by Senior Scene | Mar 1, 2025 | Bonus Article, Community, General Interest, Senior Health
Twelve Everyday Health Rules by Arvind Dhople Professor H. W. Cone (1989-1917), a bacteriologist, had been teaching at Wesleyan University in Connecticut for many years. In his “Introductory Physiology and Hygiene” course, he had posted permanently...
by Senior Scene | Mar 1, 2025 | Featured Article (01), General Interest, Magazine, Senior Health
Regular physical activity is proven to help prevent and manage communicable disease such as heart disease, hypertension, stroke, diabetes and several cancers. Yet, current global estimates show 1 in 3 adults and 81% adolescents do not do enough. With the recent...
by Senior Scene | Jan 31, 2025 | Community, Featured Article (03), General Interest, Magazine, Senior Health
The house was completed in 1916 by Edward Postell Porcher and his wife Byrnina Peck Porcher, who designed the house. For many years there was a two story home and packing house to the north, about where the Civic Center is located now, and a long dock out into the...
by Senior Scene | Jan 31, 2025 | Featured Article (01), General Interest, Magazine, Senior Health
Regular physical activity is proven to help prevent and manage communicable disease such as heart disease, hypertension, stroke, diabetes and several cancers. Yet, current global estimates show 1 in 3 adults and 81% adolescents do not do enough. With the recent...
by Senior Scene | Jan 31, 2025 | Community, General Interest, Magazine, Senior Health, Top Story (B)
By Lisa Conway February is American Heart Month, dedicated to that powerful organ inside your chest. Your heart is responsible for pumping blood and delivering essential oxygen and nutrients from your brain to your toes. Scheduled checkups by your healthcare provider...
by Senior Scene | Jan 31, 2025 | Bonus Article, Community, General Interest, Senior Health
Spend some time reading medical articles and I would shock at the unlikely ways people manage to hurt themselves. Focus on sneeze-related accidents, and I would notice a trend: Bad things happen when people hold in their sneeze. A fractured larynx, acute cervical...
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