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TODAY'S NEWS
Antiseptic on umbilical cord fights infection
Wed February 8th - Cleaning a newborn's umbilical cord at birth can help to limit infections, experts say today. More
Age - a risk factor for breast cancer death
Wed February 8th - Older women with breast cancer face a greater risk of succumbing to the disease than younger women, according to a Dutch study published today. More
THIS WEEK'S STORIES
Solid food weaning 'best'
Tues February 7th - Parents may do better for their infants by weaning them with solid food rather than with pureed food, British researchers report today. More
House-moves "bad" for children?
Tues February 7th - Children who move home frequently in childhood face an increased risk of poor health in later life, researchers warned today. More
Consuming fish during pregnancy 'improves' baby brain power
Mon February 6th - Eating fish during pregnancy could bolster the infant’s intelligence, according to early findings from a major European study. More
Stroke gene found
Mon February 6th - British scientists have found a new gene linked to a common cause of stroke, it was announced last night. More
Malaria kills double the numbers originally believed
Mon February 6th - Malaria kills 1.2 million people a year – twice as many as previously thought – with almost half of the deaths being children over the age of five. More
ENGLEMED HEALTH NEWS - 20/1/09

New water threat to fertility

Tuesday January 20th, 2009

Alarming new evidence suggests new threats to human fertility in water pollution.

Scientists say they have discovered a new range of chemicals that may damage male fertility.

There has been growing alarm about chemicals that are similar to female hormones finding their way into the water systems and changing the sex of some fish.

Now British scientists say they have identified chemicals that block male hormones and could block male fertility.

The chemicals are found in cancer treatments, other drugs and agricultural pesticides, the researchers report in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives.

Researcher Dr Susan Jobling, of Brunel University, Middlesex, UK, said: "The new research findings illustrate the complexities in unravelling chemical causation of adverse health effects in wildlife populations and re-open the possibility of a human – wildlife connection in which effects seen in wild fish and in humans are caused by similar combinations of chemicals.

"We have identified a new group of chemicals in our study on fish, but do not know where they are coming from. A principal aim of our work is now to identify the source of these pollutants and work with regulators and relevant industry to test the effects of a mixture of these chemicals and the already known environmental estrogens and help protect environmental health."

Fellow researcher Professor Charles Tyler, of the University of Exeter, UK, said: "Our research shows that a much wider range of chemicals than we previously thought is leading to hormone disruption in fish. This means that the pollutants causing these problems are likely to be coming from a wide variety of sources."

Tags: Childbirth and Pregnancy | General Health | Men’s Health | UK News

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