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- Bắc Ninh: Hàng ngàn người về xem Hội Rước Pháo Làng Ðồng Kỵ
Hàng ngàn người từ các tỉnh lân cận và Hà Nội đã đổ về làng Ðồng Kỵ thuộc xã Ðồng Quan, Huyện Từ Sơn, tỉnh Bắc Ninh (cách Hà Nội chừng 50 km) để xem hội rước pháo truyền thống vào sáng Mùng 4 Tết.
- Baghdad: Nổ bom xe ngay khách sạn bộ trưởng, 4 người chết
- Báo "Thanh Niên" chọn chín vụ án lớn nhất Việt Nam trong năm 2003
- Bầu cử Tổng Thống Hoa Kỳ:
- Các chính phủ Á Châu đồng ý lập hệ thống theo dõi bệnh cúm gà
- Các chuyên gia thấy có tiến triển tốt trong cuộc đối đầu ở nhà tù Arizona
- Cán bộ lão thành tố cáo lãnh tụ Ðảng tham nhũng, không sửa sai
Một cán bộ cao cấp nghỉ hưu có 57 tuổi đảng lên tiếng tố cáo nhiều lãnh tụ Ðảng tham nhũng và chế độ Hà Nội làm nhiều điều sái quấy, hại dân nhưng không chịu sửa sai.
- Sáu quân nhân Phi Luật Tân bị thẩm vấn vì tố cáo Bộ Trưởng Quốc Phòng vi phạm tự do bầu cử
- Cựu Thanh Tra Kay: Tình báo Hoa Kỳ trước cuộc chiến Iraq là có lỗi lầm
- Dải Gaza: Giao chiến khiến có ít nhất chín người Palestine chết
- Dịch cúm gà xuất hiện ở Hà Nội và đã lan ra tới 31 tỉnh
- Hà Nội: Sông Hồng cạn nước trơ đáy
- Hà Sĩ Phu bị công an kiếm chuyện sau khi đi Hà Nội chữa bệnh
- Hoa Kỳ thả hơn 20 tù nhân từ nhà tù Guantanamo
- Hoa Kỳ thành lập “Văn Phòng Thông Tin Giáo Dục Hoa Kỳ” tại Sài Gòn
- The personal touch
- Diabetes on the rise among Asians
Exercise, diet can help to keep the disease away.
- Her Việt Nam
The women of the North so captivated photographer Nancy Hoàn Lê that she snapped 2,000 pictures of them. Now, she wants her images to inspire people to raise funds for a worthy cause.
- Her Việt Nam
The women of the North so captivated photographer Nancy Hoàn Lê that she snapped 2,000 pictures of them. Now, she wants her images to inspire people to raise funds for a worthy cause.
- Overcoming the fear and embarrassment
Cervical cancer, while common for Vietnamese American women, is curable if you get regular Pap tests. But that’s the problem: many Vietnamese women don’t.
- First fears, now a bit more calm
HÀ NỘI — Hương Lê heard the news about one neighbor from another. One person in this city’s central Đống Đa district had just died of avian flu, becoming Vietnam’s 42nd — and most recent — victim.
- When it comes to bird flu, fear isn't always rational
On my television screen, a doomsday voice intoned that the greatest threat to America wasn’t terrorism or nuclear weapons — but the person right next to you.
- Bay Area Asians part of growing drug problem
Methamphetamine, or 'meth,' is now the drug of choice of Asian Americans there.
- Speaking their language
Medical interpreters help patients to understand their diagnosis and treatment plan.
- Shattering the stigma
Painter Kiên Nguyễn found his inspiration when he was diagnosed with the illness. He shares his message — that HIV/AIDS patients aren’t to be feared — through his work.
- Shattering the stigma
Painter Kiên Nguyễn found his inspiration when he was diagnosed with the illness. He shares his message — that HIV/AIDS patients aren’t to be feared — through his work.
- HIV and AIDS in Viet Nam
16 years after the first case reached the country, Việt Nam is working to reduce the number of new infections. Among the most active are those who have the most to lose: those currently infected with HIV and AIDS.
- Getting through the day
Self-help groups are sufferers of HIV and AIDS who work to raise money and awareness and offer comfort to fellow patients.
- Eye doctor's vow: No vision left behind
While serving two tours with the U.S. Navy in Việt Nam, Tim Mendez saw enough devastation to last a lifetime.
- Southern Californians need not neglect their eyesight
There are ways to find low-or no-cost care
- Hepatitis tests crucial for Vietnamese American
Groups run education campaigns to reach this at-risk population.
- While saving face, mental health suffers
One issue hits home, over and over, as the Virginia Tech tragedy unfolds — mental illness.
- Kids thirsty? Give them water
Despite a belief that people of Vietnamese descent rarely become overweight, Vietnamese American children — mainly from low-income families — are bucking the trend and gaining weight in greater proportions than ever before
- Speaking for her sister
A CSUF researcher is writing a book about Asian-American women and suicide
- Years later, still suffering?
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is an anxiety disorder that can occur after you have been through a traumatic event. During this type of event, you think that your life or others’ lives are in danger.
- Friends don't make you fat
A recent study published in The New England Journal of Medicine suggests that it’s not what you know but who you know that makes you obese.
- The journey of a breast-cancer patient
Images of the breast-cancer patient held under the reins of scrutinizing medical devices had a profound impact on me during my visit to the Centre de Cultura Contemporania de Barcelona in December 2005.
- The disease doesn’t have to be kept in silence
It’s October, national Breast Cancer Awareness month. Perhaps you’ve noticed all the pink that manufacturers have brought out this month to call attention to and raise money for the disease.
- Dementia in Asian elders: madness, demons or loss of soul
SAN FRANCISCO — When elderly Hmong, Chinese or Vietnamese people become demented or chronically confused, family members attribute the condition to a normal part of the aging process, something they would have to live with. Admission to a long-term care facility is unthinkable because of the shame it would bring the family.
- Cancer can't stop pilot from flying patients who need help
Costa Mesa man hopes radiation treatments haven’t ruined
his volleyball career
- Cancer can't stop pilot from flying patients who need help
Costa Mesa man hopes radiation treatments haven’t ruined
his volleyball career
- Asian American plastic surgeon a favorite in California and abroad
Dr. Hugh Vũ, voted the top plastic surgeon in the Central Valley by San Joaquin Magazine readers for the past two years, hopes to make each patient a renewed person.
- Schwarzenegger's proposal would deny health care to many
SAN FRANCISCO — Thousands of Californians could either lose or be denied health coverage under Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s proposed budget cuts, threatening the state’s already endangered health-care system and swelling the ranks of the uninsured.
- Out of grief comes help for others
The death of Nghĩa Trần encourages her daughter to push for a California law requiring hospitals to give families time for a final visit with a loved one.
- Out of grief comes help for others
The death of Nghĩa Trần encourages her daughter to push for a California law requiring hospitals to give families time for a final visit with a loved one.
- Basketball: Rajon Rondo ký hợp đồng mới $55 triệu với Celtics
Boston Celtics, đội bóng rổ nhà nghề có tham vọng sẽ tái chiếm danh hiệu vô địch NBA mùa này, trong tuần qua phải đối phó với hai vấn đề còn lại: Ðó là tình trạng chấn thương đầu gối của Garnett mà cho tới nay đã có dấu hiệu tiến triển tốt đẹp.
- MLS Playoffs: Columbus Crew rời khỏi cuộc chơi
Bốn trận lượt về bắt đầu từ ngày Thứ Năm tuần này, 5 Tháng Mười Một, 2009 với đội Columbus Crew đón tiếp đội khách Real Salt Lake, nhưng đương kim vô địch MLS năm nay đã thật sự bị loại khỏi vòng chiến khi để thua trận thứ hai trước đội khách Real Salt Lake với tỷ số 2-3.
- Lịch sử Bức Tường Bá Linh
Là hình ảnh tiêu biểu nhất của thời kỳ Chiến Tranh Lạnh, Bức Tường Bá Linh đã tồn tại trong 28 năm và sự sụp đổ đánh dấu giai đoạn kết thúc của chế độ Cộng Sản ở Ðông Âu.
- Lịch sử Bức Tường Bá Linh
Là hình ảnh tiêu biểu nhất của thời kỳ Chiến Tranh Lạnh, Bức Tường Bá Linh đã tồn tại trong 28 năm và sự sụp đổ đánh dấu giai đoạn kết thúc của chế độ Cộng Sản ở Ðông Âu.
- Quan Điểm của Ông Ngô Đình Nhu về Hiểm Họa Xâm Lăng của Trung Cộng (tiếp theo và hết)
Chúng ta còn nhớ, khi muốn lật đổ chính quyền Ngô Ðình Diệm, nhóm chống Tổng Thống Diệm trong Bộ Ngoại Giao Hoa Kỳ đã vận động các quốc gia Á Phi đưa vấn đề được báo chí Hoa Kỳ thời đó gọi là Ðàn Áp Phật Giáo và Vi Phạm Nhân Quyền tại Việt Nam, ra trước Ðại Hội Ðồng Liên Hiệp Quốc, chuẩn bị dư luận trước ở các quốc gia Á Phi cho việc thay đổi chính phủ tại miền Nam, trước khi âm mưu tổ chức đảo chánh ở Sài Gòn, để khỏi gây nên những ảnh hưởng tiêu cực tại các quốc gia đó đối với chính sách ngoại giao của Mỹ.
- Ngày 7 tháng 11
Tổng Thống Hoa Kỳ Lyndon B.Johnson đã gửi hai điện văn chúc mừng ông Phan Khắc Sửu, Quốc trưởng Việt Nam Cộng Hòa, nhân dịp ông được bầu làm Quốc trưởng và nhân ngày Quốc Khánh Việt Nam.
- Bão Việt Nam: không biết bơi, ông già đeo trên cây ba ngày
Một ông 69 tuổi vì không biết bơi nên khi gặp nước lũ dâng lên do trận bão Mirinae, liền leo tót lên cây và bám trụ suốt ba ngày hai đêm.
- Linh mục gốc Việt được phong chức Giám Mục Phụ Tá ở Toronto
Một người Canada gốc Việt thuộc Tổng Giáo Phận Toronto vừa được Ðức Giáo Hoàng Benedict XVI phong chức Giám Mục Phụ Tá (Auxilliary Bishop) ở cùng địa phận nơi Cha đang phục vụ.
- Giá vàng ở Việt Nam tăng từng giờ: hơn 25 triệu đồng một lượng
Giá vàng ở Việt Nam tăng vọt từng giờ dù thị trường vàng trên thế giới không có bao nhiêu biến động trong ngày.
- Giá vàng ở Việt Nam tăng từng giờ: hơn 25 triệu đồng một lượng
Giá vàng ở Việt Nam tăng vọt từng giờ dù thị trường vàng trên thế giới không có bao nhiêu biến động trong ngày.
- Tổng thống Obama ban hành đạo luật trợ giúp thất nghiệp, người mua nhà
Tổng Thống Barack Obama đã ký ban hành một dự luật kích thích kinh tế $24 tỉ, cung cấp các khích lệ về thuế cho những người mua nhà và gia hạn các phúc lợi thất nghiệp cho những người bị mất việc lâu dài - những người đã bị bỏ lại đàng sau giữa lúc nền kinh tế hướng tới sự hồi phục.
- Tokyo: băng đảng bắn nhau, 3 người bị thương
Một người bắn bị thương ba người khác gần Tokyo hôm Thứ Sáu trước khi chạy vào ẩn náu trong một tòa nhà rồi sau đó tự sát - trong một vụ nổ súng hiếm thấy mà phía cảnh sát cho rằng có liên hệ đến băng đảng.
- Tường trình từ Berlin: Lá phiếu đầu tiên của 20 năm trước
Hai ngày nữa, đúng ngày 9 Tháng Mười Một, nước Ðức, và thế giới này, sẽ kỷ niệm 20 năm ngày bức tường Bá Linh sụp đổ.
- Tường trình từ Berlin: Lá phiếu đầu tiên của 20 năm trước
Hai ngày nữa, đúng ngày 9 Tháng Mười Một, nước Ðức, và thế giới này, sẽ kỷ niệm 20 năm ngày bức tường Bá Linh sụp đổ.
- Tìm thấy chiếc xe mất cắp từ 35 năm
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John Vu Lę shocked his family when he told them he was shunning medicine to take his 6-month-old son to a chiropractor to treat his asthma.
At the time, “I told him, John, what are you doing? He doesn’t have back pain. He hasn’t had an accident,” said Patrick Xuân Lę, John’s younger brother. But after seeing how chiropractic helped Nathan, now 7, he was sold.
So much so, in fact, that he scrapped plans to attend medical school, opting instead to study chiropractic, said Patrick Lę, 30, of the decision that transformed his life six years ago. He now heads The Center for Higher Power, opened in 2006 in the heart of Little Saigon in Westminster, Calif.
Patrick’s belief that chiropractic treatment has kept Nathan free of asthma since his infant days may sound unorthodox — and some in the medical community question whether chiropractic can eliminate this or other illness from a person’s system without medical intervention — but don’t tell that to the boy’s father.
Seeing that Nathan had difficulty breathing, John and his wife took the child to a doctor who diagnosed asthma, sending the family home with medicine, an inhaler and a breathing machine. The couple looked at that machine and “felt sorry” for their boy, his father recalled.
At the urging of his sister, Cecile Richardson, John took Nathan to see her chiropractor, Gavin Grant, D.C., who “adjusted Nathan and got on a program with him. After the first visit, we saw a change” in the tot’s breathing, John said. “We decided to stop the medicines even though Dr. Grant didn’t tell us to. We went to him three times a week, and after three months, Nathan didn’t need the breathing machine, so we donated it to his office as a testament that chiropractic care works.”
Intrigued, Patrick signed up for a few spinal adjustments of his own from Grant and, in less than two months, found himself with a new job. Grant “asked me if I wanted to work with him. He said he saw something in me that spoke chiropractic,” Patrick said.
As Grant’s assistant, Patrick performed consultations and handled front-desk work, watching people “come in and out every day. It was very cool. They no longer had the problems they were having before. No medicines anymore, and no surgery,” he said.
Patrick, a 2004 graduate of Life Chiropractic College West in Hayward, Calif., is adamant that even though folks who come to see him ask him to “cure” them of some malady, his work does not involve curing in the traditional sense of the word, he said.
“We help them, but we can’t cure.” The remedy is “all within them. They don’t even need medicines. They need to acknowledge what is wrong with their lives,” he said, adding that he refers individuals to doctors “when it’s an emergency situation.”
Rather than cures, “I see miracles happening... I see people living at their best,” Patrick said. He juggles about 350 clients, ranging from infants to adults, describing his work as teaching them “about their bodies and their life.”
He focuses on adjusting the spinal cord, removing misalign-ments of the vertebrae to eliminate pressure on the spinal nerve so it can function without interference, he said. “With the nervous system, each nerve from the spinal cord goes to a different part of the body.” With asthma, “messages from the brain that needed to get to the lungs are not working properly. I open up the main system of the body so that pathway to lungs is open,” he said, adding that he believes medication should be used “primarily for life-threatening emergency situations.”
Most individuals taking medicine “are just masking their symptoms or just covering up the warning signals (pain) our bodies are trying to give off. The medications even prevent our bodies from naturally regulating (themselves by) coughing, sneezing, fever, vomiting, diarrhea, runny nose” and so on, he said.
Because he wants to help as many adults and children as possible, Patrick, the son of immigrants from Vi?t Nam, charges fees using a sliding scale based on a client’s ability to pay — and he turns down no one. “Our mission is to serve as many people as possible and make it affordable for everyone,” he said. He does not take insurance plans nor work with workers compensation or accident cases.
“I want to promote that a person does not have to have a plastic (insurance) card in their wallet in order to receive adequate care or live well. That insurance card is for emergency purposes only and should be used in that manner.”
Even though the American Chiropractic Association’s statement on the care of children outlines its long-standing belief that chiropractors, in concert with other health-care providers, can play an important role in the health of youngsters, some evidence indicates that chiropractic alone might benefit children with asthma, said Angela Kargus, ACA spokeswoman.
It’s “important to note that evidence from many types of experimental studies — basic and clinical, comprised of randomized controlled trials and cohort and case studies — provides a promising basis with which to consider chiropractic management” for childhood conditions such as asthma, she said.
Anthony L. Rosner, a director at the ACA-supported Foundation for Chiropractic Education and Research in Brookline, Mass., said that Patrick “does make some sense in that addressing the needs of the nervous system might reduce or eliminate the need for some medications.”
He’s worried, however, about referrals made “to medical doctors only in life-threatening situations. It shouldn’t be pushed to that limit. There should be freer collaboration” between chiropractors and the medical community, he said.
Some members of the medical community agree that chiropractic spinal adjustments have their place in treating those with medical problems, while some have concerns that such treatment alone can eliminate asthma or other illnesses.
“It is pretty much impossible to prove or disprove anecdotal stories” of people overcoming illnesses through chiropractic care alone “since it is one person’s version of their medical illness and their interpretation of cause and effect,” said Dr. Andy Nish of the American Board of Allergy and Immunology and an American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology fellow. “In fact, multiple factors could be in play,” including initial misdiagnosis of the illness, its spontaneous resolution over time, its response to other treatments and the placebo effect, he said.
He hasn’t seen literature in peer-reviewed journals demonstrating that chiropractic is an efficient treatment of asthma or other potentially life-threatening conditions, Nish said.
“It is important to keep an open mind” about chiropractic, said Dr. David Peden, professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine. “Some non-traditional approaches, with the right kind of study, are going to prove very useful” while “many are going to prove to be not useful.”
As an example, he cites the medical community’s willingness to examine alternative ways of treating illnesses, the work of the National Institute of Health’s National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine. This component of the NIH is looking at the value of using chiropractic and other non-traditional medicines to treat various diseases.
One way that chiropractic treatments may help people deal with such things as asthma is that the spinal manipulations help eliminate stress, which exacerbates such conditions, Peden said. “Certainly, stress can worsen diseases, but if the element of stress is removed, you can have a beneficial effect,” he added.
Whether it was stress that caused the unbearable, itchy rashes covering her body each time she ate seafood and eggs is not certain, but Mai Ph?m Lę, Patrick and John’s mother, credits chiropractic with eliminating this problem that plagued her most of her adult life.
Since she began regular treatments with Grant — she now is her son’s client — Leâ can eat the once forbidden foods to her heart’s delight, she said.
“Chiropractic had a profound impact on my family’s life and I know that people out there can also benefit from it, if they just understand the premise behind it,” Patrick said.
Patrick’s clients are fortunate, because chiropractors like him “have only one purpose,” to help others feel their best, especially those in his own Vietnamese American community,” Grant said. He is “one of those people who really want to be proactive. His heart yearns to see the whole community” understand the benefits of chiropractic. “He’s walking the talk,” Grant said.
To spread the word, Patrick hosts a 10-minute weekly program on Vietnamese radio. During the show, he offers examples of how chiropractic works and explains how it’s “a great path that people can take for their well being,” he said.
Client Kimmy Ph?m of nearby Garden Grove certainly is living well for the first time in 40 years, she said, thanks to Patrick and her thrice-weekly spinal adjustments. Phaďm, 49, hurt herself in a fall when she was just 8 years old, suffering from countless headaches, insomnia and low appetite ever since, she said.
That is, until she went to the center a few months ago, after hearing Patrick on the air. Prior to the treatments, she had taken numerous medicines prescribed by doctors, and later Chinese herbs, all without result, she said. In many cases, both pills and herbs only made her feel ill.
After receiving her initial treatment from Patrick, she slept well for the first time in years, she remembered. Now, “I feel pretty well, I sleep well” and am “hungry all time. Everything tastes good to me.”
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