Teenage boys will be able to take measures to prevent hair loss using a new genetic test that predicts if a person will lose their hair, a hair treatment group says.

Advanced Hair Studio (AHS), a global company offering laser and strand-by-strand hair treatments, will introduce a DNA test just in time for Christmas, with former cricketers and company ambassadors, Shane Warne and Graham Gooch, holding a launch for the product next week.

Warne, who became a client of Advanced Hair Studio in 2007, said the addition of "this revolutionary test... means that teenagers can now start treatment to prevent hair loss prior to the male pattern baldness cycle starting".

Melbourne-based founder and chief executive of AHS Carl Howell said the company was "proud to add this test to our treatments and procedures".

"The HairDX genetic test allows men as young as 18 who are concerned about hair loss to do something about it early," he said.

Mr Howell said this DNA test was an improvement on the original test, which the company had been using for a couple of years.

Hair loss can affect people "quite drastically", Mr Howell told Fairfax Media, and said that he had "seen extreme cases of depression... generally in younger individuals".

"As we get older, we tend to sort of live with whatever problems we might have," Mr Howell said.

"But it can bother some people. Nobody wants to lose their hair."

Mr Howell said his company used all FDA approved, hair-growth pharmaceuticals, and that the science of the future was in predicting "all sorts of issues".

"In the future, science will be predicting that we may be susceptible to cancer. Now is only the beginning of it," he said. However, Professor David Castle from the University of Melbourne, who specialises in body image disorders, said it "worried him when people made claims for prevention".

"I haven't seen the science behind this particular project, but I would say that in general, medicine is poor at predicting things," he told Fairfax Media.

"There is a certain genetic market out there, and it's a very inexact science. Medicine can't predict who will get cancer or a heart attack, so hair loss would not be much different."

He said young men already faced "a lot of pressure to conform to a certain look", and that "getting these kids really concerned at a young age and getting them on these prevention techniques" could result in financial and health consequences.

"They're not cheap, these prevention treatments," Professor Castle said. "Also, they could be taking some of these treatments for their whole lives, and some of them would have some side effects."

The company had previously come under consumer watchdog scrutiny in both Australia and England, with Consumer Affairs Victoria including several complaints it received regarding Advanced Hair Studio and refunding dissatisfied customers in its 2007-08 report.

The consumer group Choice also reported that in 2009, British advertising regulators Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) banned Advanced Hair Studio's ad featuring Shane Warne, after upholding a complaint about it being misleading.

When Fairfax Media contacted Consumer Affairs Victoria about the complaints, a spokeswoman said the consumer watchdog was monitoring the company's conduct.

The watchdog also warned customers to be careful when "it comes to promises about hair loss treatments".

"While a miracle cure may be tempting, Consumer Affairs Victoria recommends that you do some research, use a qualified medical practitioner and get a second opinion. Remember – if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is," the spokeswoman said in an email.

A spokesman for Choice said that consumers could lose a lot of money on balding treatments that don't work and recommended caution on this "latest miracle test". 

Mr Howell said out of the "thousands of ads we have run... one adjudication in the UK in 2009 was picked up", which was in relation to "there being no evidence at the time that laser could grow or retard hair growth".

He said that since then, research had proven that laser-stimulated hair growth, and that ASA had given Advanced Hair Studio "approval to advertise that laser therapy stimulates hair growth" in the UK.

Mr Howell said that "over the 30-plus years we have been trading, in excess of 250,000 men and women have used our services.

"If there have been a couple of dozen people in that time who have not been satisfied, then that's less than .01 per cent. That's a pretty good innings and we're still batting as good, if not better, than Don Bradman's average."

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Children's garments made in two of China's largest manufacturing bases contain toxic chemicals that pose health risks, a new report claims.

Research by environmental campaign group Greenpeace says tests by independent laboratories on 85 children's garments - made in either Zhili Town in Zhejiang Province or Shishi City in Fujian Province - detected the hormone disrupter NPE in more than half of them.


seNine in ten items made of polyester tested positive for antimony, and phthalates - which are known for their toxicity to the reproductive system - were found in high concentrations on two samples. The products were bought by Greenpeace staff between June and October of this year. 

Garments from the two centres are sold to both domestic and international markets, including the Middle East, Southeast Asia, Africa, Europe and North America. 

"Children's clothing made in the two towns we investigated is sold to 98% of Chinese cities and many other countries, through traditional and the increasingly popular e-commerce platforms," said Lee Chih An, toxics campaigner for Greenpeace East Asia.

Greenpeace is now calling on the Chinese government to ban the use of these chemicals in children's wear and to begin eliminating their use.

"Our investigation is sending a serious signal of caution to the parents of more than two hundred million Chinese children and their foreign counterparts," An added. 

The children's clothing industry is a CNY1trn (US$165bn) business with a projected 30% annual growth, making it one of the fastest growing economic sectors in China. 

Together the two children's wear manufacturing towns investigated by Greenpeace East Asia produce about 40% of all the children's clothing items made in China.

The growth of the children's wear industry has "far out-run" the development of China's chemicals regulation system, An noted. "A national safety standard for hazardous chemicals inn kid's wear has sat in policy makers' drawers for six years now, and we still have no idea when it will be promulgated."

"With a new baby born in China every other second, the country cannot afford to take any chances on the crucial issue of children's health. Only by establishing a comprehensive and rigorous chemical management policy can China really safeguard its children."
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犯罪による人の死を見逃さないため、遺体の解剖に当たる医師などの育成を進めようと、大阪大学は再来年度から、「死因究明学」という新しい分野を研究するコースを全国で初めて設置することになりました。

死因の究明を巡っては、警察が遺体を解剖せずに犯罪を見逃すケースがあるほか、去年1年間に警察が取り扱った遺体のうち解剖が行われた割合は11%にとどまるなど、体制の強化が課題になっています。
こうしたなか大阪大学は、再来年度の平成27年4月から、医学・歯学・薬学が連携した「死因究明学」という新しい分野を研究するコースを、全国の大学で初めて設置し、遺体の解剖に当たる医師などの育成を進めることになりました。
具体的には、▽大学院の修士課程に2年間のコースを設置し、解剖の現場に立ち会うなどして専門性を高めるほか、▽最先端の機器を導入して解剖結果などのデータを分析し、死因を判断する際のガイドラインを作ることにしています。
「死因究明学」の設置に関わった大阪大学大学院医学系研究科の松本博志教授は、「死因の診断を専門とする医師が日本では非常に少ないので、ほかの大学にも同じような取り組みを広め、体制を強化していきたい」と話しています。通販サイトの比較

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