Grenfell Tower fire.

Related image
In the afternoon session of the Grenfell inquiry today we heard tributes to the family of Hashim Kedir, Nura Jemal and their children, as well as to Steve Power.

An egg a day may keep heart disease away


FOR DECADES EXPERTS warned that eating eggs raises levels of unhealthy cholesterol. But a study published today said an egg a day may actually reduce the risk of heart disease and stroke. While outside experts cautioned against reading too much into the study, its authors claimed that Chinese adults who ate an egg every day had a lower risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Studying half-a-million healthy adults aged 30-79 over almost nine years, researchers concluded that “compared with non-consumers, daily egg consumption was associated with lower risk of CVD”.Risk of haemorrhagic stroke was 26% lower among egg-eaters, the Chinese-British research team reported in the journal Heart. And daily egg consumption was associated with an 18% lower risk of death from CVD, and a 28-percent lower risk for death from haemorrhagic stroke.
Heart attacks and strokes
CVD, a group of disorders of the heart and blood vessels, is the leading cause of death and disability worldwide, including in China. According to the World Health Organization, about 17.7 million people die of CVDs each year, almost a third of all deaths worldwide. Eighty percent of CVD deaths are caused by heart attacks and strokes. Smoking, not exercising enough and eating an unhealthy diet high in salt and low in fresh fruit and vegetables increase the risk.
Chicken and egg 
Eggs are rich in dietary cholesterol, long linked to a higher CVD risk, but also contain crucial protein and vitamins. In the study group, 13% reported daily egg consumption, while nine percent said they never or hardly ever ate them. By the end of the study period, almost 84,000 cases of CVD and 10,000 CVD deaths were recorded and compared among the different egg-intake groups.“The present study finds that there is an association between moderate level of egg consumption (up to one egg per day) and a lower cardiac event rate,” the authors concluded. But experts not involved in the study, said the results fail to prove that eating eggs actively lowers CVD risk.“An important limitation of this present study is that the people who consumed eggs regularly were much more affluent than those who avoided them,” University College of London nutrition specialist Tom Sanders said.“Indeed, rates of stroke have been falling in Japan, Australia, North America and Europe for several decades for reasons that remain uncertain, but may be related to increasing affluence,” he said via the Science Media Centre in London.According to cardiology expert Gavin Sandercock of the University of Essex: “To say that eating eggs is good (or bad) for you based on a study like this would be foolish as diet is much more complicated than picking on one foodstuff like eggs.”A second paper published in Heart found that people who commute to work by walking or cycling had a risk of heart disease and stroke 11% lower than those who take the car.Their risk of dying from CVD diseases was almost a third lower, found the seven-year study of more than 350,000 people in Britain.

Who is the Briton on course to make history at the Giro d'Italia?


Every four years, Britain's cyclists demonstrate at the Olympics that they are among the very best in the world.

First open winner Nancy Richey on prize money & Paris riots 50 years ago

Nancy Richey's small French Open trophy replica sits in a cabinet at her home alongside a grainy newspaper photo of her


when Nancy Richey won the 1968 French Open,

Brendan Ingle World champion boxing trainer dies aged 77.


Brendan Ingle
The Dublin-born former boxer guided British fighters Johnny Nelson and Naseem Hamed to world titles from his Sheffield-based Wincobank gym.
Blogger Tips and TricksLatest Tips And TricksBlogger Tricks