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Posts tonen met het label Study. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label Study. Alle posts tonen

A Drink a Day Before First Pregnancy Strongly Linked to Breast Cancer in Major New Study

Penulis : Unknown on dinsdag 3 september 2013 | 17:27

dinsdag 3 september 2013

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
by Kiri Blakeley 2 hours ago

I wish that all of these studies linking cancer and alcohol consumption had come out when I was in college. Not that I necessarily would have put down my wine cooler and read them. But, one can always imagine, right? Still, it seems like every time you turn around now, someone is telling you how bad drinking is for you. Can't we go back to that time when wine was supposed to make you live forever? What happened to that? That was fun, right? But anyway, we're in the downer years for booze -- when pretty much any drop of the stuff is going to send you into a premature grave. A new major study links alcohol consumption to breast cancer.

According to the study, drinking just one alcoholic drink a day -- one glass of wine after work; one beer with dinner; one shot of tequila before you get into bed (we all do that, right?) -- can increase your chances of getting breast cancer. Delayed childbearing can also increase your breast cancer risk. So you ladies who opted out of childrearing to party -- here's your comeuppance! I kid, I kid, but these studies are like after us, eh?!

Anyhoo, this research is the first study to concentrate on those drinking years between first menstruation and first pregnancy -- probably the time when most women drank the most. Except for those moms who began drinking like fish to ease the stress of motherhood. But don't worry, your bummer study will come at some later date.

These years are, of course, the drinking years for a lot of us -- high school and college. Your risk increased 11 percent for every six drinks per week. Which seems like a lot of breast cancer!

Researchers seem to think that breast tissue is more susceptible to environmental risk factors like alcohol before pregnancy -- because pregnancy causes cellular changes that make breast tissue less susceptible to cancer.

Scarily, a woman's lifetime risk of getting breast cancer is one in eight. That's a pretty big chance! Which apparently increases if you were a big drinker in your non-pregnancy years. Or even a moderate drinker. I mean, most women I knew in my teens and 20s didn't drink one drink a day -- but they certainly made up for it on the weekends!

The study concludes that women who haven't yet had their first pregnancy should limit their alcohol consumption to less than one drink a day.

Could the "healthy" beer a day habit my grandmother had for decades have contributed to her breast cancer? Hmmm. Hey, let's go back to that time when one drink a day was just fiiiiiine. 'Memba that?

Are you feeling as doomed as I am?

Image via Steampunk Family the von Hedwigs/Flickr

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Lots of Sex Can Earn You Lots of Money Says Best Study Ever

Penulis : Unknown on zaterdag 17 augustus 2013 | 15:45

zaterdag 17 augustus 2013

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
by Sasha Brown-Worsham 20 hours ago

sex and moneyA new study has revealed that there is a very simple equation to making more money: More Sex= More happiness= More Money. Yes, indeed. The study found that people who have sex four times a week generally earn more than people who do not. The reasons, however, may not be as simple as they appear.

This study is not suggesting that going out and having more sex will automatically increase your income. What it IS suggesting is that more sex leads to more happiness and that happy people tend to make more as a whole than unhappy people. Of course, what this study CAN'T account for is the reality that people who make more money are going to be more attractive to the opposite sex and thus, have more opportunities for sex... So, really, this study is not exactly going to change lives.

Still, I am going with it. My takeaway: I need to have more sex.

After 10 years of marriage, I am close to four times a week. Some weeks are better than that, some slightly worse, but now I am feeling we can do better than that. We can blow this baby up! And clearly we should. It will make us much happier.

The truth is, there is no magic "happy" number. Every couple is different. But it absolutely IS true that hitting your individual "happy" number makes you a generally better person to be around. That whole expression "he needs to get laid?" Yeah. It exists for a reason.

People who are lacking in sex show it. The part I struggle with is that happier people make more money. Again, it's a chicken or egg kind of thing. Money may not buy happiness, but if you have been poor, then you sure as hell know that not having money won't make you happy, either. If you are stressing about money, sex is usually the last thing on your mind.

So this study is...  dubious. And yet, it's also welcome. Because what two things do we like better than sex and money? Not much else, amiright?

Will this study make you have more sex?

Image via Dustin Moore /Flickr

Sasha Brown-Worsham ABOUT THE AUTHOR Sasha Brown-Worsham

can't decide whether she is a mother, writer, or runner, but is usually all three at some point each day. She has written for dozens of print magazines, newspapers, and websites. She rarely ever writes on bathroom walls.

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New Study Linking Autism and Anorexia Could Make All the Difference for Teens With Eating Disorders

Penulis : Unknown on woensdag 7 augustus 2013 | 17:25

woensdag 7 augustus 2013

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
by Jacqueline Burt 4 hours ago

scaleAs someone who struggled with anorexia for my entire adolescence and a large part of my childhood, I've always felt that the way in which the condition is treated generally misses the mark. Sure, society's unrealistic expectations for women's bodies and the fashion industry's glorification of emaciated teenagers aggravate symptoms, but anorexia is first and foremost a disease, not the byproduct of a beauty-obsessed culture. Which is why I was interested to learn about a recent study that could change the way doctors and therapists view anorexia entirely: Researchers at Cambridge University have found that girls with anorexia "possess traits that echo characteristics of autism." 

Prior to now, anorexia was considered an eating disorder, primarily. And while the study's lead researcher, Simon Baron-Cohen (hmm, any relation to Sacha Baron Cohen?), calls this a "reasonable" approach because of anorexia's obvious food/body image associations, there's a lot more going on ... 

Apparently, traits shared by both anorexics and those with autism include difficulties in the areas of social interaction, empathy, and communication, plus tendencies towards repetitive behavior and rigid interests. The difference, according to Baron-Cohen, is that in anorexics, these tendencies manifest "as an obsessive focus on food intake, weight, and body shape."

What this means for treatment going forward isn't yet clear, but I'm hopeful this finding is a step in the right direction. The "obsessive focus" really strikes a chord ... I know that when I was at my worst, I felt, more than anything, like I was trapped in some sort of obsessive-compulsive hell: I was less concerned with my actual appearance than I was with the precise location of the needle on the scale or if the skin on the apple I was about to eat was sufficiently uniform in color or whether one day's calorie count came to the exact amount as the day before. 

I learned to manage my symptoms years ago, but one of my worst fears is that my now 12-year-old daughter will someday fall prey to the same disease that overshadowed everything else about my growing-up experience. Hopefully she'll never go through what I went through, but for the sake of all the girls who will, I pray this new information leads to a breakthrough of some kind.

Are you surprised to hear about the link between anorexia and autism?

Image via Paul H/Flickr

Click "Like" for more about parenting kids on the spectrum. Jacqueline Burt ABOUT THE AUTHOR Jacqueline Burt

has written for numerous magazines, newspapers, and websites. She is easily bored and often tired, so she requires constant entertainment to keep her awake. Dance, Monkey! Dance! 

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