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Effect of 7-minute workout on weight and body composition.
CONCLUSIONS: The findings of this research show that even a very short duration workout affect the nutritional status in normal weight individuals who did not change any of their eating habits. This implies that even in normal weight individuals who perform the 7-minute workout, improvement through a decrease in waist circumference can be achieved thus leading to a better cardio-protective nutritional status. The 7 minutes workout can be a great solution for people to get started and to plan on continuing exercising, as it is simple and of minimal constraints. PMID: 28085122 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Physica Medica - January 12, 2017 Category: Physics Authors: Mattar LE, Farran NH, Bakhour DA Tags: J Sports Med Phys Fitness Source Type: research

E-Cigarette Warnings Coming To High School Bathrooms Nationwide
By Sandee LaMotte, CNN (CNN) — The US Food and Drug Administration will stage a massive education campaign aimed at the nearly 10.7 million teens at risk for e-cigarette use and potential addiction, the agency said Tuesday. For the first time, the agency will take the message that vaping is dangerous into high school bathrooms and social media feeds of those at-risk youth to stop what the FDA calls an epidemic of e-cigarette use by minors. The trend was flagged in a 2016 report from the US surgeon general, which cited a 900% increase in e-cigarette use by high school students between 2011 to 2015. More than 2 million...
Source: WBZ-TV - Breaking News, Weather and Sports for Boston, Worcester and New Hampshire - September 19, 2018 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Health – CBS Boston Tags: Health News e-cigarettes FDA vaping Source Type: news

1 In 3 Teens Breathe Secondhand E-Cigarette Vapors, Study Says
(CNN) — More middle school and high school students in the United States are being exposed to secondhand vapor from e-cigarettes in public places, new research finds. About 1 in 3 students last year said they had breathed secondhand aerosol from e-cigarettes, which is an increase from the approximately 1 in 4 students who reported exposure in years past, according to research from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute published in the medical journal JAMA Network Open on Wednesday. The research was based on self-reported data from the National Youth Tobacco Survey, which collected information on exposure to secondhand smo...
Source: WBZ-TV - Breaking News, Weather and Sports for Boston, Worcester and New Hampshire - August 29, 2019 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Health – CBS Boston Tags: Boston News Health Syndicated CBSN Boston CNN vaping Source Type: news

OK For Baseball And Softball? Dr. Mallika Marshall Answers Your Coronavirus Questions
BOSTON (CBS) — Dr. Mallika Marshall is answering your coronavirus-related medical questions. If you have a question for Dr. Mallika, email her or message her on Facebook or Twitter. Dr. Mallika is offering her best advice, but as always consult your personal doctor before making any decisions about your personal health. Phil says that a family from California came to visit his daughter for July 4th. “I’m not sure if they have been socially distancing or wearing masks, and California is a hot spot right now. Should my wife and I not return to our daughter’s house for a while?” If you and your wife are in...
Source: WBZ-TV - Breaking News, Weather and Sports for Boston, Worcester and New Hampshire - July 6, 2020 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Health – CBS Boston Tags: Boston News Covid-19 Boston, MA Health Healthcare Status Healthwatch Syndicated Local Coronavirus Dr. Mallika Marshall Source Type: news

Colleges of Medicine take lead on anti-racism in medicine initiatives
Solutions require complex, sustained efforts to move the mountain of historical racism in medicine and the systemic ways it may exhibit itself today. David Mogollon Today University of Arizona Health Sciencesgettyimages-56959507-hero-web.jpg The COVID-19 pandemic further exposed inequities in social determinants of health and wide disparities in health care delivery that are in part tied to historic issues of racism in medicine. Getty ImagesHealthBlack History MonthCollege of Medicine - PhoenixCollege of Medicine - TucsonDiversityInclusion Media contact(s)Stacy Pigott University of Arizona Health Sciencesspigott@a...
Source: The University of Arizona: Health - February 3, 2022 Category: Universities & Medical Training Authors: mittank Source Type: research

Colleges of Medicine lead initiatives focused on anti-racism in medicine
Solutions require complex, sustained efforts to move the mountain of historical racism in medicine and the systemic ways it may exhibit itself today. David Mogollon Today University of Arizona Health Sciencesgettyimages-56959507-hero-web.jpg The COVID-19 pandemic further exposed inequities in social determinants of health and wide disparities in health care delivery that are in part tied to historic issues of racism in medicine. Getty ImagesHealthBlack History MonthCollege of Medicine - PhoenixCollege of Medicine - TucsonCompassionDiversityInclusion Media contact(s)Stacy Pigott University of Arizona Health Scienc...
Source: The University of Arizona: Health - February 3, 2022 Category: Universities & Medical Training Authors: mittank Source Type: research

Important Lessons from Hospitalists Who Love Their Jobs
Job stress, moral injury, burnout, and the great resignation—these are very real concerns for the field of hospital medicine, exacerbated by but not limited to the unprecedented challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic over the past three years. But despite all the turmoil, some hospitalists say they love their jobs and still enjoy practicing acute medicine in the hospitals where they work. How do they go to work every day with smiles on their faces? How are they able to enter the hospital’s sliding glass front doors filled with hope, anticipation, and curiosity? We asked several hospitalists to share their stories and thei...
Source: The Hospitalist - May 1, 2023 Category: Hospital Management Authors: Ronda Whitaker Tags: Career Hospital Medicine Source Type: research

A Major Step Forward for Addiction Medicine
This article was originally posted on www.drugabuse.gov. -- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
Source: Science - The Huffington Post - March 31, 2016 Category: Science Source Type: news

Adherence to EBM guidelines in clinical practice.
CONCLUSIONS: Pharmacotherapy of patients aimed at secondary prevention of myocardial infarction did not fully conform to the principles of evidence-based medicine. Standards for rehabilitation after myocardial infarction require revision based on existing clinical guidelines and evidence-based medicine. PMID: 26639710 [PubMed - in process]
Source: International Journal of Risk and Safety in Medicine - December 9, 2015 Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Tags: Int J Risk Saf Med Source Type: research

How Can Doctors Restore the Heart of Medicine?
In recent years, the American public has clamored for a more integrative and holistic medical model, in which doctors are equipped not only to write prescriptions and perform procedures, but also to guide patients in a whole-being/whole-life approach to health. We actually need a medical culture that can support doctors, as well as patients, in this regard. Medicine is one of the most demanding environments in which to work. For starters, the hours can be brutal, especially early on. By way of example, it was only a decade ago that medical residency workload was decreased to 80 hours a week. Addressing this matter in our ...
Source: Healthy Living - The Huffington Post - February 11, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Let Food Be Thy Medicine
Typical food store in Brazzaville, Congo. Credit: WHOBy Adelheid Onyango and Bibi GiyoseBRAZZAVILLE, Congo, Aug 14 2018 (IPS)When faced with a crisis, our natural reaction is to deal with its immediate threats. Ateka* came to the make-shift clinic with profuse diarrhoea: they diagnosed cholera. The urgent concern in the midst of that humanitarian crisis was to treat the infection and send her home as quickly as possible. But she came back to the treatment centre a few days later – not for cholera, but because she was suffering from severe acute malnutrition. Doctors had saved her life but not restored her health. And the...
Source: IPS Inter Press Service - Health - August 14, 2018 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Authors: Adelheid Onyango and Bibi Giyose Tags: Africa Development & Aid Environment Food & Agriculture Headlines Health Humanitarian Emergencies Population Poverty & SDGs Source Type: news

New Research from Harvard School of Dental Medicine Finds Oral Health Workforce Expansion Improves Health Outcomes in Underserved Communities
WASHINGTON, March 27, 2023/PRNewswire/ -- New researchfrom Harvard School of Dental Medicine, sponsored by the Delta Dental Institute, and published in JAMA Health Forum, finds that expanding the dental workforce in Oral Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSA) through the National Health Service Corps (NHSC) would reduce the risk of dental caries among children in underserved areas, improve care, and cut costs.Lead researcher Dr. Sung En Choi, SM, PhD, studied the cost-effectiveness of expanding the dental workforce in underserved areas through the NHSC to evaluate the potential impact ...
Source: Dental Technology Blog - March 28, 2023 Category: Dentistry Source Type: news

Hospitalists Talk about Rebuilding Trust in Health Care
We present three elements that bolster trust: compassion, competence, and credibility. These exist on both interpersonal and organizational levels. Trust in health care has gradually eroded in the U.S. over the last four decades. While 80% of Americans showed confidence in the medical system in 1975, only 37% expressed confidence in 2015, a dramatic fall of more than 50%.2 And, the U.S. ranked 24 out of 29 in patients agreeing with the statement “all things considered, doctors in the U.S. can be trusted.”3 These pre-pandemic reports on public trust were an augury of signs to come.  Dr. Mathews The cause for this ste...
Source: The Hospitalist - May 2, 2022 Category: Hospital Management Authors: Ronda Whitaker Tags: Career Hospital Medicine Leadership Training Practice Management Source Type: research

Ancient DNA pioneer Svante P ääbo wins Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Svante Pääbo, a Swedish geneticist who has been a director at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany since 1997, has been awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for discoveries related to the sequencing of ancient genomes, especially those from humans and extinct hominins such as Neanderthals and Denisovans. Pääbo was a pioneer in the now-booming field of ancient DNA research, which is transforming our understanding of the past and has implications for future understanding of human biology. Pääbo was the first to successfully retrieve and sequence bits of ancie...
Source: Science of Aging Knowledge Environment - October 3, 2022 Category: Geriatrics Source Type: research

Substance Misuse Education for Physicians: Why Older People are Important.
Authors: De Jong CA, Goodair C, Crome I, Jokubonis D, El-Guebaly N, Dom G, Schellekens A, Broers B, Subata E, Welle-Strand GK, Luycks L, Wolters M, Schoof T Abstract This perspective article focuses on the need for training and education for undergraduate medical students on substance-related disorders, and describes initiatives undertaken in the United Kingdom (UK), Netherlands, United States (US), and Norway to develop the skills, knowledge, and attitudes needed by future doctors to treat patients adequately. In addition, we stress that in postgraduate training, further steps should be taken to develop Addiction ...
Source: The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine - August 10, 2016 Category: Universities & Medical Training Tags: Yale J Biol Med Source Type: research