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Socio-economic status is associated with epigenetic differences in the pSoBid cohort

01-02-2012 Hits:12 Chair's Comments Simon House

  Conclusions - This study has indicated an association between epigenetic status and socio-economic status (SES). This relationship has direct implications for population health and is reflected in further associations between global DNA methylation content and emerging biomarkers of CVD.   Key words - DNA methylation, epigenetics, socio-economic status.   Abstract - http://ije.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2012/01/08/ije.dyr215.short  Read more

Assisted reproduction treatment (ART) and epigenetic inheritance,

27-01-2012 Hits:19 Chair's Comments Simon House

  Introduction  . .  some genes from babies conceived by means of IVF show a gene expression pattern that is different from naturally conceived children (Katari et al., 2009). . .  this mechanism could put children conceived by means of assisted reproduction treatment (ART) at a greater risk of diseases, such as diabetes and obesity, later in life. Epigenetic deregulation already received increasing attention as a possible common cause of adverse ART outcomes, since the incidence of disorders that involve imprinted genes, especially... Read more

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Mary Langman Prize Essay 2011/2012

Mary Langman Prize Essay 2011/2012

The ‘Mary Langman Prize’; is an annual £500 award for an essay that furthers the lessons learnt at the Pioneer Health Centre about the social, emotional and environmental determinants of...

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tweet and Twitter

Raising the profile of the work of Sir Robert McCarrison who believed that the most important factor in restoring health is healthy nutrition. We are venturing into the world of...

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Frankenfish on your plate?

Frankenfish on your plate?

Update: Congress Unites Against FDA Approval of GE Salmon The biotechnology industry has genetically engineered a fish that grows at twice the normal rate, so it can get to market sooner...

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Darwin’s original thesis, trashed by Weismann, restored by David Marsh.

Michael Crawford says: In an excellent meeting on 22nd November 2011, David Marsh, winner of the Cleave Cup for 2011, expounded on "The Origins of Diversity": In...

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First Report: Mini-Conference: Cleave Award - Origins of Diversity

Held Tuesday 22 November 2011. See response by Prof Michael Crawford, President, McCarrison Society. David Marsh is awarded the Cleave Cup after presenting the lecture:"Origins of Diversity"; Co-author with Michael Crawford of...

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Why the food and alcohol industries need tougher regulation (Guardian…

From: Dr Myriam Wilks-Heeg, Liverpool Andrew Lansley's plans to tackle the UK's obesity crisis without imposing legislation on the food industry (Lansley's new obesity pan branded 'worthless rubbish', 14 October) is...

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Getting Kids cooking

A new book, for 3-11 year-olds, with a foreword by Marguerite Patten, Cook School (link to commercial website) may be a useful tool. The review in the Daily Telegraph by...

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Campaign against unsustainable deep water trawling - please sign!

from: Avaaz.org Our oceans are being systematically destroyed and we have little time to raise the alarm. The seafood industry uses long chains of heavy metal disks to drag nets across...

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House of Lords debate on child poverty, 2010

Below are extracts from 2 speeches made in the House of Lords with regard to the Child Poverty Bill last year below. The speeches were made by Baroness Finlay and Lord...

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Mental illness / brain disorders
now exceed all other EU burdens of ill-health, in 2004 costing €386 billion1

This cutting-edge joint conference brings together PSYCHOLOGY & NUTRITION to show how nutrition, hormones and genomics are powerfully affecting future generations.

Generating Healthy Brains

Nutrients, Hormones and Genomics in Development:
mental health through coordinated care of life’s beginnings.

Tuesday 17 January 2006
at the Innholders2 Hall 30 College Street, Dowgate Hill, London, EC4R 2RH
(next to Cannon St Station . . directions to Hall below)
Certificate of attendance can be provided

The McCarrison Society for Nutrition and Health,
The Institute of Brain Chemistry & Human Nutrition (IBCHN)2 &
The International Society for Prenatal and Perinatal Psychology and Medicine (ISPPM)


8.50

REGISTRATION AND COFFEE
Chair
Professor Michael Crawford PhD, CBiol, FIBiol, FRCPath Director, The Institute of Brain Chemistry and Human Nutrition (IBCHN), London Metropolitan University.

9.30 – 9.40




9.40 – 10.10
The coming together of our Societies. CONFERENCE PRESIDENT
Dr Ludwig Janus MD – The International Society for Prenatal and Perinatal Psychology and Medicine (ISPPM) President 1995-2005, Heidelberg.


Preconception to late adolescence; key impacts on brain development & function.
Simon House MA – McCarrison Society & ISPPM, scientific writer.

From past to present; evolution and epigenetics.
David Marsh Dip Agric - McCarrison Society, scientific writer.

10.10 – 10.50

Nutrition, the brain and mental ill health. CLEAVE LECTURE
Dr Joseph Hibbeln MD – Chief of Outpatient Clinic, Lab of Membrane Biophysics and Biochemistry, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, NIH, US Public Health Service Commander.


10.50 – 11.20
COFFEE


Chair
Professor Vivette Glover PhD, Perinatal Psychobiology, Imperial College London.

11.20 – 11.50
Priorities for brain science; making a difference.
Dr Richard Ashcroft PhD – Reader in Biomedical Ethics, Imperial College, London.

11.50 – 12.20
Our changing diet; deficits and disorders.
David Thomas DC – nutritionist, chiropractor.

12.20 – 13.00


The significance of genomic imprinting for brain development and behaviour.
Professor Barry Keverne FRS, FMedSci – Behavioural Neuroscience, King's College, Cambridge.
13.00 – 14.00
LUNCH


Chair
Dr Rupert Linder MD – gynaecology, obstetrics, psychosomatic-related nutrition and psychotherapy, Birkenfeld, Germany, ISPPM President.

14.00 – 14.30
'Brainfoods': Modulating brain structure and function.
Dr JD Bell PhD, MRI Unit, MRC Clinical Sciences Centre, Hammersmith Hospital, Imperial College London.

14.30 – 15.00
The effects of maternal anxiety or stress during pregnancy
on the fetus and the long-term development of the child.

Professor Vivette Glover PhD, Perinatal Psychobiology, Imperial College London.

15.00 – 15.30


CONFERENCE PRESIDENT
From tribal life to civilisation’s sedentary life;
changes in nurture, birth and social life.

Dr Ludwig Janus MD – ISPPM President 1995-2005, Heidelberg.

15.30 – 15.50

Chair

TEA

Dr Ludwig Janus MD – ISPPM President 1995-2005, Heidelberg.
15.50 – 16.20

A psycho-soma integration perspective in psychotherapy with parents & infants.
Dr Antonella Sansone – ISPPM, Psychologist, Infant Massage Teacher, Author.

16.20 – 16.30
'New Parenting’, prenatal & perinatal care, psychotherapy.
Terence Dowling – Depth Psychosomatologist, Heidelberg, ISPPM.
(In Terence's unfortunate absence his main points will be presented.)

16.30 – 17.00

Attention deficit disorders – drugs or nutrition?
Toshiko Matsudaira – Institute of Psychiatry, Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, King's College London.

17.00 – 17.10
BREAK of ten minutes

Chair
Kate Start, Dietician and Management Consultant.

17.10 - 17.15
Presentation by Jan Katzen-Luchenta.

17.15 - 17.30

Into the future; avoiding the cost of folly.
Jack Winkler – Food Health Research, London.


17.30 – 18.30
Discussion on the implications
Audience participation.


18.30 – 21.00
NETWORKING SUPPER


1 EU Journal of Neurology, “Cost of Disorders of the Brain in Europe” (2004, excluding cerebral palsy) vol 12, Suppl 1 pages 1-92, June 2005.

2 The Institute of Brain Chemistry & Human Nutrition is profoundly grateful to The Worshipful Company of Innholders for their most generous grant of The Innholders’ Research Fellowship of well over £100,000, contributing substantially to effective and lasting mother-child healthcare.

The Worshipful Company of Innholders







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