Thursday, March 22, 2007

Chinese Government Adopts Five-Year Health Plan

Chinese Government Adopts Five-Year Health Plan

Text of report in English by official Chinese news agency Xinhua (New China News Agency)

China's State Council, the cabinet, adopted a five-year plan to further develop the country's public health system on Wednesday.

China will establish a basic medical and healthcare network covering all urban and rural residents by the end of 2010, according to the plan, passed in principle at an executive meeting of the State Council.

Participants said at the meeting that pushing forward development of the health service is a major task of the government and an important measure to build a harmonious society.

The network includes a public health service system, a rural cooperative medical care system, an urban community medical service system and drug management and public hospital management systems.

The meeting urged deepening reform of medicine management and healthcare system, increasing investment in the public health sector, attaching equal importance to western and traditional Chinese medicine, and inviting individuals and non-government organizations to participate in health and medical services.

The meeting, chaired by Premier Wen Jiabao, also passed the 2007 work outline of the State Council.

(c) 2007 BBC Monitoring Asia Pacific. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.

Source: BBC Monitoring Asia Pacific

As Alternative Medicine Gains Acceptance, Massage Makes Great Career Choice

As Alternative Medicine Gains Acceptance, Massage Makes Great Career Choice

With insurance companies warming up to the idea of holistic coverage, now is an excellent time for a career in alternative medicine. A new article on LocalEdu.com reports that the alternative medicine industry in Westbrook, near Portland, Maine, provides educational opportunities in holistic massage therapy for people who are drawn to healthy living and relaxation. The top online resource for degree programs across the United States tells prospective alternative medicine students that attending classes in Westbrook comes with a fringe benefit of soaking up the natural holistic healing energy of the surrounding area.

With Unte.com reporting that "insurance companies are slowly catching on to the benefits of alternative treatments," LocalEdu.com advises people looking for a job change to consider careers in alternative medicine. Learning holistic massage therapy in a community of healers provides personal as well as career benefits, according to a new article, "Alternative Medicine Thrives in Westbrook, Maine" on top degree program site LocalEdu.com (http://www.localedu.com/state/maine/alternative-medicine-westbrook-maine.php). Potential students exploring career possibilities in holistic massage therapy can learn more about alternative medicine as a business at LocalEdu.com, a site that provides educational resources about a variety of industries.

In the March issue of Utne.com, Elizabeth Ryan reports that: "Holistic therapies such as acupuncture and shiatsu massage are becoming as mainstream and routine as a trip to the dentist. But getting adequate insurance coverage for such treatments is anything but the norm." However, Ryan reviews an "Alternative Medicine" report that states "insurance companies are beginning to capitalize on the popularity of natural alternatives, and consumers are starting to reap the benefits."

"Alternative Medicine Thrives in Westbrook, Maine" offers details about the town of Westbrook and the local programs in holistic massage therapy:
• The Maine Medical Center in nearby Portland boasts an alternative medicine residency program.
• The Portland/Westbrook metro area supports about 75 massage therapists, several yoga studios and more than 20 acupuncturists.
• Local holistic massage therapy programs focus on the whole person, including the body, mind and emotions.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that employment for massage therapists is expected to increase faster than average in the coming years. In the 33 states regulating the industry, therapists who complete formal training programs are likely to have very good job opportunities.
According to LocalEdu.com, "Maine is home to top schools offering programs than can help build a career, get a start in the world and advance educational opportunities" (http://www.localedu.com/state/maine/index.php).

Now may be a good time to enter the field of alternative medicine and massage. Almost twice as many doctors recommended massage therapy to their patients in 2006 than in 2001 in a survey by the American Massage Therapy Association. The survey revealed that as of 2006, 25 million more Americans per year are getting massages than in 1996.

LocalEdu.com is an educational resource that provides students with information on cities, schools and educational programs. Students can search the LocalEdu.com directory to find universities, colleges and vocational schools anywhere they want to go to school -- from California to Florida, Texas to Illinois.

Nutrition and Exercise Program Designed Specifically to Boost Fertility

Fertility Centers of Illinois (FCI) Announces First in Chicago - Nutrition and Exercise Program Designed Specifically to Boost Fertility

Fertility Centers of Illinois (FCI) and Pulling Down the Moon, Integrative Care for Fertility, have partnered together to offer a unique nutrition and fitness program to aid patients in preparing to undergo in-vitro fertilization (IVF) and other assisted reproductive technologies. This one-of-a-kind offering, coined, "Feeding Your Fertility," was launched in March to coincide with National Nutrition Month. The American Dietetic Association's focus for the month is on the importance of making informed food choices and developing sound eating and physical activity habits.

For women attempting to conceive, weight can be a major obstacle. Studies have shown that overweight women are more likely to have:

* ovulation problems
* infrequent menstrual cycles
* infertility
* ectopic pregnancies
* miscarriage
* lower IVF success rates

Feeding Your Fertility is a comprehensive fitness and nutrition program. Under medical supervision, and with the help of fertility-trained nutritionists and fitness consultants, patients are taught ways to:

* Make food and nutrient choices that boost fertility
* Achieve blood sugar balance
* Properly plan meals and utilize recipes
* Exercise properly to increase odds of conception

Experts say that even a 10 percent reduction in body fat can improve chances of conceiving because weight loss reduces insulin resistance, abdominal fat mass and restores ovulation.

The physicians at FCI helped to design this innovative program to meet the needs of patients who lacked the motivation to loose weight and exercise.

"Approximately, 40% of our patients struggle with weight issues, which are a great concern. The Feeding Your Fertility Program offers patients the knowledge and the tools to decrease their weight and increase their chances of pregnancy," according to John J. Rapisarda, reproductive endocrinologist and MD of Fertility Centers of Illinois.

For more information, visit www.fcionline.com, or www.pullingdownthemoon.com

About Fertility Centers of Illinois

Fertility Centers of Illinois, S.C., is one of the nation's leading infertility treatment practices, providing advanced reproductive endocrinology services in the Chicago area for over 25 years. FCI performs more IVF than the next nine clinics combined, over 2,500 cycles per year. FCI has more babies born than the next ten centers combined with high success rates that are recognized throughout the nation. In addition to a team of nationally recognized reproductive physicians who stay current on the latest technology and procedures, FCI patients have access to many other unique support services such as professional counseling from a licensed, Ph.D. clinical psychologist, patient advocates and innovative financial options. FCI's multiple offices are conveniently located throughout the Chicago area. FCI is part of IntegraMed, the nation's largest and most reputable network of fertility centers. With nearly 160 fertility specialists and scientists in 87 locations across the US, IntegraMed practices have collectively done more research in the field of reproductive medicine and treated more patients than any other physician consortium.

About Pulling Down the Moon

Pulling Down The Moon is an Integrative Care for Fertility (ICF) service that works in partnership with medical doctors to treat infertility, through individualized programs focused on yoga, acupuncture, massage and nutrition counseling. Pulling Down The Moon was founded in 2002 by women who were yoga teachers, business women and former fertility patients; women who understood the physical, emotional, psychological and spiritual challenges of infertility treatments.


Contact:

Fertility Centers of Illinois (FCI)
Nadine Sudnick, 630-231-7649
nadinesudnick@aol.com

Source: Fertility Centers of Illinois

Can feng shui improve your cash flow?

Can feng shui improve your cash flow?

You don't have to sell architect Dianne Kett on the financial benefits of feng shui, the ancient Chinese discipline of placement used to enhance the flow of energy through your home or office. She has seen it work wonders, both in her own office and in the homes she designs for others.

Three years ago, Kett, owner of DK Studio in Austin, Texas, took advice from feng shui consultant Stacy Davenport on how to energize the left rear corner of her office, the section that in feng shui corresponds to money, abundance and power. Her accoutrements include a wooden bowl, a fern, a money tree plant, purple amethyst crystals and two statues of Lakshmi, the goddess of abundance. She lights a tea candle as she focuses on her intention. Her fortunes have been on the upswing ever since.

"Whenever I need a check to come in, I talk to Lakshmi and light candles for intention," she says. "If I light a candle and say I need a check to come in today, it usually will show up that day."

10 feng shui money tips by Davenport

1. Clean your space of predecessor sludge.
Everything that has gone on in that space prior to this second is still there on an energetic level. It's called predecessor energy. Cure: Wipe down the walls, windowsills, doors and shelves with salt water and an essential oil like lavender to break up the psychic debris. When implementing this and the following tips, focus on the ''abundance, money and power'' corner of your home, home office or office (the left rear corner as you enter the front or office door), to help invite greater prosperity.

2. Get in your best direction.
We each have a best direction. Actually, there are four different favorable compass directions (out of eight) for every person based on their date of birth; consult any feng shui book to find yours on a chart. Orient your desk to the most advantageous direction for you. When you are working or paying bills, sit with your heart facing that direction. It will help you plug into your inner knowing.

3. Make your desk space 'conscious.'
Your desk and office space should reflect your intent and attention. A messy office doesn't work. When we have clutter around, we can't hear the still, small voice inside for all the noise of the material realm.

4. Introduce flowing water.
Water is very important to money; even our language reflects this -- cash flow, liquidity, frozen assets and so on. Wood is the foundational element in the abundance, money and power corner. By introducing water in this corner, we feed and strengthen that sector, just as water feeds a tree. Water is the energy of money, the flow. Rather than hoarding money, you have to release it to receive it. When you have that circulating energy around, we get that at a core level.

5. Bring in the green.
Plants, that is. It's good to have plants here because plants are growing and strengthening. Make sure they are live, not artificial.

6. Color considerations.
Although the element color of the money, abundance and power sector is green, the color purple activates it. An amethyst crystal here will act like a money magnet.

7. Wooden bowl.
When the money flows in, you need something in which to collect it. Wood, again, is a good choice for a bowl here. Some people drop their change in it, but for a bigger bang, seed it with a $100 bill. Even if you have a lot of money, part of our psyche is, when you know that you have that $100, you can fill up the tank, you can get a motel room and food, you're going to be all right. It's part of our basic survival instinct that runs our life.

8. Light up your vision area.
The middle rear of your home or office is your vision area; it's about seeing what's next, as well as being seen for who you really are. Having light there is important; whether that is a candle or a desk lamp, you want to activate the fire. It could be a tea light that you light in the morning. Have fun with it. Light a tea candle for 27 days straight and make an intention.

9. Nine I Ching coins.
Hang nine I Ching coins (used with the I Ching Book of Changes) on a red string in your office or on the back of your office door. You also can put them beneath your front doormat pointing toward the abundance, money and power sector (the left rear corner as you enter the front door).

10. Wind chimes attract helpful people.
Hang a metal wind chime on the ''helpful people'' sector of your house (right front corner of the house as you enter the front door). That's the opposite end of the energy teeter-totter from the abundance, money and power corner. It's about calling in helpful people, including your clientele. You need your friends to spread the word, you need people to bring in the manifestation of your money. In an office, put the wind chime in the left rear corner and ring it daily.

Would Kett's studio have fared as well without all the "woo-woo?"

"It probably could have, but I don't know if it would have grown as fast or that it would have been as direct," says Kett. "I think it's a really direct approach."

The DK clients who have allowed Kett to align and design their new homes using feng shui principles agree.

"One client used feng shui in building their home and Stacy came in after it was built and gave them a few more tips and the money just flew through the door," says Kett. "Her business soared and he got a raise and a promotion."

Isolated incidents? Luck? Chance? Perhaps. But when such bottom-line uberdevelopers as Donald Trump and Disney include feng shui in their blueprints, even the skeptical among us have to pause and wonder, though some do consider feng shui a pseudoscience at best.

Since its introduction in the West in the 1970s, feng shui has become almost mainstream, as Davenport found out when she recently realigned the energy flow in the classrooms and offices at an Austin middle school.

"I was using dowsing rods and all sorts of tools that I work with and everybody walking by just goes, 'Thank you!'" she says. "It's definitely a different day."

Feng shui cram course
Feng shui (pronounced "fuhng shway") evolved more than 4,000 years ago in China, where the earliest practitioners observed that physical objects and their orientation seem to have an effect on the flow of energy (called qi or chi and pronounced "chee") around us.

Feng shui posits that all aspects of life, from career and health to relationships and even childbearing, can flourish or flounder based on how well or poorly qi is flowing through the corresponding sectors of our immediate environment.

We humans also are the sum of our personal qi, hence our individual energy makeup and orientation is of equal importance in optimizing our environment. The goal is to have neither too much nor too little qi, but a balance thereof.

"Qi is the life stuff that we are as people; who you are is actually your qi," says feng shui consultant David Daniel Kennedy, author of "Feng Shui for Dummies."

"In the West, we've kind of gotten the idea that if I'm not in my body, I must be my mind, that's who I am. But the Chinese viewpoint is, you really are your qi. All of these different areas of your life are based on your qi."

Since the presence or absence of qi can be felt but not measured, Western science has tended to pooh-pooh feng shui as little more than folkloric mumbo jumbo. But like such other Eastern imports as acupuncture and martial arts, feng shui's popularity continues to grow as Westerners see results from using it.

Show me the money
To no great surprise, our No. 1 question of feng shui practitioners is: Can you show me the money?

It was the first question Davenport asked a decade ago when she was working in corporate America. After picking up a feng shui book on a whim, she activated her abundance, money and power corner using her 10 feng shui money tips.

"Within two weeks, I got a large bonus and a $250 a month raise," she says. "In that moment when my boss was slipping me the check, he said, 'Do not tell anybody! We're not giving raises.' I knew that, because of what I did in my space, I attracted it in."

Davenport soon left to study feng shui under Berkeley, Calif., Grandmaster Thomas Lin-Yun. Today, she offers feng shui services in the home for $100 per hour (a typical home takes two to three hours), and to small businesses at $150 per hour. Her corporate and nonprofit consults start at $500.

Kennedy says having intention, in essence putting your qi out there to manifest in results, is particularly important to shift your fortunes for the better.

"The intention is related to attention, and one of the rules of energy is that energy flows where attention goes. So what you put your attention on is what you get in life, which is the whole point of having goals. What is tracked or looked at is what tends to improve," he says.

Even consultants can benefit from an outside feng shui consultant.

"There is also what psychology calls personal blind spots, where even if you went and took all the feng shui training and even became a practitioner, you still couldn't see your own house like an outside party would," he says. "The outside viewpoint is critical because the person can see you objectively in your context, and that's impossible for you to do."

A feng shui license?
Not everyone is pleased with the proliferation of feng shui practitioners, some of whom may have only rudimentary knowledge of this ancient discipline.

Betty Stone, a consultant and assistant to Master Larry Sang at the American Feng Shui Institute in Monterey Park, Calif., says Sang is working with colleges in the Far East to offer feng shui certification in hopes of helping separate the true practitioners from the wannabes.

"Feng shui is very scientific; it's all done by mathematic calculations of how the energy evolves on our plane," says Stone. "A lot of the myths and misconceptions that people believe, the do-this and do-thats, are easier for the everyday person to understand, but they don't have to explain to you why you need to do it. So many practitioners out there are using folk beliefs versus being scientific."

How do you find a well-qualified feng shui practitioner? Stone admits it's a lot like choosing a good doctor: Ask for references and check out their credentials -- who they studied with, courses taken, certifications earned (the American Feng Shui Institute offers one) and the feng shui disciplines they use. As with doctors, there are greater and lesser choices in every price range. Stone says fees vary too widely to estimate. But experience definitely counts.

"Some people are just naturally gifted," she says. "But even a doctor, if he graduated from the best medical school without practical experience, he's not going to be great."

Stone says one thing is certain: When you've found a good feng shui consultant, you'll know it.

"There are a lot of people out there just wanting to sell remedies, so that's how they make their money," she says. "Feng shui is actually a balance of energy, and with people who are actually trying to help you, you will see immediate results. If it takes you a while before you even see anything happening, you know that definitely that's not the case."

Acupuncturist Extends Helping Hand to Veterans

Acupuncturist Extends Helping Hand to Veterans

Licensed acupuncturist Denise Slavich offers discounted acupuncture for U.S. veterans and active duty military personnel at her Charlotte, NC, practice.

Although licensed acupuncturist Denise Slavich works with energy in her acupuncture practice, the military is in her blood. With a father who served in the Army and Marines, brothers who served in the Navy and Air Force, and her own almost 10-year enlistment as a Naval Cryptologist, Ms. Slavich says she has always felt a kinship toward others who served in the military in the past and those who continue to serve today.

With the recent media exposure of VA health care issues, she felt compelled to turn outrage into action, and is challenging other health care practitioners to do the same.

From April 17-21, U.S. veterans and active duty personnel will receive a 40% discount on acupuncture services with Ms. Slavich at her private practice on Sharon Road in Charlotte. As a classically trained and licensed acupuncturist, Ms. Slavich hopes to help veterans who might not otherwise have access to the health care they need. "We owe a debt of gratitude to the brave men and women of the U.S. military," she said. "By extending a helping hand to those who served, each of us can make a difference in someone's life and let them know we care."

The discounted acupuncture services include new patient visits, follow-up treatments, and "NADA Treatments", a widely used ear acupuncture protocol that has proven helpful for addictions, stress/anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder. For those needing follow-on treatment, Ms. Slavich will offer additional discounted treatment days for veterans and active duty personnel (dates TBA) from May through August. Veterans and active duty personnel will need to show proof of military service, and must be seen on the specified days to receive the 40% discount. This discount is not combinable with any other offers or promotions.

As one of the oldest and most widely used medical procedures in the world, acupuncture offers a safe, drug-free, and effective way to address the symptoms and underlying root of a wide range of health concerns including digestive disturbances, sleep disorders, irritability, depression, "phantom" pain, and much more. Recognized by the
National Institutes of Health and the
World Health Organization, its popularity as a mainstream healthcare alternative continues to grow.

Alternative Medicine: The Christian Handbook, New Edition Available

Alternative Medicine: The Christian Handbook, New Edition Available

Christian Medical Association is pleased to announce their latest "Medically Reliable and Biblically Sound" publication Alternative Medicine: The Christian Handbook Updated and Expanded, (Zondervan, 2007) written by Dónal O'Mathúna, PhD and Walt Larimore, MD.

"A much-needed resource for the consumer as well as healthcare providers. The use of alternative medicine is increasing particularly among Christians. Over $4 billion is now spent annually in the United States on herbal remedies. This unique resource is an invaluable tool in sifting through the good, the bad and the ugly of alternative and complementary medicine," says David Stevens, MD, CEO of the 17,000 member faith-based organization, Christian Medical Association. "If the Church ever needed a trusted voice on health issues—we need it now."


In a CMA member survey, an evidence-based, faith-based resource on alternative medicine was by far the most sought-after resource.

"This area of medicine is hampered by unclear information and contradictory claims. Decisions to use any therapy or remedy should be based on the best evidence available. The book provides that evidence in ways that those without professional training can grasp. As the same time, enough details are given to make the book useful for health care professionals," notes co-author Dónal O'Mathúna, PhD.

Alternative Medicine: The Christian Handbook was one of the first comprehensive guidebooks to nontraditional medicine written from a distinctively Christian perspective. The updated and expanded edition discusses the latest developments in alternative medicine combining the most current research with an easy-to-use format. This book reviews over one hundred therapies, remedies and supplements, explaining the available research on each approach. In addition they examine, where relevant, the spiritual beliefs underlying certain therapies and look at them in light of traditional Christian values. The problems of quackery and fraud are discussed, and tips given on how to avoid them. The role of faith and prayer in health and well-being is also examined, along with new research on these topics. The book is divided into three main divisions: Evaluating Alternative Medicine; Alternative Therapies; and Herbal Remedies, Vitamins, and Dietary Supplements.

University lecturer and researcher Dónal O'Mathúna, PhD, and national medical authority, Walt Larimore, MD, provide detailed and balanced answers to your most pressing questions about alternative medicine—and to other questions you wouldn't have thought to ask.

Bolivia promotes intercultural medicine

The year-old Bolivian government of Evo Morales is attempting a monumental task - transforming more than 500 years of views about health.

''With the Incas, Bolivia was known as Kollasuyu,'' said Dr. Jaime Zalles, vice minister of Traditional Medicine and Interculturality. '''Kolla' means plant, and Kollasuyu was the land of medicinal plants. Now we are the lowest-ranking country in South America in health standards.

''Why? Because the elders, the healers, were called witches by the conquistador doctors, at the same time they were burning witches in Europe. And the traditional healer also profoundly rejected the Spanish doctors. So there was mutual exclusion.''

The Bolivian government, with support from health professionals and Native organizations, intends to change that by building an intercultural model that integrates traditional indigenous healing practices with Western medicine.

''After 514 years,'' Zalles said, ''we need to reverse the mutual exclusion and begin to work together.''

Bolivia has several different indigenous nations, each with its own traditional healing practices. In the Andean tradition, for example, the medical system has included jampiris, who are experts with coca leaves in determining the appropriate time for healing; aysiris, who balance the ''small spirit'' of the individual and his environment with the ''big spirit'' of the cosmos; layqa, who can perceive the good and bad the person is receiving from Mother Earth; qhaqojkunas, who work with massage and pressure points; yatiri, who teach the deeper philosophy of life; kallawayas, itinerant plant healers; and qpachhaqueras, who are in charge of caring for and preparing medicinal plants.

Each culture has held onto its traditions with varying degrees of success, Zalles said.

The introduction of packaged foods has also had an effect on the overall health of Bolivia's Native people. ''Now people want to eat 'white food,''' he said. ''White rice, white pasta, white flour, white sugar.

''We have to go back to the roots, eat what the grandfathers ate. They were stronger.''

Zalles' ministry, which was created last year by the Morales government, has several projects planned or already in operation: a census of traditional healers to find out who they are, where they are and how willing they are to work with Western doctors; a law that will protect and regulate traditional healers; training programs in traditional medicine; a CD of 100 medical plants and their uses; and a plan to abolish all childhood malnutrition by the year 2010.

Morales' government has also imported 700 Cuban doctors who hold a high reputation in South America for their expertise in Western medicine to provide free treatment to patients in 180 rural municipalities throughout Bolivia.

Last August, 300 traditional healers, Western health professionals and representatives from Native organizations and nongovernmental organizations met for three days to discuss how to implement Bolivia's new intercultural health model. Suggestions included an indigenous university, a Native-only Congress of Traditional Medicine, the creation of a National Council of Native Healers and the export of traditional plant medicines. Existing intercultural hospitals in Ecuador and Chile were examined as models to learn from.

Bringing two very different medical philosophies together is not without its challenges.

One representative asked, ''What kind of training do they want to give us? Each traditional healer has a gift; we can't all be traditional healers. Each healer receives the inheritance from their ancestors, through being struck by lightning. This gift is given to each person who is able to be a healer. As much knowledge as a person may get from studying plants, he won't have this gift. As far as accreditation, how can a traditional healer have accreditation? The accreditation of a traditional healer is achieved when he receives the gift of his ancestors.''

Another challenge involves the lack of camaraderie between traditional and Western doctors, Zalles said.

Patients who have told Western doctors they have been treated by traditional healers have sometimes been refused treatment. Some traditional healers will not treat a patient who has begun treatment with a Western doctor.

For Zalles, practitioners of the two systems need to develop mutual respect for one another and they need to be ''mutually independent.''

''If one can't treat you, you go to the other. What you can't do is mix them together. The language of each one is different; the relationship is different.''

Zalles compared the ideal relationship between one system of medical knowledge and the other to the relationship between the sexes.

''Each sex is different, but they have to have the same rights, the same opportunities. They can have a respectful relationship between them. Accepting ourselves as different, we can negotiate how to resolve health problems. That is interculturality.''

Exercising With Peers Has Added Appeal

A new study in the April issue of the Annals of Behavioral Medicine has found if given a choice of exercising alone, with people younger or older or with people their same age, most adults would rather exercise with others in their own age group.

“The study’s findings provide useful insight into the preferences of older exercisers, which in turn have important implications for exercise promotion initiatives [in communities around the world],” said lead researcher Mark Beauchamp, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the School of Human Kinetics at the University of British Columbia in Canada.

Beauchamp and colleagues studied 947 adults between the ages of 30 and 91 living in northern England. The participants were first grouped according to their age bracket (30s, 40s, 50s and so on) and asked about their level of activity. They were considered “regularly active” if they exercised for at least 20 minutes, three times a week, and “underactive” if they did not.

They then were asked to rate whether they prefer to exercise alone, with groups of people in different age brackets, or with those in their same age bracket.

The authors say that previous research has suggested older adults prefer to exercise alone rather than in groups. But by taking into account the characteristics of different exercise groups, Beauchamp and colleagues found that although older adults may report a lack of appeal for exercising with those much younger than themselves, they actually exhibit a positive preference for exercising with those of their own age. Furthermore, participants did not report a greater preference for exercising alone.

Because of this, Beauchamp says it’s vital that government officials take steps to better “promote opportunities that will encourage healthy and physically active lifestyles” by increasing the availability of group exercise opportunities across the life span.

While his experience shows there is no single type of activity program that will work for all adults, Wojtek Chodzko-Zajko, Ph.D., head of the department of kinesiology and community health at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, agreed the study confirms group exercise options can be “highly motivating.”

He added that to fully maximize physical activity, there needs to be “a diverse menu of activity options.”

“These opportunities should include both traditional exercise programs as well as building more activity into everyday life through walking, biking and dancing,” Chodzko-Zajko said.

Annals of Behavioral Medicine is the official peer-reviewed publication of The Society of Behavioral Medicine. For information about the journal, contact Alan J. Christensen, Ph.D., at (319) 335-3396. Visit the Society of Behavioral Medicine at http://www.sbm.org

Beauchamp MR, et al. Older adults’ preferences for exercising alone versus in groups: considering contextual congruence. Ann Behav Med 33(2), 2007.

Canada Approves Cold And Flu Medicine That Boosts Immune System

Canada Approves Cold And Flu Medicine That Boosts Immune System

Science Daily — Health Canada, the Canadian government regulatory agency, has approved wide-ranging new health claims for COLD-fX, the most popular cold/flu remedy in Canada. After an extensive review, the Natural Health Products Directorate (NHPD) -- a division of Health Canada responsible for evaluating the safety, efficacy and quality of natural health products (NHPs) -- has issued COLD-fX with a much sought after license to sell to the public with specific science backed claims.

The comprehensive treatment claim for COLD-fX approved by Health Canada states that the product "helps reduce the frequency, severity and duration of cold and flu symptoms by boosting the immune system." Comprehensive therapeutic claims require support by the highest level of scientific evidence: randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials.

"This is our strongest point of medical recognition to date, and coming from the government authority whose responsibility it is to help Canadians maintain and improve their health, this approval should give great confidence to consumers," said Dr. Jacqueline Shan, co-founder of CV Technologies, a University of Alberta spinoff company that developed COLD-fX.

Shan, who is also president, CEO and Chief Scientific Officer of CV Technologies added, "There are two novel therapeutic aspects to COLD-fX. First, COLD-fX is one of the very few medicines -- drugs or natural health products -- that Health Canada has approved for daily use as a preventative medicine. Second, COLD-fX can be taken to provide symptom relief for colds and flu."

Shan added that Health Canada reviewed all of CV Technologies published and unpublished data on COLD-fx before approving the claims.

The NHPD issues product licenses in several categories. Because COLD-fX is a unique patented product, it was issued an NPN in the non-traditional category, which requires the highest level of scientific evidence. In contrast, claims with the term "traditional" are not based on scientific evidence and products in the "monograph" category have claims which are not supported by specific research on their particular product.

"There's no cure for the common cold," Dr. Shan stated. "So, in medicine the traditional strategy is if you can't treat the disease, you treat the symptoms. The COLD-fX strategy is to boost your immune system to help you avoid getting a cold or the flu in the first place, or if you do get one, to fight it more effectively."

The NHPD's safety review confirmed the safety profile of COLD-fX with no known side effects or drug interactions for generally healthy individuals.

Health Canada established new regulations effective Jan. 1, 2004, to monitor and manage the NHP industry. CV Technologies was the first company in Canada to launch and complete a trial under the new regulations. These regulations are being phased in over a six-year period as the NHPD reviews supporting safety, efficacy and quality information for all natural health products.

Although there are grey areas between the definitions of drugs and natural health products in general, the major distinction is that natural health products are derived from natural sources. Natural health products require the same degree of scientific evidence as drugs to support their claims. Natural health product regulations are also similar to drug regulations with requirements for standardized labeling, good manufacturing practices, and specification requirements for finished products and post-market surveillance for potential adverse effects.

UC-Davis School of Medicine Investigates Human Disease Genetics with OpenArray(TM) System

UC-Davis School of Medicine Investigates Human Disease Genetics with OpenArray(TM) System
BioTrove Technology Enables Research into Link Between Genetic Variation and Disease Epidemics

BioTrove, Inc. announced today that the University of California, Davis School of Medicine will use the BioTrove OpenArray(TM) technology platform to explore genetic variations in common human diseases. Led by Michael F. Seldin, M.D., Ph.D., Rowe Chair of Human Genetics, researchers at UC-Davis are utilizing an OpenArray NT Imager to conduct single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotyping of large community-based patient cohorts, with the goal of identifying genetic variations linked to disease susceptibility.

"To better understand the genetic variation of disease and its links to human ancestry, we have embarked on a study using tens of thousands of patient samples," said Dr. Seldin. "These studies will provide the ability to both look at whether ancestry is linked to disease, as well as to better design experimental studies in admixed populations such as African Americans and various Hispanic groups."

"Finding a possible link is a first and vital step toward broader research leading to better treatment," he continued. "Now, with the OpenArray platform enabling faster, more cost-effective analysis of large patient populations and hundreds of SNPs, we can conduct research that was previously untenable - helping UC-Davis pave the way for scientists in academic, medical and industry settings across the nation to identify the most promising ways to fight disease."

OpenArray technology also enables researchers to confirm associations in very complex diseases. Unlike other technologies, which can genotype hundreds of thousands of SNPs in a few patient samples, OpenArray allows researchers to analyze SNPs across tens of thousands of patient samples - dramatically expanding study size and data significance. OpenArray SNP genotyping is also more efficient than previous technology because of its flexible design. A single OpenArray plate holds as few as 16 or as many as 3072 separate assays, which can be run against 48-144 samples per plate. Since the OpenArray NT Imager can process three OpenArray plates at once, it can generate more than 9000 data points in less than 10 minutes, ultimately generating over 100,000 data points per day with a single employee.

"A significant issue facing researchers today is securing access to efficient, precise and cost-effective SNP genotyping technologies," said Albert Luderer, Ph.D., president and CEO, BioTrove. "Our commitment is to enable research centers such as the UC-Davis School of Medicine to conduct innovative, large-scale research projects like Dr. Seldin's, unlocking the possibilities to improving public health. BioTrove is excited that an outstanding group of scientists are combining their know-how with our technologies."

About BioTrove, Inc.

BioTrove, Inc. offers two innovative technology platforms: RapidFire(TM), which enables the acceleration of drug discovery and pipeline decisions, and OpenArray(TM), which advances genomic research in a wide range of life science fields, including agriculture, disease research, bio-defense, and public health. With more than half of the world's ten largest pharmaceutical companies as clients, and partnerships with prestigious research and public health centers around the world, BioTrove's products and services ensure that an industry committed to accuracy and speed can meet business goals.

RapidFire(TM) Mass Spectrometry (RFMS) uses an innovative microfluidic technology to facilitate analysis at faster than 10 seconds per sample, eliminating the bottleneck created by traditional mass spectrometry throughput. RFMS is routinely used in many applications including the high-throughput screening of previously intractable drug targets, cytochrome P450 inhibition and other ADME assays and directed evolution studies.

The OpenArray(TM) Platform enables genomics researchers to generate SNP and real time qPCR data in the hundreds of thousands of data points per day, significantly increasing the number of samples analyzed while significantly decreasing the time and cost required. The flexible format and nanoliter scale of the OpenArray(TM) system allows for easy adjustment of sample and assay numbers, achieving economical, high-throughput genomics.

For more information, please visit www.biotrove.com.


Contact:

BioTrove, Inc.
Dr. Albert A. Luderer, 781-721-3600
President and CEO
info@biotrove.com
or
Makovsky + Company
Arielle Bernstein, 212-508-9643
abernstein@makovsky.com

Source: BioTrove, Inc.

Alternative Medicine: Traditional Chinese medicine for multiple sclerosis

Alternative Medicine: Traditional Chinese medicine for multiple sclerosis

Multiple sclerosis is an inflammatory, autoimmune disease of the central nervous system, generally striking during early adult years. Its most frequent symptoms include numbness, impaired vision, loss of balance, weakness, bladder dysfunction and psychological changes. While there is no cure for the disease, acupuncturists can offer significant help managing symptoms and side effects. In a 2002 survey of multiple sclerosis patients at the Rocky Mountain MS Center in Boulder, Colo., more than 50 percent of patients receiving acupuncture noted significant improvement in symptoms of pain, anxiety, depression, fatigue, muscle stiffness and numbness. Additionally, many noted improvement in walking problems, weakness and balance, while others saw positive changes in urinary and bowel problems.

Traditional Chinese medicine, a 5,000-year-old medical tradition, has no definitive diagnosis of multiple sclerosis. Many classical texts refer to a syndrome known as a Wei (or atrophy) syndrome. There are multiple presentations of a Wei syndrome, and each can result from different factors. These may include any combination of improper diet, emotional stress, shock and possibly heredity.

Visits to a licensed acupuncturist for multiple sclerosis may include traditional acupuncture, electroacupuncture (gentle electrical stimulation of meridian points) as well as dietary advice, Qi Gong and Chinese herbs. Treatment will be designed to help resolve symptoms as well as address underlying conditions that may cause symptoms. Traditional Chinese medicine is in no way a replacement for conventional therapies. The medical advice of a board-certified neurologist should be followed during any course of treatment.

Patients Don’t Understand Difference Between Walk-in Centres and Traditional Emergency Care

Patients Don’t Understand Difference Between Walk-in Centres and Traditional Emergency Care
Libraries

Description
Patients can’t tell the difference between hospital walk-in centres and traditional emergency care departments, says research in Emergency Medicine Journal.

Newswise — Patients can’t tell the difference between hospital walk-in centres and traditional emergency care departments, says research in Emergency Medicine Journal.

And even when they can, they often don’t have the option of making a choice.

The findings undermine the government’s policy on patient choice, suggest the authors.

The research team quizzed just over 700 patients attending eight hospital emergency care departments and eight walk–in centres located in hospital grounds.

Patients were asked about their treatment preferences and what they thought of the treatment they had been given.

Most people went to an emergency care department first, even when a walk-in centre was available in the hospital grounds.

And almost 80% of those at walk-in centres had been redirected there from emergency care departments.

A third of those being treated at a walk-in centre said they would have preferred to go to a hospital emergency care department.

But only 12 to 13% of those at emergency care departments said they would have preferred a walk-in centre.

Over half of those at walk-in centres did not even realise that they were being treated in this kind of facility.

Those who chose to go to a walk-in centre thought they would be seen more quickly or that it would be quicker than trying to get an appointment with their family doctor.

There was no difference in the satisfaction levels patients expressed with either type of care.

“The [government] policy aim of establishing walk-in centres to improve access to care appears to have been lost or subsumed by a more immediate demand to reduce A workload and waiting times,” say the authors.

They add: “There is no evidence from the data available that walk-in centres co-located with A departments have achieved the aim of increasing patient choice, preferences or satisfaction with care received.”

Traditional Medicine Has 'World Potential'

Traditional Medicine Has 'World Potential'

Traditional Chinese medicine could become a global leader in medical treatment, a top science official said yesterday.

"Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), with its peculiar way of observing life and disease, has the greatest potential for original innovations among all the other academic disciplines in the country," Liu Yanhua, vice-minister of science and technology, said.

Liu made the comments at a ceremony marking the launch of a new report on TCM's potential to prevent and treat major infectious and chronic diseases.

The document, "Outline for Innovative Development of TCM" was co- published by 16 central government ministries and other official bodies.

TCM and forthcoming breakthroughs in life science are expected to be "one of the points of penetration for China's scientific research into the world".

Investment, innovation

To encourage more innovation, China will invest more money in the area and encourage international cooperation in the TCM research field.

And to give TCM a better footing on the world market, "a system of standards" would be established for medical treatments, medicine production, teaching, scientific research and market entry.

Such a system of standards would help boost TCM's "recognition and understanding" throughout the world, Yu Wenming, deputy director of the State Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine, said.

That system was expected to be the same as that applied to the world's traditional medicines.

More monitoring efforts will also be made on the side effects of TCM, according to the outline.

The State Food and Drug Administration received 369,000 reports of adverse drug reactions last year, of which TCM accounted for 15 percent, Wu Zhen, deputy director of the administration, said.

(c) 2007 China Daily; North American ed.. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.

Source: China Daily; North American ed.

Many herbs we use today are featured in the Bible

During the Lenten season, many people think about what they will give up. I also like to think about what I will add to my Lenten discipline. Why not add learning more about herbs, biblical herbs in particular and their significance and uses?

Herbs have played an important part in our lives since the beginning when God put "every seed-bearing plant and tree" on the Earth. Herbs in biblical times were used in people's every day lives. They were used as medicine (caraway, cardamom, garlic, onions, sesame and thyme), cosmetic ointments (myrrh), aromatic oils (frankincense, myrrh), perfumes (spikenard), fumigation agents and religious rituals (hyssop), embalming (anise, cumin, marjoram, myrrh as well as spices like cinnamon, cloves and cassia), and cooking (basil, coriander, dill, mint, oregano, savory and tarragon). As you can see, herbs touched every aspect of people's lives. Their importance made them valuable, to the extent that people even paid taxes with them. I'd like to send a pot of parsley to Washington, D.C., on April 15th and see if it still works.

Herbs are mentioned throughout the Old and New testaments. Jewish Passover this year is celebrated April 3-10 where herbs play a special part. The Christian Holy Week starts on Palm Sunday (April 1) and continues through Easter Sunday (April 8) with herbs playing a part in their celebration as well.

The Dish: Secret in the sauce? Herbs

Feel drained of energy? Don't drink that energy drink, said Trung Do, co-owner of Megan's Noodle House.

Instead opt for a traditional Vietnamese soup to chase away the drain.

"It makes you feel much better," Do said.

The Vietnamese don't turn to medicine to cure their ailments, they treat them with herbs. The same herbs the restaurant uses in their Vietnamese and Chinese cuisine.

Do, who co-owns the restaurant with his family, said he opened it six weeks ago to please some area residents.

"A lot of people kept asking us to open a Vietnamese restaurant," he said. "There wasn't one on the Eastern Shore."

Vietnamese food is popular, Do said, because it is full of herbs, no preservatives and it uses less grease than other ethnic restaurants.

"It has such a unique taste to it," he said. "You just have to taste it."

The restaurant is named in honor of the family's newest member, 6-month-old Megan On.

Since the restaurant opened it's doors, Do said his customers really like the No. 5 -- Beef Eye Round Noodle Soup. It's the same recipe made across Vietnam, and the same soup former President Clinton ate on his visit there in the late 1990s.

"It's no secret," he said. "The Vietnamese people know. It's inside you."

The most popular soup is made of beef broth that has all natural herbs including ginseng, basil, cilantro and tree stock. The noodles are made of rice that is ground and cooked and made into noodles.

It is made fresh every day.

Since Vietnamese food is new to the area, Do said the family decided to add Chinese items to the menu.

"I didn't want a guest to get stuck," he said. "We wanted a second option."

Do's brother-in-law, Han On, has 25 years experience in the restaurant business, including being a chef for Chinese restaurants. Adding Chinese food to the menu was a natural fit. The restaurant also has daily specials that aren't included on the menu.

They've gotten a good response from the community, Do said. They offer their customers clean environment and good, quality food cooked in a clean kitchen by a professional.

Herbal Essence: Club challenges people to use herbs in desserts

Cooks commonly call on ginger, cinnamon and other spices to enliven desserts. But what about herbs? Jimmy Speas recently challenged fellow enthusiasts in the Herbal Friends club to use herbs in desserts.

Sure, the club's dessert contest did include some ginger and other common baking spices. But the most interesting and creative sweets cleverly incorporated rosemary, lavender, mint and other herbs.

Herbal Friends is an independent group that meets on the third Thursday night of every month to talk about its passion for herbs. The group was formed in 1997 and has about 20 members.

Members showed up at last week's meeting with 14 desserts for the contest at the Home and Garden Building at the Dixie Classic Fairgrounds. These included apple rosemary purses, lavender-blossom muffins, lime pound cake with lime-mint glaze, and lemon-thyme cookies.

Kay Owen and Bettie Luper, two veterans of Dixie Classic Fair cooking contests, and I were asked to judge.

Herbs, when used wisely, can make some interesting and wonderful additions to baked goods. We gave first place to Diane Martin of Pfafftown, the club's president, who made a dessert with lemon verbena.

Second place went to Mary Layton of King, who added rosemary to pineapple upside-down cake, and third place went to Elaine "Laine" Carter, who made a coconut icebox pie with peppermint.

Martin's dessert was a happy accident. "I was baking a cheesecake, and when I took it out of the oven, it sunk," Martin said. "I was like, 'Oh, man.'"

She quickly got her wits about her, though. By breaking up the pieces and pouring a glaze on top of them, she turned her entry into a kind of bread pudding enriched with cream cheese and flavored with lemon verbena. She also added some ground-up petals of calendula flowers to add color.

Layton transformed her husband's favorite dessert of pineapple upside-down cake with the addition of rosemary. The cake apparently wasn't a big hit with her husband. "He was very polite," she said. "He was just quiet."

But I loved the combination of pineapple and rosemary, the best match of a fruit and an herb in the contest.

Carter said she almost didn't come to the meeting because she couldn't think of what to make. "I went out in the garden and found nothing but these little shoots of mint coming up."

She eventually found inspiration in a white Christmas pie recipe in a Betty Crocker cookbook that she adapted to suit the occasion. She combined her fresh peppermint leaves with peppermint candy and came up with a tasty and pretty peppermint pie covered in coconut.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Deutsche Bank sees stake in Chinese traditional medicine company

Deutsche Bank sees stake in Chinese traditional medicine company

BEIJING (AFP) - A Deutsche Bank-led consortium is offering four billion yuan (517 million dollars) for 40 percent of China's largest traditional medicine producer, state media said Tuesday.

The price offered by the Deutsche Bank consortium is the highest among the five potential investors in state-owned Sanjiu Enterprise Group, the 21st Century Business Herald reported, citing an unnamed source.

The five potential investors are a Deutsche Bank-led consortium, China Resources Group, a New World Group consortium, a Shanghai Industrial Investment (Holding) Co Ltd consortium and the Fosun Group, the report said.

The newspaper cited the source as saying that the Deutsche Bank consortium and China Resources Group are likely to be the front-runners as the other three investors have been left out of the shortlist due to low bids.

China Resources Group, which is owned by the central government, is the front runner, planning to buy 70 percent of Sanjiu Group for 3.9 billion yuan.

According to the bid requirements, Sanjiu Group is intended to remain controlled by the state-owned asset regulator, which in turn comes directly under the cabinet.

Any cash paid must also be enough to pay off bank loans worth of 3.7 billion yuan owed by Sanjiu Medical and Pharmaceutical Co Ltd, the group's listed arm and core business.

Sanjiu Group has estimated net assets of around six billion yuan and is restructuring its debt of 10.7 billion yuan.

Both Deutsche Bank and Sanjiu Group declined comment when approached by AFP Tuesday.

The Bank of New York Appointed as Depositary by Tongjitang Chinese Medicines Company for Its Listed ADR Program

The Bank of New York Appointed as Depositary by Tongjitang Chinese Medicines Company for Its Listed ADR Program

The Bank of New York, a global leader in securities servicing, has been selected by Tongjitang Chinese Medicines Company as the depositary bank for its Level III American depositary receipt (ADR) program. Each Tongjitang ADR represents four ordinary shares. The ADRs trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "TCM."

Tongjitang Chinese Medicines Company is a specialty pharmaceutical company focusing on the development, manufacturing, marketing and selling of modernized traditional Chinese medicine in China. The principal executive offices of the company are located in Shenzhen, China.

Wang Shaolan, chief financial officer of Tongjitang, said, "After a careful assessment of depositary banks, we decided to appoint one with solid track record -- The Bank of New York. The Bank's guidance and support are streamlining our entry into the U.S. market."

Christopher Sturdy, executive vice president and head of the Bank of New York's Depositary Receipt Division, said, "Tongjitang Chinese Medicines Company joins a number of Chinese companies going public with a listing on the New York Stock Exchange. As the depositary bank for the vast majority of Chinese companies, we have the expertise needed to help them access and serve the international investor community."

The Bank of New York is depositary for more than 1,250 American and global depositary receipt programs, a 64% market share, acting in partnership with leading companies from 62 countries. With an unrivalled commitment to helping securities issuers succeed in the world's rapidly evolving financial markets, the Bank delivers the industry's most comprehensive suite of integrated depositary receipt, corporate trust and stock transfer services. Additional information is available at http://www.adrbny.com.

The Bank of New York has been conducting business in the Asia-Pacific region for over 50 years. The Company has 18 offices in 12 countries in the region.

The Bank of New York Company, Inc. (NYSE: BK - News) is a global leader in providing a comprehensive array of services that enable institutions and individuals to move and manage their financial assets in more than 100 markets worldwide. The Company has a long tradition of collaborating with clients to deliver innovative solutions through its core competencies: securities servicing, treasury management, asset management, and private banking. The Company's extensive global client base includes a broad range of leading financial institutions, corporations, government entities, endowments and foundations. Its principal subsidiary, The Bank of New York, founded in 1784, is the oldest bank in the United States and has consistently played a prominent role in the evolution of financial markets worldwide. Additional information is available at http://www.bankofny.com.

The Bank of New York provides no advice nor recommendation or endorsement with respect to any company or security. Nothing herein shall be deemed to constitute an offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell securities.


Source: Bank of New York

Training the doctor to do sensitive exams

Training the doctor to do sensitive exams


CHICAGO (Reuters) - Dr. Carla Pugh seems an unlikely patron of porn shops.


But that's exactly where Pugh, an assistant professor of surgery at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine, procured some of the male body parts she uses to train medical students about human anatomy.

Pugh, 41, has patented technology that combines portions of fully formed anatomical mannequins with computers to teach medical students to do exams on the body's most private and sensitive areas -- genitalia, breasts and rectums.

These are the exams, she said, that students are often most afraid of and that many medical school instructors, themselves often long-time practicing physicians, still find to be a source of embarrassment.

"We've got big issues in the U.S. with sexuality," Pugh said in an interview during a break from teaching first-year medical students. "These guys have to be able to do it and act professional, so that adds a lot of pressure."

Getting supplies to build the models was no easy task. Medical education has largely glossed over such training, limiting demand for products in the industry. In some cases, erotica was the only option, she said.

The simulators are a far cry from the flesh and bones of a living, breathing person. But they are close enough to the real thing to let students know whether their touch is too rough, too soft or if they've missed a key spot entirely.

NOT THE REAL THING

In traditional medical training, students often go straight from textbook to exam room with live patients, where they observe skilled doctors in action. Questions are asked later.

"Guess what?" said Pugh. "They're sweating bullets because they haven't had a scenario where they can talk about it comfortably, safely and with someone who is more knowledgeable."

During the Northwestern class, training is hands-on. Simulators are arranged at various stations according to exam type. At the prostate station, for example, several models of the male posterior are arranged on a table in various positions.

Inside each plastic model -- yes, they have a fully formed anus and rectum -- are paper-thin sensors that measure a student's touch and send individual readings to an attached computer monitor.

Students show up at the station for a brief overview from an instructing physician and then moments later, fingers are inserted, line readings from sensors go up and down on the computer screen, questions are asked and answered.

Scatological humor is inevitable. An instructor assures a student that, yes, you can tell a patient it's OK to pass wind if necessary during the exam and ask for a warning first.

Time is called and students move on to the next station. On another table, several examples of the penis, circumcised and not, limp and erect, await another round of students, who smile nervously.

Dr. Sudha Rao, a pediatrician, prepares to give an overview of the proper methods for performing an examination of the penis.

"It's very helpful," said Rao of the anatomical models. "I think they're fantastic to be able to show a young student who is starting out."

PLAYING WITH DOLLS

Pugh began performing "surgery" on her dolls as a child, transplanting eyes and limbs with a sewing kit borrowed from her mother. Since then, she said she has always maintained a hands-on approach to medicine.

She was disappointed with the level of feedback she received while doing her own surgical training in medical school at Howard University in Washington.

"It frustrated me because I was unsure," said Pugh, one of fewer than 400 black women surgeons in the United States. "I didn't have the level of access to the human body that I wanted."

She came up with the idea for the technology while working on a doctorate in education at Stanford University and obtained a patent for the sensors and data accumulation technology in 2001.

Pugh formed a licensing agreement with Medical Education Technologies Inc., a company specializing in medical training products, in early 2003.

Her pelvic exam simulators are already on the market at prices ranging from $16,000 to $20,000 each, and are used by more than 60 medical and nursing schools around the country. The prostate exam simulators used in the class as well as those for breast exams are still in prototype form.

Any help in these often taboo topics will make the first clinical encounters with a patient's private parts a little easier for medical students like 28-year-old Meredith Hirshfeld at Northwestern University in Chicago.

"It's the first time we're doing something invasive," she said. "It's nerve-racking."

UC-Davis School of Medicine Investigates Human Disease Genetics with OpenArray(TM) System

UC-Davis School of Medicine Investigates Human Disease Genetics with OpenArray(TM) System

BioTrove Technology Enables Research into Link Between Genetic Variation and Disease Epidemics

BioTrove, Inc. announced today that the University of California, Davis School of Medicine will use the BioTrove OpenArray(TM) technology platform to explore genetic variations in common human diseases. Led by Michael F. Seldin, M.D., Ph.D., Rowe Chair of Human Genetics, researchers at UC-Davis are utilizing an OpenArray NT Imager to conduct single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotyping of large community-based patient cohorts, with the goal of identifying genetic variations linked to disease susceptibility.

"To better understand the genetic variation of disease and its links to human ancestry, we have embarked on a study using tens of thousands of patient samples," said Dr. Seldin. "These studies will provide the ability to both look at whether ancestry is linked to disease, as well as to better design experimental studies in admixed populations such as African Americans and various Hispanic groups."

"Finding a possible link is a first and vital step toward broader research leading to better treatment," he continued. "Now, with the OpenArray platform enabling faster, more cost-effective analysis of large patient populations and hundreds of SNPs, we can conduct research that was previously untenable - helping UC-Davis pave the way for scientists in academic, medical and industry settings across the nation to identify the most promising ways to fight disease."

OpenArray technology also enables researchers to confirm associations in very complex diseases. Unlike other technologies, which can genotype hundreds of thousands of SNPs in a few patient samples, OpenArray allows researchers to analyze SNPs across tens of thousands of patient samples - dramatically expanding study size and data significance. OpenArray SNP genotyping is also more efficient than previous technology because of its flexible design. A single OpenArray plate holds as few as 16 or as many as 3072 separate assays, which can be run against 48-144 samples per plate. Since the OpenArray NT Imager can process three OpenArray plates at once, it can generate more than 9000 data points in less than 10 minutes, ultimately generating over 100,000 data points per day with a single employee.

"A significant issue facing researchers today is securing access to efficient, precise and cost-effective SNP genotyping technologies," said Albert Luderer, Ph.D., president and CEO, BioTrove. "Our commitment is to enable research centers such as the UC-Davis School of Medicine to conduct innovative, large-scale research projects like Dr. Seldin's, unlocking the possibilities to improving public health. BioTrove is excited that an outstanding group of scientists are combining their know-how with our technologies."

About BioTrove, Inc.

BioTrove, Inc. offers two innovative technology platforms: RapidFire(TM), which enables the acceleration of drug discovery and pipeline decisions, and OpenArray(TM), which advances genomic research in a wide range of life science fields, including agriculture, disease research, bio-defense, and public health. With more than half of the world's ten largest pharmaceutical companies as clients, and partnerships with prestigious research and public health centers around the world, BioTrove's products and services ensure that an industry committed to accuracy and speed can meet business goals.

RapidFire(TM) Mass Spectrometry (RFMS) uses an innovative microfluidic technology to facilitate analysis at faster than 10 seconds per sample, eliminating the bottleneck created by traditional mass spectrometry throughput. RFMS is routinely used in many applications including the high-throughput screening of previously intractable drug targets, cytochrome P450 inhibition and other ADME assays and directed evolution studies.

The OpenArray(TM) Platform enables genomics researchers to generate SNP and real time qPCR data in the hundreds of thousands of data points per day, significantly increasing the number of samples analyzed while significantly decreasing the time and cost required. The flexible format and nanoliter scale of the OpenArray(TM) system allows for easy adjustment of sample and assay numbers, achieving economical, high-throughput genomics.

For more information, please visit www.biotrove.com.


Contact:

BioTrove, Inc.
Dr. Albert A. Luderer, 781-721-3600
President and CEO
info@biotrove.com
or
Makovsky + Company
Arielle Bernstein, 212-508-9643
abernstein@makovsky.com

Source: BioTrove, Inc.

Herbal: Pinning hopes on herbal Viagra for biotech push

Pinning hopes on herbal Viagra for biotech push

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Malaysia's answer to Viagra is a traditional herb the country has picked to spearhead its push into biotechnology, but now it faces the challenge of convincing the world the remedy is both potent and safe.

Surging interest in the herb, "tongkat ali," has spawned dozens of products, from pills to beverages, that play up its reputed aphrodisiac properties, and could even threaten the sway overseas of ginseng, a more-widely established remedy in Asia.

Generations of aging Malaysian men have sworn by the rejuvenation effects of "tongkat ali," scouring the countryside for it so eagerly that it has almost vanished from all but the deepest rainforest, and now has the status of a protected plant.

Scientific studies show that concoctions of "tongkat ali" can help hormone production, making rats and mice more frisky, but have yet to prove it can reliably produce the same effect in humans, researchers say.

"It can have different effects on different people," said Abdul Razak, head of the Forest Research Institute of Malaysia, which is driving research and commercial production of the herb.

"For me, it gives the energy to play a game of golf without getting tired, but has no other effects," said Razak, who takes two capsule supplements of the herb before each weekly game to increase his stamina.

"Tongkat ali," which scientists call Eurycoma longifolia, is a slender evergreen shrub with bitter, brownish-red fruit that is native to Malaysia and Indonesia.

All parts of the plant which grows up to 10 meters (33 ft) tall can be chopped up fine and boiled in water to make the traditional medicine.

As Malaysia looks to biotechnology for economic growth, scientists are taking a harder look at the aphrodisiac qualities of tongkat ali, which means the "walking-stick of Ali," in Malay, and they say it could spawn drugs to treat cancer and malaria.

PREPARING FOR COMMERCIAL USE

Five years of research studies in collaboration with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the United States have helped to identify the key compounds in the herb, Razak said.

"All these compounds have been found, have been tested and have been patented, and we are now in the process of carrying out clinical studies, and hopefully after some time we might even commercialize this," he added.

A Malaysian industry and government group says the rapidly growing global market for aphrodisiacs is worth about $4 billion and could reach nearly $7 billion by 2012, but plans for "tongkat ali" to grab a share of this pie hinge on proving it is safe.

In Taiwan this year, Taipei city officials banned six brands of coffee from supermarkets because they contained "tongkat ali," saying the plant had not been evaluated for safe use, although there were no confirmed reports of side-effects, newspapers said.

The episode in January stirred indignation in Malaysia, where some officials publicly defended the herb, saying its safety and efficacy had been demonstrated by hundreds of years of use.

Others said the incident showed how far Malaysia still has to go to prove its claims for the herb.

"We've still got a lot of homework to do as a nation," said M. Rajen, chief executive of Tropical Botanics Sdn Bhd, which counts among its products Malaysia's most popular fish-oil brand.

Makers of ginseng, which has a global market of about $2 billion a year, according to some industry estimates, would be ruthless in battling competition from "tongkat ali," he said.

"What we see in Taiwan and elsewhere is an example of this ruthlessness," Rajen added. "Because we have not done our homework, we cannot fight it."

But Malaysia is confident it will convince the world. Officials of Power Root Malaysia Sdn Bhd, which exports tea and coffee drinks containing the herb to Japan and
South Korea, have said they are looking to the United States and the Middle East.

"One day 'tongkat ali' will be marketed internationally, even in Harrods of London," Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak said in January, at the launch of a $7 million biotech research center that will study ways to clone the herb.

At the Forest Research Institute, workers in white protective gear poured sacks of the herb into gleaming stainless steel dryers and grinders to turn out powder for capsules.

"It's high time for 'tongkat ali' now," said researcher Mohamad Shahidan, grinning through his face mask. "Everybody wants to try it."

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

HEalth: Morning Rituals and Meditation

Morning Rituals and Meditation

Posted by Victoria Anisman-Reiner
Some people meditate, others do yoga; some have a protein shake every morning for breakfast or a green drink like fresh vegetable juice or wheatgrass as a morning ritual.

This morning, I got out of bed fifteen minutes after my alarm went off (a morning ritual I'd like to shake).

I went to my desk and did my morning written meditation - 3 written pages based on the concept of Julia Cameron's "morning pages" to clear my mind and harmonize my thoughts and feelings. I find that writing or doing any ritual first thing in the morning helps me to connect with what is happening on the inside of my psyche. It enables me to break through the barriers of my wide awake, conscious mind to learn what's going on underneath, stabilizing and calming both my body and my mind.

I have another morning ritual that I follow at least 5 days a week - vegetable juice before breakfast. I have a great little juicer into which I'll stick anything from organic carrots, half of a lemon, celery or apples slices to lettuce, bitter chard or kale, and live, protein-rich sprouts! Juicing is one of the best things you can do for your health. A fresh juice just before breakfast - particularly one with something green in it - sets your body up with a wealth of vitamins, minerals and enzymes to support you through the day. Organic fruit and veggies are especially good for you to juice.

I usually add an ounce of wolfberry antioxidant juice and some hemp seed oil for omegas, and sometimes a fiber supplement. It's an acquired taste, but by now I love green juicing and I can feel the good it's doing for me.

What do you do for your wellness and health as a morning ritual? The discussion boards are open and I'd love to hear from you.

Diet: Protein in dietary balance

Protein in dietary balance

How much protein you need may vary, depending on what else you're eating. Raw foods and juicing includes enzymes that balance blood sugar in ways a processed diet won't.

The really interesting thing about dietary protein, as far as I’m concerned, is how the standard varies with who you ask. Most general food guidelines recommend that 10-15% of our diet come from protein. This number can vary depending on your body’s individual metabolism and your daily activity, and holistic practitioners tend to recommend more rather than less protein. Bodybuilders and athletes have been known to eat about 35% protein to support the growth of lean muscle mass - yet many nutritionists claim that this is not necessary and that, like the Atkins diet, athletes who consume this much excessive protein are putting their heart and kidneys at risk.

I have type A blood - the blood type that is typically considered the least protein-dependant and most condusive to being vegetarian. However, I tend to feel tired, dizzy, or get a stomach ache if I haven’t had enough of a complete protein at a meal - particularly if there are a lot of starches, sweets (even healthy ones) or other carbohydrate foods involved.

When I focus my diet on raw fruits and vegetables, on the other hand, my need for protein to balance the blood sugar high of the carbs decreases - thanks primarily, I think, to the high count of enzymes in the raw produce. I notice a particular difference when I'm juicing (green vegetables, lemons, and whatever else I have on hand) first thing in the morning, as I have been lately. Despite the high sugar content of most raw fruits and veggies, the sugars don’t hit my system the way processed carbs do, and I feel less need for protein when I’m eating a more raw diet.

Energy Medicine in the Real World

Energy Medicine in the Real World

It’s here and it’s being discussed on Oprah. Is Energy Medicine and energy healing work the real future of medicine?

I grew up on aspects of Energy Medicine. My mother studied Touch for Health Applied Kinesiology and Brain Gym when I was a child, so I knew, at least in theory, how profound the impact of energy work could be. Energy testing or “muscle testing” was invaluable for working with my allergies and sensitivities as a child and as a teenager. However, it was only after I took a 5-day Energy Medicine Intensive taught by Donna Eden in August 2005 that I really began to feel the impact that the simplest of these exercises could have on my body and mind.

After the Energy Medicine Intensive, I began to practice Donna Eden’s “5-minute tune up” every morning. Within days of starting to do the three thumps, the hook-up, cross crawl, and all the rest, I noticed that I had more energy, my mind was clearer, and I felt stronger as I used the daily tune-up as part of a morning meditation.

I do everything I can to encourage others to try using these exercises daily - not only for those who are healthy, to improve your strength, immunity, and brain function, but also to help those who are ill come into better balance with your health.

I firmly believe that there are solutions in energy work and Energy Medicine to help almost everyone with their healing challenges - whether they have simple aches and pains or serious illnesses like cancer, chronic fatigue, and MS. Energy Medicine is so versatile and powerful that it can make a difference for almost everyone.

My favorite applications of Energy Medicine are the ones I’ve used the most - those to relax, to “unscramble” a cluttered mind, to help calm kids (children with ADD/ADHD tend to respond especially well to energy work), to ease pain and tension, and to settle anxious pets (believe it or not, they have the same energy systems as we do - it just takes a little more effort to work with them).

I’ve had some experience using Energy Medicine on skeptical relatives when they were sick enough to be willing to give anything a shot. My efforts helped them to feel better, get out of bed, and go back to grumbling about my odd habit of offering to help them sort out all kinds of situations with energy work.

The most exciting thing, for me, is the public perception of energy healing and the way it is gradually becoming more accepted and appreciated. I think we’ve come a long way from labeling alternative medicine “witchcraft” and essential oils “snake oil.” Last week, a doctor appeared on Oprah’s show and called Energy Medicine “the next big frontier” in medicine! You can’t get much more mainstream than that.

Oprah’s guest, Dr. Oz, said, "We're beginning now to understand things that we know in our hearts are true but we could never measure. As we get better at understanding how little we know about the body, we begin to realize that the next big frontier… in medicine is energy medicine. It's not the mechanistic part of the joints moving. It's not the chemistry of our body. It's understanding for the first time how energy influences how we feel."

3 tips for Toronto vegetarians

3 tips for Toronto vegetarians

Posted by Victoria Anisman-Reiner
Torontonians reading my recent articles about the pros and cons of vegetarianism - or anybody else - might be interested in trying these three food discoveries!

I'm admitting straight off the top that this is a silly post. In light of my recent article about vegetarianism, I thought some of my readers might be able to make use of the fabulous results of my recent foray into vegetarian health food cuisine. I've found three things I'd like to share:

1. Basil pesto from Sunflower Kitchens

2. Vegepate from Fontaine Sante

3. Free hulled hemp seed samples at Noah's at Bloor and Spadina

1. Sunflower Kitchens is a small operation that cooks up various forms of hummus, pestos, and other dips and sauces to gourmet and health food stores in the Toronto area. I've tried some of their catering, over the years, and it's very good - but nothing compares to their fabulous BASIL PESTO. It has a rich, fresh flavour and is completely vegan - any creaminess is due to the ground sunflower seeds added to the pesto. It'll last for at least two weeks, opened, in the fridge (I've never had one longer than that before I use it up!) and it's great on salads, sandwiches, to dip raw veggies, you name it. Don't confuse it with Sunflower Kitchens' Kale and Basil Pesto - which is not as flavourful.

2. Fontaine Sante is a fresh health food company out of Quebec. I'm not as familiar with their products, but I picked up a small package of VEGEPATE yesterday at the health food store and I was surprised how good it tasted. It also has a sunflower seed base, with onions, nutritional yeast, carrots and other veggies, but it tastes like nothing so much as my Jewish great-aunt's recipe for vegetarian chopped liver. Excellent on crackers. I doubt that it will have the longevity of the Sunflower Pesto - which I like to stock as a staple! - but it's nice on occasion.

3. I was at Noah's Natural Foods at Bloor and Spadina this evening and they have a basket of FREE HEMP SEED SAMPLES on the check-out counter at the front. I doubt it'll last long, but while it does - free hemp seeds! They're a great source of omega-3 oils and of protein. And they taste great. (I was amused to see fine print on the tiny card insert in the package which reads, "Batch 6. THC Test: 0%"

HERBAL : Vegetarian Restaurants in Toronto

Vegetarian Restaurants in Toronto

Posted by Victoria Anisman-Reiner
On the lookout for a restaurant in the city of Toronto? Check out these five vegetarian restaurants for creative dining options for vegans, omnivores, and all in between

By no means an exhaustive list, this post is in intended as a follow-up to my recent articles, Benefits of a Vegetarian Diet and Disadvantages of Going Veg to suggest a few of Toronto’s best restaurants for great cuisine, good atmosphere, and healthy eating!

1. Fresh / Juice for Life

Juice for Life has three locations in the city: at Bloor and Spadina, on Queen Street West at Crawford, and on Spadina south of Queen Street West. Each is a bouncing spot for vegetarians and vegans to enjoy wholesome meals, fresh juices, and a range of desserts made with natural ingredients and healthier sweeteners. Their specialties include a veggie burger made from almonds and rice bowls topped with any and every combination of vegetables, tofu, tempeh, nuts, seeds, and sauces you can imagine. Most of their desserts come from Sweets from the Earth, the exquisite Toronto vegan bakery (most of their goodies are, however, made with unrefined cane sugar).

2. Annapurna

One of the oldest vegetarian restaurants in the city (and perhaps across Canada) is Annapurna Restaurant, a quirky, quiet place in Toronto's Annex, on Bathurst Street just south of Dupont. Annapurna specializes in delicious Southern Indian cuisine, with daily soups and specials, all very reasonably priced. Their masala dosai, a lentil flour crepe filled with potatoes and served with spicy sanbar lentil soup, is a favorite, as are the honey-sweetened carob balls for dessert.

3. Live

Live Organic Food Bar, located on Dupont at Spadina, is the only restaurant in Toronto that offers raw food appetizers and entrees as nearly half of their menu. They specialize in gourmet vegan food, fresh juices, and gourmet raw vegan desserts. Live is new, trendy, and more than a little pricey, but the food is excellent. They also offer cooking classes, catering and healthy packaged foods in the entryway.

4. Le Commensal

Le Commensal has been around since 1996, and it’s still going strong. Located in the heart of Toronto at Bay and Elm Streets (near the subway at Dundas and Yonge), Le Commensal is a buffet-style vegetarian restaurant where you pay for your food by weight before you eat. Food choices include a range of salads, rice, tofu and seitan curries and stews, pizza, lasagne, and more. Their soups and the favorite dishes are prepackaged and frozen so you can also enjoy them at home. As a bonus, they make the best tofu cheesecake in town.

5. Vegetarian Haven

Set in the U of T/ Kensington Market district on Baldwin Street, Vegetarian Haven has a huge menu - from the more conventional stews, noodles, and stuffed vegetables to unusual veggie simulations which included the popular “tofu drumsticks” as well as tofu "ham", "pastrami", "salmon" and more. The food is nicely presented and, for the most part, in very generous portions. Like Fresh/Juice for Life, they also serve desserts made by Sweets from the Earth (see above); and they’ll blend any cake or cookie into a dessert shake to order.

Traditional Medicine, why is Important?

Importance of Traditional Medicine

Traditional medicine has always been regarded as important in Bhutan, and a dispensary which doubles as a training centre was opened at Dechenchoeling in 1967. In 1979, a traditional medical hospital with a laboratory for making medicines was opened in Thimphu, subsidized by the World Health Organization. This hospital can be visited (see page 161). Four dispensaries were also set up in the rest of the country. In 1988, a project for cataloguing plants and establishing a training centre for doctors was begun with the help of an Italian non­-governmental organization. This project today is being continued by European Community.

Traditional Medicine : Diagonistic Techniques

Diagonistic Techniques

Diagnosis begins with an examination of the 12 pulses, the tongue and urine, and questions to the patient. Illnesses develop with the increase, decrease or destabilization caused by bad food, the weather, evil spirits, the weight of previ­ous actions, karma, or way of life. Remedies, in general, consist of a diet that varies with the nature of the illness, and medi­cines, which may be aided by acupuncture and moxibustion.

The decision about what kind of treatment to use for a particular condition is made by the physician mainly through the reading of the pulses. In modern medicine, pulse reading is only used to detect anomalies of the heart and of the circulatory system. Using the So-bar Rig-pa method, it is possible to detect diseases of any organ through the pulses. The eyes, tongue and urine are also examined for signs that will help with the diagnosis, and sometimes the physician will record the patient's medical history.

Therapeutic applied in traditional medicine

Therapeutic Practices

Several forms of treatment are applied in traditional medicine. Hundreds of medicinal plants, minerals and animal parts form the basic drugs used by the practitioners. These ingredients are processed and mixed in different combinations to make about 300 medicines in the form of pills, tablets, syrups, powders and lotions. Other treatments include dietary and behavioural advice. There are also so-called surgical procedures that include gtar (blood letting), bsregs (cauterisation by lerbal compounds), gser facos (acupuncture by a golden needle), tshug (cauterisation with instruments of different materials), dugs (applying heat or cold to parts of the body), byugs-pa (medicated oil massage), sman-chu (stone-heated bath), fsha-chu (bath at a hot spring) and turn (vapour treatment).

Herbal in Bhutan: The Land of Medicinal Herbs.

The Land of Medicinal Herbs.

One of the ancient names for Bhutan was Menjung – ‘the Land of Medicinal Herbs’.

The Himalayan Buddhist system of medicine is called So-ba Rig-pa and is practised in many countries today. Because it originally developed in ancient Tibet, it is commonly known as Tibetan medicine.

It is believed that at the beginning of time, the art of healing was a prerogative of the gods. It wasn't until Kashiraja Dewadas, an ancient Indian king, went to heaven to learn medicine that medicine could be offered to humans as a means to fight suffering. He taught the principles and the practice of healing, and this knowledge was spread as part of early Buddhist sacred writings. Some of the fundamental beliefs of this system are the basis of Buddhism itself.

When Buddhism was first brought to Tibet in the seventh century, some of these medicinal texts were translated into Tibetan and the rulers became interested in the subject. From that time, So-ba Rig-pa was considered a single system of medicine, although some differences are found in the different lineages based on the discovery of terma, which occasionally include medicinal teachings.

When Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal came to Bhutan, his minister of religion, Tenzin Drukey, an esteemed physician, spread the teaching of So-ba Rig-pa. Though the basic texts are the same, the Bhutanese tradition of So-ba Rig-pa has developed independently from its Tibetan origins. Today, the Himalayan Buddhist tradition is the most common type of medicine practised in Bhutan. It has been recognised by the government as the official medical tradition of the country and has been included in the national health system since 1967.

GMO Potatoes Cause Cancer in Rats

Herbal: GMO Potatoes Cause Cancer in Rats

Genetically Modified Potatoes: finally, proof of the risks
Newly released evidence from Russian studies that were suppressed since 1998 shows exactly the danger that alternative health experts predicted: GMO foods may not be safe

The debate over Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) has been going strong for years. When Monsanto and other companies began designing GMO corn, soy, potatoes, tomatoes, and other crops and marketing them to third world farmers, they opened a can of worms that may never be shut.

Environmentalists take issue with the risk that GMO crops can accidentally be released into the environment and wipe out other, native, plant species.

Religious activists object to the concept of humans "playing god" with other lifeforms and our own food supply.

And health experts - especially those in natural healing, energy work, and holistic health fields - believe that GMO foods are inherently unsafe to consume, because we don't know how the combination of genes in new ways might effect a food's chemistry or its impact on the human body.

Now, we are beginning to find out.

Studies conducted in Russia in 1998 - and suppressed by the biotech industry for eight years - have finally been uncovered, showing that rats fed GMO potatoes developed tumors. The findings from these studies are being released thanks to the work of Greenpeace activists in the UK.

Natural Medicine

The debate over Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) has been going strong for years. When Monsanto and other companies began designing GMO corn, soy, potatoes, tomatoes, and other crops and marketing them to third world farmers, they opened a can of worms that may never be shut.

Environmentalists take issue with the risk that GMO crops can accidentally be released into the environment and wipe out other, native, plant species.

Religious activists object to the concept of humans "playing god" with other lifeforms and our own food supply.

And health experts - especially those in natural healing, energy work, and holistic health fields - believe that GMO foods are inherently unsafe to consume, because we don't know how the combination of genes in new ways might effect a food's chemistry or its impact on the human body.

Now, we are beginning to find out.

Studies conducted in Russia in 1998 - and suppressed by the biotech industry for eight years - have finally been uncovered, showing that rats fed GMO potatoes developed tumors. The findings from these studies are being released thanks to the work of Greenpeace activists in the UK.

For more information on GMO foods, and links to the full story, see http://www.mercola.com/2007/mar/8/warning----gm-food-linked-to-cancer.htm

Reproduction System, a practitioner of Chinese Medicine

In assessing the health of the reproductive system, a practitioner of
Chinese Medicine will begin by looking at the health of the Qi
(pronounced “Chee”). Qi is the energetic component of the human body
that is responsible for all our metabolic and physiological events.
Just as the energy within a germinated seed that propells the seed to
grow up into a plant is invisible, so is the Qi within the human body
unseen directly. We can only see the results of the Qi’s actions
through the functions it performs.

In particular Qi has five basic functions:
1) Warming: Keeps the body at its regular temperature and initiates
the spike during ovulation.
2) Transforming: Turns ingested food into either nourishment or
waste. We can see how strong this function is by looking at the
strength and structure of the physique.
3) Propelling: Initiates all life’s growth and development and as well
the functional aspects of individual organs. ie. events like
maturation of the external sex organs, menarche, and the fact that the
heart beats regularly.
4) Defending: Protects the bodies exterior from invasion of external
pathogenic factors. Recurring colds and flu’s are a sign that this
function is weak.
5) Securing and Containing: Keeps everything within the body where it
should be. This includes keeping the blood within the blood vessels,
the foetus within the uterus, and preventing organs like the uterus or
stomach from prolapsing.

By asessing these functional aspects of the Qi the Chinese Medical
Practitioner will have a better idea of how to guide the body back its
natural state of balance and harmony. Thus increasing the chances for
a natural pregnancy.

Traditional Chinese Medicine Departments

Traditional Chinese medical departments in China receive nearly 300 million annual visits, sources with the State Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine (SATCM) said on Saturday.

“About 234 million visits have been made to hospitals of traditional Chinese medicine, another 58.51 million to Chinese medicine sections of comprehensive hospitals,” the sources said.

According to the SATCM, the traditional Chinese medical industry, with a total production value of nearly 81.026 billion yuan (about 10.125 billion U.S. dollars), makes up more than a fourth of China’s overall medical industry, with an export value of 820 million U.S. dollars in 2005.

Statistics show that China has 3,009 traditional Chinese hospitals, with more than 310,000 beds, some combining Chinese and Western medicine or Chinese and ethnic minority medicine.

“About 70 percent of all township hospitals, 89 percent of urban community medical services and 40 percent of village clinics have traditional Chinese medical departments,” the sources said, adding that traditional Chinese medicine plays a key role in health care in areas poor in medical resources.

Nationwide, 448 standard herbal medicine planting bases have been built, which have helped nearly a million farmers out of poverty by growing and selling herbal medicines.

Acupuncture: Men are more sensitivelly

My practice is approx. 50/50 men to women. I can fully conclude, without a doubt, that men are more sensitive to the needles than women. Restated, men are, on the whole, much bigger babies than their female counterparts! Yes Yes I understand that as a rule men only go to see their doctor when something is either falling off or they are too embarassed to walk out their door because of some disfiguration, and when they finally do go it is like pulling teeth to get personal information out of them. Why are women so willing to let others help them (collective) and men are stubborn as bulls (competition)?

In the luteal phase of a womens menstrual cycle (from ovulation to menses, day 14-28) when estrogen levels are quite high women too can be quite skin sensitive to the needle poke. Is there a correlation here? Does mens estrogen levels rise when they actually let down their guard enough to allow someone to help them? I think this may be a question for Huang Di and Bob Flaws to figure out !

The long and the short of this ramble is that I really feel that it is important to address the need to figure out how men need to be treated differently. Women like the spa-like TCM clinics that are poping up in the western world, but for the most part, I don’t think that men do. This issue must be addressed. I think we exist in medical systems that were built largely by men to take care of/get to know their women (the protector role men carry with such pride). So, different ideas need to come out from the woodwork from the few practitioners that have actually dedicated some focus to male patients/clients on how, and possibly where to treat the fellas.