Wednesday, 26 September 2012

September 27, 2012 Clippings


Even 5 year olds suffer heart damage
Obesity is putting more and more of our children at risk of high blood pressure and cholesterol, which can damage their hearts, according to a study.

The study found that blood pressure of obese kids is 40 per cent higher than that of healthy youngsters and they have up to nine times more cholesterol in their blood, the Daily Mail reported. Oxford academics warned that even in children as young as five, their arteries have become lined with fatty deposits so their hearts have to work harder to pump blood.

The study that involved nearly 50,000 five to 15-year-olds found the hearts of obese children were enlarged compared with those of youngsters who were a healthy weight.

And the blood pressure and cholesterol of some was already so high that unless they change their lifestyles, they could be 40 per cent more likely to die from a heart attack or stroke in adulthood.

"It's almost like a ticking time bomb of damage going on in their hearts and blood vessels," the paper quoted Dr Matthew Thompson, one of the study's authors, as saying.

Although researchers have long known that obese children tend to have slightly higher blood pressure and cholesterol levels, they were shocked at the differences compared with those of normal weight -particularly in obese girls, who had far higher blood pressure than healthy youngsters.

The researchers also found cholesterol levels, measuring fatty deposits in the arteries, were between 7.5 and nine times higher than normal.

"The relationship between obesity in children and cardiovascular risk factors such as blood pressure was much greater than we anticipated," said Researcher Dr Carl Heneghan, reader in evidence-based medicine at the University of Oxford.

"The magnitude of the effect of obesity upon increasing cardiovascular risk in children is deeply worrying in terms of their future risks of heart disease," he noted.

The researchers believe obese children's hearts gradually become enlarged due to the strain of having to pump blood through the partly blocked blood vessels. Although they are unlikely to suffer a heart attack or stroke soon, they will be at far higher risk by the time they reach adulthood.

The finding was published in the British Medical Journal.

27.09.2012


New MCI course evokes resentment among doctors
There is wide resentment among medical fraternity following the decision of Medical Council of India (MCI) to introduce B Sc in community health course after 12th class. MCI had taken the decision to deal with the shortage of doctors in rural areas.
As per MCI, B Sc community health degree holder will be trained mainly in district hospitals and placed in primary health centers and will be taught “some module of clinical work” which lets This means such degree holders can actually diagnose and treat basic medical cases, get involved in immunization programmes and administer extended first aid.
Medical practitioners lament that three-and-a-half-year degree course in community medicine that will be started from April next will lead to contradiction as students with allopathic and AYUSH degrees are already doing the same work. According to them, instead of creating more unemployed youth, the government should rather improve medical facilities in the rural areas.
There is high unemployment among AYUSH doctors in the country and the new course will only lead to resentment within the community. Union government should rather train unemployed AYUSH doctors for six months and allow them to work to meet scarcity of medical officers in rural areas” said Dr Dilip Acharya, President of the Indian Medical Association-MP branch, as reported in a leading daily. “What if they take advantage of their degree and start practicing in urban areas?” he added.
The AYUSH medical officer association too is not keen about the new course. “A large number of people with AYUSH degrees are already unemployed. Government should initiate action to provide job avenues to them first,” said Dr S D Jadhav, president, AYUSH medical officer association.
27.09.2012








Those who can adapt to change are those who will continue to grow

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