Nov 30, 2016 12:34PM
After sipping peppermint tea, people’s alertness and memory improved, while chamomile tea slowed thinking.
A seven-year study in fracking-heavy Pennsylvania found that people living close to a fracking site were up to four times more likely to suffer asthma attacks.
Diners at a chain restaurant picked healthier choices from the menu when a dining area was brightly lit.
Pile on the cranberry sauce. Women given 500 milligrams of cranberry powder daily for six months had significantly fewer UTIs.
Half of a group of 170 teenagers that used ear buds reported bouts of ringing or buzzing in their ears.
Nov 30, 2016 12:33PM
Children that sucked their thumb or bit their nails had fewer allergies as adults, reports a study by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Oct 31, 2016 11:13AM
Studies increasingly link noisy surroundings to stress hormones and cognitive difficulties in children.
Toddlers with diverse gut bacteria proved to be more curious and sociable and less impulsive than toddlers with fewer types of bacteria.
Individuals that worked out to music rather than silence felt less fatigued and exercised more effectively.
In a recent study, two-thirds of breast cancer survivors that used an acupressure routine on themselves slashed their chronic tiredness to normal levels.
Women that worked out regularly during pregnancy had fewer cesarean deliveries and a lower risk of hypertension and diabetes.
Children between 5 and 20 years of age that watched more than 14 hours a week of TV had lower bone mineral content as young adults.
Sep 30, 2016 11:00AM
Mistakes by doctors and communication breakdowns in hospitals are now estimated to cause a quarter of a million deaths annually in the United States.
Runners older than 65 that run three times a week burn oxygen at the same rate as 20-year-old runners, thus expending a similar amount of metabolic energy.
Diabetic patients that replaced their cooking oil with a blend of cold-pressed sesame oil and rice bran oil had lower blood glucose levels than patients taking the pharmaceutical glynase.
In a double-blind study involving armpit pads and cameras recording facial expressions, Dutch researchers have found that positive emotions can be transferred from one person to another via human sweat.
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