stewarttom09 | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 28 2008 | life, treatment, health, president, india, medicine, hurricane, research, travel, waterUsing Your Health Savings Account to Pay for International Travel July 28th, 2008 by taytonsblog2069 Thousands of U.S. citizens are taking advantage of the low cost and high quality of foreign hospitals by traveling abroad for medical treatment. The ...
stewarttom09 | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 20 2008 | blood-glucose, corporation, Diets, medicine, designation, treatment, diabetes, brian-gardner, Nutrition, orphan-drugOne of the best and most recommended ways of keeping diabetes in check is by following a diabetes diet plan. Of course, you have to consult a nutritionist before you embark on one, but following such a diet plan is the ideal way of ...
Continue...
stewarttom09 | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 18 2008 | incontinence, Exercise, fyi, urinary, chinese, chinese-herbal, woman, treatment, induced-urine, urinary-incontinenceMany elite female athletes experience exercise -induced increases in intra- abdominal pressure, creating stress-induced urine leakage while participating in their selected sport. Many athletes do not mention this condition, ...
View original here:
...
stewarttom09 | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 17 2008 | treatment, routledge-mental-health, books, people, treating-drug, leonard-jason, substance-abuse, routledge, development, oxfordVictims of drug addiction, chronic illness, and mental illness all too often are overwhelmed with the affliction called hopelessness. Oxford Houses succeed because their substance abuse treatment approach instills the most powerful ...
The rest is ...
stewarttom09 | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 14 2008 | treatment, things-as-far, copyright, web-analytics, apple, helpful-hints, tools, concoction, helpful, greeceVinegar has been used for thousands of years in the treatment of many ailments. Hippocrates, an ancient physician from Greece is said to have recommended vinegar for ailments ranging from ear infections to rashes, and other cultures ...
More:
From...
stewarttom09 | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 14 2008 | research, treatment, study, physical-therapy, management, evidence, physiospot-paediatrics, articles, health, paediatricsThis study on 15 patients with kyphoscoliosis concludes that quantified trunk rotational strength training can stabilize adolescent idiopathic scoliosis for up to eight months if the angle is less...
More here: Treatment of Adolescent Idiopathic Sc...
stewarttom09 | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 13 2008 | treatment, magazine, mental-illness, shameless-plug, Mental health, media, mental, health, internet, mindI’ve just received a complimentary copy of the first issue of One in Four magazine, which describes itself as an “aspirational lifestyle magazine for people with mental health difficulties”. There’sa review of our website in there. ...
Re...
Related Content from Around Faves
treatment
-
We were discussing MRSA this morning in class, it's one of those scary infections that medicine is still trying to figure out. After reading about it I realized how unhygienic picking your nose can be. gross!
Most of these people carry the normal kind of staph. But an increasing number carry MRSA. Why doesn't it hurt them?
"We don't understand why staph causes mischief. Most of the time it does not," Dickinson says. "But presumably, little breaks in the skin allow it to get past our barriers. Then it can multiply -- and staph comes with a bundle of proteins and toxins and enzymes that allow it to do a lot of damage."
So how can you stop staph from getting from the front of your nose to your skin?
"Theoretically, one thing people can do is quit picking their noses. But that won't help -- studies show people can't keep their hands away from their noses," Dickinson says.
Fortunately, there are a number of ways to prevent infection with both normal staph and MRSA.
Stopping StaphMRSA may be the latest scary germ to grab headlines, but good old-fashioned hygiene is the key to protection.
Here's how to keep MRSA at bay:
* Wash your hands. Your hands are the part of your body most likely to pick up a germ and transfer it to an itchy sore, your eyes, your mouth, or your nose. So keep them clean. Use soap and warm water -- the rule of thumb is to scrub gently and thoroughly as long as it takes to sing the alphabet song.
1 FaverViewed: 13 Times
* Got a cut or scrape? Clean it -- and cover it with a bandage until it heals.
* Avoid contact with other people's wounds or bandages.
* Do not share towels, razors, or other personal items.
* Shower right away after exercise, especially at the gym. Don't toss your wet towel in your gym bag. Clean and disinfect any gym bag that's come into contact with dirty athletic gear.
* Wash all athletic clothing daily. Regularly wash athletic gear such as elbow pads and kneepads.
* Bathe every day. MRSA can live on the skin, but it can be washed away. Staph can enter the body through hair follicles, so be particularly careful to clean your groin, underarms, arms, and legs.
* Be on the lookout for infections. Early on, a staph infection looks like a spider bite (a red, irritated bump). Don't wait -- have a nurse or doctor look at it.
* If you have an infection, don't try to squeeze out the pus. This only spreads germs on your skin. Have ALL infections treated by a health professional.
* Practice careful hygiene wh - sung - Apr 27 20081 FaverViewed: 20 Times
- wavetowake - Sep 22 20072 FaversViewed: 1 Time
health
-
So crazy!
0 FaversViewed: 6 TimesQuoted: Mike Hermanstorfer was clutching his pregnant wife’s hand when her life slipped away in a Colorado hospital on Christmas Eve, and then he cradled his newborn son’s limp body seconds after a medical team delivered the baby by Cesarean section.
- shiwani - 22 days ago2 FaversViewed: 62 Times
- shiwani - 29 days ago1 FaverViewed: 16 Times
