Error
  • JUser::_load: Unable to load user with id: 64

Archive for March, 2010

How You Can Manage 60 Minutes of Exercise Daily

Monday, March 29th, 2010 by newseditor

Women need at least 60 minutes of daily exercise as they age just to maintain body weight, according to new research in the Journal of the American Medical Association. To reach this conclusion, a 13-year study analyzed more than 34,000 women with a mean age of 54.2 years and a normal diet.

If you’re reading our blog, you probably care a lot about your appearance and health, so perhaps you are already motivated to manage 60 minutes of daily exercise. However, most people don’t think visiting the health club for an hour every day is very practical, nor is it exciting; so how can we put this advice into practice?

1. Make it intense. If an hour of moderate intensity exercise sounds boring, try 30 minutes of high intensity exercise. If you’re healthy enough, push yourself harder and burn calories faster.

2. Gain some muscle. Muscle mass aid in burning calories. Try the kettlebells.

3. Leave the car at home. Bicycle or run to your health club. It’s a great way to warmup the muscles before your workout and may even add those extra minutes that are recommended.

4. Stop searching for that perfect parking spot. Park at the outer edge of the lot and walk.

5. Initiate a workplace fitness program. Ask your employer and mention the surgeon general’s 2010 recommendation to create healthier work sites.

6. Understand the difference between performance and appearance. When you evaluate your fitness and health achievements, don’t focus solely on body weight and excess fat. If you have become faster or stronger, congratulate yourself and remember there are solutions to improve appearance when diet and exercise fail.

7. Fitness should be fun. If your current routine feels like pulling teeth, try something new and always maintain an upbeat, positive attitude.

Links

JAMA: Physical Activity and Weight Gain Prevention

NPR Blog: Fighting Fat in Middle Age Takes Hard Work

2009 Cosmetic Procedures Topped 17 Million

Monday, March 15th, 2010 by newseditor

More than 17 million cosmetic procedures were done in the United States last academy of cosmeticyear, according to a procedural survey conducted by the American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery.

The survey, which was conducted differently than in previous years, posted numbers higher than ever seen before.  To gather data for the survey, the Academy polled AACS members and random physicians across the United States.

AACS members have seen an 8% increase in cosmetic procedures during the past two years, despite the economic recession.

During the past five years, these are the procedures the Academy says have increased markedly:

“As the economy recovers slowly but surely, we are seeing patients come back and feel better about doing some things for themselves that maybe they’d been putting off for a while, said AACS president Mark Berman MD.

Researchers Link Breastfeeding With Small Waist Circumference

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010 by newseditor

The latest research regarding health benefits of breastfeeding suggests that it may help reduce a woman’s waist circumference and risk of heart disease.  Physicians discussed these findings last week at the AHA conference on cardiovascular health.

The data, collected from 351 women at an average age of 51, revealed that those “who consistently breast-fed their children had waist circumferences that were an average of 2.6 inches smaller than women who had never breast-fed.”

As Dr. Nieca Goldberg suggests, these women may also be engaged in healthier lifestyles, but it appears that breastfeeding makes a significant difference when it comes to unhealthy belly fat.

View more details on womenshealth.gov

Saline Implants Protected Her During Shooting

Monday, March 1st, 2010 by newseditor

Coming out of LA last week was a dramatic story of workplace violence that left one implants_dallaswoman dead and another with scars and deflated breast implants.  Lydia Carranza’s surgeon is now hoping her survival story will elicit a supply contribution from implant manufacturers, to offset the cost of her reconstructive surgery.

When a man opened fire in the dental office where Lydia worked last summer, she was shot twice: “The bullet fragments were millimeters from her heart and her vital organs,” said Dr. Ashkan Ghavami.

According to a firearms expert interviewed for the story, what saved Lydia’s life may have been the presence of her saline breast implants.  Of course he advises against getting “breast enhancements as a means to deflect a possible incoming bullet.”

Read more about this story here on NBC Los Angeles