Monday, June 04, 2012

All People Who Are Interested In "Wellness"

Craig Stoltz

Craig Stoltz, Health Guide

(Profile)
Health Journalist

Participating in a Heart Recovery Program is Better than Going It Alone

Here's another report that confirms intuition but serves as a useful reminder: People recovering from serious heart events and participate in a three-year follow-up program stick with heart-healthy behaviors over the long term. This may (emphasis may) reduce risk of death.   This is based on Mayo Clinic Research on heart-related disease... Read moreChevron
Craig Stoltz

Craig Stoltz, Health Guide

(Profile)
Health Journalist

Can Social Ties Stave Off Alzheimer's?

A new study confirms what previous research and intuition tell us: Connecting to other  people is good for your brain. In this case the research, published in the American Journal of Public Health, showed that memory declined at half the rate among socially engaged adults compared to their more isolated peers.   Three things you need... Read moreChevron
Craig Stoltz

Craig Stoltz, Health Guide

(Profile)
Health Journalist

ADHD: Lose Three Weeks of Work?

A Really Big Story yesterday on ADHD: A BMJ study finds adults with ADHD lose three weeks of work per year (via absence, lost efficiency, etc.) compared to coworkers without ADHD. Yikes. Let's dig in and figure out what this really means.   What you need to know:   1. A vast majority of the workers with ADHD were untreated.... Read moreChevron
posted 05/29/2008, comments (0)|
Hailey

Hailey

(Profile)
intelligent, creative, empathic, spiritual, unemployed..........

supplements to battle depression

Omega-3s and Dry Vit E has helped boost my mood considerably.Has anyone out there tried N-acetycystaine to manage depression. I'm somewhere in the bipolar spectrum and don't want to shoot myself into mania or Bipolar III
posted 05/27/2008, comments (0)|
Craig  Stoltz

Craig Stoltz, Health Guide

(Profile)
Health Journalist

Proscar, Aggressive Tumor Risk Questioned

Proscar, a widely used drug used to shrink the prostate, may not cause aggressive prostate cancer tumors after all. Back in 2003, a big government study found that Proscar reduced risk of developing prostate cancer by 25 percent--but appeared to boost the incidence of aggressive, potentially lethal tumors.   Well, five years later doctors... Read moreChevron
posted 05/21/2008, comments (0)|

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