Healthy Living

How Young is Your Brain?

November 21, 2008
mistletoe-brain-interaction

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Like your muscles, your brain gets flabby if you don’t exercise it. To find out the best ways to strengthen your brain, take Health’s anti-aging quiz (below), developed with Louis Cozolino, PhD, a professor of psychology at Pepperdine University and author of The Healthy Aging Brain: Sustaining Attachment, Attaining Wisdom (W.W. Norton, 2008; $35). Read More


Battle Aging With Vitamin D

November 21, 2008
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A few minutes of daily sunlight can help your body make much of the vitamin D it needs. Is that bad for your skin as you age? Not if you don’t overdo it, many experts say, and the payoff could be huge. Read More


How Not to Get Sick at Any Age

November 12, 2008
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By Colette Bouchez
From Health magazine

No matter where you go in life, somebody’s sneezing. Strangers on the elevator, kids at day care, even those self-important colleagues who refuse to take sick days—they all pose a risk. Avoiding germy people is your best defense, but boosting your immunity is just as important. And because your immune system naturally weakens as you age, charging it up is crucial during cold-and-flu season. Here, an age-specific plan for optimum protection. Read More


Healthy Hair at Any Age

August 14, 2008

By Danielle Braff
From Health magazine

Has your hair lost its luster? Blame your age. Truth is, after 30, hormonal ups and downs and everyday wear-and-tear can do a number on your locks, leaving them coarser or thinner. As you grow older, your hair also starts to disappear where you want it most—on your head—and suddenly appear in places you really wish it wouldn’t (like on your chin). To protect what you’ve got and deal with what you don’t want, try this age-specific advice. Read More


Healthy Hair: Hair-Friendly Foods for Any Age

August 14, 2008
By Danielle Braff
From Health magazine

Beans
As the saying goes, they’re good for your heart…and your hair. The protein makes hair grow faster and stronger. Read More


Healthy Hair: Your 30s

August 14, 2008
By Danielle Braff
From Health magazine

Baby your hair. The 30s are prime reproductive years for many women, which can be good and bad news for hair. The combo of prenatal vitamins (which keep both hair and body brimming with nutrients) and all those hormonal changes (which keep hair in the growing phase) can add up to thicker, faster-growing hair during pregnancy. But a few months after giving birth, it’s normal to lose much of that extra hair as your body returns to normal, says Eliot Ghatan, MD, a dermatologist and cosmetic surgeon in private practice in New York City. Fortunately, simple changes can help during this time. Go light on styling gels, sprays, lotions, and mousses: Buildup from these products can weigh down and dry out hair. And when shampooing, gently massage your scalp for five minutes to encourage better blood circulation to the area. Read More


Healthy Hair: Your 50s and Beyond

August 14, 2008
By Danielle Braff
From Health magazine

Deep-condition if you’ve gone gray. Gray or silver hair, although beautiful, may be drier and more prone to breakage and sun damage than pigmented hair. Protect it by getting a deep-conditioning treatment (ask for one that includes sunscreen) at a salon once a month or by using a moisturizing product like Frederic Fekkai’s All Day Hair-Plump ($95) to keep hair hydrated and more pliable. Read More


Healthy Hair: Your 40s

August 14, 2008
By Danielle Braff
From Health magazine

Skimp on styling. In your 40s, you may find that years of exposure to curling irons, hot blow dryers, and other gadgets have left your hair dried-out and brittle. The follicles at the front of your scalp can actually stop growing new hair from all the punishment, says dermatologist John Romano. The good news: The damage is reversible. Simply limit any hair-styling tool that puts off a lot of heat to special occasions or a few days a week. If you use a hair dryer every day, switch to a cooler or no-heat setting. And avoid excess brushing and washing, too, experts say. Read More


Run for Your Life: Exercisers Live Longer And With Fewer Disabilities, Study Finds

August 11, 2008

MONDAY, Aug. 11 (HealthDay News)—It may, in fact, be possible to outrun death—and even the creeping ravages of time—at least for a while.

Research spanning two decades has found that older runners live longer and suffer fewer disabilities than healthy non-runners. Read More


Married Folks Still the Healthiest

August 11, 2008

MONDAY, Aug. 11 (HealthDay News)—People who’ve exchanged wedding vows tend to be healthier than their single, divorced or widowed peers, but new research shows that health gap may be narrowing.

Interviews with today’s never-married men suggest they are healthier than never-married guys were three decades ago, researchers say. And that’s helping single males gain some ground, in terms of their health, compared to married people. Read More




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