Showing posts with label BEAUTY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BEAUTY. Show all posts

Sunday, 17 July 2016

IT IS RECOMMENDED EVEN FROM THE DOCTORS DRINK IS STRONGER THAN CURE – IT DESTROYS CHOLESTEROL AND BURNS FAT

IT IS RECOMMENDED EVEN FROM THE DOCTORS DRINK IS STRONGER THAN CURE – IT DESTROYS CHOLESTEROL AND BURNS FAT

The recipe presented in this article is extremely effective in reducing cholesterol levels and burning fat in no time.

Amazingly, even doctors advise their patients with high cholesterol levels to consume it, which tells a lot about its effectiveness.  All of the ingredients used in this drink are extremely healthy and beneficial in fighting off various diseases.  By combining these ingredients you get an amazing tool for lowering cholesterol and burning fat!

First, clean the lemon with baking soda in order to eliminate all impurities
Boil the water and allow it to cool
Cut the lemons and chop the parsley before adding them into the water
Cover the bowl and keep it refrigerated
In the morning, stir the drink well and transfer it into a bottle or jar
Use:

You should drink 100 grams of the drink on a daily basis

30 Second Daily Skin Care Tips That Will Make You Look 10 Years Younger

30 Second Daily Skin Care Tips That Will Make You Look 10 Years Younger

Women have to take off the makeup before sleeping.We all want to take care for our skin, and we do some things every day about it, like changing the pillowcase. But this is not enough, here are 17 advices how to keep your skin soften, and also rejuvenate.
During the cleaning of the face, try to massage your skin, so the circulation is taking the higher level, and prevent the appearance of wrinkles.
The condition of your skin can not be in perfect form, if you pop your pimples. This can only worsen their appearance.
Our hands are exposed to bacteria, so we must be careful when we touch our faces, unless they are clean.
Take care often to consume food that is health for your skin.
Your eye creams have to be always in the fridge.
Ice cubes are not good for pimples, except when you have red blemish.
All natural remedies that you need are exactly in your kitchen: tea treatments, olive oil, coconut oil, oatmeal, and sugar scrubs.
You can easily transfer lot of bacteria on your face, using your mobile phone. So you have to clean the phone daily.
You’ll need separate towels for hair, and face.
The pillowcase have to be changed on daily basic.
You have to be careful using hair products, make sure they do not come in contact with your skin.
Pay attention on acne breakotus, their appearance means something in your body is wrong. If you notice pimple on your forehead, that is maybe a liver problem.
Make sure your body is always hydrated, drink great quantities of water.
Eat organic food.
Exfoliate your skin every day in order to remove the dead cells from its surface.
You can cause irritation on your sink, using face cream which contain numerous chemicals, natural products are always the best choice.

Saturday, 11 June 2016

Tricks to Stop Belly Bloating

Tricks to Stop Belly Bloating

A few simple precautions can help you avoid bloat for good.

Don't eat and run

When you eat in a hurry, you swallow a lot of gas-producing air. Chew food well, with your mouth closed, and sip straight from a cup instead of from a straw.

Tricks to Stop Belly Bloating

Tricks to Stop Belly Bloating

A few simple precautions can help you avoid bloat for good.


Get bloat-free

Feel gassy? Like you've gained 10 pounds in the past two days? Most likely, bloating is to blame.

Fortunately, you can avoid that puffiness for good by taking a few simple precautions.


Tricks to Stop Belly Bloating

Tricks to Stop Belly Bloating

A few simple precautions can help you avoid bloat for good.

Cut back on sugar-free gum

Cut back on sugar-free gum and candies and other foods containing artificial sweeteners like sorbitol and aspartame, which aren't digestible and trigger bloating, says Christine Gerbstadt, MD, a spokesperson for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.

Next: Don't eat and run

Wednesday, 8 June 2016

'Biggest Loser' Made Us Take Diet Pills, Contestants Claim


More troubling news has surfaced about The Biggest Loser.
Earlier this month, a study published in the journal Obesity revealed that 13 out of 14 former contestants, who each lost an average of 100 pounds on the NBC hit show, were unable to keep the weight off six years later. The study findings suggest that changing metabolic rates and shifting levels of the appetite-regulating hormone leptin made it difficult for participants to maintain their slimmer physiques.

Now a new article in the New York Post alleges that the show encouraged some seriously unhealthy dieting tactics, which may also be to blame for the contestants' ultimate weight gain.

The Post quotes multiple sources who claim the show pushed them to take diet pills and severely restrict their caloric intake in order to shed pounds. One anonymous source said Biggest Loser trainer Bob Harper supplied contestants with Adderral and weight loss pills containing ephedra extract—a substance the FDA banned in 2004 after it caused several deaths.

Another source, Joelle Gwynn from the 2008 "Couples" season, said Harper instructed her to lie on-camera about how many calories she was consuming. Gwynn says Harper told her to say she was eating 1,500 calories a day, while he was actually pushing her to have just 800, "or as little as you can."

"People would take amphetamines, water pills, diuretics, and throw up in the bathroom," Season 2's Suzanne Mendonca told The Post. "They would take their spin bikes into the steam room to work up a sweat. I vomited every single day. Bob Harper tells people to throw up: ‘Good,’ he says. ‘You’ll lose more calories.’ "

Many of the sources claim the show's resident doctor, Rob Huizenga, MD (often referred to as Dr. H.), knew and supported these unhealthy practices. "People were passing out in Dr. H’s office at the finale weigh-in," Mendonca said. "On my season, five people had to be rushed to the hospital. He knew exactly what we were doing and never tried to stop it."

Dr. Huizenga—who collaborated with researchers for the Obesity study—is strongly denying these claims. "Nothing could be further from the truth,” he wrote in an e-mail to The Post. "Contestants are told at the start of the show that there is zero tolerance for any weight-loss drugs. Urine drug screens and the evaluation of serial weights are repeatedly used to flush out possible illicit use."

The show's producers are also refuting the claims. In a statement to The Post they stressed that the use of illegal substances is prohibited on the Biggest Loser: "The safety and well-being of our contestants is, and always has been, paramount."

Victoria’s Secret Perfume Repels Mosquitos, According to Research


Could the trick to dodging mosquitos this summer be sitting on top of your dresser? Maybe not, but it comes close.

A study from New Mexico State University (NMSU) found that Victoria's Secret Bombshell perfume is moderately effective at repelling two types of disease-carrying mosquitos: Aedes albopictus and Aedes aegypti (aka the species spreading Zika).

The research, which was published last fall in the Journal of Insect Science, compared the efficacy of eight commercially-available mosquito repellents, two fragrances, and one vitamin B patch. They used each product on a person's hand and noted whether mosquitoes were attracted or repelled.

Unsurprisingly, the researchers found that products containing DEET as the primary ingredient were the most effective in keeping mosquitos away for the longest period of time. (Only one DEET-free repellent produced effective and long-lasting results: Cutter Lemon Eucalyptus Insect repellent.) What they weren't expecting to find, however, was that the sweet, floral scent of Victoria's Secret Bombshell kept the pests at bay for two hours.

"We tested VS Bombshell because one of our test subjects had gotten it as a birthday present, so it was a completely random pick," study author Immo Hansen, PhD, said in an interview with Today.

“There was some previous literature that said fruity, floral scents attracted mosquitoes, and to not wear those,” co-author Stacy Rodriguez, a research assistant in NMSU’s Molecular Vector Physiology Lab, explained in a press release. “It was interesting to see that the mosquitoes weren’t actually attracted to the person that was wearing the Victoria’s Secret perfume —they were repelled by it.”

Mosquitos use their sense of smell to detect their hosts. The researchers speculate that the perfume may have provided a "masking odor," temporarily keeping the mosquitos from picking up common human scents.

But the researchers note that they used a high concentration of the perfume, and that lower concentrations might produce different results. They caution against using the fragrance as an insect repellent, and instead recommend products that have high concentrations of DEET.

With the skeeter season upon us, and the possibility of Zika hitting the United States, an effective repellant will help protect you from getting an insect-borne disease. It's especially vital if you're heading to a country where the Zika virus is being actively transmitted.

"In our experiments, best protection was achieved with 30% or 95% DEET-containing repellents, or oil of lemon eucalyptus," Hansen told Today. "I personally use a 30% DEET repellent when I go into the field—or my backyard."

Is Zika Really Going to Hit the U.S. This Summer? Some Experts Say No


THURSDAY, May 26, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Are health officials in the United States overreacting to the threat posed by the Zika virus this summer?

Some leading insect and infectious-diseases experts think so, arguing that the mosquito-borne virus is unlikely to become a widespread hazard to pregnant women throughout the United States.

“I think the risk for Zika actually setting up transmission cycles that become established in the continental U.S. is near zero,” said Chris Barker, a mosquito-borne virus researcher at the University of California, Davis School of Veterinary Medicine.

He said Zika should follow a pattern similar to other tropical diseases spread by mosquito bites, such as dengue fever and chikungunya, which have failed to gain any significant foothold in the United States.

“We do a pretty good job of shielding ourselves from mosquito bites in this country, with our screening and air conditioning. That seems to be enough to limit the risk for dengue, and we think the same will be true for Zika,” Barker said.

If that proves true, then small Zika outbreaks could occur in southern states where the breeds of mosquito that carry these diseases are most active, Barker and other experts said.

Zika virus is frightening because it’s the first mosquito-borne illness known to cause a brain-related birth defect—in this case microcephaly—if an expectant mother becomes infected.

Microcephaly results in babies born with abnormally small heads and brains. Nearly 5,000 babies have been born with microcephaly in Brazil, the epicenter of the Zika epidemic, according to the World Health Organization.

Given the threat to pregnant women and their fetuses, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has chosen to err on the side of caution in its Zika response, said agency spokesman Tom Skinner.

“The bottom line is that no one can predict with absolute certainty what’s going to happen here in the United States when it comes to local transmission of Zika virus,” Skinner said. “Many areas in the U.S. have the type of mosquitoes that can transmit this virus. We just can’t predict with any absolute certainty what’s going to happen.”

At the same time, federal health officials know that some parts of the United States are more vulnerable than others, he said.

“Based on what we’ve seen in years past with dengue and chikungunya, we certainly wouldn’t be surprised to see Zika emerge in an area like Florida or Texas or somewhere along the Gulf Coast or the Mexico border,” Skinner said. “While those areas are likely to be a priority, we want to make sure that other states—where we know these mosquitoes can possibly transmit the virus—are prepared to the extent they can be prepared.”

To limit any potential spread of Zika, health officials on the federal, state and local levels are deploying a three-pronged strategy: improving mosquito control; expanding their ability to test for Zika; and urging the public to protect themselves against mosquitoes.

However, officials acknowledge it won’t be possible to test every woman who’s pregnant or might become pregnant to see if she has been infected with the virus. That’s why self-protection and mosquito control are critical components of the Zika strategy, officials say.

Gulf Coast states like Florida, Louisiana and Texas are most at risk for local Zika outbreaks as this year’s mosquito season progresses, agreed Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior associate at the University of Pittsburgh’s UPMC Center for Health Security in Baltimore.

The reason: those are the states in which Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus mosquitoes “are abundant and/or in which Aedes-spread diseases such as dengue and chikungunya have had local transmission,” Adalja said.

The Aedes mosquitoes can range farther north, but it’s highly unlikely that they’ll flourish enough to carry Zika into more northern states, said Laura Harrington, chair of entomology at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y.

“Here in New York state, there’s been a lot of pressure placed on mosquito-control districts to do as much as they can. And, they’re really strapped for resources, and there’s not a huge risk of transmission compared to a place like Florida,” Harrington said.

Much of the national concern stems from maps released recently by the CDC showing that the Aedes mosquitoes can range as far north as New York, Ohio, Kansas, Missouri and California, she said.

“They’re showing this mosquito in places where there’s no way you’re going to find them,” Harrington said. “It’s really unfortunate, because it’s causing a lot of hysteria in places where people should be focusing on other health issues, like Lyme disease.”

All three experts—Barker, Adalja and Harrington—agreed that Zika requires a strong public health response, but it needs to be focused on the southern states most at risk.

“Those are the places that should have more resources,” Harrington said.

Florida is the state in the continental United States that warrants the most concern regarding Zika, with Texas close behind, Barker said.


“They have high travel volumes to places where Zika is transmitted regularly, and lots of travelers returning,” he said, referring to Latin America and the Caribbean. “We don’t have evidence for local transmission in those places (Gulf Coast states) at this point, but people should be aware the possibility exists.”

At the same time, Barker said people shouldn’t alter any travel plans within the United States based on concerns over Zika.

“We are starting to see people wondering whether they should take vacations to places like Georgia or Louisiana. And, I think the answer is to be aware of the risks that mosquito bites pose, but I wouldn’t be canceling vacations to most U.S. states at this point,” he said.

So what can women who are pregnant or planning to become pregnant do to protect themselves and their fetuses from mosquito bites? They should wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants, use mosquito repellent when outside, and stay indoors as much as possible.

These women should also use condoms or refrain from sex with a male partner if they are living in an active Zika area.

And people can cut their local risk by eliminating mosquito habitats from their property. Get rid of any source of standing water — such as buckets, plastic covers, toys or old tires. Empty and change the water in birdbaths, fountains, wading pools and potted plants once a week. Also, drain or fill with dirt any temporary pools of water, and keep swimming pool water treated and circulating, according to the CDC.