Dear Annie: Recovering alcoholic upset by parents response to him – oregonlive.com

Dear Annie: I am an alcoholic, in recovery for five months now. Recently, I asked my parents to help me because I have limited desire to do anything. I do not know why. I know that I should have more motivation. This blew up into a heated argument (again), and I now despise my parents. I have put them through a lot, I am the first to admit it, but when is it enough already? I never wanted to be this way, but I dont feel that I need to be reminded of my shortcomings every day. Maybe it would be easier if I just died. They have other sons to make them proud. -- Misunderstood Son

Dear Misunderstood: You are enough -- full stop. Keep reaching out to your parents seeking approval and youll come up empty-hearted. Take some space from them, especially as youre still in the early stages of recovery. If youve been struggling with this disease for years, it may take a while before your family is able to trust you again. That doesnt mean they dont love you.

Its phenomenal that you have five months of sobriety under your belt. That is a huge achievement. Consider incorporating therapy into your recovery. (There are even some counselors who specialize in sobriety.) Keep taking it one day at a time, and trust that the rest will fall into place as it should.

If you think you may harm yourself, I implore you to call 911 or the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255.

Dear Annie: This is in response to Kathy with a K, who wrote to you about not being able to find anyone quite her type to date. You told her it was one thing to have a type and another to have tunnel vision.

When I was in graduate school and too busy to be looking for a relationship, I met a guy one day, talked with him for a while, and thought, Hes OK, I guess, but hes definitely not my type.

This year we will celebrate our 50th wedding anniversary, and he is the love of my life. We share many interests, but each of us also enjoys activities in which the other is not involved. Is he perfect? No. But neither am I, and it takes a lot of tolerance and forgiveness and laughter from each of us to maintain a healthy marriage.

By the way, he is younger than I -- something I never considered a possibility for my ideal mate. I am glad I didnt let preconceived ideas rob me of a wonderful husband. -- Grateful Georgia Girl

Dear Grateful: Happy anniversary! Here's to going against type and winning.

Dear Annie: I have only one quarrel with the writer about National Heart Month. The general public -- including medical doctors -- is woefully uneducated about the benefits plant-based foods can have on heart health and general well-being. As Dr. Kim Williams, former president of the American College of Cardiology, points out, There are two kinds of cardiologists: vegans, and ones who havent read the data. I highly recommend your readers watch Forks Over Knives (featuring Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn) and James Camerons The Game Changers to get the real scoop on a healthy lifestyle. -- Heart-Healthy 30-Plus Years

Dear Heart Healthy: Both documentaries present very strong cases for plant-based diets' positive impacts on health, especially heart health.

Ask Me Anything: A Year of Advice From Dear Annie is out now! Annie Lanes debut book -- featuring favorite columns on love, friendship, family and etiquette -- is available as a paperback and e-book. Visit http://www.creatorspublishing.com for more information. Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators.com.

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Women in agriculture invited to home gardening and healthy lifestyle workshop – huntingdondailynews.com

Incorporating gardening, home preservation, and a healthy diet is not always easy, especially for women involved in agriculture with demands coming from every direction. The Penn State Extension Dairy Team is offering women a chance to relax, learn and network, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday, April 2, at the Bistro at the Village Green, 403 Village Way, Martinsburg.

Part of the continuing Women Rooted in Agriculture series, the meeting is free with lunch provided. Registration is required by March 25. This workshop will bring in Extension team expertise from dairy, nutrition and master gardener educators. Topics include garden planting, blueprints, pest management, canning techniques, home food preservation, healthy meals and more.

Many farm women are stressed with running a business, raising a family and school activities, most find it hard to plan healthy meals with limited time to prepare them. This event is about utilizing time to have healthy foods available to your family and reduce stress around mealtime, said Amber Yutzy, Penn State Extension dairy educator based in Huntingdon County.

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Make neighbourhoods green for heart health? The idea is taking root – Health24

Neighbourhoods filled with trees, grass and other flora not only improve the air and clear the mind they also can reduce heart disease risk, recent studies suggest.

Researchers say this may be more vital in low-income areas, whether that's an inner-city neighbourhood swallowed up by concrete and metal or a suburb surrounded by driveways and blacktop playgrounds.

Green spaces often provide room for physical activity, an essential element for a heart-healthy lifestyle. But just living in a neighbourhood dense with trees, bushes and other vegetation may reduce people's risk of having a heart attack, stroke and other cardiovascular events, according to a 2018 study published in the Journal of the American Heart Association. Those residents had lower stress levels and healthier blood vessel health both reducing the risk for developing cardiovascular diseases.

The connection between stress and cardiovascular health isn't as well understood as the connection between exercise and cardiovascular health, said Dr John Balmes, a professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. "But there's pretty good (research) showing that stress is not good for your cardiovascular system," he said.

Stress contributes to poor health habits, but it also is believed to trigger inflammation that may increase blood pressure and hormones that encourage fatty build-up along artery walls.

Green spaces also help ease the impact of climate change, said Balmes, a professor of environmental health at the University of California, Berkeley.

"Vegetation, and especially trees, are carbon sinks, so they take carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere. They also help deal with urban heat island effect, when it's actually hotter in one place than an adjacent park area with the same temperature because there's no shade," he said.

Green spaces soak up heat. In high-density urban areas, that can help reduce heat-related illnesses that place a strain on people with heart conditions, especially those who are elderly or can't afford air conditioning, Balmes said.

There's a racial and socioeconomic disparity when it comes to accessing green spaces, one that mirrors the discrepancies found among people with cardiovascular disease, said Rachel Banner, director of park access for the National Recreation and Park Association. Access to parks often is more difficult for low-income neighbourhoods and communities of colour.

"Or, they may have a park nearby, but the park may be an unsafe place or it may not be connected physically to that community there may be fences blocking the entrances," she said.

Banner's organisation is part of the "10-Minute Walk" campaign to ensure everyone has safe access to a quality park or green space close to home by 2050. That problem is not just an urban one, she said. Many suburban and rural communities across the country also lack green spaces.

Banner recounted visiting a small North Carolina town where kids at a summer camp were sent outside to play and quickly returned.

"There was not a tree in sight. It was just a big blacktop. It was really hot and the kids overheated," she said.

Researchers continue to study the link between green space and heart health, and often the connection with an area's socioeconomic level.

A 2016 study looking at low-income neighbourhoods in Florida's Miami-Dade County suggests poor neighbourhoods may gain the biggest cardiovascular health benefits from green spaces, said Scott Brown, the study's lead investigator and a research associate professor of public health sciences at the University of Miami's Miller School of Medicine.

In a related study published early this year, Brown and his colleagues found Medicare beneficiaries who lived in the greenest parts of Miami-Dade County were 25% less likely than those living in the least green neighbourhoods to have had a heart attack over a two-year span.

In other ongoing research, Brown is evaluating tree-planting's impacts on cardiovascular health among low-income residents.

He said while evidence shows cardiovascular benefits from greenery seem to be especially greater for low-income residents, "the common thread here is that for everyone we've identified, green space is associated with better health outcomes."

AHA News for HealthDay

Image credit: iStock

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Everyday is a holiday: Celebrating National Nutrition Month – College Heights Herald

March is deemed National Nutrition Month each year in hopes of encouraging healthier lifestyle choices. Making informed food choices and staying active are both key to maintaining a healthy lifestyle.

The theme for this years nutrition month is Eat Right, Bite by Bite. In celebration of the theme this month, here are three tips to keep in mind the next time you go grocery shopping.

Fiber does wonders for your body. A high-fiber diet lowers cholesterol levels, controls blood sugar levels, promotes weight loss and reduces your risk of deadly diseases. The best way to get your fiber is by eating more whole foods.

One way to achieve this is to eat more whole grains. A few easy ways to do this is to buy whole-wheat bread instead of white bread, whole-wheat pasta, or whole-grain cereals. Just look at the label on the box and try to find an item with five or more grams of fiber per serving.

Other foods that will work well in a students diet and are high in fiber include oatmeal, popcorn, beans, nuts, fruit and vegetables. These foods are not only tasty, but they improve how your body functions, which will help you feel better as a whole.

Just like your doctor says, eating your daily dose of fruits and veggies really is that important. Harvards School of Public Health explains that when you add more fruits and vegetables into your diet it can lower your blood pressure, reduce your risk for heart disease, prevent certain cancers, improve your digestion, and improve your blood sugar levels.

Why do these things matter? Well, aside from the fact that it helps you live a longer and healthier life, it also lowers your risk of developing type 2 diabetes and it helps you lose weight, as well as improving your vision.

There are lots of ways to add more fruits and veggies to your diet. If you dont like raw vegetables, you can coat them in olive oil and seasoning and bake them in the oven to add flavor and make them easier to eat. If you need something to spice up your daily fruit intake, add a nut butter for extra flavor and also for extra fiber.

The Department for Health and Human Services recommends limiting your daily dose of added sugars to 10% of your total diet or less each day. Added sugars are sugars that do not occur naturally. This type of sugar is found mostly in sugary drinks, dairy desserts, candy or pretty much any store bought dessert.

Sugar is a carbohydrate, which when consumed in excess leads to high blood sugar levels which affects your health negatively. Elevated blood sugar levels have been shown to increase your risk for weight gain, heart disease, type 2 diabetes and more. Added sugars add calories to your diet without any nutrients.

One way to start cutting back on added sugars is to substitute added sugars with natural sugars like honey, coconut sugar or maple syrup. Instead of asking for sugar-packed syrups in your latte, opt for a honey latte. Coconut sugar has a very similar taste to white sugar but it occurs naturally and has nutritional value. Maple syrup is a great substitute for sugar in baking recipes and is packed with magnesium and calcium.

Features reporter Maggie Thornton can be reached at 270-745-6291 and margaret.thornton882@topper.wku.edu. Follow Maggie on social media @maggie_thornton.

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Innovative Womens HealthCare serves clients in several counties – Grand Island Independent

HASTINGS Innovative Womens HealthCare is the newest clinic in Hastings, focusing on womens (and sometimes mens) health care to help people live the best life.

Owned and operated by Elizabeth and Jim Hardy, the clinic is located at 223 E 14th St, Suite 50.

Elizabeth Hardy earned a Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree in 1989 and a Master of Science degree as an Advanced Practice Registered Nurse in womens health in 1998. Both degrees are from University of Nebraska Medical Center.

She has additional training with the International Society for the Study of Womens Sexual Health, is certified in bio-identical hormone pellet therapy, and is a certified sexual assault nurse examiner.

While Hardy has had many years of experience in hospitals, professional education, public heath and administration, she said her main passion has always been the care of women in obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive health clinics.

She is a member of Nebraska Nurse Practitioners and Nurse Practitioners in Womens Health.

Im excited to work with adults at Innovative Womens HealthCare, Hardy said.

The Hardys have five children and she says she enjoys family time, boating and Tri-City Storm hockey.

Hardy said Innovative Womens HealthCare provides wellness and preventive care including annual exams, education, testing, and identification of treatment options.

Services offered include menopause symptom support, hormone therapy and care for women with bladder leakage and/or symptoms associated with sexual activity. Additional services are available for men including hormone level evaluation and testing for sexually transmitted infections.

Hardy said coming to a clinic can be uncomfortable for many people.

Its hard to disclose to clinic staff your specific needs and to ask for services that might feel personal or delicate, she said.

Hardy said Innovative Womens Health is unique as its environment is designed to be inviting and to minimize discomforts.

Our staff will put you at ease and offer professional health care, Hardy said. Ultimately, individuals can expect expert guidance in achieving optimum health with traditional and unique therapies.

She said the vision of Innovative Womens HealthCare is to provide a variety of health-oriented therapies addressing mind-body-spirit needs of the individuals we serve.

Our goal is to provide individualized quality health care to women and men regardless of race, ethnicity, religion, disability, family structure, sexual orientation or income while maintaining confidentiality and dignity of those served, Hardy said.

The clinics mission, she said, is to support women in every stage of life and level of wellness. Using patient goals, internal and external resources, and individualized health strategies harmonious with individual values, adults will be assisted in reaching maximum wellness.

Our services include womens wellness evaluation, preventive measures, symptom management, and treatment of selected conditions, she said.

Annual exams. Wellness physical exams include assessment and screening tests for early identification of health problems that can be treated and prevented.

Testing. Tests include vaginal pap exams, mammograms, blood chemistry, metabolic tests, bone density, exams related to weight gain, fatigue, insomnia, incontinence, problems of a sexual nature, and tests for sexually transmitted infections.

Education. Based on individual needs, education is designed to empower adults to actively participate in their health care. The clinic provides verbal, written, blogs, and websites for nutrition, physical activity, healthy lifestyle and weight loss.

Identification of treatment options. When a problem or diagnosis is identified, the clinic will discuss options available for treatment, including pros and cons and possible referrals so patients can make the most informed decision to move forward with a plan.

Menopause and perimenopause. The years leading up to the end of reproductive cycles often include symptoms that are undesirable and uncomfortable. The clinic offers options available that can help prevent, minimize or eliminate these symptoms.

Hormone therapy. Hormones direct how body systems function. For many people, hormones are not at optimal levels which leads to low energy, sleep issues, over eating, mood changes, weight changes, low bone density, hair loss, and low sex drive. Hormones are evaluated and options are explored in order to reach optimal levels for reproductive and thyroid hormones.

Sexual issues. There are many reasons adults experience low libido or pain with sexual experiences. It may be a new symptom or a long-term issue. The clinic can identify treatable causes and discuss options to improve or eliminate symptoms.

Incontinence. Many women experience urgency or leaking of urine with coughing, sneezing or laughing. Clinic staff can help identify what is causing incontinence and offer solutions to help.

The clinic also offers bio-identical hormone replacement therapy; Votiva skin treatment with microneedling radio frequency technology for wrinkles, scarring, stretch marks and sweating; Votiva FormaV radio frequency technology for female intimacy problems and incontinence; and Arterosil.

Hardy said people should visit her clinic because it provides personalized setting different from all-to-common rushed, stressful hubbub of many health care settings.

We also offer new alternatives from the traditional treatments often not requiring prescription or surgery, she said.

They accept many insurance companies, Every Woman Matters and cash pay. Some services are cash only.

We take the preventative approach to healing problems by identifying risks and symptoms in peoples lives to plan a course of action to decrease complications, often using natural solutions to avoid medication, Hardy said. Prescription are provided only when needed. Our philosophy is to support and promote total health prevention of diseases.

She said male and female hormone testing with blood work drawn in the clinic is very popular.

We offer many options like pellet insertion to optimize hormone levels and extend treatment intervals to improve quality of life and overall health, Hardy said. The clinic setup is designed to be cozy and comfortable with chandeliers in every room. People relax and are able to share difficult stories.

The clinic sees patients from a wide area including Custer, Valley, Nuckolls, Furnas and York counties.

When it comes to their future plans, Hardy said their desire is to maintain a personal, intimate setting, yet to expand to offer services in other communities.

We have had the most outstanding patients since our opening a year ago and want to thank them for their confidence, Hardy said. We have a portal on our website (www.womenshealthnebraska.com) for sharing, messaging and making appointments.

The clinics phone number is (402) 834-3973 and it has a Facebook page.

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Innovative Womens HealthCare serves clients in several counties - Grand Island Independent

The 5 best and worst states for retirement: Where to spend (or not spend) your golden years – cleveland.com

Do you plan to "retire in place" and stay in your current area, or are you interested in retiring in a different state? In either case, you may want to consult an annual study by WalletHub if retirement is imminent.

The study ranked all 50 states using 41 statistical metrics that were weighted and grouped into three major categories important to retirees: affordability, quality of life, and healthcare. You may be surprised at some of the states in both the best and worst categories. Let's start with the top five.

1. Florida You knew it had to be high on the list, didn't you? In terms of affordability, Florida came second, dropping from last year's first place and replaced by Alabama as the most affordable state. Florida also placed fifth in terms of quality of life, overcoming its 26th-ranked healthcare rating.

2. Colorado Rising from last year's third place overall, Colorado ranked fourth in healthcare while its quality of life came in fourth place, Affordability in the Centennial State jumped from 26thplace last year to seventeenth in 2020.

3. New Hampshire Not typically thought of as a retirement destination, New Hampshire has decent rankings across the board (sixth in healthcare, fourth in quality of life and 27thin affordability).

4. Utah Leaping into the top five retirement destinations from its sixth-place spot in 2019, Utah is the fifteenth most affordable state. It also placed seventeenth for healthcare, and eighteenth for quality of life.

5. Wyoming Another new entry in the five best states to retire, Wyoming wins its spot by ranking well for affordability (eleventh). Its quality of life and healthcare are also above average (twelfth and 33rd, respectively).

The next five desirable retirement states are, in order, Delaware, Virginia (losing its fifth-place ranking from 2019), Wisconsin, Idaho, and Iowa. Minnesota missed the top ten despite having number one rankings in both quality of life and healthcare, due to a dismal affordability ranking (46th), coming in sixteenth place overall. Let the freeRetirement Planner by MoneyTipshelp you calculate when you can retire without jeopardizing your lifestyle.

What about the five states with the worst rankings? In descending order, they are:

46. West Virginia While the Mountain State ranks above average in affordability (nineteenth), its overall score is pulled down by poor quality of life (fortieth) and the worst healthcare in the country (fiftieth).

47. New Jersey The Garden State is 23rdin healthcare and ranks below average in both quality of life and affordability at 31stand 48th, respectively.

48. Rhode Island Healthcare dropped seven places to 25thfrom last year's ranking, while quality of life and affordability remain poor at 38thand 47thplace, respectively.

49. New Mexico The Land of Enchantment has low scores in every category, coming in 37thfor affordability, 38thfor healthcare, and 45thfor quality of life.

50. Kentucky Kentucky ranks 48thin healthcare, 46thin quality of life and only 32ndin affordability, earning the Bluegrass State WalletHub's least desirable retirement state ranking for the third year in a row.

Was your state not mentioned? Check the fullstudy resultsfor further details on your state's rankings and a breakdown of all the statistical metrics and weightings.

Of course, each state has areas that don't fit the rest of the state profile.Individual citieswere ranked in a 2019 WalletHub study, with the inclusion of an "Activities" ranking and, while the results are similar, some differences emerge at the local level. For example, Louisiana fares poorly in the state rankings, but New Orleans ranks high in the city rankings (probably because, as you might expect, New Orleans ranks high for activities).

While the study is a useful baseline, it doesn't mean everyone should converge on Florida or flee Kentucky in his or her retirement years. Find an area that makes you happy and gives you a fulfilling and healthy lifestyle just know where the strong and weak points are in your chosen retirement state.

Remember that your credit score also influences how attractive a place may be to live.Some statesare more tolerable than others for consumers with bad credit. You can check your credit score and read your credit report for free within minutes byjoining MoneyTips.

This article was provided by our partners atmoneytips.com.

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Nutrition for the immune system – New Straits Times

Eat right to support the function of your immune system writes Susan Bowerman

WHEN you stop to think about how hard your immune system works for you, its nothing short of amazing.

Its an incredibly complex system that works nonstop to protect and defend your body from infection-- and its also a system that depends on good nutrition in order to

function properly.

As Malaysia does not experience the four seasons, residents are fortunate that they dont have to deal with sickness that tends to come with cold weather.

However, Malaysias weather can also be tricky; it can be hot and dry or wet and rainy. Studies have shown that

heat waves can reduce the bodys immune response to the flu, or affect vaccines and nutrition. This is why strengthening your immune system is so important. Your immune system is made up of your own personal army of soldiers.

They protect your body by identifying anything foreign, from a virus to a bacteria to a parasite, and then seeking it out and destroying it.

Our bodies depend on proper nutrients and a healthy lifestyle to keep our defenses strong.

Eat healthy to ensure your immune system works at its best.

GET IT RIGHT

Here are three nutrition tips to help you keep your immune system in tip-top shape:

Good Nutrition

1. Protein

Your immune system has some special forces in the form of white blood cells. These cells produce specialised proteins called antibodies that seek out and destroy invading viruses and bacteria. Since antibodies are proteins, you need adequate protein in the diet to ensure

youll be able to manufacture the antibodies your body needs.

Healthy protein foods, like fish, poultry, lean meats, soy foods and low-fat dairy products provide the building blocks that your body needs to make these specialised proteins.

2. Fruit and Vegetables

Fruit and vegetables are key players in immune system health because theyre great sources of vitamins A and C, as well as phytonutrients. Vitamin C encourages your body to produce antibodies, and vitamin A supports the health of your skin and tissues of your digestive tract and respiratory system. All of these act as first lines of prevention against foreign invaders.

Many of the phytonutrients found in fruits and veggies act as antioxidants, which can help reduce oxidative stress on the body that may weaken your bodys ability to

fight of illness.

3. Good Bacteria

Keeping your digestive system healthy is also important in supporting immune function. Your digestive tract is home to trillions of bacteria that have numerous functions in promoting health. Some strains of bacteria help you break down the fibre in your food, others consume intestinal gas, while others produce vitamins like vitamin K and vitamin B12.

When your system is populated with these good bacteria, they also serve to crowd out the potentially harmful bacteria that might enter your digestive tract. Some of the best sources of these friendly bacteria are cultured dairy products, like yogurt and kefir.

As you know, whenever youre trying something new, make sure to check with your doctor or other professional about the amount thats right for you. Some people suffer medical conditions that affect the operation of their immune systems. Diet alone wont improve the function of a compromised immune system.

But for healthy people, eating well can keep your immune system healthy and strong.

To help your body in the fight against foreign invaders, your internal army needs the best nutrition possible. So call in the troops!

Consume balanced meals.

*The writer is senior director, worldwide nutrition, education and training for Herbalife Nutrition.

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Whitewater, Red Mountain Ski Resorts adjust in response to COVID-19 – The Nelson Daily

Whitewater Ski Resort is not following drastic measures of closing operations to combat COVID-19 outbreak that some companies in BC are choosing.

Instead the local ski hill is implementing new policies and procedures staff believe will curb the spread of the novel coronavirus while allowing customers to continue to enjoy a healthy lifestyle on the mountain.

We released the information linkFriday the changes and adjustments were making at the resort, said Peter Lonergan, Sales and Marketing Director at Whitewater Ski Resort.

We will continue to be in talks with the Canada West Ski Areas Association(CWSAA) as well as of course closely monitoring the situation here in Canada but no official plans to change anything else at this time.

Changes at Whitewater, which include increased cleaning, reduced lodge capacity, no longer offering a public shuttle the kids shuttle for spring break camps will continue to operate and avoiding accepting cash transactions came prior to some ski hills in BC deciding to close down operations.

Vail Resorts, owner/operator of Whistler/Blackcomb, will cease operations from Sunday, March 15 to Sunday, March 22.

Two other ski resorts, SilverStar Mountain Resort near Vernon will close March 15-22 while Cypress Mountain in West Vancouver will close at 4 p.m. Sunday until further notice.

We urge everyone in the Whitewater community to be vigilant of their own health and conscientious of others, the release on the Whitewater website said.

If you are experiencing any symptoms concurrent with COVID-19, please do not put others at risk by entering public areas. If you are at-risk individual of contracting the virus, please carefully consider whether you visit Whitewater for the rest of the season.

Whitewater Ski Resort is a resort nestled in the Selkirk Mountainssituated in Ymir bowl, beneath the 2,400-metre-high Ymir Mountain,located a 25-minute drive from Nelson in southern British Columbia.

"We appreciate your support in limiting the spread of this virus, and we hope that by taking these steps, we are able to reduce its impacts on our community, while also enabling everyone to stay active and enjoy the mountain," the Whitewater website release said.

Red Mountain in Rossland, other than cancelling some larger events to conform with Public Health recommendations, will also continue operations during the upcoming spring break holiday.

"The good news is that we are open and continue to operate as usual, while taking all the additional precautions recommended by the health authorities including increased cleaning and sanitization of all public areas, signage, and hygiene procedures around handwashing, the release on the Red Mountain Resort website said.

"While we are disappointed to cancel these events, the safety and health of our guests and employees are very important to us. We will continue to monitor this changing situation on a daily basis and will update as required."

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Whitewater, Red Mountain Ski Resorts adjust in response to COVID-19 - The Nelson Daily

State and local officials urge good, basic health practices as they track COVID-19 – Morgan Messenger

by Kate Evans & Trish Rudder

As the number of cases of the novel coronavirus COVID-19 grows in the United States, local and state officials are reviewing their plans for dealing with a possible outbreak of the virus.

Dr. Terence Reidy, Health Officer for the Berkeley-Morgan Health Department, said local public health officials are looking to the Bureau for Public Health and the CDC for guidelines about the virus.

While the biology of the infection is similar in different communities, the resources and behaviors are not the same, Dr. Reidy said.

He emphasized the importance of people relying on accurate sources of information about COVID-19.

Gossip and rumor control are major problems that can lead to misunderstanding and dangerous reactions to situations, he said. The West Virginia State hotline will be another resource people can use to check the accuracy of information they hear or read about the COVID-19 infection.

The hotline number is 1-800-887-4304.

Morgan County Schools

Morgan County Schools Superintendent Kristen Tuttle said last Friday that the school system is monitoring the status of the coronavirus and is following the guidance of local and state health authorities. The school safety team met last Wednesday. The school district has a pandemic plan in place, which they reviewed. Everyday theyre getting more information, which is similar to a flu prevention approach.

Tuttle said they just put a message out to remind staff and students to wash hands with soap and water, not to share food and drink and to cover coughs and sneezes. Theyre still encouraging hand-washing often, proper hygiene and coughing into elbows and shoulders.

Exercise, a good diet and a healthy lifestyle are also recommended. Custodians are being encouraged to disinfect high-traffic areas with special care.

While Berkeley Springs High School and Paw Paw Schools grades 9-12 have Chromebooks, some students at other schools have issues with spotty, inconsistent, slow or no internet access at home for online classroom lessons if schools would have to close long-term with an outbreak, Tuttle said.

State School Superintendent Clayton Burch said the Department of Education is in ongoing contact with all 55 counties preparing for a potential COVID-19 outbreak.

Districts are reviewing their infectious disease outbreak and emergency communications plans. Administrators are reminded to be diligent in cleaning facilities and to advise families to keep sick children home, as they have throughout the seasonal flu period.

A state Department of Education webpage about the coronavirus has been established for families at wvde.us/covid19.

War Memorial Hospital

Dr. Gerald Bechamps, Vice-President of Medical Affairs for War Memorial Hospital and Hampshire Memorial Hospital, said there are no visitor limitations at this time at War Memorial Hospital.

Protocols are in place for care of patients with suspected coronavirus or other infectious disease at their hospitals and outpatient clinics. An infectious disease nurse practitioner monitors both West Virginia hospitals.

Isolation rooms are available for infectious disease patients at the hospitals. The rooms have negative air pressure that wont let air into the rest of the hospital ventilation system, Bechamps noted.

In West Virginia, members of the public with general questions about the COVID-19 coronavirus can call a 24/7 hotline at 1-800-887-4304.

Cases worldwide, in U.S.

As of noon Monday, March 9 there were 105,586 confirmed cases of the coronavirus globally with 80,859 of the cases and 3,100 deaths in China, according to the World Health Organization.

Outside of China the virus has spread to 101 countries, territories and areas with 24,727 laboratory-confirmed cases and 484 deaths.

John Hopkins website had 62,392 people as being recovered from the coronavirus worldwide.

The Centers For Disease Control (CDC) listed 423 cases and 19 deaths with 35 states including the District of Columbia reporting cases of the virus as of Monday afternoon.

Case numbers change by the hour and lag behind on some official sites.

Maryland Governor Larry Hogan declared a state of emergency on Friday, March 6 after announcing three confirmed cases of the coronavirus in Montgomery County. Two more cases have emerged since. Pennsylvania has six reported cases.

Currently West Virginia has no cases of the virus. As of March 9, five people in the state have been tested for coronavirus. Two of them have tested negative. Virginia has one to five confirmed cases.

West Virginia Governor Jim Justice announced a state of preparedness on Thursday, March 5 after meeting with key members of his administration and state medical experts.

Justice said proper hand-washing and good hygiene was critical and key to limiting the spread of any virus or disease.

West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) Director Bill Crouch said their agency is closely monitoring this outbreak and working with federal, state and local public health partners to inform, prepare and respond to localized COVID-19 outbreaks. DHHR set up the website http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov.

The DHHR announced it is now able to test for the virus in the state.

The West Virginia National Guard is prepared to assist across the state with medical isolation, decontamination and supply deliveries to medical facilities and communities.

Symptoms

Common symptoms of COVID-19 coronavirus infection include respiratory symptoms like a runny nose, sore throat, cough and fever along with shortness of breath and breathing difficulties.

In more severe cases, infection can cause pneumonia, severe acute respiratory syndrome, kidney failure and even death, said World Health Organization (WHO) officials.

WHO noted that 80% of the cases of the COVID-19 coronavirus have been mild with cold-like or flu-like symptoms.

Some more vulnerable

Older people and those with pre-existing conditions like heart disease or diabetes seem to be more vulnerable to developing severe illness from the virus. People with the COVID-19 disease may become ill anywhere from two days to 14 days after exposure to the virus.

Because the virus, like many illnesses, sickens older people more severely, local agencies that work with the elderly or infirm are paying attention to virus prevention.

Officials with Stonerise Healthcare, which owns Berkeley Springs nursing home facility, said the 120-bed skilled nursing center are following CDC guidelines as the virus moves across communities.

Our staff are well trained in managing a variety of infections and most of the procedures we use within Stonerise facilities are included in the recommendations from the CDC to best manage the new Coronavirus (COVID-19) concern.

We are taking every step possible to keep our staff and residents safe including monitoring staff and visitors for following hand washing procedures and asking visitors who are sick to visit their loved ones on a different day. We are staying in close contact with our local and state health departments and following ongoing guidance from the CDC, said Kristin Anderson, spokeswoman for Stonerise.

Using guidelines from the Bureau of Senior Services, the Senior Life Services of Morgan County is very proactive in alerting its clients about staying well in the face of the coronavirus outbreak.

Executive director Tammy Kees said handouts and flyers at the Senior Center from the West Virginia Health and Human Resources Bureau for Public Health tell clients dont shake hands, and instead bump knuckles or nod to each other, are the safe ways to greet each other.

The Center also provides liquid sanitizer on each table along with napkins and a box of tissues.

The seniors know if they need to cough or sneeze, they should now grab a napkin or tissues and cough or sneeze in it and immediately through it away. Sneezing or coughing in the fron
t of your elbow is no longer recommended since germs can last days, it was determined by health officials.

Were their family, Kees said of many seniors who use the facility. Seniors have been instructed to stay home if they have flu-like symptoms or a fever.

Kees said seniors are more respectful and knowledgeable than younger folks. They watch the news on television instead of social media and are informed about the virus.

Kees said she and Starting Points executive director Audrey Morris have compared handouts and were both on the same page on how to alert their clients with the best ways to stay well and safe from contracting this or any virus.

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State and local officials urge good, basic health practices as they track COVID-19 - Morgan Messenger

Taking it one day at a time – The Times and Democrat

Dear Annie: This is in response to "Kathy with a K," who wrote to you about not being able to find anyone quite her type to date. You told her it was one thing to have a type and another to have tunnel vision.

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When I was in graduate school and too busy to be looking for a relationship, I met a guy one day, talked with him for a while, and thought, "He's OK, I guess, but he's definitely not my type."

This year we will celebrate our 50th wedding anniversary, and he is the love of my life. We share many interests, but each of us also enjoys activities in which the other is not involved. Is he perfect? No. But neither am I, and it takes a lot of tolerance and forgiveness and laughter from each of us to maintain a healthy marriage.

By the way, he is younger than I -- something I never considered a possibility for my "ideal" mate. I am glad I didn't let preconceived ideas rob me of a wonderful husband. -- Grateful Georgia Girl

Dear Grateful: Happy anniversary! Here's to going against type and winning.

Dear Annie: I have only one quarrel with the writer about National Heart Month. The general public -- including medical doctors -- is woefully uneducated about the benefits plant-based foods can have on heart health and general well-being. As Dr. Kim Williams, former president of the American College of Cardiology, points out, "There are two kinds of cardiologists: vegans, and ones who haven't read the data." I highly recommend your readers watch "Forks Over Knives" (featuring Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn) and James Cameron's "The Game Changers" to get the real scoop on a healthy lifestyle. -- Heart-Healthy 30-Plus Years

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Taking it one day at a time - The Times and Democrat

Lifestyle: The Health & Wellness Connection – Chicago Defender

The word lifestyle refers to the way you live. A healthy lifestyle is a way of living that helps you prevent illness and improve wellness. They are in your control and you may be able to reduce your risk of many significant health problems. Adopting healthier lifestyle choices can prevent or control many of the nations leading causes of death. Many of these deaths are attributed to smoking, physical INACTIVITY, poor diet (which leads to high blood pressure, high cholesterol, Type II Diabetes, and heart disease) or alcohol abuse.

Healthy lifestyle choices should be made within the context of individual and biological factors, and your home and work environments. You are an individual and need an individualized plan of action to achieve your health and fitness goals.

When you define wellness, your definition will reflect your personal experiences and perspectives. For example, exercising to be free of disease and crippling conditions, or substituting water for sweetened beverages to keep from gaining weight. To have a more positive viewpoint, contemporary approaches to wellness focuses on balancing the many aspects, or dimensions, of life to promote health. Outcomes may be similar, but the mindset should be about pursuing better health rather than avoiding illness. That brings us back to a lifestyle choice. Remember; a lifestyle choice is a personal and conscious decision to perform a behavior that may increase or decrease the risk of injury or disease.

Choices bring about behavior change and consistency. Life happens, stress comes and goes, and you can get off schedule. When we choose to live a healthy lifestyle, we learn to accept changes and adapt. You learn to enjoy life when you are on vacation because you have developed the habits to live a healthy lifestyle no matter where you are. Fitness and wellness are more than the way you look or the food you eat. They are about:

There is strong evidence to suggest that it is never too late for healthy lifestyle choices to affect your physical, emotional, and mental health positively. Wellness is not an all-or-nothing situation but rather, is dynamic and changing. At any time, you may find some parts to be more evident than others in your life. By adopting healthy behaviors, you can have greater balance and, therefore, a greater sense of well-being and health. Health and Wellness are both lifestyle choices.

-Shera Strange, Contributing Writer

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Lifestyle: The Health & Wellness Connection - Chicago Defender

Live Well Festival to emphasise the importance of a healthy lifestyle – Central Coast Community News

March 13, 2020

Central Coast Councils second annual Live Well Festival promises to be bigger and better than last years inaugural event, as it throws the spotlight on the benefits and importance of a healthy lifestyle.

This year there will be an extended program, with the inclusion of a week of activities leading into the main event day on Sunday, April 5.Council Section Manager Place Activation, Cobey Linsley, said the event was not only a fantastic opportunity for businesses in the health industry to come together and network, but also a chance for people to embrace the healthy lifestyle of the Central Coast.Our main event day program will focus on four key health HUBS Eat, Move, Think and Love Your Earth, Linsley said.Each HUB will be represented by local businesses and guest speakers who will bring a wealth of knowledge and experience.Speakers will be delivering health focused talks and we expect community members to walk away inspired and equipped with great new information to make positive changes to their lifestyle.The main event will be held on the Gosford Waterfront and Central Coast Stadium.Mayor, Lisa Matthews, said she was delighted that the Central Coast had rolled out the welcome mat for the Live Well initiative, which runs into World Health Day.As a Council, we aim to educate and inspire our community members and visitors to our region to be their best selves, Cr Matthews said.Our extended and enhanced Live Well Festival is all about promoting health and wellbeing and making the most of our fantastic lifestyle here on the Coast.

Source:Media release, Mar 2Central Coast Council

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Live Well Festival to emphasise the importance of a healthy lifestyle - Central Coast Community News

March named as Nutrition Month | Health – The Oakland Press

Michigan residents are asked to choose nutritious foods and get enough physical activity as part of National Nutrition Month.

March was declared Nutrition Month by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. Each March, the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics focuses attention on healthy eating through National Nutrition Month. This years theme is Eat Right, Bite by Bite, and promotes eating a variety of nutritious foods each day, planning and creating healthy meals each week and the benefits of consulting a registered dietitian nutritionist.

Good nutrition is an important part of leading a healthy lifestyle, said Dr. Joneigh Khaldun, chief medical executive and chief deputy for health at MDHHS. Combined with physical activity, diet can help people reach and maintain a healthy weight, reduce their risk of chronic diseases and improve their overall health.

Unhealthy eating habits have contributed to the obesity epidemic in the United States in about one-third of adults and about 17 percent of children and adolescents aged 2 to 19. Even for people at a healthy weight, a poor diet is associated with health risks like heart disease, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, osteoporosis and certain types of cancer.

Dietitian nutritionists can provide recipe ideas, cooking tips and other advice for issues like cooking dinner or meal preparation for picky eaters.

Michigan residents are urged to follow these tips throughout Nutrition Month and the rest of the year:

Eat a variety of nutritious foods each day by including healthy food from all food groups and hydrate with water instead of sugary drinks.

Read food labels to find out more about the foods you eat.

Plan meals each week by choosing healthy recipes to make and using a grocery list to shop for healthy foods.

Learn skills to create meals and reduce food waste by turning food waste into meals.

For more information about healthy eating and lifestyle, visit eatright.org.

To learn more about WIC or to find an agency near you, call 211 or visit michigan.gov/WIC.

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March named as Nutrition Month | Health - The Oakland Press

The longer you follow a healthier lifestyle in middle-age the lower your risk of death later in life – Yahoo News

New US research has found that the longer an individual follows a heart healthy lifestyle during middle age, such as not smoking, eating a health diet, and exercising regularly, the less likely they are to develop diseases such as diabetes and heart disease and the lower their risk of death.

Carried out by researchers from Boston University School of Medicine, the new study looked at 1,445 middle-aged adults with an average age of 60 and gave each a score for their cardiovascular health based on smoking status, diet, physical activity, resting blood pressure levels, body mass index, fasting blood glucose levels and cholesterol levels.

They were then followed for a period of around 16 years.

The researchers found that for every five-year period that participants had intermediate or ideal cardiovascular health, they were 14 percent less likely to die, compared to those individuals in poor cardiovascular health.

The findings, which are published online in the journal JAMA Cardiology, also showed that these participants also had a 33 percent reduced risk of developing high blood pressure and around a 25 percent reduced risk of developing diabetes, chronic kidney disease and cardiovascular disease.

Although it is already known that certain unhealthy lifestyle behaviors, smoking for instance, are linked with a higher risk of disease and death, the researchers say that until now, no studies had looked at how maintaining a healthy lifestyle over a period of time could be linked with the risk of disease and mortality.

They now say that living in better cardiovascular health for longer during middle age could help lower risk of chronic disease or death later in life.

"Our results indicate that living a longer period of time in adulthood with better cardiovascular health may be potentially beneficial, regardless of age. Overall, our findings underscore the importance of promoting healthy behaviors throughout the life-course," explained corresponding author Vanessa Xanthakis, Ph.D., FAHA.

"On the community-level, this will overall help reduce morbidity and mortality associated with diseases such as hypertension, diabetes, chronic kidney disease and death during late adulthood," the researchers add.

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The longer you follow a healthier lifestyle in middle-age the lower your risk of death later in life - Yahoo News

Dr. Oz on coronavirus: Why it may help to meditate, and other advice to stay healthy – CNBC

TV host Dr. Oz, aka, Mehmet Oz, has some advice when it comes to protecting yourself amid the growing coronavirus outbreak.

Some of the heart surgeon'srecommendations echo the CDC's prevention guidelines like washing hands with soap and water for at least 20 seconds, cleaning and disinfecting frequently touched objects and surfaces and avoiding close contact with people who are sick.

But Oz also recommends overall wellness measures to stay healthy: get more than seven hours of sleep per night, exercise for 30 minutes every other day and meditate daily, he saidOn "The Dr. Oz Show" on March 6.

While there is no science directly linking lifestyle choices and enhanced immunity, a healthy lifestyle is always a good idea.

There is evidence that adequate sleep supports the immune system, and that lack of sleep can make you more susceptible to colds or viruses, according to the Mayo Clinic.

It's unclear whether or how regular exercises effects the immune system, but it does reduce stress hormones (some kinds of stress can make you more susceptible to illness), keep your heart healthy and it can increase energy levels.

As for meditation affecting the immune response, there's no definitive science. But at least onestudy, which looked at 20 studies across nearly a 50-year period, shows potential: "Mindfulness meditation likely reduces inflammation and improves health at least in part by relaxing the 'fight-or-flight' stress response, which produces proteins in the body that can drive inflammation,"Dr. George Slavich, Director of the UCLA Laboratory for Stress Assessment, who conducted the 2016 study tells CNBC Make It.

However Slavich says more research is needed for a clearer understanding of the findings and to "replicate these effects and to determine how they occur."

Oz also recommends adding food like vegetables and fruits to your diet. And research shows that some vegetables, like spinach and red peppers, as well as fruits like blueberries and kiwi, may help strengthen the immune system.

However, at least one recommendation that Oz made may be inaccurate. Oz advised using a humidifier or HEPA filter to improve air quality and decrease the number of virus particles in the air. But "[y]our typical HEPA filter is not going to be able to remove coronavirus from the air," Erin Sorrell, an assistant professor of microbiology and a member of Georgetown's Center for Global Health Science and Security, told Buzzfeed News, explaining that the virus is too small.

A spokesperson for Oz told CNBC Make It "while air filtration can't eliminate viruses, it is a recommended as a tool to improve air quality and reduce the risk of coronavirus transmission," citing a New York Times op-ed by Joseph Allenan associate professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The Times piece argues that "proper ventilation, filtration and humidity reduce the spread of pathogens like the new coronavirus." The spokesperson also noted certain HEPA filters are part the CDC's coronavirus protocol for filtering air from isolation rooms.

This story has been updated to include comments from a spokesperson for Oz.

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Dr. Oz on coronavirus: Why it may help to meditate, and other advice to stay healthy - CNBC

Connecting with NC Cooperative Extension – Asheboro Courier Tribune

What is NC Cooperative Extension?

We are more than cows and corn.

NC Cooperative Extension is Randolphs Countys link to the two land-grant universities in North Carolina (NC State and NC A&T). Land-grant universities have three parts to their mission: education, research and extension. NC Cooperative Extension extends research-based knowledge to all North Carolinians, helping them transform science into everyday solutions that improve their lives and grow our state.

Why Cooperative Extension?

Essential to extensions mission to grow the state is our collaboration with the US Department of Agricultures National Institute of Food and Agriculture (USDA-NIFA), NC State University, NC A&T State University and local (county) governments across the state. This strategic partnership and cooperation are why it is called Cooperative Extension.

Statewide, our funding is 14% federal, 36% state, 25% county and 25% other (grants, contracts donations etc). It is truly a cooperative effort to offer our services to North Carolina residents.

History of success: Then and now

In 1909, information was shared through a Boys Corn Club (the beginnings of 4-H) in Ashokie, NC, that adding nutrients to your cornfield by spreading manure could increase the corn yield. A young boy took that information when the average yield was 18 bushels per acre and increased his yield to 196 bushels per acre in two years. NC Cooperative Extension is still researching ways to increase farm productivity as the worlds population increases and with its demand for food.

Currently, agriculture is North Carolinas largest industry, generating $91.8 billion annually while employing roughly 17 percent of the states workforce. Ours is the third most diverse agriculture economy in the country, with more than 80 commercial crops and a large animal agriculture presence.

Another example from the early 1900s happened through Girls Canning Clubs. Young girls were taught food preservation. These girls sold their canned food in the wintertime to earn money. NC Cooperative Extension is still teaching life skills that build capacity in people. n 2019, 47,041 North Carolina consumers increased their knowledge of safe home food handling, preservation or preparation practices.

The Randolph County Center is fully staffed and offers services in all the NC Cooperative Extension program areas.

Adam Lawing is the Livestock Agent. Did you know that Randolph County has more beef cows and goats than any other county in North Carolina? Adam is a great resource for our Randolph County producers.

Blake Szilvay is the Field Crops/Forestry Agent. Blake helps producers identify pests and diseases in crops. He is a licensed drone pilot and uses that technology to help farmers. Blake has also brought forestry programming back to Randolph County to help woodland owners improve management practices. Over 50% of Randolph County is forested, and in 2016, those forested acres provided $4.6 million through harvests.

Ben Grandon is the Horticulture Agent. In 2019, Ben conducted 226 on-site consultations with homeowners. He helps with gardening questions, landscaping and lawn issues, and many more. Ben also leads the Randolph County Master Gardener Volunteer educational group. After Bens training, a Master Gardener Volunteer can provide research-based information about gardening and environmental stewardship to individuals. This years Master Gardener Training Course begins in April.

Jeannie Leonard is the Family and Consumer Sciences Agent. Jeannie can teach food preservation and cooking skills. Recently, her Cooking Under Pressure (Instant Pot) classes have been popular. Her next class is on March 26. Jeannie also works with Randolph County businesses and organizations when they want to offer their employees wellness programs. Jeannie provides training on healthy recipes and cooking tips on location or here at the office.

Allison Walker is the 4-H Agent. Allison is passionate about Randolph County youth. Currently, she is working with 60+ classrooms on the Embryology Project. Allison provides 1 dozen eggs and incubators to each classroom so the teachers can teach the provided embryology curriculum. The second graders learn firsthand about chick development and get to see the chicks emerge from their shells. 4-H is a great youth development program open to all youth, not just farm kids.

Jody Terry is the 4-H Program Assistant. Jody spends many days in afterschool programming. She helps children through character education, healthy lifestyle choices or STEM education. She is gearing up for Bike Safety Week where she helps teach bike safety to the fourth graders. Jody has worked with thousands of children in Randolph County through the years and still remains committed and passionate about 4-H programming for the children.

Contact us by calling 336-318-6000 or visiting https://randolph.ces.ncsu.edu/

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Connecting with NC Cooperative Extension - Asheboro Courier Tribune

A Healthy Lifestyle When Younger Reduces Heart Disease Risk Later – Live Trading News

According to a study, sticking to a healthy lifestyle in young adulthood in to the 40s is clearly linked to a lower risk of cardiovascular disease in middle age.

The research revealed that even individuals having a family history of heart conditions could have a low cardiovascular disease risk profile should they stick to a healthy lifestyle in their younger years, supporting the idea that lifestyle could play a more important part than genetics.

Most individuals who stuck to 5 healthy lifestyle factors since young adulthood, which included a healthy diet, a lean body mass index, not smoking, no alcohol consumption, and regular exercise, could stay in this low risk classification in middle age.

During the 1st year of the research, when the individuals average age was 24, almost 44% had a low cardiovascular disease risk profile.

And 20 years later, on the whole, only 24.5% achieved a low cardiovascular disease risk profile.

60% of individuals who stuck to all 5 healthy lifestyle factors got to middle age having a low cardiovascular risk profile, in comparison to less than 5% who implemented none of the healthy lifestyle factors.

Data collected during 20 yrs from another study was used. It started in 1985 and involved thousands of 18 30 yr olds and has since then observed the same group of individuals.

For this research, the scientists analyzed data like cholesterol, blood pressure, BMI, blood sugar, diet and exercise, alcohol intake, and tobacco use from more than 3,000 of the individuals to determine healthy lifestyle factors and a low cardiovascular disease risk profile. So, protect your heart!

Eat healthy, Be healthy, Live lively

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Paul A. Ebeling, polymath, excels in diverse fields of knowledge. Pattern Recognition Analyst in Equities, Commodities and Foreign Exchange and author of The Red Roadmasters Technical Report on the US Major Market Indices, a highly regarded, weekly financial market letter, he is also a philosopher, issuing insights on a wide range of subjects to a following of over 250,000 cohorts. An international audience of opinion makers, business leaders, and global organizations recognizes Ebeling as an expert.

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A Healthy Lifestyle When Younger Reduces Heart Disease Risk Later - Live Trading News

How to boost your immune system to avoid colds and coronavirus – The Guardian

Its been a long, wet winter. Everybody has got colds, and now we are braced for a coronavirus epidemic. Boosting our immune system has rarely felt more urgent, but, beyond eating more tangerines and hoping for the best, what else can we do?

Sheena Cruickshank, a professor of immunology at the University of Manchester, has a shocking cold when we speak at a safe distance, over the phone. To know how to take care of your immune system, she says, first you need to understand the weapons in your armoury a cheeringly impressive collection, it turns out.

When you come into contact with a germ youve never met before, she says, youve got various barriers to try to stop it getting into your body. As well as skin, we have mucus snot is a really important barrier and a microbiome, the collective noun for the estimated 100tn microbes that live throughout our bodies, internally and externally. Some of these helpful bugs make antimicrobial chemicals and compete with pathogens for food and space.

Beneath these writhing swamps of mucus and microbes, our bodies are lined with epithelial cells which, says Cruickshank, are really hard to get through. They make antimicrobial products including, most relevant to coronavirus, antiviral compounds that are quite hostile.

If a pathogen breaches these defences, it has to deal with our white blood cells, or immune cells. One type, called macrophages, inhabit all our body tissue and, says Cruickshank, have all these weapons ready to go, but theyre not terribly precise. They report to the cleverer, adaptive white blood cells known as lymphocytes. They are the ones that remember germs, so if you meet that germ again, says Cruickshank, theyll just deal with it probably without you even knowing. Thats when youve got immunity and is the basis of vaccination. Its trying to bypass all the early stuff and create the memory, so you dont have to be sick.

Our immune systems may have blind spots. This might mean that our immune response doesnt recognise certain bugs, she says, or the bugs have sneaky evasion strategies. Personally, my immune system is not necessarily very good at seeing colds. But a healthy lifestyle will ensure your defences are as good as they get.

Seeing as our bodies contain more cells belonging to microbes, such as bacteria and yeasts, than human ones, lets start with the microbiome. We live in a symbiotic relationship with our gut bacteria, says Prof Arne Akbar, the president of the British Society for Immunology and a professor at University College, London. Having the right ones around, that we evolved with, is best for our health. Anything we do that alters that can be detrimental.

Not only do our microbes form protective barriers, they also programme our immune systems. Animals bred with no microbiome have less well developed immune responses. Older people, and those with diseases that are characterised by inflammation, such as allergies, asthma, rheumatoid arthritis and diabetes, tend to have less varied gut microbiomes.

To feed your gut flora, Cruickshank recommends eating a more varied diet with lots of high-fibre foods. Being vegetarian isnt a prerequisite for microbiome health, but the more plant foods you consume, the better. The microbiome really likes fibre, pulses and fermented foods, she adds.

Kefir yoghurt and pickles such as sauerkraut and kimchi are among the fermented delicacies now fashionable thanks to our increasing knowledge of the microbiome. But the evidence for taking probiotic supplements, she says, is mixed. Its not a dead cert that they will survive the journey through your digestive tract, or that they will hang around long enough if they do. Its more effective to change your diet, says Cruickshank.

The skin microbiome is important, too, but we know less about it. High doses of ultraviolet light (usually from the sun) can affect it negatively, weakening any protective functions (as well as triggering immune suppression in the skin itself). Overwashing with strong soaps and using antibacterial products is not friendly to our skin microbiomes. Combinations of perfumes and moisturisers might well also have an effect, says Cruickshank.

To be immunologically fit, you need to be physically fit. White blood cells can be quite sedentary, says Akbar. Exercise mobilises them by increasing your blood flow, so they can do their surveillance jobs and seek and destroy in other parts of the body. The NHS says adults should be physically active in some way every day, and do at least 150 minutes a week of moderate aerobic activity (hiking, gardening, cycling) or 75 minutes of vigorous activity (running, swimming fast, an aerobics class).

The advice for older people, who are more vulnerable to infection, is to do whatever exercise is possible. Anythings better than nothing, says Akbar. But a lifetimes exercise could significantly slow your immune system declining with age. In 2018, a study by University of Birmingham and Kings College London found that 125 non-smoking amateur cyclists aged 55 to 79 still had the immune systems of young people.

The other side of the coin, says Akbar, is elite athletes who become very susceptible to infections because you can exercise to a point where it has a negative impact on your immune system. This problem is unlikely to affect most of us unless, says Cruickshank, youre a couch potato and suddenly try and run a marathon, this could introduce stress hormones and be quite bad for your immune system.

One of the many happy side-effects of exercise is that it reduces stress, which is next on our list of immune-boosting priorities. Stress hormones such as cortisol can compromise immune function, a common example of which, says Akbar, is when chickenpox strikes twice. If you have had it, the virus never completely goes away. During periods of stress, he says, it can reactivate again and we get shingles.

Forget boozing through the coronavirus crisis, because heavy drinking also depletes our immune cells. Some studies have suggested that the first-line-of-defence macrophages are not as effective in people who have had a lot of alcohol, says Cruickshank. And theres been suggestions that high alcohol consumption can lead to a reduction of the lymphocytes as well. So if the bug gets into you, youre not going to be as good at containing and fighting it off.

Cruickshank says that vitamin D has become a hot topic in immunology. It is used by our macrophages, and is something that people in Britain can get quite low on in the winter. Necking extra vitamin C, however, is probably a waste of time for well-fed westerners. Its not that vitamin C isnt crucial to immune function (and other things, such as bone structure). All the vitamins are important, says Cruickshank, but vitamin C is water soluble, its not one that your body stores. Eating your five a day of fruits and vegetables is the best way to maintain necessary levels.

Exercising and eating well will have the likely knock-on effect of helping you sleep better, which is a bonus because a tired body is more susceptible to bugs. One study last year found that lack of sleep impaired the disease-fighting ability of a type of lymphocyte called T cells, and research is demonstrating the importance of our natural biorhythms overall.

Janet Lord, a professor at the University of Birmingham, recently showed that vaccinating people in the morning is more effective than doing so in the afternoon. Your natural biorhythms are, to some extent, dictated by sleep, says Akbar. If youve got a regular sleep pattern, you have natural body rhythms and everythings fine. If they go out of kilter, then youve got problems.

The seriousness of an infection largely depends on the dose you are hit with, which could in turn depend on how contagious the carrier is when they cough near you. Were constantly exposed to germs, and we only get sick from a handful of those, says Cruickshank.

If youre reasonably young and healthy, says Akbar, the mild benefits you may achieve from being extra good prob
ably wont fend off a severe dose of coronavirus or flu. The likely scenario if you catch the infection is, he says, youll be sick for a while and you will recover.

From a public-health perspective, when nasty viruses such as coronavirus are doing the rounds, Akbars priority is not boosting already healthy peoples immune systems, but protecting the vulnerable people. Older people dont respond that well to the flu jab, though its better for them to have it than not. Its a general problem of immune decline with ageing.

When we get older, he says, the barrier function in the gut doesnt work that well, so you have something called leaky gut syndrome, where bugs creep into our bodies causing mild infections. This causes inflammation around the body, as does the natural accumulation of old zombie cells, called senescent cells, and inflammation compromises the immune response.

Akbar is working on developing drug treatments to reduce inflammation in older people but they are a way off yet. Age 65 is when, medically, one is considered older, but thats arbitrary, says Akbar. Some old people might get problems much earlier. And there are older people who are totally healthy.

In terms of coronavirus, says Cruickshank, its mostly spread by droplet transmission, as far as we can tell, so the biggest thing is hygiene. So wash your hands, and sneeze and cough into tissues, she suggests, between sniffles. No one can completely avoid getting sick, not even top immunologists.

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How to boost your immune system to avoid colds and coronavirus - The Guardian

"Healthy Foods For Kids" Here are the best Healthy Food to Feed Baby!!! – Herald Journalism

A Healthy Diet is a term of the Human Health Effect. Healthy foods have many categories like organic food, natural food, vegetarian food, and whole-food, etc. These products can buy easily in a healthy food store. Healthy Food For Kids benefits physical and mental health. It is suitable for a healthy lifestyle.

Milk:

Milk is the primary source of Nutrition, which contains colostrum. Milk is one of the best sources of Protein, Lactose, Calcium, and Vitamin D for kids. Milk is a part of a healthy diet, should be part of every childs diet for good health.

Apples:

Apples are a portion of excellent snack food, which is one of the healthiest foods for kids. Apples are juicy, sweet, and produced by an Apple Tree. Apple is rich in vitamin C that is good for kids health and also low in calories.

Peanut Butter:

Peanut Butter is extracted ground, dry-roasted peanuts, and also available in paste or spread. Peanut butter is the healthiest food ingredients and the taste of peanut butter, such as sweet, salty, and emulsifiers. These products reduce fat and rich in vitamin A, vitamin E, vitamin B6, iron, etc. and a good source of protein.

Yogurt:

Yogurt is a dairy food, which is produced by bacterial fermentation of milk. This is a healthful food for kids health. Yogurt gives many nutritional benefits for the kids body because this is made from Live Activity Culture.

Tuna Fish:

Tuna Fish is a saltwater fish, which belongs to Thunnini. The tuna fish is one of the healthiest foods for kids. The tuna fish produce low-fat mayonnaise and whole wheat bread. Tuna fish is a good source of high-quality protein with no fat.

Breakfast Cereal:

Breakfast Cereal is a traditional food, which is made from cereal grains. Many breakfasts are made of cereal. This is very healthy. There are many types of corn, such as Cheerios, Multi-Grain Cheerios, Shredded Wheat, and Wheaties, etc. Add in chopped banana or strawberry; then kids like it even more.

Eggs:

The egg is an Organic containing the zygote to embryo development. Eggs are good for health and an excellent source of iron and protein. Many nutrients come from eggs. Eggs are rich with vitamins and minerals, which is very good for kids.

Vegetables:

Vegetables are the best food for kids, and this is the part of plants that are consumed by humans and animals as food. The greens are rich in fiber, vitamin A, vitamin C, and potassium, which is very good for health and full of high-quality protein.

Oatmeal:

Oatmeal is a flour that is made by hulled oat grains. This is the best source of Nutrition. The oatmeal makes many dishes. This is a portion of good food and snacks for kids. Oatmeal is rich in high fiber food, and the primary source of cereal is whole-grain foods, which is good for kids health.

Sunflower Seeds:

Sunflower Seeds is a fruit of the sunflower. There are three types of sunflower seeds linoleic, high oleic, and sunflower oil. These are good for health for kids because this is a good source of high in fiber and iron. sunflower seeds are rich in vitamin E, phosphorus, and zinc.

Food is both healthy and tasty, which gives us a healthy lifestyle. Of course, Healthy Food For Kids is something tricky to decide, but it is essential for kids in their primary ages. A healthy lifestyle is one of the fantastic ways, which helps to improve our body health and well being.

A healthy lifestyle gives many benefits with critical health and control, such as weight, blood cholesterol, blood pressure, and blood sugar. Healthy foods that contain the right amount of Nutrition is essential to reach every kids meal bowl. This is the best way for good health. And every kid needs to eat healthy meals for their growth.

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Spending less time on Facebook could boost your well-being and happiness – The Jakarta Post – Jakarta Post

New European research has found that spending just 20 minutes less time on Facebook each day could increase our happiness and healthy lifestyle habits.

Carried out by a team of psychologists from Ruhr-Universitt Bochum (RUB), Germany, the new study looked at 286 participants who used Facebook for an average of an hour each day.

Of these participants, 140 were asked to reduce their Facebook use by 20minutes each day over a two-week period, which is about one third of the average usage time, while the remaining 146 participants acted as the control group and carried on using Facebook as usual.

The participants were asked to complete questionnaires recording their Facebook use, their well-being (such as depressive symptoms) and their lifestyle (such as physical activity and smoking habits) before the start of the study, one week into it, at the end of the two weeks, and one month and three months after the study had finished.

The findings, published in the journalComputers in Human Behavior, showed that the participants who were told to reduce their Facebook usage time used the platform less, both actively and passively.

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"This is significant, because passive use in particular leads to people comparing themselves with others and thus experiencing envy and a reduction in psychological well-being," commented lead author Dr. Julia Brailovskaia.

In addition, those who used Facebook less were also significantly more physically active, smoked less, were significantly more satisfied with their life, showed significantly fewer symptoms of depression, and showed fewer symptoms of addiction to Facebook after the two weeks, compared to the control group. These positive effects could also still be seen three months after the study had ended.

"After the two-week period of Facebook detox, these effects, i.e., the improvement of well-being and a healthier lifestyle, lasted until the final checks three months after the experiment," said Dr. Brailovskaia, who added that the findings suggest that just reducing the amount of time we spend on Facebook each day could be enough to increase our well-being and prevent addiction.

"It's not necessary to give up the platform altogether," concludes Dr. Brailovskaia.

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Spending less time on Facebook could boost your well-being and happiness - The Jakarta Post - Jakarta Post