Tuesday, June 9, 2015
Wednesday, June 3, 2015
Those pesky deer ticks. How to protect yourself this summer!
As the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) points out, onset of the disease is most common in June, July, and August, when ticks are more active and people spend more time outdoors. State health offices report 30,000 cases to the CDC every year, but the actual number of Americans diagnosed with the disease could be as much as 10 times greater.
A bacterial infection caused by a bite from the black-legged or deer tick, Lyme disease is prevalent in the northeast and upper Midwest. The first sign is usually a rash with a bull’s-eye shape that appears within weeks of being bitten by an infected tick. The rash may be accompanied by flu-like symptoms such as body aches, fatigue, and fever.
Not everyone develops a rash, according to Penelope Dennehy, MD, director of pediatric infectious disease at Hasbro Children’s Hospital in Providence, Rhode Island. In those cases, “it’s difficult to sort out Lyme symptoms from whatever garden-variety illness or virus is going around,” Dr. Dennehy says.
Untreated, Lyme disease can cause arthritis or neurological problems. Though less common, the Mayo Clinic lists an irregular heartbeat or inflammation of the liver as other potential complications.
RELATED: Protect Yourself From Deer Ticks When Hiking
Though most cases can be treated with antibiotics, it’s best to avoid getting Lyme disease in the first place. Here are some simple precautions you can take:
- Use insect repellent that contains at least 20 percent DEET. The American Academy of Pediatrics does not recommend using DEET on infants younger than two months.
- Light-colored clothing can help you spot ticks more easily. Wear long-sleeved shirts and tuck pants into your socks to reduce skin exposure.
- Wash clothes after being outdoors and inspect your body. Be sure to check kids and pets as well. Dennehy suggests parents look for “any freckles that weren’t there before.”
- Don’t panic if you spot a tick on your body. It has to embed itself for at least 24 hours and be infected in order to transmit the disease.
- If a tick is embedded in your skin, use tweezers to grab the tick near its head and pull straight up.
- If you think you’ve been bitten and have any symptoms, even if the signs seem to disappear, contact your doctor.
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
Summer is On! Simple precautions can ease the strain of warm weather.
Beat the heat
Some simple choices can help you weather the weather and keep heat from over stressing your heart and spoiling your summer.Take it easy. Turn procrastination from a vice to a virtue by putting off exercise or other physical activity until things cool down. Evening and early morning are the best times to get out. If you do exercise, drink more than you usually do.
Cool is cool. Chilled air is the best way to beat the heat. Fans work, but only to a point — when the air is as warm as you are, sitting in front of a fan is about as helpful as sitting in front of a blow dryer. If you don’t have an air conditioner, spending an hour or two in a movie theater, at a store, or with an air-conditioned neighbor can help. So can a cool shower or bath, or putting a cold, wet cloth or ice pack under your arm or at your groin.
Drink to your health. The lower your coolant level, the greater your chances of overheating. Unfortunately, staying hydrated isn’t always easy. Stomach or bowel problems, diuretics, a faulty thirst signal, or low fluid intake can all interfere. On dangerously hot and humid days, try downing a glass of water every hour. (If you have had congestive heart failure, check with your doctor or nurse first.) Go easy on sugary soda and full-strength fruit juice since they slow the passage of water from the digestive system to the bloodstream. And don’t rely on caffeinated beverages or alcohol for fluid because they can cause or amplify dehydration.
Eat light. Stick with smaller meals that don’t overload your stomach. Cold soups, salads, and fruits can satisfy your hunger and give you extra fluid.
Warning signs of heat illness
Heat-related trouble ranges from irritating problems such as prickly heat (also known as heat rash) to heat exhaustion and the potentially deadly heat stroke. It can be hard to tell where heat exhaustion ends and heat stroke begins. Both can be mistaken for a summer “flu,” at least at first. Be on the lookout for:- nausea or vomiting
- fatigue
- headache
- disorientation or confusion
- muscle twitches
If you think you are having heat-related problems, or if you see signs of them in someone else, getting to an air-conditioned space and drinking cool water are the most important things to do. If these don’t help or the symptoms persist, call your doctor or go to a hospital with an emergency department.
Walking Log
Here is the link for an electronic copy of the walking log. This excel document will allow you to enter your daily steps, while it will calculate your totals and averages for you.
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
Meditation 101
Little by little, meditation is shedding its image as a strange
spiritual discipline practiced by monks and ascetics in Asia.
Beyond celebrities and the military, there's science. A
growing body of research shows that meditation has a discernible effect
on the brain that promotes various types of health and well-being.
Anyone interested may need to surmount the final hurdle: the assumption
that meditation is hard, time-consuming, painful or complicated. Or
religious. While there are lots of different kinds of meditation -- from
transcendental meditation to Zen -- experts and health organizations
such as the National Institutes of Health agree a beginner need not
bother grappling with them.
Meditation is simple and easy, and everyone
can do it and benefit from it. Here are some tips:
Find some free time -- at least 20 minutes -- and as calm and quiet a place as you can. Meditating with interruptions from your BlackBerry or your computer doesn't really work.
Sit down and make yourself comfortable. Some traditions
use physical positions -- mudras, in Sanskrit -- in meditation. The
most famous is sitting on the ground in the lotus position, i.e., Indian
style. If you are comfortable sitting this way for longer than a few
minutes, fine. If not, sit in a chair.
Don't just do something, sit there -- to quote the
title of a well-known book on meditation by Sylvia Boorstein. Don't
launch immediately into what you think meditation is. Let your mind and
body settle for a minute or so. Life is stressful enough; don't make
meditation stressful and rushed.
Pick something and gently center your attention on it.
It can be your breathing, which works well because of its easy, natural
rhythm. It can be an image, mental or physical -- one can meditate with
eyes open or closed, whichever works. It can be a mantra, a sound or
word that you repeat in your mind or with your voice. "Om" -- with most
of your time resting on that nice m sound -- is the most famous.
When your mind wanders, gently bring it back to the thing you picked.
When your mind wanders again, gently bring it back to the thing you picked.
The mind is a wandering machine. Meditation is not having an empty
mind; it's gently quieting your mind using the technique of
concentrating on one thing. Over the time you sit, you will likely
notice your mind getting a bit quieter.
When your mind wanders again, gently bring it back to the thing you picked.
The key word is gently. Meditation is a simple technique, but it's also
an approach, a way of being. People, especially Americans, tend to
worry about doing it right. Worrying about doing it right is the one
wrong way to meditate. Don't be angry or frustrated with your mind or
yourself.
Gently close your meditation when you wish or need to.
The idea is relaxation and reducing stress, remember? Make it smooth,
not jarring. Let the relaxation you cultivated breathe a bit before
going on to the next thing in your day.
Repeat as needed. Meditation works best when it's done
regularly and over a long period. That doesn't have to mean for hours
every day. It can be once every other day for 20 minutes. Many
meditaters refer to their "practice." Its benefits happen, and happen
more deeply, when it's something you do regularly for some time.
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Good Question!
How much water do I really need?
Our bodies are about sixty-five percent water (if you weigh 200 pounds, everything that isn’t water weighs just 70 pounds). So why would you need more
of it? Because water helps us breathe, it regulates our metabolism and
our temperature, and it helps us digest our foods. And since we lose
water regularly—just like the planet, which is 70% water—we have to
replace it.
A few myths have helped
propel water to its status of healing elixir over the past few years.
Debates continue over how much water we need daily. And while the 8x8
rule (eight 8-ounce glasses) is certainly easy to remember, the formula
isn’t that simple.
You’ll need more water
if you exercise—and extra one and a half to two and a half cups for a
30-minute workout. You’ll need even more for high-intensity and long
workouts. Hot weather makes you sweat more. Illness makes your need for
additional fluids greater.
Chances are good those
eight glasses of water will do the trick, especially when you factor in
the other water-based beverages you consume.
Friday, May 1, 2015
Coast to Coast registration ends TODAY!
WellConnect Coast to Coast registration ends TODAY!
Here’s the link to register: http://goo.gl/forms/HUw5XT2NDv
In case you haven’t heard, here’s a recap of some of
the awesome things about the program:
- Pedometers are very reasonably priced!
- We have t-shirts this year!
- You can wear your walking program t-shirt on WellConnect Wednesday throughout the walking program!
- You can encourage others (or give friendly competition/smack talk) on the this Facebook page!
- There are MANY opportunities to win prizes throughout the program!
- Have fun with your co-workers, friends, family!
- Take advantage of all the health benefits walking can give you!
Remember: The GOAL of the program is to HAVE
FUN, raise AWARENESS of your activity level, do your best to IMPROVE!
We look forward to walking with you!
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