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Optimistic People Have Healthier Hearts, Study Finds

People who have upbeat outlooks on life have significantly better cardiovascular health, suggests a new study that examined associations between optimism and heart health in more than 5,100 adults with different backgrounds and lifestyles.

“Individuals with the highest levels of optimism have twice the odds of being in ideal cardiovascular health compared to their more pessimistic counterparts,” said lead author Rosalba Hernandez, a professor of social work at the University of Illinois. “This association remains significant, even after adjusting for socio-demographic characteristics and poor mental health.”

Participants’ cardiovascular health was assessed using seven metrics: blood pressure, body mass index, fasting plasma glucose and serum cholesterol levels, dietary intake, physical activity and tobacco use — the same metrics used by the American Heart Association to define heart health and being targeted by the AHA in its ‘Life’s Simple 7’ public awareness campaign.

In accordance with AHA’s heart-health criteria, the researchers allocated 0, 1 or 2 points — representing poor, intermediate and ideal scores, respectively — to participants on each of the seven health metrics, which were then summed to arrive at a total cardiovascular health score. Participants’ total health scores ranged from 0 to 14, with a higher total score indicative of better health.

RELATEDOptimistic Spouse Better for Partner’s Health

The participants, who ranged in age from 45-84, also completed surveys that assessed their mental health, levels of optimism, and physical health, based upon self-reported extant medical diagnoses of arthritis, liver and kidney disease.

Individuals’ total health scores increased in tandem with their levels of optimism. People who were the most optimistic were 50 and 76 percent more likely to have total health scores in the intermediate or ideal ranges, respectively.

The association between optimism and cardiovascular health was even stronger when socio-demographic characteristics such as age, race and ethnicity, income and education status were factored in. People who were the most optimistic were twice as likely to have ideal cardiovascular health, and 55 percent more likely to have a total health score in the intermediate range, the researchers found.

Optimists had significantly better blood sugar and total cholesterol levels than their counterparts. They also were more physically active, had healthier body mass indexes and were less likely to smoke, according to a paper on the research that appears in the January/February 2015 issue of Health Behavior and Policy Review.

The findings may be of clinical significance, given that a 2013 study indicated that a one-point increase in an individual’s total-health score on the LS7 was associated with an 8 percent reduction in their risk of stroke, Hernandez said.

“At the population level, even this moderate difference in cardiovascular health translates into a significant reduction in death rates,” Hernandez said. “This evidence, which is hypothesized to occur through a bio-behavioral mechanism, suggests that prevention strategies that target modification of psychological well-being — e.g., optimism — may be a potential avenue for AHA to reach its goal of improving Americans’ cardiovascular health by 20 percent before 2020.”

Believed to be the first study to examine the association of optimism and cardiovascular health in a large, ethnically and racially diverse population, the sample for the current study was 38 percent white, 28 percent African-American, 22 percent Hispanic/Latino and 12 percent Chinese.

optimistic oldsterData for the study were derived from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis, an ongoing examination of subclinical cardiovascular disease that includes 6,000 people from six U.S. regions, including Baltimore, Chicago, Forsyth County in North Carolina, and Los Angeles County.

Begun in July 2000, MESA followed participants for 11 years, collecting data every 18 months to two years. Hernandez, who is an affiliated investigator on MESA, is leading a team in conducting prospective analyses on the associations found between optimism and heart health.

“We now have available data to examine optimism at baseline and cardiovascular health a decade later,” said Hernandez, who expects to have an abstract completed in 2015.

The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and the National Center for Research Resources funded the research.

Source: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign / Photos (top, center) by Sun Star

December Job Gains Cap Best Year for U.S. Since 1999

consturction woman employment-CC-UniversityOfSalford

US employers added 252,000 jobs in December, according to Friday’s payroll report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, capping off the best year of job growth since 1999.

With January being the only month of 2014 with job gains below 200,000, the unemployment rate for job seekers is now down to 5.6%

The jobs added in December included 52,000 in business services, 48,000 in construction, 34,000 in health care and 17,000 in manufacturing.

(READ the story from Forbes.com)

Photo credit: University Of Salford (CC license)

Ill Fan is Headed to Seattle Playoff Game in Style, Thanks to Generous Fans

 

Diehard Seattle Seahawks fan Sherri Forch has never seen her National Football League heroes play in person. That will change Saturday, when she will not only attend the Seahawks’ divisional playoff game in a wheelchair, but be right on the 50-yard line under shelter, thanks to generous fans and family.

Her friend Karen Pickett, who organized a fundraiser for the ailing Forch, said the response from fans was “overwhelming.” Strangers have offered numerous tickets, a limo ride and money for the food and drinks.

“I am in orbit, over the moon, just blessing the universe from one end to the other,” Forch said Saturday night.

(WATCH the video above, or READ the full story in the Tacoma News-Tribune)

Story tip from Judy Ritchie

Volunteers Are Making Mittens for Injured Koalas

Koala-injured-with-mittens-InternationalFundfor Animal Welfare

The International Fund for Animal Welfare announced Wednesday that it is taking action to help koalas injured by the catastrophic bush fires in South Australia and Victoria.

Many of the slow-moving animals have suffered burns on their paws while trying to escape burning trees.

Once rescued, koalas are very docile and will sit quietly while they are treated. However, local vets and wildlife rehabilitators need volunteers to make cotton mittens that will keep the burn cream and bandages in place for the injured joeys.

It can take up to a year for the koalas’ burned paws to heal, so there’s a demand for hundreds of pairs for each of the surviving animals.

In just one day, the IFAW website collected pledges to make 500 pairs of mittens.

“Some people are making up to 100 mittens,” Josey Sharrad of the IFAW told TODAY.com. “It’s fantastic. We didn’t expect this response. We’ve been inundated, and it’s been brilliant.”

Volunteers are using a diagram with a specific pattern to make mittens from clean 100% cotton, such as old sheets, tea towels or cotton t-shirts.

The simple to make mittens are being sent to “IFAW at 6 Belmore Street, Surry Hills 2010” for distribution throughout the effected regions in Australia.

Take a Bite Out of Bad Cholesterol: Eat An Avocado Every Day

Haas Avocado BoardPhoto

Avocados are known to be a nutrient-dense food, high in beneficial monounsaturated fatty acids, but new research from Penn State indicates that eating one every day may lower bad cholesterol, which reduces risk for heart disease.

Previous studies have suggested that avocados are a cholesterol-lowering food, but this may be the first study that looked at specific health implications of adding the fruit to your diet.

Penny M. Kris-Etherton, Distinguished Professor of Nutrition at Penn State tested three different diets, all designed to lower cholesterol: a lower-fat diet, consisting of 24 percent fat, and two moderate fat diets, with 34 percent fat. The moderate fat diets were nearly identical, however one diet incorporated one Hass avocado every day while the other used a comparable amount of high oleic acid oils — such as olive oil — to match the fatty acid content of one avocado. (Hass avocados are the smaller, darker variety with bumpy green skin and the most commonly sold. They have a higher nutrient content than Florida avocados, which are larger, and have smoother skin and a higher water content.)

The researchers tested the diets with 45 healthy, overweight adults between the ages of 21 and 70. Compared to the participants’ baseline measurements, all three diets significantly lowered LDL — also known as bad cholesterol — as well as total cholesterol. However, participants achieved almost twice the reduction in LDL and total cholesterol while on the avocado diet, compared to the other two diets.

The avocado diet decreased bad cholesterol by 13.5 mg/dL, while LDL was decreased by 8.3 mg/dL on the moderate-fat diet and by 7.4 mg/dL on the low-fat diet.

All participants followed each of the three diets for five weeks. They were given a two-week break in between each diet. Blood samples were taken at the beginning and end of each study period. Subjects were randomly assigned the order in which they received each diet.

The study was published on Jan. 7 in the Journal of the American Heart Association.

“This was a controlled feeding study, but that is not the real world — so it is more of a proof-of-concept investigation,” said Kris-Etherton. “We need to focus on getting people to eat a healthy diet that includes avocados and other food sources of better fats.”

She pointed out that much of the U.S. population doesn’t know how to use or prepare avocados, with the exception of guacamole. However, guacamole is usually eaten with corn chips, which are high in both sodium and calories.

“People should start thinking about eating avocados in new ways,” said Kris-Etherton. “I think using it as a condiment is a great way to incorporate avocados into meals — for instance, putting a slice or two on a sandwich or using chopped avocado in a salad or to season vegetables.”

Kris-Etherton and colleagues note that further research will need to be conducted with a larger and more diverse study sample and to explore further how high-density lipoproteins — good cholesterol — might be affected by a diet that includes avocados.

The Hass Avocado Board, the National Center for Research Resources, and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences all supported this research. But, Kris-Etherton told NPR News that her team would have published the results whatever the outcome would have been, and the Hass Board had no role in the design of the study or the final report.

(Edited from an article originally published by Penn State)

Poverty-stricken Student Excels After University Rector Offers Full Scholarship

Free State University-SA-CC-Martin Kozák

A poverty-stricken South African teen who lived in a one-bedroom cottage she shared with 3 other people was unable to go to university due to a lack of funds, despite being one of the top students in her high school.

Her life was forever altered when she was personally offered an all-expenses paid scholarship by a university chancellor in the city of Bloemfontein, in Free State province, after he heard about her plight.

Not failing to disappoint, despite moving far from home, Bianca de Koning has excelled in her first year at university.

Vice chancellor Jonathan Jansen “could not stop talking about his protégé this week, saying, ‘She is a darling, [and] a wonderful asset. I love her as much as my own daughter.'”

Jansen says they’re “already on the lookout for other Biancas in all nine provinces.”

(READ the story from News24.com)

Photo of Free State University by Martin Kozák / Story tip from Tomek Piorkowski

Va. Transportation Officials Turning Roadkill Into Compost

compost-dirt-CC-normanack

The Virginia Department of Transportation has harnessed the power of accelerated decomposition and the odor-suppressing wonders of sawdust to turn its highway carcasses into plant food.

The state agency picks up as many as 55,000 dead deer every year and is testing the process at four sites, breaking down the animals in as little as six weeks.

(READ the story from The Virginian-Pilot)

Surfer’s Ring Lost in Pacific Ocean Returned After 35 Years

Robert Fowler said he was certain that he would never see his ring again when it slipped off his finger in 1979 and was lost in the Pacific Ocean.

He had owned it for only a couple of months, but 35 years later it would be returned to him by a Good Samaritan treasure hunter roaming the same beach where he lost it.

The San Francisco Chronicle reported yesterday, “The code of honor among treasure hunters requires a good-faith effort to find the owner of anything traceable.”

That’s why Larry Feurzeig  has found and reunited with owners no fewer than three gold rings.

“Wow,” Fowler said, handing Feurzeig a bottle of Champagne in appreciation. “I’m shocked. Amazed. Overjoyed. Life has a way of continuing to surprise us. Thanks.”

(READ the full story w/ photos in the SF Chronicle)

Story tip from Mike McGinley

Tribals See Lights in Their Homes for the First Time

Solar-light-in-India-MlindaFoundationPhoto

Tribal communities in some of the most remote and inaccessible forests in India were lifted out of the darkness and given hope for a better future. After never having electricity in their homes, they can now turn on solar lights and charge cell phones, an advancement that has kicked-off development for the entire village.

In July 2014, a micro-lending platform called Milaap partnered with the Mlinda Foundation to install affordable, community-owned solar mini-grids in rural villages that wanted to trade in their dirty kerosene lamps, for roughly the same cost as they were paying to buy fuel.

Communities like the Santhals in the Ayodhya hills, which had for centuries lived on subsistence farming in West Bengal, India, were given loans to install affordable solar electricity.

Milaap’s community of micro-lenders provided finance, so the tribespeople could own their solar grids and play a key role in their own development.

Solar lights not only are a means to improving their livelihood and education. Lifting them above the darkness also symbolizes hope, a path to a better future.

In the few short months since partnering with Mlinda, lenders on Milaap have helped set up solar microgrids in 23 off-grid tribal locations in the Sundarbans and in 20 hamlets of Purulia, Ayodhya Hills, benefiting over 280 families.

WATCH the video from one of the villages…

Inspired by the video?
Consider lending on Milaap to support more mini-grids

Panda Cub Plays in the Snow for the First Time (WATCH)

As the first winter snow coated the Washington, D.C. area this week, the National Zoo’s giant panda cub, Bao Bao, showed the exuberance of a child playing in it for the first time.

The sixteen month-old panda cub tumbled down the hill in her outdoor enclosure, climbed trees and pounced on her mother Mei Xiang.

The zoo reported that the big cats, seals, and wolves also enjoyed the wintry weather.

(WATCH the adorable video above)

10-Year-old Girl Thanks Police Officers With 200 Hand Made Cards

10yo-homemade-card-for-police

A fourth grader in Tyler, Texas has made 200 thank you cards and delivered them after Christmas to law enforcement officers around Smith County.

Savannah Solis, who attached candy bars to each card, said she just wanted them to know she was “thankful for what they do every day.”

Inside the note reads, “Dear police officer, My name is Savannah Solis, and I am 10-years-old. I just want to say thank you for taking care of us every day. You are my hero. I’m so glad we have you. You’re so brave, too. I pray that God will protect you. Please keep watching out for us, Love Savannah.”

She has been hand delivering the cards so she can meet the officers in person, and collecting autographs. She said she was also sending notes of gratitude to the New York City Police Department.

Whitehouse, TX Police Chief Craig Shelton told the Tyler Morning Telegraph, “It really touched me. When I was reading the card, she was sitting across from me with a beautiful little smile on her face; it choked me up.”

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from KLTV or  Tyler Morning Telegraph)

Story tip from Megan Stock

CityPak Project Gives 15,000 Custom Backpacks to Homeless

CityPak-homeless-distribution of backpack

The CITYPAK Project is distributing 2500 custom-designed backpacks to homeless people in NYC and surrounding areas this February, bringing the total number of PAKs given away to 15,000 across the U.S.

Inspired by the simple desire to create something that would make life on the streets of Chicago a little easier, businessman Ron Kaplan partnered with the design team at High Sierra, the adventure gear manufacturer, to come up with a high quality backpack.

Founded in 2012, The CITYPAK Project provides a convenient and versatile backpack with safety features uniquely designed to meet the constantly changing needs of the homeless. It includes an extra large rain pancho, straps to clip around an arm or leg when sleeping and a variety of specialty pockets.

High Sierra, and a growing list of corporate and individual donors and a variety of non-profit partners, have allowed The CITYPAK Project to distribute the PAKs in a growing list of cities.

More info at www.citypak.org – Photo by CITYPAK

 

Microbe Found in Grassy Field Contains Powerful Antibiotic

antibiotic-microbe-by WilliamFowle-NortheasternUniversity

“A team of researchers in Boston has eagerly exhumed and reburied dirt as a part of a strategy to access an untapped source of new antibiotics,” the outdoor microbes that refuse to grow in laboratories.

Now, their technique has yielded a promising lead: a previously unknown bacterium that holds promise for killing infection.

If the drug makes it through clinical trials, it would be a much needed weapon against several increasingly hard-to-treat infections.

(READ the story from Sciencemag)

Story tip from Joel Arellano

Festival Workers Rescue NZ Couple Dangling in Car on a Cliff

cliff rescue in NZ-SecurityGuardPhoto

A group of tired security guards rose from their slumber and leapt to the rescue of a couple left dangling over a river in their vehicle.

The couple’s car had skidded off a New Zealand highway at the Waioeka Gorge following the three-day Rhythm and Vines festival.

Seven members from the Red Badge Group security had to form a human chain to pull the man and woman to safety.

Making the ordeal even more frightening, every time one of the pair moved, the whole car moved as well.

(READ the story from Stuff.co.nz)

Story tip from Nancy Roberge

Never Too Old: 103 Year-old Man Scores Record Hole-in-one

A Florida golfer in Sarasota made history last month as the oldest person ever recorded to hit a hole-in-one.

The PGA confirms 103-year-old Gus Andreone recorded the ace at Palm Avis Country Club besting the mark previously held by a 102-year-old woman.

Even more amazing, the avid golfer says this is his eighth hole-in-one since 1939.

(WATCH the video above from Local 12 News)

Story tip from Kelly Harrington

After Inspiring Letter, Peyton Manning Has Team Searching 3 Months for Military Family

Peyton Manning-with Army sgt from Alaska-familyphoto

When Kristen Patterson sent quarterback Peyton Manning an inspiring letter about her husband, she never expected a response from the NFL superstar and so didn’t include any contact information.

Yet, after reading about Army Sgt. Ryan Patterson, who during two tours in Afghanistan would set alarms at odd hours of the night just to hear the Broncos’ football games, Manning requested the team’s public relations team try to find her.

The only problem was, the couple and their 10-month-old daughter had recently moved 3,950 miles away… to Fort Wainwright in North Pole, Alaska.

It took three months but the Broncos tracked down Patterson’s phone number through an Alaska utility company and sent word to Kristen through a sheriff to arrange a surprise meeting in the couple’s hometown of Cincinnati, where they would be staying for the holidays.

(READ the story from the Indianapolis Star)

Story tip from Joel Arellano

Amazing Artist With Cerebral Palsy ‘Paints’ With a Typewriter

typewriter-art-by-PaulSmith-Mountain-Youtubegrab

A man who lived with a severe disability for decades in an Oregon nursing home created a collection of amazing artwork using only a typewriter.

Paul Smith was born in 1921 with cerebral palsy, but could still type using one finger, and the ‘paintings’ he created are extraordinary.

typewriter-art-by-PaulSmith-YoutubegrabAs a young man with limited movement, he discovered that he could use the symbol keys on the top row of a typewriter to create shading and forms, even replicate the Mona Lisa.

He moved the paper around and used both black and colored typewriter ribbons to get the desired effects.

Broadcast journalist John Stofflet shared Smith’s story on YouTube last year, after covering it for Seattle’s NBC station in 2004.

(WATCH the inspiring video from KING-5 News below)

Paul Smith died at age 85 in 2007, having never married. According to Wikipedia, his art was published in several books.

Story tip from Honey Lamore

3 Guys on Snowmobiles Free a Moose Buried in an Avalanche

Avalanche Moose rescue by AveryVucinich

A moose caught in an avalanche in Alaska has three passing men on snow machines to thank for surviving into the new year.

The men spotted what looked like a nose sticking up out of the snow field, and dug out the moose apparently unharmed.  It was trapped in the area of Hatcher Pass on Dec. 28, and one of the men, Marty Mobley, said that without the group’s help, it would not have survived.

(READ the story from the Alaska Dispatch News)

Photo of Rob Uphus and Marty Mobley, by Avery Vucinich

Wild Bison Roam East of the Mississippi, First Time Since 1830s

USFWS/Rick Hansen

bison-by-USFWS-Rick Hansen

A program by the Nature Conservancy seeks to restore grasslands in Illinois, which is known as the Prairie State even though 99 percent of that landscape has been lost to farming.

Until October, their efforts, which included sowing multiple native grasses on 3,500 acres, had been missing one thing it needs in order to really thrive: grazers.

A herd of 30 bison now roam the undulating hills as the centerpiece of the restoration project located in the north-central part of the state.

(READ the full story from the Natural Resources Defense Council)

Joking With a Stranger Leads to Partnership That Brings Fun to Kids

Santas-Visions-Event-At-Fairfield-Inn-submitted-lemur

While at dinner I overheard that the person sitting 15 feet away from me has the same name as mine “Arun,” with both of us having origins in India.

Just to be funny — and possibly get a donation of $11 for a foundation I am involved with, www.tinysmilingfaces.com, that supports underprivileged kids in India — I shouted “HI, Arun!,”as if I had known him forever. He looked at me and said ‘Hi’ and stood up to shake my hand.

I got into conversations with him. He is a Doctor who is president of a foundation called “Bridges for Brain Injury” which helps many people recover from brain injuries. They have a Wildlife Defenders outreach program that brings different unique animals to family events.

I work at Visions Hotels, a group of hotels in upstate New York that organizes each year a fun day for kids during Christmas. Last year 12,000 kids were able to have a fun day in the 20 communities where Visions Hotels are located. After hearing me talk about Santa’s Visions events, Arun and his team decided to make the events even more fun for kids by exhibiting the small animals at some of the events.

In December Bridges For Brain Injury brought their education animals to five community events and benefit close to 7000 kids. Next year they plan to exhibit at all events and benefit close to 15,000 kids.

Its amazing how a small joke turned into so much fun for so many kids. We anticipate this great partnership to continue for a long time.

Through this story I hope to encourage more people to share the good that they or their company does. It’s good to share good news — because more good will happen.