This page shows you the latest news items in this category. This is page number 18.

Total 363 results found since Jan 2013.

Ban on Indoor Tanning by Minors Not Working: Study
Tanning salon use showed little change after 2013 ban, and rose among N.J. high school boys
Source: Cancercompass News: Other Cancer - August 1, 2016 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: news

Sydney women suffering from alopecia regains eyebrows ar brow salon Kristen Fisher
Twelve months ago, Katie Hale, 24, from Sydney, was diagnosed with alopecia. However, she had her eyebrows tattooed back on at one of Sydney's premier brow salons, Kristen Fisher.
Source: the Mail online | Health - July 22, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

MAGNOLIA SERUM (Magnolia Kobus Flower) Liquid Salon De Savon
Updated Date: Jul 19, 2016 EST
Source: DailyMed Drug Label Updates - July 19, 2016 Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Source Type: alerts

Mesothelioma Awareness Is About People, Not Payments
I get the same reaction from almost everyone when I tell them what type of cancer I battled. The conversation usually goes something like this: Them: What type of cancer did you have? Me: I was diagnosed with a relatively unknown cancer called mesothelioma Them: (blank look) I've never heard of that! Me: Most people haven't. It's pretty rare. Them: (the light comes on) Wait a minute! Isn't that the cancer those TV commercials are about? Me: (nodding, and anticipating all the questions to come) Them: Ohh, YOU were exposed to asbestos? I thought that stuff was banned? Did you sue?? Did you get a lot of money? Me: (d...
Source: Healthy Living - The Huffington Post - July 7, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Sugar Took Off All My Chest Hair, But I'm OK
I was sugared for the first time (and honestly, probably not the last) for work and I didn't even regret all my life choices. I did it for the Facebook views, for National Men's Health Week, and most importantly, for the Coney Island Mermaid Parade, where I will be riding a float this weekend.  Here's a thing about mermen: They have scales, fishtails, metal shoulder pads sometimes and even human butts, but they never have body hair. So it looked like I needed to get some stuff off my chest.  Instead of waxing, I thought sugaring would be an interesting alternative: Ancient Egyptians, obsessed with remov...
Source: Healthy Living - The Huffington Post - June 17, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

4 Signs You Should Stop Coloring Your Hair
SPECIAL FROM Few women welcome gray hair with open arms. When the salt outnumbers the pepper, most of us—as many as 75 percent of women, according to various sources—turn to the beauty industry for an all-over color correction. But once you start dyeing your hair to cover the grays, how do you know when enough is enough? When 56-year-old former brunette, Paula Winnig, was 35 years old, a number of well-meaning friends handed her their colorists' business cards, a not-so-subtle nod to her rapidly graying hair. She took the hint and began dyeing her locks, a practice she continued until quitting for good at ...
Source: Healthy Living - The Huffington Post - May 30, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Women Tell Men Everything They Need To Know About Pedicures
If you've never had a pedicure, there are a few things you probably don't know. For example, you might not know that you get a quick massage during said pedicure, and that contrary to popular belief, they're not a women-only experience. The main purpose of a pedicure is to treat yourself, relax and walk away with a good-looking (and feeling) pair of feet -- something you probably need this time of year. In an effort to get all men on board with pedicures, we at The Huffington Post asked the women we know to dish everything they know about what to expect at a pedicure. Men, it's sandal season. Go forth and treat your feet w...
Source: Healthy Living - The Huffington Post - April 11, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Haircuts Help Heart Patients At Boston Children’s Hospital
BOSTON (CBS) – On Sunday, you can get a haircut and help some of the tiniest heart surgery patients in Boston. Five year-old Molly from Haverhill was one of them. She was born with a heart defect and spent her first eight months at Boston Children’s Hospital. On Wednesday, stylists at Salon Mario Russo made her a “princess.” Molly had her first open-heart surgery when she was six weeks old and more surgeries after that. Now she’s active, healthy and very happy now. Her parents say she loved the day of beauty and she’s living proof that Children’s Hospital is a lifesaver “To have a place...
Source: WBZ-TV - Breaking News, Weather and Sports for Boston, Worcester and New Hampshire - April 6, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: deanreddington Tags: Health Local News Syndicated Local Boston Children's Hospital Lisa Hughes Source Type: news

Are Men Dying From Being Macho?
"Macho, macho man I gotta be a macho man" -The Village People I've spent my adult life in the structured settlement and financial business and follow actuarial science. A statistic that has held consistently true is that men die about five years sooner than women do. Why? A Salon article titled "Toxic masculinity is killing men: The roots of male trauma" sheds some light on the academic research being done on the topic. In short, it says what most guys have been taught since birth: When it comes to pain, suck it up. Which means we don't get to the doctor for regular checkups. Which means we ignore chest pains until they ...
Source: Healthy Living - The Huffington Post - April 5, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

My Bipolar Medications & The DUI
I thought I was an old-fashioned kind of girl when I first got married. I thought I wanted to be the one to take care of my man. I wanted to do the cooking, the cleaning, and all the shopping. I wanted to make his doctor appointments and be a stay-at-home mom. I wanted to do all the things I thought women in the 1950s did. Only I wasn’t living in the 1950s. When I married my husband in 1997, I had just graduated cosmetology school and become a stylist at the most upscale salon in our town. I had become a mother at the young age of 17, and I did not want to marry his biological father because I knew I would never have any...
Source: Psych Central - April 3, 2016 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Tosha Maaks Tags: Attention Deficit Disorder Bipolar Caregivers Children and Teens Disorders Family General Medications Parenting Personal Stories Relationships & Love Adhd Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Driving Under The Influence Irr Source Type: news

7 Emotions That Can't Be Explained in English
Image source: Pixabay.com. CC0 Public Domain license. By Erika Wittlieb. Occasionally, emotions that we can't identify well up within us, causing us to experience confusion over how to react. In an article in the January/February 2016 issue of Psychology Today, Mark R. Leary, Duke University professor of psychology and neuroscience, explains this phenomenon. He writes Emotions have motivational consequences. They tell us what to do. If you can't tell what you're feeling, then it's a lot more puzzling to know how you should react: I don't know whether to laugh or cry. I don't know whether to approach you or avoid you. Than...
Source: Healthy Living - The Huffington Post - March 31, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

When I Picture Myself Being Included, I Don't See Myself Without My Disabilities
I want to live in a world where my existence is just accepted. I don't want to have to undergo drastic physical or neurological changes to be perceived as a normal part the world. When I imagine myself in an inclusive and accepting world, I see myself as me unchanged, still disabled but simply in a world where that does not matter. And yet this is not what people think I should see. This is evidenced by this video, produced for World Down Syndrome Day (March 21). In the video, a narrator talks about her life aspirations and goals while the actor Olivia Wilde lives them out. The implication is that the narrator cannot do t...
Source: Healthy Living - The Huffington Post - March 17, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Can you really get a stroke from a hair salon visit?
A California woman is suing a beauty parlor because she said getting her hair washed there caused her to have a stroke
Source: Health News: CBSNews.com - March 16, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

I Know What Girls Like: Science, Technology, Engineering and Math!
Myth: Girls Don't like Math and Science. Busted: Statistics show that 74% of girls show at least as much interest as boys in these disciplines. In fact, high school girls surpass the percentage of boys interested in Algebra II and Calculus. According to the American Association of University Women, boys and girls perform equally well in math and science. High school girls actually earn more math and science credits than boys and the girls' GPAs aggregated across all math and science classes are higher than boys, even if boys are scoring higher on the standardized tests. Generation STEM (What Girls Say about Science, Techn...
Source: Science - The Huffington Post - March 4, 2016 Category: Science Source Type: news

National Eating Disorders Awareness Week: Mind the Gap
National Eating Disorders Awareness Week: February 21-27, 2016 A few days ago, I was swiveling back and forth in the beauty salon chair, paging through the latest issue of Vogue, and waiting for the timer to ping! so that my stylist could wash the purple-that-turns-black dye from my hair. My gray strands aren't like Emmylou Harris's silvery waterfall, but more wiry crone variety. For better or worse, I fight time, and, added bonus, at the salon I read all the glossy magazines that I don't buy for myself in the forty minutes it takes for the dye's transformative magic to work. Except this time, as I flipped the pages, what ...
Source: Healthy Living - The Huffington Post - February 22, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news