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June 28, 2012 – Radio Bahá'í began airing the National Institutes of Health Research Radio program today. The program can be heard at 10:00 AM, 7:00 PM, and at midnight, every Tuesday and Thursday, starting today. This program is a temporary filler for a new health program that is being produced locally that will start in a few months.

The program airing today, which was produced back in January by the NIH, is mostly about diets: news about a link between animal fat and a kind of diabetes, details on some top-ranked eating plans, how an app, and coaching, can help with weight control, and a story about sleep.

The transcript for the program is available on the NIH Website:  http://www.nih.gov/news/radio/podcast/2012/e0151.htm

The story today makes a number of references to websites where you can get more information about the studies. Those references are listed below to make it easier for you.

High animal fat diet increases gestational diabetes risk

How a mother’s diet before and during pregnancy influences her metabolism during pregnancy, which may have implications for the baby’s health at birth, and later in life.  They also point out that this type of study requires confirmation by a clinical trial. For more information on the study visit www.nichd.nih.gov

For details on gestational diabetes, visit the website www.ndep.nih.gov

Top-ranked eating plans from NIH

For more information on both the DASH and TLC eating plans, visit www.nhlbi.nih.gov

Body Mass Index app helps measure health risk

The app is available for free from the BMI calculator page on the NHLBI website as well as from the iTunes store. To download the app or find more information about BMI and the importance of a maintaining a healthy weight, visit www.nhlbi.nih.gov

NIH studies find long-term weight loss methods for clinical practice

these studies will help bring proven weight loss interventions to the front lines of clinical practice. For more information, visit www.nhlbi.nih.gov

Updated NIH Sleep Disorders Research Plan seeks to promote and protect sleep health

The 2011 NIH Sleep Disorders Research Plan provides an opportunity for future research to continue to define the role of sleep as a fundamental requirement of daily life and learn why a wide range of health, performance, and safety problems emerge when sleep and circadian rhythms are disrupted. For more information, visit www.nhlbi.nih.gov

 

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Think of human beings held in involuntary servitude by other human beings, and you’re likely of think of faraway times and places - not the 21st Century in South Carolina. But that’s exactly what anti-human trafficking activists say is happening; people - children and adults – are being kidnapped and lured into captivity to work in the sex trade or other forms of forced labor.

Human trafficking is a form of modern-day slavery involving the act of recruiting, transporting, transferring, harboring or receiving a person through the use of force, coercion or other means, for the purpose of exploiting them, according to the Polaris Project, an anti-human trafficking organization in Washington, DC. According to the Polaris Project and other human rights organization, thousands of men, women and children fall into the hands of traffickers, in their own countries and abroad every year. About 80 percent of people who are trafficked are women and children, according to statistics from the U.S. Department of Justice.

Anti-human trafficking advocates in SC are urging lawmakers to enact more comprehensive laws to make SC an inhospitable an environment for human traffickers. A recent anti-human trafficking lobby day at the SC state house included a media conference during which several heavy hitters of the state’s legal and justice systems and victims’ advocates vowed to do all within their power to end human trafficking in SC.

Rep. Nelson Hardwicke of Surfside Beach has been a key leader of the charge to enact more comprehensive anti-human trafficking laws in the state. Last year, Hardwicke introduced H. 3757, a comprehensive bill that would criminalize sex trafficking, support trafficking victims, and raise awareness of the problem. The bill gives more tools to law enforcement to combat human trafficking, including asset forfeiture. The bill also creates a civil cause of action for victims of trafficking and establishes mandatory restitution for those who have been victimized.  Finally, H. 3757 creates a task force to fight human trafficking through the Office of the Attorney General.

Betty Houbion of Murrells Inlet is one the state’s leading anti-human trafficking activists. While she doesn’t necessarily believe that the legislation being considered will zip through the process, she does believe that it will eventually become law. That’s because of the job she and others have done educating lawmakers and others on the issue. She gives Rep. Hardwicke a lot of credit for getting the ball rolling and helping advocates and activists educate other legislators. This report by Bhakti Larry Hough includes interviews with Rep. Hardwicke, Houbion and others.

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Picture of O'Neal Smalls standing in the field.
O'Neal Smalls, president of the Freewoods Foundation, standing in the field.

African American history and culture is complex, diverse and intriguing. Listen to Insight, and Join Bhakti Larry Hough for reports that give glimpses into two different aspects of African American historic preservation - the Freewoods Farm of the Burgess community of Myrtle Beach, SC and the Gullah-Geechee Heritage Corridor. This program airs on the 11th, 14th, 18th and 21st.

You can hear Insight Sunday evenings at 6:00 PM, and Wednesday nights at midnight. Or, you can download this edition of Insight and listen whenever you like.

Photo of O'Neal Smalls and two employees.
O'Neal Smalls (with hoe), president of the Freewoods Foundation, with Freewoods Farm employees Willie Hamilton and Gerald Graham.
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Young Stroke, Inc. Logo
youngstroke.org

While the vast majority of strokes still occur among people over 65, data shows strokes are increasing rapidly among young people and adults in their 30s and 40s. It was her own experience with a stroke at the age of 43 that led Amy Edmunds of Conway to form Young Stroke, Inc., a nonprofit tax-exempt organization for adult stroke survivors between the ages of 20 and 64 and their caregivers. Bhakti Larry Hough interviews Edmunds, for Insight, about the special needs of young stroke survivors and how her organization serves them. You can hear the program Sunday evening, Feb. 19th, at 6:00 PM, Wednesday night, Feb. 22nd, at midnight, and again Sunday night, Feb. 26th, at 6:00 PM.

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Portrait of Bhakti Larry Hough.Radio Baha'i's very own Bhakti Larry Hough has been elected chairman of the South Carolina African American Heritage Commission. He is a charter member of the former SC African American Heritage Council, and was elected at the SCAAHC's recent annual meeting. ...continue reading "Bhakti Hough – President of SC African American Heritage Commission"

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