Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Bipolar Disorder May Vary Depending on Weight ... - Health.com

bipolar-symptoms-400x400

MONDAY, July 29 (HealthDay News) ? Bipolar disorder develops differently in obese people and among those who binge eat, a new study finds.

Up to 4 percent of Americans have bipolar disorder, a serious mental illness that causes extreme mood swings. Just less than 10 percent of people with bipolar disorder are binge eaters, which the authors of the new study said is a higher rate than in the general population.

This study found that bipolar patients who binge eat are more likely to have other mental health problems, such as suicidal thoughts, psychosis, anxiety disorders and substance abuse.

Obese bipolar patients who do not binge eat are more likely to have serious physical conditions such as arthritis, diabetes, high blood pressure and heart disease.

More women than men with bipolar disorder were binge eaters or obese, according to the study, which was published online recently in the Journal of Affective Disorders.

?The illness is more complicated, and then by definition how you would conceptualize how best to individualize treatment is more complicated,? study co-author Dr. Mark Frye, a psychiatrist and chairman of the psychiatry/psychology department at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., said in a Mayo news release.

?It really underscores the importance of trying to stabilize mood, because we know when people are symptomatic of their bipolar illness their binge frequency is likely to increase,? Frye said. ?We want to work with treatments that can be helpful but not have weight gain as a significant side effect.?

The investigators plan further research to determine whether there is a genetic link between binge eating and bipolar disease.

?Patients with bipolar disorder and binge eating disorder appear to represent a more severely ill population of bipolar patients,? study co-author Dr. Susan McElroy, chief research officer at the Lindner Center of HOPE, in Cincinnati, said in the news release.

?Identification of this subgroup of patients will help determine the underlying causes of bipolar disorder and lead to more effective and personalized treatments,? McElroy said.

More information

The U.S. National Institute of Mental Health has more about bipolar disorder.

Source: http://news.health.com/2013/07/29/bipolar-disorder-may-vary-depending-on-weight-eating-disorders/

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Need help updating your Nexus 4 to Android 4.3?

Nexus 4 about screen

It's important to remember that not everyone's a whiz when it comes to the command-line aspect of Android. And to that end, the fine folks in our forums?? 1.6 million strong and growing?? have you covered.?

The over-the-air update that brings the Nexus 4 to Android 4.3 is pushing out now. But if for some reason you haven't gotten it yet and you don't want to wait any longer,?Phalgun Gujjar in our forums has a nice little tutorial for sideloading the update. No, it doesn't root your phone, and it's really no different than just waiting for the update to push out. It's quick and it's easy and it's a great way to learn one of the basics of working with your Android phone with the command line.

Source: http://www.androidcentral.com/need-help-updating-your-nexus-4-android-43

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Friday, July 26, 2013

Kaspersky reports increase in Apple phishing attempts this year

Kaspersky reports increase in Apple phishing attempts this year

So far this year, Apple customers have been exposed to an increased number of phishing attempts according to a study done by Kaspersky Labs. The study shows a greatly increased number of phishing emails purporting to come from Apple in the first five months of this year when compared to the number of Apple-related phishing attempts detected in 2011. More specifically, Kaspersky seems to be looking at the number of attempts to access phishing sites that have been blocked by their products.

Phishing scams send legitimate (or sometimes not so legitimate) looking emails that appear to come from companies that a person may have a real account with, such as Apple. While the contents of the emails vary, they often provide a link to click asking you to confirm your account, reset your password, or provide some other sensitive information. The biggest reported spike in phishing attempts so far took place last December. The day after iTunes stores launched in 56 new countries, including India, Turkey, Russia and South Africa, Kaspersky saw an all-time high of 900,000 phishing attempts directing users to fake Apple sites.

These phishing emails will usually have a falsified "from" address, such as services@apple.com. People should be careful to not rely on the from address of an email, as they can be easily spoofed. A more reliable source to look at are the raw headers of the email to see the servers that the email has gone through, and where it originated from.

People should also be cautious of the links in these emails. The URL will usually contain Apple in it somewhere to try and trick people into thinking they're on Apple's site, but if you look closely these scam URLs won't have apple.com as the root of the address. It's also a safe bet that if you're clicking on a legitimate link from Apple, you will see a green lock icon up in the address bar of your browser, indicating that the site you are on is using a trusted SSL certificate to encrypt your traffic. Clicking on the icon provides additional information confirming the identity of the site. Phishing sites often employ no SSL, or sometimes they will offer a certificate that is marked as untrusted or unverified.

Finally, unless you were expecting to get an email from Apple, if you recently submitted a request to reset your password for instance, you should probably avoid clicking on the link all-together. Instead, navigate to Apple's site in your browser manually. You can manage your Apple ID at appleid.apple.com. If Apple needs you to add anything to your account or reset any information, you should be able to do it from that site just fine, without needing to click that link in your email. Among other account management features, My Apple ID is also where you can enable two-step verification. Having two-step verification enabled on your account will help make sure that even if you do get tricked by a phishing attack, the scammers won't be able to log in to your account unless they're also in possession of one of your trusted devices, which would be unlikely.

After the recent security threat to Apple's Developer Portal, a number of people have taken to various outlets to report phishing emails they have received. An increase in phishing attempts as a result of the Developer Portal incident is certainly possible, or it could just be that people are more aware of these scams as a result of the threat. Either way, phishing scams aren't going away any time soon and users should remain vigilant in their awareness of such scams even when there have not been any recent threats.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/x1XcVwMKLOY/story01.htm

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The poverty of boycotting Israel

  • 8:46 PM

    Egypt army gives Brotherhood 48 hours for political reconciliation, official says (Reuters)

  • 8:17 PM

    Gunmen kill two Egyptian soldiers in northern Sinai, say sources (Reuters)

  • 7:59 PM

    Hamas shuts Al-Arabiya, other media offices in Gaza (Reuters)

  • 7:53 PM

    Petah Tikva fire extinguished; man found stabbed on scene (Haaretz)

  • 7:26 PM

    One critically wounded in Petah Tikva fire; some feared trapped (Haaretz)

  • 6:53 PM

    Death toll at Spain train disaster rises to 80, official says (Reuters)

  • 6:48 PM

    IMF says still not talking to Egypt's interim government (Reuters)

  • 6:06 PM

    U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry: There is 'no military solution' to Syrian civil war (AP)

  • 5:55 PM

    IDF detains Palestinian suspected of firing on Israeli bus in West Bank (Haaretz)

  • 5:23 PM

    UN chief says over 100,000 people killed in Syria (AP)

  • 4:42 PM

    Car bomb in Damascus suburb kills seven, state media (reuters)

  • 4:16 PM

    Assailants throw stones at bus near Jerusalem's Damascus Gate; several passengers wounded (Haaretz)

  • 3:51 PM

    Syria lashes out at U.S. decision to arm rebels (AP)

  • 3:34 PM

    Tunisia: Opposition leader shot dead (AP)

  • 3:26 PM

    Bulgaria distributes images of Burgas bombing terror suspects (AP)

  • Source: http://haaretz.feedsportal.com/c/34191/f/620529/s/2f24d261/sc/20/l/0L0Shaaretz0N0Copinion0C0Bpremium0E10B537930A/story01.htm

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    Does fracking lead to earthquakes?

    There is mounting evidence that fracking can cause seismic temblors thousands of miles from the site, King writes. The fracking is not the culprit but rather the disposal of the brine used to do it.

    By Llewellyn King,?Guest blogger / July 24, 2013

    A brine injection well owned is seen in Youngstown, Ohio. Fracking water is disposed of in ?injection wells? where tens of thousands of gallons of waste water, chemicals and other impurities that have been picked up are forced into the ground and abandoned.

    Amy Sancetta/AP/File

    Enlarge

    The Arab oil embargo, imposed on the United States 40 years ago this fall, brought the instant chaos of gas lines, dire predictions and a new concentration of political minds on the Middle East. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) became a household word -- and a pejorative one at that. The economy shuddered.?

    Skip to next paragraph OilPrice.com

    offers extensive coverage of all energy sectors from crude oil and natural gas to solar energy and environmental issues. To see more opinion pieces and news analysis that cover energy technology, finance and trading, geopolitics, and sector news, please visit?Oilprice.com.

    Recent posts

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    Although directed against the West for supporting Israel, the embargo unleashed general global frustration with the way U.S. and European oil companies had negotiated contracts and with the modest returns the oil-producing countries were getting for their asset.

    With the largest proven reserves, Saudi Arabia became, in some ways, the most important country on Earth. A small, desert monarchy ? more like medieval than modern monarchies -- was both courted and reviled.

    Even when the embargo was lifted in March 1974, the crisis continued throughout the decade ? and new chaos gripped the world with the Iranian Revolution of 1979. Inflation ravaged the world; in 1974, 24 heads of state lost their jobs due to the inflation.?(Oilprice.com Premium:?Get the same inside information as the CEOs of Exxon, Chevron and BP - as fast as they get it, often before they get it)

    In 1975, Congress converted the Atomic Energy Commission into the Energy Research and Development Administration; later, President Jimmy Carter upped the government role with the creation of the Department of Energy. Congress also, in 1978, passed a rather crazy piece of legislation, long repealed, called the Powerplant and Industrial Fuel Use Act, which posited that natural gas was in such short supply and so precious that it could not be used for much of anything except fertilizer and industrial processes ? no electricity generation, ornamental flames or pilot lights.

    Heroics in Congress did little to fix the situation. But plodding, technological innovation, much of it in government research programs, did. Drilling improved and took a giant step forward with the perfection of horizontal drilling. Also the old oilfield practice of geological fracturing (fracking) improved substantially, opening a bonanza of new oil and gas and changing the face of oil and gas production by putting shale deposits into big-time play.

    The world energy picture is turned upside down now. The impossible in 1973 ? energy self-sufficiency for the United States -- is in sight.

    But all could be lost.

    There is mounting evidence that fracking can cause seismic temblors thousands of miles from the site. The fracking is not the culprit but rather the disposal of the brine used to do it. (Oilprice.com Premium:?Find out first about the latest technology and technology investments being made by energy industry insiders)

    The key ingredient in fracking besides water is sand, which wedges itself between the shale rocks and allows the gas or oil to come out. But sand -- or silicate as the drillers like to call it ? doesn't suspend in water, so chemicals are added. This makes the water useless for other functions and it is disposed of in ?injection wells? where tens of thousands of gallons of waste water, chemicals and other impurities that have been picked up are forced into the ground and abandoned. There are thousands and thousands of these waste-water dump wells across the United States.

    Now comes a study, conducted by England's Durham University and published in the journal Science, which confirms that seismic activity, and possibly major earthquakes, can be triggered by injection wells, banned in the United Kingdom and elsewhere in Europe. Sadly, many drillers have reacted with denial. The industry should throw a lot of science at the problem quickly, before a major event is blamed on fracking and the brave new world of abundance is shut down.

    The nuclear industry, always sure of its safety, responded to the Three Mile Island accident in 1979 by vastly improving that safety regime and establishing new national and international institutions devoted solely to best practices and enhanced safety. After the Japanese experience at Fukushima Daiichi, the nuclear world again tightened its standards and expectations.
    But it has never totally regained public confidence, and that is important.

    If fracking could, as the Durham study suggests, lead to a major earthquake, that event would be as catastrophic for shale oil and gas recovery as Three Mile Island was for nuclear power. And if the public comes to believe that earthquakes are triggered by fracking, then the hope of energy independence will be doomed and the 1970s could be replayed.
    Source:?https://oilprice.com/Energy/Natural-Gas/What-Shale-Oil-and-Gas-Can-Learn-from-Nuclear.html

    The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best energy bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here. To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on the link in the blog description box above.

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/I1mGekPgp2s/Does-fracking-lead-to-earthquakes

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    Thursday, July 25, 2013

    BASF Q2 profit dips amid patchy global economy

    (AP) ? Chemicals and oil company BASF SE warned Thursday that it will find it more difficult to achieve its full-year profit target as it reported a 4.2 percent fall in second-quarter earnings due to weaker demand in an uneven global economy.

    Following the warning, BASF shares fell 4 percent to 67.09 euros in morning trading in Frankfurt.

    Net profit fell 4.2 percent to 1.16 billion euros ($1.53 billion) even as revenues rose 2.9 percent to 18.35 billion euros.

    The company, based in Ludwigshafen, Germany, said it saw thinner profit margins on some products in its basic chemicals division such as caprolactam, the raw material for a widely used form of nylon that goes into everything from lingerie to tires.

    It also said its business in more extensively processed chemical products saw "intense competition in some product lines." That division also saw euro earnings reduced by a weaker yen, while its year-earlier earnings were boosted by insurance payments for damage suffered from Japan's earthquake and tsunami disaster.

    CEO Kurt Bock said the economic environment "remains volatile" with the European economy waning and China "no longer running at full power" at a time when the U.S. expansion was only moderate. The company was "clearly feeling these effects," he said.

    Bock said the company still expected to increase sales and earnings this year but that achieving that target "is significantly more challenging today" than expected at the beginning of the year.

    BASF lowered its estimate for global economic growth this year to 2.0 percent from 2.4 percent and for industrial production to 2.7 percent from 3.4 percent.

    The company makes raw materials for a huge range of products including pharmaceuticals, plastics, textiles, paint, auto parts, and construction materials. It also produces farm chemicals and oil and gas.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-07-25-EU-Germany-Earns-BASF/id-914c4a3054364435be728b9190b38fb0

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    Wednesday, July 24, 2013

    Friday, July 12, 2013 | GreenStar Enterprise

    [unable to retrieve full-text content]They are offered an opportunity to learn and develop entrepreneurial business skills, and become advocates for environmental and health issues amongst their peers and within their community. The Green Star Enterprise program presents youth from diverse backgrounds the opportunity to learn and ... to participate in self-employment activities centered on environmental themes and community gardening. Promote healthy lifestyle through nutrition and fitness.

    Source: http://gsegarden.wordpress.com/2013/07/23/friday-july-12-2013/

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    Tuesday, July 23, 2013

    Body acceptance and self-esteem in men - Health, Fitness, and Sports

    puddingmouse
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    PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2013 1:23 pm?? ?Post subject: Body acceptance and self-esteem in men Reply with quote

    I'm starting to be more and more aware of this as an issue. I had a boyfriend who had always struggled with his weight but got bigger over time. His body acceptance was zero and it interfered with his sexual appetite (and consequently ended the relationship.) Looking back and seeing it for what it is, this makes me sad. I'm not saying that being obese is good for health, but that everyone, male or female, should like their body.

    I see men are under a lot of pressure to have a certain body now more than they did 15 years ago. It's good if men want to work out to be healthy, but I see some unhealthy attitudes and practices developing. The way their self-esteem is affected upsets the way they go about relationships too.

    Thinking of the kind of men I'm attracted to: I like all sorts of body types. I like skinny rockstars and 'bears' just as much (although I'm not a gay man, I can see what gay men see in bears.) I also like athletic people like runners and cyclists. I even like a geeky computer guys with a 24 BMI and little man boobies (this is probably because I would probably look like this if I was a guy and was back down to my normal weight) Laughing

    Men are so insecure and try to bravado it away with 'bro' culture and if they're fat, laughing it off and being 'comedic' fat guys. It's much more acceptable to call a man a 'fat bastard' than it is to say a woman is fat. Their are tonnes of body acceptance blogs and sites for women but not for men. There's this idea that a woman can be hot if she's big, because she can be a BBW and have curves, but big men are just gross unless they have an unhealthily low body fat % and turn all the bulk into muscle.

    This affects women, as well because women have relationships with these insecure guys. Also, I see body acceptance as a societal thing that men and women need to do together or not at all.

    I think women (or men) should never:

    1. Call a man a 'fat bastard'.
    2. Sing the 'who ate all the pies' song at a man (this is a popular British song used to make fun of fat people, it's nearly always sung at men.)
    3. Make fun of ectomorph men who take their top off and reveal a skinny chest and arms.
    4. Make fun of endomorph men who don't have the societally required muscle definition to take their top off.
    5. Refer to thin men as 'Skeletor' or a 'bag of bones'.

    And I'm sure there are a few others. Who's with me?
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    PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2013 6:56 pm?? ?Post subject: Re: Body acceptance and self-esteem in men Reply with quote

    puddingmouse wrote:
    I'm starting to be more and more aware of this as an issue. I had a boyfriend who had always struggled with his weight but got bigger over time. His body acceptance was zero and it interfered with his sexual appetite (and consequently ended the relationship.) Looking back and seeing it for what it is, this makes me sad. I'm not saying that being obese is good for health, but that everyone, male or female, should like their body.

    I see men are under a lot of pressure to have a certain body now more than they did 15 years ago. It's good if men want to work out to be healthy, but I see some unhealthy attitudes and practices developing. The way their self-esteem is affected upsets the way they go about relationships too.

    To me there seems to be a trend in media, movies, TV, to feature more muscular men than in the nineties. The "ideal" man seems to have grown in muscle mass.

    The trend amongst the general public seems to be that people are getting fatter. The number of people having the normal body type (that most everyone had before) men generally had doing manual labour seems to me to be rapidly declining. This pressure you speak of may reflect that, and when most everyone had the normal body type there would be no need for such pressure.

    What seems to be strongly trending where I live is the fitness culture amongst most between 16 and 30, or somewhere there about. A seriously large number of girls now hit the gym and it wasn't like that 5 or 10 years ago. Number of gyms have doubled in 2 years and what a 20 year old girl considers a desirable body is way off what it was 10 years ago. This has nothing to do with being overweight but about being "tight", or what they call it... This could be a worrying trend if a normal slim teenage girls feels she doesn't have the muscle tone that is becoming the norm or trend.

    puddingmouse wrote:
    of the kind of men I'm attracted to: I like all sorts of body types. I like skinny rockstars and 'bears' just as much (although I'm not a gay man, I can see what gay men see in bears.) I also like athletic people like runners and cyclists. I even like a geeky computer guys with a 24 BMI and little man boobies (this is probably because I would probably look like this if I was a guy and was back down to my normal weight)

    A BMI of 23-24 seems to be what is generally considered desirable for men, with a BMI on the lower end being desirable for women, like 19-21.

    The picture of the geek is more like being way heavier than 24, like obese, or on the low to end of the scale.

    puddingmouse wrote:
    Men are so insecure and try to bravado it away with 'bro' culture and if they're fat, laughing it off and being 'comedic' fat guys. It's much more acceptable to call a man a 'fat bastard' than it is to say a woman is fat. Their are tonnes of body acceptance blogs and sites for women but not for men. There's this idea that a woman can be hot if she's big, because she can be a BBW and have curves, but big men are just gross unless they have an unhealthily low body fat % and turn all the bulk into muscle.

    This affects women, as well because women have relationships with these insecure guys. Also, I see body acceptance as a societal thing that men and women need to do together or not at all.


    Depending on where you live, but being fat isn't something few are. In the US 64% were overweight, obese or pre-obese, 10 years ago. Likely significantly higher now and about a third being obese now. Most of western Europe isn't that far behind. With every second or so guy being a bit overweight it can't possibly have the same stigma attached to it as being an aspie, being gay, deaf, etc.

    People get the weirdest ideas. This advocacy of being big could be dangerous to some degree. Even losing a little could have positive effect on health. Everyone knows being obese negatively effects health, and advocating the likes of obesity, smoking, drugs, alcohol, speeding, etc., probably shouldn't be done. This may be stretching what you were meaning, and I'm sorry about that, but after watching a few programmes about BBWs, acceptance and such, it did seem a strange culture. Either way society's pressure should not be making people feel bad and get depressed because they don't conform and have trouble shedding their weight. One is what one is and you have to be happy about that and accept yourself.

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    PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2013 10:02 pm?? ?Post subject: Reply with quote

    Eh, I feel there should be moderation for accepting the body completely. There is a very unhealthy culture of accepting unhealthy lifestyles etc, "thin privilege" and all that.

    I had health and self-esteem issues in the past, I am at least proud of my 100lbs weight loss. My sense of being now feels pretty good. It is a shame that there are people that accept their unhealthy bodies as fate and that everyone else is wrong, I wouldn't be surprised this type of inflamed attitude is killing people.

    Balance, moderation and promoting general good health is key. From experiences, Take full self-confidence within yourself but also take responsibility of health.


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    Source: http://www.wrongplanet.net/postt236079.html

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