As we recognize the 20th World AIDS Day tomorrow (Dec. 1, 2007), prevention of HIV/AIDS remains the key strategy for fighting the disease. The promise of a HIV/AIDS vaccine is yet to be delivered. Clinical trials for an AIDS vaccine were halted in September of this year, causing frustration for many researchers and HIV/AIDS patients.
These two clinical trials found that there were more infections among men who got the vaccine - 49 out of 914 - than those receiving a placebo - 33 of 922 (MSNBC). The first trial took place in the United States, Peru, Brazil, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, and Australia. The second trial was conducted in South Africa.
So just how close are we to an effective vaccine against HIV/AIDS? Experts agree that a vaccine would be the best way to fight AIDS, but efforts to develop a vaccine have so far been almost completely ineffective. Dozens of potential vaccines are in trials now, but some say it could still be decades before a vaccine is complete.
Until a vaccine is found, prevention must remain our single defense against AIDS. With many powerful HIV/AIDS-fighting drugs in existence today, the risk of dying from AIDS has decreased but it remains a major threat in many areas of the world. AIDS has killed about 25 million people to date.
On World AIDS Day, we should remember the importance of HIV/AIDS prevention and education. Nearly 40 million people, located in every country in the world, are currently infected with HIV.
For more information on AIDS and HIV/AIDS prevention, visit healia.com.
World AIDS Day HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS prevention
Whether you are cooking or eating this Thanksgiving (or both), one thing to be mindful of is keeping the Thanksgiving Day dinner healthy. It is estimated that a typical Thanksgiving meal contains between 2,000 to 7,000 calories! The average adult should consume between 2,000 to 2,400 calories per day. A Thanksgiving dinner of 7,000 calories is more than three times that!
Needless to say, these meals can pack on a lot of calories so here are a few tips on making your Thanksgiving Day dinner and other meals a healthy one:
For tips on preparing a healthy Thanksgiving meal, take a look at these recipes: http://thanksgiving.betterrecipes.com/healthythanksgivingrecipes.html.
For more information on healthy eating, please visit healia.com.
healthy Thanksgiving dinner healthy eating healthy Thanksgiving cooking tips
Were you one of the many smokers that kicked the smoking habit last Thursday during the Great American Smokeout? November 15, 2007 was this year’s Great American Smokeout day, an annual event held since the 1970s that challenges people to stop using tobacco. The event helps raise awareness about the various ways to stop cigarette smoking.
Tobacco use accounts for at least 30% of all cancer deaths and 87% of lung cancer deaths in the United States (Cancer Facts and Figures 2007). Smoking also damages nearly every organ in the human body and is linked to at least 15 different cancers.
Changing a long-standing health behavior is very difficult but the health benefits of stopping smoking are tremendous. How does quitting smoking improve your health? The American Cancer Society states that when smokers’ quit, the following health benefits can occur:
smoking cessation quit smoking stop cigarette smoking
Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus, MRSA,
staph
infection, “superbug”– these terms have been in the media a lot over the past year and
you may be very concerned about how to prevent staph infections.
MRSA infections are caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus bacteria, which are now responsible for more deaths in the United States each year than AIDS. It has been nicknamed the "superbug" by the media because of its resistance to several commonly used antibiotics.
MRSA is not fundamentally different from other staph infections; it is not more virulent or longer-lived. Instead, the problem with MRSA is that because it does not respond to most antibiotics that are commonly prescribed for staph infections, it often gets a chance to do a lot of damage to the body before doctors realize that it must be treated differently. MRSA can be treated effectively with antibiotics, but it requires the use of more powerful and toxic antibiotics such as vancomycin.
Many healthy people carry staphylococcus aureus bacteria on their skin. Staph bacteria are generally harmless unless they enter the body through a cut or other wound. Even then, they typically cause only minor skin infections in healthy people. But sometimes, usually in older adults and people who are ill or have weakened immune systems, ordinary staph infections can cause serious illness.
Until recently, almost all antibiotic-resistant cases of staph infection occurred inside hospitals. However, MRSA infections contracted outside of hospitals, called community-associated MRSA (CA-MRSA) are becoming more common. The most serious cases of CA-MRSA infection cause a “flesh eating” disease known as necrotizing fasciitis. Such infections must be treated by administering intravenous antibiotics and may require surgery to remove portions of the body infected with MRSA bacteria.
MRSA infections spread through close association such as skin-to-skin contact, contact with skin wounds and through contact with contaminated items, where staph bacteria can live for 24 hours or more. In some cases, staph bacteria can enter healthy, intact skin. The best way to reduce your chance of contracting a MRSA infection is to practice good hygiene. These tips from the Mayo Clinic can help reduce your risk of MRSA infections:
Want to learn more? Ask an Expert at Healia
Health Communities. You can also share your experiences with others in the Healia
Health Community for MRSA.
Photo: Allen W. Mathies, MD, CDC Public Health Image Library
MRSA Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus superbug staph infection
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