joi, 11 august 2011

Sleep apnea linked to memory decline, dementia

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By Genevra Pittman

NEW YORK | Tue Aug 9, 2011 8:54pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Older women who have sleep apnea may be more likely to develop memory problems and dementia, according to a new study.

It's not clear yet whether treating the sleep apnea can help prevent that memory decline -- but researchers say future studies should address that question.

"It makes sense that good sleep is going to be protective to the brain," said Dr. Robert Thomas, who studies sleep at Harvard Medical School in Boston and was not involved in the new study.

But, he added, clear answers have been lacking on the link between problem sleeping and memory. "We simply don't have data to answer many of the simple questions people may have in the sleep clinic," he told Reuters Health.

To try to shrink that gap, Dr. Kristine Yaffe of the University of California, San Francisco and colleagues gave an overnight sleep apnea test to 298 women without dementia, who were an average of 82 years old. The test looks for changes in breathing and oxygen flow during the night, as well as for the short, frequent breaks in sleep that are signs of sleep apnea.

Just over a third of the women had sleep apnea -- which is especially common in older, overweight people.

About five years later, the researchers brought those same women in for a set of thinking and memory tests, and doctors evaluated any of the women who showed signs of memory decline.

In total, a little over a third (36 percent) of the women were diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment or dementia.

Among women who had shown signs of sleep apnea on their overnight tests five years earlier, 45 percent had developed thinking and memory problems, compared to 31 percent of women who didn't have sleep problems.

When Yaffe and her colleagues took factors such as race, weight, and other diseases and medications into consideration, women with sleep apnea were almost twice as likely to test positive for cognitive impairment or dementia, according to findings published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Sleep apnea has also been linked to a host of other health problems, including high blood pressure and cholesterol. Researchers pointed to lower blood flow to the brain during sleep as a possible culprit in cognitive problems down the line.

Indeed, when the authors looked at the specific factors that went into a diagnosis of sleep apnea, they found that the lack of steady oxygen overnight was related to thinking and memory problems, not how much total sleep women got or how many times they woke up during the night.

Thomas said that not everyone with sleep apnea has symptoms, which include fatigue and snoring, and that people who are overweight or have heart and blood pressure diseases should also consider getting tested.

But researchers still don't know to what extent treatment -- which involves wearing a mask that delivers pressurized air from a "CPAP" machine to ease breathing at night -- can prevent the complications of sleep apnea, including cognitive decline.

"The single biggest hole in sleep apnea (research) is: what are the outcomes of treatment?" Thomas said.

Yaffe agreed. "That's obviously a next step and important question," she told Reuters Health.

Seva Polotsky, a sleep apnea researcher from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, said it's important nonetheless that people with sleep apnea follow whatever treatment regimen their doctor recommends. Still, "there's only one cure for apnea so far we've found, and this is weight loss," he told Reuters Health.

People with sleep apnea should also try to be tested occasionally for signs of cognitive decline, Yaffe concluded.

SOURCE: bit.ly/hwxtTL JAMA, online August 9, 2011.


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Facebook to close U.S. prison inmate accounts

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A page from the Facebook website is seen in Singapore May 11, 2011. REUTERS/Tan Shung Sin

A page from the Facebook website is seen in Singapore May 11, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Tan Shung Sin

By Alex Dobuzinskis

LOS ANGELES | Wed Aug 10, 2011 10:46am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Facebook has begun closing the accounts of California prison inmates after a convicted child molester viewed the pages of his victim from behind bars, authorities and the social networking site said.

Facebook has shut down the accounts of at least two prisoners and officials are working on identifying other accounts that had been accessed from behind bars, said the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

Though most prisoners in California do not have access to the Internet, they often log onto the Internet with contraband cell phones, despite an effort to crack down on the devices, corrections officials said.

California corrections officials, who formally announced the partnership with Facebook Monday, said they have received hundreds of complaints from victims who were contacted by prison inmates behind bars.

They include the convicted child molester, who prison officials said viewed the Facebook and MySpace pages of his victim, then mailed her family some drawings of the girl, officials said.

The victim was 10 years-old when she was molested and 17 when she was contacted by the offender, who had used the Web to learn how she wore her hair and her brand of clothes.

"Really, they're just limited by their imagination, you've got high ranking gang members shot-calling, ordering crimes to be committed on their behalf," California Department of Corrections spokeswoman Dana Toyama told Reuters.

Palo Alto, California-based Facebook lets inmates use the website if they are located in a state that allows them to access the Internet.

But since California prohibits inmates from using the Web, the company confirmed that it is working with state officials to remove them from Facebook.

The policy will not apply to inmates who created an account before they were sentenced and have not used it while incarcerated.

Facebook's policies prohibit an individual other than the registered user from updating a Facebook account, which happens occasionally when an inmate asks a friend or family member to access their page.

"We will disable accounts reported to us that are violating relevant U.S. laws or regulations, or inmate accounts that are updated by someone on the outside," Facebook spokesman Andrew Noyes said in a statement.

California has seen the number of contraband cell phones taken from inmates jump from 261 in 2006 to 10,760 last year, which shows the problem is increasing. "We're on track to way surpass last year's numbers," Toyama said.

Earlier this year, mass murderer Charles Manson was caught for the second time with a phone at a California prison.

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Dan Whitcomb and Greg McCune)


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Insomnia, fatigue common in people with cancer

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By Genevra Pittman

NEW YORK | Wed Aug 10, 2011 10:24pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - More than half of cancer patients may suffer symptoms of insomnia during treatment, and for some, sleep problems can persist for months afterward, according to a new study.

The findings "point to the fact that sleep, including insomnia symptoms, are a really big problem for cancer patients," said Carol Enderlin, who studies sleep in breast cancer patients at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock.

"Many of them may think this is just something they have to deal with," Enderlin, who was not involved in the new research, told Reuters Health.

But the message for patients, she said, is "to be aware of sleep and the importance of sleep, to report changes in sleep to your healthcare provider before they become severe (and) to not be afraid to bring them up."

Canadian researchers, led by Josee Savard of the Laval University Cancer Research Center in Quebec, asked close to 1,000 patients getting surgery for cancer whether they had trouble falling asleep at night or staying asleep. Then, they regularly followed up with the same patients to see if their sleep and sleep symptoms changed over the months after treatment.

Patients were between 23 and 79 years old, and most had early-stage cancer, including breast and prostate cancers.

At the time of treatment, 59 percent of patients reported symptoms of insomnia, and about half of those were severe enough to qualify as insomnia syndrome, a collection of persistent symptoms such as requiring more than half an hour to fall asleep at least three nights per week. That rate was three times higher than insomnia syndrome rates in the general population.

One and a half years later, 36 percent of the participants reported insomnia symptoms.

While patients were generally less likely to report insomnia as time went on, one in seven developed symptoms for the first time in the months after surgery.

In another study published concurrently in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, Julienne Bower of the University of California, Los Angeles, and colleagues found that close to two-thirds of recently treated breast cancer patients suffered from fatigue and poor sleep quality.

It's only in recent years that sleep has been recognized as a problem for cancer patients, researchers said.

"There was a shift in attention a decade ago as cancer survivors were living longer," Bower said. "Oncologists were beginning to notice that they actually were having these persistent side effects and symptoms, and fatigue has probably been the most common."

Staying active during cancer treatment and maintaining a positive outlook could help ward off some of those symptoms, Bower said.

Her research team has been testing the effectiveness of yoga as a treatment for fatigue and tai chi for insomnia. Cognitive behavioral therapy, which has helped other people with insomnia, might also work for cancer patients with fatigue or insomnia, she said.

"If you try to change the way you're thinking about your fatigue, try to change your behaviors, that may be helpful," Bower said. "You can usually tolerate having some fatigue while you're going through treatment, but you really don't want to have it for the next 10 years," she added.

Enderlin said she hopes doctors and nurses will start routinely asking cancer patients about sleep and addressing sleep-related symptoms.

"When people are faced with stress, when they are faced with challenges, they do much better on a good night's sleep," she said. "It's very important, never more so than with cancer patients."

SOURCES: bit.ly/oUtOWk and bit.ly/n3mCnt Journal of Clinical Oncology, online August 8, 2011.


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Heart failure in elderly linked to memory problems

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The hands of a pensioner are pictured during an afternoon nap at a residential home for the elderly in Eichenau near Munich June 21, 2011. Picture taken June 21. REUTERS/Michaela Rehle

The hands of a pensioner are pictured during an afternoon nap at a residential home for the elderly in Eichenau near Munich June 21, 2011. Picture taken June 21.

Credit: Reuters/Michaela Rehle

NEW YORK | Wed Aug 10, 2011 9:54pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters Life!) - Older patients with heart failure had more memory problems when their heart ailments were advanced, but the same was not true with younger patients who suffered from a similar type of heart failure, according to a study.

The findings, published in Archives of Neurology, tell cardiologists they need to be aware their patients may be at higher risk of memory problems, problems that could come into play in their treatment, said study author Joanne Festa from St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital in new York.

"As you get older, there's more atrophy (in the brain). It could be that particularly in heart failure, the brain atrophies at a quicker rate," Festa Said.

"Memory plays a role in how you manage your health. Do you remember to take your medication? Keep up with follow-yup appointments? Do you remember the symptoms that you have?"

In addition, when memory decline is linked to heart failure, it may come on very slowly and not be noticed until it's advanced.

Festa and her colleagues collected data from memory tests in 207 heart failure patients being evaluated to see if they were candidates for a heart transplant. The researchers split those patients up into 189 who had low scores on a test of heart function, and 38 who had better scores.

All the patients had heart failure market by a low left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), the measurement of how much blood is being pumped out of the left ventricle of the heart.

In general, patients younger than 63 performed similarly on memory tests, regardless of left ventricular function.

But in older patients, a low LVEF was linked to a 1 percent lower score on combined memory tests, especially on tests that measured how well they recognized and memorized words.

"They learn at about the same rate, but essentially they don't hold onto the information," Festa said.

"They don't remember it, they don't recognize it -- which is very relevant to remembered what your doctor said to you in the office."

In younger patients, the brain may be able to compensate for lower blood flow, while an already-aging brain might suffer more from the impact of heart failure, she added.

The researchers found that poor memory was also linked to depression symptoms and attention problems.

The findings are something for older heart patients, and the doctors treating them, to take note of, she added.

"Everyone is concerned about their memory, memory is an important part of everyday functioning," she said.

"But it also plays an important role in health outcomes. Doctors need to be aware that many of these patients should be evaluated."

(Reporting by Genevra Pittman at Reuters Health; editing by Elaine Lies)


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Trojan horse t-shirts trick neo-Nazis

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BERLIN | Wed Aug 10, 2011 9:47am EDT

BERLIN (Reuters) - Festival goers at a nationalist, right-wing concert in Germany were taken by surprise when souvenir t-shirts they were given had a secret anti-far right message that emerged only after being washed.

The slogan on the shirts first read "hardcore rebels" along with a skull and nationalist flags. But once washed the slogan turned into a message from a group offering help to right-wing extremists break away from the neo-Nazi scene.

"If your t-shirt can do it, you can do it too -- we'll help you get away from right-wing extremism," reads the slogan on the shirts after their first washing.

The anti-far right shirts were handed to 250 people at a "Rock for Germany" concert in Gera by organisers after they had been donated anonymously. They were provided by EXIT, a group which helps people disassociate themselves from the far-right.

Festival organiser Gordon Richter of the far-right NPD party said the stunt was a waste of money.

"It's kind of pathetic that anyone spent money for something like that," Richter told Reuters. He said many who got the Trojan horse shirts thought it was a creative idea.

Bernd Wagner, founder of EXIT, said the t-shirts were designed to reach their main target group: right-wing extremists contemplating getting away.

"We wanted to raise awareness about our program, especially among the young and less committed," Wagner said.

(Reporting by Kalina Oroschakoff, editing by Paul Casciato)


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Heart failure linked to memory problems: study

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By Genevra Pittman

NEW YORK | Wed Aug 10, 2011 9:56pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Older patients with heart failure had more memory problems when their heart ailments were advanced, in a new study of adults being evaluated for transplants.

But that wasn't the case in young and middle-aged adults with a type of heart failure marked by a lower-than-normal amount of blood being pumped by the left ventricle.

"As you get older, there's more atrophy" in the brain, said study author Joanne Festa, from St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital in New York. "It could be that particularly in heart failure the brain atrophies at a quicker rate."

The findings tell cardiologists they need to be aware that their patients might be at higher risk of memory problems -- problems that could come into play in their heart treatment, Festa added.

"Memory plays a role in how you manage your health," she said. "Do you remember to take your medication? Keep up with follow-up appointments? Do you remember the symptoms that you have?"

In addition, when memory decline is linked to heart failure, it might come on very slowly, and not be noticed until it's advanced.

Festa and her colleagues collected data from memory tests in 207 heart failure patients who were being evaluated to see if they were candidates for a heart transplant. The researchers split those patients up into 169 that had low scores on a test of heart function and 38 that had a better score.

In general, patients younger than 63 performed similarly on memory tests, regardless of how well exams showed their left ventricle was working.

But in older patients, poor heart function was linked to a one percent lower score on combined memory tests, and especially poor performance on tests that measured how well they recognized and remembered words.

"They learn at about the same rate, but essentially they don't hold on to the information," Festa said. "They don't remember it, and they don't recognize it -- which is very relevant to remembering what your doctor said to you in the office."

In younger patients, she added, the brain may be able to compensate for lower blood flow -- while an already-aging brain might suffer more from the impact of heart failure.

In a separate analysis, the researchers report in Archives of Neurology that poor memory was also linked to depression symptoms and attention problems.

Festa said there's strong evidence implicating heart disease in thinking and memory difficulties, but that studies looking specifically at left ventricle problems have been less consistent. Now, it seems part of that inconsistency could be due to varied ages of patients in different studies.

The findings are something for older heart patients, and the doctors treating them, to take note of, the researcher said.

"Everyone is concerned about their memory; memory is an important part of everyday functioning," Festa said. "But it also plays an important role in health outcomes."

"Doctors need to be aware that many of these patients should be evaluated," even if the patients don't report memory problems.

SOURCE: bit.ly/nDOZDR Archives of Neurology, online August 8, 2011.


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Apple copycat "hiPhone 5" comes calling in China

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SHANGHAI | Wed Aug 10, 2011 3:04pm EDT

SHANGHAI (Reuters) - The newest version of Apple Inc's popular iPhone has already hit the Chinese market -- the fake market that is.

The 'hiPhone 5' is selling for as little as 200 yuan ($31) on China's top e-commerce platform Taobao, which is owned by Alibaba Group.

But one has to pay around 800 yuan for a more "genuine" one, according to some shop clerks at a mobile phone market in Shanghai.

"Look at this. It's not the same as the 300-400 yuan ones," Shanghai-based daily Metro Express quoted a clerk as saying, pointing to one originally priced at 850 yuan.

The 'hiPhone 5' is based on leaked images of the yet-to-be-launched iPhone 5 and is thinner and with less rounded edges than the existing iPhone 4, according to the newspaper. However, it is extremely light, almost like a plastic toy, like most pirated mobile phones, it said.

Western governments have repeatedly criticized China for widespread violation of intellectual property rights, but pirated goods from branded watches, to bags and computer software can be easily found in shops.

Last month, an American blogger set off a media storm after she posted pictures of an elaborate fake Apple Store in Kunming, selling genuine if unauthorized iPhones, Macbooks and other widely popular Apple products.

Reuters also uncovered a look-a-like of the Swedish furniture giant Ikea in the southwestern Chinese city.

Apple, which is expected to roll out the latest version of the iPhone 5 smartphone within a few months, sold a record 20.34 million iPhones during the last quarter, even though its newest model is over a year old.

($1 = 6.431 Chinese Yuan)

(Reporting by Kazunori Takada; Editing by Ken Wills and Muralikumar Anantharaman)


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Berlin Wall Trail a surreal journey into city's past

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A man rides his bike through a gap in a row of metal rods that delineates the line along which the Berlin Wall used to run at the Berlin Wall memorial site in Bernauer Strasse in Berlin, August 9, 2011. REUTERS/Thomas Peter

1 of 6. A man rides his bike through a gap in a row of metal rods that delineates the line along which the Berlin Wall used to run at the Berlin Wall memorial site in Bernauer Strasse in Berlin, August 9, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Thomas Peter

By Erik Kirschbaum

BERLIN | Wed Aug 10, 2011 8:29am EDT

BERLIN (Reuters) - It was once one of the world's most deadly frontiers but has since been converted into one of the planet's most fascinating bicycle paths -- a green belt that offers a surreal ride into Berlin history.

The "Berliner Mauerweg" (Berlin Wall Trail) follows the wall's 160-km (100-mile) route and the accompanying "death strip" that encircled West Berlin during the dark decades of the Cold War.

At least 136 people were killed trying to get through the Wall that divided Berlin from the day it was built 50 years ago on August 13, 1961, to its fall on November 9, 1989. Most were shot by East German border guards. About 5,000 made it.

In the euphoria that followed the despised Wall's collapse, most of it was quickly destroyed and early proposals to preserve at least a few pieces for posterity or turn the "death strip" into a bike trail were dismissed as madness.

"Those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it," said Michael Cramer, a Greens party leader who ignored the widespread criticism and spent a lonely decade pushing to get the Berlin Wall Trail built.

"Everyone wanted the Wall gone as soon as possible and they called some of us in the Greens who wanted to preserve parts of it crazy," Cramer told Reuters. "Unfortunately, there was a certain Prussian thoroughness in demolishing it all."

The city council finally got behind his project in 2001, agreeing it made sense for a city with financial woes to develop its top tourist attraction. The trail is now used daily by tens of thousands of people.

FEARS OF ANOTHER WAR

"It took 10 years but it was worth it," said Cramer, 62, a physical education and music teacher in West Berlin for two decades before switching to politics and now a member of the European parliament.

"There was a realisation that you can't eradicate history. They realised it wasn't just tourists asking 'Where's the Wall?' but people in Berlin too."

Cramer was a 12-year-old boy when the Berlin Wall was built and remembered being terrified by the possibility the tensions around the construction would lead to another World War.

"I cried when I read the Wall was being built," he said. "I always thought we'd never have a war like my father and uncles went through. But suddenly a war loomed. I've never forgot that feeling and the Wall fascinated me from that moment on.

The Wall turned into an obsession and he often rode the perimeter of the west side.

"The first time I rode along the Wall after it opened, I was able to cross back and forth from east to west and was amazed to think just a few months before I'd have been shot to death for trying to do that," he added. "It was an incredible experience."

"TRYING TO FLEE"

The Wall complex that split East and West Berlin as well as sealed off West Berlin from East Germany was between five and 500 meters wide. There were a series of barriers, minefields and barbed wire to keep East Germans far away from the Wall. Much of the western side of the Wall was covered with graffiti.

It was built to stop a flood of East Germans to the West -- some three million left from 1949 to 1961. About 3,200 people were arrested for trying to cross after the wall was built, jailed for "Republikflucht," or trying to flee.

The trail that now stands in the Wall's place was at first fairly primitive, poorly marked and much of it on the cement slabs used by East German border guard patrols but also on sandy terrain where bicycles had to be pushed.

Over the years, a total of 10 million euros ($14 million) has been invested on upgrading the bike path and now almost all if it is paved or on well-maintained dirt trails. About 900 grey and white signs now mark the path, all at a height of exactly 3.6 meters, the same height as the Wall in 1989.

Whether walking their dogs or pushing baby carriages, going for jogs or commuting to work, many people have made the Wall Trail an integral part of their lives.

PEDALING ALONG THE "DEATH STRIP"

In summer months, flocks of cyclists can be seen pedaling along the trail, especially along the 43 km (27 miles) of the "death strip" that snaked its way through the inner city.

Some hardy souls venture around the entire length of the trial in a day or two, and on August 20 a group of marathoners will run the distance in a race expected to last about 30 hours.

It is a remarkably pleasant journey and at the same time a fascinating trip back to a horrific period of history.

Scores of signs posted along the route detail historical landmarks, especially poignant escape attempts and some of the heartbreaking stories of those who failed.

"This is the spot where 20-year-old Chris Gueffroy was killed on February 5, 1989. He was the last victim shot dead while trying to escape from East Germany," reads one.

"Peter Fechter, 1944-1962...he just wanted to be free," reads another, a memorial to an 18-year-old bricklayer was shot by East German border guards and left to bleed to death in the shadow of the Wall. His unanswered cries for help were heard on both sides of the Wall.

New houses have sprung up on parts of the former death strip and horse stables and chicken farms have been established on the

reclaimed land once patrolled by menacing East German border guards and watchdogs.

"The trail is to help Berlin come to terms with the past," says Cramer. "It's a reminder of not only of the division but also of how the Wall was peacefully swept away in 1989."

(Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)


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New Zealand names mountain after Everest conqueror Hillary

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A guard adjusts a scarf on a statue of late Sir Edmund Hillary in Kathmandu October 12, 2009. REUTERS/Deepa Shrestha

A guard adjusts a scarf on a statue of late Sir Edmund Hillary in Kathmandu October 12, 2009.

Credit: Reuters/Deepa Shrestha

WELLINGTON | Tue Aug 9, 2011 9:05pm EDT

WELLINGTON (Reuters Life!) - New Zealand will name a part of its highest mountain after one of its most famous citizens, Sir Edmund Hillary, the first man to scale Mount Everest, the government said Wednesday.

The South Ridge of Mt. Cook, which is also known by its Maori name Aoraki, will be renamed Hillary Ridge, Land Information Minister Maurice Williamson said.

"Sir Edmund made an enormous contribution to our country and abroad and it is befitting and appropriate that his contribution is acknowledged in this way," Williamson said in a statement.

Hillary was the first man to use the South Ridge route to scale the 3,754 meter (12,315 ft) Mt. Cook in 1948, five years before his successful ascent of the 8,848 meter (29,029 ft) Mt. Everest with Tenzing Norgay.

After Hillary's death in 2008 at the age of 88, the government launched a campaign to find an appropriate alpine landmark to be named in honor of one of its most revered citizens.

(Reporting by Adrian Bathgate; editing by Elaine Lies)


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Americans spent 8 billion hours volunteering in 2010

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A volunteer worker keeps loaves of bread in a refrigerator inside the Mary Brennan Interfaith Nutrition Network (INN) soup kitchen in Hempstead, New York June 2, 2008. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

A volunteer worker keeps loaves of bread in a refrigerator inside the Mary Brennan Interfaith Nutrition Network (INN) soup kitchen in Hempstead, New York June 2, 2008.

Credit: Reuters/Shannon Stapleton

By Bernd Debusmann Jr.

NEW YORK | Wed Aug 10, 2011 11:36am EDT

NEW YORK, Aug 10 (Reuters Life)- More than 60 million Americans volunteered 8.1 billion hours of their services in 2010 in work valued at nearly $173 billion, according to a new report.

Whether it is tutoring and mentoring students, fundraising, job training or assisting during natural disasters, volunteers have contributed to their communities, the report by the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS) showed,

Although the overall national rate of volunteerism dipped from 26.8 percent to 26.3 last year, the number of hours has remained the same, indicating that many volunteers are devoting more hours.

"Every day, volunteers of all ages are giving their time and talents to solve problems and make our country stronger," said Robert Velasco II, acting CEO of CNCS.

Minneapolis-St.Paul ranked No. 1 in volunteerism among large U.S. cities, with 37.1 percent of people giving their services. Portland, Salt Lake City, Seattle, and Rochester, New York were other urban areas with strong volunteer rates.

On a state level Utah led the way followed by Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska and South Dakota.

People born between 1965-1981, known as Generation X, volunteered more of their time to volunteering than ever before, contributing 2.3 billion hours in 2010 -- 110 million hours more than the year before.

Velasco said the figures show that civic involvement increases as people become more deeply rooted in their community through family, work and school ties.

Partly thanks to social networking, teen volunteer rates have been significantly higher between 2002 and 2010 than they were in 1989, according to the report called "Volunteering in America."

It attributed high teen volunteer rates to greater emphasis on service-learning in high schools, the influence of parents who volunteer and the ease of finding volunteer opportunities with the Internet.

"Technology in the broad sense of social networking has been an asset to volunteerism. I think young people are much more attuned to volunteering at an earlier age than some of us were," Velasco said in an interview.

"They have much more social engagement and networks, and, as a result, they are just much more engaged."

CNCS said it produces the annual report to expand volunteerism and to help elected officials and leaders of nonprofit organizations develop strategies to mobilize more Americans to get involved in their local communities.

The organization recently partnered with the White House to launch a website, serve.gov, where potential volunteers can find opportunities in their areas by entering their interests and zip code.

(Corrects typo in first paragraph to billion, instead of million)


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