The REACH Program & Home-Based Care with Dr. Chrissy Kistler

This weekend on YOUR HEALTH®, Adam & Cristy will be talking with Dr. Chrissy Kistler, Assistant Professor in the UNC Department of Family Medicine, about The REACH Program & Home-Based Care.

Please tune in! This show will air:
• Saturday, July 20th at 9am
• Sunday, July 21st at 9am and 5pm
• Monday, July 22nd at 6pm and 10pm
 
Listen to the Show!
Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository

Show Topics:

  • Research that Matters (min 0-10): chewing tobacco & teens, living by major road & your health, teen fighting & exercise, ADHD & drug/alcohol use
  • Conversations with Dr. Chrissy Kistler about the REACH Program & Home-Based Care (min 10-30)
  • House Calls (min 30-40): Gabapentin, appetite & age, origin of metastasized cancer, gender & genetics

Resources:

National Healthcare in Israel with Dr. Ehud Davidson

Dr. Ehud DavidsonThis weekend on YOUR HEALTH® Adam & Cristy will be joined by Deputy Director General & Head of the Hospital Division at Clalit Health Services, Dr. Ehud Davidson to talk about National Healthcare in Israel.

Please tune in! This show will air:
• Saturday, December 8th at 9am
• Sunday, December 9th at 9am and 5pm
• Monday, December 10th at 6pm and 10pm
 
 
Listen to the Show!
Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository

Show Topics:

  • Research that Matters (min 0-11): pregnancy & asthma medication, reduce ADHD medication & exercise, acupuncture & reduce cancer side effects, cancer & green tea
  • Conversations with Dr. Ehud Davidson about National Healthcare in Israel (min 11-34)
  • House Calls (min 34-42): enalapril & diuretic blood pressure medications, high blood pressure & EKG,  flu season, transferring cat scans between hospitals

Resources:

The Internet & Your Health, Safety, Security & Your Privacy with Neil Berman

This weekend on YOUR HEALTH®, we’ll be joined by Helper-in-Chief at TheONbutton Computer and Technology Services, Neil Berman, about the internet & your health, safety, security & your privacy.

Please tune in! This show will air:
• Saturday, August 25th at 9am
• Sunday, August 26th at 9am and 5pm
• Monday, August 27th at 6pm and 10pm

Listen to the Show!
Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository
 

Access to Specialty Care for Children with Dr. Karin Rhodes

Dr. Karin RhodesAdam & Cristy will be joined by Assistant Professor and Director of Health Care Policy Research in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Dr. Karin Rhodes this weekend to discuss Access to Specialty Care for Children.

Please tune in! This show will air:
• Saturday, January 7th at 9am
• Sunday, January 8th at 9am and 5pm
• Monday, January 9th at 6pm and 10pm

 
Listen to the Show!
Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository
 

Epigenetics: More Than Just Genes with Dr. Howard Cedar

Howard CedarThis weekend on YOUR HEALTH®, we’ll talk with Dr. Howard Cedar, Head of the Faculty of the Medicine’s Department of Developmental Biology and Cancer Research at Hebrew University, about Epigenetics: More Than Just Genes. Dr. Cedar is an internationally- acclaimed molecular biologist, and his discoveries have earned him the title of the “father of DNA methylation.” He has also received the Israel Prize and Wolf Prize in Medicine.

Please tune in! We’re on the air:
– Saturday at 9am
– Sunday at 9am & 5pm
– Monday at 6pm & 10pm
 
 
Listen to the Show!

Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository

The War Against Wounds with Dr. William Marston

William MarstonThis weekend on YOUR HEALTH®, we’ll be talking with Chief of the UNC Division of Vascular Surgery and Medical Director of UNC’s Wound Healing Center, Dr. William Marston about the war against wounds.

Please tune in! We’re on the air:
– Saturday at 9am
– Sunday at 9am & 5pm
– Monday at 6pm & 10pm
 
 
 
 
 
Listen to the Show!

Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository

ADHD drugs may be safer then originally thought

Attention deficit disorder and hyperactivity (ADHD) are unarguably one of our countries most important medical diagnoses, affective millions of children and adults.  Over 2.5 million of youth ages 4-17 take some type of medication for ADHD.  Previously, people have worried that ADHD drugs have potential negative side effects on the heart, but new research may prove that elevated heart risks do not have meaningful adverse clinical effects with the drugs.

A study done by the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and co-authors from HealthCore Inc. showed that children/teens who ADHD medicines are not at any higher risk for heart problems then children/teens who don’t use the medicines.  The researchers even went on to say that if the medicine is having positive effects on the child, that the benefit of the drug on the child outweighs any uncertain risks.

The study looked at over 241,000 patients from 5 states (California, Florida, Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio) and from a HealthCore Research Database. The patients were ages 3-17 and on ADHD medications. They then compared patients who take ADHD medications with those who don’t, and looked specifically at heart attack, sudden death and stroke.  Of the children/teens that were on ADHD medicine, only 28 had died but of the children/teens who weren’t on medicine, 607 had died. No relationship existed between being on the drug and having an adverse outcome.

This study does not rule out a rare adverse affect, but it should reassure most parents that ADHD medications can safely benefit youth without raising heart risks to dangerous levels.

Does my child need supplemental iron?

We know that iron and zinc are important to nutrition and to everyone’s brain development, especially children.  Iron deficiency causes not only malnutrition and anemia, but it may contribute to Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) or hinder brain development and child growth.  Unfortunately children in developing nations are at particularly high risk of not getting iron and zinc in their diets.

So it makes sense that taking a supplement beginning at young age in such countries might improve cognitive development.  We wish research was always that simple!  In the Journal of Clinical Nutrition, a recent study looked at 560 nine-year-olds in Thailand randomly assigned at birth to receive supplements.  Some children got supplements with iron and zinc, and some of them just got a sugar pill.  The researchers followed the children over 9 years to find out if the children who were given supplements did better with IQ, memory, attention and school performance.

While the study showed that there really wasn’t a difference in outcomes at age nine,  maybe a caveat exists: children in the study only received the supplements  for six months early on in infancy, and most of the kids were not iron deficient.

The jury may still be out on the benefits of routine infant supplements, but make no mistake, the jury is certainly clear that if you or your child is iron deficient, then it is absolutely necessary to take action. Zinc is especially important in many developing countries because it can help prevent diarrhea, which is often a major problem.

In order to find out your iron levels, you may need to get tested.
To find out the recommended intake for iron, what foods to eat, and much more about the importance of iron, go to: http://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/iron

For more information on what an iron test is and why it is important to get tested, go to: http://www.healthline.com/galecontent/iron-tests

ADD & bladder problems in children-Why all parents should care

Image of the brain with the words such as inattention and distracted surrounding it.

We just reviewed research from Turkey of a study of 62 children with ADHD, or Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, and 124 children who did not have the disorder.   Researchers had the children’s parents complete questionnaires about their children’s voiding symptoms and any problems with bed-wetting or bladder control.  The research showed that the children with ADHD suffer from more and more severe bladder related problems.

We know from previous research that children who had ADHD had more issues with bed-wetting, but this new research looks at all kinds of bladder issues, not just the most severe things, including much more common issues like children’s ability to just control their bladder or to go to the bathroom more frequently.

It’s not quite clear why this relationship exists.   It could have to do with the medications that children with ADHD may be taking or it may have to do with some of that impulse control that such children have. So we are not quite sure why, but it sure looks like kids who have ADHD have more problems with their bladder.

This research should serve as a valuable take-home message for teachers, parents, administrators, therapists and clinicians.  Caregivers, family members and even doctors need to know that a child with ADHD who is fidgeting may have to go to the bathroom. Teachers should not think a child with ADHD just wants to get out of the classroom.  New strategies can teach better bladder control.  Flexibility, education and understanding all the way around are really needed.

Image courtesy of Psyc3330 w11