Charity urges 5% tobacco tax rise

Posted by Health JYDC Admin | Health News! | Saturday 6 March 2010 10:53 am

Article Source: Health And Fitness Journal


A cigarette being smoked

A five per cent rise in tobacco tax would lead to a substantial drop in the number of smokers and save millions in health costs, a charity suggests.

Such an increase would discourage children from buying cigarettes and help adults quit, a report by Action on Smoking and Health (Ash) says.

Its chief executive, Deborah Arnott, said: "Smoking is a childhood addiction and not an adult choice."

Support for the idea comes from such charities as Cancer Research UK.

The British Heart Foundation and the Foundation for the Study of Infant Deaths (FSID) have also backed the proposal.

The report also says that raising tobacco prices through taxation by five per cent above inflation would lead to a reduction in the number of smokers by 190,000 and save the NHS more than £20m a year by cutting the cost of treating smoking-related diseases.

Health benefits

It also claims a tax rise would also reduce smoking-related absenteeism in the workplace, saving more than £10m a year, increase government tax revenues by more than £500m a year and result in wider economic benefits in the first five years of more than £270m a year.

Ash outlines its call on tobacco prices in a pre-Budget submission to the Treasury.

Its chief executive, Deborah Arnott, said: "By increasing tobacco taxation, we help to discourage children from buying cigarettes. An above-inflation rise would also help adults stop smoking."

FSID director Joyce Epstein said: "Scientific evidence shows that every year the lives of over 100 UK infants could be saved if no pregnant woman smoked.

"Smoking by fathers increases the risk of infant death as well. Our organisation supports increasing the price of tobacco because it will encourage smokers to consider quitting and so protect their children." </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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‘Good progress’ at Baby P council

Posted by Health JYDC Admin | Health News! | Tuesday 23 February 2010 10:19 pm

Article Source: Health And Fitness Journal


Baby P

Ofsted inspectors are expected to say later that children’s services at the council criticised over the death of baby Peter Connolly have improved.

The 17-month-old was seen repeatedly by social workers at Haringey Council, in London, before he died in August 2007 with more than 50 injuries.

His mother, her ex-partner and another man have been jailed over his death.

In its previous report, the lead Ofsted inspector said the council’s children’s department was the "worst ever seen".

Extra spending

The report due to be published by Ofsted looked at the quality of child protection in Haringey and is expected to say that standards have improved.

Ofsted’s previous report was scathing about the way the department was run and said there had been a failure to identify children at immediate risk of harm.

The lead inspector in the review of Haringey’s services, Heather Brown, had said: "The concerns that arose from this exercise were extremely serious – fundamental to the way that safeguarding systems were operating in Haringey."

She said the quality of practice in the department had been the "worst I had ever seen", with "only a single example of good practice" found in the whole inspection.

It had been claimed at the time of Peter’s death that the department was facing budget cuts.

But since then the government has spent £2m to improve child protection in the borough.

Haringey’s former director of children’s services, Sharon Shoesmith, is awaiting a High Court judgement over the circumstances surrounding her dismissal from her job, claiming Ofsted, the government and Haringey Council acted unlawfully. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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Best ‘dates’

Posted by Health JYDC Admin | Health News! | Saturday 13 February 2010 8:35 am

Article Source: Health And Fitness Journal


Jane Ashley
Health reporter, BBC News

George Clooney

"Signs of altruism have an enormous effect on women looking for a boyfriend," according to Ros Fewster from London, who found love though a dating agency.

"When I saw on my boyfriend’s listing that he had worked with disabled groups, that definitely worked for me. "

She disputes the popular notion that women prefer to date ‘jerks’ and that ‘nice guys finish last’.

Her view is supported by research published in the British Journal of Psychology.

The Canadian study found that women preferred men who appear to be generous.

This applied whether they were seeking a long term relationship or just one date.

"When I saw on my boyfriend’s listing that he had worked with disabled groups, that definitely worked for me. "

Ros Fewster, London

But for men it was different.

Whilst they still valued altruism in a long term partner, they found it slightly off-putting when looking for short term relationship.

Over 300 volunteers, half men, half women, were shown dating profiles, including photographs

They were asked to rate them for long term relationships or short term dates.

Dating profiles

Some of the profiles were subtly modified to suggest the potential date was a kind person.

"In some of the profiles we gave hints to indicate kind, altruistic interests such as ‘I enjoy helping people’ and ‘I volunteer at the food bank’," says the author, Dr Pat Barclay from University of Guelph, Canada.

"We found that women showed a strong preference for relationships with altruistic men in this study, even though the clues to altruistic traits were fairly subtle."

He explains this in evolutionary terms:

"This suggests that women are attuned to generosity, and that altruism serves a purpose in mate selection.

"If a man is kind and generous towards others – even strangers – then there’s a good chance that he’d make a good and generous parent."

‘Softening maleness’

This finding is not surprising, according to Dr David Lewis, a member of the British Psychological Society and author of ‘Loving and Loathing: the Enigma of Personal Attraction’.

"We know that women are often drawn to men who have masculine characteristics but with some femininity, such as soft hair on their forearm or longer than usual eyelashes," he said.

Altruism in men could also be seen as a "softening of their maleness," he added.

But he thinks that attraction is likely to be affected much more by appearance than by whether someone seems kind.

He says that people make up their mind about someone else incredibly quickly, often in the first second of meeting.

Then they seek to justify their initial impression.

"We know that women are often drawn to men who have masculine characteristics but with some femininity, such as soft hair on their forearm or longer than usual eyelashes"

Dr David Lewis, Psychologist

But Dr Viren Swami, a specialist in interpersonal attraction from the Department of Psychology at the University of Westminster, disagrees.

He has studied how first impressions change when people subsequently interact.

He found that although physical factors, such as facial appearance and weight are initially important, they are quickly outweighed by personality.

"Our research has found ‘agreeableness’ to be particularly important to whether people are attracted to each other," he said.

Altruism could be regarded as one component of agreeableness, he added.

Dr Swami believes people may find altruism attractive in potential mates for cultural rather than evolutionary reasons.

"Most of us value altruism," he said. "We like people who are kind."

But what of the finding that men don’t care about altruism when seeking partners for a quick fling

"This could be because men fear that altruistic women will be too interested in other things and not enough in them," said Dr Lewis

"Men are very egotistical and see themselves as the sun in their own world. "

‘More to prove’

How does this impact in the world of dating

Do people think they would be more attractive to potential partners if the present themselves as kind, caring and generous

Ros Fewster thinks some men do try to play the altruism card on dating sites.

"While my boyfriend is a genuinely lovely person, I think some men play up their altruistic qualities when writing their listing because they think that will make them more appealing.

"Women don’t tend to do this because men often take it for granted that women are kind. Women often think men are looking for other things.

"But men have to work harder to prove that they are not just after sex. " </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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