Thursday 10 November 2016

More Science Says Smartphones Spoil Sleep


More Science Says Smartphones Spoil Sleep
Credit: Marcos Mesa Sam Wordley/Shutterstock.com
The more time you spend on your smartphone, the worse you'll sleep, a new study suggests.
People in the study who used their smartphones for more time during the month-long study period got less sleep and were less likely to sleep well than those who spent less time on their phones, according to the study.
And people who used their smartphones right before bedtime took longer to fall asleep, according to the study, published today (Nov. 9) in the journalPLOS ONE.
The findings suggest that "exposure to smartphone screens, particularly around bedtime, may negatively impact sleep," the researchers wrote.
In the study, researchers asked 653 adults to install an app on their Android phones that recorded how many minutes the phone's screen was turned on, whenever the phone was not in airplane mode. The researchers collected the data from each person's phone over 30 days. Two of the study's authors work for the company that made the app. [9 Odd Ways Your Tech Devices May Injure You]
The people in the study were part of a larger, ongoing project called the Health eHeart Study and had provided information about their medical histories and lifestyle habits. In addition, some of the people in the study completed a questionnaire about their sleep habits, the researchers wrote.
Results showed that the participants used their phones, on average, for 1 hour and 29 minutes each day, the researchers found. There was no link between smartphone use and people's amount of physical activity, mood or body mass index, according to the study.
However, smartphone use was linked to sleep.
Among the 136 study participants who also provided information about their sleep habits, the researchers found that more smartphone screen time was associated with decreased sleep quality, a shorter amount of sleep time and a longer amount of time needed to fall asleep. More screen time was also linked to lower "sleep efficiency," which is a ratio of the amount of time spent in bed compared to the amount of time actually sleeping.
But in particular, smartphone use around bedtime was linked to lower sleep efficiency and longer time needed to fall asleep, according to the study. This finding suggests that "the relationship between overall smartphone use and sleep may be driven by exposure near bedtime," the scientists, led by Matthew Christensen, a researcher at the University of California, San Francisco, wrote.
"That increased screen time in the hour of and after bedtime, but not the hour before, was associated with [a longer time needed to fall asleep] agrees with the notion that screen use just before attempting to fall asleep may be particularly problematic," the researchers wrote.
Indeed, previous studies have suggested that screen time at night is associated with poor sleep and shorter sleep time, according to the study. This may be due to exposure to the blue light from screens, which may suppress the brain's production of the hormone melatonin, which is involved in sleep, the researchers wrote.
Apple, for example, is trying to address this problem with the "Night Shift" feature on the company's phones, which shifts the display from blues to warmer tones at night.
The researchers noted that there are several limitations to the study. For example, the participants, all of whom decided to join an app-driven study, may not be representative of the general population. In addition, it is possible that the measurements of screen time were not entirely accurate, because people may have let others use their phones for part of the time, or may have been unaware that their phone was "on," such as when it was in a pocket.
The investigators also noted that the study does not prove there is a cause-and-effect between smartphone use and worse sleep. It could be, for example, that people who generally have trouble going to sleep are more likely to turn to their phones at bedtime, the authors wrote.
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3 More States Legalize Recreational Use of Marijuana: How the Map Looks Now

 
3 More States Legalize Recreational Use of Marijuana: How the Map Looks Now
Credit: Jan Havlicek/Shutterstock.com
Voters in California, Massachusetts and Nevada decided yesterday (Nov. 8) to legalize the recreational use of marijuana in their states.
These three states joined Alaska, Colorado, Oregon, Washington and the District of Columbia, which had already legalized the drug for recreational use in previous votes.
In addition, four states voted yesterday to legalize using marijuana for medical reasons: Arkansas, Florida, Montana and North Dakota, Time magazine reported.
That means that medical marijuana is now legal in 28 states, and an additional 16 states have laws that allow for limited medical use of the drug, according to Time. In most cases, these limited-medical-use laws mean that only a specific type of cannabis extract can be used. This extract contains concentrated cannabidiol but is low in tetrahydrocannabinol(THC), the main psychoactive compound of marijuana, according to the marijuana advocacy organization National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. [Marijuana Legalization in the US (Map)]
In California, Massachusetts and Nevada, the new laws limit marijuana use and possession to adults ages 21 and up. Residents of those states will legally be allowed to grow up to six marijuana plants, although in Nevada, cultivation will be allowed only for people who live more than 25 miles from a retail marijuana store.
In California and Nevada, employers will have the right to enforce rules about how their employees use marijuana. In Massachusetts, the ballot measure states that employers will be permitted "to prohibit the consumption of marijuana by employees in the workplace."
Marijuana use in public places, however, is still illegal in all states that have legalized recreational marijuana use. 
A Gallup poll from October found that 60 percent of Americans now say marijuana should be legal
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HIV Test to Go: USB Tool Could Aid Developing Countries By Rachael Rettner, Senior Writer




HIV Test to Go: USB Tool Could Aid Developing Countries
A new technology that fits on a USB stick can be used to test for levels of HIV in people's blood.
Credit: Imperial College London/DNA Electronics

A new technology that fits on a USB stick can be used to test for levels of HIV in people's blood, which could aid in treatment of the disease in developing countries, according to a new study.
The device has a chip that uses just a drop of blood to detect HIV levels, the researchers said. It creates an electrical signal that is sent to a USB stick, which can then be read by a computer.
Testing for levels of HIV in the blood is important because it allows patients to see if their HIV medications are working properly. HIV treatments can lower levels of the virus in the blood to nearly zero, but if the virus develops resistance to the drugs, levels in the blood will rise.
Current tests for HIV levels can take at least three days and require blood to be sent to a laboratory, which can be very difficult in some parts of the world, the researchers in the new study said. But the new device is portable, and the test takes less than 30 minutes.
"Monitoring viral load is crucial to the success of HIV treatment," study co-author Dr. Graham Cooke, of the Department of Medicine at Imperial College London, said in a statement. "At the moment, testing often requires costly and complex equipment that can take a couple of days to produce a result. We have taken the job done by this equipment, which is the size of a large photocopier, and shrunk it down to a USB chip," Cooke said. [6 Superbugs to Watch Out For]
Testing for HIV levels is also a way for doctors to check if patients are taking their HIV medications. Stopping these medications contributes to the development of the virus's drug resistance, the researchers said.
To use the device, a drop of blood from a patient with HIV is placed on a spot on the chip. If HIV is present, it will trigger a change in acidity, and this change is transformed into an electrical signal that is sent to the USB stick, the researchers said.
In the study, the researchers tested about 990 blood samples, and the test was up to 95 percent accurate in detecting HIV levels. The average time for a result was about 20 minutes.
However, the device will need to be further developed before it can be used by doctors and their patients, the researchers said.
The device was developed in conjunction with the company DNA Electronics, which has patents on the technology. The study is published today (Nov. 10) in the journal Scientific Reports.
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Checkout The 8 Powerful Things Hillary Clinton Said After Losing Presidential Election To Trump (See Here)



Senator Hillary Clinton lost the presidential election to Donald Trump in the US election help on Tuesday, November 8.

In what has been described as an upset, Trump won the electoral vote to defeat Clinton even though she won the popular vote.

In a speech she gave on Wednesday, November 9, Clinton reacted to her loss and spoke to Americans on how she felt about her loss.

Below are eight powerful things she said after losing the election:

1. “I congratulated Trump and offered to work with him. I hope he will be a successful president for all Americans”

2. “I’m sorry we did not win this election for the values we shared and the vision we hope for our country”

3. “Being your candidate has been one of the greatest honour of my life. I know how disappointed you feel because I feel it too; this is painful and will be for a long time”

4. “Our nation is more deeply divided that we thought; we must accept this result and look to the future”

5. “Our responsibility as citizen is to keep doing our part to build a stronger America”

6. “I have spent my entire adult life fighting for what I believe in”

7. “Never stop believing that fighting for what is right is worth it”

8. “If we stand together and work together…..our best days are still ahead of us”
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