Economic Information - October 7, 2008

U.N. Reveals Growing Rich-Poor Divide Threatens Child Health In Asia-Pacific

August 13, 2008 - Topics asia, child, diarrhea, women and gender
Child survival in Asia and the Pacific has improved considerably deepening economic disparities have meant that the region's poor are often unable to get proper health care, the United Nations said.

The region's robust economic growth, the fastest in the world since 1990, has lifted millions out of poverty and led to numerous improvements, including in child and maternal health, according to a new report by the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)

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US Study: Running Can Help Slow Down Aging

August 11, 2008 - Topics study, exercise, survey, economic and research
There's good news for people who fear aging. According to U.S. research, running can actually help slow down the aging process.

A team from Stanford University Medical Center here have discovered that elderly people who are long-term joggers were less likely to die from medical conditions such as cancer as compared with those who are not joggers. They were also healthier and had fewer disabilities

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New Study Says Having Obese Friends Makes One Put On Unwanted Pounds

July 25, 2008 - Topics study, obesity, male, men and women
People who have fat friends are more likely to put on some unwanted pounds as compared to people who have leaner friends, new research suggests. Calling it "imitative obesity," an international team including University of Warwick experts suggest fat friends can cause someone to put on weight too.

Researchers analyzed data on 27,000 people from across Europe and found that obesity is more of a sociological phenomenon than a physiological one, as people are subconsciously influenced by the weight of people around them

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Lance Armstrong, Four Former U.S. Surgeons Spread Cancer Awareness

July 23, 2008 - Topics cancer, disease, burden, fruit and vegetable
World cycling champion Lance Armstrong and four former U.S. surgeons general urged Americans on Wednesday to do more to prevent cancer and get recommended screening tests.

Speaking at a press conference in Washington, the seven-time Tour de France winner asked the surgeons general to develop goals to reduce the medical, economic and social burden of the disease. Armstrong, who survived testicular cancer, urged people to adopt healthy lifestyles, screening tests, education and better care for survivors

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ADHD Found More Commonly In Older Children, CDC Says

July 23, 2008 - Topics child, disease, africa, research and economic
A large number of older children are being diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), while diagnoses among younger children have held steady, a federal report said Wednesday.

A report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said about 5 percent of children between the ages of 6 and 17 are diagnosed with ADHD, a neurobehavioral developmental disorder

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