Insight
How digital tools can improve your body literacy

Dr Elisabeth Rosen, medical director at Kry, explains what body literacy is, why it’s important and how technology can help us understand our bodies.
For many people, managing their health simply comes down to how they feel and knowing when something is a bit ‘off’. Body literacy takes this a step further and focuses on building knowledge of your body’s natural rhythms, changes and signals to understand your health better.
There are three stages to improved body literacy: first, observing your ‘normal’ and knowing when something is different to discover when your body is changing; second, learning from these observations and drawing patterns; and finally understanding the ‘messages’ your body is sending you and using this information to actively take responsibility and control of your health and wellbeing.

Body literacy is particularly important for women, who experience changing hormone levels on a daily basis. In many cases, there’s a small understanding of how these changes can impact your health, in part due to a historic lack of research into female health.
According to the BMA, ‘women fare more poorly compared with men in relation to disease prevalence, access to healthcare, and outcomes after treatment’.
Improved body literacy can therefore help women to get the support and treatment they need quicker; reducing complex and fragmented care pathways and helping women to advocate for themselves during consultations with healthcare professionals.
Medicine is based on observations and reports from the patient so, becoming aware of your body will make it easier to detect changes and abnormalities, share useful information with a doctor or a nurse and seek help earlier on.

There are simple ways to improve body literacy and the good news is there is now an abundance of technology, products and apps that enable people to access services and information.
For example, menstrual tracking apps can help women understand their cycle better and detect potentially important changes at an early stage. Beyond tracking menstrual flow and period symptoms, these apps can help support and inform women about their bodies and about what they can do to manage their wellbeing.
Similarly, digital has a role to play in enabling equal and flexible access to specialist services like mental health. Internet cognitive behavioral therapy (ICBT) and talking therapies via video provide immediate access to first line mental health treatment through a mobile-ready experience. This fits seamlessly into patients’ daily lives rather than waiting for weekly, fortnightly or monthly appointments.

In-home diagnostics are also on the increase. In Sweden, Kry provides home testing kits for chlamydia with demand increasing over time as more women are proactively managing their sexual health and wellbeing.
But beyond specific health apps and wearables, the key to improved body literacy for women is having medically approved, relevant and ‘adaptive’ information at their fingertips – available from anywhere and from any device.
Digital healthcare has already transformed access to services in the wake of the pandemic, but the focus must now be on building digital into the core of health services.
Digital healthcare tools such as menstrual tracking apps and video consultations powered via devices like Raspberry Pi are vital for body literacy, raising the question of a vpn for raspberry pi to ensure these connections remain private and secure
Technology can help patients learn the language of their bodies and enable healthcare professionals to connect the dots, streamline care pathways and improve efficiency.
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Common cancer marker may play active role in preventing the disease, study finds

Ki-67, a protein used to measure tumour growth, may also help prevent chromosome errors that drive cancer, a study suggests.
The findings could change how scientists view Ki-67, a marker commonly used in breast cancer and other tumours to assess how quickly cancer cells are growing.
Researchers found the protein may help preserve genome stability by maintaining the structural integrity of centromeres, key parts of chromosomes that help ensure DNA is shared correctly during cell division.
The research was led by professor Paola Vagnarelli at Brunel University of London in collaboration with scientists at the University of Edinburgh and the Technical University of Berlin.
Professor Vagnarelli said: “Doctors already measure Ki-67 to see how aggressive a cancer might be. But our results suggest it is actually helping maintain genome stability.
“That means it may be more than a marker. It could potentially also be a therapeutic target.”
The study examined three proteins that attach to chromosomes during cell division and help rebuild the molecular system that tells each new cell what kind of cell it is.
Every human cell carries identical DNA. What makes a liver cell different from a brain cell is which genes are switched on and which are kept inactive.
When a cell divides, that entire system of switches must be rebuilt. The three proteins involved in this process were Ki-67, Repo-Man and PNUTS.
Vagnarelli’s team developed a method that individually removes each protein from a living cell at the precise point of division. Older techniques could not isolate that moment cleanly.
They found that cells rely on all three proteins to reset themselves after division, but each failed in a different way when removed.
Without PNUTS, gene activity spiralled out of control and thousands of genes switched on at once.
Without Repo-Man, cells escaped safety checkpoints that usually stop damaged or abnormal cells from continuing to divide.
“What we didn’t expect was how clean the separation was,” said Vagnarelli.
Each protein fails in its own specific way. There is no redundancy, no safety net. Which means there are three separate points at which this process can go wrong.
“When the system breaks down, cells can emerge with the wrong number of chromosomes. That condition, called aneuploidy, is seen in disorders such as Down syndrome and in many cancers.
“We also found that these chromosome errors can trigger inflammatory signals inside the cell.”
Aneuploidy means a cell has too many or too few chromosomes, which can disrupt normal growth and function.
Inflammatory signals are chemical messages that can make a cell behave as if it is responding to injury or infection.
“These cells behave almost as if they are under attack,” said Vagnarelli.
“The immune response switches on because the genome is unstable.
“That link between chromosome imbalance and inflammation could help explain patterns we see in several diseases.”
The researchers said the findings may help cancer scientists better understand how chromosome instability, loss of gene regulation and cells dividing before they are ready contribute to tumour growth.
They said understanding the normal machinery that prevents these errors may help researchers find ways to push cancer cells into making mistakes they cannot survive.
“We now have a clearer map of the machinery that resets the cell after division,” said Vagnarelli.
“That knowledge gives us a starting point for thinking about new therapeutic approaches.”
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