Kidney Disease Soars

kidney_diseaseTHE rate of Australians receiving dialysis and kidney transplants has shot up by more than a quarter, new figures show. Chronic kidney disease was a factor in nearly one in 10 deaths in 2006 and more than one million hospitalizations in 2006-07, according an Australian Institute of Health and Welfare report released today.

Between 2000 and 2007, the rate of people receiving dialysis and kidney transplants for the treatment of end-stage kidney disease rose by 26 per cent. Over the same period, the number of new cases of end-stage kidney disease attributed to diabetes increased by almost two thirds in people aged 55 years and older.

The institute’s Claire Ryan said the risk factors for chronic kidney disease in Australia are high, including smoking and obesity. “Statistics like these obviously indicate that chronic kidney disease is a common and serious problem in Australia,” she said.

Chronic kidney disease is particularly common among indigenous people, who also have a high rate of diabetes. Aboriginal people are six times more likely than non-indigenous people to receive dialysis and kidney transplants. The death rates from the chronic kidney disease for indigenous men and women were seven and 11 times those of their non-indigenous counterparts.

Fun Family Vacation Spot

circus_in_las_vegasDoes anybody of you here have plan to experience the taste of elegance right in the heart of Las Vegas, Nevada where every thought out detail was created to bring you a wondrous and satisfying experience? Its graceful beauty will surround you with its spacious suites, food and entertainment. Well, for potential Vegas visitors who have the available funds for a Sin City trip, the local casino – hotel industry is offering some enticing discounts on rooms and vacation packages. Room rates at Las Vegas hotels are running at 30 – 50% below those observed at this time last year and are at levels not seen for several years.

One of many challenges the Vegas tourism industry will continue to face is potential consumer confidence or willingness to spend money on Vegas vacations. The tightness of money at home for prospective visitors is evident in the dwindling visitation numbers, significantly reduced occupancy rates, and lowered spending by those who do visit. All those latter indicators have forced Las Vegas gaming and tourism entities to send out some recently unprecedented room and package deals with freebies attached in order to entice patrons to show up and drop some bucks.

The depth of their efforts to entice visitors to Vegas has been ongoing for several months now and will continue into the unforeseeable future. Las Vegas has indeed reassumed its role as a bargain destination city and because of those developments now is the time to consider taking a family vacation in Las Vegas.   Not often thought of as a family destination, it has much to offer those looking for a fun family vacation spot.

Promoting RP Tourism

rp_tourismTHE National Association of Independent Travel Agencies is promoting volunteer vacations to further promote tourism in the country.

Robert Lim Joseph, Naitas chairman emeritus, said his group has tied up with Hands On Manila for “Hands On Volunteer Vacations” in various provinces of the country.

Joseph, who is also consul general of Latvia to the Philippines , said Naitas will provide logistical support for the vacation aspect of the program. The Philippine Tour Operators Association will also be tapped for the same assistance.

He said this new Naitas advocacy will promote to the local and foreign travelers who prefer to go to communities where they can be of help and contribute while enjoying the sights and the company of local people and appreciating the indigenous arts and culture.

Volunteer vacations are not new in other countries where travelers do not only lend helping hand literally but also share their expertise and knowledge, but are only being introduced here.

Hope In A Dose Of Nature

green_teaOnce a day, Matthew Hudson takes a square of chocolate mixed with green-tea extract and lets it dissolve in his mouth. Hudson, who has leukemia, is skeptical of natural therapies. But he has been taking the concoction for more than three years, ever since his doctor at the Mayo Clinic suggested it. “My disease has not progressed since I’ve been taking it,” said Hudson, a retired lawyer and investor from northern Virginia. “What does that mean? I don’t know. It means I’m not going to stop taking it.”A study by Mayo Clinic researchers last week provided more reason for hope. They found that high doses of green-tea extract can have a positive effect on Hudson’s type of cancer, chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). The saga of Daniel Hauser, the 13-year-old Minnesota boy with Hodgkin’s lymphoma, has sparked public debate over the value of natural medicine, especially in cancer treatment. In labs at Mayo and elsewhere, scientists are putting those same questions to the test, training their microscopes on everything from shark cartilage to mistletoe and finding some surprising answers.

At last count, the National Institutes of Health’s center for complementary medicine had sponsored 47 cancer-related studies — on macrobiotic diets, soy, Reiki-energy healing, yoga, flaxseed, self-hypnosis, fish oil, massage, acupuncture and more. So far, most have focused on how alternative therapies can help ease the pain or side effects of cancer treatment, says Mary Jo Kreitzer, director of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Spirituality and Healing. Studies that have looked for cancer-fighting properties have been disappointing, she said. “There have just not been good vigorous studies that have found these natural remedies to cure cancer,” said Kreitzer, who is both a scientist and a supporter of complementary medicine. The green-tea study shows the promise, she said, as well as the difficulties in trying to tap nature’s curing powers.