Today's
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March 11, 2010
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Here's recent news featuring Allina Hospitals & Clinics, a not-for-profit family of hospitals, clinics and other care services dedicated to meeting the health care needs of communities throughout Minnesota and western Wisconsin.
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Need help getting a good night's sleep?

[KARE 11 News, March 11, 2010] More than a quarter of the U.S. population report difficulty sleeping or not getting enough rest. Many of them can be helped with a sleep study to diagnose their problems.

KARE11 Sunrise reporter Jeff Olsen visited the Aspen Sleep Center at Bandana Square in St. Paul this morning during National Sleep Awareness Week to see what a sleep study is all about, and he talked to one person who is glad he had one done. Read the full story on allinanews.com...

More kids surviving blows to chest during baseball, other sports

[Pioneer Press, March 11, 2010] It's parents' worst nightmare — watching children collapse from ill-timed baseballs or pucks that strike their chests and shut down their hearts. Since this phenomenon was identified 15 years ago, a Minneapolis registry has collected information on 224 U.S. cases — most of which resulted in the deaths of healthy children or teens.

But the keeper of the registry, Dr. Barry Maron of the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation at Abbott Northwestern Hospital, had good news to share Wednesday. Between 2006 and 2009, more children survived such cardiac episodes than died from them. Read the full story on twincities.com...

Vitamin D shows promise but research still lagging

[Chicago Tribune, March 10, 2010] Long ignored and feared in high doses, vitamin D is being hailed as the answer to nearly every health issue under the sun. The excitement stems from a flurry of preliminary studies finding links between vitamin D deficiencies and various illnesses. But experts caution that claims of wide-ranging health benefits are not yet supported by clinical evidence.

Dr. Gregory Plotnikoff of Allina Hospitals & Clinics' Center for Healthcare Innovation in Minneapolis is conducting vitamin D trials. He and other researchers still have high hopes for the vitamin, saying it could prove to be the single most cost-effective medical intervention in the U.S. today. Read the full story on chicagotribune.com...

Sun vs. vitamins: What the experts say

[Chicago Tribune, March 10, 2010] Research shows 3 of every 4 Americans don't get enough vitamin D. Dr. Gregory Plotnikoff, medical director of the Institute for Health and Healing at Abbott Northwestern Hospital, recommends that all pregnant women, people with chronic illnesses and those seeking to minimize their risk of disease go to their doctor for a baseline blood test. Read the full story on chicagotribune.com...

Healthday logo NATIONAL & INTERNATIONAL HEALTH NEWS

Read more headlines and news stories on Allina.com.

Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:

Men Feel Less Guilt Than Women

Women experience more guilt than men, according to a Spanish study that included 360 men and women from three age groups.

The participants were given a number of potentially guilt-inducing scenarios and asked to describe how they would feel in each situation, MSNBC.com reported.

Based on the responses, the researchers at the University of the Basque Country concluded that "habitual guilt (a kind of internalized feeling of guilt) was more intense in women than in men in all three age groups studied."

Interpersonal guilt (related to how our action or inaction affects others) was "significantly more intense in women than in men in the adolescent group, and in the 25-33 age group, the pattern of results was similar."

Older men and older women had similar levels of interpersonal guilt, MSNBC.com reported.

"This study highlights the need for educational practices and socializing agents to reduce the tendency towards anxious-aggressive guilt in women, and to promote interpersonal sensitivity in men," the researchers concluded.

The study appeared in a recent issue of The Spanish Journal of Psychology.

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More Food Products Added to Recall List

About 1.7 million pounds of ready-to-eat beef taquito and chicken quesadilla products and 115,700 pounds of Tornados Ranchero Beef & Cheese roll-ups from Texas-based Ruiz Foods have been added to a recall of food products that contain a flavoring ingredient possibly contaminated with salmonella.

The ingredient -- hydrolyzed vegetable protein (HVP) -- was made by Basic Food Flavors of Las Vegas. On March 4, the company announced a recall of its entire production of HVP dating to Feb. 17, 2009, USA Today reported.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is continuously updating the list of recalled foods that contain the ingredient. To date, the list contains 105 products, including gravy mixes, snacks, soups, bouillons, dip mixes, salad dressings and ready-to-eat foods.

An FDA inspection report released this week said that Basic Food Flavors knew about salmonella contamination at its plant as early as Jan. 21, but continued to distribute HVP paste and powder products until Feb. 15, USA Today reported.

The FDA says there have been no illnesses associated with food products containing the recalled HVP.

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Grocery Store Shopper Cards Used to Identify Salmonella Source

For the first time in a food safety investigation, U.S. officials used grocery store shopper cards to trace the source of a salmonella outbreak that has sickened at least 245 people in 44 states.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention investigators got permission from patients to use their shopper cards to track their food purchases. Using this information, the CDC team was led to salami made by a Rhode Island company and then determined that pepper used to season the meat was the source of the salmonella, the Associated Press reported.

This is the first time that data compiled by supermarket chains were successfully used by the CDC to pinpoint the source of a foodborne illness outbreak.

"It was really exciting. It was a break in the investigation for sure," CDC epidemiologist Casey Barton Behravesh told the AP.

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FDA Reviews Safety of Bone-Building Drugs

A safety review will examine whether bone-building drugs called bisphosphonates increase the risk of femur (thigh bone) fractures, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said Wednesday.

Bisphosphonates, which include drugs such as Boniva and Fosamax, are designed to increase bone mass and are commonly prescribed to treat osteoporosis.

The FDA said it's looking at reports that some patients who take the drugs for several years are at increased risk for atypical subtrochanteric femur fractures (fractures in the femur just below the hip joint), said the Wall Street Journal.

People currently taking bisphosphonates shouldn't stop taking them, but should consult a doctor if they develop new hip or thigh pain, the FDA said.

Using bisphosphonates for four or more years may affect bone quality and increase risk of femur fractures, according to two studies presented Wednesday at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Copyright © 2010 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

Published on: 03/11/2010

TODAY'S HEALTH NEWS, a compilation of local, national and international health news, comes courtesy of Allina.com.

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