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& Awards, Announcements
Health & Fitness News Elsewhere
(fresh daily from the Web)
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Features
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Berries benefit health
[SEPT.
12, 2002]
URBANA — For decades,
mothers and grandmothers have said that drinking cranberry juice
would help prevent urinary tract infections. Anecdotal evidence said
that it worked, but why it worked and at what dosage, Grandma
couldn’t say. Researchers finally know the answer.
|
A team of researchers working in labs
across the continent have been studying a variety of medicinal
properties of cranberries and blueberries and have found some
remarkable answers to age-old mysteries about the health benefits
from eating berries.
According to "the Berry Group" as they
are often called, berries can protect against a wide variety of
ailments, including urinary tract infections, cardiovascular
disease, cancer, attention-deficit disorder and diabetes. Berries
are also the No. 1 antidote for aging.
One member of the berry group at
Rutgers, led by Amy Howell, has shown that the unique ability of
cranberry and blueberry juices to combat urinary tract infections is
not, as earlier suspected, an acidity effect, but an anti-adherence.
Mary Ann Lila, a plant scientist at the
University of Illinois and a member of the berry group, explained,
"The berries actually interfere with the bacterial-landing
mechanism, preventing them from taking hold on the rough walls of
the bladder and preventing colonization that can lead to infections.
And, as a direct result of this conclusive research, for the first
time, we are able to establish effective dosage recommendations for
patients."
Interestingly, Lila’s lab recently
discovered that the same berry components (called proanthocyanidins)
responsible for the anti-adherence also have potent
anti-carcinogenic properties. "Natural ingredients found in high
concentrations in the berries are capable of inhibiting the
initiation of carcinogenesis, as well as inhibiting tumor formation.
It’s remarkable that the berries have exhibited such far-ranging and
diverse roles in human health protection," Lila said.
The team has also begun referring to
blueberries as "brainberries," due to another berry research project
that looks at brain functions. Researchers Jim Joseph and Barbara
Shukitt-Hale at Tufts in Boston fed blueberry chow to lab rats and
found a slowing and actual reversal of age-related loss in cognitive
as well as motor and neurological functions. Rat memory improved as
measured by their ability to complete a maze.
[to top of second column in this
article]
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Diets rich in berries enhance dopamine
release in the brain as well, which improves the brain cells’
ability to communicate. This brain function is reduced with age, but
research has shown that eating blueberries can reverse the
age-related decline in brain signals.
Lila cautions that the health benefits
derived from eating berries may not be the same if taken as a
dietary supplement from a bottle. "Dietary supplements are
frequently produced and marketed based on one recognized bioactive
component," said Lila. "They fail to look at the contribution of
other components from the whole plant food."
There appears to be a relationship
between all the components that make up a plant food. When one
component is separated out, the maximum effect is not seen. "So, a
dietary supplement containing only one isolated extract of a
blueberry or cranberry," said Lila, "cannot be expected to provide
full benefits and will not mimic the same results if someone were to
eat the whole berry."
Finding whole, fresh blueberries in the
local grocery store, however, can be tricky, particularly for areas
where blueberries are not grown year-round. Lila has a couple of
suggestions. "Convince your local grocery store to stock them. Or if
they won’t, there are frozen blueberries available in most places.
There are also sources for mail order blueberries that come packed
in dry ice, which are often comparable or cheaper than fresh berries
that you’d buy in a grocery store. For those of us in the Midwest
who can’t always get fresh berries, the quick frozen mail order
berries are a good alternative."
Lila said that canned blueberries are
another option. Although the heating process for canning may take
some of what she called "the good stuff" out of the berries, what’s
left in the canned variety can be more easily absorbed into the
body.
Funding for
Lila’s research is provided by the National Institute for Health —
National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine and the
USDA Initiative for Future Agriculture and Food Systems.
[U of I news release] |
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Logan-Mason Mental Health
hosts parent program
[SEPT.
9, 2002]
Do you wish you had a map to
show you how to raise happy, healthy kids? On Sept. 12, Logan-Mason
Mental Health will provide you with a diagram by offering the Iowa
Strengthening Families Program at Lincoln Junior High School.
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The program will be available to any
interested parent, grandparent or guardian of youth ages 12-14.
Sessions will meet in the library at the junior high on Thursdays
from 6 to 8 p.m. for seven nonconsecutive weeks.
The Iowa Strengthening Families Program
was developed to prevent teen substance abuse and other behavior
problems, strengthen parenting skills, and build family strengths.
The program consists of adults and youth in separate sessions for
the first hour, and the second hour will consist of a family
session. The family sessions will discuss such topics as making
house rules, encouraging good behavior and using consequences.
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Logan-Mason Mental Health encourages
all families to attend. If you are unable to attend as a parent,
please send an adult who has a constant relationship with your
child. If there are other siblings at home, they may come to the
sessions.
Refreshments will be provided.
It is very
important for you to attend these sessions to enable you to become
better prepared to discuss these important topics at home. If you
are interested in attending or have any questions concerning the
program, please call Kristi Lessen or Kelly Bogdanic, (217)
735-2272, at Logan-Mason Mental Health, 304 Eighth St., Lincoln, IL
62656.
[Press release] |
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Grape juice may prevent
breast cancer growth
[SEPT.
6, 2002]
Concord grape juice inhibits
the growth of breast cancer tumors in laboratory animals, according
to University of Illinois research. In this study, rats fed purple
grape juice had significantly fewer and smaller tumors than those
that were not.
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"In an animal model, grape juice could
prevent or slow the development of breast cancer," said Keith
Singletary, U of I professor of nutrition.
In a project funded by the Illinois
Council for Food and Agricultural Research, female rats developing
breast cancer were given concentrated grape juice to drink. The
result was that tumors in these rats were reduced by 28 to 36
percent compared with those that did not have grape juice in their
diet.
In addition, on a cellular level, "polyphenolics"
from grape juice were shown to suppress mammary tumor growth. These
phenolic constituents include the grape’s purple pigment, said
Singletary, but it is unclear at this point which constituent or
combination is suppressing tumor growth. It is also unclear how
polyphenolics inhibit cancer.
"Previous research suggests that
polyphenolics, which are found in grapes, berries and chocolate, are
high in antioxidants," said Singletary.
[to top of second column
in this article]
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Antioxidants fight damaging molecules
in the body called oxygen-free radicals that may contribute to the
aging process as well as the development of cancer.
"From this study, we can’t identify
specifically the biological mechanism that is stopping tumor growth.
Antioxidants may play a role, but there may a combination of factors
effectively preventing the development of breast cancer.
"The results
of this study are quite promising," said Singletary. "They suggest
the need to explore the effect polyphenolics have on human cells so
we can identify any benefits that grape juice might offer to women."
[U of I news release] |
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Blood drive in Mount Pulaski
to help patients in local hospitals
[SEPT.
6, 2002]
Central Illinois Community
Blood Center, which supplies all of the blood and blood products for
12 central Illinois hospitals, including those in Lincoln,
Springfield, Hopedale, Taylorville, Jacksonville, Carrollton,
Hillsboro, Pana and Pittsfield, needs the help of community members
to replenish the blood supply for local hospitals. The Mount Pulaski
American Legion Women’s Auxiliary will host a blood drive on
Saturday, Sept. 14, from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. at the Mount Pulaski
American Legion Hall. The patients you will be helping are your
friends, neighbors and family members. Please help save lives in
central Illinois. Please donate blood.
|
Central Illinois Community Blood Center
is a nonprofit humanitarian organization that has been serving area
hospitals for over 31 years. CICBC is FDA-licensed and tests every
unit of blood as required by the FDA. CICBC is dedicated to
providing a safe, adequate and cost-effective blood supply to the
hospitals it serves. However, this cannot happen without the support
of the communities that use these hospitals. After supplying the
local hospitals, any extra blood collected is shared with other
areas of the country in need.
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Donating blood is safe and easy to do.
If you are at least 17 years old (16 years old with written
permission of a parent or guardian), weigh at least 110 pounds and
are in good health, you can be a hero and save a life.
For more information, call Robin Benson
at 523-2587.
[CICBC
press release] |
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Illinois receives additional
funding to fight West Nile virus
[AUG. 29, 2002]
CHICAGO
— Gov. George Ryan announced Wednesday that Illinois will receive
$400,506 from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
to assist in the control of West Nile virus.
|
"Illinois welcomes these additional
dollars," Ryan said. "Along with state dollars, this funding will
help us sustain our continuing efforts to manage West Nile virus in
Illinois." Illinois plans to use the additional funds for laboratory
enhancements, increased public awareness and local surveillance of
conditions that result in the spread of the virus.
The state’s West Nile Virus Task Force
was organized by the governor last fall after the virus was detected
in two birds in the Chicago metropolitan area. The group, which
began regular sessions last fall, meets regularly with Ryan to
update him on West Nile virus activity and prevention measures
throughout the state.
State Public Health Director Dr. John
R. Lumpkin, who leads the West Nile Virus Task Force, said the state
is doing all it can to monitor West Nile virus activity. The Chicago
laboratory for the Department
of Public Health has been working seven days a week to assist
hospitals and doctors with the testing of human samples. The funding
will support increased staffing, equipment and supplies.
[to top of second column in
this article] |
Human cases of West Nile virus have
been identified in Chicago and 10 Illinois counties: Chicago, 12
cases; suburban Cook County, 40; DuPage County, four; Ford County,
one; Jackson, one; Madison County, three; Montgomery County, one;
Sangamon County, two; Shelby County, one; St. Clair County, one; and
Will County, five.
The average age of people who have
contracted the virus in Illinois is 52.5 years. There have now been
a total of four deaths due to West Nile virus illness.
A total of 439 birds, 236 mosquito
batches and 62 horses in 92 Illinois counties have tested positive
this year for West Nile since surveillance for the
mosquito-transmitted virus began May 1.
A complete listing of the positive
birds, mosquito batches, horses and humans identified so far in
Illinois, by county, is available on the Illinois Department of
Public Health’s site at
http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/
wnvsurveillance_data02.htm.
[Illinois
Government News Network
press release]
[For links to
more information on the West Nile virus, click here.]
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Health
Matters A
monthly feature from Logan County Health Department
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The flu and
you
[SEPT.
3, 2002]
As the fall weather
approaches, flu season begins. Influenza is a serious and widespread
illness that is the cause of as many as 4,000 deaths each year in
Illinois. Influenza is caused by a virus that spreads from infected
people to the nose or throat of others and can cause fever, cough,
chills, sore throat, headache and muscle aches in people of any age.
Influenza should not be confused with intestinal illness.
|
People considered at high risk should
get a flu shot every year. The optimal time for these individuals to
receive influenza vaccine is during October and November.
High-risk categories include:
• People 65 years of age
or older.
• People with chronic
medical conditions.
• People with immune
system problems.
• Women who will be in the
second or third trimester of pregnancy during flu season.
• Children receiving
long-term aspirin therapy.
• Employees of nursing
homes or other chronic care facilities.
• Health-care workers.
• Household contacts of
people at increased risk for influenza-related complications.
[to top of
second column in this article]
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All others should begin their flu shots
in November and later, for as long as vaccine is available.
Beginning in October, Logan County
Health Department will have flu and pneumonia immunizations
available at the Health Department, 109 Third St., and on the Rural
Health Van.
Flu shots and pneumonia shots cost $16
each. Medicare will pay for flu and pneumonia shots; clients must
bring their Medicare card with them. Medicaid will pay for only flu
shots; clients must bring their Medicaid card with them.
Watch the
newspapers for upcoming schedules of flu clinics or call Logan
County Health Department at (217) 735-2317 for more information.
[News
release]
|
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Red
Cross
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September Red Cross classes
[AUG.
22, 2002]
The American Red Cross will
offer CPR and first-aid classes Sept. 10, 11 and 12 at their office
at 125 S. Kickapoo St. in Lincoln.
|
Adult CPR will be on the 10th,
first aid on the 11th, and infant and child CPR on the 12th. All
classes will be from 5:30 until 9:30 p.m.
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To register for any of the classes or for
further information, call 732-2134.
Office hours are from noon until 4 p.m. weekdays.
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West Nile Virus
|
West Nile virus links
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LDN articles
Federal websites
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State websites
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Honors
& Awards
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Announcements
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Medical rights class offered
[SEPT.
9, 2002]
Do you know what your
medical record contains or how it is used? With the great increase
in computerized medical information systems over the past few
decades, health care providers, insurance companies, information
bureaus, government, employers and other organizations hold much
greater amounts of medical information about individuals than ever
before.
|
What are your medical record privacy
risks? What laws protect your medical information?
To answer these questions such as
these, the Logan County Unit of University of Illinois Extension is
sponsoring a class called "Medical Privacy: Your Rights and
Responsibilities." The session will be at 1 p.m. Monday, Sept. 16,
at the local Extension office, 980 N. Postville Drive.
Ellen Burton, consumer and family
economics educator from the Peoria Extension center, will present
information to help you understand the main issues surrounding the
privacy of medical records.
Interested
individuals are invited to attend. Please call 732-8289 by Friday,
Sept. 13, to preregister for the program. It will last about two
hours and is provided at no cost to the participants. If you need a
reasonable accommodation in order to participate, please request
this when you preregister. The University of Illinois Extension
provides equal opportunities in programs and employment.
[News release] |
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Mobile
health unit schedule
The
Rural Health Partnership has announced the schedule for its mobile
health unit for 2002.
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Morning:
9-11 a.m. |
|
Afternoon:
1-3:30 p.m. |
Monday |
1st and 3rd |
Hartsburg |
1st and 3rd |
Emden |
|
2nd and 4th |
San Jose |
2nd and 4th |
Greenview |
Tuesday |
Weekly |
Chestnut |
Weekly |
Mount Pulaski |
Wednesday |
Weekly |
New Holland |
Weekly |
Middletown |
Thursday |
1st and 3rd |
Elkhart |
Weekly |
Atlanta |
|
2nd and 4th |
Friendship
Manor-Lincoln |
|
|
Friday |
1st, 2nd,
4th |
Village Hall-Latham |
1st |
Beason |
|
|
|
2nd and 4th |
Broadwell |
|
3rd |
Maintenance/ special
events |
3rd |
Maintenance/
special events
|
The
mobile health unit does not operate on the following dates for
holidays
during 2002: Jan. 21 (Martin Luther King Jr. Day), Feb. 18 (Presidents’ Day),
March 29 (Good
Friday), May 27 (Memorial Day), July 4 (Independence Day), Sept. 2 (Labor Day), Oct.
14 (Columbus Day), Nov. 11 (Veterans Day), Nov. 28-29
(Thanksgiving break) and Dec. 24-25 (Christmas break).
For more
information on the mobile health unit schedule and services, contact
Dayle Eldredge at (217) 732-2161, Ext. 409.
|
|
Community
resource list
This
family resource list to save and use is provided by the Healthy
Communities Partnership and the Healthy
Families Task Force, 732-2161, Ext. 409.
Agency |
Phone number |
Address |
Lincoln
agencies |
911 |
911 (emergency)
732-3911 (office -- non-emergency)
|
911 Pekin St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Abraham Lincoln
Memorial Hospital
|
732-2161
|
315 Eighth St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
American Red Cross
www.il-redcross.org |
732-2134 or
1 (800) 412-0100
|
125 S. Kickapoo
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Catholic Social
Services
www.cdop.org |
732-3771 |
310 S. Logan
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Lincoln/Logan County Chamber
of Commerce
www.lincolnillinois.com |
735-2385 |
303 S. Kickapoo St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Community Action (CIEDC) |
732-2159
|
1800 Fifth St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Crisis Pregnancy Center/
Living Alternatives |
735-4838 |
408 A Pulaski St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
DCFS (Department of
Children
& Family Services) |
735-4402 or
1 (800) 252-2873
(crisis hotline)
|
1120 Keokuk St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Heartland Community
College
- GED program |
735-1731 |
620 Broadway St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Housing Authority |
732-7776
|
1028 N. College St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Illinois Breast &
Cervical Cancer Program (IBCCP)
www.logancountyhealth.org |
735-2317 or
1 (800) 269-4019
|
109 Third St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Illinois Employment and Training Center (replaces JTPA office) |
735-5441 |
120
S. McLean St., Suite B
Farm
Bureau Building
Lincoln,
IL 62656
|
Lincoln Area YMCA
|
735-3915 |
319 W. Kickapoo St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Lincoln/Logan Food
Pantry |
732-2204
|
P.O. Box 773
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Lincoln Parents’
Center |
735-4192 |
100 S. Maple
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Lincoln Park District |
732-8770 |
1400 Primm Rd.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Logan County Department
of Human Services (Public Aid)
www.state.il.us/agency/dhs |
735-2306 |
1500 Fourth St.
P.O.
Box 310
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Logan County Health
Department
www.logancountyhealth.org |
735-2317 |
109 Third St.
P.O. Box
508
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Logan-Mason Mental
Health |
735-2272 or
735-3600
(crisis line)
|
304 Eighth St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Logan-Mason
Rehabilitation Center |
735-1413 |
760 S. Postville Drive
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
The Oasis
(Senior Citizens
of Logan County) |
732-6132 |
501 Pulaski St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Project READ
|
735-1731 |
620 Broadway St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Salvation Army |
732-7890
|
1501 N. Kickapoo
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Senior Services of
Central Illinois |
732-6213 or
1 (800) 252-8966
(crisis line)
|
109 Third St.
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
U. of I. Extension
Service
www.ag.uiuc.edu |
732-8289 |
980 N. Postville Drive
Lincoln, IL 62656
|
Springfield
agencies |
Department of Aging
www.state.il.us/aging |
785-3356 |
421 E. Capitol, #100
Springfield, IL 62701-1789
|
American Cancer Society
www.cancer.org |
546-7586
(24 hour) |
1305 Wabash, Suite J
Springfield, IL 62704
|
Community Child Care
Connection
www.childcaresolutions.org |
(217) 525-2805 or
1 (800) 676-2805
|
1004 N. Milton Ave.
Springfield, IL 62702-4430
|
Hospice Care of
Illinois |
1 (800) 342-4862
(24 hour) or
732-2161, Ext. 444
|
720 N. Bond
Springfield, IL 62702
|
Illinois Department of
Public Health
www.idph.state.il.us |
(217) 782-4977
|
535 W. Jefferson
Springfield, IL 62761
|
Legal Assistance
Foundation |
(217) 753-3300 or
1 (800) 252-8629
|
730 E. Vine St., Suite
214
Springfield, IL 62703
|
Sojourn Shelter &
Services Inc.
http://www.sojournshelter.org/
|
732-8988 or
1 (866) HELP4DV
(24-hour hotline)
|
1800 Westchester Blvd.
Springfield, IL 62704
|
U. of I. Division of
Specialized Care for Children
www.uic.edu |
524-2000 or
1 (800) 946-8468
|
421 South Grand Ave.
West
Second Floor
Springfield, IL 62704
|
Logan County
libraries |
Atlanta Library |
(217) 648-2112 |
100 Race St.
Atlanta, IL 61723 |
Elkhart Library |
(217) 947-2313 |
121 E. Bohan
Elkhart, IL 62634 |
Lincoln Public Library
www.lincolnpubliclibrary.org |
732-8878 |
725 Pekin St.
Lincoln, IL 62656 |
Mount Pulaski Library |
792-5919
|
320 N. Washington
Mount Pulaski, IL 62548
|
|
(updated
2-15-02) |
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