Health & Wellness
Researchers at the University of Utah carried out an international comparison of women in 37 different populations and cultures.
On comparing the waist-to-hip ratio of the women, researchers found that those who had successful careers were more likely to have flatter figures. Career women are more likely to look like Keira Knightley than Marilyn Monroe.
Previous studies have linked curvaceous figures (where the hips are 30 percent or larger in circumference than the waist) with improved fertility in women.
Forced into a waiting boat, she sat down. She'd been taught "little children rules" for the water. She fixed her gaze on her mother standing alone against the house until the image was only a speck and then, nothing.
She couldn't stop crying. She felt so worthless, she says, "I knew God Himself didn't want me."
The students got sick Thursday afternoon after drinking from contaminated water bottles that came from a vending machine at La Mesa Junior High School.
The FBI is investigating how the tainted water bottles got into a vending machine but they say the bottles do not appear to have been tampered with.
It was not immediately clear what the bottles contained, but it appeared to be a "bleach-like substance," county inspector Steve Zermeno said.
The study, which reviewed 300 child deaths dating back to 2000, found abuse-related child death cases are disproportionately clustered in neighborhoods that stretch from South Tacoma to the military bases along the Interstate 5 corridor.
"The one factor that is interesting is it's around the military bases, even though in our research we found that these cases are not related to the military," said lead researcher Tom Stokes.
Low levels of vitamin D may be linked to severity of asthma in children, according to a new study.
The study, published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, examined the blood levels of vitamin D in children with asthma. Lower levels of vitamin D were associated with more severe asthma.
Chewing sugarless gum during class and while doing homework may improve academic performance of adolescents, a new study says.
The research was underwritten by the William Wrigley Jr. Co., the Chicago-based chewing gum giant, but scientists from the Baylor College of Medicine say that didn't influence the study's design or its outcome.
And scientists who had nothing to do with the study say it's likely that chewing gum can reduce stress, leading to enhanced concentration and thus better academic performance.
Well, they lasted nearly 50 years, until Dad's death five years ago, and let's just say my siblings and I heard our share of fighting. But we also heard our share of resolving and making up and never hitting below the belt - and that, psychologists say, is the difference between scarring children when parents quarrel, and teaching them.
Some viewing television coverage of this women's tragedy might think her behaviors are abnormal. After all, the woman is a survivor; her life was spared. She should be glad she's alive, some might reason. However, emergency professionals and disaster teams recognize the victim's responses as typical of the varied responses observed immediately after a disaster.
This article focuses on disaster psychology, a multidisciplinary body of knowledge that is an offshoot of traumatology. However, this now-psychiatric subspecialty has a stronger community-based model of assessment and intervention, in contrast to the previously prevalent clinical model, which focused on individual responses.1 This article examines aspects of both models.
The Victor Center at Albert Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia has released an article to the Jewish Times of South Jersey about the need for Jewish couples to have genetic testing when getting married.
One in five people of Ashkenazi Jewish descent are a carrier of one of several diseases that can be tragic. They can include Tay-Sachs, Familial Dysautonomia, Canavan disease, Gaucher disease and Bloom Syndrome among other disorders. These disorders can cause death in early childhood as well as life-long dependent care. Probably the least serious is Tay-Sachs.






