Author: Staff (Page 97 of 157)

Thanksgiving Memories Keep Us Connected

Feelings of nostalgia at Thanksgiving time are nothing to be ashamed of.

In fact, celebrate your natural tendency to over sentimentalize everything and even cry at the site of mom’s pecan pie.

That’s why this time of year, TV and radio ads are filled with smiling families sitting around a large table in holiday sweaters, passing the dinner rolls. Even if you’re far away from home, companies want you to believe that buying those same dinner rolls will fill your heart with holiday joy. Turns out, it works.

Thanksgiving foods trigger memories of time spent with family and loved ones. And given the way our memories work we really edit out the bad and focus on the good.

Scent memory is very strong and can transport us to a simpler carefree time.

So just sit back and enjoy; soak it all in for one big day of feasting and a walk down memory lane.

Call in Sick to Work, Do or Don’t?

Should you call in sick to work?

In a tough economy you certainly don’t want to put your job in jeopardy, however, putting the health of everyone you work with in jeopardy might not be the better choice.

Not only is this cold and flu season but holiday stress and activity can take it’s toll, as well.

Make sure that you can maintain distance and avoid contact with others.

Wash hands often and try not to share office equipment.

Consider your job; serving food? Waiting on clients or supervising young children, immunocompromised or the elderly could make your illness a real health threat to others

A few more things to consider:

How well can you carry out your work duties?

If you’re feeling quite sick, “you’re going to have a hard time functioning and performing at your normal level,” Cummins says.

Are you contagious?

If you have a viral or bacterial illness, you’ll expose your coworkers and they in turn will infect others. Staying home when you’re sick helps to curb germs in the community. “It’s to contain the illness,” Cummins says.

Will resting at home help your body to overcome the illness?

“We see a lot of worsening symptoms because people will just not stop and rest. They want to go; they want to be able to do everything that they normally do,” Cummins says. “What they don’t understand is that they’re pushing themselves to the point where they’re actually a lot sicker at the end of two to four days than they would have been if they had just taken that first day off and let their body fight the infection.”

Are you taking medications that could impair your ability to think, work, operate machinery, or drive?

Let’s say, for example, that you’ve been prescribed Vicodin for back pain and it’s causing fuzzy thinking. “If you’re so sick that you’re using opiates or any controlled substance to control pain, you really need to stay home,” Cummins says. “You shouldn’t be driving, and you could have your performance impaired or it could even be dangerous.”

Sleeping With Baby Ad Goes a Bit to Far

Sleeping with your baby ad goes too, far?

What some researchers fail to mention is that alcohol, drugs and cigarettes are often involved in co-sleeping death statistics.

Turbulent or violent home life and lack of education play a part, as well.

Get the facts, consult your pediatrician and make an informed decision that works best for you.

Normal Weight People Snack More than those Who are Over Weight

Overweight people eat fewer meals than normal weight people.

It might seem counter-intuitive, however, it seems that all this snacking leads to consuming less calories overall throughout the day.

Generally, though, “weight loss maintainers” consumed the fewest calories, at about 1,800 a day, compared with the normal weight and overweight subjects, who took in 1,900 and more than 2,000 calories a day, respectively.

Weight loss maintainers also were the most physically active of the three groups, Bachman said, burning off about 3,000 calories a week through exercise and other activities, compared to 2,000 calories a week among the normal weight subjects and 800 calories a week in the overweight group.

The take away? You can be satisfied eating less if you spread the food out over the course of your day.

A lighter belly also leaves you more inclined to be active in between meals.

Tough Diseases Diagnosed at NIH Special Clinic

Clinic of Last Resort diagnosis the tough diseases.

When resources are scarce and doctors have no other solutions, the rare and elusive cases end up at the Undiagnosed Diseases Program begun in 2008 by the National Institutes of Health.

By early this year, the medical detectives had fielded 4,700 inquiries, reviewed 1,700 medical records, rejected 100 cases and accepted 400, with the rest under review, according to a summary by Dr. William A. Gahl, who heads the program, based in Bethesda, Md.
“The discovery of a new disease. That’s something that will stand forever in the scientific realm,” Gahl told TODAY.com.

Louise Benge walks on a treadmill at NIH, part of the exams that helped diagnose the disease that allows calcium to build up in the blood vessels of her hands and lower limbs.
The program also dramatically expanded knowledge and descriptions of several other disorders in patients who came to what’s now regarded as the clinic of last resort.

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