Showing posts with label Student. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Student. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Are you playing with fire?

Aztec women are handed flowers and smoking tub...Image via Wikipedia
I recently heard from my sister that she was diagnosed with polyps on her nose, which was due to her husband's incessant smoking. That's right, it was secondary smoking, or passive smoking. the very culprit. And as always said, the sufferings and woes of people affected by secondary smoking is more that those doing the puffing.

If you are into that habit of lighting up and smoking away, here's something that may make you stop - if you will.

Read on...


Are you playing with fire?
by Eveline Gan

YOU are craving a nicotine fix, but you don't want the second-hand smoke to affect your child. So you step outside for a puff, thinking what a responsible parent you are.

Well, think again.

A study has found that toxic particles from cigarette smoke, also dubbed as third-hand smoke, can linger on surfaces such as human skin, clothes or furniture, long after the cigarette is extinguished and smoke cleared from the air.

Are you playing with fire? TODAYOnlin.com - Health
The study, published recently in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that after exposing a piece of paper to smoke, the levels of newly-formed carcinogen (cancer-causing substances) rose by 10 times higher when it interacted with an indoor air chemical called nitrous acid commonly emitted by household appliances or cigarette smoke for three hours.

"A lot of parents think that if they smoke at home when their children aren't around, their children are safe. Although ventilation will help smoke dissipate, the particles simply embed themselves on furniture, carpets and other surfaces," said Dr Lim Yun Chin, a psychiatrist at Raffles Hospital's Raffles Counselling Centre.

"Even smoking outside will not help because the nicotine residues will stick to a smoker's skin, hair and clothing."

The Easy Way to Stop Smoking: Join the Millions Who Have Become Non-Smokers Using Allen Carr's Easyway MethodHe added: "When the toxic particles land and embed themselves on objects in the home, you run the risk of children receiving chronic exposure to these contaminants. It may be as simple as an infant, being held, inhaling and touching toxins from a smoking parent's clothing."

Chronic exposure to second- and third-hand smoke is harmful to children.

While it is well-known that toxic particles from cigarette smoke affects the lungs and heart, recent studies have also found that it may affect brain development.

According to Dr Lim, research has shown that cigarette smoke is linked to lower intelligence and other behavioural problems such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and aggressive and defiant behaviour, in children.

LifeSign QuitKey Smoking Cessation ComputerProfessor Kua Ee Heok, a senior consultant at the National University Hospital's psychological medicine department added that while many of the study findings are inconclusive, one thing is for sure.

"We know that children in such families (with smokers) may have a tendency to smoke at an earlier age because of 'Learned Behaviour'," Prof Kua said.

"Learned Behaviour" is one that is observed through experience and then carried out by an individual. A child exposed to cigarette smoking in a smoking household, who then picks up the habit, is an example.

How To Quit Smoking Even If You Don't Want ToAs such, parents who smoke should try to quit for the sake of their children, advised Dr Lim.

If your self-help methods have not been effective, try professional help or visit a smoking cessation clinic.

A combination of medication - to reduce withdrawal symptoms - and counselling to ease the stress of quitting can help, said Prof Kua.


Taken from TODAY, Health - Tuesday, 20-April-2010;
Source article is here, Are you playing with fire?
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Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Stemming the stem cell banks?

Diseases and conditions where stem cell treatm...Image via Wikipedia
US SCIENTISTS WARN OF STEM CELL FRAUD
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SAN DIEGO - Clinics that offer to "bank" stem cells from the umbilical cords of newborns for use later in life when illness strikes are fraudsters, a top scientist in the United States said on Saturday.

Clinics in many countries allow parents to deposit stem cells from their newborn's umbilical cord with a view to using the cells to cure major illnesses that could occur later in life.

In Thailand, for example, parents pay in the region of US$3,600 ($5,080) to make a deposit in a stem cell bank, thinking they are taking out a sort of health insurance for their child.

But Dr Irving Weissman, director of the Institute of Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine at Stanford University in California, said the parents were being fleeced by the stem cell bankers.

"Umbilical cords contain blood-forming stem cells at a level that would maintain the blood-forming capacity of a very young child," Dr Weissman told reporters at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

"They could also have derived mesenchymal cells - fiberglass-like cells that have a very limited capacity to make scar, bone, fat - but they don't make brain, they don't make blood, they don't make heart, they don't make skeletal muscle, despite what various people claim," he said.

Dr Weissman said these "unproven stem cell therapeutic clinicians" tend to set up shop in countries with poor medical regulations.

A check by AFP, however, found websites for umbilical cord stem cell banks in European Union member states and in the United States.

"They do the therapies, then they let the patients go on their own, short of maybe US$50-US$150,000 for a therapy that has no chance - taken away from a family that needs them when they have an incurable disease," Dr Weissman said. "It is wrong."

The International Stem Cell Society is due to issue a report in April about unproven stem cell therapies such as banking a baby's umbilical cord blood for future use. AFP

From TODAY, Monday, 22-Feb-2010
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Monday, June 29, 2009

500 students at RI Boarding School on leave of absence

By Lynda Hong, Channel NewsAsia | Posted: 29 June 2009 1944 hrs

RIBoardingSchoolStudents SINGAPORE: All 500-odd students and 20 teachers at Raffles Institution Boarding School are on Leave of Absence.

This is because a majority of the boarders are foreigners who have been to H1N1-affected countries during the recent school holidays.

Raffles Institution Boarding School has two H1N1 cases, who did not enter the school premises.

They showed symptoms upon arrival in Singapore.

The entire RI campus, with a student population of 4,500, is now segregated into three sections - Junior College, Secondary and Boarding School.

RI said tests and classes were carried out in these segregated groups on Monday to minimise interaction.

All students were also asked to leave immediately after school ended.

Junior college students who are boarders on Leave Of Absence sat for their Common Tests at the boarding school.

RI said it is doing everything it can to ensure the well-being of students by maintaining social distancing and grouping wherever possible.

- CNA/ir

From ChannelNewsAsia.com; see the source article here.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Three new cases in steamboat food poisoning


Channel NewsAsia - Tuesday, April 14

SINGAPORE: Three more people have food poisoning after eating at the steamboat restaurant BaShu RenJia at Geylang Road, bringing the total number of cases to 17.

These cases developed the onset of illness between 9 and 11 April. They had consumed food at the steamboat restaurant from 9 to 10 April.

All except two patients received outpatient treatment. The two hospitalised patients have since been discharged.

Meanwhile no new cases were reported from the "Rojak Geylang Serai" stall’s mass food poisoning incident.

Stool cultures of five food handlers from the "Rojak Geylang Serai" stall have tested negative for Vibrio parahaemolyticus bacteria which was found in 12 cases.

The result for the food handler from the neighbouring mee siam stall is still pending.

In a bid to win customers’ confidence after the "Rojak Geylang Serai" stall’s food poisoning outbreak, three temporary markets have brought forward their spring cleaning exercise.

At the Albert Centre Temporary Market, over 170 stalls took part in the National Environment Agency’s Spring Cleaning Exercise on Monday morning.

Besides the stalls, ceilings, fans and other shared spaces were also cleaned.

NEA officers did not report any rat problems at the market. But the hygiene ratings for the 73 cooked food stalls in the market have fallen after it moved to the temporary premises near Bugis MRT Station.

NEA’s grading assessment three months after the move showed two stalls losing their "A" rating, while more than 40 stalls lost their "B" ratings. And the "C" ratings saw a threefold increase.

NEA cites the housekeeping and poorer fittings and fixtures at the temporary premises as reasons for the change in ratings.

Two other temporary markets — at Ang Mo Kio and Tekka — also brought forward their spring cleaning exercise to Monday.

Spring cleaning for the temporary market near Ang Mo Kio Block 628 was scheduled on 27 April, while the Tekka Temporary Market was supposed to conduct its spring cleaning in May.
— CNA/ir


The original article is found here.

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Easy maintenance to a healthier you