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* L’ASCOMA dénonce : Ces huiles qui peuvent tuer - Journal Le Républicain (maliweb.net)
Jeudi 03 Janvier 2008 - 18:26 - 11 mois depuis - Presse généraliste - Google santé france C’est le docteur Ibrahima Sangaré, vétérinaire hygiéniste de l’Association des consommateurs du Mali qui nous avertit : “Aujourd’hui, il ya des risques pour la santé du consommateur qui ne sont pas gérés. Parmi ces risques, il y en a un qui est devenu ... |
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Scientific American Body: Getting to Know Nutraceuticals
Jeudi 03 Janvier 2008 - 15:10 - 11 mois depuis - Cancer - Scientific American We live in an age when good nutrition practices--eat lots of whole grains, fresh fruits and fresh vegetables; hold the fatty meat and hydrogenated vegetable oils--are simple, straightforward and widely available. But visit a well-stocked health food store, pharmacy or supermarket, and you’d never know it. The variety of dietary supplements can be overwhelming, with dozens of vitamins, minerals and extracts offered alone and in combinations targeted at every possible intersection of age, sex and activity. And that selection is a nutritional desert compared to the tropical rain forest–level diversity of supplements at more specialized stores. |
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Scientific American Body: Getting to Know Nutraceuticals
Jeudi 03 Janvier 2008 - 15:10 - 11 mois depuis - Presse spécialisée - Scientific American We live in an age when good nutrition practices--eat lots of whole grains, fresh fruits and fresh vegetables; hold the fatty meat and hydrogenated vegetable oils--are simple, straightforward and widely available. But visit a well-stocked health food store, pharmacy or supermarket, and you’d never know it. The variety of dietary supplements can be overwhelming, with dozens of vitamins, minerals and extracts offered alone and in combinations targeted at every possible intersection of age, sex and activity. And that selection is a nutritional desert compared to the tropical rain forest–level diversity of supplements at more specialized stores. |
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Scientific American Body: 5 New Year's Resolutions You Owe Yourself
Jeudi 03 Janvier 2008 - 14:30 - 11 mois depuis - Presse spécialisée - Scientific American On New Year’s Day more than a few of us annually resolve to change our lives--or at least our more self-indulgent habits. On the hunch that all good things flow from physical and mental well-being, Scientific American Body offers this list of recommended resolutions based on the advice of health professionals and the scientific literature. Whatever your goals, it will help you understand why hardly anything you could choose to do would have a bigger impact on your quality of life. |
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Scientific American Body: The Skinny on the Environment
Jeudi 03 Janvier 2008 - 14:30 - 11 mois depuis - Presse spécialisée - Scientific American When Susan Handy moved to Davis, Calif., in 2002, she immediately bought a commuting vehicle: a wheeled trailer, for toting her kids behind her bike. Handy, an environmental policy analyst at the University of California, and her husband frequently pedal to work, with two preschoolers in tow. Among locals, their commute is common. Fifty miles of bike lanes ribbon Davis, which is only about 10.5 square miles in area. Handy calls Davis “a small town that really works.” |
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Scientific American Body: Pro-Drug Gets Attention
Jeudi 03 Janvier 2008 - 14:00 - 11 mois depuis - Cancer - Scientific American ALL-DAY RELIEF FROM ADHD: The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is now considering whether to approve the marketing of Vyvanse (lisdexamfetamine dimesylate, made by Shire) to adults with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). |
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Scientific American Body: Pro-Drug Gets Attention
Jeudi 03 Janvier 2008 - 14:00 - 11 mois depuis - Presse spécialisée - Scientific American ALL-DAY RELIEF FROM ADHD: The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is now considering whether to approve the marketing of Vyvanse (lisdexamfetamine dimesylate, made by Shire) to adults with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). |
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Scientific American Body: EMDR: Taking a Closer Look
Jeudi 03 Janvier 2008 - 14:00 - 11 mois depuis - Presse spécialisée - Scientific American More than 500 brands of psychotherapy exist, with new ones springing up on a nearly monthly basis. Although a handful of these neophyte treatments have been tested in scientific studies, it is anybody’s guess whether the others actually work. |
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Scientific American Body: World's Top 10 Most Polluted Places
Jeudi 03 Janvier 2008 - 14:00 - 11 mois depuis - Presse spécialisée - Scientific American 1. Sumqayit, Azerbaijan--This area gained the dubious distinction of landing atop the Blacksmith Institute’s list of the world’s most polluted sites. Yet another heir to the toxic legacy of Soviet industry, this city of 275,000 bears heavy metal, oil and chemical contamination from its days as a center of chemical production. As a result, locals suffer cancer rates 22 to 51 percent higher than their countrymen, and their children suffer from a host of genetic defects, ranging from mental retardation to bone disease. |
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Scientific American Body: Suffering a Slow Recovery
Jeudi 03 Janvier 2008 - 14:00 - 11 mois depuis - Presse spécialisée - Scientific American There may be a new roof on the New Orleans Superdome and tourists in the French Quarter, but time is not healing all wounds in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Even two years after the storm, mental health problems in the region are growing among the nearly 70,000 families still living in temporary housing provided by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The slow recovery, researchers and clinicians are finding, has bred levels of mental distress unseen in the aftermath of other disasters. |
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