Reasons to Consider Alcohol Detox

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :

Alcohol detox can help those who are dependent on alcohol to stop drinking.

Alcohol detox is when you take a short course of medication to minimise the worst effects of alcohol withdrawal. Alcohol detox does not magically stop someone drinking but gets alcohol out of their system so they can focus on rehabilitation and life without drink.

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If you're regularly drinking heavily, you could be seriously risking your health and even your job, relationships and mental health. Drinking above the limits outlined by the Government can be potentially hazardous - currently the limits are 21 units of alcohol per week for men and 14 for women (with no more than four or three units per day respectively).

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Reasons to Consider Alcohol Detox

Minimise alcohol health risks

The health risks associated with heavy drinking are reason enough alone to consider alcohol detox. It increases the risks of developing serious illness such as cirrhosis of the liver, pancreatic damage, some cancers, heart conditions and more.

Statistics suggest that a third of men and one in seven women regularly drink too much. Experts suggest that the more alcohol you drink, the greater the risks to your health.

Avoid personal problems

As well as health issues, problem drinking can also trigger a range of personal problems. For example, people who get very drunk may say or do things which they regret. Heavy drinking is often associated with violence and arguments.

In addition heavy drinking can cause people to miss work or not perform as well as usual when they are there.

Heavy drinking can also cause problems between friends, couples and families. Others may become annoyed by someone's drinking and alcoholism can also lead to secrecy and lying which weakens trust in relationships.

Alcohol is expensive and those who are dependent on alcohol may find that they are spending more than they can afford on drink. Debt or lack of money can cause stress which then encourages more drinking, leading to a vicious cycle.

Beat alcohol addiction

In many cases, alcohol detox as well as therapy and aftercare can help people beat alcohol addiction and stay off drink permanently. Many people who are alcoholic drink every day and often drink to beat unpleasant (and potentially very serious) withdrawal symptoms. It's estimated that around 2% of women are alcoholics and up to 6% of men.

It's important to note that anyone who is dependent on alcohol should always seek medical advice before stopping drinking. You may well be able to do it at home but a doctor will ensure that you stop drinking safely - suddenly stopping can be very dangerous.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Reasons to Consider Alcohol Detox

To Be or Not To Be: Low Carb...

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I get asked all the time, "what do you think about the Atkin's Diet?". Well, as a Nutritional Bio-Chemist, my opinion and answer to that question would have to be a biochemical response.

First of all, lets start with the foundation of the Atkins Diet. Robert Atkins did not invent the Low Carb diet. It was first administered over 80 years ago by John Hopkins Medical School and Hospital for the treatment of pediatric Epilepsy. It was then modified for the U.S. Air Force long before Robert Atkins picked it up to modify it once again.

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Our bodies run on glucose as a fuel. We can not store glucose and have enough for about 24 hours. When we have no food for 24 hours, the body turns to burn fat for energy and this is called Ketosis. By having a diet at 80% fat, and these are the right type of fats, some protein and almost no carbohydrates, the body remains in Ketosis and the pH of the blood can change, which can alleviate seizures, either the severity or the occurrence all together.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :To Be or Not To Be: Low Carb...

It is speculated to work because the pancreas has no or low signal to release insulin to counter or escort the glucose into the cells. Keeping the insulin steady in the system will not trigger seizures in the brain.

Like in all things, an excess can bring on side-effects. Some side effects of a Low Carb or Ketogenic Diet may include kidney stones and gall stones, some women may have menstrual irregularities. Because of the amount of fat and protein in the diet, some may suffer from Pancreatitis or inflammation of the pancreas, because there is an increase of fat, some minerals will not absorb correctly, so there can be decreased bone density and sometimes eye problems, sometimes there is a high level of fat build up in the blood, especially if the person is deficient in certain digestive enzymes. All these side effects can be very serious and that is why the Ketogenic Diet has always been administered by Nutritional-Medical professionals within the care of a hospital.

Low Carb or No Carb diets can be deceiving, especially since the goal is to keep the blood glucose levels steady.
There are some sugar substitutes that are 50% protein, this protein can cause an increase of activity within the cell. As any diabetic can tell you, the use of Aspartame, which is 50 percent phenylalanine, can cause the blood sugar to go out of control. Phenylalanine should not be taken by pregnant women or by people who suffer from anxiety attacks, diabetes, high blood pressure, phenylketonuria (PKU), or preexisting pigmented melanoma, a type of skin cancer, this is directed by the medical and medical research community.
Aspertame also is made up of Aspartic Acid and methyl alcohol or wood alcohol. So, not only do you have the risk of toxicity because of the amino acid phenylalanine, you also have methanol which is considered poisonous even in small amounts. Methanol can cause blindness, brain swelling, and inflammation of the pancreas and heart muscle.

Splenda or Sucralose has still other problems, it was not studied thoroughly before the FDA approved it. Under scrutiny of the biochemical community, especially after Aspertame was approved without long term study, the following has been noted, this taken from the http://www.low-carbdiet.co.uk/splenda.htm website.

"...Few human studies of safety have been published on sucralose. One small study of diabetic patients using the sweetener showed a statistically significant increase in glycosylated hemoglobin (Hba1C), which is a marker of long-term blood glucose levels and is used to assess glycemic control in diabetic patients. According to the FDA, "increases in glycosolation in hemoglobin imply lessening of control of diabetes.

Research in animals has shown that sucralose can cause many problems in rats, mice, and rabbits, such as:

Shrunken thymus glands (up to 40% shrinkage)

Enlarged liver and kidneys.

Atrophy of lymph follicles in the spleen and thymus

Increased cecal weight

Reduced growth rate

Decreased red blood cell count

Hyperplasia of the pelvis

Extension of the pregnancy period

Aborted pregnancy

Decreased fetal body weights and placental weights

Diarrhea

According to one source (Sucralose Toxicity Information Center), concerning the significant reduction in size of the thymus gland, "the manufacturer claimed that the sucralose was unpleasant for the rodents to eat in large doses and that starvation caused the shrunken thymus glands.

[Toxicologist Judith] Bellin reviewed studies on rats starved under experimental conditions, and concluded that their growth rate could be reduced by as much as a third without the thymus losing a significant amount of weight (less than 7 percent). The changes were much more marked in rats fed on sucralose. While the animals' growth rate was reduced by between 7 and 20 percent, their thymuses shrank by as much as 40 percent. (New Scientist 23 Nov 1991, pg 13)"

A compound chemically related to sucrose, 6-chloro-deoxyglucose, is known to have anti-fertility and neurotoxic effects, although animal studies of sucralose have not shown these effects.
According to the FDA's "Final Rule" report, "Sucralose was weakly mutagenic in a mouse lymphoma mutation assay." The FDA also reported many other tests as having "inconclusive" results.
Just how few studies currently exist on sucralose is an issue. Endurance News provides the following table illustrating this fact:

Sweetener + # of Studies*

Saccharin

2374

Aspartame

598

Cyclamates

459

Acesulfame-K

28

Sucralose

19

*Number of studies determined by MEDLINE search.

In terms of safety, it is not just the original substance (sucralose) that one needs to worry about. As the FDA notes, "Because sucralose may hydrolyze in some food products...the resulting hydrolysis products may also be ingested by the consumer."

I went into a forum looking for research information. There were many comments about Sucralose, most saying that if there was negative information about a product, that it was bogus because the FDA would have never approved it. The FDA approved the drug combination of Phen-Fen, which caused heart problems for thousands of people, some irreversible. Sure, it helped them to lose weight, but they didn't have their health to live it after words.

Then we have Sugar Alcohols, like...sorbitol, xylitol, mannitol, lactitol, maltitol and others.

Sugar alcohols are alcohols that are derived from sugar molecules. They are a carbohydrate, but according to the FDA, sugar alcohols have a very small impact on blood sugar levels and insulin release in the body. They are incompletely absorbed from the small intestine into the blood and as a result, they have a lesser impact on blood glucose levels. Some of the polyol that is not absorbed into the blood is broken down into fatty acids in the large intestine and sugar alcohols do contain calories, about three-fourths as many as sugar. Since they are incompletely absorbed by the intestine, over-consumption may produce a laxative effect in some people. Sugar alcohols can also act as "trigger foods," causing carbohydrate cravings or binges and there is some evidence to suggest that products containing polyols may actually defer weight loss efforts. In some people, sugar alcohols can have uncomfortable side effects, such as bloating and gas. Some diabetics also report elevated blood sugars when eating some low carbohydrate products, particularly sugar alcohol containing candies.

So is the "Low Carb" diet or diets the answer for weight loss and glucose control. As a biochemist, I would have to say no. Because different carbohydrates absorb differently in individuals, you can not count on those types of food and calumniated absorption rates. The only way that you can tell what that food, and combinations of foods will do to your body, it to actually test the blood in 15 minute increments for a period of 2 to 3 hours. If your blood remains steady, then that food, that amount of food, or that combination of food will not be detrimental.
Along with many scientists in this field, I too have written the FDA to appeal for better labeling for the public. The "Low-Carb" label is deceptive and damaging for those who rely on blood glucose control for quality of life. To say that a product is Low-Carb doesn't mean that it is low in calories, will not affect your blood sugar, or is even healthy. As a matter of fact, most of the time's when something suggests that it is "Low-Carb" it is a product that should be heavily scrutinized and avoided.

And as far as the new craze of Glycemic Index or Glucose diet. This is a very expensive diet to be on because of the supply of Glucometers, Glucose Sticks and time it takes to test, but a much safer method and more conclusive method of dieting in order to keep your carbohydrate intake under control and your blood sugar under control. As a scientist the only problem that I have with the GI or Canadian diet is that products and manufacturers who label a product as low, medium or High Glycemic Index do not have a standard of calculating those numbers. There are 8 different ways to calculate what a Glycemic Index is, and none of them are wrong. Some are more correct than others, but depending on what method you use, algebraic or Calculus and for what you are testing for, will determine if those numbers are correct. Don't get me wrong, Glycemic Indexing is much more correct than calculating "net carbs" or determining if something is "Low Carb", because you have proven results from a field of subjects to tell you how the product will be absorb from true blood glucose numbers. Because this method allows you to see actual results from what was ingested, you can believe that you are eating right and maintaining better health.

For the most part, people ask me about Dieting because they want to be thin and healthy, but being healthy is not just about this diet or that diet. Being healthy has to do with lifestyle more than anything else. Eating a diet of functional foods, healthy foods, non-processed foods, being active and interactive, and being relaxed and well rested has a lot to do with how your body will respond as far as health is concerned.
Do I recommend a "Diet", not necessarily, what I recommend is a lifestyle for better health that is as individual as the person it is designed for. How do you do that? You need to not only look at your body type, but your genetic background, your personality and your day to day habits. You can work on your taste in foods first. To get away from the sweets, salt and processing, you can start by eliminating the processed foods out of your diet. Remember when you had "home cooked meals from scratch", a salad "out of the garden", made Jams and Jellies from the fruit off the trees in Grandma's yard? These tasted better and were better than those we buy off the shelf now days. It takes a lot of time, but the time spent in eating better will pay off in the retirement years. The next step would be to get active, exercise, go for a walk everyday, chase your children around the yard with a football, walk the mall with your daughters or your grand baby in a stroller, ride your bikes as a family, play soccer in the backyard with your kids, play a game of catch with your son, all these will improve your bodies response to some many things. Start slow with things, take your personality and your job into account so that it will be a lifestyle of habit and happiness, not a routine of forced misery.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :To Be or Not To Be: Low Carb...

Death by Cigarettes

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It has long been known that smoking and lung cancer are causally linked. After having discovered this association though, much has been made of the heightened incidence of other forms of cancer caused by of smoking. I am going to highlight the data that reiterates the claims and suggest that the evidence is not so strong for other forms of cancer being causally linked with smoking. The evidence is analysed from the mortality statistics for the UK in 2002.

I will work through the statistics because 26% of the population are smokers and so one might reasonably assume that any incidence of cancer where less than 26% of sufferers are smokers may have other more prevalent causes than smoking.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics

Firstly, we will deal with the cancer deaths so lets get underway with the 33,600 deaths from lung cancer. 84% of these deaths were in smokers. This means that the average 26% of the smoking population yielded more than three times the proportion of deaths - a clear link.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Death by Cigarettes

Oesophageal cancer deaths numbered just under 5,000 and the deceased were found to be 66% smokers, 71% and 65% men to women respectively; again another clear link that smoking and oesophageal cancer are linked.

Next, bladder cancer takes over 1,800 lives per year of which 37% are found to be smokers. However, only 19% of female cases were smokers compared with 47% of male cases. It is fair to assume that there are other factors more prevalent in female bladder cancer other than smoking but the link is clear in men.

Stomach cancer took 1,650 lives in 2002 but is found in 35% of men compared with only 11% of female smokers. It is reasonable therefore to draw the same conclusion about the causes as for bladder cancer between men and women.

Pancreatic cancer is another cancer that is less prevalent in smokers than the general population. Indeed 20% of men and 26% of women dying from the disease in 2002 were smokers, suggesting parity with women and a disparity with men. It may be reasonable therefore to assume that there are other contributory factors in male pancreatic cancers.

Death from cancer of the upper respiratory tract was found at a rate of 66% in smokers, nearly three times the percentage of smokers. Note though that women sufferers represented half of their cohort compared with three quarters of men, suggesting upper respiratory cancer is more likely in men than in women smokers.

Kidney cancer is another cancer where smokers are seen less frequently than non-smokers in the statistics.

The next disease we shall look at is the non-cancerous, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or COPD. The disease manifests itself mainly in two forms, being emphysema and chronic bronchitis.

Emphysema is the destruction of the lung leading to loss of surface area, alveoli (air sacks in the lungs) and the loss of elasticity. Chronic bronchitis manifests itself through swollen bronchii and over production of mucus within the lung. It is characterised by daily coughing, bringing up sputum. Both emphysema and bronchitis lead to slow, debilitating and frustrating deaths for their victims.

Deaths from COPD in 2002 in the UK numbered 28,500 of which 84% were smokers demonstrating a clear link between the inhalation of tobacco smoke and the disease as is the case with lung cancer.

Some sources suggest that pneumonia is more likely to kill in smokers but only 17% of the 36,000 fatal pneumonia cases were found in smokers suggesting this is not the case.

Finally, heart disease is the biggest single killer in the UK with over a quarter of a million deaths a year as a result of its various forms.

Of all the major forms of heart disease, ischaemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, aortic aneurysm, myocardial degeneration and atherosclerosis, the percentage of smokers suffering from aortic aneuryism was just under 60%. All other forms of heart disease showed near 26% or below. This suggests that smoking may not be the main contributory factor but it almost certainly will have had an impact.

All in all, there were over 114,000 premature deaths in 2002 from cigarette smoking, mostly from cancer, but also from heart disease and pulmonary (lung) disease. The best way to improve ones chances of not suffering from a shortened life and succumbing to one of the diseases mentioned in this article is by quitting smoking once and for all. Benefits have been clearly documented and the sooner smokers quit, the bigger the benefits of quitting become on their life expectancy. Indeed, smokers who quit before they reach thirty, statistically negate virtually all the ill health effect of smoking and can generally expect to live as long as a non-smoking contemporary.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Death by Cigarettes

Even The Elderly Can Fight Back Against Cancer

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It was not so long ago that an elderly person suffering from cancer would have received limited treatment and been sent home to die.

"The common thoughts used to be that it wasn't worth treating cancer in older patients; that they'd lived their lives; they might be dying anyway; they couldn't tolerate the treatment; the treatment might adversely affect their quality of life; or that they didn't want to live with the side effects of treatment," said Gary Shapiro, MD, chairman of the department of oncology at Johns Hopkins Bayview and co-founder of its Geriatric Oncology program.

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That would not have been particularly good news to people like Charlotte, an 83-year-old local woman who five years ago was diagnosed with breast cancer. Today, after surgery and chemotherapy, Charlotte remains in remission and lives an active live that includes traveling, taking adult education classes, gardening and spending quality time with her children and grandchildren.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Even The Elderly Can Fight Back Against Cancer

Nor, would it have been good news to a neighbor of Charlotte's, 91-year-old Gordon, who was diagnosed with prostate cancer when he was 85. In the past, the philosophy was that with a slow growing tumor like this, there would be no reason to intervene. Gordon's physician, however, convinced the tumor was aggressive, suggested an intensive protocol of radiation. Six years later, he is still driving, playing an occasional round of golf and competing in bridge tournaments.

When Charlotte was first diagnosed with cancer, her children's first thought was that they didn't want to put their mother through any rigorous regimen that would affect her quality of life. Only after the oncologist, who had considerable experience in working with geriatric patients, assured them that he thought Charlotte was healthy enough to cope with the treatment and had a good prognosis, did they feel comfortable with having her undergo treatment. Gordon's children were equally concerned about their dad having radiation. He tolerated the treatments well and has not looked back since.

A Disease of Aging
Cancer can strike anyone at any age, but it is considered a disease of aging. The average age of those diagnosed with all types of cancer is 70. Certain cancers, such as breast, colon, prostate, pancreatic, lung, bladder and stomach cancer, are linked to aging. For lung cancer, for example, the average age of onset is 72; for colon cancer it's 71; breast cancer is 68. These statistics notwithstanding, relatively little is known about how cancers develop and progress in older patients or how best to treat them.

What is known is that recent research has shown that many older cancer patients can tolerate more aggressive treatment than they have typically received. Yet, this group of cancer patients has not been studied in proportion to its size so there is still a dearth of information in understanding the functional, physical, mental, pharma-therapeutic and socio-economic factors that affect the course of disease and outcome of treatment decisions.

In many cases, older people with cancer present with other medical conditions as well. They may have heart disease or diabetes, for example, and the cancer may impact those problems, and conversely.

When it comes to treatment for cancer, older adults:

• May be less tolerant of certain cancer treatments
• Have a decreased reserve (i.e. a capacity to respond to disease and treatment)
• Have other medical problems that also need to be treated
• Have functional problems, such as memory loss or an inability with the ADLs.
• May lack any support network

Additionally, medical professionals need to take into account an older patient's susceptibility to falling and breaking a hip, which can greatly compromise cancer treatment. This may mean the need to prescribe physical therapy to increase strength and reduce risks with a patient who may become weaker as a result of treatment.

Similarly, nutrition may pose a problem when it comes to tolerating certain types of treatment. A dietitian may need to create a nutrition program to boost the patient's health status prior to any intervention. A home care professional may be needed to take care of the patient until treatment is completed, particularly for those without any family caregivers living nearby.

Yet, all this notwithstanding, cancer survivors like Charlotte and Gordon, who are both living full lives, are testaments to the need not to write off geriatric cancer patients, but rather to make sure they receive comprehensive assessments in developing the right care plan once they've been diagnosed.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Even The Elderly Can Fight Back Against Cancer

The Causes of Cancer - What Causes This Potentially Deadly Disease?

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Cancer is one of the most lethal medical conditions, even though different traditional and alternative treatments are available. Following logic, the best way for prevention is to know and recognize the causes of cancer. For this reason, it is perfectly natural for you to ask what causes this condition.

Despite the extensive research and the constant advancement of science, the causes of most types of cancer remain unknown. This group includes some of the most common types of cancer, such as breast cancer, prostate cancer and colorectal cancer. However, thanks to research and medical observation, the main risk factors for many different types of cancer have been identified.

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It is important to differentiate between causes of cancer and risk factors. If you have the risk factors, you are more likely to develop the condition. However, this does not mean that you will get it. In fact, for some types, such as oral cancer, approximately 25% of all patients have not been at higher risk before being diagnosed with the condition.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :The Causes of Cancer - What Causes This Potentially Deadly Disease?

Simply put, no one is perfectly safe from getting such a disease. Despite this, provided that you know the risk factors, you can work to eliminate them and reduce your risk of developing cancer. It should be pointed out that some factors can be eliminated, while others cannot.

Smoking and cigarette smoking to be exact, is identified as the single most significant factor leading to lung cancer. Statistics show that it is responsible for over 85% of all cases. A large number of the remaining 15% of the cases are due to passive smoking and cigar and tobacco smoking. In fact, over 1,000 passive smokers die of lung cancer each year. Smoking can also increase the risk of other types of cancer, such as kidney, pancreatic, stomach and cervical cancer. For this reason, not smoking is one of the most effective ways for prevention.

Above normal weight and obesity are other serious risk factors. They increase the risk of breast, colon, kidney, endometrial and prostate cancer. The level of risk is not the same for all conditions. Even though obesity cannot be linked directly to other types of cancer other than endometrial cancer, it can reduce your health risk significantly in general. For this reason losing weight through a low-calorie diet and exercise is particularly important.

In fact, the diet can also be considered to lead to increased risk of cancer, even though it is certainly not considered to be one of the causes of cancer. According to researchers the diet full of animal fats increases the risk of prostate cancer. Similarly, a diet low in fiber may put you at higher risk of colorectal cancer. That is why a healthy diet rich in fruits and vegetables is essential.

Recent studies show that alcohol consumption can also be a risk factor for different types of cancer. It has been discovered that women who consume more than one drink every day are more likely to develop breast cancer. For this reason, avoiding drinking can be beneficial.

Exposure to the sun is the main cause of skin cancer. You can protect yourself by avoiding sun exposure and sunbathing in the afternoon. Wearing sunscreen and protective clothing is a must.

Exposure to radiation is another one of the most significant cancer risk factors. Other factors, such as exposure to asbestos are equally risky. Still, such exposures are rare in general.

Some viruses are directly or indirectly responsible for cancer development. For instance, some HPV virus infections, considered sexually transmitted diseases, can lead to cervical cancer. In addition, a person suffering from hepatitis is more likely to develop liver cancer.

Aging is not one of the causes of cancer, but the risk of most types increases with age. This can be explained by the fact that cells become more vulnerable to factors that can cause a change in their DNA structure as the body ages. In turn, they are more likely to become abnormal and to grow into a malignant tumor.

Genetics may be one of the causes of cancer. Many types of cancer are known to run in families. For example, a woman's risk of breast cancer increases around two times, if she has a mother, sister or daughter who has or has had the condition. Regrettably, researchers are still working to discover the exact genes that can lead to the growth of tumors. Despite this, individuals in higher risk can have medical screenings more regularly, as a form of prevention.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :The Causes of Cancer - What Causes This Potentially Deadly Disease?

The Danger Of Alcoholism Binge Drinking

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Alcoholism binge drinking is one of the known public health issue today. Recognizing the root of this kind of problem will save not only your own life but people who love you the most.

Many people do not think that they have an issue with alcohol because they only drink occasionally but research proves that even consuming too much alcohol when drinking occasionally could be detrimental to ones health.

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Alcoholism binge drinking was defined by The National Institute on Alcohol and alcoholism as a blueprint of the consumption of alcohol that can cause your blood alcohol concentration level to increase; (BAC) to 0.08% or higher.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :The Danger Of Alcoholism Binge Drinking

The pattern is equivalent to four or more alcoholic beverages for women and five or more for men in just a certain occasion. Too much drinking is also associated with this kind of addiction.

In short, the above mentioned pertains to when guy drinks ten or more alcoholic beverages and eight or more for a girl. It is very dangerous to your health.

As what is mentioned above this disorder may trigger some health problems and may bring your life to danger. Some of these major health risks are heart attack, alcohol abuse, and it may harm a developing fetus in a women's womb. Other problems that may occur are pancreatitis, cancers, high blood pressure, liver cirrhosis and psychological problem.

Injuries like vehicular accidents, drowning, and accidentally shot by someone are some risk associated with it. It may take your life or bring it in danger.

Alcoholism binge drinking not only affects the body physically because it also puts someone at risk for mental and social disorders. Statistics have proven that individuals involved in alcoholism binge drinking tend to have financial issues combined with social issues when interacting with friends or family. It is a terrible disorders that is extremely dangerous and can hurt others around. Receiving proper treatment will greatly assist in someone who is suffering from this kind of disorder.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :The Danger Of Alcoholism Binge Drinking

Cancer and Green Tea - Sorting Through The Evidence

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By now most of us have heard that green tea may have tremendous potential in terms of helping us win the war against cancer. There have been many studies that have shown that green tea has been shown to prevent the development of cancer when it is a significant part of your diet. In addition, there have even been studies that have shown that green tea may even have potential for treating cancer.

But, then occasionally you'll find a study that makes it sound as though green tea may actually have some negative effects on our health. So, it can be easy to get confused as to whether we really should be adding green tea to our diets for health benefits or not.

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Here are a few things that are known for sure.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Cancer and Green Tea - Sorting Through The Evidence

Anti-oxidants are good for us. They combat the free radicals that are created in our bodies as we process food. When our diet is low in anti-oxidants the free radicals damage our cells and our DNA. Over time this leads to aging and disease.

Tea contains EGCG and polyphenols. These are two of the most potent forms of anti-oxidants, making tea, particularly green tea, because of its lack of fermentation, rich in the substance that protect us from aging and disease.

There are no known side effects to drinking green tea. Green tea is lower in caffeine that coffee or black tea, so it's a good beverage choice for those who must watch their intake of caffeine. And, it's completely natural. A simple cup of tea will have no additives, preservatives or processed substances.

Asian cultures drink a large amount of green tea and have a significantly lower than incidence of cancer, heart disease and stroke. Of course, there may be other factors in the Asian lifestyle that affect their lower incidence of disease. However, there are some statistics that are startling. For instance, nearly 75% of all Japanese men smoke, yet their risk of lung cancer and heart disease is significantly lower than that of American men.

It's true that we still need additional research on humans to gain more conclusive evidence about green tea and its potential in preventing or treating cancer.

Many of the studies that have been conducted have been on mice. Human research takes years of follow up to be conclusive and is more difficult than laboratory research. And, there are many more factors that must be considered during human studies, such as habits and genetics.

One interesting discussion of the studies that have been performed on green tea and their results, both positive and negative, is in the National Library of Medicine. This publication gave an overview of several studies done on green tea and cancer. The breakdown looks like this.

In 5 studies on colon cancer, three concluded that it might prevent cancer, one concluded that green tea might contribute to cancer.

In 4 studies on rectal cancer, one reported that green tea could prevent cancer, but two showed that it might actually contribute to developing the disease.

In 10 studies on stomach cancer, 6 suggested that green tea might prevent cancer and 3 suggested that it might contribute to cancer. The most comprehensive study on stomach cancer reported that green tea is an effective preventer of cancer.

Nearly all studies on pancreatic and esophageal cancer suggest that green tea has a preventative effect, and most lung cancer studies have shown positive results, though there has been at least one study that reported and increased risk associated with green tea.

So, as with many other health research concerns, there is still much work that needs to be done. And, there have been a few studies that have shown a possibility that green tea might actually increase your risk of cancer. However, when you take the research as a whole, it seems probable that you're better off drinking green tea than avoiding it.

As research continues, we'll learn more definitive information about the level of protection that green tea can provide, and just exactly how it provides this protection. As we learn more, we'll be better able to determine how much tea you really need to drink and on which cancers it seems to be most effective.

In spite of the few studies that have shown some negative results, overall researchers believe that green tea shows great promise in the area of cancer prevention and treatment. For centuries, Asians have used green tea to prevent and treat all kinds of illnesses, even before there was scientific research to support it.

In the mean time, there seems to be no reason to avoid green tea. It's refreshing, has no side effects and can be a great way to lower your intake of caffeine. Keep your eyes out for the new research findings as they emerge - it's sure to be exciting to find out all the potential that lies in green tea.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Cancer and Green Tea - Sorting Through The Evidence

What Are the Different Types of Cancer? Find Out All You Need to Know

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :

We do not know many things about cancer, even though research is extensive and ongoing. One of the things we do not know is why some types of cancer are more frequently occurring than other types. Despite this, it is worth learning more about the different types of cancer. In this way, you will be able to take more adequate and timely measures for prevention.

Lung cancer is the most common type of cancer. In the Unites States the estimated number of new cases for 2010 is 222,520. The projected number of deaths from this disease is 157,300. This statistical data is quite frightening for one simple reason - the expected deaths are more than half of the newly diagnosed cases.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics

The surprising fact is that even though it is the most common type, lung cancer is perhaps the most preventable type of all. Anywhere between 85% and 90% of all cases are due to cigarette smoking. A large percentage of the remaining cases are due to passive smoking. In turn, the best way for prevention is to protect your lungs from the carcinogenic substances in tobacco. Nonsmoking can reduce the risk of getting the condition 25 times. A smoker who quits will experience a reduction in the risk to this level 15 years after quitting. For this reason, if you are a smoker you should do your best to quit right away.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :What Are the Different Types of Cancer? Find Out All You Need to Know

Prostate cancer is the second most common type of cancer. In fact, some researchers believe that almost every man above the age of 80 has some traces of it. The condition is expected to affect around 217,730 men in America in 2010. The number of deaths for this year is estimated to be 32,050.

Prostate cancer develops in the prostate, a small gland that is right under the bladder. It is close to the rectum as well. For this reason, the condition can be easily spotted during a routine rectal exam. Since the causes of this disease are unknown, regular rectal examinations are the optimal method for prevention. Men over 50 years of age are recommended to have them annually. Other factors that can reduce the risk of prostate cancer include a diet that contains little or no animal fats.

Breast cancer is the third most common type of cancer. It has been estimated that the number of newly diagnosed patients for 2010 in the United States will be over 208,000. Of these 207,090 will be women and 1,970 will be men. Around 39,840 female patients are expected to die from the condition. The number of deaths in men is expected to be around 390.

The causes of breast cancer are unknown. For this reason, there are no effective methods for prevention apart from having regular screenings with mammogram testing. Self-examination is also a method for spotting the condition early. There are some breast cancer risk factors that you can work on to eliminate. These include obesity, above average alcohol consumption and smoking.

Colon and rectal cancer, usually referred to as colorectal cancer is another one of the most common types of cancer. It is expected to affect around 142,570 men and women in the United States in 2010. The estimated number of deaths is 51,370.

The causes of colorectal cancer are unknown. However, the risk of getting this condition can be reduced significantly. Regular screening is recommended to individuals who have or have a family history of colon polyps. A diet rich in dietary fiber, found in fruits and vegetables, can also reduce your risk to an extent. It is important for you to see a doctor, if you notice a change in your bowel habits or blood in your stools. These symptoms can be associated with much less dangerous conditions, such as hemorrhoids, but it is best to get examined just to be on the safe side.

Other common types of cancer include bladder cancer, with 70,530 new cases expected in 2010 in the US, and melanoma, the most serious type of skin cancer, with 68,130 new cases estimated for 2010. The list is completed by Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma, cancer of the lymphatic system, kidney cancer, also known as renal cell cancer, thyroid cancer, endometrial cancer, pancreatic cancer and leukemia.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :What Are the Different Types of Cancer? Find Out All You Need to Know

Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :

Diabetes affects the manner in which the body handles digested carbohydrates. If neglected, diabetes can cause serious health complications, ranging from blindness to kidney failure.

Approximately 8% of the population in the United States has diabetes. This means that approximately 16 million people have been diagnosed with the disease, based only on national statistics. The American Diabetes Association estimates that diabetes accounts for 178,000 deaths, 54,000 amputees, and 12,000-24,000 cases of blindness annually. Blindness is 25 times more common among diabetic patients compared to nondiabetics. It is proposed that by the year 2010, diabetes will exceed both heart disease and cancer as the leading cause of death through its many complications.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics

Diabetics have a high level of blood glucose. The blood sugar level is regulated by insulin, a hormone produced by the pancreas, which releases it in response to food consumption. Insulin causes the cells of the body to take in glucose from the blood. The glucose is used as fuel for cellular functions.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes

Diagnostic standards for diabetes have been fasting plasma glucose levels greater than 140 mg/dL on two occasions and plasma glucose greater than 200 mg/dL following a 75-gram glucose load. More recently, the American Diabetes Association lowered the criteria for a diabetes diagnosis to fasting plasma glucose levels equal to or greater than 126 mg/dL. Fasting plasma levels outside the normal limit require additional tests, usually by repeating the fasting plasma glucose test and (if indicated) giving the patient an oral glucose tolerance test.

The symptoms of diabetes include excessive urination, excessive thirst and hunger, sudden weight loss, blurred vision, delay in healing of wounds, dry and itchy skin, repeated infections, fatigue and headache. These symptoms, while suggestive of diabetes, may be due to other reasons also.

There are two different types of diabetes.

Type I Diabetes (juvenile diabetes or insulin-dependent diabetes): The cause of type I diabetes is caused by pancreatic inability to produce insulin. It is responsible for 5-10% of cases of diabetes. The pancreatic Islet of Langerhans cells, which secrete the hormone, are destroyed by the body's own immune system, probably because it mistakes them for a virus. Viral infections are thought to be the trigger that sets off this auto-immune disease. It is more common in caucasians and runs in families.

If untreated, death occurs within a few months of the onset of juvenile diabetes, as the cells of the body starve because they no longer receive the hormonal prompt to take in glucose. While most Type I diabetics are young (hence the term Juvenile Diabetes), the condition can develop at any age. Autoimmune diabetes can be definitely diagnosed by a blood test which shows the presence of anti-insulin/anti-islet-cell antibodies.

Type II Diabetes (non insulin dependent diabetes or adult onset diabetes): This diabetes is a result of body tissues becoming resistant to insulin. It accounts for 90-95% of cases. Often the pancreas is producing more than average amounts of insulin, but the cells of the body have become unresponsive to its effect due to the chronically high level of the hormone. Eventually the pancreas may exhaust its over-active secretion of the hormone, and insulin levels fall to below normal.

A tendency towards Type II diabetes is hereditary, but it is unlikely to develop in normal-weight individuals eating a low- or moderate-carbohydrate diet. Obese, sedentary individuals who eat poor-quality diets based on refined starch, which constantly activates pancreatic insulin secretion, are prone to develop insulin resistance. Native peoples such as North American Indians whose traditional diets did not include refined starch until its recent introduction by Europeans have extremely high rates of diabetes, up to 5 times the rate of caucasians. Blacks and hispanics are also at higher risk. Though Type II diabetes is not fatal within a matter of months, it can lead to health complications over several years and cause severe disability and premature death. As with Type I diabetes, the condition is found primarily in one age group, in this case people over 40 (which is why it is often termed Adult Onset); however, with the rise in childhood and teenage obesity, it is appearing in children as well.

If neglected, diabetes can lead to life-threatening complications such as kidney damage (nephropathy), heart disease, nerve damage (neuropathy), retinal damage and blindness(retinopathy), and hypoglycemia (drastic reduction in glucose levels). Diabetes damages blood vessels, especially smaller end-arteries, leading to severe and premature atherosclerosis. Diabetics are prone to foot problems because neuropathy, which affects approximately 10% of patients, causes their feet to lose sensation. Foot injuries, common in day-to-day living, go unnoticed, and these injuries do not heal because of poor circulation through the small arteries in the foot. Gangrene and subsequent amputation of toes or feet is the consequence for many elderly patients with poorly-controlled diabetes. Usually these sequelae appear earlier in Type I than Type II diabetes, because Type II patients have some of their own insulin production left to buffer changes in blood sugar levels.

Type I diabetes is a serious disease and there is no permanent cure for it. However, the symptoms can be controlled by strict dietary monitering and insulin injections. Implanted pumps which release insulin immediately in response to changes in blood glucose are in the testing stages.

In theory, since it caused by diet, Type II diabetes should be preventable and manageable by dietary changes alone, but in practice many diabetics (and many obese people without diabetes) find it personally impossible to lose weight or adhere to a healthy diet. Therefore they are frequently treated with drugs which restore the body's response to insulin, and in some cases injections of insulin.

Please note that this article is not a subsitute for medical advice. If you suspect you have diabetes or are in a high risk group, please see your doctor.

For more information, please visit our site,
http://www.diabetes-testing-2006.info

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes

The Risks of Obesity on Your Life

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :

Controversy continues to rage in the medical field. How life-threatening is obesity as a whole? An original CDC (Center for Disease Control) study shows that 300,000 Americans die each year as a result of obesity-caused or obesity-effected disease. Another study done in 2005 shows that number to be 112,000.

But does that matter? With 61 percent of the adult community in America considered overweight or obese, it's the risk that's important. Whether 300,000 or 112,000 Americans a year, the reality is that obesity kills a lot of people. It's a scary thought, but it's true. If you're struggling with obesity, it's important to understand the risks involved, and the reality you may be faced with if you cannot make a change in your life. Even a small change will make a difference. Studies have shown that the more obese a person is, the greater the risk to his or her health. A person with a BMI of 30, for instance, is at less risk of developing life-threatening health problems than a person with a BMI of 40 or even 50.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics

Studies have shown that a person that is about 40 percent above their ideal weight is twice as likely to die prematurely as a person of average weight. Twice as likely. That's a scary statistic. Death from obesity-related factors occurs due to a large variety of diseases and disorders.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :The Risks of Obesity on Your Life

Increased Risk of Heart Disease

High blood pressure is twice as common in obese adults as in those with a normal weight. Especially in obese persons with a large amount of abdominal fat, obesity leads to a much higher occurrence of cardiovascular disease.

Increased Risk of Some Cancers

In 2001, experts concluded that some cancers, specifically breast, colon, endometrium (uterine), esophagus, and kidney, are closely associated with obesity. Others studies have also showed a close relation between obesity and pancreatic, gallbladder, and ovarian cancers. In 2002, about 41,000 cases of cancer diagnosed in the United States were determined to be caused by obesity.

A weight loss of even 5-10% can greatly reduce these risks.

Increased Risk of Diabetes

In 1990, about 11 million American suffered from diabetes. In 1999, less than ten years later, that number was up to 16 million. As lifestyles change and people make more and more unhealthy food choices, diabetes is becoming an epidemic. In all, 97 percent of all cases of type two adult-onset diabetes are caused by obesity or excessive weight.

In addition to the risks outlined, obesity also increases the risk of fatty liver disease, stroke, chronic venous insufficiency, gallbladder disease, deep vein thrombosis, arthritis, and breathing problems. So it's important to understand that losing weight will have more than a positive effect of your self-esteem and lifestyle-- it will also make a vast difference in your health later on in life.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :The Risks of Obesity on Your Life

The Most Deadly Cancers

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :

There are a huge number of potential cancers that a person can have. Skin, lung, pancreatic, brain, esophageal, and pretty much any other tissue can develop tumors that become cancerous. While the huge number of cancers all share the fact that they are all deadly if untreated, not all cancers, if treated, have the same mortality rate.

The mortality rate is the percentage of individuals that develop a specific type of cancer that then die. It can be tracked at the five year mark, ten year mark, and so on. One of the misleading facts of tracking mortality further out is that a person may die due to other causes. Because people typically develop cancer later in life, it is a very real possibility that an individual that is treated successfully for skin cancer at 60 may die of a different cause by the time he or she hits 80.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics

Overall, pancreatic cancer is the most deadly form of cancer. Fortunately, it is not a terribly common form of cancer. In 2008, there were 37,000 new cases of pancreatic cancer. While that may sound high, there were more than a million non-melanoma cases of skin cancer in the same year. Unfortunately, more than 90% of all people who are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer will die before they reach the five year mark. This is mostly due to there not being an effective test for the disease that will let it show up in the early stages. Because there is no test for the disease, by the time a person goes to the doctor with symptoms it is typically too late.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :The Most Deadly Cancers

Lung cancer is another deadly form of cancer. Roughly 75% of all people diagnosed with a form of lung cancer will die before the five year mark. Lung cancer is dangerous because it has a very strong ability to spread to other parts of the body quickly. In addition, it is not typically a possible treatment option to remove a person's lungs. Fortunately, around 80% of all people who are diagnosed with lung cancer have or do smoke. This means that individuals who have not lived with smokers and have never smoked have a less likely chance of falling into this group. The other 20% of cases are attributable to a variety of other causes, like asbestos exposure.

Leukemia is another cancer with a high mortality rate. Of the individuals diagnosed with leukemia, roughly half will die. This data is somewhat misleading though because there are numerous types of leukemia. Some types of leukemia are harder to treat than others and so just because a person is diagnosed with leukemia does not mean that the person has a 50/50 chance of surviving to five years.

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Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :The Most Deadly Cancers

Pancreatic Cancer Survival Rate - Dare To Know Your Chances

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :

A pancreatic cancer survival rate refers to the percentage of people who were reported still living after being diagnosed with the cancer about 5 yrs ago.

This disease is one of the deadliest of all cancers and one with the lowest survival rates. According to the American Cancer Society, only 5% of patients with this disease are alive 5 years after the cancer is found.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics

In the United States, it is estimated that more than 30,000 people are diagnosed with this disease each year. What is surprising is that many people don't know this and in addition, most of them are not even sure what cancer of the pancreas is. Another little known fact about this disease is that more than 60,000 cases are diagnosed in Europe each year.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Pancreatic Cancer Survival Rate - Dare To Know Your Chances

The pancreas is a gland behind the stomach that is shaped a wee bit like the shape of a fish. It is six inches long and less than 2 inches wide. It extends across the abdomen. The pancreas has two functions. It breaks down fats and proteins in foods we eat for body absorption. The pancreas also produces hormones to help balance the amount of sugar in the blood.

While cancer of the pancreas can affect anyone, the American Cancer Society has identified several risk factors for this disease:

* Nearly 70 percent of patients with this disease are over 55 years.
* Men are affected more often than women.
* Blacks are more likely to have this disease than whites.
* The risk is higher among smokers.
* There may be a link with the consumption of large amounts of red meat and pork, especially processed meats (like sausage and bacon).
* Very overweight people are 20% more likely to develop this disease.

This type of cancer is a fatal disease and pancreatic cancer survival rate is very poor. The cancer of the pancreas is the fourth most common cause of cancer-related mortality in the United States. Over 98% of patients with cancer of the pancreas die.

Diagnosis of this cancer at an early stage is very difficult because the symptoms in the early stages are vague and diagnostic procedures are not very reliable in diagnosing the disease at an early stage. The diagnosis is usually made at an advanced stage of the disease, making it very difficult to treat. Complete tumor resection is also not curative and pancreatic cancer survival rate is only 1 amongst 20 people.

Recent studies and clinical trials are offering promising results but at the moment, curative resection remains the only hope to improve the over-all pancreatic cancer survival rate.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Pancreatic Cancer Survival Rate - Dare To Know Your Chances

Survival Rates of Patients with Leukemia

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :

Although medical science has evolved significantly in the last decades, the treatment of leukemia is still a major issue in present. Modern medicine doesn't hold the cure for leukemia and medical treatments available these days provide differentiated results. Survival rates depend on the promptitude of diagnosis, the type of treatment and the patients' responsiveness to specific cancer therapies and treatments. Although leukemia can't always be completely overcome, the progression of the disease can be slowed down and its malignant effects can be contained with the help of existent cancer treatments. Thus, the life expectancy of patients with leukemia has risen considerably in the last three decades. By contrast, the mortality rate registered among patients with leukemia has known a pronounced decrease in the last decade.

The treatment of leukemia is focused towards achieving a complete remission with minimal side-effects. Complete remission refers to absence of leukemia traces at cellular level. Patients who present no evidence of malignant cellular activity after completing the treatment of leukemia are considered to be completely cured. By contrast, relapse indicates a recurrence of leukemia specific symptoms and physiological signs.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics

In the case of patients with acute leukemia, a remission that lasts for more than five years after the treatment suggests a complete recovery. This five-year period is considered to be critical for leukemia sufferers, as it can make the difference between relapse and complete recovery.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Survival Rates of Patients with Leukemia

In the last few decades, the five-year survival period of patients with leukemia has tripled. While in the 60's the five-year survival rate was around 15 percent, nowadays it revolves around 50 percent. This five-year survival period is strongly influenced by patients' age and the type of leukemia. Statistics indicate that the five-year survival rate for patients with acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) is around 60 percent, while the five-year survival rate for patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is higher, reaching the value of 70 percent. By contrast, the prognosis of patients with myelogenous leukemia is less favorable. The same five-year survival rate for patients diagnosed with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) is around 14 percent, while an estimated 32 percent of patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) exceed this five-year survival period.

The five-year survival rate for children diagnosed with acute lymphocytic leukemia revolves around the value of 80 percent, while the overall survival rate of children with acute lymphocytic leukemia is less than 45 percent. This type of leukemia is the most common form of cancer diagnosed in children. Due to the fact that it predominantly affects young patients with ages between 3 and 15, the disease is referred to as childhood leukemia.

In the United States, the mortality rate for children with leukemia has decreased with 60 percent in the last three decades. In spite of this fact, leukemia is still the leading cause of death among young patients with ages under 15.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Survival Rates of Patients with Leukemia

Fight the Cigarette Tax - Quit Smoking!

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Smoking has just become even more expensive. The new federal taxes on tobacco products raised tobacco taxes on cigarettes from 39 cents to .01 a pack on April 1 as part of an increase to pay for expanded federal health insurance programs for uninsured children. I like the idea of giving health coverage to children and I agree with this plan 100%. The reason I agree is because I don't smoke. I used to but I quit many years ago.

The reason I quit was because cigarettes were making me feel terrible. I had colds constantly. My breath stunk and so did my clothes. Over the past 35 years or so I have seen the effects of smoking on many of my friends and acquaintances. Unfortunately, quite a few of them are experiencing health problems. It was because of this that I decided to start helping people quit smoking using hypnosis and NLP. I wanted to help people have a better chance at living a long, healthy life.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics

If you need reasons to quit, here are 9 of the best reasons I could come up with.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Fight the Cigarette Tax - Quit Smoking!

1. Smoking Causes Poor Circulation and Heart Disease

Smoking can kill you a number of ways. The most prominent is heart disease. There were 332,973 deaths due to heart disease in 2004. It was the number one cause of death in the United States. Smoking is responsible for 30 percent of all heart attacks and cardiovascular deaths. Nicotine, the main ingredient in cigarettes, raises your blood pressure and makes your blood clot more easily. When your blood clots more easily it gets stuck in your veins causing poor circulation and heart attacks.

Did you know that smokers often have frequent headaches? They get them because there is a constant lack of oxygen due to hardened, narrowed blood vessels to your brain. Oh, by the way, these hardened, narrowed blood vessels can lead to a stroke. Even though it wasn't due to smoking my dad had a stroke. I guarantee you that one of the biggest reasons I don't smoke is that I don't want to spend the last years of my life like my dad did, weakened, using a crutch and frustrated because he couldn't find the words to explain what he wanted to say.

Those blood clots caused by your smoking can cause a stroke if they end up in your brain. Smoking deprives your cardiovascular system of oxygen. When combined with the monoxide poisoning form cigarettes, this lack of oxygen forms thick cholesterol deposits on your artery walls, choking off your blood supply. This resulting poor circulation can cause impotence, another reason to quit smoking. If you are a middle-aged or older man smoking can keep you from getting an erection and also impairs sperm motility. Most men find that this reverses when they stop smoking.

If that wasn't enough, the poor circulation caused by smoking's result in Claudication or chronic pains in the legs, feet and toes. This can eventually lead to a loss of circulation and you can end up having gangrene which will lead to the amputations of your toes or feet. Smoking can also be linked to loss of circulation in your fingers.

2. Smoking Causes Cancer of the Mouth, Emphysema, Lung Cancer and Bronchitis

Do you know anyone who has died from cancer? I have known a few. It can be a slow, terrible death. Cancer is caused cells that grow like weeds in a garden that strangle out needed bodily functions and good cells. I would not wish cancer on anyone.

Studies show that smoking is responsible for at least 30 percent of all cancer deaths. Read that again, smoking is responsible for 30 percent of all cancer deaths. Tobacco in any form, including "smokeless" or chewing tobacco significantly increases the risk for cancer of the mouth.

Smoking tobacco can cause similar effects as well as giving you gum disease and tooth decay. Dentist regularly send me their patients that smoke because they know the problems smoking has on dental health. Smoking also makes your teeth yellow and gives you bad breath.

If you smoke you are ten times more likely to get lung cancer as a nonsmoker. Smoking is linked to 87 percent of all lung cancer deaths each year. Smoking is responsible for 82 percent of deaths due to emphysema and chronic bronchitis.

When you inhale the smoke from a cigarette it passes through your bronchi, or breathing tubes. Nasty chemicals from the cigarette smoke, like hydrogen cyanide, formaldehyde, ammonia, attach themselves to the lining of the bronchi and cause them to erode. They also cause the inflammation to the bronchi that result in chronic smoker's cough. As the bronchi weaken they become more susceptible to bronchial infections as well as to colds and the flu.

3. Smoking Causes Heartburn, Ulcers and other Digestive Problems

Your entire digestive system is affected. Smoking causes increased stomach acid secretion that contributes to heartburn and peptic ulcers. Since smoking interferes with circulation, smokers experience delays in the healing of ulcers to the stomach and duodenum.

Smoking also increases the risk of Crohn's disease. It has also been linked to gallstones, which form when liquid stored in the gallbladder hardens into pieces of stone-like material. Smoking has been linked to liver damage and research suggests that smoking can worsen liver disease caused by drinking too much alcohol.

4. Smoking Causes Cancer to the Esophagus and Throat

In adults, the esophagus is an approximately 10 inch hollow tube that carries food and liquids from your mouth to your stomach. The muscles of the esophagus contract as you swallow to push food down into the stomach. It has glands in its lining that produce mucus that makes swallowing easier. Difficulty in swallowing is usually the first symptom of esophageal cancer in most patients.

Esophageal cancer is the seventh leading cause of cancer death in men in the United States. The tars and other chemicals in cigarette smoke can trigger cancer of the esophagus and throat. Esophageal cancer is often fatal. Both smoking and smokeless tobacco have been linked to the approximately 12,300 new cases in the U.S. annually and each year there are approximately 12,000 deaths caused by esophageal cancer.

5. Smoking Causes Pancreatic Cancer and Bladder Cancer

"Actor Patrick Swayze is defiantly continuing to smoke - despite suffering from cancer. Patrick was spotted enjoying a cigarette recently whilst waiting in his car for his wife to fetch pizza. The 56-year-old star has not quit the awful habit despite undergoing months of chemotherapy for pancreatic cancer. The ill 'Ghost' actor was also recently rushed to hospital with a lung infection and doctors declared him "more ill than ever"."

Pancreatic cancer occurs most commonly in men between the ages of 35 and 70. It is the fourth highest cause of cancer mortality.

Smokers experience much higher rates of pancreatic cancer. In fact the risk of getting cancer of the pancreas is 2 to 3 times higher in smokers. Experts believe that 2 to 3 out of 10 cases of pancreatic cancer are thought to be caused by smoking. People who use "smokeless" tobacco are also more likely to get pancreatic cancer.

The carcinogenic compounds in cigarette smoke have also been linked to bladder cancer. Our bodies rid themselves of chemicals in our urine which is stored in the bladder. The presence of carcinogens in your urine from cigarette smoke can cause bladder cancer, which is often fatal.

6. Smoking Damages Kidneys

Your kidneys can be directly affected by smoking. Since smoking affects your circulation it also can elevate your blood pressure. Although high blood pressure can damage blood vessels throughout your body, when blood vessels in your kidneys are damaged it interferes with your kidney's ability to remove wastes and excessive fluid. This can lead to a vicious cycle with the extra fluid in your blood vessels raising your blood pressure even more, eventually resulting in kidney failure.

7. Smoking, Fertility and the Effects the Unborn Children

Studies have shown that smoking reduces a women's fertility. It also delays their ability to conceive after they stop using birth control pills.

Just like when you eat, a smoking mother is smoking for two. You increase the risks of miscarriage, premature birth and your baby's death in its first year. The infant mortality rate at birth or through a miscarriage is 50 percent higher when the mother smokes. Children whose mothers smoke are also 2½ times more likely to die of crib death or sudden infant death syndrome.

The affects of smoking during pregnancy last a lifetime. The average birth weight of babies whose mother's smoked is less than babies of nonsmokers. Also, when examined at age 7, children whose mothers smoked during pregnancy were more likely be shorter, slower readers and socially impaired.

8. Smoking Causes Wrinkles

Smoking reduces blood flow to your skin. Have you ever seen someone who has smoked for decades? Of course you have! Because of the lack of circulation to their skin they look life old, wrinkled baseball mitts. This lack of circulation prevents the needed oxygen and nutrients from reaching your skin. It also reduces the amount of natural skin softeners, collagen and elastin, in your skin.

Smokers easily appear 5 years older than non-smokers of the same age. Since cigarette smoke irritates the skin and eyes, smokers squint more which leads to more wrinkles around the corners of the eyes.

9. Smoking Causes Osteoporosis

Recent studies have shown a direct relationship between smoking and decreased bone density which is known as osteoporosis. It most often affects women. Osteoporosis is a disease which causes bones to weaken and fracture more easily.

What Can You Do?

As you can see smoking has been shown to directly affect your health. Statistics show that forty percent of the men who smoke will die before they reach retirement age. Women smokers face an increased risk of cervical cancer. Pregnant women not only take risks with their own health but also take a chance with the health of their unborn babies.

The good news is that if you haven't experienced any of these effects yet you can quit. When you quit your body begins to repair itself and within ten years your body will have repaired most of the damage your smoking caused.

If you are interested in quitting on your own I have a FREE e-course that can help you become smoke free for life. If you are really committed to quitting and are interested in getting help you can reach me at (800) 989-6570. Whatever you do decide to quit for good and for life!

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Fight the Cigarette Tax - Quit Smoking!

Health and Societal Effects of Alcohol and Alcoholism - Facts You Need to Know

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :

Alcohol is used as a celebratory gesture in just about every culture across the globe. It's used for New Years, Christmas, birthdays, weddings, graduations, bar mitzvahs, and to commemorate just about any special occasion. In America, it's almost like an earned rite of passage, where the elders hand the younger partygoers a sip... ah... and then it's love at first sip.

It's no wonder alcoholism runs in families. Few people actually wait until the legal drinking age of 21 to drink. Sometimes, adolescents take up drinking so early on, that by the time they've reached actual drinking age, they've become full-blown alcoholics.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics

These young adults go onto college where it's considered socially acceptable to get hammered every weekend, and for the "week night warriors," even close out the bars on a Monday or Tuesday night! After graduation, it continues into the workforce...and it never stops.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Health and Societal Effects of Alcohol and Alcoholism - Facts You Need to Know

Or if it does, it's already too late, as alcoholism's long-term effects have already manifested in the body, causing liver problems, a suppressed immune system, high blood pressure, heart and respiratory problems, and even brain damage.

If that isn't enough to steer you clear of that weekly drinking binge, perhaps these facts will:

1) Around 76 million people worldwide suffer from some type of alcohol-related disorders including excessive drinking and alcoholism.

2) Alcohol consumption increases the risk of developing certain cancers including lip, tongue, throat, esophagus, liver, and breast cancer. These types of cancers aren't just related to alcoholism - even three drinks a day can cause these cancers, according to the American Cancer Society.

3) Alcohol abuse cost the United States an estimated 0-billion in 2005, more than cancer (6-billion) and obesity (3-billion)

4) People who begin drinking as teenagers are four times more likely to develop alcohol-related disorders than those who wait until age 21 to consume their first drink.

5) According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), in 2008, 11,773 people in the U.S. died in drunk-driving accidents. Every 45 minutes, someone is killed in an alcohol-impaired driving collision.

6) Four people under the age of 21 die each day because of alcohol-related traffic incidents.

7) Children with alcoholic parents are up to 10 times more likely to abuse alcohol themselves.

8) According to suicide statistics, 15-20% of suicides involve alcohol

9) 'Binge drinking' is defined as drinking five or more drinks at one time. Long term binge-drinking are known to cause liver disease, cancer, pancreatitis, and heart disease. These binge-drinking sessions don't need to be weekly either. Even irregular heavy drinking can cause these diseases.

10) In 2007 one-fifth of adults (20%) ages 18-25 were classified as needing alcohol abuse treatment and drug abuse treatment - that's an estimated 6.9 million people!

While these facts are alarming, it's important to know that there are programs out there, all across the nation that can help people get sober and defeat their alcohol addictions before it's too late. Alcohol abuse recovery can be a long, difficult road, but it's worth it when a person no longer seeks alcohol to fill a void in their lives - that much-sought-after happiness will come from within.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Health and Societal Effects of Alcohol and Alcoholism - Facts You Need to Know

Antidote to Our Too Toxic World - Detoxamin EDTA Chelation Therapy

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :

This article is going to begin with some very frightening statistics, but, fortunately, there is a ready solution to the problem that is about to be described, so readers should not be discouraged. Here are the statistics: One out of every 2.5 people in the USA is going to get cancer. Half of all the men who are now alive and one third of all the women will die from cancer. The cause of approximately 98% of cancers has been linked back to toxic chemicals. The good news is that medical science has developed a very effective way to cleanse toxic chemicals from the body, chelation therapy.

First used in World War I to help the victims of poison gas attacks, chelation therapy was further refined in the 1940s to treat sailors who used poisonous lead based paint on the hulls of navy ships. In a nutshell, chelation therapy is the use of chemical agents that form bonds with toxic heavy metals, such as lead, mercury and arsenic, so they may be flushed out of the body. Detoxamin EDTA is one of those chelation agents.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics

The chelating agent in Detoxamin is the amino acid Calcium-EDTA. Studies of Ca-EDTA have proven its efficacy in lowering cancer mortality. One study of 59 patients treated with this chelating agent over an 18-year period demonstrated a 90% reduction in mortality from cancer. But cancer is not the only disease that can be treated with Detoxamin therapy. Experts say that just about every health trouble, from learning disorders to heart disease is worsened by the increased levels of lead and other heavy metals that we have been accumulating. A medical publication, released in 1999 revealed that "human exposure to heavy metals has risen dramatically in the last 50 years as a result of ... heavy metals in industrial process and products."

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Antidote to Our Too Toxic World - Detoxamin EDTA Chelation Therapy

Using Detoxamin EDTA to remove toxic metals from the body can help prevent or alleviate such illnesses as the deterioration of heart and blood vessels, arthritis, chronic fatigue and irritable bowel syndromes, Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis and pancreatitis.

Although Detoxamin EDTA can cleanse toxic metal from most of the cells all over the body, they cannot be removed from bones. Therefore, even after the successful completion of a 90-day or 180-day cleansing program, it is recommended to continue with a Detoxamin maintenance program to remove heavy metals that are re-distributed from the bones into the bloodstream on a regular basis.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Antidote to Our Too Toxic World - Detoxamin EDTA Chelation Therapy

Compassionately Caring for Disagreeable People

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :

If you are not already a caregiver for someone with a chronic or terminal illness, statistics say you will be. It's estimated that there are at least 45 million family caregivers in the United States and that number will keep rising as people live longer. You should assume that at least once in your life, you will be asked or feel obligated to provide care for someone who can no longer care for him or herself. It may be occasional and for a short period of time, or constant and last for years.

The question asked by millions every day is, "How do I do it?" The question asked by anyone with deep spiritual convictions, is "How do I do it for someone who holds very different beliefs than me?" As a Buddhist caregiver in both hospices and other settings, and whose caregiving population is nearly all non-Buddhist, I've often had to ask myself the latter question. And with Buddhists comprising a tiny fraction of the American population, you too may be faced with the same question.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics

When Needs Conflict With Buddhist Values

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Compassionately Caring for Disagreeable People

We all have a tendency to look at the misery of others and think, if only they would believe as I do, they could lessen their pain. Our beliefs are often in the form of "if only" propositions. The core message is, "If only everyone followed the teachings of (place your favorite teacher here) the world would be a better place." And by extrapolation, the person you are caring for could be more at ease with their chronic or terminal illness if only (fill in the blank with your favorite life maxim).

From a safe distance, helpful suggestions based on millennium-old principles seem logical and righteous. I know that as a Buddhist, the application of certain principles and beliefs have made my life more meaningful. From a distance, it's possible to look at the misery of others and feel the certitude of "if only" statements. But what if the person needing care is your non-Buddhist partner, brother, mother, father, child, or close friend whose idea of "letting go" is trading in a car every two years for a new one. Or "living in the present" means keeping up with current fashion? The objectivity that is possible from a distance dissolves when it's someone whose hand you can hold. And the universal truth of some concepts, such as letting go and living in the present, becomes equivocal. There is a Spanish proverb that says, "It's not the same to talk of bulls as to be in the bullring." The same applies to caring for anyone who has a chronic or terminal illness and has not lived their life as a Buddhist.

Serving Needs While Ignoring Doctrine

The way I've served patients for the past eight years is based more on their needs, than on many of the Buddhist principles that structure my life. I did it with someone who believed the holocaust-where thirty-nine of my relatives died in Auschwitz-was fiction. Even though I have a daughter, I listened without judgment to the sexual exploits of a former member of the Hells Angels who was released from prison so he could die in a hospice. And I did the same with countless others whose lives were examples of how not to live. The mistakes my patients made throughout their lives were powerful incentives for me to change my own, but did not alter my service to them.

Many Buddhist teachings may have limited value when the person you are caring for can only see the world and your advice through their illness. I recently experienced a pain so intense that I asked my wife to call 911. It was something unusual for me, since I have always been reluctant to seek help before trying to control my pain through meditation. But not that time. The intensity made every technique I spent years practicing as useful as a 1970s computer. Fortunately, it was nothing serious. But I learned that given a battle between the immediacy of a problem and a concept, the practicality of a problem always wins out. That was the case with one of my patients who described himself as a "confirmed atheist."

He noticed the mala I was wearing on my wrist and asked me what it was. When I explained that it was the Buddhist version of a Catholic rosary, he asked me about Buddhism. Not in a way that was inquisitive, but rather challenging. As I struggled to explain my "practical" Buddhism using centuries-old concepts, I realized my words were sounding like the canned speeches of people who came to my door and wanted to lead me from damnation to salvation.

"I can have a monk visit you and explain it," I said, since the San Francisco Zen Center was across the street.

"No," he said breathlessly, an oxygen tube in his nose. "I don't want to hear any mumbo jumbo for a professional religionist. Just tell me how what you do because of your beliefs can help me die better."

That was the first of many interactions I had with patients who taught me to see my words and actions through their eyes-the eyes of someone who looked at the world through cancer, HIV, a chronic heart condition, early stages of dementia, ALS, or any of the hundreds of illnesses that tainted everything they felt or perceived.

If Buddhist caregivers are to be effective, they need to understand that almost everything experienced by people they are caring for is seen through the lens of their illness or the certainty of death. It's a very different world than the one a caregiver lives in. Urging them to look at it through a Buddhist perspective, as well intentioned as it is, may be counter-productive.

Imagine being dropped into a strange country with a language you don't understand and customs that are unfamiliar. I experienced this when I was in Prague in the Czech Republic and decided to drive to Weimer, Germany, a four-hour trip away. I didn't speak any Czech and my German was as inadequate as it was when I studied it in high school. But I did have a GPS that guided me. Without the GPS I probably would still be wondering around Germany. In many ways, the person with a chronic or terminal illness is on a similar journey, but without a GPS.

Before their illness, how they viewed themselves was based on roles, affiliations, values, abilities, and relationships, just to mention some of the multitude of things that constitute "identity." All of these in combination are used by people to create a picture of who they are, and by other people as they anticipate reacting to them. When an integral part of a person's life is lost, identity changes, and so does their self-perception and place in the world.

Even though you, as a Buddhist, may believe that the stripping away of ego-enhancing activities should bring someone closer to understanding their "original nature," it may not for someone such as the Fortune 500 executive I cared for with ALS who became dependent on a caregiver for things seemingly as inconsequential as scratching an itch. Or the novelist with dementia known for her intricate plots, who painfully wrote about becoming lost in the supermarket she had frequented for years. Losses of ego-enhancing abilities are rarely thought of in positive terms by non-Buddhists as they face a world that is constantly changing because they are. As the world of the person requiring caregiving changes, guidance for what to do should be based more on their needs than most of the Buddhist values that are the basis of your own life. Accept

Where They Life in Time

I know that the more I remain in the present, the more aware and more appreciative I am of every day I'm still alive. But is that true for everyone needing care? Is it important for everyone to remain "aware" in the present?

For Eric, it was. He stayed in the present during the last two weeks of his life. It wasn't out of philosophical conviction, but rather because that's where he was most comfortable. He was dying from pancreatic cancer, had been divorced twice, had a history of drug problems, and had never been able to hold a job for long. But he had an eighteen-year-old son who was devoted to him. Eric told me his son's love was sufficient for easing his death, and up to the time when he peacefully lost consciousness, our conversations were firmly rooted in the present.

For Mary, her dying was eased when she focused on the past. For twenty years she had been instrumental in changing the lives of poor children through an afterschool reading program. As her disease painfully progressed, she focused on her past accomplishments to make the present tolerable. In her mind, she had made a difference in the world; there was no need to regret not having a future, and the present, devoid of family or friends, was no match for the joy she experienced just by remembering the past.

Although the past and present held equal relief for these two patients, death for those living in the future did not. That was the case with an author who had made significant contributions to the field of journalism and was widely published. Though he had a list of important publications that would have been the envy of most writers, he found no solace in what he had done. With only days left to live, he kept looking for a manuscript.

"I have to finish it," he said to me one morning. "It's due on Saturday. What day is it?"

"Tuesday," I said."

"Tuesday? How many days until Saturday?"

"Five."

"Five days! I have six chapters to complete. I need to find it now." He tried to get out of bed, but was too weak to sit up by himself. Another volunteer and I gently eased him back down.

"We'll find it for you, Bill," I said.

We kept searching the room until he fell asleep, but we couldn't find anything that even resembled a manuscript. Until he died two days later, the most I could offer him in the way of comfort was to sit next to him and witness his anxiety about not finishing the manuscript. After he died, staff, volunteers, and a few of his friends sat around his body and each of us spoke about the impact he made on our lives. I asked a friend who had known him for many years about the manuscript.

"What manuscript?" the woman said.

"Bill said he needed to finish a manuscript by Saturday."

"There is no manuscript," she said. "Bill hasn't written anything longer than a short article in ten years." For this gifted writer, I don't think there could ever have been enough accomplishments.

Being stuck in a specific time frame or effortlessly migrating back and forth is based on experiences, values, and needs. For many of my patients, residing firmly in the present resulted in easier deaths. In the present they could let go of the past and relinquish the future. But for others like Mary, nothing could compare with a specific era in her past, and the longer she stayed there in our conversations and her thoughts, the happier she was. Unfortunately for others like Bill, their life was future oriented. Changing how one lives close to the end of life is possible, but difficult. Sometimes the only thing you can do is be supportive of where the person has chosen to reside.

Compassion or Understanding

As someone who spends more time with ailing non-Buddhists than Buddhists, there is one principle that guides me more than any other: compassion. Thich Nhat Hanh's explanation of it is to think of the person in front of you as if he or she was your mother who cared and fed you when you couldn't do it yourself. With that image in mind, being compassionate with some patients became as easy as breathing. But for others, the mother envisioned by Thich Nhat Hanh took on all the characteristics of the witch in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. That was the case with Clarence, who was eighty, born in Alabama, and hated Blacks, Jews, Catholics, and "them damn agitators." As someone who was involved in the civil rights movement, whose parents were Jewish, and who's been a lifelong activist, I stood for everything he hated. He was dying and looked to me for compassion. My convictions said, "Give it." But I couldn't.

There will be times, despite your best efforts, that you can't become the compassionate caregiver you want to be. I aspired to be compassionate to Clarence. I wanted to serve him, but thought I couldn't. I realized that when compassion couldn't be tapped into, understanding might be. How different would I be if I had been born in Selma to segregationist parents whose great great grandparents owned slaves, and whose fundamentalist religion espoused the superiority of whites, Protestants, and the Confederate cause? It was the circumstances of our lives that had made us different. When you think you can't be compassionate, try understanding the circumstances of a person's life. It definitely mutes those parts of it that you find unacceptable.

What's In It for You?

Tibetans have a saying, that to get over those things you fear most-the sharp points of your life-bring them closer, rather then pushing them away. It's an idea that many people in Western societies view as counterintuitive. For example, some try to hide from the sharp points of aging by glossing over them, with the same degree of success that a new coat of paint has on stopping an old car's engine from sputtering. Some who have lost physical or cognitive abilities grasp at what is gone, doing little more than increasing their suffering. And for death-probably the sharpest point of all-we hide from it as if it were a tyrannical schoolteacher coming to discipline us.

The poet, Rainer Maria Rilke, thought bringing the sharp points in our life closer was an opportunity for healing. He said that our greatest fears are like dragons guarding our heart. There are few dragons as intimidating or as capable of hiding our wisdom from ourselves as long-term caregiving. Pushing away its sharp points is like covering them with a gossamer cloak; something so porous, that they emerge at unexpected moments when a smell, word, or sight allows them to resurface.

Think about the transformative events in your life. I would guess that most, if not all, involved getting past the dragons. Personal growth doesn't seem to occur when life is pleasant. Few people would say something like " I turned my life around sitting on the beach in Kauai being served piƱa coladas by attentive wait staff." Just as intense heat and pounding are necessary for creating the highest quality swords, so are sharp points for shaping our lives. Caregiving is one of the sharpest.

The space occupied by the caregiver and the person served is special. Some would say spiritual. Depending on someone for your continued existence creates a connectiveness that is unmatched in almost any other setting. The person is saying "I can no longer continue living without your help." The caregiver's response should be "I'm honored to be given an opportunity to make the last phase of your life peaceful." And while some of the experiences are enlightening, others will be unpleasant. Coming to caregiving with compassion based on a person's needs, rather than a doctrinaire position, will allow the dragons to surface, each providing a lesson on life and death.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Compassionately Caring for Disagreeable People

The Link Between Weight Gain And Diabetes

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :

Approximately 16 million people in the United States are diagnosed with diabetes based on national statistics. In reality, through, this figure is much higher. It is estimated that another 5.4 million people have the disease and are not aware of it. Type II diabetes, also called adult onset diabetes, now appears routinely in six year old children. Minorities are at particular risk, as their diet consists mainly of cheap fast foods, such as hamburgers, fried chicken, pasta, potatoes, refined sweets and other highly processed foods and beverages.

These foods typically cause a rapid increase in blood sugar, which stimulates the production of large quantities of insulin. When there is too much insulin in the blood, the body reacts by producing the chemical somatostatin, which suppresses insulin release. In due time this natural response translates into diabetes. Compared with Caucasians, African Americans have a 60% higher risk of developing diabetes and Hispanics have a 90% increased risk. Considering the large number of undiagnosed diabetics, physicians are now losing more patients to diabetes than they are diagnosing.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics

An increasing number of American adults diagnosed with diabetes are obese, U.S. officials said in November 2004. A study by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention found that between 1999 and 2002, 54.8 percent of diabetics over the age of 19 were obese. That compared with 45.7 percent in the same age group between 1988 and 1994. When the category was expanded to include diabetics who were obese or overweight, the percentage surged to 85.2 percent in 1999-2002 compared with 78.5 percent in the earlier period. About 69 million people are obese or severely obese, according to the American Obesity Association.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :The Link Between Weight Gain And Diabetes

In the CDC study, a person was considered overweight if their body mass index (BMI) - the most commonly used method for calculating if a person weighs too much - was 25 to 29. Anyone with a body mass index of 30 or greater was categorized as obese. Using the body mass index to determine risk for diabetes is not completely reliable and can keep these numbers lower than they actually are. Taking averages in human statistic analysis always ends up distorting the true figures.

A balanced Vata type, for example has a naturally lower weight than average. According to the body mass index, Vatas are underweight. Their bones are much lighter and they have very little body fat on them. If a Vata type adds 25 pounds of body weight, it can cause him serious health problems, but according to the body mass index, this extra weight would bring him up to the normal range. Kapha types, on the other hand, have a very heavy body structure already. They cannot afford to add even 25 pounds without causing them to develop a typical Kapha disorder, such as diabetes, heart disease, or cancer.

By removing the discrepancies that exist with currently used body mass calculations, it is likely that almost every diabetic is overweight or obese. Likewise, a person who is overweight or obese can actually be considered diabetic, or at least insulin resistant. Due to the accumulation of abnormal amounts of new cells in the overweight person, there is simply not enough insulin available to meet all the nutrient demands of these extra cells. And although the pancreas may still make a normal or a little extra amount of insulin, the added weight leads to a relative insulin shortage. Eventually, the pancreas suffers from being continuously over-extended. The side-effects of a relative insulin-deficiency can be just the same as an absolute insulin-deficiency where pancreatic cells stop producing insulin altogether.

According to the American Diabetes Association, diabetes accounts for 178,000 deaths (which may not be accurate), 54,000 amputees, and 12,000-24,000 cases of blindness annually. Blindness is 25 times more common among diabetic patients compared to non-diabetics. It is estimated that by the year 2010, diabetes will actually exceed both heart disease and cancer as the leading cause of death through its many complications. It is my hope that more and more scientists and doctors begin to see the strong link that exists between all these 'diseases'. They are metabolic disorders that share a common cause, but show up as different symptoms.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :The Link Between Weight Gain And Diabetes

Childhood Obesity and Cancer Correlation Statistics - 3 Scary Facts All Parents Should Be Aware Of!

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :

In the last few decades, childhood obesity has become such a health problem in so many children, that health authorities have labeled it an epidemic! We all know being obese is unhealthy, but can it really cause cancer? Here are 3 facts about childhood obesity and cancer correlation statistics. Be warned, they are very shocking:

1) - Research shows that clinically overweight children of both sexes are much more likely to develop among a large variety of cancers. Studies done in obese children show that they are far more likely to develop a different cancer than children of normal weight.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics

2) - Scientists discovered that the more obese children are more likely to develop bladder, pancreatic, mouth, and respiratory-tract cancers as adults. These are a few of the cancers scientists believe that obese children are at a risk of developing as they mature into adulthood.

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Childhood Obesity and Cancer Correlation Statistics - 3 Scary Facts All Parents Should Be Aware Of!

3) - Furthermore, the older obese children were more likely to also develop the full range of cancer, including prostate, breast, and colorectal tumors. The older clinically obese kids were more likely to develop very serious forms of cancer, including tumors in the breasts and prostate.

The fact that thirty percent of children in our society are overweight proves just how important it is that we treat childhood obesity at an early age. By 2010, some scientists believe that over 50 percent of children in our society are going to be overweight! We must take action now in order for our children and our society to flourish and be healthy!

Pancreatic Cancer Statistics :Childhood Obesity and Cancer Correlation Statistics - 3 Scary Facts All Parents Should Be Aware Of!