Year: 2013
Health and fitness: Working out on a budget
MIT Reports Gastroenteritis Outbreak
Stomach flu is going around MIT. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology released a statement announcing a gastroenteritis outbreak on its campus, which includes symptoms of diarrhea, nausea and vomiting. Two of the people were seen by MIT Medical staff at the beginning of the week, and 16 more were seen on Wednesday (Dec. 5).
Healthy Living Conversations Better Left Off the Holiday Table
Exercise May Delay or Prevent Hip Surgery
Global Cobalt Announces Additional Exercise of Warrants
Procrastination: I Won’t Let You Get the Best of Me!
Did the Government Cause the Obesity Epidemic?
Teen Swallows Rare-Earth Magnets, Undergoes Emergency Surgery
Beware: Magnets can be extremely dangerous. One Florida teen learned the lesson firsthand after she accidentally swallowed rare-earth magnets at school last month. Christin Rivas, 14, was rushed to the emergency room for an X-ray, but a doctor sent her home, telling Rivas' mother that the magnets would pass. Five days later, the teen underwent emergency surgery during which the magnets — along with part of her colon and appendix — were removed. Now, Rivas is sharing her story in hopes of warning others of the danger playing with the magnets poses. "I do feel it was one of those
Helping Older Adults Cope With Lifestyle Changes
Jack Osbourne On His Multiple Sclerosis Diagnosis: ‘You Can’t Take Good Health For Granted’
Jack Osbourne, son of Ozzy, was just 26 — and his daughter just weeks old — when he was diagnosed with the autoimmune disease multiple sclerosis. "I had about four days of like, 'Pity party, woe is me, it's all over,'" he says in the clip above of his recent HuffPost Live appearance. "Then I did some research and spoke with doctors and got in contact with people who have MS, and I soon realized it's actually a lot more manageable than the kind of public perception of it is, and that's part of the reason why I've been so
Esquire: Don’t believe its ‘new way of killing cancer.’
(This post originally appeared at the Knight Science Journalism Tracker.) If you’re looking for “a whole new way of killing cancer,” don’t turn to the journals. You’ll find it in Esquire. There Tom Junod and Mark Warren write about a scientist who says the difference between others’ research and his is “the difference between medieval alchemy and chemistry.”