Natural Family News


May 15, 2006

Article touts benefits of cosleeping

Filed under: Attachment Parenting — lking @ 5:47 pm

In a soon-to-be-published book by Margot Sunderland, director of education at the Centre for Child Mental Health in London, cosleeping is recommended for children up to age 5. In an article published in the Times Online she cites various physiological and neurodevelopmental benefits for the practice and encourages parents to abandon the idea of putting their children to bed in separate rooms, especially when left to cry. At least science is finally catching up with what some of us knew all along.

May 8, 2006

Alternative Phyto-Med Formulators Launches Business Blog

Filed under: Health,Home Education,Natural Birth — jmanty @ 5:55 am

Amarillo, TX (PRWEB) May 8, 2006 -– Since blogs first surfaced in the late 1990s, more than 36 million have been created. Many businesses are discovering that blogs are a good way to establish expertise, educate and expose readers to new ideas, and keep customers informed. Alternative Phyto-Med Formulators (APMF) is a family business dedicated to doing all three.

APMF (http://apmformulators.com) offers a unique, organic, non-toxic salve for skin, but the business blog covers such topics as medical education for homeschool students, naturopathy, homebirth, midwifery, organic products, and domestic family care from a biblical worldview.

“Because it is not possible for a medical education to take place without reference to God, we look to the Scriptures as our axiom,” said Pete Hernandez, co-founder of AMPF.

APMF is one of many companies that use blogs to reach potential clients and readers. A blog, short for “weblog,” is a frequently updated web site. Most blogs are personal online journals, but businesses are learning that such web sites are also powerful and effective marketing tools.

“When consumers buy medicine, what they really want is a cure. When consumers buy a blanket, they buy warmth. When we write medical information, we want to arm readers with medical ammunition they can use. We decided to start a business blog to reach online users looking for organic products and to educate readers. We read blogs and know how important they are when it comes to sharing information.”

Through blogging, well-researched articles, products, and services, APMF supports individuals, families, medical students, and churches as they seek to implement a biblical worldview. At the APMF blog, you’ll learn how family medicine, the Bible, logic, and medical botany intersect through the time-honored approach to learning known as the TRIVIUM.

In 1994, Pete and Maribel Hernandez began studying a variety of medical courses because of a family medical crises. While researching hepatic encephalopathy, prostrate cancer, and variety of common aliments frequently suffered by family and friends, they found that clinical applications were highly toxic. They set out to learn more about alternative health care therapies.

For more information, visit the site.

May 5, 2006

California may ban personal use of ultrasounds

Filed under: Natural Birth — jmanty @ 7:37 am

Citing concerns over fetal health, California lawmakers are moving forward with a statute that would ban the personal use of ultrasound equipment. The sale of ultrasound equipment would be limited to professionals. Some studies have shown that diagnostic levels of ultrasound can harm human tissue.

The First National Sustainable Design Expo

Filed under: Alternative Energy,Sustainable Living — jmanty @ 7:33 am

You might want to check this out if you’re going to be in the D.C. area. It’s a bit far for me to go on a last minute trip, but if anyone does go, let us know what it was like.

Green Technology: Use Less Resources and Increase Profits

Imagine a world where houses are built from plant materials instead of cement and bricks. Drinking water is disinfected by solar energy, not chemicals. And homes are designed to harvest rainwater to supply hot and cold water. It’s not a far away dream – you can see it next week at the first National Sustainable Design Expo on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., May 9-10 which showcases the best new designs for sustainable products and technologies, also called “green technology.”

A highlight of the Expo is EPA’s second annual People, Prosperity and the Planet (P3) Awards, a national competition involving 41 teams of college and university students who will exhibit their novel design projects. Sustainable designs prove that providing a higher quality of life and protecting the planet are compatible with economic prosperity. Businesses are taking notice – - last year, four P3 design projects became new commercial ventures. Projects included designs for green buildings, alternative fuel technologies, plans for safe drinking water in developing countries and even greening the apparel industry.

“Businesses are discovering green technology not only helps green the planet, but puts more green in their wallets. Scientific innovation has long driven the U.S. economy,” said Dr. George Gray, assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Research and Development. “Now innovation is driving the movement toward environmental sustainability in the United States and making it profitable. At the Expo, you will see designs for how we will heat our homes, clean our drinking water, and design our transportation systems in the near future.”

The P3 Award was launched in 2004 to respond to the needs of the developed and developing world in moving toward sustainability. This national competition enables college students to research, develop and design scientific, technical and policy solutions to sustainability challenges.

Support for the P3 competition includes more than 45 partners in the federal government, industry and scientific and professional societies. The expo will include exhibits by companies, government and nonprofit organizations, demonstrating successful sustainable technologies and products. The expo is co-sponsored by the National Council for Science and the Environment; Environmental and Energy Study Institute and Green Chemistry Institute.

The National Sustainable Design Expo is open to the general public without charge and will take place on May 9, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and May 10, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the National Mall between 3rd and 4th streets.

Information on the expo and the P3 Award

Expo agenda

EPA’s sustainability research program

Children in daycare at increased risk for allergy symptoms

Filed under: Health — jmanty @ 6:47 am

Children between the ages of 1 and 6 who are in daycare are up to 56% more likely to exhibit symptoms of allergies. They also are 2.5 times more likely to have more colds. The cold part I can understand, but I must say I’m a bit perplexed why daycare would make a difference in allergies.

I know my oldest son, who is the only one of mine who was in daycare, was also my sickest child. Of course, I attribute that to other factors, in addition to being in daycare.

May 3, 2006

Filipino women hope to set record

Filed under: Breastfeeding — jmanty @ 7:38 am

Filipino mothers are hoping to set a Guiness World Record on May 4th when they gather at a stadium for a group nurse. The current record is held by a group of Berkley, California moms and was set in 2001. The organizers hope to encourage more mother to breastfeed.

May 1, 2006

New EPA Environmental Radiation Website

Filed under: Health — jmanty @ 1:52 pm

New Interactive Web Site is Totally Rad

(Washington, D.C. – May 1, 2006) From seeing a stadium laser light show to receiving an x-ray, radiation is part of our lives. That’s why EPA is launching RadTown USA, a new web site that uses an animated town to provide basic information on radiation in the environment. RadTown USA is a virtual community showing the wide variety of radiation sources commonly encountered in everyday life. The RadTown site features houses, a school, stadium, construction site, flying plane, moving train and much more to highlight and explain the many common sources of radiation.

The information is organized in a series of easy-to-understand fact sheets, with links to additional information resources. Every fact sheet includes the types of radiation sources at the location, the important roles that federal, state and local governments play in protection and control, and normal steps that individuals can take to protect themselves, such as applying sun block or installing radon detectors in homes.

Discover RadTown USA

April 26, 2006

Yikes. Vaccines at birth.

Filed under: Health,Natural Birth — jmanty @ 12:38 pm

Normally, I don’t post things verbatim. I usually send a link, but this article is not available online yet, and I think it’s too important to not pass along. I’m pretty sure that there is a reason that the newborn immune system functions as it does, and I think it’s scary to mess with something that sensitive.

Vaccines for newborns ‘on the horizon’
Source: Blood 2006; Not yet available online

Assessing the immunologic effects of stimulating toll-like receptors in newborns.

US researchers think they have found a way to boost the immune system of babies so that they can be vaccinated at birth rather than at 2 months of age.

Newborns have an immature immune system, which means they respond poorly to vaccines and are initially vulnerable to infection.

But Ofer Levy, from the Children’s Hospital Boston in Massachusetts, and team say that a receptor on the surface of certain white blood cells could be targeted to boost their immunity.

Previous research has shown that Toll-like receptors (TLR) form the first line of defense against infection by triggering the production of cytokines, which activate other immune cells.

Assessing the functionality of the 10 TLRs in newborns, the researchers found that, when most were stimulated, the immune response was extremely impaired. However, one of the receptors, TLR8, triggered adult levels of cytokines, including tumor necrosis factor-alpha, in response to agents mimicking viral antigens.

“These findings suggest that agents that stimulate TLR8 could be used to enhance immune response in newborns, perhaps as adjuvants given along with vaccines,” said Levy.

“From a global perspective, if you can vaccinate at birth, a much higher percentage of the population can be covered,” Levy added.

April 18, 2006

EPA announces “Pass It On” week

Filed under: Sustainable Living — jmanty @ 9:04 am

(Washington, D.C. – April 18, 2006) Why trash your old computer when you can pass it on for reuse? That’s the thinking behind EPA’s “Pass It On Week,” April 16 – 23, 2006. EPA and its Plug-In To eCycling partners created Pass It On Week to encourage the collection and reuse of personal computers. EPA’s Plug-In partners will host several regional collections during the week.

“Americans have the opportunity to pass on access to technology as well as a cleaner environment,” said EPA Administrator Stephen L. Johnson. “Technology’s advances leave behind computers and electronics in its wake. Although some people make upgrades every few years, computers are built to last much longer – so instead of throwing them out, passing them on.”

As part of Pass It On Week, EPA is also promoting “100 Percent Day.” Created by the Computer Reuse Coalition, a group of nonprofit organizations, refurbishers, governments and manufacturers, this national effort aims to collect more than 100,000 computers throughout the United States on or near Earth Day. Businesses are asked to donate computers on April 21 and individuals are asked to donate on April 22. Three Plug-In partners are hosting or sponsoring collection events.

Formed in 2002, Plug-In To eCycling aims to increase the safe recycling of used electronic products by encouraging private and public sector partners to advertise, promote, or provide actual opportunities to recycle old consumer electronics.

EPA’s Plug-In To eCycling
(more…)

April 12, 2006

Can people afford to eat healthy food?

Filed under: Blogroll,Health,Sustainable Living — jmanty @ 8:17 am

This is a bit of a departure from the normal writing contained here, but in researching yesterday’s post, I came across another article written by Professor John Ikerd that I think addresses very well the question of eating well on a budget. Professor Ikerd has generously allowed me to reprint the article here for you. Thank you, Professor Ikerd. I hope you all find this article as interesting and educational as I did.

Anyone Can Afford Good Food,
originally published as part of “Sustaining People through Agriculture series,” Small Farm Today Magazine, Missouri Farm Publications, Clark, MO. March-April, 2005

“Perhaps people who have money can eat like that, but what about poor people?” I hear comments such as this in nearly every discussion of the growing opportunities for people to eat more locally grown, sustainably produced foods. My typical response is that just about anyone anywhere can find good locally grown food these days and just about anyone can afford it.

Locally grown foods, particularly meat, milk, and eggs, are probably going to cost a good bit more than comparable items in the supermarkets. But most people, even those with modest incomes, can afford to buy good local foods, simply by spending a bit less on other things that add less to their health and happiness. As I have written before, costs of good local foods tend to be higher because local sustainable producers pay the full cost of production; they don’t pollute the environment or exploit other people in the production process. Once people understand the differences between typical industrially produced foods and local sustainably produced foods – in terms of freshness, flavor, wholesomeness, and nutrition, as well as social and ethical integrity – good local food acquires a priority that makes it seem easily affordable.

The average American family spends only about a dime out of each dollar of disposable income for food. So, spending ten or even twenty percent more for good food only requires spending one or two percent more of the typical family’s income for food, rather than for some other discretionary budget item. In some cases, good food may not require actually giving up anything else. For example, the average American family today spends about fifteen percent of their income for health care, and as we learn more about the linkages of diet with health, it’s becoming evident that spending a bit more for good food could result in spending a lot less for healthcare.

“People living in poverty don’t have discretionary income,” is the typical response I get when I talk about being willing to pay the full costs of good food. “They can’t afford either good food or healthcare.” Admittedly, for people living in poverty, choosing good food is more of a challenge. Some poor people may spend up to half of their income for food. For these people, spending another ten to twenty percent for food would require five to ten percent more income, since they can’t take it from anywhere else in their budget. But, the challenge can be met.

First, from each dime the average American consumer spends for food, about eight cents goes to pay for the processing, transportation, storage, and packaging that makes food more convenient, and for the advertising that persuades people that convenience is more important than food. So the average consumer actually spends only about two cents from each dollar of their income for food – for what they actually eat. This means lower income consumers spending half of their income for food may easily spend forty percent of their income for convenience, rather than food.

Lower income consumers often buy food in smaller quantities, buy more highly processed foods, and buy more pre-prepared, take-out, or fast foods. Many don’t have the money to buy in bulk, don’t have freezers for storage, and don’t have time to prepare food, because they are working long hours or two jobs. As a result, the poor may actually spend proportionally more for convenience and less for food than does the average consumer.

Obviously, a poor person can’t afford to buy as much of everything as a wealthy person can. So, poor people may not be able to afford both good food and the level of convenience that many Americans have come to expect with their food. But, they can choose between good food and convenience, even if they can’t afford both. If a person spending fifty percent of their income on food was able to buy all of their food from local producers in its raw or unprocessed form, they could theoretically save the equivalent of forty percent of their income simply by buying food locally and preparing their own food. They would avoid all of the eighty percent of total food costs accounted for by processing, transportation, storage, packaging, and advertising.

Realistically, no one can actually save this entire amount, as it would require slaughtering animals for meat, milling grain for bread, etc. In addition, some raw food items, such as raw milk, are not sold direct from farmers to consumers in all locations. But, it is realistic to believe that most consumers could save half or more of the cost they currently pay for convenience by buying locally and preparing their own food. Practically all vegetables and many fruits and berries are readily available to consumers from local farmers during their normal local growing seasons. Meat, milk, and eggs are often available locally in minimally processed forms. Flour for bread and grains for cereal are often available, if not locally, at least direct from a miller. Some retail food stores also offer raw and minimally processed items bought from local growers.

Every individual situation will be a bit different, but realistically, a person spending half of their income for food might save the equivalent of a twenty to thirty percent of their income by preparing their own food from raw or minimally processed local food items. Hours spent preparing meals can be as economically beneficial as hours spent working for pay. Costs of transportation, childcare, or special clothing may dramatically reduce the net income from additional work. A person working long hours, or even two jobs, may actually be better off financially after cutting back to a normal workweek and preparing their own food. Thus, the economic obstacles to good eating are surmountable. The obstacles of being unable to buy in bulk, unable to store food, and lack of time, also can be overcome, with a bit of education and some common sense.

The costs of additional equipment for food preparation or transportation for local shopping will probably be more than offset by avoiding the expenses of a second job. Buying food in larger quantities when the weekly paycheck comes in is as easy as setting aside a few dollars for savings. Bulk buying actually is an investment that will be paid back with interest with each meal. The money saved on food during times when many local foods are in-season can quickly pay off an investment in canning equipment or a second-hand freezer. Anyone with normal intelligence and an able body can afford to eat good food.

To demonstrate the practically of eating good local food on a “food stamp budget,” Robert Waldrop, president of the Oklahoma food alliance, tried it for a week. He combined (1) frugal supermarket shopping, (2) preparing meals from basic ingredients, (3) buying local foods, (4) gardening, (5) food storage, and (6) home preservation of food to create a healthy, affordable, practical, and environmentally sustainable meal plan. And, he said, “the food had to be satisfying and taste good too, otherwise, what’s the point?”

The bottom line, he was able to provide a healthy diet for two people, with seventy-three percent local foods, for a cost of just over $60, which is a bit less that the current food stamp allowance for two people. Waldrop’s website, http://www.bettertimesinfo.org/foodchallenge.htm, provides many more details. His basic point is, even poor people can afford good, local food.

A commitment to eating good food represents far more than a change in shopping habits. It is a commitment to a new lifestyle for everyone who makes it, but is even more so for people with low incomes. First, a person with less income is not likely to have the nutrition education necessary to choose a low-cost, healthy diet from the smaller seasonal variety of locally available foods. Second, they may also lack the necessary skills for food preparation, processing, and storage. However, most people probably realize they can overcome these deficiencies, if they had a good reason to do so. Publicly supported educational programs are available for anyone who is interested in learning to select and prepare their own food. But, self-education requires a personal commitment.

The lack of time for food preparation may seem more difficult. However, families that are willing to make a commitment to good food may find they actually have more time for the things that they now find important in life. First, some local foods, such as fresh vegetables, fruits, and cheese, require little preparation. In addition, children of all ages, and both genders, can be productive participants in food preparation and processing. Families can rediscover the true meaning to quality time preparing good food and enjoying it together. Time devoted to preparing and eating good food can be time for learning, for creative expression, and for sharing of values and culture among family and friends, not time wasted. Time spent preparing food also leaves less time to be filled with unproductive, counterproductive, and often costly distractions.

Even families with limited income may find that they can actually live better by spending more time and money for good local food and less of both on other things that are no longer necessities in a family that shares an appreciation for good food. People, rich and poor, need only find the courage to reject the bombardment of advertising that tells them food is nothing but fuel to be purchased as cheaply as possible, prepared easily as possible, and consumed as quickly as possible. The enjoyment of preparing and eating good, sustainably produced, local food is well worth the extra time, effort, and money.

April 11, 2006

My issue with Wal-Mart

Filed under: Blogroll — jmanty @ 2:35 pm

I recently had a reader who questioned how I could possibly be opposed to Wal-Mart carrying more organic food? Surely, my opposition must mean that I think only the wealthy should be allowed to eat organic. It must mean that I’m ignorant or arrogant or both.

Here is what it really means: WalMart has proved destructive to every industry it has touched. Most businesses who have started doing business with WalMart have eventually been forced to outsource their labor. So, what will this mean to the organic industry? Will organic suppliers no longer be able to afford to continue growing?

I have to admit I’m not an expert, but if you’re interested in reading what the experts have to say on the subject, you can read this paper by Professor Emeritus John Ikerd, who specializes in agricultural economics. Here is an excerpt:

The national supermarkets could be joined by food discount chains, such as Walmart, in initiating a round of cut-throat price competition — which to date has not been seen in organic markets. Walmart is notorious for driving out competition by cutting prices. Supermarkets will not mount a major national advertising and promotion campaign for organic foods, until they have a strategy for ensuring that each dollar spent for organic doesn’t mean a dollar less spent for non-organic foods in their stores. Thus, they will attempt first to gain market share from the specialty chains. They may force the specialty chains out of business through price cutting, or may buy them out if pricing them out becomes too expensive.

Under either scenario, price cutting at the retail level will force prices paid to organic producers to the lowest possible levels. Organic producers will be forced to specialize, standardize, and centralize their production systems in order to achieve economies of scale and reduce costs to levels necessary for survival. Many smaller, independent organic producers will be forced out of business by reoccurring production surpluses and chronically depressed prices. Organic consumers may benefit from lower prices, at least initially, but they will no longer have choices among products produced under alternative “organic-like” production methods. Standard organic methods will reflect the least cost means of meeting minimum government standards.

Ultimately, mass markets for organic foods will be controlled by a few large corporate retailers and will be supplied by a few large corporate producers. Supplies will be restricted in order to stabilize prices at levels high enough to yield acceptable returns to corporate investors. Only then will stability and profitability return to organic mass markets. Organics will have become industrialized.

So, there you have it. A summary of my non-arrogant, non-ignorant concerns over Wal-Mart entering the organic industry. Feel free to disagree.

April 9, 2006

Online magazine to focus on breastfeeding in public

Filed under: Attachment Parenting,Breastfeeding — jmanty @ 8:24 am

SearchMothers.com, an interactive online monthly magazine, which focuses on motherhood, spotlights the issue of nursing in public this month.

Lumberton, NJ (PRWEB) April 7, 2006 — Interactive online monthly, SearchMothers.com, which offers community message boards, resources, and insightful articles for single mothers, spotlights the topic of ‘mothers nursing their babies in public’.

The April 2006 issue features an editorial by Chris Mulford, RN, International Board Certified Lactation Consultant, (IBCLC) and Co-coordinator, Women & Work Task Force, World Alliance for Breastfeeding Action (WABA). “Attitudes Can Change:
Supporting Mothers and Their Babies in Public Nursing”
is an important commentary aimed at pregnant and nursing mothers. Ms. Mulford is an active breastfeeding advocate, who has liasoned with various U.S. organizations to bring this breastfeeding issue to the forefront. She is also a La Leche League, Leader Reserve (LR).

Other articles this month include “Breastfeeding in Public”, “Helping Kids with Divorce”, “The Financially Challenging Single Life”, “Easter Egg Decorating”, “How to teach your Baby Sign Language”, “Stop the Diaper Changing Battles”, “Taking a Road Trip with Your Baby”, and more. The site also offers a free, interactive Pregnancy Calendar for soon-to-be mothers.

SearchMothers.com contains original and syndicated articles in departmental topics such as Custodial Mothering, Parenting, Pregnancy, Relationships, Healthy Living, Work and Career, and Childcare. Additionally, visitors can find an assortment of regulars such as the community Message Board Area and interactive tools; Editor’s Picks for the Month, polls, pre-screened links, and RSS feeds to relevant Mother’s news. The site also offers a searchable web directory. Search functionality looks at the pre-screened links in the directory, which are to quality-content websites, podcasts, research and other online resources.

Submitting your website, podcast, blog, or RSS feed to SearchMothers.com is free and easy. All sites and/or feeds are reviewed. The suggested site’s content needs to relate to and/or benefit mothers and their family to be listed.
SearchMothers.com regularly publishes reader contributions. Readers can simply email their submission or idea to the Editor for publication consideration. Submissions from all readers are welcome.

About SearchMothers.com
SearchMothers.com provides reliable and useful online resources for all types of mothers. It is an independent online monthly magazine, and known as a trusted resource for single mothers and mothers-to-be.

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