study: israelis PWNED by widespread iodine deficiency.
| Hot 180 Ticket Booth | 08/17/17 | | Hot 180 Ticket Booth | 08/17/17 | | Cobalt bisexual really tough guy coldplay fan | 08/17/17 | | Hot 180 Ticket Booth | 08/26/17 | | Cobalt bisexual really tough guy coldplay fan | 08/26/17 | | Hot 180 Ticket Booth | 09/17/17 | | Hot 180 Ticket Booth | 08/26/17 | | Hot 180 Ticket Booth | 09/03/17 | | Dark Crotch | 09/03/17 | | violent personal credit line | 09/03/17 | | Dark Crotch | 09/03/17 | | anal karate | 09/03/17 | | misanthropic reading party | 09/03/17 | | Wonderful coffee pot keepsake machete | 09/03/17 | | insanely creepy wild yarmulke | 08/23/23 | | exciting peach circlehead | 08/23/23 | | Titillating Roast Beef Tank | 08/23/23 | | Razzle-dazzle senate sneaky criminal | 08/23/23 |
Poast new message in this thread
Date: August 17th, 2017 11:35 PM Author: Hot 180 Ticket Booth
http://new.huji.ac.il/en/article/34005
get your shit together, israelis.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3704624&forum_id=2#34015900) |
Date: August 17th, 2017 11:54 PM Author: Hot 180 Ticket Booth
According to the researchers, the high burden of iodine insufficiency in Israel is a serious public health and clinical concern. By comparison to data from other countries with a similar extent of deficiency, these data suggest that there is a high risk of maternal and fetal hypothyroidism and impaired neurological development of the fetus in Israel. By extrapolation, given the rate of insufficiency in Israeli pregnant women, nearly all pregnant women and their children may be at risk, implying that the majority of the population could be unlikely to realize its full intellectual potential.
“The immediate implication of our findings is that we need to improve the public’s intake of iodine,” said Prof. Aron Troen, Principal Investigator at the Nutrition and Brain Health Laboratory, School of Nutrition Science, Hebrew University’s Robert H. Smith Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Environment. “It seems that as in most other countries, Israel’s food supply and our collective dietary habits do not ensure iodine sufficiency. Thus eliminating iodine deficiency and achieving optimal iodine status in Israel’s population will require a sustainable, government-regulated program of salt or food iodization. The costs are small and the benefits substantial and have been proven in over 160 countries around the world where this is done.”
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3704624&forum_id=2#34016037) |
|
|