Quantum Sufficit
Just Enough
New memories may erase old cravings, according to a study
published in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences. Researchers found they could influence people to
crave strawberry ice cream less after implanting false suggestions about bad
childhood experiences with it. The scientists gathered data from more than 200
volunteers and then persuaded them to believe they got sick from strawberry ice
cream as children. As a result, about 40 percent of the participants believed
the false memory, and most of those persons lowered their preference for the
ice cream on a later survey. The same study was performed with chocolate chip
cookies; however, it did not yield the same outcome. (PNAS, August 3, 2005)
Can a popular "club drug" help relieve the symptoms of
Parkinson's disease? A group of researchers found that the drug
methylenedioxymethamphetamine, also known as Ecstasy, eased Parkinson's-like
symptoms in mice. Although the team has not researched the drug's effect on
humans, they are hopeful that this will lead to new treatment opportunities for
people with tremors and stiffness caused by Parkinson's disease. Researchers
found even greater results when this drug was combined with the current
Parkinson's disease drug, levodopa. (Nature, August 2, 2005)
"Like mother, like daughter" is true when it comes to
cohabitation of unmarried couples. A study by Ohio State University found that
girls whose mothers reported cohabitation were more likely to cohabit
themselves. Data for the study came from the National Longitudinal Survey of
Youth, which surveyed men and women who were 14 to 22 years of age in 1979.
Researchers talked with the participants annually until 1994 and every two
years from 1996 forward. They also surveyed the participants' children. Girls
with cohabiting mothers were 57 percent more likely to live with a partner and
did so at a younger age. Authors believe that the girls modeled their behavior
after their mothers. (Ohio State University
Research News, August 15, 2005).
Work it out! According to researchers at the University
of Bristol in England, on the days workers exercised for at least 31 to 60
minutes during their shift, they returned to their desks more productive and
easier to get along with than on days they didn't exercise. The six-week study
followed 210 men and women 23 to 57 years of age who worked out at an on-site
gym at least one day each week. Two in three participants reported improvements
in at least one area of mood, energy, productivity, or efficiency while on the
job. (The Washington Post, July 5,
2005).

Is smoking more expensive than originally
thought? The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that premature
death by way of lung cancer, heart disease, and other smoking-related illnesses
cost the United States about $92 billion in lost wages between 1997 and 2001.
On average, men lose 3.3 million years of life and women lose 2.2 million years
because of smoking. The lost productivity and smoking-related health care
expenses cost the nation more than $167 billion annually. (Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, June 30,
2005).
Consumers can now add one more thing to their shopping
lists: medical advice. ABC News reports that some supermarkets, retail chains,
and pharmacies now house MinuteClinics. In these small kiosks, shoppers can get
advice and remedies for minor ailments from a nurse practitioner without having
to make appointments or spend time in waiting rooms. With the help of specially
designed software, nurse practitioners are able to identify and treat 24 common
illnesses and infections, including pink eye and bronchitis. However, clinic
operators say that these MinuteClinics are no substitute for family physicians.
(ABC News, June 21, 2005)
| Copyright © 2005 by the American
Academy of Family Physicians. |









