Mostrando postagens com marcador Health risks. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Health risks. Mostrar todas as postagens

quarta-feira, 23 de setembro de 2015

If you’re sitting down, don’t sit still, new research suggests

 

 


Fidget for your health. Scientists found no increased risk of mortality from longer sitting times, compared to more active women, in those who considered themselves as moderately or very fidgety.

Credit: © Rawpixel / Fotolia

New research suggests that the movements involved in fidgeting may counteract the adverse health impacts of sitting for long periods.

In a study published today in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, a team of researchers, co-led by the University of Leeds and UCL, report that an increased risk of mortality from sitting for long periods was only found in those who consider themselves very occasional fidgeters.

They found no increased risk of mortality from longer sitting times, compared to more active women, in those who considered themselves as moderately or very fidgety.

The study examined data from the University of Leeds' UK Women's Cohort Study, which is one of the largest cohort studies of diet and health of women in the UK.

Study co-lead author Professor Janet Cade, from the School of Food Science and Nutrition at the University of Leeds said: "While further research is needed, the findings raise questions about whether the negative associations with fidgeting, such as rudeness or lack of concentration, should persist if such simple movements are beneficial for our health."

Even among adults who meet recommended physical activity levels and who sleep for eight hours per night, it is possible to spend the vast majority of the day (up to 15 hours) sitting down.

The study builds on growing evidence suggesting that a sedentary lifestyle is bad for your health, even if you are physically active outside work.

Breaks in sitting time have previously been shown to improve markers of good health, such as body mass index and your body's glucose and insulin responses. But until now, no study has ever examined whether fidgeting might modify an association between sitting time and death rates.

The University of Leeds' UK Women's Cohort Study gathered information on a wide range of eating patterns of more than 35,000 women aged 35 to 69 who are living in the UK.

The new study analyses data from a follow-up survey sent to the same women, which included questions on health behaviours, chronic disease, physical activity levels and fidgeting. More than 14,000 responses were received.

Study co-lead author Dr Gareth Hagger-Johnson from UCL, who conducted the data analysis, said: "Our results support the suggestion that it's best to avoid sitting still for long periods of time, and even fidgeting may offer enough of a break to make a difference."


Story Source:

The above post is reprinted from materials provided by University of Leeds.Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Gareth Hagger-Johnson, Victoria Burley, Darren Greenwood, Janet E. Cade.Sitting Time, Fidgeting, and All-Cause Mortality in the UK Women’s Cohort Study. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 2015 DOI:10.1016/j.amepre.2015.06.025

 

segunda-feira, 14 de setembro de 2015

10 Products You Think Are Healthy (But Aren’t)

 

 

woman-using-loofah-bath

Getty Images

Some products meant to improve your health and well-being can actually have the opposite effect if used incorrectly

You buy these products with the best intentions: antibacterial soap to kill germs, toothpaste to prevent cavities, a humidifier to relieve sinus congestion. But everyday items like these can trigger your allergies, leave you with a skin infection, or cause other problems if used incorrectly. The good news: the fixes are resoundingly simple, super quick, and keep you safe.

Your loofah

It might make your shower nice and sudsy, but you wouldn’t believe what’s hiding in the nooks and crannies of your loofah. “These act as a perfect environment for growth of bacteria, fungi, and mold,” says Jessica Weiser, MD, of the New York Dermatology Group. Any small open wounds (even microscopic ones from shaving or dry skin) are at risk for infections, from impetigo to folliculitis, she says.

Stay safe: Loofah lovers, don’t worry—you can still use one. Choose one made with natural fibers—they have enzymes to control bacteria, mold, and mildew growth—and replace it every month. Rinse thoroughly and wring out all the water after each use, and store the loofah in a cool, dry environment.

The humidifier

Hooking up a humidifier can bring you much-needed relief from cold-weather ailments like stuffy nose and dry skin. The downside: if not cleaned properly or often enough, humidifiers can grow mold and pathogens, spewing plumes of the stuff into the air, says Miguel Wolbert, MD, medical director of West Texas Allergy in Midland, Texas. Plus, having too much moisture in the air can turn your home into a breeding ground for dust mites, a problem if you suffer from indoor allergies.

Stay safe: After running the humidifier at night, don’t just turn it off and let it sit. Freestanding water left in the bowl is what will accumulate mold. Empty and dry it out completely. The Environmental Protection Agency also recommends cleaning portable humidifiers every third day by using a brush or scrubber on the tank to remove deposits and film.

Cotton swabs

Even though it’s gunky, wax exists to protect your delicate inner ear structures from dust and debris. So it’s healthy, but if it builds up, it can cause an ache or annoying feeling of fullness. That’s why you might routinely dig out whatever’s in there with Q-tips, something doctors don’t recommend: “If you accidentally place the Q-tip anywhere past the ear canal, you can push wax further in and even perforate the ear drum,” says Sujana Chandrasekhar, MD, director of New York Otology in Manhattan.

Stay safe: Forget the cotton swab. “There’s no reason to clean out any of the gunk from your ears except the part that can be removed by sweeping the pad of your index finger in the opening of the canal,” Dr. Chandrasekhar says. “Any wax deeper than that is actually doing a nice job of protecting your ears already.” If you do have an earache, see your doctor for any remedies.

Antibacterial soap

For so long we’d scrub up, aiming to kill germs at every turn. But as it turns out, antibacterial soaps are ineffective at best, says Elaine Larson, PhD, a professor of epidemiology at Columbia University. A decade ago she authored a double-blind randomized clinical trial (the gold standard of study methods) comparing households that used antibacterial products to those without them. The result? There was no difference in the rates people got sick. “It was clear that in a healthy home, antibacterial soap doesn’t really help that much,” she says. At worse, antibacterial ingredients like triclosan may spur antibacterial resistance, says the FDA.

Stay safe: Wash up with plain soap and water, period. And scrub well—it’s the friction between your two hands that physically removes germs and sends the buggers down the drain, says Larson.

Your chair

The risks of sitting keep piling up: an increased risk of heart disease, obesity, and mortality (and the list goes on). Unfortunately, research also shows that even if you’re a regular exerciser, it’s not enough to offset sitting all day during your commute, at work, and then at night in front of the TV.

Stay safe: Unless you get a stand-up desk, you probably can’t change the fact you sit at your desk job. But you can move just a bit more. Get up and walk to refill your glass of water or chat with a colleague. Light walking for two minutes out of every hour reduced mortality risk by 23% compared to spending the full time on your duff, according to a 2015 study published in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.

The blender

You know to wash your blender every time you make one of your yummy spinach smoothies, but you’re probably skipping one of the most important parts: the blender gasket (the rubber ring that helps hold the blade in place). In a 2013 report by NSF International, an independent organization that tests the health and safety of consumer products, the blender gasket was found to be the third germiest item in the kitchen, harboring Salmonella, E. coli, yeast, and mold. When researchers asked people what they thought were the top sources of grime in their kitchen, the blender didn’t even make their list.

Stay safe: After sucking down the smoothie, the NSF recommends disassembling the blender and pulling the blade and gasket out for a thorough washing. Yes, every time.

Nail tools

At-home manis and pedis keep your hands and feet summer-ready, but the tools you use could be harboring a dirty secret. It’s normal for bacteria to live on your skin, so when you use a cuticle clipper or pumice stone, you’re transferring those bacteria to the tools. Skip cleaning them properly and the bacteria can grow and potentially lead to skin infections, notes Dr. Weiser.

Stay safe: Wash pumice stones with soap and water every time you use it and get a new one every three to four weeks. As for nail and cuticle clippers, clean those with soap and water after using, too. More importantly, don’t share. “Normal flora differ from person to person, so bacteria harmless to you could cause infection in your friend, sibling, or partner,” she says.

Rubber spatula

Sure, you clean it every time you use it, but you should consider adding an important step: pulling the spatula head off the handle before you wash. Forgetting to do so is one of the reasons the NSF declared the rubber spatula the number-two dirtiest kitchen item. It was found to contain E. coli, yeast, and mold—not things you want to mix into your batter.

Stay safe: If your spatula is detachable, wash both pieces separately. If it’s a one-piece, you still need to take precautions because yeast can hide and grow in the joint. Make sure to give extra TLC to that section when washing.

Stuffed animals

What could go wrong with the impossibly cute and cuddly toys you use to comfort your little kids? “These are a magnet for dust mites,” says Dr. Wolbert. And dust mites are the biggest culprit in indoor dust allergens, setting off sneezing, runny nose, and red, itchy eyes. Dust mites living in your kids’ stuffed animals can prompt allergy attacks in anybody else in your household.

Stay safe: Keep one or two on your kid’s bed and keep the rest on a shelf. Trade them out every couple of weeks, he suggests. (It cuts down on exposure if you’re not surrounded by 10 at a time.) Or, wrap them in a plastic bag and stash in the freezer overnight—the cold kills mites.

Whitening toothpaste

Here’s the rub: you rely on toothpaste for fresh breath and fighting cavities, and many are designed to make your pearly whites white again. But just because whitening toothpastes are available over the counter doesn’t mean they’re completely harmless. Long-term use of some of these toothpastes—especially grittier ones designed to scrub off stains—can wear away your enamel and increase sensitivity, says Clifton M. Carey, PhD, professor in the school of dental medicine at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus.

Stay safe: Look for whitening toothpastes with the American Dental Association’s ADA Seal of Acceptance, which is an indication that they gently polish teeth to remove surface stains. If your teeth feel more sensitive after beginning a new whitening product, see your dentist.

 

http://time.com/4013141/health-products-hand-sanitizer/

segunda-feira, 8 de setembro de 2014

Sitting Still Risks Found

 

Sitting at Desk - altrendo images / Stockbyte

 

 

  • Sitting Raises Risk of Type II Diabetes, Cardiovascular Disease, and Early Death: A compendium of studies published in 2012 found that sitting for long periods raised the relative risk of type II diabetes and cardiovascular disease over 100%; the association was strongest for diabetes. The studies found this effect regardless of whether the sitter got the recommended amount of moderate and vigorous intensity exercise the rest of the day.
  • Sitting Slows Metabolism: Dr. Marc T. Hamilton says research shows thatfat-burning is slowed by prolonged sitting, so you burn less fat when you finally get up and exercise. "Sitting time and non-exercise activity have been linked in epidemiological studies to rates of metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes, obesity and cardiovascular disease," Dr. Hamilton concludes.
  • Sitting Increases Diabetes Risk in Women: A study found that the more sitting hours per day reported by women over age 40, the more their markers of insulin resistance and inflammation were increased. This points to an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes. This was true whether or not they got moderate exercise each day.
  • Two-Minute Walk Breaks Improve Glucose Control and Insulin Response: Breaking up sitting time with two-minute walk breaks every 20 minutes improved the body's response to a meal by 30% in a 2012 study. The study simulated an office environment with middle-aged, overweight people. Walking at light or moderate intensity for two minutes after each 20 minutes of sitting helped maintain glucose control and insulin response. There may be good benefits in developing habits of getting up more frequently during the workday and at home while video gaming, watching television or using the computer.
  • Screen Time Is a Health Risk: Two hours a day of sitting in front of the TV or computer may double your risk of a heart attack or other cardiac event. Four hours a day of screen time increases your risk of death by any cause by 50%, according to findings of a study of more than 4,500 middle-aged men in Scotland.
  • Sit More-Die Younger: The American Cancer Society's Cancer II study of more than 100,000 healthy people tracked since 1992 found that women who sit for more than six hours during their leisure time each day had a 37% greater chance of death than women who sat for three hours or less. Men had an 18% greater chance of death. This finding was independent of whether the people got in a good dose of exercise each day. However, the good news is that those who also got exercise had a lower risk of death than those who didn't—just not enough to overcome the presumed effects of the sitting hours.
  • Sounding the Alarm About Sitting: An editorial in the British Journal of Sports Medicine concluded that "recent observational studies have suggested that prolonged bouts of sitting time and lack of whole-body muscular movement are strongly associated with obesity, abnormal glucose metabolism, diabetes, metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular disease risk and cancer, as well as total mortality independent of moderate to vigorous-intensity physical activity," say the authors.
Six Ways You Can Decrease Sitting Time

Decrease the amount of time you sit still throughout the day by using these tactics:

  • Wear a pedometer: Aim not only to increase your total daily steps gradually to 10,000 steps per day, but also to log 500 steps per hour to ensure you are not sitting still for long periods of time. If you carry your phone with you all day, you may only need a pedometer app.
  • Activity monitors and apps with sitting time alerts: Some activity monitors and apps can be set to alert you when you've been inactive too long.
  • Screen Alerts: Those with computer-based jobs may want to install a program, such as RSIGuard, that pops up to alert them to move around each hour. For those tied to the cubicle, this can mean standing and walking in place, desk stretches, pacing while on the phone, etc.
  • Treadmill Desk: Build or buy a treadmill desk so you can walk slowly while working on the computer, reading, gaming or watching videos.
  • Switch to Active Video Games: Rather than play sitting-based computer games, switch to a Wii or other gaming device that includes active games that have you standing and moving.
  • Walk on Your Breaks: Use your break and lunch times to get in a brisk walk.

Sources:

Wilmot, E. G., et al. "Sedentary time in adults and the association with diabetes, cardiovascular disease and death: systematic review and meta-analysis",DIABETOLOGIA, Volume 55, Number 11 (2012), 2895-2905, DOI: 10.1007/s00125-012-2677-z

Hamilton, Marc T., et al. "Role of Low Energy Expenditure and Sitting in Obesity, Metabolic Syndrome, Type 2 Diabetes, and Cardiovascular Disease." Diabetes. 2007 Nov;56(11):2655-67.

Bakl, Elin, et. al. "Are we facing a new paradigm of inactivity physiology?" British Journal of Sports Medicine

Emmanuel Stamatakis, et al. "Screen-Based Entertainment Time, All-Cause Mortality, and Cardiovascular Events," J Am Coll Cardiol, 2011; 57:292-299, doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2010.05.065

Alpa V. Patel, Leslie Bernstein, Anusila Deka, Heather Spencer Feigelson, Peter T. Campbell, Susan M. Gapstur, Graham A. Colditz, and Michael J. Thun "Leisure Time Spent Sitting in Relation to Total Mortality in a Prospective Cohort of US Adults." Am. J. Epidemiol., Advance Access published on July 22, 2010; doi: doi:10.1093/aje/kwq155

Yates T, Khunti K, Wilmot EG, Brady E, Webb D, Srinivasan B, Henson J, Talbot D, Davies MJ. "Self-reported sitting time and markers of inflammation, insulin resistance, and adiposity." Am J Prev Med. 2012 Jan;42(1):1-7

Dunstan DW, Kingwell BA, Larsen R, Healy GN, Cerin E, Hamilton MT, Shaw JE, Bertovic DA, Zimmet PZ, Salmon J, Owen N. "Breaking Up Prolonged Sitting Reduces Postprandial Glucose and Insulin Responses." Diabetes Care. 2012 Feb 28.