Search for Health Info Online – Chances Are Your Info is Leaked (VIDEO)
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Reading, Writing, Brain Stimulation Keeps Dementia and Alzheimer’s at Bay
One of the lessons I share from my elder friends about living a quality life is the notion of lifelong learning. I have published numerous blogs on the positive affect that brain stimulation has in keeping dementia and Alzheimer’s at bay. Here’s another one.
New research suggests that reading books, writing and participating in brain-stimulating activities at any age may preserve memory. Research published in Neurologyå¨, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology, studied 294 people who were given tests that measured memory and thinking every year for about six years before their deaths at an average age of 89. They also answered a questionnaire about whether they read books, wrote and participated in other mentally stimulating activities during childhood, adolescence, middle age and at their current age.
The study found that the rate of decline was reduced by 32 percent in people with frequent mental activity in late life, compared to people with average mental activity, while the rate of decline of those with infrequent activity was 48 percent faster than those with average activity.
“Our study suggests that exercising your brain by taking part in activities such as these across a person’s lifetime, from childhood through old age, is important for brain health in old age,” said study author Robert S. Wilson, PhD, with Rush University Medical Center in Chicago.
“Based on this, we shouldn’t underestimate the effects of everyday activities, such as reading and writing, on our children, ourselves and our parents or grandparents,” said Wilson.
Source: Science Daily
Search for Health Info Online – Chances Are Your Info is Leaked
Patients who search on free health-related websites for information related to a medical condition may have the health information they provide leaked to third party tracking entities through code on those websites, according to a research letter published in JAMA by Marco D. Huesch, M.B.B.S., Ph.D., of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles.
Between December 2012 and January 2013, using a sample of 20 popular health-related websites, Huesch used freely available privacy tools to detect third parties. Commercial interception software also was used to intercept hidden traffic from the researcherÛªs computer to the websites of third parties.
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- Huesch found that all 20 sites had at least one third-party element, with the average being six or seven.
åÊ - Thirteen of the 20 websites had one or more tracking element.
åÊ - No tracking elements were found on physician-oriented sites closely tied to professional groups.
åÊ - Five of the 13 sites that had tracker elements had also enabled social media button tracking.
åÊ - Using the interception tool, searches were leaked to third-party tracking entities by seven websites.
åÊ - Search terms were not leaked to third-party tracking sites when done on U.S. government sites or four of the five physician-oriented sites, according to the study results.
ÛÏFailure to address these concerns may diminish trust in health-related websites and reduce the willingness of some people to access health-related information online,Û the study concludes.
Coffee and Alzheimer’s
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Check Out The Blue Zones Project (VIDEO)
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