Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Paki Friendship - Teenage boys really do eat a lot?

Paki Friendship - Teenage boys really do eat a lot?

Parents of teenage boys often believe they are being eaten out of house and home. A new study suggests they’re right.

In a lunch-buffet experiment involving 200 kids ages 8 to 17, researchers found that boys routinely ate more compared with girls their own age. But boys in their mid-teens were the most ravenous of all — downing an average of nearly 2,000 lunchtime calories.

The pattern makes sense, given that boys usually hit their growth spurt — putting on height and muscle mass — in late puberty, according to senior researcher Dr. Jack A. Yanovski, of the US National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.

Yet, while teenage boys have a storied reputation for packing it away, there had actually been little objective evidence that this is the norm.

“There’s a lot of folk wisdom that says boys can eat prodigious amounts, but we haven’t had much data,” Yanovski told.

To fill the gap, he and his colleagues had 204 8- to 17-year-old boys and girls come to a lunch-buffet on two separate days. On one day, the kids were instructed to eat as much as they normally would during lunch; on the other day, they were told to eat as much as they wanted.

Overall, the researchers found, boys ate more than girls did at each stage of puberty. Prepubescent boys — generally between the ages of 8 and 10 — averaged nearly 1,300 lunchtime calories, versus 900 among prepubescent girls.

Girls showed the biggest increase in appetite during early- to- mid-puberty, roughly between the ages of 10 and 13. Girls that age averaged almost 1,300 lunchtime calories, and that figure was only slightly higher among girls who were in late puberty.

That pattern is in line with girls’ development, Yanovski said, as they tend to have their most significant growth spurts in early- to- mid-puberty.

Boys, on the other hand, tend to develop later. And their calorie needs appear to shoot up significantly in late puberty, or between the ages of 14 and 17.

While boys in this study showed little change in calorie intake between pre- and mid-puberty, their average lunchtime calorie intake reached nearly 2,000 calories in late puberty. Even for active children, those 2,000 calories would be most of their daily energy needs.

“They really can eat,” Yanovski noted.

For parents, he said, the findings offer an idea of what they can reasonably expect as far as their children’s calorie needs, and the family grocery bills, as kids get older.

And as long as their teenage sons are healthy and normal-weight, a sudden surge in eating should not be alarming, according to the researcher.

On the other hand, Yanovski added, boys who are overweight should have more limits on how many calories they down. Studies suggest that a majority of overweight kids become overweight adults.

Paki Friendship - Be careful overtime linked to heart risk

Paki Friendship - Be careful overtime linked to heart risk

People who work three hours or more of overtime per day run a 60-percent higher risk of bad heart problems compared to those who work regular hours, a study published in the European Heart Journal said.

The findings came from a long-term research project into 6,014 British civil servants aged 39-61, two-thirds of whom were men, who had healthy hearts at the start of the probe in the early 1990s.

At an 11-year monitoring point, 369 of the volunteers had either died of coronary heart disease (CHD) or had had a non-fatal heart attack or angina.

After accounting for risk factors such as smoking, overweight and high cholesterol, doctors found that working between three and four hours of overtime each day was associated with a 60 percent greater risk compared to those who did no overtime.

Those who worked overtime tended to be slightly younger than the non-overtime group, were likelier to be men rather than women and be in a higher occupational grade.

The investigators say the link between cardiac problems and overtime seems clear but the cause is less so, given the complexities of heart disease and relationships in the workplace.

For instance, working overtime could affect metabolism or mask depression, anxiety and sleeplessness, they caution.

There is also a phenomenon called "sickness presenteeism", whereby employees who work overtime are likelier to work while ill, ignore symptoms and not seek medical health.

In addition, people who like their job and have greater latitude in work decisions tend to work longer hours just for the pleasure, and may have a lower rate of CHD.

"More research is needed before we can be confident that overtime work would cause CHD," said Marianna Virtanen, an epidemiologist at the Finnish Institute of Occupational Health and University College London.

Paki Friendship - Talk to your father to be happy

Paki Friendship - Talk to your father to be happy

Do you want to know the secret to happiness? Well kids, just talk to your dad, said a research study.

Researchers at the University of York have found that children who regularly talk to their fathers are happier than those who do not -- the findings are based on an analysis of the British Household Panel survey into 1,200 young people all aged between 11 and 15 years.

Young people who said they talked seriously to their dads "most days" gave themselves an 87 per cent score on a happiness scale compared with 79 per cent for those who said they hardly ever spoke to their fathers in this way.

Nearly half of young people -- 46 per cent -- said that they "hardly ever" spoke to their fathers about important topics compared with 28 per cent who hardly ever spoke to their mothers about the things that matter most.

Only 13 per cent confided in their father "most days", 'The Daily Telegraph' reported.

The study, commissioned by Children's Society, showed that young people talk less to their fathers about important issues, as they get older. The data showed 42 per cent of 11-year-olds did so more than once a week compared with 16 per cent of 15-year-olds.

The analysis suggested there has been little change over the years with the same proportion -- 30 per cent -- of young people talking to their fathers about something that mattered to them more than once a week in 2007-08 as in 2002-03.

Paki Friendship - Protect kids from TV watching

Paki Friendship - Protect kids from TV watching

Television can expose your child to things that you have tried to protect them from especially violence, drug abuse, commercials and relationships etc.

Follow these TV parental guidelines and show them children’s programme only.

This TV parental guideline suggests that you should limit children television viewing to 1-2 hours for each day.

For TV watching, do not allow your children to have a TV set in their bedrooms.

Review the ratings of children’s programme, which shows healthy entertainment.

This parental guideline suggest, watch television with your children, and discuss what is happening during the show, discuss options and more suitable things that characters could have done for unsuitable behaviours and actions. Also teach your children to be critical of the messages that are being conveyed through TV watching.

Here are some of the children’s programmes, which include: Sesame Street, Barney & Friends, Bob The Builder, Bear in the Big Blue House, Arthur, Dragon Tales, Blue's Clues, Dora Explorer, Thomas the Tank Engine, Spongebob, Squarepants.

Older kids would love to watch Bill Nye the Science Guy, Wishbone and Beakman's World etc.

Paki Friendship - Filthy utensils putting people’s lives at risk

Paki Friendship - Filthy utensils putting people’s lives at risk

Filthy and unclean utensils have put the health of scores of people at risk, especially those consuming food from different outlets, including hotels and kiosks.

There is a need to introduce a new law that should force vendors and owners of hotels to use disposable pots in their food outlets and temporary stalls in the twin cities.

According to a survey conducted, most of the juice centres and outlets serving common food items in markets lack proper arrangement to wash utensils thus making customers quite vulnerable to viral diseases.

“The vendors selling fruit chat have only one bucket full of water and they dips and rinses used utensils into it and even do not bother to think how it would pose health risks to his customers, the survey report said.

It is quite ironic that food outlets being run on temporary or permanent basis are mushrooming in every nook and corner across the country, but number of health officers and food inspectors are gradually decreasing, as there are only two food inspectors in the capital city to keep vigil over unhealthy practices of food vendors and stall holders. “Water in which vendors wash utensils sometimes carries particles of broken food, but they continue to wash steel plates in it despite knowing the fact that such practice would pose severe threats to lives of their customers,” a visitor at the commercial market told.

Doctors said if vendors wash their utensils in fresh water even then threat of viral diseases cannot be ruled out because cracks in food pots become ‘house of germs’ and it is near-to-impossible to remove these germs through a simple wash.

Paki Friendship - Healthy lifestyle in middle- age 'can help to ward off Alzheime

Paki Friendship - Healthy lifestyle in middle- age 'can help to ward off Alzheime

A healthy lifestyle in middle- age can help to ward off Alzheimer’s disease, experts have advised.

Keeping trim, regulating blood pressure and lowering cholesterol can all reduce the risk of developing the devastating condition---Rebecca Wood, chief executive of the Alzheimer’s Research Trust, said: “Diet and lifestyle almost certainly plays a part in every person’s Alzheimer’s risk.

“These factors remain a magnet for research because they could offer relatively inexpensive ways to fight a disease that ruins countless lives.

“By taking regular exercise and eating a healthy diet, especially in mid-life, we may help reduce our risk of developing dementia as well as reaping numerous other benefits from living a healthy lifestyle.”

An estimated 820,000 people in Britain are thought to suffer from dementia, of which Alzheimer’s is the most common form.

Paki Friendship - Six ''perfect parenting'' myths revealed

Paki Friendship - Six ''perfect parenting'' myths revealed

Six ''perfect parenting'' myths revealed Perfect parents trying hard to meet their children’s every need may be doing more harm than good, claims a book.

Sydney psychologist Renee Mill said that parents are exhausted and stressed while trying to fulfill every demand of their kids. In her new book, ‘No Sweat Parenting’, Mill has listed out six “perfect parenting” myths.

She writes that this is in a well intentioned but misguided belief that quality time means sitting on the floor playing whatever game their child wants.

Other myths include that parents must be perfect; firm discipline will quash a child’s self-esteem; parenting and adult life have to be conducted separately; parents cannot deprive their kids of material goods; and that parents have to shield children from any problems or disappointments in life.

Mill insists that, with these myths, parents are bringing up a generation of kids believe they are the centre of the universe. "We are growing monsters," the Sydney Morning Herald quoted her as saying.