Tag: Singapore

  • What You Should Eat If You Have High Cholesterol

    What You Should Eat If You Have High Cholesterol

    High fat, low fat, no carb, more carb – when it comes to getting information on eating to manage high blood cholesterol, confusion reigns.

    From recent trials that tested the impact of specific foods on blood cholesterol, it was found that eating more nuts, plant sterols (molecules found in plants), legumes and olive oil helps to lower blood cholesterol.

    The bad news? Junk foods raise blood cholesterol, especially bad cholesterol (LDL). Eating less lowers it.

    EAT PLANT STEROLS
AND MARGARINES

    Plant sterols are concentrated from plant sources and added to some commonly eaten foods such as margarines, spreads or milk.Plant sterols, or phytosterols, are chemically similar to blood cholesterol and are found in some plant foods, including nuts.

    Plant sterols compete with two other types of cholesterol for absorption in the gut – pre-made cholesterol, found in foods such as prawns; and cholesterol, which is made in your liver.

    This “competition” lowers the amount of cholesterol that ends up in your blood.

    A review concluded that 2g of plant sterols a day leads to an 8 to 10 per cent reduction in LDL cholesterol.

    The type of fat the plant sterols are mixed with is important.

    A meta-analysis of 32 randomised control trials, involving about 2,100 people, found bigger reductions in total cholesterol (a mix of good and bad types) and LDL cholesterol when plant sterols were added to margarines or spreads derived from canola or rapeseed oil, rather than sunflower or soya bean oil.

    EAT NUTS

    Nuts are high in protein and fat, but the amounts of polyunsaturated, monounsaturated and saturated fat vary.

    In a review of 25 trials, eating 67g of nuts a day led to a 5.1 per cent reduction in total cholesterol and 7.4 per cent cut for LDL.

    People with higher LDL cholesterol or who were not overweight had a bigger improvement.

    Do note that half a cup of nuts contains 400 calories, so you need to eat nuts instead of another food, or eat less each day but have it every day.

    
USE OLIVE OIL

    Olive oil contains a high proportion of monounsaturated fat.

    More than 80 per cent of its compounds are lost during the refining process, so less refined varieties, such as virgin olive oil, are a better choice.

    A review of eight trials that involved 350 people consuming high phenolic olive oil found medium effects on lowering blood pressure and small effects on lowering oxidised LDL, with no significant effects on total or LDL cholesterol.

    Another trial randomly selected more than 7,400 men and women at high risk of heart disease to follow three diets: the Mediterranean diet plus extra-virgin olive oil, or Mediterranean diet plus nuts, or a control diet (low fat).

    Five years later, a follow-up showed that those in the olive oil and nut groups had a 30 per cent lower risk of heart attack, stroke or death from heart disease, compared to those on the control diet.

    In a recent trial, 47 men and women substituted 4.5 per cent of their usual food intake of olive oil or butter for five weeks, and then crossed over to the other group for another five weeks.

    Researchers found total and LDL cholesterol levels were significantly higher after consuming butter, compared to olive oil.

    EAT LEGUMES

    Legumes and pulses, including baked beans, kidney beans, chickpeas, lentils and split peas, can help lower cholesterol levels.

    The results of 26 randomised control trials, which involved 1,037 people who had either normal or high cholesterol levels, were added together.

    The data showed LDL cholesterol was reduced by 5 per cent in response to eating 130g of pulses per day.

    This is equivalent to one small can of baked beans.

    Pulses are high in vegetable protein and fibre. They lower blood cholesterol in a number of ways.

    The soluble and insoluble fibres help lower cholesterol absorption in the gut and promote the growth of beneficial gut bacteria in the large bowel.

    Legumes and pulses take longer to digest, compared to processed foods. This means you tend to eat less when they are part of a meal.

    
AVOID JUNK FOOD

    In a study, it was found that people were able to make a number of small changes across a range of the foods that lower blood cholesterol levels.

    But the biggest change people made was cutting back on energy-dense, nutrient-poor foods (junk foods) and eating a wider variety of healthy foods.

    The benefits? They lost weight and lowered their cholesterol and blood pressure.

    A big study examined changes in diet-quality scores and heart disease risk in 29,000 men from the Health Professionals Follow-up Study and 51,000 women from the Nurses’ Health Study (1986-2010).

    After four years of follow-up, almost 11,000 people had a heart disease “event”.

    Those who had the biggest improvement in their diet-quality score had a 7 to 8 per cent lower risk.

    When it comes to heart-disease risk factors, get your cholesterol and blood pressure checked the next time you see your doctor.

     

    Source: The New Paper

  • AYE Accident Victim Was Media Personality Who Was Cast In Commercials And TV Shows

    AYE Accident Victim Was Media Personality Who Was Cast In Commercials And TV Shows

    The 37-year-old man who died in the accident along the Ayer Rajar Expressway on Monday morning (Dec 19) has been identified as Liong Kuo Hwa, a media personality who has appeared in several local films, television programmes and commercials.

    Liong — also known as Jackie — was driving along the AYE before Tuas West Road in a Toyota Vios at around 8am, when a silver Mercedes car allegedly driving against the traffic flow collided into it. He was pronounced dead at the scene and had to be extricated from the driver’s seat by personnel from the Singapore Civil Defence Force.

    His wife, who was traveling with him, were among the four injured admitted to the National University Hospital. Speaking to TODAY over the phone, his wife confirmed that she was the other passenger in the car and is currently hospitalised at the National University Hospital.

    “I am in hospital. I think I am not in the position to talk so much … I am being attended to for my injuries,” said Mrs Liong.

    Mr Liong identified himself as an actor, singer, producer and host on his personal website. According to the site, he has been cast in various English, Chinese and Malay dramas and short films, such as Code Of Law (2012), Point Of Entry (2011) and Sayang Sayang (2008).

    In recent years, Mr Liong appeared more in TV commercials, the most recent of which includes the “DBS: What Is Your Big Plan” commercial this year, and KFC’s advertisement to commemorate Singapore’s 49th birthday, in 2014.His online portfolio also includes theatre productions and emcee gigs for various events.

     

    Source: Today Online

  • Accident On AYE Leaves Trail Of Destruction, With One Dead And Three Taken To Hospital

    Accident On AYE Leaves Trail Of Destruction, With One Dead And Three Taken To Hospital

    Wrecked vehicles lined the Ayer Rajah Expressway (AYE) on Monday (Dec 19) morning after an accident left one dead and three injured.

    According to a Facebook post by road safety interest group Beh Chia Lor, a Mercedes had allegedly gone against traffic, causing the massive accident along AYE towards Tuas, before the Tuas West Road exit.

    A video posted on the page captured the dramatic trail of destruction left by the accident, with a silver car sitting on the left-most lane, facing the wrong direction. The front of the car is crumpled, and the wall of the expressway is severely damaged.

    Further down the road, the video captured a stationary black car on the right lane, with a fallen scooter lying against it and a conscious woman is lying on the road about 3m in front of the vehicles.

    The left-most lane also has a car flipped on its side as well as another black car, with a smashed bonnet and rear backed against two holes in the expressway wall.

    The Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) was alerted to the accident at about 8.05am. It dispatched a fire engine, a Red Rhino, two fire bikes, a support vehicle and four ambulances to the scene.

    A Chinese male was found trapped in the driver’s seat of a car, and was extricated using hydraulic rescue tools. He was pronounced dead by paramedics.

    Another two females and a male, all Chinese, were taken to National University Hospital (NUH), and the hospital was alerted to be on standby to receive them.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • The Next President, Hopefully Female, Likely Malay, Will Be Served By An All-Men Council Of Advisers

    The Next President, Hopefully Female, Likely Malay, Will Be Served By An All-Men Council Of Advisers

    In 1991, Parliament passed a Bill to amend the Constitution of Singapore to change Singapore’s presidency to an Elected Presidency.

    The Elected President (EP) was given new discretionary powers to safeguard Singapore’s past reserves and to appoint key personnel in government organisations.

    One of the less prominent aspects of turning the President’s office into an elected office in 1991 was the creation of the Council of Presidential Advisers (CPA).

    What does the CPA do?

    Currently comprising of six members and two alternate members, the CPA’s role is to advise EP, particularly regarding the use of his/her discretionary veto powers.

    Following the recent legislation in November to amend the Constitution regarding the EP, there will be eight members of the CPA in future.

    As the CPA is unelected, its powers to act is constrained. For instance, it does not have the power to block the EP.

    The chairman of the CPA also plays an additional role as Acting President whenever the EP is unavailable.

    When current President Tony Tan was away on a State Visit to Japan recently (Nov. 28 to Dec. 6), the current CPA chairman, J Y Pillay, stood in for Tan as Acting President.

    As Acting President, Pillay hosted Myanmar State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi when she came to Singapore on a three-day visit in late November.

    In the event that the both the EP and CPA chairman are unavailable, the Speaker of Parliament stands in as Acting President.

    How is the CPA formed?

    The eight members of the CPA are appointed in the following ways:

    – EP nominates three members.
    – Prime Minister (PM) nominates three members.
    – Chief Justice (CJ) nominates one member
    – Chairman of the Public Service Commission (PSC) nominates one member

    CPA members are initially appointed on a six-year term, and are eligible to be re-appointed on subsequent six-year terms.

    Under the Constitution, a CPA member must:
    a) be a Singapore citizen who is at least 35 years old;
    b) be resident in Singapore; and
    c) not be subject to certain disqualifications.

    Powers of CPA were recently strengthened

    Besides the increase in the number of members in the CPA, the powers of the CPA have also been strengthened.

    The next EP would be required to consult the CPA before exercising his/her discretion in respect of all fiscal matters touching on Singapore’s reserves and all public service appointments.

    This is not the case at present.

    The EP’s decision would be subject to Parliamentary override (by simple majority) where he acts against the CPA’s advice.

    However, if the EP was to act with the support of an absolute majority of the CPA, Parliament should not be able to override the President’s decision.

     

    Source: http://mothership.sg

  • MHA: Five Maids Worked In Singapore Radicalised But Did Not Pose Imminent Security Threat

    MHA: Five Maids Worked In Singapore Radicalised But Did Not Pose Imminent Security Threat

    In the past two years, five maids working in Singapore were radicalised, although they “did not pose an imminent security threat” at the time, said the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA).

    The maids were among some 70 foreigners investigated during that period, and had been radicalised through social media. Some of the foreigners were later deported after the authorities in their home countries were informed of their cases.

    The statement yesterday came after Indonesia’s anti-terror police commandos rounded up four women in the past week on suspicion of terrorism. Among them was Dian Yulia Novi, 27. She had worked in Singapore between 2008 and 2009, said an MHA spokesman.

    Dian had allegedly been planning to mount a suicide bomb attack on the presidential palace in Jakarta. In a television interview broadcast last Tuesday, she said she was first exposed to radical Islam through Facebook by opening profiles of extremists while working as a maid abroad.

    She worked for a family with three children here, and as a maid for three years in Taiwan.

    But Dian did not show signs of being radicalised during her time in Singapore, said the MHA spokesman, who added: “Our security agencies are in contact with their counterparts regarding her case.”

    Most of the 70 foreigners investigated in the past two years “were radicalised through their exposure to radical propaganda on social media”, said MHA. Some then radicalised others using radical propaganda from online sources.

    The Straits Times understands that the five maids were among those radicalised via social media.

    While they did not plan to carry out acts of violence in Singapore at the time they were investigated, their presence posed a security concern for Singapore, MHA said.

    Six Bangladeshis charged with offences under the Terrorism (Suppression of Financing) Act are serving their sentences here.

    With radicalisation through the Internet being a worldwide phenomenon, MHA said social media platform owners have to ensure “their platforms are not used to promote radicalism and terrorism”.

    A more effective approach in the longer term may be sensitising the public to the dangers of extremist rhetoric and equipping them with social media literacy so they will not be vulnerable to terrorist propaganda online, added the ministry. Those who notice people showing signs of radicalisation should inform the authorities.

    “The security agencies meanwhile continue to work closely with their foreign counterparts to share intelligence on terrorism activities,” said MHA.

    Dian was a member of a cell based in Solo, Central Java. She had hidden a “rice cooker” bomb in her room, where she was arrested on Dec 10.

    The arrests of Dian and three other women mark a shift in strategy, with Indonesian militants recruiting women instead of men to mount attacks, national police chief Tito Karnavian has said.

    Maids from Indonesia said they were worried about being typecast after the news.

    “It affects us too because people will think other Indonesians will end up the same way,” said Ms Sri Hartatik, 35, who has worked here for 11 years. “It is common for Muslims, including domestic workers here, to read about religion on social media,” she said. But not everyone does so, she added, and neither does she.

    Mr Gary Chin, chief executive of maid agency Nation Employment, said that employers should watch out for sudden changes in their helpers’ behaviour, show them concern and take an interest in who their friends are.

    “If they sense anything amiss, they should inform the agency as well, so that we can arrange for counsellors or family members to speak to the domestic helper.”

    Dr Rohan Gunaratna, head of the International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research, noted that militant group Islamic State in Iraq and Syria is investing heavily in recruiting in cyber space.

    While Singapore has secured its physical space, it “now needs to better protect its citizens and residents, including the labour population, from cyber radicalisation”.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

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