Belly fat is the worst kind — and easy to conquer with exercise (The Kansas City Star)
This is just what you need, in the aftermath of pumpkin pie and the advent of holiday parties: gross-out science about deep belly fat.
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Good Health is Your Greatest Wealth……Virgil
This is just what you need, in the aftermath of pumpkin pie and the advent of holiday parties: gross-out science about deep belly fat.
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Title: Who Gets Enough Exercise, Who Doesn’t? Category: Health News Created: 12/5/2008 Last Editorial Review: 12/5/2008
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Exercise has long been viewed as one of the primary solutions to our growing obesity problem. And while there’s no doubt that physical activity boosts calorie burn, you need to do more than work out a couple times a week to keep the weight off.
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Many Americans are failing to meet the minimum recommendations for exercise, although confusing guidelines are making it difficult to assess, researchers reported on Thursday.
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THURSDAY, Dec. 4 (HealthDay News) — An estimated 65 percent of people in the United States last year met the 2008 Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans. And 49 percent of those people met the Healthy People 2010 physical activity objectives, according to a federal report released Thursday.
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CDC: Under new, less strict exercise guidelines, 2/3 of Americans are “physically active” — but only half of Americans would have met the older exercise guideline.
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WEDNESDAY, Dec. 3 (HealthDay News) — Overweight kids may be able to work out their anger with exercise, a new report finds.
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MONTREAL, Dec. 1 (UPI) — A majority of diabetics avoid physical activity because they worry about exercise-induced hypoglycemia, or low blood sugar, Canadian researchers said.
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When did you last curl up with a good book to unwind and enjoy some “me” time without feeling guilty? Reading and exercise are often shelved when we’re overburdened and stressed, yet research confirms both activities are vital for physical and mental well-being.
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( Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters ) Patients who have had surgical correction of a chest wall deformity commonly known as funnel chest report marked improvement in body image and ability to exercise, according to a study published December in Pediatrics. “These results should prompt physicians to consider both the emotional and physical implications of correcting pectus excavatum,” …
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