Tag: malaria
Quick & Healthy: Love That Dirty Water

Quick & Healthy: Love That Dirty Water

“Quick & Healthy” offers some highlights from the world of health and wellness that you may have missed this week:

 

  • Over two-thirds of public water has fluoride added to it, pursuant to federal recommendations designed to prevent cavities. For over 50 years, the Department of Health and Human Services has advised that tap water contain between 0.7 and 1.2 milligrams of fluoride per liter. Just this Monday, it revised its recommendations to cap the amount at 0.7 milligrams, as a response to a surge in fluorosis, a staining of the teeth caused by too much fluroide, which studies show is on the rise among American adolescents.
  • Testing for HIV is potentially about to become a whole lot easier. The first instant HIV self-test went on sale in England, Scotland, and Wales this week. (Laws in Northern Ireland currently prevent the sale of the self-test kits.) The test screens for levels of antibodies in blood and will allow people to screen themselves at home, without going to a lab or a clinic, and get results within 15 minutes.
  • It’s true. TV is making kids fat. A new study conducted by the U.S. Department of Education shows a stark link between sitting in front of the boob tube for hours on end and childhood obesity. Specifically, a kindergartner who watches an hour or more of television a day is 72 percent more likely to become obese. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends children consume no more than two hours a day, but apparently even that might tip the scales.
  • Although it is not yet ready for the market, a new malaria vaccine — the first of its kind — is showing promise in early tests. The vaccine’s efficacy in the long-term fight against the disease is not 100 percent yet, but leading pharmaceutical companies have thus far been able to cure the elusive disease, and this is a promising development.

Photo: Christina Spicuzza via Flickr

U.N. Goal On Child Deaths Set To Be Missed: Study

U.N. Goal On Child Deaths Set To Be Missed: Study

Paris (AFP) — A U.N. target for slashing infant deaths will be missed, mainly through failures to roll back infectious disease and complications during pregnancy, experts said on Wednesday.

Under the fourth so-called Millennium Development Goal (MDG), all U.N. members were meant to reduce deaths among children under five by two-thirds by the end of 2015 from 1990 levels.

There were 6.3 million deaths in 2013 worldwide, a near halving of the 1990 toll of 12.7 million.

The decrease shows “countries have made great progress in improving child survival since the turn of the millennium,” specialists reported in The Lancet.

“Nevertheless, Millennium Development Goal 4… will probably only be achieved by a few countries.”

The study, led by Robert Black of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, delved into causes of under-five deaths in 2013.

Pre-term complications were to blame for 965,000 deaths world-wide, while pneumonia accounted for another 935,000 deaths and complications during childbirth for 662,000. Diarrhea and malaria were also major killers.

China, the Democratic Republic of Congo, India, Nigeria, and Pakistan together accounted for about half of all deaths globally in 2013, the paper found.

The research should help frame debate for the Sustainable Development Goals, which are due to be decided by U.N. leaders in September 2015 as a successor to the MDGs, the authors hope.

On current trends, in 2030 4.4 million children under five will still die, and 60 percent of these deaths will occur in sub-Saharan Africa.

AFP Photo/Dibyangshu Sarkar

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