...rt disease and obesity. In fact, caring for someone with AD can be even harder than caring for someone with other chronic diseases. A 1999 study [...]
...rt disease and obesity. In fact, caring for someone with AD can be even harder than caring for someone with other chronic diseases. A 1999 study [...]
...own boss—working for yourself, or being self-employed. (Although that is becoming harder and harder given [...]
...ing effects of alcohol. Indeed, stress is one of the greatest killers of modern times. So it makes sense that a moderate amount of alcohol, with its relaxing [...]
...sufficient. Be careful with calcium supplements Supplement sources of calcium come in many forms. And the calcium [...]
...owel syndrome, migraine headache, phantom pain, post-traumatic stress disorder, rheumatoid arthritis, skin conditions such as eczema and psoriasis, [...]
...an “pre-scan psychosis” or PSP. It can induce responses similar to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). A mental health evaluation [...]
...ients to take a “rest cure,” “nature cure,” or even “west cure.” They considered it the best course for treating almost any [...]
...ion on the death certificate instead of AD. Pneumonia is actually the most common deadly complication of AD. Remember, AD is a [...]
...oduct made with triclosan. Period. Triclosan and triclocarban are the most common “antibacterial” chemicals found in consumer products. [...]
...ing to suppress publication of my research. As soon as I left the NCI to become an associate medical director at Walter Reed, I published the [...]