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News - Men ‘ignoring prostate health’
dans Health Treatment Samedi 17 mai 2008 07:12

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Nearly three-quarters of men in Scotland are too embarrassed to visit their GPs for prostate health, according to campaigners.

The Men’s Health Forum charity is encouraging men to take greater responsibility for their wellbeing.

The scheme focuses on benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), which affects about one-in-three men aged over 50.

The campaign coincides with a Scottish Executive award of 4m to develop 10 Well Man clinics across Scotland.

Former Partick Thistle, Liverpool and Scotland player Alan Hansen is unveiling the Time To Go campaign, which is also backed by the Westminster All-Party Group on Men’s Health.

PROSTATE HEALTH IN SCOTLAND
74% of men over 50 are too embarrassed to seek help from their GP for bladder problems

43% are actually afraid to visit their GP for this sort of problem

19% get up more than twice to pass water during the night

42% don’t know where their prostate is

58% have only visited their GP once, twice or not at all in past 12 months

BPH is a epilepsy handbook health issue treatment woman enlargement of the prostate gland, which compresses the urethra and obstructs urine flow. In severe cases kidney damage can occur.

The condition has also been linked to depression, anxiety, sexual dysfunction and difficulty in
carrying out routine activities.

While treating BPH, GPs can also pick up early signs of prostate cancer, the second most dangerous form of cancer after lung cancer, killing 10,000 men a year in the UK.

Speaking at the launch, Mr Hansen said: “Sometimes men’s health hasn’t been given the priority it deserves, allied to the fact that when it comes to sensitive areas and sensitive issues men are hardly really active in discount man health magazine
these problems.”

Alan Hansen

Mr Hansen called for men to take action

He added: “This campaign is all about encouraging men to get to the doctors quickly when they get the symptoms. I’m 49 so I’m right on the verge of it.”

Mr Hansen urged men to refer to a new prostate health checklist intended to help identify symptoms and overcome any health man health baldness
with GPs.

Men’s Health Forum director Peter Baker added: “BPH is still very much a neglected disease
even though it affects about 2.5 million men in the UK.”

The prostate checklist which gives men advice on the problem is available on the freephone number 0808 141 0808.




News - Victim spotted Sainsbury’s rapist
dans Health Treatment Vendredi 16 mai 2008 05:32

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A teenage boy has been given nine years detention for raping an 11-year-old girl in a forum health sexual
toilet. But how did the police track the boy down?

The search for the youth who raped an 11-year-old girl in a supermarket toilet sparked hundreds of calls to a police incident room.


But in the end, police were helped by the fact the victim twice spotted him while she was being driven around town by her mother.


The girl, who cannot be identified, was raped in a toilet cubicle at a Sainsbury’s store near Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, in March.


The victim’s mother, who can only be identified as Liz, told of how her daughter twice spotted him in town in the following fortnight.


“We were in the car and she was just chatting away to me. She suddenly just stopped talking as we passed him and said ‘did you see how he looked at me?’”


“I knew what she was going to say so I turned the car round but by the time we got there he had gone.


When he was arrested more than one adult in his family group said yes, I man best health
thought it would be him

Det Ch Insp Adrian Pearson


“The second time she just shouted out ‘there’s the attacker again’. She said, ‘are you going to stop the car?’”


But Liz said she just carried on driving and reported the incidents to police.

A 15-year-old boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was given nine years detention on Friday for raping the girl.


Det Ch Insp Adrian Pearson said: “I want to say how brave she has been. She played a crucial part in identifying the attacker.”

He added, however, that he was sure a distinctive jacket the attacker was wearing would have helped them trace him.

Similar jacket to the one the attacker was wearing

The attacker was found by his distinctive jacket

The teenager, arrested on 29 March, was a very dangerous young man, the detective added.


“We discovered a range of sexual dysfunction in his background, things he had done to people in a social group or in his family circle,” Mr Pearson said.


“None of it was reported to police but it points to the fact he was a very dangerous young man.


“When he was arrested more than one adult in his family group said: ‘Yes, I immediately thought it would be him’.


“I make no comment about the fact that these people did not come forward to the police.”


‘Coolness of attacker’


A reward had been offered to encourage people to come forward, but no-one would receive it, he said.


The ferocity of the attack led Mr Pearson to assume the attacker would be an older person.


“Because of the severity of the attack and the coolness of the attacker I really thought it would be someone older and more experienced,” he said.


“This person was very inexperienced which makes him more dangerous.”

Toilets at Sainsbury's supermarket

The girl was assaulted when she went to the store’s toilet

The youngster had carried out minor sexual attacks on women both before and after the rape, but police said they did not know why he suddenly carried out a vicious attack.


“He had gone to the store to make purchases. He used the toilet and as he left he saw the victim going in.


“On the spur of the moment he decided to ‘do something sexual’ with her. He was suddenly prepared to rape her in a short period of time.”


The girl’s mother should not blame herself, he said.


“It is every parent’s worst nightmare. There is nothing a parent could have done. You can’t wrap children in cotton wool and how could anyone know this would happen.”


‘Lost trust’


Liz said she and her family were coping “day by day”.


“Now, I feel angry. How can someone of 15 take a child’s men
away,” she said.


“She was a bubbly, nice, active, confident girl. She had a lot of confidence and would go anywhere on her own.


“Now she is not as bubbly. I think she has lost her trust in people.”


The pair still go shopping together although not as much to the Sainsbury’s store where it happened.


“I do blame myself to a certain degree. I keep asking if I could have been more careful.


“I sometimes see people letting their children go to the toilet and I want to stop them,” she said.




News - Female orgasm is ‘down to genes’
dans Health Treatment Jeudi 15 mai 2008 04:51

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The reason why some women have problems reaching orgasm might be down to their genes, say UK scientists.


By studying 4,000 twins, Keele and London researchers found female orgasm is not all psycho-social as some claim.


This variability might even be beneficial and have evolved to help women find the best male to mate with, they told a Royal Society journal.


Knowing which genes are important could potentially pave the way to drugs to help women orgasm.


There is a biological underlying influence that can’t be attributed purely to upbringing, religion or race
Researcher Professor Tim Spector


The findings also suggest that women who orgasm easily may be satisfied with mates who are less skilled in bed.


Professor Tim Spector and colleagues carried out DNA tests on more than 4,000 women aged 19-83, half of whom were identical and half of whom were non-identical twins.


Identical twins share the same DNA, while non-identical twins do not.


The women were also asked to fill out man health supplement
health magazine man site web about their sexual lives.


Orgasm failure


A third of the women said they never or seldom achieved orgasm, while more than a tenth said they always had an orgasm during intercourse.


More of the women were able to orgasm during 2005 december health magazine man
, with 34% always reaching orgasm.


In comparison, studies have shown that men fail to orgasm only 2% of the time during intercourse.


This is dysfunction female male sexual treatment but quite simplistic
Gynaecologist Dr Margaret Rees


Overall, orgasm frequency was higher for the identical female twins than the non-identical female twins, which the researchers said suggested there must be some genetic component.


Professor Spector, director of the Twin Research Unit at St Thomas’ Hospital in London, said: “We found that between 34 and 45% of the variation in ability to orgasm can be explained by underlying genetic variation.


“There is a biological underlying influence that can’t be attributed purely to upbringing, religion or race.


“The fact that it’s heritable suggests that evolution has a role.”


One theory is that the orgasm promotes fertility. Past research shows women are slightly more likely to orgasm during periods of fertility and that sperm uptake is increased during orgasm.


“The other theory is that orgasm is a male-selection tool,” said Professor Spector.


‘Many factors involved’


“If a man is considered powerful enough, strong enough, or thoughtful enough in bed or in the cave, then he’s likely to hang around as a long-term partner and be a better bet for bringing up children.”


Professor Spector said pinpointing the genes involved would take years because there could be hundreds.


It is possible that their influence is physical, causing variations in the G-spot, or psychological, altering arousal, he said.


Dr Margaret Rees, consultant gynaecologist at the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford and expert in female sexual dysfunction, said: “This is interesting but quite simplistic.


“There are many factors involved with female sexual dysfunction - hypoactive desire, low arousal, problems with orgasm and pain.


“Any one of these can cause the others. They are all inter-related.”


Therefore, she said it was unlikely that a single drug treatment would work.


However, she said self-help and womens sexual health
counselling could be helpful.


The study appears in the June issue of Biology Letters.