Friday, November 2, 2007

Mindful Exercising: Thinking Your Body to Good Health?



Author:
Karen Barrow
Medically Reviewed On: May 09, 2007
Can just thinking you are getting a good workout make you healthier? The results of a new study suggest the secret to feeling better about exercising is believing that it is helping you.
Researchers have found that hotel room attendants who were told they were getting a good workout from their daily routine of cleaning rooms were in better health a few weeks later than those who weren’t told that.
Though there is documented evidence of a placebo effect in people taking fake pills, this study is the first to show that a placebo effect may exist in the world of exercise.
For the study, researchers from Harvard University recruited 84 female room attendants from seven hotels. In four of these hotels, the workers were given an information session, telling them that the amount of exercise they got while at work met or exceeded government recommendations. Those workers from the three other hotels were not given this information. All of the participants had their blood pressure, body mass index (BMI) and other standard measures of health taken.
Before the study, one-third of the participants reported that they did not exercise at all, with the other two-thirds reporting that they did not exercise regularly. After four weeks, however, 80 percent of those who were told their work was good exercise reported regular exercise.
Most importantly, these participants lost an average of two pounds, lowered their blood pressure by 10 percent and showed some reduction in BMI and body fat. Fewer health improvements were seen in the group whose members were not informed that their jobs were good exercise.
“These results support the hypothesis that exercise affects health in part or in whole via the placebo effect,” wrote Dr. Alia Crum and Ellen J. Langer in Psychological Science.
The researchers also surveyed their participants to determine if they changed their diet during the study, thinking that some may have adopted a healthier lifestyle, but there was no change in general diet or exercise habits reported.
“Whether the change in physiological health was brought about directly or indirectly, it is clear that health is significantly affected by mind-set,” the researchers note.
Who knows? Next time you are running after your kids, washing your car or just walking through the local mall, if you think you are getting a good workout, you just may reap the benefits of one.

Insulin Pen May Improve Diabetes Outcomes



Medically Reviewed On: October 31, 2006
(HealthCentersOnline) - Using an insulin pen instead of syringe injections may improve compliance and reduce diabetic emergencies, new research suggests.
All people with type 1 diabetes and some people with type 2 and other forms of diabetes must take supplements of insulin, a hormone needed to process glucose (blood sugar) for energy. The most common method of insulin administration is injections using needle-tipped syringes and vials of insulin.
Another injection option is insulin pens, which have short needles and prefilled cartridges or chambers in a single device. Insulin pens are generally less uncomfortable and easier to use but more expensive short-term than syringe injections. They have been more popular in some countries than in the United States.
Scientists with a U.S. corporate research firm and a pharmaceutical company conducted what they described as the first study to compare medical and economic outcomes in patients with type 2 diabetes who switched from syringe injections to insulin pens. They reviewed a healthcare claims database covering more than 40 million people to identify 1,156 adult patients fitting that description.
Their 18-month analysis of these patients who converted to insulin pens indicated that the proportion who complied with their physician-prescribed treatment plan rose from 36 percent to 55 percent. Also, episodes of low glucose, known as hypoglycemia, declined, including a decrease by up to two-thirds in patients who followed their treatment plan at least 80 percent of the time.
Emergency hospital visits due to hypoglycemia declined, with an annual savings of $788 a patient, and total annual savings in treatment costs were $1,590 a patient.
The researchers concluded that switching from insulin syringe injections to insulin pens could improve patient compliance, reduce hypoglycemia and yield long-term savings.
The study was published this month in Clinical Therapeutics.
Copyright 2000-2006 HealthCentersOnline Inc.

Meaning of Dreams

Book - your going to be wise in every decision you will make.
Angle - sadness, if the angel in your dream sings it means
you'll going to have a known friend.
Dust - You'll be insulted by someone.
Sun - You'll see things that is amazing to you.

Just ask me if you want to know the meaning of your dreams

Three Months With 18th Day that Brings Bad Luck


March 18
September 18
August 18

Lucky Days In 12 Months
January 1-2-3-4-5-28-29
February 2-4-5-17-26-27-28
March 2-3-8-9-10
April 2-6-25-26-27
May 1-2-3-4-12-13-18-20
June 3-5-16-19-24-30
July 4-12-15-19-26
August 6-9-14-19-26-31
September 3-12-20-21-29
October 7-12-17-24-29-30
November 1-2-11-18-23-28
December 5-8-16-20-24-25