Category: Health

  • Chelsea Whips Arsenal 2-1

    Chelsea has stayed top of the Premier League table after inflicting Arsenal’s first defeat of the season at Emirates Stadium.

    Chelsea captain John Terry started as he decides whether to appeal against the four-match ban and £220,000 fine imposed by the Football Association after he was found guilty of racially abusing QPR’s Anton Ferdinand.

    And he played his part in a victory that was set up by Fernando Torres’s clever early strike as he stole in behind Laurent Koscielny to steer in Juan Mata’s free-kick.

    Gervinho’s powerful finish put Arsenal level before the interval but Roberto Di Matteo’s side claimed the points early in the second half when Mata’s long-range free-kick took the slightest touch off Koscielny and beat Vito Mannone before he could react.

    Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger regarded this match of a measure of his side’s title potential – and they had the opportunity to rescue a point only to find Chelsea keeper Petr Cech in defiant mood.

    He saved brilliantly from Lukas Podolski’s second-half header and produced a superb reflex save from Olivier Giroud’s deflected shot, the France striker also missing a great stoppage-time opportunity when he hit the side-netting after evading Cech’s challenge.

    The Blues will see this as a landmark win as Di Matteo continues to shift the emphasis in personnel and tactical approach after May’s Champions League triumph.

    He demonstrated attacking intent by field Oscar, Mata and Eden Hazard from the start – a selection that restricted Frank Lampard to a place on the bench.

    Inevitably, Terry’s every touch was jeered by Arsenal fans as was that of former Gunners defender Ashley Cole – six years after his move to Chelsea.

    It was the visitors, however, who settled better and took the lead after 20 minutes through a goal that was a combination of dreadful Arsenal defending and the opportunism of Torres, who easily escaped the flimsy attentions of Koscielny at the far post to hook his finish past Mannone.

    Torres should have doubled his side’s lead soon after when he raced clear with only the keeper to beat but he hesitated and could only manage a fresh air shot under challenge from Koscielny, with his subsequent appeals for a penalty ignored.

    The home side’s rhythm had not been helped by the early loss of Abou Diaby with a hip injury but they forced their way back into the game with Gervinho’s equaliser three minutes before the break.

    The striker collected substitute Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain’s cross and punished Terry for retreating too far towards his own goal with a fine finish high past Cech.

    Arsenal’s improved defensive work under Wenger’s new assistant Steve Bould has drawn much praise this season but once again they were sloppy as Chelsea regained the lead after 53 minutes.

    Thomas Vermaelen was penalised for fouling Torres and the punishment was complete as Mata’s angled free-kick took a slight touch off Koscielny to drift beyond Mannone into the bottom corner.

    Cech had not been overworked in the first half but excelled in clawing away Podolski’s header and then saving from Giroud’s deflected effort after he had replaced the Germany striker.

    Chelsea threatened on the break without testing Mannone but the best chance fell to Giroud in injury time, the France striker rounding Cech but hitting the side-netting from a tight angle.

    It was the final act and Terry celebrated by advancing towards celebrating Chelsea fans after the final whistle and handing his boots to a youngster in the crowd.

    BBC

  • Chelsea Clash Tests Arsenal’s Title Credentials

    Arsene Wenger believes the clash against Chelsea at the Emirates this Saturday could offer an indication of whether Arsenal will challenge for the Premier League title.

    The immediate build-up to the game between the London rivals will inevitably be dominated by the fall-out from Chelsea captain John Terry being found guilty of racially abusing Queens Park Rangers defender Anton Ferdinand by the FA.

    Terry has been punished with a four-game ban and £220,000 fine, suspended pending the outcome of an appeal process that leaves the central defender free to face the Gunners.

    However, Arsenal manager Wenger insisted his side must ignore Chelsea’s problems and focus instead on securing victory against one of their main rivals.

    The Frenchman has identified his side’s home games against the traditional Premier League heavyweights as a key factor in keeping pace at the top.

    Wenger’s team drew at Manchester City last weekend and won at Liverpool earlier in the campaign but meeting Roberto di Matteo’s side is their first major test on home soil this term.

    “We have played one big game this season where we got some belief against Man City,” Wenger, whose team are four points behind early leaders Chelsea, said.

    “This is another one but a different one as we are at home. We have played five games, three away from home — Stoke, Liverpool and Man City — and doing well at home against the big teams will have a big impact on our chances in the league.

    “We have a big task ahead of us and hope, of course, but it is down to consistency and being efficient in big games like this.”

    The Gunners have Thomas Vermaelen back from illness and have been encouraged by Bacary Sagna and Jack Wilshere returning to full training.

    Wojciech Szczesny and Lukasz Fabianski are injured for the Chelsea game, along with Tomas Rosicky, who is two weeks away from returning.

    Wilshere will play in an Under-21 game against West Brom on Monday, Wenger confirmed. It will be his first game since recovering from knee and ankle injuries.

    “He will play for maybe an hour,” Wenger said. “He’s not played for 14 months so we have to be patient. It’s fantastic for him.”

    Meanwhile Saturday’s match will see European champions Chelsea without striker Didier Drogba, who had a fine record against Arsenal before moving to Shanghai Shenhua at the end of last season.

    “I don’t know if they (Chelsea) miss him, but we don’t miss him,” Wenger said. “He did a lot of damage against. Last season he had an average season in the Premier League but in the cups he was absolutely decisive and influential.

    “He played a big part of their success in the FA Cup and Champions League, he was massive and had that quality that on a bad day he didn’t give up and kept focused with his desire to be efficient. He was an exceptional player.”

    Chelsea’s victory over Stoke ensured they retained their place at the head of the Premier League table after a brief dip in form before Tuesday’s 6-0 thrashing of Wolves in the League Cup.

    That victory featured a first Chelsea goal for the club for Victor Moses who moved to Stamford Bridge in a £9 million pre-season move from Wigan.

    Moses operated mainly on the wing for his former club but he believes he can fill the central striker role and challenge Fernando Torres for the position.

    Torres was also on the mark against second-tier Wolves but has struggled to maintain his promising early season form in recent weeks.
    And Moses said:

    “Changing position just comes naturally to me. I don’t really mind where I play — left, right, up front on my own or with another striker.

    “I’m just versatile like that and I don’t mind playing anywhere in attack.”

    Frank Lampard is expected to return for Chelsea after struggling with an ankle injury but Daniel Sturridge’s hamstring problem is expected to keep the England forward sidelined.

  • ‘Take Few Drops of Urine Let Know How you Feel’

    When Fr Francis Limo Riwa took a glass of urine at a facility in China which, he claims, healed his backache, the man of the cloth started treating the human waste as the water of life.

    But now the Catholic priest’s urine-inspired advocacy has kicked up a controversy in the Kenyan region of Meru, with a medical doctor falling short of calling his pursuit a crackpot’s pastime and his church distancing itself from the bizarre therapy.

    But the doctor and the church might as well keep their opinions to themselves.

    Every Wednesday morning, a group consisting of mainly members of the Charismatic Union throngs Fr Riwa’s Kieru Prayer House for a praise-and-worship interdenominational mass during which they blend faith healing with healthy doses of fresh morning urine.

    Fr Riwa has been holding meetings throughout Tigania West District popularising urine therapy, claiming that it cures all ailments, including HIV and Aids.

    The cleric has also opened an institution where villagers can troop in and be taught on the ideal urine to take… and the quantity. Fully equipped with modern computers installed with fast Internet access, the ‘University of the People’, as he calls the prayer house, is stocked with various books on urine therapy where villagers are allowed to browse and study on the said cure free of charge.

    Fr Riwa says he learnt of the therapy from a Chinese priest 10 years ago while on a tour of the Asian country, but only took it seriously five months ago after “researching and testing it”.

    In his words, a glass of his own urine every morning healed his backache and has helped him manage his weight and stay calm.

    “I did not tell anyone (of the therapy) for about 100 days as I engaged in further research,” he told us at his Nchiru home, where he runs the St Francis Children’s Village that cares for orphaned and vulnerable girls and street boys.

    Cure-all

    His mother, Francesca Riwa, who lives in the outskirts of Moshi, Tanzania, was among his first patients.

    “She had gone to Loliondo and yet was not healed of her arthritis,” he says. “She is now well after taking the therapy.”

    Loliondo became famous courtesy of another ‘miracle cure-all’ popularised by Tanzanian pastor Babu Ambilikile Mwasapile, who dominated headlines last year as miles-long convoys headed to his rural village laden with hundreds, even thousands of sick people in desperate need of his one-size-fit-all herbal cure.

    Several books, including Your Own Perfect Medicine by Martha Christy, Water Of Life by John Armstrong and The Most Powerful Holistic Therapy by Martin Lara, lie on the tables in Fr Riwa’s library, giving his visitors the academic side of his beliefs.

    But not every drop of urine is medicinal, he explains, advising that one has to understand the therapy before taking the first sip.

    “It is recommended that you take the first urine when you wake up,” says the 54-year-old cleric who was ordained on October 1, 1983.

    “You should allow the first few drops to go through the urethra to clean it up, then tap the middle urine and drain the last few drops as it could contain some impurities. You must have had at least four hours of rest for the urine to be of medicinal value.”

    He also recommends a balanced diet with plenty of vegetables and fruits for the urine to have a good effect.

    A stickler for good diet and regular exercise, Fr Riwa’s diet must include ‘terere’ (amaranth). He does not take red meat, alcohol or tobacco.

    His day begins at 4.30am with a four-kilometre jog before taking a mug of porridge whose contents are about 40 per cent amaranth and 60 per cent millet.

    The 700 students at the institution must also take a two-kilometre morning jog — and some optional urine.

    “I believe in four pillars; prayers, study, sports and work. One must take control of their body. A good diet is paramount, thus one must eat well. It is recommended that if one is taking urine therapy, they should avoid red meat and instead eat white meat with plenty of vegetables and fruits,” says Fr Riwa while taking us round an expansive farm under amaranth and other vegetables.

    Cautious approval

    The priest, however, cautions that urine therapy is not an alternative to conventional medicine, especially when one needs specialised treatment such as surgery.

    “I believe in conventional medicine. If one is involved in a car accident, I would not recommend that one takes urine. Same as X-ray when one has a fracture.

    Urine therapy should be taken with a lot of care because if one has complicated illness like diabetes, HIV or cancer, it is good to consult a physician” he advises.

    So where is proof of the efficacy of urine medication? Look no further than the treatment of the wound after female circumcision, says Fr Riwa. This, he says, demonstrates that urine has some antiseptic qualities.

    “Communities that circumcise their girls use urine to clean the wound since it has urea and uric acid, which helps heal the gash. Urine is the most pure fluid from the body. It is ultra-filtered in the kidney and only gets dirty in the urethra.

    That is why I urge people to let the first few drops fall to clear it. Urine is rich in minerals and enzymes. If your body is missing some minerals, it will re-absorb it from the urine,” goes his freakish science.

    Naturally, this off-the-wall indulgence by the man whose business card describes him as the Diocese of Meru Director of Medical Services has rubbed the Bishop of Meru, Salesius Mugambi, the wrong way.

    Bishop Mugambi has publicly denounced the priest’s urine therapy, saying Fr Riwa’s unconventional therapy “does not Many view Bishop Mugambi’s caution as having been informed by the fact that the church is afraid of lawsuits that could originate from a botched pee therapy since it is being administered by a priest while on official duty.

    “The faithful wanted the bishop to categorically state the church’s stand because some people have been embarrassed by the priest’s paramedical pursuits. Some priests are also uneasy since Fr Riwa sits in the (See’s) medical board,” say a faithful who did not wish to be named discussing church matters.

    But Fr Riwa has been preaching his unique therapy together with the bishop’s principal deputy, Vicar General Basilio Njagi.

    The Meru Level 5 Hospital medical superintendent Ben Gatino thinks this urine business is simply laughable.

    “If the urine did not help the body while it was being extracted from the blood, then how is it beneficial after it has been eliminated from the body?” he asks.

    Criticism

    Because of these criticisms, scores of people from Fr Riwa’s prayer unit have rushed to his defense, testifying how they have been healed of various illnesses.

    At the church yard off the Kianjai-Ruiri road last week, scores of worshippers were arriving on foot, boda bodas and matatus for the therapy, saying they had heard lengthy testimonies from “beneficiaries” of the remedy.

    John Kirema, a former tour operator from Miathene, says it healed his backache, foot odour, and amoebic dysentery.

    “I took urine for 10 days and now the problem is gone. I don’t have to use expensive medicine any more. I can now lift something heavy without a problem,” he said.

    Kirema is now one of Fr Riwa’s foot soldiers and has been holding sessions with villagers at different places.

    “My phone is always engaged. Initially, I had given out my number and asked people to beep me after which I would call them back,” he says.

    “But nowadays I have to hold physical meetings to save on cost of airtime. I also use this prayer forum to talk to the faithful who come here to pray and lay their problems to God.”

    Elizabeth Karimi, 29, claims she has been healed of a persistent kidney problem which had forced her to drop out of school.

    “I kept on experiencing seizures and was frequently in and out of hospitals. I had to drop out of Makuri Girls’ High School and could not go beyond Form Three due to ill health.

    I could not perform easy chores without getting tired and was quickly losing weight. I was spending at least Sh2,000 on treatment per week and I was desperate,” she said at the sidelines of the prayer meeting.

    Ms Karimi claims she administered the therapy for 21 days and has never gone back to hospital.

    “I heard about the therapy and was desperate. Now I can perform easy tasks,” she says.

    Fredrick Mwendwa, the administrator at the children’s village, testifies that he was the first patient to take up the therapy and was healed of amoebic dysentery.

    So is drinking urine a form of faith-healing? “Not really,” says Fr Riwa, but stresses that “it is real”.

    NMG

  • WHO: New Sars Virus Not Easily Transmitted

    A new respiratory illness – from the same family as the Sars virus – appears not to spread easily, experts at the World Health Organization (WHO) say.

    The WHO said on Friday that it appeared the new virus “cannot be easily transmitted from person to person.”

    BBC reports that a man 49, from Qatari with the virus is being treated in the UK. The first person known to have had it, in Saudi Arabia, died.

    The Sars virus, which emerged in China in 2002, killed hundreds of people.

    Both Sars (severe acute respiratory syndrome) and the new, un-named, virus – as well as the common cold virus – belong to the coronavirus family

    But this new virus is different from any coronaviruses previously identified in humans.

    Both of the patients known to have had the virus experienced kidney failure.

    The WHO said it would continue to monitor the situation but was not recommending any travel restrictions for Saudi Arabia or Qatar.

    However it said it was working closely with Saudi authorities in advance of the forthcoming Hajj, the annual Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca.

    The WHO also announced diagnostic tests were being developed by scientists around the world as quickly as possible.

    The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), which monitors disease in the European Union, said initial findings suggested the virus may have originated in animals – diseases known as zoonotic.

    Writing in the journal Eurosurveillance, they said: “It is quite probably of zoonotic origin and different in behaviour to Sars.”

  • Isonga FC in Bus Accident

    Isonga Football club was involved in an accident when the bus they were travelling in swaved off the road hitting a house.

    There were no major injuries reported.

    Isonga FC captain Ndatimana Robert said its a chance that they survived the crash, “We were very tired and had travelled a long Journey from Rusizi district. We were asleep althrough the journey.”

    The Incident happened Tuesday Involving a Coaster Bus belonging to SOTRA transport company.

    Isonga FC had been playing against Espoir FC. Isonga Fc lost to Espoir FC (1-0.)

  • Medics Cautioned on Poor Management of Equipment

    Despite efforts by the Ministry of Health in ensuring health care, Rwanda’s hospitals are facing the problem of good management of medical equipments due to the gap between Bio-medical engineering Technicians (BMET) and hospital Administrators.

    On September21st, 2012, Theogene Namahungu the Acting Head of Medical Maintenance Centre (MMC) one of the divisions of Rwanda Bio-Medical Centre, revealed that insufficiency of Bio-Medical Engineers hinder progress in health sector.

    He was concluding a workshop on Health Technology Management held in Eastern province.

    “Many hospitals have medical equipments that are not in good condition and there is no closer collaboration between hospital technicians and the heads of hospitals in ensuring proper functionality of medical equipments”, said Namahungu.

    However, Lambert Ntakirutimana, Head of Maintenance service in Ngarama Hospital located in Gatsibo district, Eastern Province has said that Hospital Administrators do not normally understand job of technicians in hospitals adding that they work in isolation yet they have technical skills to impact on functionality of medical equipment to enable health care of patients.

    Ntakirutimana added that the training on Health Technology Management with hospital Administrators will help technicians and hospital administrators to understand the importance of managing medical equipment by working as a team and will enable maximum use of health equipment and timely deliverance of health services.

    The Belgium Development Agency (BTC) through Institutional Support Program to the Conception and Implementation of a Strategic Health Development Plan for Kigali City (PAPSDSK) managed the partial fund

    and the preparations of the training on Health Technology Management in collaboration with Rwanda Bio-Medical Centre, Engineering World Health ,US NGO and with GIZ, the German Development Agency to make sure that both hospital technicians and hospital administrators manage well medical equipment and prioritise the needs of hospitals and clinical services as standard of health care.

  • Research Team to Study Malaria Prevalence

    A 4-year research study on Malaria in Bugesera district has kicked off to determine why there is high prevalance of the disease in that zone of Rwanda.

    Bugesera district is among the most affected districts with high malaria cases. The research aims at giving direction on malaria control.

    Dr. Claver Kayumba, the Acting Director General of Rwanda Biomedical Centre, says, “This is one of the most affected areas with Malaria. The research will be able to identify how Malaria can be eliminated.

    Dr. Kayumba added that despite issuing of mosquito nets and spraying insecticides to kill mosquitoes, “we still have malaria cases. The Research team will identify why and what the way forward should be.”

    Fredrick Gatera(PHD student) also on the research team, said that there could be many underlying causes of high malaria prevalence in this area.

    Gatera noted that the Area has only one health centre serving over 35 villages which could be one of the factors.

    “We want to look at the impact of Community Health Workers (CHW’s) and their delivery of community health services. While they’ve done a good job, there’s need to evaluate their impact and see if they can use them as key first line diagnosis and treatment options since there’s only one health centre in Ruhuha sector.”

    The Research team also says, they intends to identify if CHW’s can mobilize community because community involvement is very crucial in disease control.

    Additional Information NewTimes

  • Study: 80% Tanzanian Men Unable to Impregnate

    Research conducted by a Tanzanian Doctor Dr. Henry Mwakyoma reveals that in every ten Tanzanian men, only 2 can successfully impregnate a woman.

    This means over 80% of Tanzanian men are incapable of impregnating a woman.

    Dr. Henry Mwakyoma a lecturer at Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences said it was true Tanzania is facing an increase in fertilisation problem.

    He said the fertilisation treatment in a woman is only carried out if it is only the woman who has problems; if her partner’s sperms are too weak to fertilise the ova, the procedure won’t be of any use.

    This has been also proved by the number of Tanzanian women travelling to nearby Kenya seeking fertility treatment services which are very costly in Tanzania.

    The Tanzania Citizen has reported that in every 10 people who seek the service at the Aga Khan and Nairobi In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF) centres in Nairobi, at least four are from Tanzania.

    It is believed that Tanzanians travel to Kenya because of the reputedly better services and “reasonable cost”.

    The infertility treatment involves channeling male sperms to woman’s fallopian tubes.

    The process takes at least one month, starting on the second day after the end of the woman’s menstruation circle.

    Sometimes, women buy sperms at our centre and the process continues as planned.

    Fertilised ova are kept for two days in a special container so as to support the growth of an embryo before they are transferred to the uterus for insemination.

    Kenya has more than five IVF centres. This is why Kenya has become the destination for couples seeking children solutions.

    Other countries whose people are known to visit Kenya for fertility services include South Sudan, US and Ethiopia.

    Specialists say infertility is a global problem estimated at the average of 10%, thus in every 10 couples, one is troubled with failure to conceive.

    The specialists say causes of infertility include “too much schooling” and career pursuits of today’s woman who keeps on putting off marriage.

  • Ebola Could Spread to DRC Towns–WHO

    Ebola virus in the Democratic Republic of Congo risks spreading to major towns if not brought under control soon after the death toll doubled within a week, the World Health Organisation has warned.

    The number of people killed by the contagious virus for which there is no known treatment has now risen to 31, including five health workers.

    Ebola causes massive bleeding and kills up to 90% of its victims.

    “The epidemic is not under control. On the contrary the situation is very, very serious,” Eugene Kabambi, a WHO spokesman in Congo’s capital Kinshasa said.

    “If nothing is done now, the disease will reach other places, and even major towns will be threatened,” he said, adding that an estimated $2 million had to be urgently found to pay for measures to tackle the disease.

    The outbreak, which is believed to have been caused by tainted bushmeat hunted by local villagers, has so far struck in the towns of Isiro and Viadana in the northeastern province of Orientale.

    Some 16 people in neighboring Uganda died of the disease last month, though the WHO said the two epidemics were not connected.

    The latest WHO figures show there are now 65 probable or suspected cases of Ebola in Congo, with 108 people under surveillance.

    Kabambi said one suspected case in Kinshasa had come back negative. Congo’s ramshackle capital is home to at least 9 million people and its health sector is crumbling.

    Congo’s infrastructure has been devastated by decades of corruption, conflict and misrule. The country last year came bottom of a United Nations development index.

    Reuters

  • Smoking Marijuana Doubles risk of Testicular Cancer

    Young men who smoke Marijuana (locally known as urumoji) are twice more likely to be diagnosed with testicular cancer than men who have never consumed the narcotic—says a U.S. study.

    Researchers whose findings published in journal Cancer said the link appeared to be specific to a type of tumor known as nonseminoma.

    “This is the third study consistently demonstrating a greater than doubling of risk of this particularly undesirable subtype of testicular cancer among young men with marijuana use,” said Victoria Cortessis of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, who led the study.

    According to the American Cancer Society, a man’s lifetime risk of getting testicular cancer is about one in 270 – and because effective treatment is available, the risk of dying from the disease is just one in 5,000.

    Little is known about what causes it. In cases where testes remain in the abdomen beyond the age of a year, are a risk factor. Both pesticide and hormone exposure have also been associated with the tumors.

    163 young men who had been diagnosed with testicular cancer and nearly 300 men in a comparison group without the disease.
    Both groups had been interviewed about their health and drug use between 1987 and 1994.

    Among the men with cancer, 81% had used marijuana at some point, whereas that was the case for 70 percent of the comparison group.