Tag Archives: 10

Healthy Cooking: Top 10 Tips

default

Healthy Cooking: Top 10 Tips

[media id=4 width=500 height=400]

Here are 10 simple tips that you can use in the kitchen to make more healthy foods; lose the calories and fat, not the taste.

By replacing unhealthy foods with healthy alternatives in a recipe, you can cook healthy food, reduce fat, increase nutrients, lower calories and improve your diet.

Healthy Cooking, Healthy Cooking, Healthy Cooking News, Healthy Cooking news, Healthy Cooking Information, bealthy breakfast information, Healthy Cooking Photo, Healthy Cooking Latest, Healthy Cooking latest, Healthy Cooking Story, Healthy Cooking story, Healthy Cooking Video, Healthy Cooking video, Healthy Cooking History, Healthy Cooking history, history, Healthy Cooking Asia,  Healthy Cooking asia, Healthy Cooking Gallery, Healthy Cooking gallery, Healthy Cooking Photo Gallery, Healthy Cooking photo gallery, Healthy Cooking Picture, Healthy Cooking picture, Healthy Cooking Web, web , top,  10,  cooking,  food,  tips,  nutrition,  natalie,  diet,  cook,  recipe,  weight,  loss,  fat,  calorie

10 Tips for Healthy Hair

healthy-hair-main_Full

10 Tips for Healthy Hair

[media id=63 width=500 height=400]

This video offers tips on how African American women can achieve and maintain long, natural, healthy hair.

Hair is a protein filament that grows through the epidermis from follicles deep within the dermis. The fine, soft hair found on many nonhuman mammals is typically called fur; wool is the characteristically curly hair found on sheep and goats. Found exclusively in mammals, hair is one of the defining characteristics of the mammalian class.

Although other non-mammals, especially insects, show filamentous outgrowths, these are not considered “hair” in the scientific sense. So-called “hairs” (trichomes) are also found on plants.

The projections on arthropods such as insects and spiders are actually insect bristles, composed of a polysaccharide called chitin. There are varieties of cats, dogs, and mice bred to have little or no visible fur. In some species, hair is absent at certain stages of life. The main component of hair fiber is keratin.

Healthy Hair  , Healthy Hair   Health, Healthy Hair   Health Latest, Healthy Hair   Health Information, Healthy Hair  Health information, Healthy Hair   Health Photo,Healthy Hair  for Weight Health photo, Healthy Hair   Health Latest, Healthy Hair   Health latest, Choreography for Weight  Health Story, Healthy Hair   Video, Healthy Hair  video, Healthy Hair   Health History, Healthy Hair   Health history, Healthy Hair  over Picture, history, Healthy Hair   Asia, Healthy Hair   asia, Healthy Hair    Gallery, Healthy Hair   for Weight gallery, Healthy Hair    Photo Gallery, Healthy Hair   Picture, Healthy Hair   picture, Healthy Hair   Web, Malaysia Health, web Health, web Health picture, video photo, video surgery, gallery, laparoscopy, virus, flu, drug, video, Health Health, calories, photo, nutrition, health video, symptoms, Healthy Hair , medical, beating, diet, physical, Training, organic, gym, blister, exercise, weightloss, surgery, spiritual, eating, tips, skin, operation, bf1, Healthy ,Hair

Less sleep for kids may mean higher blood sugar

Less sleep for kids may mean higher blood sugar

Young children may be more apt to have high blood sugar, a precursor to diabetes, if they average 8 hours or less of sleep a night, report Chinese and American researchers.

This risk may be even greater among obese youngsters, Dr. Zhijie Yu, at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Shanghai and colleagues note in Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine.

Moreover, Yu said in an email to Reuters Health, shorter sleep seemed to influence blood sugar “independently of a large variety of risk factors,” such as age, gender, birth-related influences, early life feeding or later diet, recent illness, physical activity, body mass, and waist girth.

Yu’s team investigated sleep duration and blood sugar levels in 619 obese and 617 non-obese children who were 3 to 6 years old and free of diabetes or blood sugar problems.

Parental reports showed a greater percentage of the obese (47 percent) than the non-obese (37 percent) kids averaged 8 or fewer hours of sleep nightly. These reports also showed nightly averages of 9 or 10, or 11-plus, hours of sleep less common in obese (37 and 16 percent) versus non-obese (43 and 20 percent) kids, respectively.

High blood sugar levels, defined as 100 milligrams of glucose per deciliter of blood after not eating for 8 hours, appeared about 1.35-fold and 2.15-fold more likely in the shorter-sleeping non-obese and obese kids, respectively. (For comparison, 110 milligrams per deciliter is considered “pre-diabetes,” while diabetes is diagnosed at 126 milligrams.)

High blood sugar levels were evident in 23 of the 217 non-obese and in 49 of the 291 obese kids sleeping less than 8 hours. By contrast, 21 each of the 175 non-obese and 229 obese kids getting 9 or 10 hours of sleep nightly had high blood sugar.

Less sleep environmental health,Less sleep health department,Less sleep health insurance,Less sleep health nutrition,health,Less sleep public health,Less sleep health risk assessment,Less sleep health plans,Less sleep health dept,Less sleep health benefits,Less sleep health education,Less sleep health promotion,natural health,health policy,department of health,women’s health,health diet,Less sleep health products,Less sleep skin health,Less sleep health supplements,Less sleep human health,Less sleep health concerns,Less sleep insurance health,Less sleep dental health,Less sleep health coverage,Less sleep health center,Less sleep gov health,Less sleep health departments,Less sleep health county,Less sleep womens health,Less sleep health effects,health regulations,board of health,nutritional health,clinics health,nutrition and health,nutrients health,current health,google health,total health,health