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How does what an embryo hears while being in its mother’s uterus affects its later behavior and cognitive developments?

How does what an embryo hears while being in its mother's uterus affects its later behavior… by Connie b. Dellobuono

Answer by Connie b. Dellobuono:

Vibrations, acidity or alkalinity of fluids surrounding the baby, all forms of positive energy from the mother translated to stronger immune system, massage and soothing voice from parents transfers to positive energy to the baby, skin cells relay messages to the baby in the womb, light energy also travels to the baby and many more events.
The heat from the ultrasound make the growing embryo stay away from it.
The deep breathing of the mom sends more oxygen to the bay.
The circular hand massage to the tummy by the mother and positive emotions of the mother relieve the hard contractions during pregnancy.
And many more ways to communicate to the growing embryo or baby in a way that promotes growth.
Happy mother breeds happy babies.
Drugs, alcohol and unhealthy diet affect cognitive functions of the growing embryo.
A mile walk each day during pregnancy helps in the health of the baby.

How does what an embryo hears while being in its mother's uterus affects its later behavior and cognitive developments?

Is there any part of our body and its processes that is “optimal”, meaning that there’s no room for improvement?

Is there any part of our body and its processes that is "optimal", meaning that there's no … by Connie b. Dellobuono

Answer by Connie b. Dellobuono:

We have two kidneys, two eyes, two hands, two feet to be ready to adapt to any challenges in health. Some enzymes work in five, some genes work in twos and we have immune cells that work in threes. Our skin and liver work together in some ways.
We can always improve.

Is there any part of our body and its processes that is "optimal", meaning that there's no room for improvement?

Can you cure a headache?

Can you cure a headache? by Connie b. Dellobuono

Answer by Connie b. Dellobuono:

See a doctor. Search for migraine at http://www.clubalthea.com
I would take calcium+magnesium+Vit C and eat red colored fruits and veggies. Eat walnuts, avocado, fish and coconut. De-stress and get a massage. Eat whole foods and avoid toxic chemicals from the environment (fumes,metals,others). Sleep more as our brain detoxes during sleep.

Can you cure a headache?

Heart issues growing with younger gen

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Connie’s comments: When you have a cold, virus, there is no need for antibiotic. Eat lots of garlic and Vit C rich food. Massage lymps (armpit and thighs). Drink healthy drinks and rest. Athletes be careful of brain concussions. Young ones, please eat healthy foods good for your heart.  Good job older gen for taking care of your heart, it is not too late.

Can hirsutism get reduced over time?

Can hirsutism get reduced over time? by Connie b. Dellobuono

Answer by Connie b. Dellobuono:

See a doctor. I would avoid estrogen rich food and eat more progesterone rich food. There is cell energy herbal caps at http://www.getwellinternational.com that removes excess estrogen.
From Wiki:
Hirsutism can be caused by either an increased level of androgens, the male hormones, or an oversensitivity of hair follicles to androgens. Male hormones such as testosterone stimulate hair growth, increase size and intensify the growth and pigmentation of hair. Other symptoms associated with a high level of male hormones include acne, deepening of the voice, and increased muscle mass.
Growing evidence implicates high circulating levels of insulin in women for the development of hirsutism. This theory is speculated to be consistent with the observation that obese (and thus presumably insulin resistant hyperinsulinemic) women are at high risk of becoming hirsute. Further, treatments that lower insulin levels will lead to a reduction in hirsutism.
It is speculated that insulin, at high enough concentration, stimulates the ovarian theca cells to produce androgens. There may also be an effect of high levels of insulin to activate insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) receptor in those same cells. Again, the result is increased androgen production.
Signs that are suggestive of an androgen-secreting tumor in a patient with hirsutism is rapid onset, virilization and palpable abdominal mass.
The following may be some of the conditions that may increase a woman’s normally low level of male hormones:
Adrenal gland cancer, Von Hippel–Lindau disease.
Congenital adrenal hyperplasia, in turn mostly caused by 21-α hydroxylase deficiency.
Cushing’s disease.
Growth hormone excess (acromegaly).
Insulin resistance.
Obesity: As there is peripheral conversion of androgens to estrogen in these patients, this is the same mechanism as polycystic ovary syndrome, PCOS.
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), the most common cause in ciswomen.
Porphyria cutanea tarda.
Stromal hyperthecosis (SH) – in postmenopausal women.
Transsexualism (male birth sex)
Tumors in the ovaries .
Use of certain medications such as tetrahydrogestrinone, phenytoin, or minoxidil.
—-
Dr Mercola wrote about PCOS: You can’t just take progesterone, and you can’t just cut out the sugar. You usually need to do both. Exercise and good nutrition are also very important in maintaining hormone balance.
——
Do avoid plastics and chemicals that alter our hormonal balance. Do a liver detox. Eat more cilantro and sulfur rich foods.

Can hirsutisum get reduced over time?

How do hospitals decide on costs?

How do hospitals decide on costs? by Connie b. Dellobuono

Answer by Connie b. Dellobuono:

We have to ask hospital management. Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements, expensive equipment, labor, and other services add up to hospital costs. They want to stay on the black and not red but more patients come in due to obesity, alcohol, drugs, and tobacco use. About 25% of the expenses are related to the aging population. We can save money if we are all healthy with no addiction to drugs, alcohol, tobacco and sugar.
https://clubalthea.com/2016/07/14/hospital-costs-in-the-usa/

How do hospitals decide on costs?

Hospital costs in the USA

Assessment of Cost Trends and Price Differences for U. S. Hospitals March 2011

Margaret E. Guerin-Calvert, Vice Chairman and Senior Managing Director, Guillermo Israilevich, Vice President

ASSESSMENT OF COST DRIVERS AND TRENDS IN HEALTHCARE AND THE HOSPITAL SECTOR

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Hospital care accounts for a steady proportion of national expenditures on healthcare, approximately 30%, and is projected to remain at this proportion for the next decade. Over the past decade, increased expenditures on labor explain a substantial proportion of overall cost increases experienced by hospitals. In addition, hospitals are facing a growing need to cover shortfalls from insufficient Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement, uncompensated and charity care, and new compliance-related costs for new technologies such as electronic health records. Moreover, reimbursement shortfalls have increased in significance with the increasing proportion of inpatient admissions from Medicare and Medicaid. Overall, hospital revenues have closely tracked cost increases at the national and regional level. This indicates that, on average, hospital margins have not increased substantially.

SPENDING ON HOSPITAL CARE IN THE CONTEXT OF OVERALL HEALTHCARE EXPENDITURES

A useful starting point for evaluating cost trends for hospitals is to put them in the context of broader healthcare costs and trends. Hospital services are one aspect of healthcare expenditures.9 As the following table shows, there are many different expenditure categories accounting for total national healthcare costs.10 As of 2009, healthcare expenditures accounted for 17.6% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Of a total of $2,486 billion in expenditures on healthcare at the national level in 2009, hospital care accounts for $759 billion, or 30.5%. Other major categories include professional services, including physician and clinical services (27.1%), prescription drugs and other medical products (13.2%), nursing home and home health (8.3%), and investment (6.3%).

 

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ACUTE CARE HOSPITAL COSTS IN MASSACHUSETTS (FY 2004 TO FY 2008)


Connie’s comments: Hospitals are burdened by Medicare and Medicaid patients and so must compensate for loses. We like that nurses pay increased in some parts of the states. Drug costs and high tech hospital equipment still account for the bigger expense.

We have to ask hospital management. Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements, expensive equipment, labor, and other services add up to hospital costs. They want to stay on the black and not red but more patients come in due to obesity, alcohol, drugs, and tobacco use. About 25% of the expenses are related to the aging population. We can save money if we are all healthy with no addiction to drugs, alcohol, tobacco and sugar.

Self-rated health worth doctors’ attention

By Mike Williams

Patients’ self-rated health is a better long-term predictor of illness and death than standard blood tests, blood pressure measurements or other symptomatic evidence a doctor might gather, according to a new study from Rice University.

The study in Psychoneuroendocrinology lays out mounting statistical evidence to support this conclusion.

The team led by Christopher Fagundes, a Rice assistant professor of psychology, and postdoctoral researcher Kyle Murdock found evidence to bolster their theory that self-rated health – what you’d say when a doctor asks how you feel your health is in general – is as good as and perhaps even better than any test to describe one’s physiological condition.

“A couple of years ago there was a boom of work in psychology and medicine about what we call patient-reported outcomes, the idea that what patients actually feel like and say they feel like seems to be more prognostic of morbidity and mortality than all the cholesterol ratings and blood tests we get from doctors’ offices,” Fagundes said.

“That was an odd finding,” he said. “You would think that objective markers like blood pressure would be more accurate. The way people generally report how they feel is more often linked to a future disease or mortality than what the doctor accesses.

“As psychologists, we think, ‘They’re sensing something. There’s something going on here.’ That’s what took us to this paper.”

The researchers set out to find evidence that would connect the dots between feelings and fate. They found it in existing data that established solid links between self-rated health and rising levels of herpesvirus activity, an important marker of poor cellular immunity that promotes high levels of inflammation.

Fagundes has a long-standing collaboration with a team at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston and was able to take advantage of a unique dataset it gathered a decade ago for the Texas City Health and Stress Study. The study assessed the relationship between stress and health in the community that hosts petrochemical industries at the mouth of the Houston Ship Channel.

The survey of the residents gathered self-assessments (through a 36-item questionnaire) and blood samples for nearly 1,500 individuals. Those samples were analyzed for levels of active herpesviruses and biomarkers for inflammation.

“We found that self-rated health was associated with reactivation of herpesviruses,” Murdock said. “We’re not talking about the sexually transmitted disease, but viruses that are associated with things like cold sores that are ubiquitous among adults.”

“Herpesvirus activity is a very good functional marker of cellular immunity, because almost everybody has been exposed to one type of the virus or another,” Fagundes said. “It doesn’t mean you’re sick; it’s probably been dormant in your cells for most of your life. But because it reactivates at a cellular level and prompts the immune system to fight it, it becomes a great marker of how the system is working.

“You can imagine that when the immune system’s fighting something, you get more inflammation throughout the body, and inflammation contributes to disease. That’s it in a nutshell,” he said.

Previous studies by Fagundes and others demonstrated the link between herpesvirus activation and inflammation. While patients may not be aware of active herpesviruses or inflammation, the researchers suspected a mechanism stronger than mere instinct was responsible for their expressions of discomfort.

“We found that poor self-rated health was associated with more reactivation of these latent herpesviruses, which was associated with higher inflammation, and we know those two things are associated with morbidity and mortality, as well as some cancers, type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease,” Murdock said.

After eliminating data for 251 individuals who showed no sign of herpesvirus, the team wound up with a snapshot that clearly showed those who reported feeling in good health had low virus and inflammation levels, while those who said they felt poorly were high on the virus and inflammation scales.

The researchers noted that primary care physicians are highly unlikely to check for herpesvirus activity or inflammation. “It’s too hard an assay to do clinically and takes too much time,” Fagundes said. “They look at things like white blood cell counts in cancer patients but would never do a herpesvirus latency test, and tests for inflammation would be rare. These are good markers for long-term health, but not for things that are going to impact you tomorrow.”

He said scientists haven’t yet identified the channel that gives people a sense of impending illness. One theory is that fatigue is a marker. “I’ve heard many primary care physicians say they’ve never seen anyone with a disease that wasn’t associated with fatigue,” Fagundes said. Another possibility is a sense of imbalance in the gut microbiome, another avenue of future study.

But doctors should still pay close attention to what patients report. “When a patient says, ‘I don’t feel like my health is very good right now,’ it’s meaningful thing with a biological basis, even if they don’t show symptoms,” he said.

When I go to patient-advocate conferences, people say they’re grateful we’re finding biological mechanisms because they feel like doctors have ignored them for years, saying, ‘It’s in your head.’ Well, it’s in your head, but there’s a reason.”

Explore further: Breast cancer patients’ persistent fatigue is real, may actually speed up aging

More information: Kyle W. Murdock et al. The effect of self-reported health on latent herpesvirus reactivation and inflammation in an ethnically diverse sample, Psychoneuroendocrinology (2016). DOI: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2016.06.014

Journal reference: Psychoneuroendocrinology search and more info website

Provided by: Rice University


Connie’s comments: A person who listens to his/her body about any signs of health issues and a has a strong immune system can effect health outcome more than diagnostic tools can.  It is also helpful if the spouse can detect any health issues and listen to his/her partner complaints related to health. Seek a doctor if you know something is wrong with your body. An itch in the skin can be a breast cancer that a dermatologist will not know about (like what happened to my neighbor who died 2 yrs later from the time she felt the itches in her skin).  In a small town in S Africa, only one woman did not get an HIV and she believed that she is healthy.

Always tell your doctors how you feel about your health. You are the owner of your body.