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View Article  Hidden Caffeine in Food and Drink: Do You Know What You Are Consuming?
Hidden Caffeine in Food and Drink: Do You Know What You Are Consuming?

National Geographic

Did you know?

Guarana: Hidden Caffeine

Guarana is an ingredient found in many sodas, energy drinks, protein bars, and natural weight-loss aids. It comes from the seeds of a woody vine native to Brazil named for an Amazonian people, the Guarani, who process the seeds for use in food, drink, and medicine. What might be a surprise is that guarana contains concentrations of naturally occurring caffeine higher than that found in coffee, tea, cacao, and kola. Guarana sodas are immensely popular in South America, especially Brazil, and the stimulant is finding its way into more and more energy drinks. Guarana is sometimes marketed as a natural alternative to caffeine, but it's caffeine all the same. Look at the labels of some energy drinks and you'll see both caffeine and guarana, which means that you're getting caffeine from two sources.
 

Rethinking Caffeine

Scientists have developed various theories to explain caffeine's "wake-promoting" power. The consensus today focuses on the drug's interference with adenosine, a chemical in the body that acts as a natural sleeping pill. Caffeine blocks the hypnotic effect of adenosine and keeps us from falling asleep. Since caffeine has also been shown to enhance mood and increase alertness in moderate amounts, it's a potent potion for students and scholars stuck in the lab at three in the morning. Paul Erdős, the Hungarian mathematician who often worked his equations around the clock, is known for saying that "a mathematician is a machine for turning coffee into theorems."

..."Caffeine helps people try to wrest control away from the human circadian rhythm that is hardwired in all of us," says Czeisler. But then a shadow crosses the doctor's sunny face, and his tone changes sharply. "On the other hand," he says solemnly, "there is a heavy, heavy price that has been paid for all this extra wakefulness." Without adequate sleep—the conventional eight hours out of each 24 is about right—the human body will not function at its best, physically, mentally, or emotionally, the doctor says. "As a society, we are tremendously sleep deprived."
 
In fact, the professor goes on, there is a sort of catch-22 at the heart of the modern craving for caffeine. "The principal reason that caffeine is used around the world is to promote wakefulness," Czeisler says. "But the principal reason that people need that crutch is inadequate sleep. Think about that: We use caffeine to make up for a sleep deficit that is largely the result of using caffeine."

(Click here to read the complete article.)

View Article  Future IOWA Weather
Future IOWA Weather


So, now that we IOWANS have endured our first wave of 4-degree F temperatures and less this winter, what is all the hubbub about global temperature change? 

Let us put it in terms we can understand.  Humans put thousands of pounds per day of carbon dioxide and other nasty items into our air from our activities.  More and more of us have become aware that these behaviors are not good for our health or for the status of our weather.  According to the Sierra Club, the last four years have been the warmest since 1861 records were kept.  If you happen to look at the forecast for the end of this week, at least here in eastern IOWA, we will be close to 60 degrees F by Thursday or Friday.  This is not necessarily a good thing.  Let's look at what the Sierra Club says about this because the consequences of global climate change will be felt locally by IOWANS and our economy.

The world's leading scientists project that during our children's lifetimes, global warming will raise the average temperature of the planet by 2.7 to 11 degrees Fahrenheit.

The Earth is only 5 to 9 degrees warmer today than it was 10,000 years ago during the last ice age. Throughout history, major shifts in temperature occurred at a rate of a few degrees over thousands of years. They were accompanied by radical ecological changes, including the extinction of many species. Manmade global warming is occurring much faster - faster, in fact, than at any time in the past 10,000 years. Unless we slow and ultimately reverse the buildup of greenhouse gases, we will have decades, not millennia, to try to adapt to radical changes in weather patterns, sea levels and serious threats to human health. Increased flooding, storms and agricultural losses could devastate our economy. Plants and animals that cannot adapt to new conditions will become extinct.

But How Much of a Difference Can a Few Degrees Make?

Plenty.

The human race is engaged in the largest and most dangerous experiment in history - an experiment to see what will happen to our health and the health of our planet when we change our atmosphere and our climate. This is not some deliberate scientific inquiry. It is an uncontrolled experiment on the environment of the Earth, and we're gambling our children's future on its outcome. The results of this pollution are already significant. We have increased levels of carbon dioxide (CO2), the primary global warming gas, in our atmosphere by 30 percent in the past 100 years. Some regions of the world have already warmed by as much as 5 degrees Fahrenheit. Physicians at Harvard University and Johns Hopkins medical schools and other medical institutions have issued grim assessments that global warming may already be causing the spread of infectious diseases and increasing heat-wave deaths. Extreme weather events have become more common. Plants and animals around the world are shifting their ranges in an effort to escape a changing climate.

The rapid buildup of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere is the source of the problem. By burning ever-increasing quantities of coal, oil and gas, we are choking our planet in a cloud of this pollution. If we don't begin to act now to curb global warming, our children will live in a world where the climate will be far less hospitable than it is today.

The current Washington, D.C. administration has a Clogged Skies Policy that does nothing more than give a pass to energy industries and other corporations that spew killing toxins into our atmosphere. Current administrators have given their plan a different name, but I choose to call it EXACTLY what it is: THE CLOGGED SKIES POLICY.  For you see, this current administration is WEAK when it comes to keeping cancer-causing, asthma-inducing products out of our lives.  The businesses that choose to slide under the radar and not be progressive and benevolent enough to do the right thing, are going to continue to contribute to the ill health of us all.

So, are you asking yourself what you can do?  Look around your town, your county, your state, and nearby states to see where the pollution in your area is coming from.  Then take action.  It is as close as looking in your own backyard.

 
For more information and to see what you can do to alleviate this problem, go to: www.sierraclub.org/globalwarming/overview/

See also the September 2004 issue of National Geographic or go to their site: www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine

View Article  Naughty and Nice 2004
Naughty and Nice 2004

American Progress

The Progress Report makes this year's holiday list and checks it twice

Naughty: Merck, for spending millions to market the pain-reliever Vioxx to consumers long after the company knew it was unsafe.
Nice: Dr. David Graham, of the FDA's Office of Drug Safety, for fighting to keep dangerous drugs off the market.  

Naughty: Bernard Kerik, for turning an apartment donated for weary Ground Zero police and rescue workers into a love nest for his adulterous affairs.
Nice: Miramax Films, for putting the kibosh on Kerik's summer blockbuster biopic.

Naughty: Congress, for underfunding the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP). allocating "$164 million less than needed to cover the expected 24 percent increase in home heating costs" this winter.
Nice: Richard Hamann and his wife, Donna, for paying the electricity bills for the entire town of Anthon, Iowa, because they wanted to give something back to their community.

Naughty: NRA Radio, for broadcasting anti-gun-control propaganda and calling it legitimate news.
Nice: Ed Schultz, Arnie Arnesen, Tony Trupiano, Thom Hartmann, Wendy Wilde, Al Franken, Katherine Lanpher and the rest of the Air America crew, for showing progressive radio can be thought-provoking, hard-hitting and fun.

Naughty: Department of Homeland Security, for omitting "major sites" like chemical plants and dams from its unfinished national database of potential terrorist targets.
Nice: Department of Homeland Security, for including "water parks and miniature golf courses" in the national database. At your local putt putt, the terrorists never win.

Naughty: The Environmental Protection Agency, for using camcorders to bribe parents into offering up their toddlers as guinea pigs for a study about the dangers of pesticides on children…sponsored by the chemical industry.
Nice: The Natural Resources Defense Council, for fighting to protect kids from the harmful effects of pesticides and chemicals. 

Naughty: Right-wing conservatives in the House of Representatives, for changing ethics rules so Tom DeLay (R-TX) could one day be their indicted leader.
Nice: Whistleblowers like Bunnatine Greenhouse, Richard Foster and Paul O'Neill, for holding our government to a higher ethical standard.

Naughty: Medicare head Tom Scully, Rep. Billy Tauzin, Rep. James Greenwood and trade representatives Ralph Ives and Claude Burcky, for using public service for personal benefit, taking lucrative, top-dollar jobs with the pharmaceutical industry they had formerly regulated.
Nice: Rep. Henry Waxman, for using public service for public benefit, compiling reports on everything from the Halliburton to undue secrecy in the White House.

Naughty: EPA administrator Mike Leavitt, for blaming pollution on poverty.
Nice: The Union of Concerned Scientists, for giving us the facts about global warming, pollution, clean energy and the Bush administration's ideological approach to science.

Naughty: Sinclair Media, for planning to run an hour long anti-Kerry screed as "news" just before the U.S. presidential election.
Nice: Media Matters and the blogosphere [and Rapid Response!], for forcing Sinclair to change its plans. (And continuing to demand that Sinclair stop broadcasting one-sided political spin.)

View Article  John Drury: Iowa's Prescription for Low Cost Medicine
Iowa's Prescription for Low Cost Medicine

by John Drury

Currently, there are only four U.S. states that openly encourage their citizens to buy prescription drugs from Canada: Kansas, Illinois, Missouri, and Wisconsin. Iowa is not on the list, but I believe that it should be.


In the recent presidential election, we heard Bush use one of his many scare tactics saying that if we are going to import drugs from Canada, he wants to make sure “it cures you, and doesn’t kill you.” He said his worry is that a drug might “look like it’s from Canada but it might be from a third world.”

While that’s a very good scare tactic, and undoubtedly worked very well in his campaign, it is, like many of his scare tactics, not based on any sort of fact.

Predictably, the prescription drug companies have only added to the fear with full page ads like the one shown here. One way to get people to stop getting their drugs from Canada would be to tell them they are from a third world country, schemes the pharmaceutical companies.

According to a recent Day to Day news story aired on NPR on December 7, the opposite is true. Most of the drugs that Americans buy from Canada are actually made in the United States, exported to Canada, and then get re-imported back to the United States.

Canadians are baffled by our ignorance, and offended by the suggestion that their pharmacies aren’t safe and that it is some sort of prescription drug grab bag free for all. Their government regulates the quality and the price of their prescription drugs. We, on the other hand, turn our government over to the pharmaceutical companies, letting them write our laws and set our policies, all at our own expense. Oddly enough, our high drug prices—which seniors cannot afford—are effectively subsidizing the low-cost prescriptions that Canadians enjoy.

Iowa is in the top five in the percentage of its elderly population. Since the federal government has failed its people on this issue, the state of Iowa has a moral obligation to meet the needs of Iowans who cannot afford the drugs that are prescribed to them. It is time for the state of Iowa to join our neighbors and make lower cost, prescription drugs from Canada readily accessible to our seniors.

View Article  FDA's Credibility Hits Yet Another Low as Consumer Health Lands on Back Burner


FDA's Credibility Hits Yet Another Low as Consumer Health Lands on Back Burner

American Progress

Pfizer's Greed A National Shame

The drug maker Pfizer "reaffirmed its commitment" over the weekend to keep its prescription painkiller, Celebrex, on the market, despite a disclosure last week that the drug more than tripled the risk of heart attacks, strokes and death among those taking high doses in a national trial. That level of risk is even greater than the one found in patients taking the similar painkiller, Vioxx, in a similar trial that led Merck to withdraw Vioxx in September. The results have "raised new questions about how well federal drug regulators protect the public and worsened drug makers' already dismal image." Indeed, reports following the discovery have shown Celebrex, "fast-tracked" by the agency and never even proved it protected the stomach from gastrointestinal problems associated with aspirin and ibuprofen – its primary advantage over existing pain relievers.

MARKETING TO MIDDLE AGE: Celebrex and Vioxx were designed for senior citizens, who have the highest risk of stomach bleeding – "principally people over 65 years who have suffered from gastrointestinal problems," – but marketed aggressively to middle-aged Americans, who could have benefited just as well from traditional painkillers like aspirin. Dorothy Hamill, the 1976 Olympic figure skating gold medalist, "was the middle-aged celebrity face of Vioxx," while commercials for Celebrex targeted "baby boomers beginning to suffer from arthritis." Many medical experts "now say that Celebrex and Vioxx, selling for $2 or $3 a pill, have been too widely prescribed to patients who could safely obtain the same pain benefits from over-the-counter drugs costing pennies apiece." Under pressure from the FDA, Pfizer now says it will halt advertising to consumers, but not to doctors.

THE PASSING LANE: Celebrex, like Vioxx, was "fast-tracked" by the FDA, because it was suggested the drug would help cut the rate of gastrointestinal bleeding associated with older painkillers. That meant the FDA took only six months to approve the drug, even though scientists concluded it had not "sufficiently demonstrated" it reduced the rate of the gastrointestinal problems compared with existing painkillers. Later studies by Pfizer "were never convincing enough for the agency to remove the warning from Celebrex's labeling." In other words, Celebrex "has never been proven to the FDA's satisfaction to have the stomach-protecting benefits that originally were supposed to be the point of that category of drugs."

THE 'SPECTACULAR' FDA: Celebrex and Vioxx are not the only drugs to come under scrutiny lately. On the same day the Celebrex study broke, "in less than 12 hours," AstraZeneca reported that a trial of Iressa, a lung cancer drug approved in the United States last year, showed that the drug did not prolong lives. Eli Lilly warned doctors that Strattera, its drug to treat attention deficit disorder had caused severe liver injury in at least two patients. And doctors writing in a prominent medical journal recommended that physicians stop prescribing Pfizer's Bextra painkiller. So what was the White House's reaction to the finding that several FDA approved drugs are ineffective or dangerous? White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card said the agency was doing a "spectacular job."

SPECTACULAR NEGLIGENCE: The Washington Post reports the FDA, "which regulates almost one-quarter of the U.S. economy, has been without a permanent chief for almost two-thirds of the time that Bush has been in office." The agency also has had a "high number of temporary appointees administering its centers, offices and divisions, including the key positions running the offices that evaluate new drugs and monitor the safety record of approved medications." The White House's negligence plays right into the hands of major drug companies, which would rather "have no one there than someone who favors a proactive stance that might slow down the industry or raise hard questions about profitable drugs." Observers say the agency's lack of leadership has made it "less able to respond quickly and effectively to emerging problems."

SPECTACULAR FUNDRAISERS: Another reason Bush has not appointed an FDA head may be that some Democrats have signaled they would "strongly oppose any nominee from the pharmaceutical industry." But the pharmaceutical industry, which was the major winner in last year's prescription drug bill, includes some of the GOP's biggest supporters. And of health industry contributors, Pfizer is number one. Company executives have contributed $2.7 million to Republicans since 2000, and the drugmaker's political action committee (PAC) has pitched in more than $1.4 million. Since 2000, 79 percent of the company's contributions have gone to Republicans. Merck has made almost $1.8 million in political donations since 2000, 74 percent to Republicans.

View Article  Recycle 'Til You Drop!
Recycle 'Til You Drop!

Waste Commissions In Your Area
 
There once was a girl name' of ANN
Who'd recycle every jar, every can
'cycling cartons and boxes
And papers and watches
Such a good little example this girl name' of Ann

Did you know the recycled cardboard that your cereal comes in used only 1/4 the energy to make and also only created 1/2 the pollution as a newly made box? 

Besides decreased energy use and pollution reduction, another advantage is the resultant pride knowing you are contributing to the welfare of your community and state. It can also be a chance to create a family project at home or with your friends.  See who can recycle the most as well as purchase recycled items. List items that you find are made by recycling means. This can be something we ALL can work on every day of our lives.

From a recycled garden in Davenport on North Carey Avenue above 53rd Street, to a Davenport resident winning a car for her years of recycling, IOWANS are doing their part to make our state a cleaner state.        

So what can recycling do for you and what can you do for recycling?  Park benches, rugs, goggles and fiber for filling ski jackets are just a few items that can be made from recycled plastics.  Used aluminum and steel have each found a second life as bikes, cookware, and cars.  

Every county in IOWA should have a WASTE COMMISSION. Check out your government listings. Here in SCOTT COUNTY you can go to
www.wastecom.com to find more information. Or you can contact them at WASTE COMMISSION OF SCOTT COUNTY/PO BOX 563 BUFFALO, IOWA 52728/(563) 381-1300/ or FAX 381-1301...Love, Peace, Happy Holidays.... Please, remember to CPR: CONSERVE, PARTICIPATE, & RECYCLE. 

View Article  Food Supply Vulnerable to Contamination by Drugs and Plastics from Gene-Altered Crops
Food Supply Vulnerable to Contamination by Drugs and Plastics from Gene-Altered Crops

Union of Concerned Scientists

WASHINGTON -- For more than a decade, corn, soybeans, and other food crops genetically engineered to produce drugs, vaccines, and industrial chemicals have been grown on American farms. But a new report by six agricultural experts now warns that the food supply is vulnerable to contamination by these "pharmaceutical crops" unless substantial changes are made in the ways and places such crops are grown and managed.

Based on the experts' findings, the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) [this week] called on the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) to immediately ban the field production of corn, soybeans, and other food crops engineered to produce pharmaceutical and industrial chemicals. UCS recommends that the USDA spearhead a major campaign to encourage and fund safer alternatives like non- food crops or growing pharmaceutical food crops indoors....

UCS convened the panel of experts to determine whether it is possible to produce pharmaceuticals in familiar food crops like corn or soybean (the two plants most often used for pharmaceutical production) without contaminating human food or animal feed. The panel -- acting independently of UCS -- analyzed the current system for growing food- and feed-grade corn and soybeans and identified many points where drugs and plastics could pass to the food supply if pharmaceutical crops were grown under the same system. After evaluating various approaches to blocking contamination at those points, the panel concluded that the current corn and soybean production system cannot be used for pharmaceutical corn and soybean in the United States while ensuring virtually no contamination of the food and feed system.

"It is sobering that drugs and industrial chemicals could have so many routes to the food supply," said Dr. David Andow, editor of the technical report and a professor in the Department of Entomology at the University of Minnesota. "Pollen can be carried to fields with food crops by the wind or insects, seeds lodged in the crevices of harvesting equipment could come loose while harvesting food, and plants can come up as volunteers in the middle of a food crop. To protect the food supply, each potential route has to be blocked."

(Click here to read the complete article.)


View Article  Asthma Danger To Rural Children
Asthma Danger To Rural Children

IOWA Public Radio

December 12, 2004

Children living close to large factory hog farms have a higher than normal incidence of ASTHMA than children who do not live in such areas.  Those children living close to factory farms that use antibiotics on the swine incur the highest rate of ASTHMA.   This information was reported on IOWA Public Radio Friday, December 10th and is from a study in part by Dr. James A. Merchant.  Dr. Merchant is Dean of the University of IOWA College of Public Health in IOWA City. The College of Public Health at the U of I teaches and publishes research on causes of rural illness and prevention as well as environmental health policy.  They also have published information on "Cancer In IOWA", the "IOWA Birth Defects Registry Annual Report" and "Environmental Health Science Research".                                                               
Connections between use of pesticides and prostate cancer are laid out in their 2004 College of Public Health Research Publication.  On page 16 entitled "All in a Day's Work" it states:   "In IOWA individual farm holders have 27% increased risk of prostate cancer, while commercial pesticide applicators have a 41% increased risk."


(See: www.public-health.uiowa.edu/news/pubs)

(Also see: www.ehsrc.org and www.aghealth.org)


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