related to the Japan disaster: requiring nuclear operators to spend tens of millions of dollars to install filtered vents at two dozen reactors.

NRC staff recommended the filters as a way to prevent radioactive particles from escaping into the atmosphere after a core meltdown. The filters are required in Japan and throughout much of Europe, but U.S. utilities say they are unnecessary and expensive.

The Nuclear Energy Institute said filters may work in some situations, but not all. The group is calling for a "performance-based approach" that allows a case-by-case determination of whether filtering is the best approach to protect public safety and the environment.

"We're not against filtering. It's how you achieve it," said Marvin Fertel, the group's president and CEO.

The filter issue has ignited a debate on Capitol Hill. Lawmakers from both parties have sent out a flurry of dueling letters for and against the proposal. Twenty-eight Republicans in the House and Senate, joined by more than two dozen House Democrats, have sent letters opposing the requirement as hasty and unnecessary.

A dozen Democratic senators and five House members have written letters backing the requirement, which they say will ensure public safety in the event of a Japan-style accident. The five-member commission is expected to vote on the issue in the next few weeks.

"It's not the time to be rash with hasty new rules, especially when the NRC has added 40-plus 'safety enhancements' " to its initial requirements following the Japan disaster, said Sen. David Vitter, R-La., senior Republican on the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee.

Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., who chairs the committee, said the filters were needed to protect the 31 U.S. nuclear reactors that have similar designs to the ones that melted down in Japan.

The filters "world reduce the amount of radioactive material released into the environment" in a severe nuclear accident, Boxer wrote in a letter signed by 11 fellow Democrats. "These technologies have been demonstrated in nuclear plants around the world."

Boxer, whose committee has held seven oversight hearings since the Japan disaster, has asked the NRC to report to her on the agency's progress implementing the post-Fukushima safety reforms.

"It is vital that U.S. nuclear power plants fully incorporate the lessons learned from this disaster," she said.

___

Follow Matthew Daly on Twitter; https://twiitter.com/MatthewDalyWDC

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-10-Nuclear%20Safety/id-c64a9185594642a793a8d3050e16a88c

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সোমবার, ১১ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Harvard Says It Spied on Teachers to Save Them

Harvard isn't sorry for snooping through the emails of more than a dozen of its own deans. On Monday the university issued a length statement?explaining why?it secretly sifted through the Harvard.edu email accounts of as many as 16 deans who received?a confidential email?discussing the procedure by which students who were implicated in last year's massive cheating ring would be adjudicated. And, well, the explanation is pretty thin: They spied to save!

RELATED: Harvard Spied on Its Own Deans During the Cheating Scandal

According to the statement ? attributed to arts and sciences faculty dean Michael D. Smith and Harvard College dean Evelynn M. Hammonds ? Harvard officials were ?officially "concerned" that the leaked email, which was printed by?The Harvard Crimson in September, suggested that other, more sensitive documents were in danger of being disclosed (in violation of federal law):

While the specific document made public may be deemed by some as not particularly consequential, the disclosure of the document and nearly word-for-word disclosure of a confidential board conversation led to concerns that other information ? especially student information we have a duty to protect as private ? was at risk.?

In other words, Harvard now seems to care a lot more about protecting further leaks and controlling its image as a bunch of cheaters than, you know, the privacy and professionalism of its faculty.

RELATED: Mark Zuckerberg's Harvard Career According to The Crimson

The statement indicates that Harvard's email probe, first reported by the Boston Globe?this weekend as?a secret process to search for certain email headers in the accounts of teachers who live on campus, turned up one resident dean who quickly admitted to forwarding the email in question to two advisees. (It's not indicated, however, if either of those advisees works for?The Crimson.) Harvard says it decided to "[protect] the privacy of the Resident Dean who had made an inadvertent error," which is why it didn't tell other deans that their emails had been searched. Because, you know, deans talk?

RELATED: Singing Grandmothers in Russia, Harvard, and 'Hollywood Heights'

The explanation is unlikely to sit well with Harvard's faculty, members of which have already expressed their discontent with Harvard's clandestine hunt for a leaked email. One professor?told?The New York Times?that he was "shocked and dismayed" about Harvard's conduct. Other professors were even more scathing: one?called the extensive search "dishonorable"; another deemed it "one of the lowest points in Harvard?s recent history?maybe Harvard?s history, period.":

It?s an invasion of privacy, a betrayal of trust, and a violation of the academic values for which the university should be advocating. And all to try to hunt down the source of a leak on a story about which the university should have been forthcoming in the first place (but of course wasn?t).

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/harvard-says-spied-teachers-save-them-171727624.html

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The Hale Family: Hale Baby Shower

The Hale Family: Hale Baby Shower

Hale Baby Shower

Cathy and Katherine threw a wonderful baby shower for us at my house for the Hale family.? We were once again totally spoiled by everyone's generosity!








?

Source: http://benandcorey.blogspot.com/2013/03/hale-baby-shower.html

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