Culturally appropriate - why it matters for our kids
When you hear the word ‘granny’, what image does your mind conjure up? A gentle old lady with shrivelled hands and kind eyes behind rimless glasses, a knitted shawl around her shoulders? Me, I see the chubby faces and soulful eyes of my beautiful grandchildren. You see, ‘granny’ is Aboriginal English for ‘grandchild’.
India leads the way with new stroke study
This Tuesday is World Stroke Day, a reminder that one in six of us will have a stroke in our lifetime. Here the figures are equally alarming with 1.5 million people having a stroke each year, representing about 3,000 to 4,000 people having a stroke each day in India.
Fat chance for physical activity
Professor Bruce Neal comments on a new study showing the rise in physical activity is not combating the obesity epidemic in the United States.
The enormous burden of ill health caused by overweight and obesity is well understood, particularly in developed countries like the United States, which have seen massive increases in prevalence over the last few decades.
At its most basic level, obesity is easily understood as a problem of energy balance - if energy intake from food exceeds energy expenditure from physical activity, weight gain ensues.
The Science of Health Informatics
Healthcare workers in the UK and around the world are rapidly adopting new information technology tools to assist them in their work. These range from vast national networks such as the UK’s Summary Care Record service to personalised mobile applications such as the “Epocrates” medication reference “app”.
Benefits and risks of affordable technologies in healthcare
Despite and perhaps because of the advances in biomedicine over the past few decades, chronic diseases, like heart disease, stroke, and diabetes are now rising in many places of the world and more worryingly they impose their heaviest burden on the poor and disadvantaged populations.
Laws that could make you younger
As I move towards 50, I think more about my age than I used to. And it’s not entirely encouraging.I hurtle around the sun, clock up the years and head unswervingly towards the inevitable. Or do I?
World Health Day celebrates the establishment of the World Health Organisation in 1948. This year the theme was health and ageing - two things that don’t obviously go together – but two things that now warrant much more of my attention than they used to!