Jake Ejercito and Albie Casiño, not Andi Eigenmann’s ‘first boyfriend’

Posted by: Doctor Medical  :  Category: Health News


Whodunnit? - Albie was Andi's boyfriend before she was launched on 'Agua Bendita;' Jake, meanwhile, has been spotted with Andi on numerous occasions several months back (Jake’s photo from his Facebook fan page)

MANILA, Philippines – When Jaclyn Jose admitted on “TV Patrol” on June 29 that her daughter, Andi Eigenmann, is indeed pregnant and would only reveal that father is the young actress’ “first boyfriend,” showbiz insiders immediately speculated on the man’s real identity.

Not surprisingly, two names have been prominently mentioned: Andi’s former flame, Albie Casiño, and the new man being linked to her, Jake Ejercito.

Both Albie and Jake’s camps have since addressed the controversy.

In a Twitter post, June 29, Rina Casiño, Albie’s mother, said–only hours after Jaclyn confirmed her daughter’s pregnancy—that her son is not the young actress’ first beau.

“no ones denying nor confirming. Just saying he is not her 1st bf I didnt hear ms jaclyn say Albie did u?” Mrs. Casiño told a Twitter follower who asked about the matter.

Nevertheless, “E-Live” host and entertainment columnist Ogie Diaz posted a Twitter update on June 30, in which he said he spoke to Mrs. Casiño. “Walang problema kung anak ko ang nakabuntis ke Andi. Blessing yan. And we welcome DNA Test,” he quoted her in his tweet.

Albie, who rose to fame by reprising the role of Christian in the “Mara Clara” remake, was Andi’s boyfriend before she entered showbiz. The two also got into a much-publicized rift last month in which Albie accused Andi of being a “cheater” through his Formspring account. Albie, in turn, had invariably been accused of hitting Andie–something the actor denied.

Meanwhile, Jake, who has been spotted on various occasions with Andi, addressed the issue on Twitter, Wednesday.

“I’d just like to ask everyone not to jump into conclusions and misinterpret what has been said. I am not Andi’s first boyfriend. Let us just respect and pray for her, her baby, and family,” said Jake, the son of former president Joseph Estrada to former actress Laarni Enriquez.

His elder sister Jerika also extended her support to Andi. In one of her tweets on June 29, she said, “love them both dearly, @andieigengirl@unoemilio xxx,” referring to Andi and Jake’s respective Twitter usernames.

Jaclyn, in an interview aired on “Showbiz News Ngayon” on the same night, dispelled rumors linking Andi to Jake.

She also said that the “first boyfriend” of Andi left her daughter after he found out about the pregnancy.

“I’m okay with that. I don’t want to talk about him anymore. Wala akong hinihiling sa kanila, ni ayaw ko silang makita,” the veteran actress had also said.

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‘We’ll beat Lankans in Manila’

Posted by: Doctor Medical  :  Category: Health News

MANILA, Philippines — The German coach of the Philippine football team admits he’s not happy, but is not about to cry over spilled milk.

“I’m not the happiest man in the world but I’m not too disappointed. We take the result as it is and prepare for the match on Sunday,” Michael Weiss told interaction.com, a television website.

The Azkals barely escaped with a 1-all draw with Sri Lanka Wednesday in the first leg of their opening World Cup qualifying match in Colombo.

Weiss said the Azkals could have won the match had they got off to a bright start.

“We could have finished the match in the first half. But we didn’t do it and we got punished. The goal was unlucky, it was deflected. We continued to play and pressed for a goal in the second half. Unfortunately, we couldn’t finish them off,” Weiss said.

“We were lucky at the end. It’s a good result for us. We wanted to win but things don’t turn out as planned,” he said.

Weiss said pitch conditions were difficult.

“I don’t want to make it an excuse but it was difficult to have a passing game on that pitch. We had to play long balls. It’s not my favorite style of play but we were able to create chances with it. I cannot hang my head down right now,” Weiss said.

The Filipinos were set to return last night, giving them two days to prepare for the second leg to be held at the Rizal Memorial stadium on Sunday.

Sri Lanka, a world power in cricket but a minnow in football, scored the first goal in the 43rd minute when Chathura Guranarathna’s free kick thundered past the Azkals’ wall, partially hit the head of Rob Gier and beat goalkeeper Neil Etheridge.

The Azkals, however, did not lose hope and turned to Fil-American rookie Nate Burkey to score the equalizer seven minutes later.

Burkey, inserted into the game in place of injured striker Phil Younghusband, was at the right place and at the right time to head home the all-important goal. He completed a follow up header off a missed header by James Younghusband, a play set up by a gorgeous free kick by Caligdong.

Despite the less-than-stellar result, Weiss remained confident they can overcome Sri Lanka at home.

The Azkals need only to hold Sri Lanka scoreless to get into the next round against Kuwait by virtue of away goal. If it ends at 1-1, an extra time will be needed, but if it closes out on a 2-2, the Philippines will be eliminated.

Team manager Dan Palami said the Azkals won’t settle for a goal-less draw.

“We would have wanted a two-goal cushion. But we can’t always get what we want. We have to make sure that we learn from the game we played today,” Palami said. “It’s going to be different crowd, a different pitch on Sunday and for as long as we learned from this draw, we will be okay. We will go for the win and not just the draw.”

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Int’l media to cover Azkals

Meanwhile, there’s so much interest in Philippine football’s renaissance nowadays that a drove of international media is expected to cover the Azkals’ home match against Sri Lanka in the first round of the qualifying tournament for the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil.

Rick Olivares, the media officer for the July 3 match, said the British Broadcasting Company and the European Press Photo Agency, and Stuttgarter Sportkurier, a news agency from the capital state of Baden-Wuerttemberg in southern Germany, are among the over hundreds of media outfits which applied for accreditation for the match at the Rizal Memorial Football Stadium.

“It’s surprising that so many international media is interested in Philippine football,” Olivares said. “This is the sign of the globalization for the sport.”

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Study finds Americans are eating more

Posted by: Doctor Medical  :  Category: Health News


RALEIGH, North Carolina |
Wed Jun 29, 2011 7:06pm EDT

RALEIGH, North Carolina (Reuters) – Americans may be cutting back on super-sized meals, but waistlines continue to expand from more frequent eating, according to a study released on Wednesday.

The number of daily meals and snacks consumed by U.S. adults rose to 4.8 in 2006 from 3.8 in 1977, according to University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill researchers who examined surveys of daily eating habits over a 30-year period.

In the top 10 percent of those surveyed, the number of daily meals and snacks rose to seven from five.

The analysis also found that although the size of meal portions has stabilized in recent years, but the number of total calories consumed is rising.

By 2006, the end of the period studied, Americans were consuming 570 more calories per day than they did in the late 1970s.

A chief culprit behind the calorie gain: Americans now consume 220 more calories daily from sugar-sweetened soft drinks than they did in the 1960s, the study found.

The study is thought to be the first to examine the combined contribution of changes in portion sizes, the caloric level of foods, and eating frequency on people’s total calorie consumption.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health, and the findings appear in the June 2011 issue of the journal PLoS Medicine.

Kiyah Duffey, a postdoctoral fellow at the UNC Interdisciplinary Obesity Center and one of the study’s authors, said large portion sizes drove the rise in calories during the early part of the study period.

“Around the time people became aware of the portion sizes, we see a decline in the portion sizes they are consuming,” Duffey told Reuters.

“It really seems that in the last couple of decades, it is the number of eating occasions that is driving this change.”

A proliferation of food availability and a decline in regular mealtimes may be fueling the pattern, Duffey said.

“People aren’t sitting down to three meals anymore,” she said. “We sort of think about eating all through the day.”

Some sources of dieting and health advice say frequent eating in small doses revs up the metabolism and controls hunger, and is a healthier way of eating than three big meals.

Duffey said what matters is what and how much you eat over the course of the day rather than how often you eat.

“Don’t eat seven times a day if what you’re eating is a salty snack or a pizza,” she said. “If you’re going to do that, reach for an apple instead.”

(Edited by Colleen Jenkins and Peter Bohan)

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Analysis: Life saving lung cancer test to set off cost debate

Posted by: Doctor Medical  :  Category: Health News


NEW YORK |
Wed Jun 29, 2011 6:07pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) – A landmark study showing that routine lung screening of heavy smokers and former smokers using low dose CT scans could save thousands of lives is sure to set off a fierce debate about the cost of such testing on an overburdened healthcare system.

The U.S. National Cancer Institute studied more than 53,000 people between the ages of 55 and 74 deemed at high risk of developing lung cancer. It found that screening with the three-dimensional X-rays cut deaths by 20 percent.

Details of the study and a discussion of its implications were published on Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine, lending additional weight to initial findings that were released in November.

The discussion noted that radiologists using more advanced CT equipment than was available for the study could lead to an even larger reduction in lung cancer deaths. At the same time, the potential for many more false positive results could rise.

Some cancer experts say the results demand CT screening for high risk individuals become the standard of care.

“With this large a study that was so carefully done, it becomes the gold standard and it should become practice,” said Dr. Stan Gerson, director of the Seidman Cancer Center at the University Hospitals Case Medical Center in Cleveland.

Lung cancer is by far the leading cancer killer in the United States, with more than 157,000 deaths annually. Caught early, it can be cured surgically, but it is typically not diagnosed until it has spread. Only about 15 percent of lung cancer patients live 5 years or more.

Gerson’s hospital began such screenings this month at a reduced rate of $99 while it is not yet covered by insurance.

He and other doctors face an uphill battle to convince government programs and health insurers to pay for routine testing of millions of people, just as they try to rein in ballooning costs.

“Before public policy recommendations are crafted, the cost effectiveness of low dose CT screening must be rigorously analyzed,” the New England Journal article said. The cost includes not just screening, but also the expense of diagnostic follow-up and treatments.

It said some 7 million people in the United States would qualify for screening based on the trial criteria, out of 94 million current and former smokers and many more exposed to secondhand smoke.

NEW SCREENING GUIDELINES

Dr Bruce Johnson of the Dana Farber Cancer Institute in Boston and a member of the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s (ASCO) board of directors said the organization is examining the most appropriate way to implement the findings.

ASCO is working with the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, the American Cancer Society and the American College of Chest Physicians to come up with clinical practice guidelines “in a matter of months,” Johnson said.

“We think this is going to change the paradigm,” he said. “Personally, based on what was released, if a family member or loved one fit the study criteria I would have recommended to them that they get a screening CT scan.”

“If you were to implement this in a broad population it’s very expensive,” Johnson admitted. “In a setting of infinite resources it absolutely should be offered.”

But the debate over who will shoulder the financial burden of millions of tests that currently cost about $300 to $500 each may rage long after the new guidelines are issued.

“Lung cancer kills more people than breast cancer, prostate cancer and colon combined and they all have routine screening,” said Dr Michael Brant-Zawadzki, from Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach, California, and an adjunct clinical professor of radiology at Stanford University who was not involved in the study.

The cost and value of routine screening for all three of those cancers have been hotly debated and all were deemed to be worthy of coverage by Medicare and health insurers.

Brant-Zawadzki said the National Lung Screening Trial had an extremely high threshold to prove the life-saving value of CT screening.

Subjects in the study received either three annual CT scans or standard chest X-rays and were followed for eight years to yield the results.

“The trial unabashedly, definitively proved it saves lives way more than mammography has proved it saves lives,” he said. “So the real debate is how much are we willing to spend to save lives in a population that we know we can save lives in. It may take an act of Congress that makes this decision.”

There is little consensus among healthcare providers over whether the life-saving CT screening could ultimately save healthcare costs down the road.

Gerson believes that early detection, followed by surgery, would save the costs now paid for patients diagnosed when the disease is more advanced, including dozens of medical visits within a year and expensive drugs.

Brant-Zawadzki, while fiercely advocating for CT screening, said it can only raise healthcare costs. He said because lung cancer is usually diagnosed late and most patients die within five years, it is currently one of the least expensive major cancers in terms of overall cost.

Johnson said it was extremely difficult to know what the ultimate burden on the system might be.

“When you do something that makes people live longer you potentially add more healthcare costs because the people live a long time,” he said.

But there is one lung cancer strategy on which all interested parties are in complete agreement.

“By far the most effective cost benefit is doing everything we can to get people to not start smoking and getting people who are smoking to quit,” Johnson said.

(Reporting by Bill Berkrot; editing by Carol Bishopric)

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Novartis lung drug has similar efficacy to rival

Posted by: Doctor Medical  :  Category: Health News


ZURICH |
Thu Jun 30, 2011 4:46am EDT

ZURICH (Reuters) – Swiss drugmaker Novartis AG experimental lung drug NVA237 helps patients with a life threatening respiratory disease in a similar way to a rival drug from Pfizer and Boehringer Ingelheim, a late-stage study showed.

The news comes as a boost to Novartis’ respiratory franchise, which it is looking to build up, and highlights the strength of Novartis’ pipeline at a time when its top-selling drugs such as Diovan are having to stave off generic competition.

The Phase III trial showed once-daily NVA237, or glycopyrronium bromide, significantly improved the lung function in patients with moderate-to-severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), commonly referred to as smoker’s cough, compared with a placebo and with similar efficacy to open-label tiotropium.

NVA237 was licensed to Novartis in 2005 by Vectura and its co-development partner Sosei.

At 0719 GMT, Novartis shares were flat, while Vectura shares were trading 3.4 percent higher. The European healthcare index was down 0.3 percent.

COPD causes breathing trouble and chronic coughing and is sometimes fatal. An estimated 80 million people worldwide have moderate to severe COPD, according to the World Health Organization.

Until recently, Novartis was not on the radar as a major force in lung drugs, which are more difficult to make because of the inhaler devices needed.

The field is now becoming increasingly important to Novartis as it develops new drugs and cheap generic versions of older products such as Glaxo’s Advair.

Novartis is currently awaiting a decision from U.S. authorities on whether they will back QAB149 in COPD. Approval could open the way for a potential new blockbuster for the Basel-based group.

(Reporting by Katie Reid; Editing by Mike Nesbit)

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