If You Think You Can’t Focus for Long, You’re Right

If You Think You Can’t Focus for Long, You’re Right

Claremont Colonic
I’ve been working steadily for hours but feel as if I haven’t even started. My attention is being pulled from my assigned task — writing this story — by a myriad of what I believe are necessary work interruptions. (OK, a couple were from my cat, who also firmly believes in their necessity.)
My kids and I call days like this “squirrel days” in honor of Dug, the talking dog in (squirrel !!) the 2009 Pixar movie “Up,” who (squirrel !!) was constantly distracted by well, just about (squirrel !!) …

Unfortunately, all too many of us are having “squirrel” days, according to Dr. Gloria Mark, a professor of informatics at the University of California, Irvine, who studies how digital media affects our lives. In her book “Attention Span: A Groundbreaking Way to Restore Balance, Happiness and Productivity,” Mark explains how decades of research have tracked the decline of the ability to focus.

“In 2004, we measured the average attention on a screen to be 2½ minutes,” Mark said. “Some years later, we found attention spans to be about 75 seconds. Now we find people can only pay attention to one screen for an average of 47 seconds.”

Not only do people concentrate for less than a minute on any one screen, Mark said, but when attention is diverted from an active work project, they take about 25 minutes to refocus on that task. (Wait, what??)

“In fact, our research shows it takes 25 minutes, 26 seconds, before we go back to the original working sphere or project,” Mark said.

Why you have a short attention span

How can that be? “If we look at work in terms of switching projects, as opposed to the micro view of switching screens, we find people spend about 10½ minutes in any work project before being interrupted — internally or by someone else — and then switch to another work project,” Mark said.

Yes, but then we go back to the original work, right? Wrong, Mark said. Instead, when we are interrupted on project two, we switch yet again to a different task — call it project three. Unbelievably, her research has shown we are also interrupted on project three and move on to project four.

“And then you go back and pick up the original interrupted project,” Mark said. “But it’s not like you’re interrupted and you do nothing. For over 25 minutes, you’re actually working on other things.”

(At least I can tell my boss that when I miss my deadline.)

“However, there’s also a switch cost,” Mark added. “A switch cost is the time it takes you to reorient back to your work: ‘Where was I? What was I thinking of?’ That additional effort can also lead to errors and stress.”

How to focus

Why is all of this a problem? After all, it’s called multitasking, thought by many to be a highly prized skill for coping with the demands of the information age.

“With the exception of a few rare individuals, there is no such thing as multitasking,” Mark said. “Unless one of the tasks is automatic, like chewing gum or walking, you cannot do two effortful things at the same time.”

For example, she said, you can’t read email and be in a video meeting. When you focus on one thing, you lose the other. “You’re actually switching your attention very quickly between the two,” Mark said. “And when you switch your attention fast, it’s correlated with stress.” Blood pressure rises. Heart rate speeds up. Psychological measures of stress also show negative outcomes, she said, such as more fatigue and mistakes and less productivity: “The more people multitask, the more errors they make.”

Who did this to us? We did, of course, with the help of tech culprits such as social media, tablets and television. But Mark blames email the most.

“To me, email is probably the worst because it’s become a symbol of work,” she said, adding that her research has found a direct correlation between email and more stress.

“We cut off email for some workers in an organization for one workweek,” she said. “Using heart rate monitors, we found that they became significantly less stressed and were able to focus significantly longer.”

(I find myself pausing to look up flights to Bora Bora. Oh, right. They have email there, too.)

“There’s no way that a person can just completely cut off from technology and work in today’s world,” Mark said. “So let’s learn how to live with it in a way that maintains our positive well-being.”

How to increase your attention span

Regaining your focus requires you to be mindful of how you are using technology, Mark said, a daunting task if you consider the average American spends at least 10 hours a day on screens.

Paradoxically, you can use technology to help, she said. Schedule rote work for the first part of the day when you’re not fully alert, then use technology to block distractions when you’re at your mental best. At night, offload tasks from your brain by writing them down and then put the list away.

Distracted by social media sites? Hide them, Mark said: “Take the icons off your desktop and bury the apps on your phone inside folders, where it takes an extra effort to find them. Leave your phone in another room or put it in a drawer and lock it.”

It’s also important to learn when to take a break. “If you have to read something more than once or if the words are just not registering, it’s time to stop and replenish,” she said.

The best break is a walk in nature: “Just a 20-minute walk in nature can help significantly relax people,” Mark said. “And we found it can help people produce significantly more ideas — it’s called divergent thinking.”

Too cold to walk outside? Do something engaging that takes no mental effort.

“I have a friend who is an MIT professor, and his favorite activity is matching socks,” Mark said. “Another friend likes to iron. Ideas can incubate and then we come back to the hard work, and we see it with fresh eyes.”


Contributor: Sandee LaMotte – CNN Health

7 Natural Ways to Help Clear Your Lungs

7 Natural Ways to Help Clear Your Lungs

Claremont Colonic Clinic

The lungs are susceptible to infection due to particle exposure, chemicals, and infectious viruses. In fact, it’s estimated that four million people die annually from respiratory tract infection and pneumonia alone. Additionally, in the US, one in every five people die from cigarette smoke. Lung clearing techniques may open airways, reduce inflammation, reduce the effects of smoke and pollution in the lungs, and improve lung capacity. Here’s how you can clear your lungs naturally.

A little prevention…

When we think of lung disease, it’s hard not to think about COVID-19. Experts say almost all of the serious consequences people face from coronavirus features pneumonia. And evidence suggests that pneumonia caused by coronavirus is particularly harsh. Currently, there is no cure, but efforts are underway to develop a vaccine. In the meantime, should you develop any lung disorders, you’ll need to do what you can to keep your lungs clear.

Steam inhalation

Research suggests that breathing in steam opens the airways and helps the lungs drain mucus. Cold or dry air can worsen lung conditions because the mucus membranes dry out, and blood flow is restricted. Steam adds warm moisture to the lungs and, when inhaled, can give you immediate relief with your breathing. Using steam therapy offers an effective temporary solution to improve respiratory function.

Try a cup of green tea

Green tea, due to polyphenols (compounds that boost the immune system), has anti-inflammatory properties that may help reduce inflammation in the lungs. In fact, a study published in The Journal of Nutrition looked at the link between green tea and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). There are two main types of COPD: Chronic bronchitis, which creates a long-term cough and mucus, and emphysema, which damages the lungs over time. Both make it difficult to breathe. The study found that drinking two cups of green tea per day is associated with a reduced risk of COPD.

Supplement with turmeric

When breathing becomes difficult, and your chest feels heavy and congested, your air passages likely have excessive inflammation. Consuming turmeric can reduce inflammation and relieve symptoms. Numerous research has found that curcumin, the active compound in turmeric, is the reason turmeric has been found to have broad anti-inflammatory activities. Keep in mind though; you need more than a little sprinkle of turmeric on your food. Supplementing is the best alternative to reap the benefits.

Peppermint tea

Hot tea can soothe a scratchy throat, but peppermint tea goes one step further to help break up mucus and inflammation caused by pneumonia. Research published in Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine found that certain herbs like peppermint provided a soothing effect on the throat, helped expel mucus, and eased the inflammation associated with pneumonia.

Teaspoon of honey

Research suggests that honey has antiviral and antibacterial properties. But a study published in JAMA Pediatrics looked at buckwheat honey versus dextromethorphan (DM) as a treatment for cough due to upper respiratory tract infection in children. The study found that a single dose of honey administered 30 minutes prior to bedtime provided symptomatic relief for cough and sleep difficulty in kids with infection. Interestingly, when comparing honey with DM, there was no significant difference.

Effective or controlled coughing

When lungs produce excess mucus, everyone coughs. But not all coughing is effective to loosen and expel mucus from the lungs. Sudden, explosive, or uncontrolled coughing can cause airways to collapse, and mucus to become trapped, suggests the Cleveland Clinic, further aggravating the lungs. Effective or controlled coughing is forceful enough to loosen mucus and carry it through the airways without causing them to collapse. Controlled coughing also helps retain energy and oxygen.

To control your coughing:

1. Sit on a chair or the edge of your bed and place both feet flat on the floor. Lean forward slightly and relax.
2. Folding your arms across your abdomen, begin to breathe in slowly through your nose.
3. When exhaling, lean forward while pressing your arms against your abdomen.
4. Cough sharply and quickly, two to three times through a slightly open mouth. The first cough should loosen the mucus in your chest and move it through your airways. The second and third cough allows the mucus to come up through the air passages and expel.
5. After coughing, breathe slowly and gently through your nose (sniffing). This will help prevent mucus from flowing back down your airways.
6. Rest and repeat again if needed.

Daily exercise

Thirty minutes of moderate exercise at least five days a week can greatly increase your capacity to breathe suggests the American Lung Association. While exercising with lung problems may be intimidating, exercising helps your lungs and heart stay stronger. Additionally, you’ll be able to perform daily tasks better.

Don’t take your breathing and respiratory health for granted

If you’re worried about the state of your lungs, there is some good news. Although the lungs are susceptible to infection, they are self-cleaning organs that will heal once exposure to pollutants are eliminated. Now is the time to make some lifestyle adjustments. By exercising, eating healthy foods and not smoking, you’ll help your lungs stay strong and better fight off infection.

Disclaimer: “None of this has been proven to prevent, treat or remedy COVID-19, these are just things to consider”


Contributor: Katherine Marko – Alternative Daily

Here’s a Perfect Healthy and Colorful Summer Recipe to Enjoy:

Here’s a Perfect Healthy and Colorful Summer Recipe to Enjoy:

Claremont Colonic
This raw beetroot salad is simple to put together and offers a fabulous variety of colour, textures and flavours.
Beetroots are full of fibre, vitamins and minerals and although delicious when cooked they are also fantastic eaten raw.
Beetroot Salad

Each serving provides 402 kcal, 15.2g protein, 24.7g carbohydrate (of which 23.9g sugars), 25.1g fat (of which 6.3g saturates), 8.6g fibre and 0.58g salt.

2 medium beetroots (approx. 250g/9oz), peeled and grated

1 unwaxed lemon, juice and zest

1 heaped tsp Dijon mustard

1 tbsp rapeseed or olive oil

15g/½oz fresh dill

2 small oranges, skin and pith removed, sliced into thin 0.5–1cm circles then quartered

40g/½oz skin-on almonds, roughly chopped

40g½oz watercress

125g/4½oz ricotta

salt and freshly ground black pepper

Method

1. Place the grated beetroot in a large bowl and add in the lemon zest, juice, Dijon mustard, oil and dill, season with salt and pepper and stir well.

2. Stir half of the orange pieces, half of the chopped almonds and all the watercress though the grated beetroot and divide between your serving plates.

3. Use two teaspoons to dot on the ricotta, then sprinkle over the remaining almonds and orange.

Recipe tips

Beetroots can easily stain hands and chopping boards so when preparing them I tend to wear kitchen safe gloves and grate them onto a large plate rather than a chopping board.


Contributor: Philippa Davis – BBC

FDA Greenlights First Blood Test to Help Diagnose Alzheimer’s Disease in the US

FDA Greenlights First Blood Test to Help Diagnose Alzheimer’s Disease in the US

Claremont Colonic Center
The US Food and Drug Administration has given marketing clearance to a blood test to help diagnose Alzheimer’s disease, making the test the first to get signoff to aid in the early detection of the disease in the United States.
The test, called the Lumipulse G pTau217/ß-Amyloid 1-42 Plasma Ratio, is for adults 55 and older who are showing signs and symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease, the FDA announced Friday.

It works by measuring two proteins in blood plasma: pTau217 and beta-amyloid 1-42. A ratio of those proteins tends to correlate with the occurrence or absence of amyloid plaques in the brain, which are among the hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease. The test does not measure amyloid directly but can signal its presence.

However, there remains no current single test to diagnose Alzheimer’s disease. Doctors primarily rely on a variety of tools to diagnose the condition, which may include medical history, neurological exams, cognitive and functional evaluations, brain imaging, spinal fluid analysis and, more recently, blood tests.

The FDA said the results of the newly cleared blood test must be assessed in conjunction with other clinical information from a patient.

“Alzheimer’s disease impacts too many people, more than breast cancer and prostate cancer combined,” FDA Commissioner Dr. Martin Makary said in Friday’s announcement. “Knowing that 10% of people aged 65 and older have Alzheimer’s, and that by 2050 that number is expected to double, I am hopeful that new medical products such as this one will help patients.”

According to the FDA, the new blood test – developed by the Pennsylvania-based biotechnology company Fujirebio Diagnostics Inc. – can help increase access to Alzheimer’s disease detection and reduce reliance on positron emission tomography or PET scans, a type of imaging that can reveal amyloid plaques in the brain but can be expensive, costing thousands of dollars without insurance.

The FDA said it reviewed clinical trial data on the new blood test, involving plasma samples collected from 499 adults who were cognitively impaired. The samples were evaluated using the blood test, and the results were compared with the results from patients’ PET scans or separate testing using cerebrospinal fluid samples, such as from spinal taps.

The data showed that 91.7% of adults with positive results using the blood test had the presence of amyloid plaques confirmed by their PET scan or cerebrospinal fluid test, and 97.3% of people with negative results had a negative amyloid PET scan or cerebrospinal fluid test result, according to the FDA.

The agency added that the risks associated with the blood test are mainly the risk of a false positive or false negative test result.

A ‘new era’ of Alzheimer’s research

Preventive neurologist Dr. Richard Isaacson, who established one of the first Alzheimer’s prevention clinics in the United States, said he has been using this blood test for years for research and applauded the FDA clearance.

“It can provide better clarity into whether a person experiencing memory loss may have Alzheimer’s disease. They can take this test as a screening test,” said Isaacson, director of research at the Institute for Neurodegenerative Diseases in Florida. Compared with costly PET scans or spinal taps, “this is a much more simple screening test, with reasonable accuracy, to tell the physician that a person with cognitive decline has symptoms that are actually due to Alzheimer’s disease.”

But Isaacson warned that while the FDA clearance is “an important step forward” for the field, more research is needed to help inform how blood test results should be interpreted and used to make clinical decisions.

“I think the next step as a field is, we need to advance education about what these tests mean and what they don’t and who they should be used for,” he said. “Because they mean different things in different people depending on their risk factors and whether or not they have symptoms. So we’re still early.”

Fujirebio Diagnostics designed the blood test to help detect Alzheimer’s disease early, when interventions are more effective, president and CEO Monte Wiltse said in a news release last year, when the company filed its test with the FDA.

“An early and accurate diagnosis will also facilitate the development of new drug therapies, which are urgently needed as the prevalence of AD increases with a rapidly aging population globally,” Wiltse said.

It’s estimated that more than 2 in 5 people over the age of 55 in the United States – about 42% – will develop dementia in their later years.

But in some cases, deposits of amyloid can start to accumulate in the brain decades before Alzheimer’s symptoms begin. Early detection of these amyloid plaques could open the door for a person to take steps to slow the progression of disease, such as starting preventive treatment with medications.

“For too long Americans have struggled to get a simple and accurate diagnosis, with today’s action by the FDA we are hopeful it will be easier for more individuals to receive an accurate diagnosis earlier,” Dr. Maria Carrillo, chief science officer and medical affairs lead at the Alzheimer’s Association, said in a statement Friday.

There are a variety of laboratory-developed tests on the market that can be used to detect blood-based biomarkers associated with Alzheimer’s, according to the Alzheimer’s Association, as well as experimental tests. But the Fujirebio Diagnostics test is the first one cleared by the FDA.

“Blood-based biomarkers are reshaping how we identify and understand Alzheimer’s disease,” Carrillo said. “At the same time, there are important questions for health care professionals to consider; in particular, who should be tested and when.”

For now, the FDA’s clearance “marks a major milestone,” said Dr. Howard Fillit, co-founder and chief science officer at the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation.

“The ability to diagnose Alzheimer’s earlier with a simple blood test, like we do for cholesterol, is a game changer, allowing more patients to receive treatment options that have the potential to significantly slow or even prevent the disease,” Fillit said in an email Friday. “This is a clear example of the new era of Alzheimer’s research where innovation, science and technology come together to develop more accessible, affordable and scalable tools that will pave the way for additional regulatory approvals of diagnostic tools.”

Contributor: Jacqueline Howard – CNN Health