Lethbridge Herald

What did you learn in disastrous 2020?

- W. Gifford-Jones, MD and Diana Gifford-Jones This father-daughter health column appears each Thursday.

How carefully have you been reading our column over the past year? Take our True or False quiz. 1. Excessive amounts of fructose, one of the main carbohydra­tes in refined sugar, is converted by the liver into fat. Glucose, the other component of sugar, is burned up as energy by all cells.

2. It’s prudent to brush the tongue after eating, not just your teeth, as this removes bacteria, fungi and even protozoa from deep fissures with benefits for your overall health.

3. Magnesium found in dark leaf greens and whole grains helps to dilate arteries and lower blood pressure.

4. The World Health Organizati­on and 15,000 scientists have signed a petition warning humanity to cut back on eating meat, citing the environmen­tal harm of methane-emitting cattle.

5. Light therapy releases morphine-like substances, helps with the formation of newblood vessels, and cures 60 per cent of patients with degenerati­ve changes in the lumbosacra­l region of the spine and compressio­n of spinal nerves.

6. Artificial intelligen­ce developed by a Canadian company is assisting in early diagnosis among the 425 million patients worldwide who have diabetes, complicate­d by retinal atheroscle­rosis, and stand to lose their sight.

7. Men suffering from chronic obstructiv­e lung disease are more often correctly diagnosed than women with the same problem who are more likely to be labelled as having a psychiatri­c problem.

8. There may be 2,000 ticks in an acre of forestland. A classic tick bite rash looks like a bull’s eye with a clear centre, but only three people in 10 get this rash.

9. Keep the toilet seat down when flushing. A report in Physics of

Fluids advises it’s better to keep viruses in the bowl. Spray, they say, can fly as high as three feet and in public toilets even higher.

10. Dr. Charles Matthews of the Nutrition Cancer Institute in the U.S. pooled data from nine studies which analyzed how activity affected 15 types of cancer. Those who engaged in 7-15 hours of physical activity a week showed significan­tly lower risk of seven of the 15 cancers.

11. Authoritie­s say that the safe limit for canned goods such as acidic foods like canned tomatoes and other fruit is 18 months. For canned vegetables, beans, meats and poultry, it’s two to five years. A dented or rusty is a red flag. A swollen can means harmful bacteria are present and the can must be thrown away.

12. A Gifford-Jones Law states that one degenerati­ve disease often leads to another and another. This is why the epidemic of obesity often leads to type 2 diabetes and the complicati­ons of blindness, kidney failure and amputation of legs due to atheroscle­rosis (hardening of arteries).

13. For baby boomers (born between 1945 and 1965) having hepatitis C, it most likely was transmitte­d long ago through contact with contaminat­ed blood before robust controls were in place.

14. A study at Boston University showed that cortisone injections for knee arthritis should be limited to two to three a year to decrease the risk of cartilage damage.

15. Internatio­nal viral experts report that 1,000 milligrams of vitamin C taken three times a day, 3,000 internatio­nal units (IU), 400 milligrams of magnesium and 30 milligrams of zinc daily will decrease the risk both of developing coronaviru­s and of dying of it.

The answers? All items are true.

We close out this disastrous year of 2020 with a wish to all readers for your good health and a better year ahead.

Sign up at www.docgiff.com to receive our weekly e-newsletter. For comments, email contactus@docgiff.com. Follow our new Instagram accounts, @docgiff and @diana_gifford_jones

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