Obese Children And Surgery
October 28, 2009 by Aleksandro Imles
Filed under Blogging
Despite the well documented physical emotional toll that obesity takes on the self-esteem of children and teens – the majority of those surveyed would not want weight loss surgery.
Professor Paul Gateley, who leads the Carnegie Weight Management program, surveyed 100 clinically obese children (aged 8-17). Here is what he and his team found;
60% felt surgery was cheating. 71% felt weight loss surgery was dangerous. 61% believed there were easier ways to lose weight. 29% of the children saw eating too much junk food as the cause of their problem. 59% claimed that managing portion sizes was the main reason for their heavy weight. 60% feel that they get no support in overcoming their weight issues at school. 42% say they have been subjected to bullying. 58% think their body weight will prevent them from getting a boyfriend/girlfriend. A similar percentage worried that their weight would prevent them from pursuing their dream career. What we can learn from this
Youth obesity is easily one of the most pressing health concerns of the developed and developing world. Understanding the fears, concerns and mindsets of these kids is crucial to developing successful interventions to reverse this trend.
It all starts at home: parents need to take control of their children’s health by role-modeling healthy behaviours and providing a home environment whereby they set their children up for success. More often than not, obese children have obese children. This is an opportunity to get healthy as a family.
Government/school boards need to do their part: Providing healthy fare at schools and access to healthy foods for low income families is imperative. On the education front, physical education should be a staple in all schools. Further, classes on living a healthy lifestyle should be included in the curriculum of schools. The fact that only 29% of children saw eating too much junk food as being responsible for their weight problem is surprising.
Reversing this worrying trend will be neither easy nor quick. Massive paradigm shifts take time, persistence and the dedication of many individuals and organizations banding together towards a common purpose.
Stephen Trenen is trainer in a sport club and he runs his own popular website about Best Diet Plans, check it out to learn more tried-out Diet Plans.
Smart Phone – What Is It?
August 28, 2009 by Aleksandro Imles
Filed under Blogging
Although we lack a clear distinction between a cell phone and a smart phone, generally, a smart phone is a next-generation, multifunctional cell phone that provides voice communication and text-messaging capabilities and facilitates data processing as well as enhanced wireless connectivity. Cell phones are everywhere, growing in both number and type. You might consider the smart phone as the marriage between a powerful cell phone and a wireless-enabled PDA.
According a study by UK market research firm Canalys, more than 12 million data-ready wireless mobile devices shipped in the second quarter of 2005-twice the fewer than 6 million shipped in the year before. Although smart phones account for only a small slice of the worldwide cell phone market, many consumers are opting for business-centric smart phones as the price continues to drop.
The big picture Unlike most conventional cell phones, a smart phone will have these features: A color LCD screen with backlight. Enhanced wireless capability such as Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and infrared and the ability to synchronize with computers. A large memory (RAM and ROM) and persistent storage (memory cards or built-in hard disk). An advanced operating system with a set of applications that usually include games and calendar, scheduler, address book, media player, book reader, recorder, note, and calculator functions. Many have a camera; some even have a Carl Zeiss lens.
Additionally, smart phones generally fall into three categories in terms of handset design, representing three camps in the industry sector:
high-end cell phones by cell phone manufacturers, such as Nokia, Ericsson, and Motorola; PDA phones by HP and Palm; and enhanced wireless email devices (that is, Blackberry) by Research in Motion. However, software platforms for smart phones aren’t aligned with this categorization at all.
Cell phone manufacturers used to develop their own proprietary, highly customized operating systems for their product lines. Because independent software vendors generally don’t have access to these operating systems, they’re not suitable for today’s vertical wireless market. On the battlefield of smart phone software platforms, we have only a few big combatants: Symbian OS, Microsoft Windows Mobile, Palm OS, and some variations of embedded Linux systems.
This article tried to explained only a tiny piece about how smart phones differ from ordinary mobile phones. Nowadays, smart phones can do astonishing things!


