The crook of your elbow is not just a plain patch of skin. It is a piece of coveted real estate, a special ecosystem, a bountiful home to no fewer than six tribes of bacteria. Even after you have washed the skin, there are 1 million bacteria in every square centimeter.
These are not bad bacteria. They are what biologists call commensals, creatures that eat at the same table with people to everyone's mutual benefit. Though they were not invited to enjoy board and lodging in the skin of your inner elbow, they are giving something of value in return.
They are helping to moisturize the skin by processing the raw fats it produces, said Dr. Julia Segre, of the National Human Genome Research Institute.
Segre and colleagues reported their discovery of the six tribes in a paper published online Friday in Genome Research. The research is part of the human microbiome project, "microbiome" meaning the entourage of all microbes that live in people. The project is a government-financed endeavor to catalog the typical bacterial colonies that inhabit each niche in the human ecosystem.
The project, in its early stages, has established that the bacteria in the human microbiome collectively possess at least 100 times as many genes as the mere 20,000 or so in the human genome.
Since humans depend on their microbiome for various essential services, including digestion, a person should be considered a superorganism, microbiologists said, consisting of his or her own cells and those of all the commensal bacteria. The bacterial cells outnumber human cells by 10-1, meaning that if cells could vote, people would be a minority in their own body.
Segre reckons there are at least 20 different niches for bacteria, and maybe many more, on the skin, each with a characteristic set of favored commensals. The types of bacteria she found in the inner elbow are different from those that another researcher identified a few inches away, on the inner forearm. But each of the five people Segre sampled harbored much the same set of bacteria, suggesting this set is specialized for the precise conditions of nutrients and moisture that prevail in the human elbow.
Microbiologists think humans and their commensal bacteria are continually adapting to one another genetically. The precision of this mutual accommodation is indicated by the presence of particular species of bacteria in different niches on the human body, as Segre has found with denizens of the elbow.
Other researchers have found that most gut bacteria belong to just 2 of the 70 known tribes of bacteria. The gut bacteria perform vital services such as breaking down complex sugars in the diet and converting hydrogen, a byproduct of bacterial fermentation, to methane.
The nature of the gut tribes is heavily influenced by diet, according to a research team led by Dr. Ruth Ley and Dr. Jeffrey Gordon of the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
With the help of colleagues at the San Diego and St. Louis zoos, Ley and Gordon scanned the gut microbes in the feces of people and 59 other species of mammals, including meat eaters, plant eaters and omnivores. Each of these three groups has a distinctive set of bacteria, they reported in Friday's issue of Science, with the gut flora of people grouping with the other omnivores.
Despite the vast changes that people have made to their diet through cooking and agriculture, their gut bacteria "don't dramatically depart in composition from those of other omnivorous primates," Gordon said.
The lifetime of an individual bacterium in the human superorganism may be short, since millions are shed each day from the skin or gut. But the colonies may survive for a long time, cloning themselves briskly to replace members that are sacrificed. Where these colonies come from and how long they last is not known.
Dr. David Relman of Stanford University has tracked the gut flora of infants and found that their first colonists come from their mother. But after a few weeks the babies acquired distinctive individual sets of bacteria, all except a pair of twins who had the same set. Relman said he was trying to ascertain if the first colonists remain with an individual for many years.
Saturday, May 31, 2008
Friday, May 30, 2008
Strong Link Between Crime and Lead Exposure
The first study to follow lead-exposed children from before birth into adulthood has shown that even relatively low levels of lead permanently damage the brain and are linked to higher numbers of arrests, particularly for violent crime.
Previous studies linking lead to such problems have used indirect measures of lead and criminality, and critics have argued that socioeconomic and other factors may be responsible for the observed effects.
But by measuring blood levels of lead before birth and during the first seven years of life and then correlating the levels with arrest records and brain size, Cincinnati researchers have produced the strongest evidence yet that lead plays a major role in crime.
The team also found that lead exposure is a continuing problem despite the efforts of the federal government and cities to minimize exposure.
The average lead levels in the study "unfortunately are still seen in many thousands of children throughout the United States," said Dr. Philip Landrigan, director of the Children's Environmental Health Center at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York.
The link between criminal behavior and lead exposure was found among even the least-contaminated children in the study, who were exposed to amounts of lead similar to what the average U.S. child is exposed to today, said Landrigan, who was not involved in the study.
"People will sometimes say, 'This is in the past. We are cleaning up lead. We don't have lead problems anymore,' " said criminologist Deborah Denno of Fordham University in New York, who was not involved in the study. "The Ohio study says this is still a big problem."
Nationwide, about 310,000 children between 1 and 5 have blood lead levels above the federal guideline of 10 micrograms per deciliter, and experts suspect that many times that number have lower levels that are nonetheless dangerous.
"It is a national disgrace that so many children continue to be exposed at levels known to be neurotoxic," said Dr. David Bellinger, of the Harvard Medical School, who wrote an editorial accompanying the research.
Although some urban soil is contaminated with lead from gasoline, 80 percent of lead exposure comes from houses built before 1978. Paint in such houses often contains up to 50 percent lead and, even though it has been covered by newer, lead-free paints, it flakes or rubs off.
About 38 million U.S. homes, 40 percent of the nation's housing, contain lead-based paint, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The problem is particularly acute in urban areas, which typically have older housing that has not been renovated.
More recently, parents and authorities have become concerned about lead-based paint in toys imported from China.
Researchers have long known that lead exposure reduces IQ by damaging brain cells in children during their early years.
It is also known that lead increases children's distractibility, impulsiveness and restlessness and leaves them with a shortened attention span, all factors considered precursors of aggressive or violent behavior.
A landmark 1990 paper by Denno linked lead to increases in criminal behavior, but the children in the study were not tested for lead levels. The diagnosis was based on their physicians' evaluation, Denno said.
The Cincinnati Lead Study enrolled 376 pregnant women in Cincinnati between 1979 and 1984, measuring their blood lead levels during pregnancy and the children's levels during the their first seven years.
In the first of the new studies, environmental health research Kim Dietrich of the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine studied 250 of the original group, correlating their lead levels with adult criminal-arrest records from Hamilton County, Ohio.
Controlling for a variety of factors, including parental IQ, education, income and drug use, Dietrich and colleagues found that the more lead in a child's blood from birth through age 7, the more likely he or she was arrested as an adult. The tie between high lead and violent crime was particularly strong.
They found that 55 percent of the subjects (63 percent of males) had been arrested, and that the average was five arrests between the ages of 18 and 24.
The higher the blood-lead level at any time in childhood, the greater the likelihood of arrests. "The strongest association was with violent criminal activity: murder, rape domestic violence, assault, robbery and possession of weapons," Dietrich said.
Blood levels in the children ranged from 4 to 37 micrograms per deciliter.
The researchers found, for example, that every 5-microgram-per-deciliter increase in blood lead level at age 6 was accompanied by a 50 percent increase in violent crime later in life.
Confirming previous findings, the effect of lead was strongest in males, who had an arrest rate 4.5 times that of females.
"We need to be thinking about lead as a drug and a fairly strong one," Dietrich said.
In the second study, radiologist Kim Cecil and her colleagues examined a "representative sample" of 157 members of the same group using whole-brain MRI scans. They found that those with the highest blood levels of lead during childhood had the smallest brain volume.
For those with average lead level in the study, their brains were about 1.2 percent smaller. The most affected regions of the brain were those regulating decision making, impulse control and attention, among other areas.
"The most important message is that lead affects brain volume, independent of demographic and social factors that are often used to explain away poor outcomes" in life, Cecil said. "This is independent biological evidence showing that the brain is affected by lead."
Previous studies linking lead to such problems have used indirect measures of lead and criminality, and critics have argued that socioeconomic and other factors may be responsible for the observed effects.
But by measuring blood levels of lead before birth and during the first seven years of life and then correlating the levels with arrest records and brain size, Cincinnati researchers have produced the strongest evidence yet that lead plays a major role in crime.
The team also found that lead exposure is a continuing problem despite the efforts of the federal government and cities to minimize exposure.
The average lead levels in the study "unfortunately are still seen in many thousands of children throughout the United States," said Dr. Philip Landrigan, director of the Children's Environmental Health Center at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York.
The link between criminal behavior and lead exposure was found among even the least-contaminated children in the study, who were exposed to amounts of lead similar to what the average U.S. child is exposed to today, said Landrigan, who was not involved in the study.
"People will sometimes say, 'This is in the past. We are cleaning up lead. We don't have lead problems anymore,' " said criminologist Deborah Denno of Fordham University in New York, who was not involved in the study. "The Ohio study says this is still a big problem."
Nationwide, about 310,000 children between 1 and 5 have blood lead levels above the federal guideline of 10 micrograms per deciliter, and experts suspect that many times that number have lower levels that are nonetheless dangerous.
"It is a national disgrace that so many children continue to be exposed at levels known to be neurotoxic," said Dr. David Bellinger, of the Harvard Medical School, who wrote an editorial accompanying the research.
Although some urban soil is contaminated with lead from gasoline, 80 percent of lead exposure comes from houses built before 1978. Paint in such houses often contains up to 50 percent lead and, even though it has been covered by newer, lead-free paints, it flakes or rubs off.
About 38 million U.S. homes, 40 percent of the nation's housing, contain lead-based paint, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The problem is particularly acute in urban areas, which typically have older housing that has not been renovated.
More recently, parents and authorities have become concerned about lead-based paint in toys imported from China.
Researchers have long known that lead exposure reduces IQ by damaging brain cells in children during their early years.
It is also known that lead increases children's distractibility, impulsiveness and restlessness and leaves them with a shortened attention span, all factors considered precursors of aggressive or violent behavior.
A landmark 1990 paper by Denno linked lead to increases in criminal behavior, but the children in the study were not tested for lead levels. The diagnosis was based on their physicians' evaluation, Denno said.
The Cincinnati Lead Study enrolled 376 pregnant women in Cincinnati between 1979 and 1984, measuring their blood lead levels during pregnancy and the children's levels during the their first seven years.
In the first of the new studies, environmental health research Kim Dietrich of the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine studied 250 of the original group, correlating their lead levels with adult criminal-arrest records from Hamilton County, Ohio.
Controlling for a variety of factors, including parental IQ, education, income and drug use, Dietrich and colleagues found that the more lead in a child's blood from birth through age 7, the more likely he or she was arrested as an adult. The tie between high lead and violent crime was particularly strong.
They found that 55 percent of the subjects (63 percent of males) had been arrested, and that the average was five arrests between the ages of 18 and 24.
The higher the blood-lead level at any time in childhood, the greater the likelihood of arrests. "The strongest association was with violent criminal activity: murder, rape domestic violence, assault, robbery and possession of weapons," Dietrich said.
Blood levels in the children ranged from 4 to 37 micrograms per deciliter.
The researchers found, for example, that every 5-microgram-per-deciliter increase in blood lead level at age 6 was accompanied by a 50 percent increase in violent crime later in life.
Confirming previous findings, the effect of lead was strongest in males, who had an arrest rate 4.5 times that of females.
"We need to be thinking about lead as a drug and a fairly strong one," Dietrich said.
In the second study, radiologist Kim Cecil and her colleagues examined a "representative sample" of 157 members of the same group using whole-brain MRI scans. They found that those with the highest blood levels of lead during childhood had the smallest brain volume.
For those with average lead level in the study, their brains were about 1.2 percent smaller. The most affected regions of the brain were those regulating decision making, impulse control and attention, among other areas.
"The most important message is that lead affects brain volume, independent of demographic and social factors that are often used to explain away poor outcomes" in life, Cecil said. "This is independent biological evidence showing that the brain is affected by lead."
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Getting in Shape by Cycling
As the days get warmer and longer, more riders will hop on their bicycles for a spin. Just how fast and where you go will determine if your bike is a piece of fitness equipment or simply a comfortable, recreational way to save gas and enjoy the outdoors.
Ask Craig Undem about bicycling and fitness. He will give you a short but insightful answer.
"Go climb hills," said Undem, a local cycling coach who operates the Cycle U training company in Seattle and regularly serves as an instructor for the Cascade Bicycle Club.
Undem said too few cyclists choose hills for workouts, when doing so a couple times per week can transform your body composition (goodbye, fat) and dispel any doubts that cycling is a top calorie burner among physical activities.
"Hills give you more bang for the buck," Undem said. "You might choose to go on a slow, steady ride for 20 miles (about an hour's worth for experienced riders and more like two hours for novices). But if you do moderate hills for 30 minutes that will burn more calories."
Undem said moderate hills translates to "a grade of 4 to 6 percent, not too steep, especially if you're just getting back into shape." He said you want to work at an exertion rate of 70 to 90 revolutions per minute, or rpm. You can determine this level by purchasing a bicycle computer (about $50 retail) or comparing that pedaling rate of 70 to 90 rpm to how that registers on a indoor stationary bike.
"You want that cadence to be moderately intense," Undem said. "It keeps you in a safe zone and gives you a great workout."
Increasing your intensity levels in short bursts (enough to be out of breath but not gagging) elevates cycling to one of the best calorie-burners among all physical activities. In fact, statistics from the American Council on Exercise (the primary certification group for personal trainers) equates bicycle racing with a vigorous game of basketball and not far off running at a brisk clip that would leave most people gasping.
Adding hills to any bicycle ride is easy enough here in the Pacific Northwest. Undem said to do it most efficiently requires more expertise than you might think. For instance, Cycle U teaches a "boot camp" devoted strictly to going up and down hills. It runs for eight two-hour sessions.
"It's a lot like skiing once you get into it," explained Undem. "There is a lot of technique."
Some highlights: Sit more upright in the bike saddle when you're climbing a hill. Don't pull your arms back too hard or too much when navigating the upward slope. And breathe deeply as you work.
One more tip for climbers that applies to all cyclists as they roll back outside this spring. Undem said too many recreational riders forget to drink water during the ride and eat something if they are going more than a hour nonstop. Sports nutritionist will suggest a snack and water is good idea some time in the hour before your ride.
Cycle U and the Cascade Bicycle Club offers plenty of other courses for beginners as well as the most savvy riders. You can learn how to ride a bike -- "there are plenty of people who come to us that never learned as kids," Undem said -- or perhaps take a refresher course on how to shift gears. Cascade instructors might go to the bike shop with you to pick out just the right model.
Not surprisingly, the Cascade club, the country's largest with a membership base of 10,000, works with a significant percentage of injured athletes from other sports. Basketball, running and tennis lead the list, mostly due to balky knees that are treated less jarringly on a bike.
Lateral movement fells basketball and tennis players, Undem said. Runners tend to not rest their bodies enough and stride themselves right into overuse injuries.
"Cycling has a locked range of motion so those runners, tennis players and basketball players can exercise without doing any more harm to the knees," Undem said.
The key strategy is to add intensity to your bike workouts, whether you are rehabbing an injury, cross training or deciding to make your commute your daily workout. All cycling for fitness will turn up noticeable changes in your body composition and personal energy level if you add some hills and maybe incorporate a few all-out sprints for 30 seconds or less when it is safe to do.
"Cycling is a real tonic for the body," Undem said. "Work harder and it will charge you up. You will feel good even after you're off the bike."
Ask Craig Undem about bicycling and fitness. He will give you a short but insightful answer.
"Go climb hills," said Undem, a local cycling coach who operates the Cycle U training company in Seattle and regularly serves as an instructor for the Cascade Bicycle Club.
Undem said too few cyclists choose hills for workouts, when doing so a couple times per week can transform your body composition (goodbye, fat) and dispel any doubts that cycling is a top calorie burner among physical activities.
"Hills give you more bang for the buck," Undem said. "You might choose to go on a slow, steady ride for 20 miles (about an hour's worth for experienced riders and more like two hours for novices). But if you do moderate hills for 30 minutes that will burn more calories."
Undem said moderate hills translates to "a grade of 4 to 6 percent, not too steep, especially if you're just getting back into shape." He said you want to work at an exertion rate of 70 to 90 revolutions per minute, or rpm. You can determine this level by purchasing a bicycle computer (about $50 retail) or comparing that pedaling rate of 70 to 90 rpm to how that registers on a indoor stationary bike.
"You want that cadence to be moderately intense," Undem said. "It keeps you in a safe zone and gives you a great workout."
Increasing your intensity levels in short bursts (enough to be out of breath but not gagging) elevates cycling to one of the best calorie-burners among all physical activities. In fact, statistics from the American Council on Exercise (the primary certification group for personal trainers) equates bicycle racing with a vigorous game of basketball and not far off running at a brisk clip that would leave most people gasping.
Adding hills to any bicycle ride is easy enough here in the Pacific Northwest. Undem said to do it most efficiently requires more expertise than you might think. For instance, Cycle U teaches a "boot camp" devoted strictly to going up and down hills. It runs for eight two-hour sessions.
"It's a lot like skiing once you get into it," explained Undem. "There is a lot of technique."
Some highlights: Sit more upright in the bike saddle when you're climbing a hill. Don't pull your arms back too hard or too much when navigating the upward slope. And breathe deeply as you work.
One more tip for climbers that applies to all cyclists as they roll back outside this spring. Undem said too many recreational riders forget to drink water during the ride and eat something if they are going more than a hour nonstop. Sports nutritionist will suggest a snack and water is good idea some time in the hour before your ride.
Cycle U and the Cascade Bicycle Club offers plenty of other courses for beginners as well as the most savvy riders. You can learn how to ride a bike -- "there are plenty of people who come to us that never learned as kids," Undem said -- or perhaps take a refresher course on how to shift gears. Cascade instructors might go to the bike shop with you to pick out just the right model.
Not surprisingly, the Cascade club, the country's largest with a membership base of 10,000, works with a significant percentage of injured athletes from other sports. Basketball, running and tennis lead the list, mostly due to balky knees that are treated less jarringly on a bike.
Lateral movement fells basketball and tennis players, Undem said. Runners tend to not rest their bodies enough and stride themselves right into overuse injuries.
"Cycling has a locked range of motion so those runners, tennis players and basketball players can exercise without doing any more harm to the knees," Undem said.
The key strategy is to add intensity to your bike workouts, whether you are rehabbing an injury, cross training or deciding to make your commute your daily workout. All cycling for fitness will turn up noticeable changes in your body composition and personal energy level if you add some hills and maybe incorporate a few all-out sprints for 30 seconds or less when it is safe to do.
"Cycling is a real tonic for the body," Undem said. "Work harder and it will charge you up. You will feel good even after you're off the bike."
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Quality Critical to Health Care Reform
Expanding healthinsurance coverage is a critical step in health reform, but reforms willnot be successful if they fail to also address the quality and cost of care.
That is the conclusion of The Quality Crossroads Group, a broad groupof stakeholders drawn together to identify strategies to address thecomplex challenges confronting the U.S. health care system. The group laysout a five-point agenda in an article published today in Health Affairs that serves as a vision for quality in an election year when patient safety, the plight of the uninsured, and rising costs are making front-pagenews.
"Quality improvement is intricately connected with containing costs andexpanding coverage. Yet too often, quality is left out of the equation,"says co-author Margaret E. O'Kane, president of the National Committee forQuality Assurance. "Poor quality care is a major contributor to runaway health care costs.
Improving quality is a key part of making coverage affordable."
"The future of health care reform rests on the ability for diversegroups, at national, state, and community levels, to work to achieve consensus. We cannot achieve the important policy goals outlined in this paper without collaboration," says co-author Janet Corrigan, president and CEO of the National Quality Forum. "The thinking in this paper, by leadersin the quality movement across the country, represents a successful effort to collaborate in moving beyond rhetoric and sparking real change," sheadded.
If taken up by the new President, Congress and others, the five-point reform plan put forward by the 13 authors of the paper would mobilize true change in the nation's vast, complicated, and expensive health care system.
The reform plan calls for:
A national center to support effectiveness research. The U.S. invests too little in understanding what works and what does not for a whole array of technologies, drugs, and treatments. In order to ensure that our health care dollars are wisely spent, we need to systematically identify where critical gaps in evidence exist and fill them.
Models of accountable health care entities capable of providing integrated and coordinated care. The sickest patients often suffer the most from lack of care coordination across settings. They see multiple specialists, get an array of tests, and take multiple medications - usually without a "health care home" or central coordinator of care. Achieving high levels of coordination will require investments in organizational supports that go beyond information technology. IT is a critical enabler of management, but is not sufficient to produce high-quality, efficient, and patient-centered care.
Payment models that reward high-value care. There are nearly 10,000 codes for payment for medical procedures, but not one for outcomes or results. The Quality Crossroads Group believes that if quality is not tied to payment, providers' behavior will not appreciably change, and if it does not change, access to insurance and care will continue to decline.
We need to aggressively develop models of payment that reward clinically effective and efficient care and yield high patient satisfaction. Those might include innovative ideas like bundled chronic care episodes.
A national strategy for performance measurement, including standardized measures of patient and population health. We need a common vision of what quality care means. To get there, we need to agree on what we are measuring and how we are measuring it. Performance information is a public good and federal funding for the National Quality Forum, a private sector standard-setting organization, will facilitate development of a comprehensive portfolio of standardized measures that is continually assessed and updated.
A multistakeholder approach to improving population health. Obesity is a national crisis that demands solutions that lie mostly outside of health care. The public sector can do much to promote population health. For example, in Arkansas, nearly 38 percent of young people are overweight or at risk of becoming overweight. State officials implemented a strategy to target children in schools, focusing on what they eat and how often they exercise. We must make a concerted public- and private-sector effort -- similar to the one we mounted for tobacco control -- to achieve the outcomes we know are possible.
That is the conclusion of The Quality Crossroads Group, a broad groupof stakeholders drawn together to identify strategies to address thecomplex challenges confronting the U.S. health care system. The group laysout a five-point agenda in an article published today in Health Affairs that serves as a vision for quality in an election year when patient safety, the plight of the uninsured, and rising costs are making front-pagenews.
"Quality improvement is intricately connected with containing costs andexpanding coverage. Yet too often, quality is left out of the equation,"says co-author Margaret E. O'Kane, president of the National Committee forQuality Assurance. "Poor quality care is a major contributor to runaway health care costs.
Improving quality is a key part of making coverage affordable."
"The future of health care reform rests on the ability for diversegroups, at national, state, and community levels, to work to achieve consensus. We cannot achieve the important policy goals outlined in this paper without collaboration," says co-author Janet Corrigan, president and CEO of the National Quality Forum. "The thinking in this paper, by leadersin the quality movement across the country, represents a successful effort to collaborate in moving beyond rhetoric and sparking real change," sheadded.
If taken up by the new President, Congress and others, the five-point reform plan put forward by the 13 authors of the paper would mobilize true change in the nation's vast, complicated, and expensive health care system.
The reform plan calls for:
A national center to support effectiveness research. The U.S. invests too little in understanding what works and what does not for a whole array of technologies, drugs, and treatments. In order to ensure that our health care dollars are wisely spent, we need to systematically identify where critical gaps in evidence exist and fill them.
Models of accountable health care entities capable of providing integrated and coordinated care. The sickest patients often suffer the most from lack of care coordination across settings. They see multiple specialists, get an array of tests, and take multiple medications - usually without a "health care home" or central coordinator of care. Achieving high levels of coordination will require investments in organizational supports that go beyond information technology. IT is a critical enabler of management, but is not sufficient to produce high-quality, efficient, and patient-centered care.
Payment models that reward high-value care. There are nearly 10,000 codes for payment for medical procedures, but not one for outcomes or results. The Quality Crossroads Group believes that if quality is not tied to payment, providers' behavior will not appreciably change, and if it does not change, access to insurance and care will continue to decline.
We need to aggressively develop models of payment that reward clinically effective and efficient care and yield high patient satisfaction. Those might include innovative ideas like bundled chronic care episodes.
A national strategy for performance measurement, including standardized measures of patient and population health. We need a common vision of what quality care means. To get there, we need to agree on what we are measuring and how we are measuring it. Performance information is a public good and federal funding for the National Quality Forum, a private sector standard-setting organization, will facilitate development of a comprehensive portfolio of standardized measures that is continually assessed and updated.
A multistakeholder approach to improving population health. Obesity is a national crisis that demands solutions that lie mostly outside of health care. The public sector can do much to promote population health. For example, in Arkansas, nearly 38 percent of young people are overweight or at risk of becoming overweight. State officials implemented a strategy to target children in schools, focusing on what they eat and how often they exercise. We must make a concerted public- and private-sector effort -- similar to the one we mounted for tobacco control -- to achieve the outcomes we know are possible.
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Executing the most popular Yoga position
HOW TO DO A DOWNWARD DOG
Place your feet hip-width apart on the floor, toes facing forward.
Place your hands shoulder-width apart on the floor, lightly spread the fingers.
Keep your tailbone lifted towards the sky and gently push down through the heels. If you're a beginner, you might not get your heels all the way to the floor at first -- that's OK.
Open your upper back by rotating the shoulder blades away from one another. Keep the shoulders away from the ears and press down firmly through all fingers and thumbs. Place more weight onto your feet than your hands.
Shifting the weight back to the hips is the key element in feeling the energizing effect of this posture. Pull your navel toward your spine and lift the pelvic floor muscles. Lift your kneecaps up and contract the quadriceps muscles.
Maintain this pose for 5 to 10 deep breaths.
Place your feet hip-width apart on the floor, toes facing forward.
Place your hands shoulder-width apart on the floor, lightly spread the fingers.
Keep your tailbone lifted towards the sky and gently push down through the heels. If you're a beginner, you might not get your heels all the way to the floor at first -- that's OK.
Open your upper back by rotating the shoulder blades away from one another. Keep the shoulders away from the ears and press down firmly through all fingers and thumbs. Place more weight onto your feet than your hands.
Shifting the weight back to the hips is the key element in feeling the energizing effect of this posture. Pull your navel toward your spine and lift the pelvic floor muscles. Lift your kneecaps up and contract the quadriceps muscles.
Maintain this pose for 5 to 10 deep breaths.
Monday, May 26, 2008
Stress Relief From Yoga
Funny thing. When Jenny Hayo first started practicing yoga in 1996, she thought of it as "purely an exercise option." Within two years, she was teaching classes and digging deeper.
Her appreciation of yoga as a personal methodology changed with each new mentor. Hayo realized yoga is energizing in ways beyond the workout, and said she sees no reason why the rest of us can't tap into it for stress relief and everyday vigor.
"The interesting point of modern-day yoga is it is looked at as exercise by most people," says Hayo, who teaches at 8 Limbs Yoga Center in the Capitol Hill neighborhood, plus some classes at the downtown Zum health club. "Ninety-five percent of people get into yoga that way. But no one is complaining. It puts people on the yoga mat and that's great."
In fact, Seattle P-I venture capital columnist and blogger John Cook noted earlier this month in an item about the TeachStreet free online directory that there are no fewer than 984 yoga classes in the Seattle area.
That's a lot of yoga mats.
For her part, Hayo, 33, learned yoga is more than meets the physical plane and any form of the seemingly undoable lotus position.
"The name, '8 Limbs,' comes from the eight principles of yoga," Hayo said. "As you practice yoga, you can begin to feel the physical, emotional, mental and energetic benefits."
There are different interpretations, but fundamentally the "eight limbs" of yoga include body postures, breathing exercises or control of "prana," personal observances, control of the senses, concentration and inner awareness, devotion or meditation, universal morality and union with the divine.
Hayo acknowledged that most of us would recognize the body postures, breathing and meditation components. The remaining "limbs" are less familiar but powerful, even if you commit to just minutes of yoga daily or one session a week.
The ideal strategy for yoga novices is a one-on-one session with an instructor -- "it will cost about the same as an appointment with your massage therapist," Hayo said. But you can certainly get an energy boost from a beginner's class at your local yoga studio (look for a teacher who offers different versions of the same posture depending upon experience and fitness level).
Or you can begin with the "downward-facing dog" pose, which Hayo said is one of the "inversion" postures that can instantly energize the body.
Yoga brings balance, said Hayo, who works with numerous clients to match a customized set of postures to their needs. "The downward dog can help if you feel tired or anxious (or both)."
The downward dog is a more accessible version of the handstand or headstand, which likely most American adults have not done since, oh, fifth grade. Yet maybe there is more to those childhood handstands than just playing or showing off.
"I have teacher who calls headstands and handstand the 'yogi's coffee,' " Hayo said.
The downward dog pose looks, not surprisingly, a lot like a dog stretching its paws in front and its rear high in the air. For us humans, it starts with putting your hands in alignment with your shoulders and hips as you move to hands and feet on the floor. Novices often spread the hands too far apart and the feet too close together.
Next, as you come into all fours, place your knees under your hips and gently extend your spine. As you put your hands on the mats, spread the fingers a bit with the middle finger straight ahead.
Lift your pelvis toward the ceiling and pull the hips back. Your eyes look to the feet. The feet are even with the hips. Resist moving them closer to the hands just put the heels down. If your heels don't touch, they will if you do the downward dog regularly.
Hayo said a good practice is to hold the posture for five slow, purposeful breaths.
"Keep at it," she said. "You will get mental clarity while in the pose. I tell students to experience it until it feels right. You will know."
What keeps yoga regulars coming back is, to be sure, a combination of results. But one of the most satisfying is increased energy, not just after class but the rest of the day or week. You feel more clear-headed. You stand more upright. There is less tiredness midday. Who can resist that in today's hurly-burly?
Well, there is one problem. You might call it the Foot-and-Leg-Over-the-Head mental block.
To that end, 8 Limbs and other local yoga studios are eager to attract beginners with basics classes and special weekend workshops, such as the "Yoga for Men" class, 2:30 to 4:45 p.m. at the 8 Limbs center in West Seattle, on May 18. Instructor Greg Owen will be working to help reluctant men get past "what they feel is their lack of flexibility."
Owen plans to help men connect yoga movement and breathing with ways to ease the strain and pain of "sore lower backs, tight hamstrings and stiff shoulders."
A good deal for at least four limbs.
Her appreciation of yoga as a personal methodology changed with each new mentor. Hayo realized yoga is energizing in ways beyond the workout, and said she sees no reason why the rest of us can't tap into it for stress relief and everyday vigor.
"The interesting point of modern-day yoga is it is looked at as exercise by most people," says Hayo, who teaches at 8 Limbs Yoga Center in the Capitol Hill neighborhood, plus some classes at the downtown Zum health club. "Ninety-five percent of people get into yoga that way. But no one is complaining. It puts people on the yoga mat and that's great."
In fact, Seattle P-I venture capital columnist and blogger John Cook noted earlier this month in an item about the TeachStreet free online directory that there are no fewer than 984 yoga classes in the Seattle area.
That's a lot of yoga mats.
For her part, Hayo, 33, learned yoga is more than meets the physical plane and any form of the seemingly undoable lotus position.
"The name, '8 Limbs,' comes from the eight principles of yoga," Hayo said. "As you practice yoga, you can begin to feel the physical, emotional, mental and energetic benefits."
There are different interpretations, but fundamentally the "eight limbs" of yoga include body postures, breathing exercises or control of "prana," personal observances, control of the senses, concentration and inner awareness, devotion or meditation, universal morality and union with the divine.
Hayo acknowledged that most of us would recognize the body postures, breathing and meditation components. The remaining "limbs" are less familiar but powerful, even if you commit to just minutes of yoga daily or one session a week.
The ideal strategy for yoga novices is a one-on-one session with an instructor -- "it will cost about the same as an appointment with your massage therapist," Hayo said. But you can certainly get an energy boost from a beginner's class at your local yoga studio (look for a teacher who offers different versions of the same posture depending upon experience and fitness level).
Or you can begin with the "downward-facing dog" pose, which Hayo said is one of the "inversion" postures that can instantly energize the body.
Yoga brings balance, said Hayo, who works with numerous clients to match a customized set of postures to their needs. "The downward dog can help if you feel tired or anxious (or both)."
The downward dog is a more accessible version of the handstand or headstand, which likely most American adults have not done since, oh, fifth grade. Yet maybe there is more to those childhood handstands than just playing or showing off.
"I have teacher who calls headstands and handstand the 'yogi's coffee,' " Hayo said.
The downward dog pose looks, not surprisingly, a lot like a dog stretching its paws in front and its rear high in the air. For us humans, it starts with putting your hands in alignment with your shoulders and hips as you move to hands and feet on the floor. Novices often spread the hands too far apart and the feet too close together.
Next, as you come into all fours, place your knees under your hips and gently extend your spine. As you put your hands on the mats, spread the fingers a bit with the middle finger straight ahead.
Lift your pelvis toward the ceiling and pull the hips back. Your eyes look to the feet. The feet are even with the hips. Resist moving them closer to the hands just put the heels down. If your heels don't touch, they will if you do the downward dog regularly.
Hayo said a good practice is to hold the posture for five slow, purposeful breaths.
"Keep at it," she said. "You will get mental clarity while in the pose. I tell students to experience it until it feels right. You will know."
What keeps yoga regulars coming back is, to be sure, a combination of results. But one of the most satisfying is increased energy, not just after class but the rest of the day or week. You feel more clear-headed. You stand more upright. There is less tiredness midday. Who can resist that in today's hurly-burly?
Well, there is one problem. You might call it the Foot-and-Leg-Over-the-Head mental block.
To that end, 8 Limbs and other local yoga studios are eager to attract beginners with basics classes and special weekend workshops, such as the "Yoga for Men" class, 2:30 to 4:45 p.m. at the 8 Limbs center in West Seattle, on May 18. Instructor Greg Owen will be working to help reluctant men get past "what they feel is their lack of flexibility."
Owen plans to help men connect yoga movement and breathing with ways to ease the strain and pain of "sore lower backs, tight hamstrings and stiff shoulders."
A good deal for at least four limbs.
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Stress in the Workplace
The longer he waited, the more David worried. For weeks he had been plagued by aching muscles, loss of appetite, restless sleep, and a complete sense of exhaustion. At first he tried to ignore these problems, but eventually he became so short-tempered and irritable that his wife insisted he get a checkup.
Now, sitting in the doctor's office and wondering what the verdict would be, he didn't even notice when Theresa took the seat beside him. They had been good friends when she worked in the front office at the plant, but he hadn't seen her since she left three years ago to take a job as a customer service representative.
Her gentle poke in the ribs brought him around, and within minutes they were talking and gossiping as if she had never left.
"You got out just in time," he told her. "Since the reorganization, nobody feels safe. It used to be that as long as you did your work, you had a job. That's not for sure anymore. They expect the same production rates even though two guys are now doing the work of three.
We're so backed up I'm working twelve-hour shifts six days a week. I swear I hear those machines humming in my sleep. Guys are calling in sick just to get a break. Morale is so bad they're talking about bringing in some consultants to figure out a better way to get the job done."
"Well, I really miss you guys," she said. "I'm afraid I jumped from the frying pan into the fire. In my new job, the computer routes the calls and they never stop. I even have to schedule my bathroom breaks.
All I hear the whole day are complaints from unhappy customers. I try to be helpful and sympathetic, but I can't promise anything without getting my boss's approval. Most of the time I'm caught between what the customer wants and company policy.
I'm not sure who I'm supposed to keep happy. The other reps are so uptight and tense they don't even talk to one another. We all go to our own little cubicles and stay there until quitting time. To make matters worse, my mother's health is deteriorating. If only I could use some of my sick time to look after her.
No wonder I'm in here with migraine headaches and high blood pressure. A lot of the reps are seeing the employee assistance counselor and taking stress management classes, which seems to help. But sooner or later, someone will have to make some changes in the way the place is run."
Job stress can be defined as the harmful physical and emotional responses that occur when the requirements of the job do not match the capabilities, resources, or needs of the worker. Job stress can lead to poor health and even injury.
The concept of job stress is often confused with challenge, but these concepts are not the same.
Challenge energizes us psychologically and physically, and it motivates us to learn new skills and master our jobs. When a challenge is met, we feel relaxed and satisfied. Thus, challenge is an important ingredient for healthy and productive work. The importance of challenge in our work lives is probably what people are referring to when they say "a little bit of stress is good for you.
But for David and Theresa, the situation is different-the challenge has turned into job demands that cannot be met, relaxation has turned to exhaustion, and a sense of satisfaction has turned into feelings of stress. In short, the stage is set for illness, injury, and job failure.
Nearly everyone agrees that job stress results from the interaction of the worker and the conditions of work. Views differ, however, on the importance of worker characteristics versus working conditions as the primary cause of job stress. These differing viewpoints are important because they suggest different ways to prevent stress at work.
According to one school of thought, differences in individual characteristics such as personality and coping style are most important in predicting whether certain job conditions will result in stress-in other words, what is stressful for one person may not be a problem for someone else. This viewpoint leads to prevention strategies that focus on workers and ways to help them cope with demanding job conditions.
Although the importance of individual differences cannot be ignored, scientific evidence suggests that certain working conditions are stressful to most people. The excessive workload demands and conflicting expectations described in David's and Theresa's stories are good examples. Such evidence argues for a greater emphasis on working conditions as the key source of job stress, and for job redesign as a primary prevention strategy.
Now, sitting in the doctor's office and wondering what the verdict would be, he didn't even notice when Theresa took the seat beside him. They had been good friends when she worked in the front office at the plant, but he hadn't seen her since she left three years ago to take a job as a customer service representative.
Her gentle poke in the ribs brought him around, and within minutes they were talking and gossiping as if she had never left.
"You got out just in time," he told her. "Since the reorganization, nobody feels safe. It used to be that as long as you did your work, you had a job. That's not for sure anymore. They expect the same production rates even though two guys are now doing the work of three.
We're so backed up I'm working twelve-hour shifts six days a week. I swear I hear those machines humming in my sleep. Guys are calling in sick just to get a break. Morale is so bad they're talking about bringing in some consultants to figure out a better way to get the job done."
"Well, I really miss you guys," she said. "I'm afraid I jumped from the frying pan into the fire. In my new job, the computer routes the calls and they never stop. I even have to schedule my bathroom breaks.
All I hear the whole day are complaints from unhappy customers. I try to be helpful and sympathetic, but I can't promise anything without getting my boss's approval. Most of the time I'm caught between what the customer wants and company policy.
I'm not sure who I'm supposed to keep happy. The other reps are so uptight and tense they don't even talk to one another. We all go to our own little cubicles and stay there until quitting time. To make matters worse, my mother's health is deteriorating. If only I could use some of my sick time to look after her.
No wonder I'm in here with migraine headaches and high blood pressure. A lot of the reps are seeing the employee assistance counselor and taking stress management classes, which seems to help. But sooner or later, someone will have to make some changes in the way the place is run."
Job stress can be defined as the harmful physical and emotional responses that occur when the requirements of the job do not match the capabilities, resources, or needs of the worker. Job stress can lead to poor health and even injury.
The concept of job stress is often confused with challenge, but these concepts are not the same.
Challenge energizes us psychologically and physically, and it motivates us to learn new skills and master our jobs. When a challenge is met, we feel relaxed and satisfied. Thus, challenge is an important ingredient for healthy and productive work. The importance of challenge in our work lives is probably what people are referring to when they say "a little bit of stress is good for you.
But for David and Theresa, the situation is different-the challenge has turned into job demands that cannot be met, relaxation has turned to exhaustion, and a sense of satisfaction has turned into feelings of stress. In short, the stage is set for illness, injury, and job failure.
Nearly everyone agrees that job stress results from the interaction of the worker and the conditions of work. Views differ, however, on the importance of worker characteristics versus working conditions as the primary cause of job stress. These differing viewpoints are important because they suggest different ways to prevent stress at work.
According to one school of thought, differences in individual characteristics such as personality and coping style are most important in predicting whether certain job conditions will result in stress-in other words, what is stressful for one person may not be a problem for someone else. This viewpoint leads to prevention strategies that focus on workers and ways to help them cope with demanding job conditions.
Although the importance of individual differences cannot be ignored, scientific evidence suggests that certain working conditions are stressful to most people. The excessive workload demands and conflicting expectations described in David's and Theresa's stories are good examples. Such evidence argues for a greater emphasis on working conditions as the key source of job stress, and for job redesign as a primary prevention strategy.
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