CEO of biggest US mall owner says retail industry is ‘reaching the bottom’ of bankruptcies – CNBC

The CEO of the biggest mall owner in the U.S., Simon Property Group, says the retail industry looks to be "reaching the bottom" of a tumultuous wave of bankruptcies.

"We are having a high bankruptcy year. ... There's no denying that," David Simon told analysts during a post-earnings conference call on Wednesday morning. "But I think we're kind of reaching the bottom in ... 2019 on that stuff. It's rivaling what happened in 2017. So, it's not like something that we haven't experienced before. But we know [what] we have to do."

Simon shares were last down about 3.5% Wednesday afternoon, having fallen about 12% this year.

The CEO's comments come on the heels of Forever 21 and Barneys New York, among other retail chains, filing for bankruptcy this year. So far in 2019, U.S. retailers have announced 8,993 store closures and 3,780 store openings, compared with 5,844 closures and 3,258 openings in all of 2018, according to a tracking by Coresight Research. The consulting firm expects closures could still hit a record 12,000 by the end of this year.

"As we put together our plans for next year, I think we'll be OK," Simon said. "We're hustling. We're finding new tenants."

The CEO also on Wednesday highlighted the real estate company's recent investments, including it taking a stake in online shopping site Rue La La's parent company, Rue Gilt Groupe. Rue Gilt Groupe is now helping Simon run a website for its outlet centers, "ShopPremiumOutlets.com," where people can buy from brands such as Saks Off Fifth, BCBGMAXAZRIA, Reebok Outlet and Under Armour. Earlier this week, Simon in a press release listed its latest investments: in gym operator Life Time, dining and entertainment venue Pinstripes, e-gaming company Allied Esports, Sports Illustrated and the trendy membership club Soho House.

"We're going to be a better real estate operator the more we know e-commerce," Simon explained on the conference call. "We are going to make money ... and we're going to know our retailers better." He also said none of Simon's investments have reached the "material" level, where the real estate investment trust would need to disclose more details on those ventures. "Right now we're playing with the house's money and it's not material."

Simon had previously made investments in once-bankrupted Aeropostale, Nautica and Authentic Brands Group, which owns dozens of brands including Nine West and Vince Camuto.

The mall and outlet center owner also has a venture arm, Simon Ventures, which has invested in retail start-ups such as beverage brand Dirty Lemon, Imran Khan's Verishop, underwear maker Me Undies and subscription box company FabFitFun.

"Any leading company out there invests in the future ... from Microsoft to Amazon," Simon said. "If I had a criticism of historical retailers ... because of strained balance sheets or overspending in one thing versus another thing, is the inability to reinvest in your business is a major no-no."

When Simon reported fiscal third-quarter earnings on Wednesday, the company said reported retailer sales per square foot for the period ended Sept. 30 were $680, up 4.5% from a year ago. Total occupancy was 94.7%, down from 95.5% a year ago.

Funds from operations, which is the metric analysts use to gauge real estate investment trusts, were $1.081 billion, or $3.05 per share, compared with $1.086 billion, or $3.05 a share, a year ago. Analysts had been calling for funds from operations of $3.06.

Simon also slashed its full-year funds from operations outlook to between $12 and $12.05 a share, from between $12.30 and $12.40 per share, accounting for losses on the extinguishment of debt.

Simon said comparable funds from operations are now expected to fall between $12.33 and $12.38 per share for the full year, an increase of 3 cents on the lower end of the range the company had provided in July.

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CEO of biggest US mall owner says retail industry is 'reaching the bottom' of bankruptcies - CNBC

Cornellian Caught Up in Forever 21 Bankruptcy Shines Light on Perils of Fast Fashion – Cornell University The Cornell Daily Sun

At age 21, Esther Dukhee Chang 08 was studying stitches as a fiber science major in the College of Human Ecology. Now, Esther is better known by fashion professionals as the second daughter of Forever 21 founders, Do Won and Jin Sook Chang. In September, while serving as the famous fast-fashion brands vice president of merchandising, she was part of their declaration of bankruptcy.

Once regarded as the most popular brand among teens and twenty-somethings, Forever 21 at its peak made more than $4 billion in annual sales. This year, the retail titan was forced to file for bankruptcy due to its overcalculation in opening stores in expensive areas, according to The New York Times.

Chang joined her parents company in 2011 as the head of the visual display team and was placed in charge of creating graphics and window displays with the companys trademark bright yellow. In partnership with her older sister Linda, she co-launched Forever 21s beauty and accessories brand Riley Rose in 2017.

In 2015, Changs parents borrowed $5 million from each of their daughters trust funds to keep the company afloat, The Los Angeles Times reported ensnaring them both in bankruptcy proceedings.

FSAD Prof. Van Dyk Lewis referred to Forever 21 as a friend of the Cornell department. Weve done projects with them before, Van Dyk Lewis told The Sun. As part of a class assignment years ago, Cornell students designed two collections for the brand, which later were sold in stores.

According to Grace Anderson 21, an E-board member of Cornell Fashion Industry Network, the department also accepted a donated set of mannequins a few years ago.

Forever 21 is no stranger to controversies according to The Los Angeles Times, The U.S. Department of Labor alleged that the companys factories operate with sweatshop-like conditions. And as one of the original companies that helped shape the fast-fashion industry, Forever 21 has been criticized for its vast water pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, the Los Angeles Times reported.

The perils of fast fashion are a hot topic on-campus in FSAD classrooms, too. Prof. Tasha Lewis and her fellow student researchers focus on the principles of sustainability, and the once multi-billion companys recent announcement of its bankruptcy has sparked the conversation among academic professionals.

[The industry] is a bit problematic, Prof. Mark Milstein, director of Center for the Sustainable Global Enterprise in the SC Johnson College of Business, told The Sun.

I suppose in theory it addresses consumers desire for a different change in clothes, but the impact that it has environmentally and the amount of waste it produces is pretty significant, he continued.

For similar reasons, Forever 21s demise was no surprise to several students who spoke to The Sun.

I wouldnt be surprised if it were due to the decline in the demand for fast and cheap fashion, Mikala Bliahu 22, an environment and sustainability major, said. Brands like Forever 21 are cheap and insolent and dont deserve to be a staple for youth. Fast fashion in all promotes consumerism while keeping a secret as to how the clothing is made.

Eva Milstein-Touesnard 22, a government major and environmental and sustainability minor, says she is not surprised because both the company and the entire fast-fashion industry often fail to be sustainable. Obviously they need materials that are even cheaper than the cheap prices of their products.

According to the Letter to Our Customers on the companys website, filing for bankruptcy protection under chapter 11 allows Forever 21 to continue to operate its stores as usual, while the Company takes positive steps to reorganize the business.Thus, it is still early days to conclude the final fate of Forever 21. Anderson wishes them well and we hope they consider investing further into protecting the environment and their workers, Anderson said.

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Cornellian Caught Up in Forever 21 Bankruptcy Shines Light on Perils of Fast Fashion - Cornell University The Cornell Daily Sun

Admitting North Macedonia to NATO brings more risks than benefits to the US | TheHill – The Hill

While most Americans are consumed with the debate over President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump says Republicans should release their own transcripts in impeachment probe Trump keeps NYT, WaPo apps on his phone despite canceling subscriptions: report The big deception behind tariffs and geopolitics MOREs withdrawal of troops from Syria and ongoing impeachment investigations, their elected leaders are in the process of quietly adding another burden to the long list of U.S. defense obligations.

The Senate voted on Tuesday 91-2 to extend NATO membership to North Macedonia, a small, landlocked nation in southeastern Europe.The only nay votes came from Sens. Mike LeeMichael (Mike) Shumway LeeTrump plans to name DHS undersecretary as agency's acting head: report Admitting North Macedonia to NATO brings more risks than benefits to the US Graham: Trump's ATF nominee 'very problematic' MORE (R-Utah) and Rand PaulRandal (Rand) Howard PaulTrump: Whistleblower 'must come forward' Admitting North Macedonia to NATO brings more risks than benefits to the US Trump's criminal justice reform record fraught with contradiction MORE (R-Ky.), both of who also opposed the previous round of NATO expansion to Montenegro in 2017.

For small countries like Montenegro or North Macedonia, the benefits of joining NATO are obvious. North Macedonia has a population of slightly more than 2 million with the 128th largest GDP in the world. NATOs Article 5 provides for the collective defense of all members, so the North Macedonian government and its estimated 13,000-person military will have the support of significantly larger militaries, including the worlds only superpower, through ascension into the organization.

But for the United States and other member countries, the benefits of expanding NATO are neither obvious nor quantifiable. With the most formidable and technologically advanced military in the world, the U.S. gains essentially nothing from the addition of such a small forceeither peacetime orcrisis.To their credit, the Macedonian military provided military support that served honorably inAfghanistanandIraq, but objectively this had little impact on the outcome of either conflict.

Furthermore, many larger NATO members already fail to take their defense obligations seriously.American policymakers from both sides of the aisle have acknowledged this serious issue for over two decades, but continue to prioritize expansion over concerns about alliance functionality and the commitment of existing members.

Such supportersin the United Stateswillstress the geostrategic importance of the alliance over the actual addition of military support. After all, NATO was conceived as a post-WWII military alliance to prevent the Soviet Union from dominating strategically important but defenseless Europe. It is one of the external forces that helped break the Soviet government.

But North Macedonia occupies a part of Europe with little strategic and even less economic importance to the United States. Its location in the historically volatile Balkans region carries a serious risk for any country with whom it shares a defensive alliance, as we are hardly two decades removed from a major armed conflict in that area. Increased involvement in the Balkans is not something policymakers in the United States consider a strategic imperative, and rightly so.American voters would likely reject the notion, as well.

What other impetus exists for Western leaders to continue such unquestioning support for NATO expansion? Advocates cite countering and deterring Russian aggression as the primary justification. As Sen. Jim RischJames (Jim) Elroy RischMcConnell sends warning shot on Turkey sanctions after House vote Van Hollen urges Senate to take up House-passed Turkey sanctions bill Admitting North Macedonia to NATO brings more risks than benefits to the US MORE (R-Idaho), chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who helped steer North Macedonias NATO vote through the full chamberstated afterwards, The Russians hate this sort of thing, they hate an increase in the size of NATO, but we want the Europeans to be encouraged.

Russian frustration with NATO expansion is not a new issue, andit shouldntbe the lynchpin that decides U.S. foreign policy. Soon after the fall of the Soviet Union, NATO members quickly set about on the first round of expansion while Russia was weak andthe post-Soviet government wasmore amenable to integration into the free world.

That expansion did not ingratiate the West to new Russian leaders nor prevent the rise of an authoritarian-style government under Vladimir PutinVladimir Vladimirovich PutinDemocrats feud over health care, Trump strategy in Iowa America's dual foreign policies collide Aramco attacks remind us about 'defense in depth' MORE. The subsequent rounds of expansion into the former Soviet zonesdid not deterRussian aggression in Georgia and Ukraineas Western leaders desired.

As NATO expanded since the end of the Cold War, Russia has become exactly what supporters of NATO expansion claimed they were seeking to prevent:a destabilizing force in the region as it seeks to push back against perceived threats to its interests. The Russians have not been deterred from anything; instead their aggression has been, in their view, justified and necessary.

There is every indication Trump will sign off on the pending membership of North Macedonia into NATO, and their membership, while of little benefit to the United States, does not carry near as much risk as the possible membership of nations like Ukraine or Georgia.But its' membership will do nothing to address NATOs long-standing burden sharing problems and adds one more obligation to an already overcommitted U.S. defense structure.

When considering the possible extension of current defense agreements or creation of new ones, the United States should look primarily at how such agreements will benefit or risk our national security and economic interests, not their appeal for antagonizing geopolitical rivals or whether extension is deserved by strategically unimportant countries. A policy driven by a desire to annoy our only nuclear peer is not a sound basis for defense strategy.

RobertMooreis a public policy advisor for Defense Priorities Foundation. He previously worked for nearly a decade on Capitol Hill, most recently as lead staffer for Senator Mike Lee on the Senate Armed Services Committee.

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Admitting North Macedonia to NATO brings more risks than benefits to the US | TheHill - The Hill

Would Trump Really Push NATO to Help Confront Iran? – The National Interest Online

Secretary of Defense Mark T. Esper was recently in Brusselsfor a meeting of NATO defense ministers, with the Turkish incursion and related events in Syriafiguringprominently in the discussions. But Esper hadanotheritem on his agenda that stems from the Trump administrations obsession with confronting Iran: getting the allies to contribute more to the defense of Saudi Arabia. Esper already hadraised at a meeting with his NATO counterparts in June the administrations request for more contributions to meet what it describes as an Iranian threat in the Persian Gulf, and he was met with a lack of enthusiasm for the idea.

NATO is no stranger to out-of-area operations.The purposes of those operations have generally been easy to understand from the alliances point of view, even when they have gone far afield from NATOs original purpose of meeting conventional military threats in Europe.The alliances significant effort in Afghanistan, for example, has been seen as a counterterrorist operation.Another activity aimed at non-state threats that could affect the economic and security interests of member states has been an anti-piracy operation off the Horn of Africa. As for the Persian Gulf region, the U.S.-led operation in 1990-1991 that reversed Iraqs aggression against Kuwait was not conducted under NATO auspices but did include all major members of the alliance.

No such circumstances apply to the current U.S. attempt to get the allies involved in its face-off against Iran.Neither Iran nor any other Persian Gulf state has committed aggression as naked as what Saddam Husseins Iraq did to Kuwait.The European allies see that it was the actions of the United Statesits reneging on the agreement restricting Irans nuclear program, and its initiation of unrestricted economic warfare against Iranthat led directly to this years heightened tensions and risk of war in the Persian Gulf.They see that it was the United States that began a campaign to take oil from the Persian Gulf (i.e., Irans oil) off the market.More broadly, the allies see no reason to take sidesespecially to the extent of weighing in with their own military resourcesin regional quarrels and competitions such as that between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

Pressing for greater European involvement in that dispute is thus probably a poor way to spend whatever political chits Esper may be spending with the allies on this subject.The United States also could benefit from learning a lesson or two from the allies, in that rigid side-taking in regional quarrels in the Gulf does not benefit U.S. interests any more than it benefits European interests.

This topic represents a subset of a more general U.S. tendency, not limited to the Trump administration, to assume that other states see threats and lines of conflict the same way the United States does, or to insist that other states see the threats that way and that they respond the way the United States wants to respond. This myopia underlies the current administrations failure to get traction for its idea of a NATO-like alliance of favored Sunni states in the Middle East. Disputes among the Gulf Arabs are a major reason for this failure. The failure is fortunate, in that the division between those who are in or out of the proposed alliance does not correlate with any division between those who are or are not destabilizing the region, and such an alliance would be another instrument for dragging the United States into other peoples quarrels.

This type of myopia also is involved in a contretemps involving the redeployment of U.S. troops being evacuated from northeast Syria.Esperannounced that those troops would be going to western Iraq and would use that as a base for continuing to fight ISIS, but the government of Iraq evidently didnt get the memo.That government, which has sound security and political reasons to minimize any U.S. troop presence on Iraqi soil,stated that the troops can redeploy via Iraq but are not welcome to stay there.This is another example of how U.S. foreign relations would be smoother and more effective if those running it would devote more effort to understanding how other states and other people perceive their problems and perceive the world.

Paul R. Pillar is Nonresident Senior Fellow at the Center for Security Studies at Georgetown University and Nonresident Senior Fellow in Foreign Policy at the Brookings Institution. He is a contributing editor toThe National Interest.

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Would Trump Really Push NATO to Help Confront Iran? - The National Interest Online

NATO War Planners Tried Everything To Stop Russia’s Deadly Submarines (Even Magnets) – Yahoo News

Key point: The magnets worked as intended, but were to impractical for training purposes.

At the height of the Cold War, the Soviet Union had so many hundreds of deadly submarines at sea that Western war planners willing to try almost any possible countermeasure, however goofy sounding.

Some seemingly crazy ideas proved actually worthwhile, such as the underwater Sound Surveillance Systema vast chain of seafloor microphones that patiently listened for Soviet subs and remains in use today.

Other less elegant anti-submarine tools survive only as anecdotes. In his book Hunter Killers, naval writer Iain Ballantyne recalls one of the zanier ideas air-dropped floppy-magnets meant to foul up Soviet undersea boats, making them noisier and easier to detect.

From the late 1940s on, captured German technology boosted Soviet postwar submarine design. Soviet shipyards delivered subs good enough and numerous enough to pose a huge danger to Western shipping.

By the time of the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, the USSR controlled the largest submarine force in the world some 300 diesel-electric submarines and a handful of nuclear-propelled models. NATO navies couldnt keep up. We simply do not have enough forces, Vice Adm. R.M. Smeeton stated.

NATO war planners feared only nuclear escalation could check the Soviet submarine wolf packs. That is, atomic strikes on sub bases along the Russian coast.

But the nuclear solution was worse than the problem. We can take steps to make sure the enemy is fully aware of where his course of action is leading him without nuclear weapons, Smeeton said, but we cannot go to war that way.

Desperate planners sought ways of making Soviet subs easier to hunt. Any technology that could speed up an undersea search was worth considering. A submarines best defense is of course stealth, remaining quiet and undetected in the ocean deep, Ballantyne notes. Something that could rob the Soviets of that cloak of silence must have seemed irresistible and, at least initially, a stroke of genius.

A Canadian scientist figured some kind of sticky undersea noisemaker would make a Soviet sub more detectable. He designed a simple hinged cluster of magnets that could attach to a submarines metal hull.

Story continues

Movement would cause the flopping magnets to bang against the hull like a loose screen door, giving away the subs location to anyone listening. The simple devices would take time and effort to remove, thus also impairing the Soviet undersea fleets readiness.

At least that was the idea.

Godawful racket

In late 1962, the British Admiralty dispatched the A-class diesel submarine HMS Auriga to Nova Scotia for joint anti-submarine training with the Canadian navy. The British were helping Canada establish a submarine force, s0 Royal Navy subs routinely exercised with Canadian vessels.

Auriga had just returned to the submarine base at Faslane, Scotland after a combat patrol as part of the Cuban Missile Crisis. Other subs of the joint Canadian-British Submarine Squadron Six at Halifax had seen action during the crisis.

The 1945-vintage Auriga spent much of her time in Nova Scotia simulating Soviet diesel subs during hazardous under-ice ASW practice with U.S. and Canadian forces. During a typical three-week exercise, Auriga would be subject to the attentions of surface vessels, aircraft and other subs, including the U.S. Navys new nuke boats.

During one open-ocean exercise, Auriga was given the floppy-magnet treatment. A Canadian patrol plane flew over Aurigas submerged position and dropped a full load of the widgets into the sea.

As weird as it sounded, the magnet concept proved a resounding success. Enough magnets fell on or near Aurigas hull to stick and flop. Banging and clanking with a godawful racket, the magnets gave sonar operators tracking the sub a field day. Then the trouble started.

As Auriga surfaced at the end of the exercise, the magnets made their way into holes and slots in the subs outer hull designed to let water flow. They basically slid down the hull, Ballantyne says of the magnets, and remained firmly fixed inside the casing, on top of the ballast tanks, in various nooks and crannies.

The floppy-magnets couldnt be removed at sea. In fact, they couldnt be removed at all until the submarine dry-docked back in Halifax weeks later.

In the meantime, one of Her Majestys submarines was about as stealthy as a mariachi band. No fighting, no training, no nothing until all those floppy little magnets were dug out of her skin at a cost of time, money and frustration.

The magnets worked on the Soviets with the same maddening results. The crews of several Foxtrots were driven bonkers by the noise and returned to port rather than complete their cruises.

Now, the Soviet navy could afford to furlough a sub or two, but NATO could not. Anti-submarine crews couldnt practice with floppy-magnets attached to their exercise targets.

The floppy-magnets worked exactly as intended, but they were simply too messy to train with to be practical on a large scale. It seems NATO deployed them only a few times.

The submarine-fouling floppy-magnet turned out to be, well, a flop.

This first appeared in WarIsBoring here.

This article first appeared several years ago.

Image: Reuters.

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NATO War Planners Tried Everything To Stop Russia's Deadly Submarines (Even Magnets) - Yahoo News

NATO drills being held in Lithuania – Information-Analytic Agency NEWS.am

Large-scale maneuvers of Gelezinis Vilkas 2019 - II with the participation of about 4 thousand troops from 11 NATO member states and over 1 thousand units of military equipment began on Monday in Lithuania, TASS reported.

The purpose of the maneuvers is to develop the interaction of the forces and means for the effective planning and implementation of combat missions, said the command of the Lithuanian Army.

The military personnel of Belgium, UK, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, the US, Czech Republic and Estonia take part in maneuvers. Some of them are part of the forward-based NATO combined battalion stationed in Lithuania.

The drills will take place at the Lithuanian Army training ground, where the US Armed Forces battalion arrived in October, which included about 500 troops, 30 Abrams tanks and 25 Bradley infantry fighting vehicles. Other military equipment from places of permanent deployment to the training area will be followed by civilian freeways accompanied by military police. The main part of the drills will last until November 18.

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NATO drills being held in Lithuania - Information-Analytic Agency NEWS.am

NATO Code Name FELON: Russian Su-57 Gets Its Reporting Name, And It Couldn’t Be Better. – The Aviationist

Bogdan's Su-57 leaps into the air on full afterburner in front of huge crowds at MAKS 2019 on the final day of flying. (All photos: Tom Demerly/TheAviationist)

It couldnt be better even if the late Tom Clancy were to have written it, and we have to believe he is smiling down from the tactical high ground of the afterlife. The latest Russian 5th generation stealth combat aircraft, the Sukhoi Su-57, was assigned an official NATO reporting name this week: FELON

NATO Reporting names provide a convenient and recognizable English language moniker for communicating Russian aircraft types. The names are assigned to equipment including weapons systems, ships, ground vehicles and aircraft by members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). These code names or reporting names are used in radio communication and in common usage among westerners, including enthusiasts.

There is a system to NATO reporting names. If the first letter of a reporting name is an F, or FOXTROT as pronounced in the military phonetic alphabet, this designates the aircraft as a fighter. For instance, the MiG-25 is the FOXBAT, the Su-27 is the FLANKER and the MiG-29 is the FULCRUM. Suffixes are often added to NATO reporting names to denote a significantly different variant of the original aircraft. For instance, the new Su-35, an entirely updated version of the original Su-27, is referred to as the FLANKER-E. You likely recall from Tom Clancys Hunt For Red October references to Russian long-range maritime patrol and strategic bomber, the BEAR-FOXTROT, or BEAR-F for the Tupolev Tu-95.

Officially, in NATO definition from section 1.1 of NATO Reporting Names for Aircraft and Missiles:

Reporting names for aircraft are selected by the ASIC (Air and Space Interoperability Council; renamed in 2005 from ASCC, Air Standardization Coordinating Committee member states are Australia, Canada, New Zealand, USA and UK), but names for missiles (and other systems like radars etc.) are created by other organizations. However, all reporting names are eventually forwarded to NATO in a single list.The specification for reporting names goes on to define that:

Fixed-wing aircraft are designated by reporting names beginning with code letters designating the aircrafts mission. Propeller-driven planes are designated by single-syllabic words (e.g. Bear), and jets by multi-syllabic words (e.g. Backfire). Helicopters and guided missiles are designated similarly, but the length of a word is not defined.

Interestingly, Russians, especially aircraft spotters, tend to not use any of the NATO reporting names in conversation. In our visit to MAKS 2019 earlier this year, Russian aircraft experts, photographers and enthusiasts most commonly referred to the Su-57 by its pre-production designation as two spoken words. The Russians would most commonly identify the new Sukhoi Su-57 as by saying the words Pahk-FAH. They also called the aircraft the Sue-fifty-seven, speaking a word for the acronym Su that stands for Sukhoi in the aircrafts name.

Whoever at NATO ultimately wound-up selecting FELON as the new NATO reporting names for the Su-57 did a great job using what little creative license they are afforded in the process. Its safe to say that aircraft spotters in west will be excited to see and chat about Russias impressive new Sukhoi Su-57 FELON for years to come.

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NATO Code Name FELON: Russian Su-57 Gets Its Reporting Name, And It Couldn't Be Better. - The Aviationist

4 Skincare Ingredients A Top Derm Wants You To Use Daily – Women’s Health

Most people would agree that beautiful, healthy skin is #goals. But youd be hard-pressed to find two people who agree on the best way to achieve it. And that kinda makes sense: There are countless skincare products on the market, and it's tricky to know which actually live up to their claims.

So how can you cut through the clutter and find the products that will actually give you the complexion you want? According to Lily Talakoub, M.D. of McLean Dermatology, the key is to look for formulas that contain proven ingredients, like the four superstars below. According to Dr. Talakoub, theyre all worth adding into your daily routine.

What it is: Glycolic acid, which is derived from sugar cane, is the alpha hydroxy acid (AHA) with the smallest molecules. Like all AHAs, its a chemical (rather than a physical) exfoliant. Where physical exfoliants remove the build-up of dead skin through scrubbing, chemical exfoliants like AHAs do so by dissolving, making them gentler on the skin. And since glycolic acid is the tiniest AHA, it's able to penetrate the skin to deliver the best possible results.

Revitalift Derm Intensives 10% Pure Glycolic Acid Serum

$23.99

The benefits: Using glycolic acid will leave your skin feeling soft and looking radiant and more youthful, says Dr. Talakoub. Plus, it loosens clogged pores, so it helps with any blackheads and deeper cystic acne. It can also diminish the appearance of acne scars and reduce hyperpigmentation and photo-aging, according to a Clinical, Cosmetic, and Investigational Dermatology study.

When and how to use it: While most in-office peels contain a 20 to 70 percent concentration of glycolic acid, you can add glycolic acid into your daily routine with low-dose products like LOral Paris Revitalift Derm Intensives 10% Pure Glycolic Acid Serum.

I use glycolic acid every single day, Dr. Talakoub says. You can apply it any time of day, following your cleansing routine and before applying a moisturizer. If you use it in the morning, follow up with SPF since glycolic acid can make skin more sensitive to the sun.

What it is: Vitamin C isn't just found in your morning glass of OJ. This free radical-neutralizing pro is one of the most effective topical antioxidant out there, according to Dr. Talakoub.

The benefits: Not only can it treat and prevent hyperpigmentation, photo-aging, and inflammation, according to UK researchers, applying it daily can also boost collagen production. Another perk: If you live in a metropolitan area where pollution wreaks havoc on your complexion, Vitamin C can help stave off damage, keeping your skin looking radiant.

When and how to use it: Apply it in the morning post-cleansing and follow up with SPF. Slathering on an antioxidant can make your skin slightly more sensitive to UV rays, so protecting yourself is a must!

What it is: Retinol is a derivative of vitamin A thats known for its anti-aging benefits.

The benefits: Unlike other anti-aging ingredients that may only target the top-most layer of skin, topical retinol improves the elasticity of the top, middle, and deepest layers of skin by stimulating collagen and elastin formation. Simply put: It will give you amazing results.

Retinol is the best anti-aging medicine because it speeds up the desquamationread: dead-cell-sheddingprocess and helps skin cells turn over faster, which regenerates the skin for a fresher complexion with less dullness and fine lines," Dr. Talakoub says.

When and how to use it: Retinol can be bought over the counter or with a prescription, however, prescription formulas work best, Dr. Talakoub says. There are many different retinol percentages on the market depending on your specific complexion goals. As a rule of thumb, cosmetic scientists recommend 0.4% concentrations for basic anti-aging benefits.

Once you find your ideal formula (either from your derm or OTC), add it into your nighttime routine. If its a serum, apply it after cleansing and before moisturizing; if its a moisturizer, use it as the last step of your evening regimen.

What it is: Ceramides are naturally occurring lipids in the skin that help form the skins moisture barrier. When you layer on synthetic ceramides (which are designed to mimic those natural ones) in the form of moisturizers and creams, you help strengthen and support your moisture barrier.

The benefits: While people with clear, healthy skin have over 340 ceramide species within their moisture barrier, those living with skin conditions like psoriasis, atopic dermatitis, acne, and dandruff have lower ceramide levels, which impact how well they can retain moisture, Dr. Talakoub explains. Applying a ceramide-rich skincare product can help combat that.

Other people can benefit from using the ingredient on the daily, too. Ceramides hold water in the skin, which leads to a more hydrated complexion, Dr. Talakoub says.

When and how to use it: Ceramides are almost always in moisturizers, as opposed to cleansers or toners, Dr. Talakoub says. So adding the superstar ingredient into your routine is as simple as finding a ceramide-rich moisturizer (like this one) and using it morning and night after cleansing and applying any essences, serums, or toners.

When adding these dermatologist-recommended ingredients into your routine, remember to take it slow. While they can absolutely be used daily, Dr. Talakoub points out that since glycolic acid and retinol increase the sloughing of the skin, theres a chance that they could lead to sensitivity. Ease them into your new routine, applying the ingredients every other day for the first three weeks, before upgrading to daily use.

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4 Skincare Ingredients A Top Derm Wants You To Use Daily - Women's Health

Antiaging Products and Services is Thriving Worldwide with Smart Key Players | Procter & Gamble, Avon, Allergan, GSK, Chanel, L’Oreal – Herald…

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TheAntiaging Products and Services Marketreport is a professional asset which offers the in depth analysis of the market and covers all the regions around the globe. For enhanced analysis, the report provides information regarding the global market into categorized form based on the parameters product, the technology used, consumer applications segment product, its end users, applications of the market.

TheGlobalAntiaging Products and ServicesMarketare expected to reach USD 859.11 billion by 2025, growing at aCAGR of 11.8%during the forecastperiod of 2019 to 2025

As the skin ages, it loses its natural elasticity and becomes thinner, more fragile and laxer, taking on a wrinkled appearance. In modern society, there is a great increase in the search for eternal youth and an insatiable appetite for methods which could turn back the clock. This has triggered an explosion in the antiaging industry. In addition, technological advances in medicine for the prevention and treatment of deadly diseases help to increase life expectancy.

Few of the major competitors currently working in the global Antiaging Products market areChanel SA, GlaxoSmithKline Plc, Allergan Inc, Neutrogena Corporation, Procter & Gamble, Elizabeth Arden Inc, Johnson & Johnson, Orlane SA, Revlon Inc, Novartis International AG, Unilever PLC, Avon Products Inc, Woodridge Labs Inc, Beiersdorf, LOreal, Merck & Company Inc, Christian Dior, Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, NeoStrata Company Inc, Bayer Schering Pharma AG, F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltdamong others.

Market Segmentation:

By Product(UV Absorbers, Anti-Wrinkle Products, Anti-Stretch Products, Others),

By Therapies And Services(Eye-Lid Surgery, Abdominoplasty, Hormone Replacement Therapy, Breast Augmentation, Liposuction, Sclerotherapy, Anti-Pigmentation Therapy, Hair Restoration Services, Chemical Peels.)

By End Users(Hospitals, Clinics, Home Health Care)

By Geography(North America, South America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Middle East and Africa)

Major Market Drivers and Restraints:

The aging process of the skin generally has two kinds of forms: natural aging and light aging. There are various factors which directly affect intrinsic aging such as ethnicity, anatomic variations, hormonal changes, extrinsic aging, drugs, smoking and sunlight exposure. These aging conditions can be treated by the antiaging products such as UV absorbers, anti-wrinkle products, anti-stretch products, others and services and therapies. For anti-aging, the cosmetics are commercially available products that can be used to improve the appearance of the skin. People are constantly demanding for more effective products that can essentially beautify the appearance and has resulted in augmented basic science research and product development in the cosmetics industry.

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Antiaging Products and Services is Thriving Worldwide with Smart Key Players | Procter & Gamble, Avon, Allergan, GSK, Chanel, L'Oreal - Herald...

Preventive care for a healthier workforce is vital to a successful business – BizTimes – Milwaukee Business News

Savvy employers know that the wellness of their employees is key to their organizations performance. Employees who are healthy are more productive and less likely to take sick days. Receiving recommended preventive care and making healthy lifestyle choices are two key steps in maintaining good health.

Preventive care can stop disease before it starts. An example is colorectal cancer screening. Colorectal cancer usually starts from small benign growths called polyps that over time can turn cancerous. A colonoscopy allows a physician to view the entire large intestine and remove any polyps and prevent colorectal cancer from developing.

An employee is more likely to stay current with their preventive care when under the guidance of a primary care provider. A primary care provider can recommend appropriate care for the employees age and health history, including:

Advanced technology and telehealth are emerging to support preventive care. One example is Advocate Aurora Healths online patient portal that allows patients to easily message their primary care and other providers, schedule appointments and see their test results.

The portal also generates friendly reminders to patients about scheduling preventive care. Women may receive reminders about scheduling their annual mammogram or others may receive reminders about recommended screenings and vaccines based on their age and health history.

E-visits and virtual visits are a convenient, cost-effective way to treat common ailments before they morph into something more serious and expensive to treat. Advocate Auroras telehealth options allow people to access prompt consultations and care from a health care provider online 24/7.

Employers are motivated to influence healthy behaviors to keep health care coverage affordable, while improving their employees health. Employers are adopting a wide range of strategies, from providing healthier food options in the cafeteria to more comprehensive interventions that encourage employees to adopt and sustain healthy lifestyles.

This may include partnering with a health organization that offers population health management and care management strategies used to better engage patients and help control health costs while improving the health of their employees.

One example is Kettle Moraine School Districts partnership with Advocate Aurora to make health care more affordable and accessible for its employees and their families. Through the health systemsEmployer SolutionsWell Priority insurance product, the district offers its teachers and other employees access to a near-site clinic to receive preventative care, vaccinations and screenings.

Using incentives that reward or penalize certain behaviors can encourage employee engagement in managing their health. Incentives can encourage employees to:

Especially during open enrollment, employers can help educate their employees so they fully understand their health insurance benefits and take advantage of their preventive care coverage.

Want to explore a proven way to improve your employees health and well-being and lower your medical costs? Visit Advocate Auroras Employer Solutions for a solution customized to your companys culture that could include employer clinics, wellness, occupational health, employee assistance programs (EAP), executive health programs and more.

Advocate Aurora Healthis one of the 10 largest not-for-profit, integrated health systems in the United States and a leading Midwest employer with more than 70,000 employees and the regions largest employed medical staff and home health organization. The system serves nearly 3 million patients annually in Illinois and Wisconsin.

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Preventive care for a healthier workforce is vital to a successful business - BizTimes - Milwaukee Business News

Blue Devil of the Week: Bringing a Human Touch to Healthy Choices – Duke Today

Name: Sally Neve

Position: Health Coach, LIVE FOR LIFE, Dukes employee wellness program

Years at Duke: 22 MEET SALLYS NOMINATOR

Sally Neve was nominated by LIVE FOR LIFE colleague Esther Granville, who wrote that Neve is dependable and knowledgeable, professional and detail-oriented. She receives high scores from the employees she coaches, particularly our pre-bariatric and post-bariatric participants.

What she does at Duke: Neve, a registered dietitian and nutritionist, knows plenty about the science of losing weight. But one of her important skills is her ability to connect with patients.

Many people Neve helps are part of the Pathways to Change Health Coaching program. This program assists obese Duke employees or dependents covered by Duke insurance who are preparing for bariatric surgery or are working on maintaining a healthy lifestyle after weight loss surgery.

Neve works with around 100 benefits-eligible participants in the year-long program, helping them craft and complete a unique roadmap for their journey to a healthier life.

While we may be the expert on some things, theyre the experts on themselves, their lives, what they need and how they can see change in themselves, Neve said.

Neve often works with people who have been unsuccessful in previous attempts to lose weight and reverse health concerns that accompany obesity, such as high blood pressure, diabetes and an increased risk of heart disease and stroke. Thats why Neve builds confidence through setting small personal goals such as being able to play with grandchildren or not needing an extender for airplane seatbelts.

We live in the real world, it can be tough, Neve said. But are there enough success stories to keep me going? Yes. Yes there are. Absolutely.

What she loves about Duke: With a client list thats drawn from all corners of Duke, Neve appreciates that her role puts her in contact with a wide variety of people.

Bus drivers or surgeons, I see everybody, Neve said. I like meeting people. I like that, with this job, its not a one-time thing where you do what you can do in an hour. I get to know these people.

Memorable days at work: Neve occasionally gets thank-you notes or cards from participants shes helped. But when someone comes back to the LIVE FOR LIFE clinic to see her in person, its especially moving.

I do get people who come back to say Hi, I want you to see me, I want you to see how you impacted my life, Neve said. Its very gratifying.

What she couldnt do her job without: Neve works in a shared office with six other LIVE FOR LIFE colleagues. She said the energetic, positive vibe in the workspace helps make work fun.

We like to talk about stuff other than work, Neve said. Hearing about co-workers families and other fun activities reminds us that were people instead of employees doing the same thing.

First ever job: As a first-year student at Rutgers University, Neve got a job in one of the dining halls. Among her first duties was washing dishes.

She ended up working at the dining hall all four years, eventually working her way up to the position of student manager, where she oversaw the roughly 100 students who had roles on the facilitys staff.

I think that helped teach me that you have to start on the bottom rung, be humble and understand that you dont know everything and you have to work your way up, Neve said.

Something most people dont know about her: Neve tries to put her faith to work by helping others. As part of this, she has participated in charity work in the Caribbean with Operation Mobilization, a Christian missionary group.

Closer to home, she takes time to visit with several senior citizens who live near her north Durham home, often bringing them meals and providing companionship.

Its not a formal thing, Neve said. I guess I do it because I see myself going there one day and not everybody has family thats there to see them through.

Is there a colleague at Duke who has an intriguing job or goes above and beyond to make a difference? Nominate that person for Blue Devil of the Week.

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Blue Devil of the Week: Bringing a Human Touch to Healthy Choices - Duke Today

Why You Need To Start Investing In Your Health – Thrive Global

Healthcare expenses can be difficult to manage at any age. More recently, millennials have been ditching the doctor and diagnosing any symptoms or illnesses they may have themselves. A shocking statistic that has emerged in a new study suggests that over45% of millennialsneglect their health issues mainly due to the costs of deductibles and copays. In a survey done by an insurance company over 80 percent of millennials found themselves to be in good health however less than 70 percent had a primary care physician compared to over 90 percent of generation X. Health care costs can actually become considerably higher if preventative maintenance or treatment of acute onset symptoms are not done as some conditions can progress to more serious ones. Heres why you need to start investing in your health.

Millennials as a whole are a physically healthier group of people when compared to generation X due to their age bracket, as such the group would have less chronic conditions which are developed over time. At the same time, Millennials tend to be more stressed, are less likely to eat healthy or have good sleeping habits. As such neglecting ones health will lead to a higher percentage of millennials to have chronic conditions.

Extend your life expectancy:

Most people would like to extend their life expectancy for various different reasons. One key component to achieving a longer life expectancy is to monitor your health and allow a healthcare professional to diagnose any symptoms that you may be having. Periodic visits every 6 months-1 year to check your physical health, performing blood work deemed necessary by your provider, and maintaining an overall healthy lifestyle can help avoid future costs of medications, surgeries, invasive procedures, and so on.

Prevent diseases and other illnesses:

Having routine checkups and examinations are crucial to maintaining good health. Medical advancements have allowed healthcare professionals to diagnose and treat conditions earlier to prevent progression.

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Why You Need To Start Investing In Your Health - Thrive Global

Scientists ask whether how old people feel is a health-indicating biomarker – Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Not long ago, Stephanie Heller, a New Jersey real estate agent, was leaving her gym after a workout when she noticed a woman in the parking lot struggling to bend down. "I don't know if she dropped something and had to pick it up, or if her shoe was untied," Heller said, but she eagerly bounded over to help. The woman blamed old age for her incapacity, explaining that she was 70. But Heller was 71.

"This woman felt every bit her age," she recalled. "I don't let age stop me. I think it's a mindset, really."

Each of us has a chronological age, the number we commemorate on birthdays. But some 50-, 60- and 70-year-olds look and feel youthful, while others do not. Scientists can measure these differences by looking at age-related biomarkers things such as skin elasticity, blood pressure, lung capacity and grip strength. People with a healthy lifestyle and living conditions and a fortunate genetic inheritance tend to score "younger" on these assessments and are said to have a lower "biological age."

But there's a much easier way to determine the shape people are in. It's called "subjective age."

When scientists ask, "How old do you feel, most of the time?" the answer tends to reflect the state of people's physical and mental health. "This simple question seems to be particularly powerful," says Antonio Terracciano, a professor of geriatrics at Florida State University College of Medicine in Tallahassee.

Scientists are finding that people who feel younger than their chronological age are typically healthier and more psychologically resilient than those who feel older. They perform better on memory tasks and are at lower risk of cognitive decline.

In a study published in 2018, a team of South Korean researchers scanned the brains of 68 healthy older adults and found that those who felt younger than their age had thicker brain matter and had endured less age-related deterioration. By contrast, people who feel older than their chronological age are more at risk for hospitalization, dementia and death.

"We have found many, many predictive associations," says Yannick Stephan, an assistant professor of health and aging psychology at the University of Montpellier in France who has been at the forefront of subjective age research.

If you're over 40, chances are you feel younger than your driver's license suggests. Some 80% of people do, according to Stephan. A small fraction of people fewer than 10% feel older. The discrepancy between felt and actual age increases with the years, Terracciano said. At age 50, people may feel about five years, or 10%, younger, but by the time they're 70, they may feel 15% or even 20% younger.

Most of the research on subjective age is based on associations between how old people feel and their health status, so it cannot establish cause and effect. It's not clear, for example, whether feeling younger actually makes people healthier, or people who are already healthy tend to feel younger.

For Francisca Mercado-Ruiz of South Plainfield, N.J., getting healthier transformed her internal sense of age. In the months leading up to her 49th birthday in December, she fulfilled her goal of losing 49 pounds. Before the weight loss, she had back and hip pain and felt like she was 65. Now, she's off her blood pressure medication, full of energy, has few aches and says she feels 35.

A few intriguing studies suggest that a youthful frame of mind can have a powerful effect. When scientists trick older people into feeling younger, most tend to become more capable, instantly. In a 2013 experiment by Stephan and colleagues, for example, people's grip strength significantly improved after they were told that they were stronger than most people their age. A Chinese study published in November 2018 in the journal Aging & Mental Health found that people performed better on a memory task after being told they were sharper than others their age.

Whether these findings translate into real-world situations, however, is uncertain. In a 2018 German study, investigators asked people in their 60s, 70s and early 80s how old they felt, then measured their walking speed in two settings. Participants walked 20 feet in the laboratory while being observed and timed. They also wore belts containing an accelerometer while out and about in their daily lives. Those who reported feeling younger tended to walk faster during the lab assessment. But feeling younger had no impact on their walking speed in real life. Instead, the researchers found, the ones who walked faster were those who walked the most.

What makes subjective age such a powerful predictor? Stephan believes that people possess intuitive information about their physical abilities, mental sharpness and emotional stability, all of which gets distilled into a single meaningful number.

But critics assert that for many, subjective age simply reflects cultural obsessions with youth. People cultivate a younger identity to fend off stereotypes of frailty and senility, said David Weiss, a life span psychologist at the University of Leipzig. "If old age weren't negatively valued, you wouldn't have the need to say that you feel younger," he said.

Indeed, in cultures where elders are respected for their wisdom and experience, people don't even understand the concept of subjective age, he said. When a graduate student of Weiss' did research in Jordan, the people he spoke with would say: "I'm 80. I don't know what you mean by 'How old do I feel?'"

Paradoxically, older people may hold warm feelings for their generation even as they feel distaste for people their age. In a 2012 experiment, Weiss and a colleague divided 104 people ages 65 to 88 into two groups. All had to complete five sentences, but members of one group were asked to describe people their age, while those in the other were asked about their generation.

The first group wrote things like "People of my age are afraid and worry about the future" and "People of my age often talk about their illnesses."

The generation-oriented group displayed a stronger sense of empowerment and meaning. Those members wrote, "People of my generation were the 68ers who founded a more civil society," a reference to student protest movements of the late 1960s, and "People of my generation should pass on their life experience to the youth."

One way to combat internalized ageism, Weiss suggests, is to identify with one's generation.

A similar feeling of shared purpose and belonging keeps Thomas W. Dortch Jr., 69, an Atlanta businessman and philanthropist, vibrant. People take him for being in his early 50s when they first meet, and he says he feels like he's in his early 40s.

As national chairman of the organization 100 Black Men of America, he nurtures the next generation of black leaders. "I've been focused all my life on being engaged and working to make sure that life is better for future generations," he said. "I can never be too tired to make a difference."

Whatever their stance on subjective age, experts agree that healthy habits, including eating well and exercising, can keep age-related deterioration at bay. Just as important is keeping a positive attitude. Internalized ageism can worsen not just people's outlook but their health. Experts urge that people recognize not just the losses associated with aging but also the significant gains.

As we age, we tend to become generally happier and more satisfied, said Dr. Tracey Gendron, a gerontologist at Virginia Commonwealth University, who questions the whole notion of subjective age research.

Let's say someone who is 60 says she feels 45, Gendron said. What does that actually mean? Clearly, she doesn't feel how she did 15 years earlier, because people constantly mature and change. So whose 45 does she feel?

In 2017, Gendron published a paper suggesting that the study of subjective age may be inherently unethical.

"I think we have to ask ourselves the question, are we feeding the larger narrative of aging as decline by asking that que
stion?" she said. "Older age is a time that we can actually look forward to. People really just enjoy themselves more and are at peace with who they are. I would love for everyone to say their age at every year and celebrate it."

Style on 11/04/2019

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Scientists ask whether how old people feel is a health-indicating biomarker - Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ali Fedotowsky Poses in Her Bra on Instagram to Send a Message About Being Healthy: Im So Dang Proud of This Body of Mine – Yahoo Lifestyle

While being confident in your body can feel good, having a healthy body can feel even better. Thats what former Bachelorette Ali Fedotowsky-Manno wants other moms to knowand shes sending that message in the most candid way.

On Monday, Fedotowsky-Manno took to Instagram to share a photo of herself sitting on the floor in her bra, revealing her stomach for her Instagram followers to see.

I exercised this morning, I ate healthy and nutritious meals, and I drank so much water that I definitely peed every hour on the hour, she wrote in her caption. Proud of myself and this incredible body of mine.

RELATED: Influencer Poses in Bra and Underwear to Show Off Stretch Marks in Body Transformation Post

The mom-of-two continued by saying she believes its important to discuss body image and health, and how important it is to prioritize wellbeing.

Ill always strive to be accepting of my body as long as Im taking care of it. Because at the end of the day it doesnt matter what my body looks like but it ABSOLUTELY matters how healthy my body is, she wrote. I want to be a good example to my kids, and I want to be a strong and healthy parent so I can live as long as possible to be here for them.

RELATED: This Mom's 2 Kids Busted Into the Bathroom While She Was on the ToiletAnd You Have to See Her Emotional Response

She finished off her message by writing, Today, Im so dang proud of this body of mine. And I vow to try to treat it better both physically and mentally for my children, and for my husband (because they need me), but most importantly for me.

Of course, the former Bachelorette has spoken out about self love and body acceptance before. Fedotowsky-Manno shared a similar post last week, opening up about how shes making an effort to accept all of her body parts, even the ones she criticizes most.

I think if we stop to think about our body parts and appreciate them for their true purpose and function rather than some arbitrary aesthetic that society put on them, she wrote. Then wed all be speaking to ourselves in a completely different way. Today, choose to appreciate and love your body for what it was made for. Giving you life and giving you the ability to enjoy this life.

RELATED: You Have to Read This Husband's Note About His Wife's Postpartum Loose Skin

As for Mondays post, Fedotowsky-Manno received over 61,000 likes and over 1,000 comments, most of which were in support of her empowering message. But some comments went beyond support, with users commenting on much her message inspired them to find a healthy lifestyle for their own bodies.

You are such an inspirational ray of sunshine to follow, Ali, wrote one user. Youve helped me in more ways than I can count and today is no different! I needed this! Another added, Love your honesty, willingness to show reality and bless all of us mamas out here with the message that our bodies are all beautiful. Thank you!!!

Clearly, Fedotowsky-Mannos message struck a chordheres to hoping she keeps the body positive insights coming.

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Ali Fedotowsky Poses in Her Bra on Instagram to Send a Message About Being Healthy: Im So Dang Proud of This Body of Mine - Yahoo Lifestyle

United Way Now Accepting Applications for Health Care Subsidy Program – Madison Commons

The United Way of Dane County is joining forces with UW Health and Quartz to offer local residents a subsidized health insurance premium through their joint program, HealthConnect, according to a press release from the organization.

The program may help tighten the healthcare gap in Dane County, as the 20192021 Community Health Needs Assessment identified inequities in nearly every category of health outcomes along lines of race, gender, age, and other identity-based populations.

Piloted in 2014, this program has protected nearly 2,500 Dane County individuals and families, covering nearly $912,140 in premiums, according to the release.

Enrollment in the program is relatively straightforward, requiring folks to be a US citizen living in Dane County, have an income within the stated range, and fit within acceptable criteria for federal assistance through the Affordable Care Act. Geared toward low-income folks, HealthConnect has provided preventative care such as screenings and vaccinations for over 80 percent of those previously or currently enrolled, providing public health benefits in addition to personal health outcomes.

Despite being ranked among the top 10 healthiest counties in Wisconsin and flaunting an extensive provider system, over 25,000 Dane County residents do not have health insurance, according to US Census data. This is particularly concerning when considering how disparities in access to affordable healthcare may correlate with disparities in health outcomes. For example, African Americans living in Wisconsin make the least on average in terms of median household income, and also experience higher incidence of heart disease, lower life expectancies, and higher infant mortality rates.

Wisconsin is also the only state with expanded eligibility for Medicaid coverage without receiving additional federal funding for the programs, the most extensive of which is BadgerCare Plus. Yet, when Governor Tony Evers announced his budget for the previous fiscal year, he proposed to broaden the BadgerCare Plus coverage of adults in order to reach the threshold needed to receive additional federal funding, which would have potentially offered another avenue of health care for low-income folks if passed. The Republican-controlled state legislature will most likely further prevent this funding from rolling in any time soon.

Regardless, the reception of HealthConnect has been positive in the past five years of the programs existence, with 2019 enrollees praising the subsidy for allowing them to worry less about their already-tight budgets, and provide themselves and their families with the medical care necessary to maintain a happy and healthy lifestyle.

HealthConnects application period runs from Nov. 1 to Dec. 15 and, for those eligible, may fully cover monthly premiums starting in January 2020. The application is available on the United Way of Dane County website.

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United Way Now Accepting Applications for Health Care Subsidy Program - Madison Commons

Lipoprotein "Little A" Can Cause More than a Little Damage to the Heart – Scientific American

Bernie Sanders is lucky. He needed heart artery stents at the age of 78, but others have had major cardiac issues at younger ages, such as Bob Harper, the fitness guru from The Biggest Loser, who was only 52 when an artery blockage caused him to suffer a heart attack, and he almost died. When it comes to heart disease, you can seem healthy one day and be gone the next. This discrepancy is why doctors and health care professionals work so hard to prevent it: the first warning can often be your last. For those patients who receive preventive cardiac care, many will have some risk factor that their doctor will find and counsel them on how to lower. Even with this precaution, however, 20 percent of heart attacks are still not preventable.

This 20 percent is what I worry about. As a cardiologist who has met too many patients after they needed resuscitation following their heart attack or cardiac arrest, I wanted to do more. I wanted to know what else we are missing, especially for women. When I and my colleagues opened Rush University Medical Centers Rush Heart Center for Women more than 15 years ago, I needed to learn what young women and men whose fathers or close relatives died or had a heart attack in their 40s were at risk for.

A former mentor of mine, the late Angelo Scanu of the University of Chicago, discovered that a particular cholesterol particle is associated with increased risk of coronary artery disease: lipoprotein(a), which is inherited and affects about 20 percent of people. Sometimes called Lp little a or Lp(a), this protein is a complex molecule that is similar to the more familiar low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol. They contain similar moleculesapolipoprotein(a), or apo(a), for Lp(A) and apolipoprotein B, or apoB, for LDL. Both can cause plaques in many of the arteries and aortic valve that can lead to heart attacks, strokes or sudden death. And even worse, Lp(a) is similar to the molecule fibrinogen, which causes blood clots.

So what can one do about Lp(a) when it is found to be elevated in people? Well, thats the problem. Studiesshow that plant-based diets can lower Lp(a) by a small percentage, but it may be too small of a difference to be meaningful. Certain individuals have an inherited gene, usually the Lp(a) intron gene, which causes them to have levels so dangerous that even an extremely healthy lifestyle cannot prevent a heart attack. There are somemedications that can lower Lp(a), but the currently available ones, such as niacin, which can do so by about 30 percent, dont actually make a difference in lessening events such as heart attacks or strokes. Underway studies are investigating whether new medications that can drop Lp(a) by as much as 80 percent will be enough to make a difference in those events. Until those studies are complete, doctors advise that the best way to decrease the risk from Lp(a) is to lower LDL cholesterol and take a small daily dose of aspirin.

Lp(a) is common in the general population, but there are racial differences that may explain why some people are at higher risk of heart disease. South Asians have the highest prevalence, with 35 percent of their population having Lp(a) greater than 50 milligrams per deciliter, followed by Africans at 30 percent. Asians have long been thought by doctors to be at low risk for the illness because East Asians, such as Chinese, Japanese and Koreans, have a lower possibility of experiencing coronary artery disease as compared with other ethnic groups.

But its not just South Asians; Filipino and Vietnamese people also have higher risk than the East Asians. Patients from these backgrounds should check with their doctor about the risks they may have for elevated Lp(a).

Alarmingly, the decline in mortality from cardiovascular disease that we saw from about 1980 to 2010 has stopped. Since 2010, the National Center for Health Statistics has reported an increase in cardiovascular-disease-related deaths. In the latest statistical update, from 2016, the leading cause of death from cardiovascular disease remains coronary artery disease, at 43.2 percent, followed by stroke, at 16.9 percent. More than 60 percent of such deaths is still from plaque buildup. Studies are continuing to see if lowering Lp(a) can decrease the risk of heart disease.

Until then, people should calculate their risk of having a cardiac event in the next 10 years. If the risk is greater than, or equal to, 7.5 percent, cholesterol-lowering drugs called statins can reduce the chance of heart attacks strokes and death. If the risk is between 5 percent and 7.5 percent, further testsincluding measuring Lp(a), finding coronary artery calcium using CT scans and determining family history of heart diseasemay need to be done to decide whether a patient requires statins. Additionally, the Lipoprotein(a) Foundation provides resources for those with inherited Lp(a) to better educate and empower themselves.

When I started my life as a doctor more than 35 years ago, I wanted to become a cardiologist to prevent heart attacks. Those with a family history of early heart disease not only need to get tested for the usual risk factors of high cholesterol, high blood pressure, diabetes and smoking but also must make sure they know if their Lp(a) is high and get their children tested as well.

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Lipoprotein "Little A" Can Cause More than a Little Damage to the Heart - Scientific American

Olivia Culpo Tells Herself This One Thing to Stay PositiveEven During a Breakup – Yahoo Lifestyle

This video is part of Health's My Mantra series. Follow along with new videos on our Instagram page and share your own words of wisdom using #MantraMonday.

No matter how good things may be going its easy to get caught up in the little annoyances of life. Even former Miss Universe Olivia Culpo knows this to be true, which is why she relies on a mantra to stay grounded: Anytime something is wrong you can think, okay, I trust that this is happening for my highest good, she explains to Health.

With a positive attitude, Culpo feels like she can turn a terrible or difficult situation into something to learn from. If you have that attitude with every hardship in life, youll always evolve and youll basically become a better version of yourself, she says.

RELATED: The Skincare Product Behind Olivia Culpos Baby Soft Skin Has a Near-Perfect Rating at Nordstrom

We caught up with Culpo at the grand opening for P.volve Studio in New York City at the very early time of 7 a.m., and she joked that she was currently using this mantra to look on the bright side of sleeping through her alarm that morning. I got extra sleep, she smiled.

But in all seriousness, Culpo says this phrase has been particularly helpful when it comes to relationshipsprofessional and personal. When things go badly in a relationship and it really hurts you personally, it does make you stronger, she says. I know thats kind of a clich, but it does make you learn so much more about yourself. It helps you realize what you do and dont want and that might be really difficult, but ultimately, you grow.

RELATED: 4 Health and Wellness Influencers Share the Mantras They Live By

Culpos other necessities for living a healthy lifestyle are drinking a lot of water, getting enough sleep, and sticking to a workout she loves. Because I travel so much, sometimes I dont sleep much, and I always notice a difference mentally and physically, she explains.

As for her favorite workout, Culpo is an ambassador for P.volve, a method that focuses on low-impact moves to strengthen your muscles. Its so great at helping people achieve strengthening, lengthening, toning, she says. Culpo and her two sisters all enjoy being able to stream the workout from home.

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Olivia Culpo Tells Herself This One Thing to Stay PositiveEven During a Breakup - Yahoo Lifestyle

Happiness is the X-factor in your health – PhillyVoice.com

Guys, if you're looking for that edge, that secret factor that can help you get healthy, here it is: Get happy.

Yes, there is a huge body of research that documents a link between healthiness and happiness. And there's even hope for the old farts known for their grumpiness and pessimism.

A Harvard Medical School reportsays that being young has little or no bearing on happiness. They cite a study where adults grew steadily happier as they moved into and through middle age. Happiness levels only decline slowly when health problems and other life problems emerged according to the study. Could it be that easy?

Now, for the record, the Harvard report adds that it's helps to lower your stress levels over a period of years and with a positive outlook and relaxation techniques, you could reduce your risk of health problems. Definitely a reasonable ask.

Looking deeper, an article by Caroline Wilmuthasserts that happiness may not cure what ails you, but it might help stop you from getting sick in the first place. And Kira Newman reportsscientific studies have been finding that happiness can make our hearts healthier, our immune systems stronger and, our lives longer. She also suggests that happiness can help combat stress.

Perhaps the most preeminent study, and one specifically focused on male behavior and the connection between our social relationships and happiness, is the 75-year-and-counting Harvard study of adult development.

Its researchers have tracked the lives of 724 men and now their children. According to study director Robert Waldinger, 75 years of research on male health can be boiled down into one simple point: "Good relationships keep us happier and healthier."

There you have it. A game plan that reinforces the importance of our social relationships and the positive impact that happiness can have on our health. Couple that with some healthy living and you've got a winning recipe.

But what comes first? Do we need to be happy to find the motivation to start living healthy? Can healthy behavior contribute to our happiness and get us into the cycle where the two become mutually reinforcing? Either way, the key is to foster the connection.

I consider myself a positive, glass-half-full guy. Trust me, after 40 years in management, I'm not naive to the ways of the world and the crap that we all deal with.

That said, I try to see for the positive side of things. When I look into the eyes of my 4-year-old grandson, I can't help but feel happy and believe that there's hope for our troubled world. A positive outlook works for me.

On the interplay of healthiness and happiness, my experience is that they absolutely go hand in hand. You may have experienced the same.

For me, a good workout is the perfect antidote tothe stress of daily life. I love to exercise in the morning, in part, because it sets the tone for my day, and gives me the feeling that I can handle whatever it brings.

As a single dad back in my 30s and 40s with 2 boys at home, diet and exercise enabled me to balance a busy career and fatherhood. It kept me upbeat and happy when I could have easily played the blame game and bemoaned my mistakes of the past.I'm not sure if it was the proximity of my fatherly experiences or my healthy lifestyle, but I was happy and feeling good.

How about you? What makes you happy? How can you bring happiness, and healthiness into your life? The literature is full of guidance. In an article in Psychology Today of the same name, psychotherapist Barton Goldsmith identified 10 Simple Ways to Find Happiness. Among my favorites on his list are being open to change and finding purpose.

My personal approach to finding happiness is to engage in a simple 4-step analysis:

Whatever method you use, remember that happiness and a positive outlook can go far in supporting your health. A little attention to this "X" Factor can go a long way.

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Happiness is the X-factor in your health - PhillyVoice.com

Dr. Kevin Most: More Uplifting This Week – WGN Radio – Chicago

Ok, so last week I hit a few topics that were not very uplifting or positive and it is Monday am, so this week we will try to be a bit more positive, even if the weather is not.

Coffee and tea in place of the soda I took away last week

We have discussed many times the health benefits from coffee.

1.) Two cups of coffee following a tough work out can decrease the pain by 50%2.) We know those who drink coffee thru the day have a decreased risk of Type 2 diabetes3.) Caffeine has been shown to decrease the risk of Alzheimers disease4.) 4 cups of coffee a day shows a decrease in depression5.) We have discussed the studies that show coffee can also decrease the risk of Parkinsons6.) We have discussed that coffee drinkers can lower their risk of heart disease7.) When discussing colon cancer we discussed that coffee helps decrease our risk of colon cancer

Wait theres more, a recent study that discusses the impact of coffee on brown fat in the body. The body has 2 types of fat, brown fat and white fat. Brown fat is found in humans and other mammals. It is thought mainly to be important in producing heat by burning sugar and fat, often in response to cold temperatures. As the activity of brown fat is increased, blood sugars are in better control as well as fats in the blood stream drop. Until this study, we had no idea how to stimulate this in humans until recently when they had individuals drink coffee and then looked at cell activity they noted it increased. They are not sure if it is the caffeine or some other ingredient. As they study this more, this may be used as a part of weight management as well diabetes management.

Coffee has some great health benefits

Not a coffee drinker? Enjoy Tea instead? Well a study out this year has shown that regular tea drinkers have healthier brains and cognitive function when compared to non-tea drinkers. This study looked at seniors over the age of 60. They had neuro testing as well as MRI screens. The results showed that individuals who consumed tea at least 4 times a week had brain testing that suggests that drinking tea regularly has a protective effect against age related decline in brain function.

We know from other studies that tea helps with weight loss, protects your bone health, has powerful antioxidants, improves mood, and reduces your risk of a heart attack or stroke. Green tea is the tea that appears to have the greatest benefit from a cardiovascular view and bone health. Also Tea for the most part has less caffeine than coffee.

So last week I took away soft drinks from you as a health related concern, we have now replaced it with Tea and coffee for its health related benefits.

Get a dog

Who cant find a dog story uplifting. We often think about adopting a dog as saving the dog, well we may have it backwards. We know that sedentary life style and loneliness are not good for our health and that that is really true for heart attack and stroke victims

We have discussed in the past that dogs help individuals minimize social isolation and actually improves physical activity and lowers blood pressure. Two studies that came out a couple of weeks ago showed that dog ownership is associated with longer life and better cardiovascular outcomes, especially in individuals who have suffered from a stroke or heart attack. This impact is noted by comparing the patients who owned a dog with those who did not, and even when compared to living alone with a dog or with a family with a dog the difference was substantial. They found that dog ownership was associated with a 24% decrease risk of death overall and a 33% decrease risk of death among heart attack survivors that live alone. These studies looked at over 3 million individuals

More studies need to be completed but the initial thought was the dog impacts their mood, is a motivator for physical activity so it works on the rehab of the heart, body and mind.

We also know the impact a dog can make with individuals suffering from PTSD, Depression, high blood pressure and cholesterol levels. They really are mans best friend.

We know the mental health benefits of taking care of somebody besides yourself, maybe dogs do as well

Hate those reading glasses, an eye drop may replace them soon.

Ok, how many of you hate reading glasses? Or get to a restaurant and not be able to read the menu because you forgot your glasses? An Israel based company is in the final stages of testing an eye drop that will treat far sightedness. Far sightedness or senior associated vision changes is the change that makes us have difficulty reading or seeing items closely, thus we need glasses that magnify print allowing us to read normally printed items.

The eye drop being developed has been shown to temporarily reverses this change and allows for improvement in distance correction. The drops have thus far shown exceptional safety and tolerability. The study which was just completed Phase 2 studies in research centers across the US was quite encouraging. Phase 2 studies look at dosing and effectiveness on a small and the next step would be start a Phase 3 study where the drug would be tested on a large number of people to again show effectiveness in a larger setting. The drops are made of well-known ingredients that have thus far been safe. The drug reverses its effects after a short period of time, results on the dosing will determine how long the medication works.

If this pans out, individuals may not need their reading glasses and many may hold off on surgery like Lasik surgery to help correct the problem. More to come in the next few years.

The importance of a hug in all phases of life

We know an Apple a day keeps the doctor away, how about a hug a day? We all know the feeling that one gets when a warm embrace occurs, they are comforting, mood elevating, stress relieving and actually lowers our blood pressure. It has been also shown to increase our immune system as well, so although we often want to stay away from someone who is ill, a hug may actually be safer and better for you than a handshake.

In children we know the importance physical contact and this was noted in a very painful way. Orphanages in Romania had children that were provided food but not held or hugged, when studied later in life these same children had significant developmental and emotional delays as well as smaller brains. Those studied showed that the physical contact with these infants impacted not only the childrens behavior later in life but also in the development of their cognitive skills.

We also know that with premature babies a light massage over the course of a week causes significant weight gain. It is felt that this action as well as professional cuddlers in the Neonatal Intensive Care Units lower stress in the new born infants and speeds their growth. Think of the crying baby, what action do we take? We pick them up and hug them, often the crying stops immediately and the child falls asleep. The contact of the hug puts one into comfort and a relaxed state of mind. The beauty of this action is that individual providing the hugging to these infants gets a large benefit as well

A Study was done that showed that people seeing images of other individuals hugging actually showed changes in their EEG, or brain activity readings.

So a Hug a day may increase your immune system, decrease your stress, decrease your pain levels

Lower your chance of Alzheimers

5.8 million individuals in the US from Alzheimers, including 200,000 under the age of 65. It is frustrating to all that we dont have a cure, dont have many medications that slow or halt the progression of the illness. So without treatment we look to prevention.

A Study came out recently that showed 5 specific lifestyle choices that were linked to a 60% reduction in the risk of Alzheimers, the study actually showed if you even did 4 of the 5 your risk is still decreased by 60%. The study actually came out of Rush University.. The researchers thought there would be some corre
lation between lifestyle factors and cognitive outcomes but were surprised by the actual impact.

What are they.1.) Make sure to get 150 minutes a week of moderate to vigorous activity2.) Do not smoke3.) Limit yourself to one drink a day4.) Do puzzles or other problem solving tasks daily5.) Eat a good diet- nuts, veggies, whole grains, seafood, poultry and olive oil. Avoid pastries, sweets, fried foods and red meat or other saturated fats.

Now everyone was not as stringent in the 9 year research, but they found over the time of the study that as an individual added a healthier lifestyle choice to whatever they were currently doing, their risk dropped over 20%.

The same day this study was published another came out in JAMA and showed that a healthy lifestyle can be equally protective and that study looked at over 200,000 individuals.

So a change in your lifestyle will certainly decrease your chance of dementia in the future.

Hopefully this week was more uplifting with positive stories.

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Dr. Kevin Most: More Uplifting This Week - WGN Radio - Chicago

Is Your Bed Hurting Your Health, Education Or Career? – Forbes

Are you having a hard time focusing today? If so, a lack of sleep might be to blame. Sleep deficiency can alter activity in the brain so people may have trouble making decisions, solving problems, be more easily distracted and less likely to catch mistakes, observes Dr. Raj Dasgupta, an assistant professor of clinical medicine at the University of Southern Californias Keck School of Medicine and a spokesman for the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. Although individual sleep needs vary, AASM recommends that adults get seven or more hours of nightly sleep for optimal health, productivity and daytime alertness, he adds.

Your mattress and pillows need to do more than look great.

Teens and children need even more hours, and all age groups can be impacted by sleep deprivation. Dasgupta notes, Cognitive and motor performance impairments from sleep deprivation are comparable to those induced by alcohol consumption at or above the legal limit. While texting and distracted driving are commonly-cited causes of car accidents involving teens, sleeplessness can play a role, too. It can also play a role in school performance. In fact, California just passed a law requiring public middle and high schools to start later, citing research that shows academic performance and attendance improve when older students get more sleep.

Bad beds to blame

If you or your kids dont have insomnia or other health issues that could be impacting sleep, one big factor in not getting enough of it could be your beds. If your mattresses and pillows are not supportive and comfortable, they can keep you from enjoying the restful night you need, points out Coronado, California-based chiropractor Dr. Chris Coulsby.

If you think of what a mattress does on its most basic level support the body while we sleep it makes sense that a worn-out mattress will not be able to do that job. The most common problem as a mattress ages and loses its firmness, he shares, is the proverbial hole that we fall into all night. The body reacts to the sunken position by engaging your core and hip flexor trying to keep you more level and can give rise to back pain in the morning or a restless night.The same can be true of a newer but overly soft mattress that doesnt properly support your body.

Children and teens also need supportive mattresses.

Pillows can be an issue, too, Coulsby says. Having a bad pillow will increase neck soreness, headaches and shoulder pain. It all comes down to support of the neck; too much or too little will ultimately lead to dysfunction.There isnt one right type of pillow for everyone, Coulsby and Dasgupta agree. Your body and sleeping position will determine whats best for you, the chiropractor adds. Basically your body needs neutral support of the head and neck, the rest is personal preference, he says. There isnt an optimal number of pillows either, he reports. See what gives you support without strain.

Choosing the right mattress and pillows

Firmness or softness mean different things to different people, notes Detroit-based interior designer Armina Kasprowicz. Take advantage of in-home trials, she advises; many mattress companies offer them now. Sleep on the mattress for a month and see how you feel. She also recommends educating yourself; mattress shopping is not necessarily a simple process. Ask yourself what the highlighted features will do for you, she advises.

You want to know whats inside a mattress, as well, she adds. Is it a foam, spring or hybrid model? If it is foam or hybrid, ask about density. It should be three pounds per cubic foot, she recommends. If the mattress has springs, ask about the kind of gauge, she suggests, adding, Pocket coils are best for motion isolation, and if they are between 12 and 15 gauge, it is a good sign of durability.

Quality doesnt come without costs, but considering how many hours youll spend on your mattress, the $2,000 to $3,000 youll invest for a highly-rated queen or king set can improve both your health and career. You should purchase a good quality mattress with natural fibers like cotton and wool covers, and high coil counts that will stand up to more wear and tear, Kasprowicz suggests. Pillows are important, too, she notes. The right pillow will have just as much of an impact on your quality of sleep as the mattress.

A quality mattress and pillows are investments in your health.

For children

Susan Wintersteen, a San Diego-based interior designer, started a nonprofit five years ago that remakes spaces for children facing cancer and other medical crises. Each mattress we specify, we consult with a vendor and explain the size and age of the child. We tend to do firmer mattresses for younger children and more medium firmness for older kids, she shares.

Wintersteen also looks for lower profile mattresses for small kids. As they are climbing in and out of bed, I dont want an extra-high profile where their distance to the floor is too great. I also look for something that can be encased in a waterproof cover. When it comes to pillows, she prefers hypoallergenic versions for her clients.

Low profile beds and mattresses are safer for small children.

Children spend more than a third of their young lives in bed, and Wintersteen would like to see its components be easier to shop for, she says. I find the industry somewhat cryptic. As a designer, I want to understand the products I am putting in a space. There is a perception that children dont need a good safe mattress; they can fall asleep on the floor. The reality is that bones are setting and forming, and for our medically fragile children, sleep is incredibly restorative. We want to play a big part in that healing.

Parting thoughts

Sleep is restorative and healing for humans of all ages. Even if youre not spending thousands on your mattress and pillow sets, spend the time to find mattresses and pillows that work for your body.As Dasgupta and AASM will tell you, Sufficient sleep is one of the three pillars of a healthy lifestyle. The other two are good nutrition and regular exercise, but you probably knew that already.

The right bed can be healing and restorative.

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Is Your Bed Hurting Your Health, Education Or Career? - Forbes