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Fish oil foils psychosis

Getty Images

Getty Images

It’s well known that taking omega-3 fish oil supplements can help to prevent mild to moderate depression and boost memory and cognition. Now it seems fish oil may play an even more dramatic effect in mental health, with a study in the Archives of General Psychiatry suggesting that it could help prevent psychotic disorders.

In a randomised, double-blind clinical trial, researchers from the University of Vienna gave teens and young adults with a high risk of psychotic behaviour (which was defined as already demonstrating mild psychotic symptoms or having a family history of schizophrenia or showing a decrease in their ability to function day-to-day) a dosage of fish oil providing 700mg of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and 480mg of docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) daily for three months.

At the end of the trial period, those taking the supplements were 22.6 percent less likely to develop a psychotic disorder, compared to those taking placebos.

In addition, the authors suggest that fish oil supplements offer several bonuses that anti-psychotic drugs do not: they are relatively cheap, offer other general health benefits, and do not cause side effects like weight gain, which may be off-putting for young people to whom appearance is often of particular importance.

Your say: Do you take fish oil? Do you find it has an affect on your mental health? Share with us.

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Jo Beth Taylor: Waltzing into love

Jo Beth Taylor

What started off with private dance rehearsals is quickly becoming a family affair for Jo Beth Taylor and her Dancing With The Stars partner, Dannial Gosper.

In the clearest sign yet that Jo Beth, 39, and Dannial are partners both on and off the dance floor, the 31-year-old performer took the significant step of introducing the blonde beauty to his parents when they visited him on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast last week.

“My folks came up on the weekend and they met Jo – we had a great time at the yacht club and danced the night away,” says Dannial. “They get along well.”

And they were not the only family members Jo Beth was winning over last week, with Dannial also bringing his niece, Erin, 6, along to a rehearsal as a playdate for her son, Christian.

To top it all off, the run-down star is also suffering from a seriously sore foot. Luckily her dance partner, Brendan Midson, is there to help.

“I really am being very well looked after,” Esther tells Woman’s Day during a brief break. “Brendan’s just awesome. I wasn’t sure whether I hurt my foot in dance rehearsals, or filming for Home And Away, because I had to do a crash-tackle last week in high heels.

“But Brendan’s been giving me foot rubs, and bringing me bandaids and muesli bars and mints – whatever I need.”

Hang on a minute – Brendan’s giving foot rubs?

“I know!” she laughs. “He’s just gorgeous. He’s like, ‘Well, we’ve got to look after you.’”

Getting looked after is something Esther is loving, after breaking up with former H&A co-star Conrad Coleby last year. And while she insists she enjoys being on her own, having someone to share the successes of the past few months would surely make things sweeter.

Maybe Brendan’s just the person she needs?

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 28, 2010.

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I’m still Australia’s oldest virgin

Mark Cermac

Mark Cermac is still looking for love … but only Miss Perfect need apply.

He’s a hopeless romantic with old-fashioned values – traits some would argue have long been bordering on extinction. But what sets Mark Cermac even further apart is the fact that, at 42, he’s still a virgin.

“I believe I am still Australia’s oldest virgin,” says Mark, whom we first met in Woman’s Day four years ago. Back then, the Brisbane native declared to our readers that he was saving himself for “the right woman”.

Although a deluge of hopefuls came forward, Mark – who concedes he is extremely picky – didn’t feel tempted and is still holding out for “Miss Right”.

“Like any male, I too have my urges,” he says. “But I put my heart first, I prefer to be in love.”

Although a little embarrassed by his virgin status, Mark insists on staying true to his values.

“I don’t just want to hop into the cot with the nearest person … To find the perfect someone would be fantastic,” he says. “I’d love to shower her with gifts. I like that old-fashioned approach to romance. I’d be a rock for her.”

The last time we met Mark he told us he was in the process of reinventing himself. “That is ongoing,” he says. “I think I’ve developed a new confidence that was lacking in my thirties.

“Having qualified to do a Bachelor of Television at uni, and beginning a TAFE course in retail [this year], I feel I have a lot more to offer.”

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 28, 2010.

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Susan Falls: My son doesn’t know I killed his dad

Susan Falls

She killed her husband after years of abuse climaxed with threats to her son’s life. Now, the Aussie mum tells Warren Gibbs she’s starting anew.

As seven-year-old Jackson Falls lays in bed each morning, his mum Susan curls up beside him, kisses his cheeks and whispers how much she loves him.“ I love my children so much it hurts me,” says Susan, 42.

Yet she hides a chilling secret from her little boy. “I haven’t told him that I killed his daddy,” Susan tells Woman’s Day in an exclusive interview.

Wiping away tears with a trembling hand, the petite blonde draws a deep breath. “Jackson knows his dad is dead, but he doesn’t know how,” she says, softly.

When Jackson is old enough to understand, Susan will tell him the tragic truth – that 20 years of torment left her with “no option” but to kill Rodney Falls. But for now, Susan is piecing together a new life after two decades of abuse and four years fighting a murder charge.

With a new man by her side, 39-year-old carpenter Matt Barlow, Susan is speaking for the first time since her June 3 acquittal – with the full support of her daughters, Amanda, 20, Danielle, 18, and Cassandra, 16.

“It has taken me a long, long time to trust another man and to truly discover what love really is,” Susan says. “To be told I’m a princess, to be called ‘babe’, is something so special.

“Matt has made me so happy and I’m so grateful he has come into our lives. “Jackson simply adores him, as do my daughters. I thought I found happiness when I married Rodney, but I wed a monster.”

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 28, 2010.

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How Lara’s spending Michael’s millions

Lara Bingle

If Michael Clarke has been wondering where the bloody hell his ex-fiancée has been hiding… try Mexico! The model went on a $100,000 birthday binge to drown her sorrows, Jade Watkins reports.

Dumped model Lara Bingle is wasting no time in spending ex-fiancé Michael Clarke’s millions, flying by private jet to Mexico to celebrate her 23rd birthday in style with a bunch of girlfriends.

And not just any old resort. Lara chose the One & Only Palmilla Resort in Cabo San Lucas, the place where superstar Jennifer Aniston stayed this year – in a $15,000-a-night villa – to celebrate her 41st birthday.

Jen took Courteney Cox, Sheryl Crow and Gerard Butler on her getaway, and while the Aussie and her three friends didn’t share quite the same star power, Lara went on a spending spree to rival any superstar, flying in on a private jet and sailing the Pacific Ocean in a stunning yacht with a group of hot young men.

While most other girls her age struggle on a backpacker budget, Lara was splashing cash like there was no tomorrow – but then she did just get a $1.5 million settlement from her cricket vice-captain ex.

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 28, 2010.

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*MasterChef’s* Joanne: I’m terrified for my family

Joanne Zalm and family

It should have been a happy time but MasterChef Joanne Zalm’s return home after being evicted from the show was bittersweet, thanks to a frightening hate campaign.

For the six long months she lived in the MasterChef house, Joanne Zalm dreamed of the moment she would return home to the welcoming arms of her beloved daughters.

But when the 37-year-old was eliminated from MasterChef last week, the happy family reunion she was hoping for was blighted by ugly threats made by anonymous online bullies, the most extreme calling for Joanne to be killed.

Now in her Sydney home with her adorable three-year-old daughter, Archella, clambering around her shoulders and eldest daughter Faith, 7, showing off her homemade MasterChef apron, Joanne and her devoted husband Richard are proving love can conquer all.

As the frightening episode unfolded, Richard, 43, never faltered in his loyalty to Joanne and their marriage of eight years, and is now calling on the cowards to stand by what they said.

“We don’t know who these people are and obviously they don’t want to be contacted or tell us their identities,” says Richard, who runs a hairdressing business.

“My message to them is: ‘Come forward and tell us who you are.’

“Put your number and your name next to what you write instead of hiding.”

With Richard’s support, Joanne has staunchly faced the vicious smear campaign, which sprang up on the social networking site Facebook, to which she does not belong.

But her abrupt introduction to the world of cyberbullying has left her with a lingering concern for her daughters’ welfare. “I am a mother and a wife first and foremost, and that means my first priority is protecting my family,” Joanne says.

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 28, 2010.

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Bondi Rescue’s Kobi: I’m lucky to be alive

Kobi Graham

The TV lifesaver tells Katherine Chatfield of his brush with death.

As a star of Bondi Rescue, lifeguard Kobi Graham is known as a real-life hero whose experience in the surf has given him the skills to save lives on a daily basis.

He never expected he’d need to call on those skills to save his own life.

Kobi, 31, is lucky to be alive after he broke his neck in a surfing accident at treacherous Cape Solander, off Sydney’s Botany Bay, in May. He was riding what he thought was the best wave of the day when disaster struck.

“I knew I’d fallen off on the worst part of the wave,” Kobi says. “I thought, ‘I’m in trouble.’ There was a moment of suspension, then, bang, I hit my head. There was this big flash. I knew I’d done something severe.”

“If I’d been knocked out, I would definitely have been dead.”

Kobi is sure it was his lifeguard training that saved him in the seconds after the fall. He went through a standard checklist for any rescue – except this time it was for himself.

“I thought, ‘Am I conscious?’. I realised I was. Then I thought, ‘Can I move?’”

But as Kobi tried to move, he felt an electric current of pain shooting through his arms. “It was like I was holding on to a live wire,” he says. “I’d never felt so much pain. I knew instantly I’d broken my neck.”

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 28, 2010.

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Sleeping beauty

Unlike the fairytale princess, you may not be condemned to 100 years of sleep, but you can use your nightly shut-eye to reinvigorate your skin.

Face

Before you worry that you need another cream in your daily routine and skip this section, have a read. We’re all prepared to moisturise after cleansing at night, so why not give your skin a moisturiser that will keep working once REM has kicked in. Night creams contain different ingredients to the moisturiser you use during the day and often target the deeper levels of the epidermis. A night cream formula doesn’t have to focus on protecting your face from the sun, wind and pollution of daytime life, so it can work harder on replenishing your skin. After your nightly cleanse, massage your night cream in generous circles on your face and down to your neck and décolletage.

We love: Clarins Multi-Active Night Youth Recovery Cream, $89, 50ml, (02) 9663 4277; Avon Anew Ultimate Night Gold Emulsion, $59.99, 50ml, 1800 646 000. Lancôme Génifique Repair Youth Activating Night Cream, $155, 50ml, (02) 9931 8888. Shu Uemura Phyto-Black Lift Renewing Firming Night Cream, $180, 50ml, (02) 9931 8888. Clinique Youth Surge Night Age Decelerating Night Moisturizer, $100, 50ml, www.clinique.com.au.

Eyes

The delicate eye area is the first area of your face to show signs of ageing. Boost your eyes’ defence mechanism by applying eye cream just before you shut them down for the night. The best way to apply eye cream is to put small dots of it under your eye, just where you feel the socket, and then gently dab the cream around the eye area until it has been absorbed into the skin. Your ring finger is ideal for this delicate application because it won’t use too much pressure. You can also take the cream up to under the eyebrow.

We love: Nivea Visage Expert Lift Eye Cream, $27.99, 15ml, 1800 103 023. Trilogy Eye Contour Cream, $44, 20ml, www.trilogyproducts.com. M.A.C Moisturelush Eye Cream, $58, 15ml, 1800 613 828.

Body

It might be the largest organ in the body, but we can sometimes forget to give our skin the love and attention it needs. During winter, when the heating is turned up, the wind is howling and the tights are on, the skin on your body is far more likely to dry out. Take a stand against dry skin by lathering a thick moisturiser all over before bed and let it sink you’re your skin during the night.

We love: Vaseline Cocoa Butter Deep Conditioning Body Lotion, $10, 750ml, (02) 8303 6464.

Hair Let’s face it, we’re often in a rush when we wash our hair. First thing in the morning, we have to get to work or get the kids off to school and, last thing at night, we just want to hop into bed, so the chances of using a hair mask on a regular basis are remote. If your hair is in need of some TLC, but you can’t find the time to care for it, make use of the hours you’re asleep and apply a night elixir to strengthen and repair your tresses.

We love: Kérastase Oléo-Relax Nuit, $55, 200ml, 1300 365 552. L’Oréal Paris Elvive Total Repair 5 Restoring Night Elixir, $11.45, 50ml, 1300 659 259.

Nails

Believe it or not, your nails and nail beds can be one of the first spots on your body to show signs of stress and fatigue. Peeling nails, cracked fingers and ridges on the nails can all be your body’s way of telling you you’re not getting enough sleep or you’re working too hard. Help your nails out by applying a cuticle cream just before you go to sleep and follow it up with a luscious hand cream.

We love: Orly Cuticle Oil+, $19.95, 30ml, www.orlybeauty.com.au. L’Occitane Lavender Hand Lotion, $32.95, 250ml, (02) 8912 3000.

Worried about chest wrinkles? You know, the ones that appear after a good nights sleep on your side? Try Decollette Pads from Skin Vigor8. The silicone pads prevent and repair chest wrinkles. $55 for one pad, www.skinvigor8.com.au

Your say: Do you make use of your nightly sleep time? Which products are your favourites? Share your routine with us below.

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Prime Minister Julia Gillard: My Aussie dream

Prime Minister Julia Gillard: My Aussie dream

The nation’s first-ever female Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, knows better than most that Australia truly is the land of opportunity, writes STEVE JACKSON.

For our nation’s first female Prime minister, the challenge has only just begun. But if anyone is well-equipped for the contest that lies ahead, it’s Julia Gillard.

Faced with calming the country in the wake of the greatest political shock in its history, the flame-haired politician has appealed to the nation for support, just hours after ousting former prime minister Kevin Rudd – the first leader ever axed in his first term.

“I certainly acknowledge I have not been elected Prime Minister by the Australian people,” Julia said on Thursday morning.

“In the coming months I will ask the Governor General to call a general election so that the Australian people can exercise their birthright and choose their prime Minister. Between now and this election I seek their consideration and their support.”

It is a challenge she won’t face alone. Along with her allies in the Australian Labor Party, doubtless still split in some factions by her leadership coup, she will embark on the journey ahead with her long-time beau, Tim Mathieson, by her side.

Her 50-year-old partner, though, will be of more personal solace than political assistance. Having thrown herself into her career, her love life has always had a strong political bent with romances with union officials Michael O’Connor and Bruce Wilson, as well as fellow Labor pollie Craig Emerson.

But when she met Tim, a hairdresser, in Melbourne salon Heading Out, it was a relationship built on a different foundation. Indeed, he admits he knows almost nothing of politics and even had to ask whether she was a state or federal minister when they first started dating.

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 25, 2010.

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From debt to disaster

We often consider credit card debt to be a personal problem, but when we start families, what we don't realise is the impact it has on the entire household.
parents on lounge, with child, Getty Images

THE latest Insolvency and Trustee Service Australia (ITSA) statistics show that in 2007, there were more than 10,000 women in Australia declaring bankruptcy, with women in their late thirties being the most vulnerable.

While most credit card debts are small and not likely to result in bankruptcy, the nature of debt is that it magnifies itself over time. Reserve Bank of Australia figures indicate the average personal credit card balance of $3300, if left unattended at today’s rates of around 17 per cent, will double in about four years.

When debt rises into the tens of thousands, it often takes years to pay off. And what’s worse, our children usually inherit our bad spending and money management habits, which can leave a financial scar on the household.

Women are also more vulnerable than men to be unemployed at the time of bankruptcy (52 per cent of women compared to 39 per cent of men), making it even harder for us to get back on our feet.

The reality for most of these women is that being stuck in credit debt can edge them closer and closer towards bankruptcy, and for those with families, the entire household will suffer along side. To avoid this, many women have to enter into debt agreements with their creditors, which is a low-cost, legally binding repayment option which is often a simple alternative to bankruptcy.

Of the women taking up debt agreements, credit debt was cited as the main reason for the cause of their insolvency (39 per cent of women), with women between 15 to 24 years of age at the highest risk according to the ITSA report.

The surprising thing is that the vast majority (92 per cent) of people entering debt agreements are employed at the time, indicating that anyone suffering from bad credit debt can end up coming this close to bankruptcy.

So how do we shield ourselves from ending up deep in debt in the first place?

1. Compare deals online at financial comparison sites like RateCity to help you lower your credit card debt with options such as low-rate balance transfer cards or switching to lowest rate cards can help you save a lot in interest charges.

2.Remain financially independent. If you avoid taking up joint loans or credit cards with partners, you can lower your risk of receiving or “transmitting” debt, and prevent yourself from being left “in the lurch” by partners.

3.Avoid credit debt altogether. Visa and MasterCard debit cards provide an attractive alternative to avoid facing the stress and catastrophe of insolvency, while enjoying the convenience of shopping remotely such as over the phone or online.

Take matters into your own hands, and keep yourself from becoming a debt magnet. We all want the best for our families and children but in some cases, the best and easiest thing to fix is your own mistakes.

Your say: Has debt put strain on your family? How did you deal with it? Email us on [email protected]

Michelle Hutchison is Consumer Advocate at RateCity.

The above information is general only and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation or needs.

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