drink luke warm water or beverages
do not get stress
stressed eat desserts:)
live , put your mind into health- i am healthy, i have no pain
support medical research-- lots of peole show up , generously support dr peter aids research and its annual fund raising
support arco search canada medical research, new chairperson for life science ubc is now on campus.
brai fitness try meditation, avoid alcohol, smoking, and too much weight
cheap inexpensive way to detoxify your body wear more clothing, and get a sauna , naturally by exercises in the heat
do drink more water
avoid perfection mentality
socialize join meetup or other event
volunteer
stay smiling and keep active
be positive, new research with stem cell and many other research is bettering the human medical knowledge
google start a new health research bracnh in aging and medical health
Tags:
canada, dr albert sze wei tan, healing, health natural, support cancer, vancovuer
Posted at: 01:42 PM | 82 Comments | Add Comment | Permalink
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22 August 2012
30 minutes of daily exercise does the trick
Same effect in half the time
Researchers at the University of Copenhagen have shown that 30 minutes of daily training provide an equally effective loss of weight and body mass as 60 minutes. Their results have just been published in the American Journal of Physiology.
Forty percent of Danish men are moderately overweight. For thirteen weeks, a research team at the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences followed 60 heavy – but healthy – Danish men in their efforts to get into better shape. Half of the men were set to exercise for an hour a day, wearing a heart-rate monitor and calorie counter, while the second group only had to sweat for 30 minutes. Research results show that 30 minutes of exercise hard enough to produce a sweat is enough to turn the tide on an unhealthy body mass index:
"On average, the men who exercised 30 minutes a day lost 3.6 kilo in three months, while those who exercised for a whole hour only lost 2.7 kg. The reduction in body mass was about 4 kg for both groups," reports Mads Rosenkilde, PhD student, Department of...
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Tags:
exercise medicine, physiology, research, sports, vancouver
Posted at: 11:49 AM | 2 Comments | Add Comment | Permalink
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