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Crave Coffee Too Much? Talk Therapy May Help

By Alan Mozes
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Dec. 1, 2015 (HealthDay News) — A short round of “talk-therapy” seems to help over-consumers of caffeine dramatically cut back their intake, a small new study suggests.

Caffeine-use disorder, though not yet an official mental health diagnosis, is defined by caffeine dependency and an inability to consume less caffeine despite a desire to do so, the researchers explained.

The new study found that just a single one-hour session of “reduction-strategy” therapy — a type of cognitive behavioral therapy — helped patients lower their caffeine intake by more than 75 percent. The goal of this type of talk therapy is to help patients understand, recognize and change irrational thoughts that are causing their behavior.

“What we’re talking about here are people who have not only a physical dependence on caffeine, but also negative physical and psychological repercussions if they try to cut back or quit, and therefore an inability to do so,” said study author Laura Juliano, a professor of psychology at American University in Washington, D.C.

“And we found that therapy helped people with this disorder make significant reductions in consumption,” she said.

The study was published online recently in the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology.

Juliano said caffeine is the most popular psychoactive drug in the world. It’s consumed by roughly 90 percent of Americans — including children — in the form of coffee, tea, chocolate, or energy drinks and bars.

Though caffeine tolerance varies, and there is no hard-and-fast rule, Juliano advised limiting caffeine consumption to about 400 milligrams (mg) per day, roughly equal to two or three 8-ounce cups of coffee.

But prior research, she said, indicated that although the average American consumes about 200 mg per day, many people consume far more. And, more than half of regular caffeine consumers have trouble reducing or kicking their caffeine habit, Juliano said.

That struggle can persist even when caffeine dependency causes anxiety, tension, stress, sleep problems and jitteriness, or threatens to complicate other health concerns, such as an impending pregnancy, heart disease or a bleeding condition, she said.

In 2013, “caffeine-use disorder” was recognized by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) — an official list of recognized mental disorders — as a concern worthy of further investigation. But the DSM-5 stopped short of declaring it an actual diagnosis, the study authors said. (Juliano served as DSM-5 advisor.)

With that in mind, the current study set out to explore the potential caffeine-kicking benefits of behavioral therapy.

Cognitive behavioral therapy is already known to be very helpful for depression, anxiety and an assortment of addiction issues, said psychiatry professor Janice Kiecolt-Glaser, of Ohio State University said. Kiecolt-Glaser wasn’t involved in the current research, but reviewed the study’s findings.

“In general, the goal is to help change maladaptive thoughts and behaviors by learning to pay attention to them, and developing alternative strategies for handling challenges,” she said.

“But if someone with an addictive disorder is ordered into treatment or doesn’t really consider themselves to have a problem in the first place, this kind of treatment is generally not that successful or far less successful,” Kiecolt-Glaser added.

“It’s really most effective when the patient knows they have a problem and is motivated to seek therapy in order to overcome their issue,” she said.

That’s exactly the kind of men and women Juliano and her team enlisted for their study. All 67 participants indicated having tried and failed to cut back on caffeine despite a strong desire to do so.

On average, participants consumed just shy of 700 mg per day, the study found. About seven in 10 hoped to cut down that figure, rather than give up caffeine altogether, Juliano said.

Half were randomly assigned to immediately receive one hour of therapy with a trained counselor. They were also given take-home material that outlined a plan for a slow decline in caffeine spread over a five-week period. The other half also received therapy, but only after a six-week waiting period, the study authors said.

The result: the behavioral therapy enabled more than three-quarters of the participants to reduce their caffeine intake to less than 200 mg per day. And they were able to keep it around that level even one year later, the study authors said.

“It’s impressive,” said Kiecolt-Glaser. “I’m not aware of other treatments for caffeine addiction. But this appears to be an excellent way to go about it. It makes a lot of sense.”

More information

There’s more on caffeine at U.S. National Library of Medicine.





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6 Moves for Sculpted Shoulders by New Year’s Eve

There’s something to be said about having tank-top ready shoulders, even in the winter. That’s because having a toned upper body does (way) more for you than meets the eye. Yes, shapely shoulders will give the appearance of a smaller waist, and yes, your arms will look stellar in that cocktail dress. But strengthening this area will also help to relieve pressure from your neck and back, while helping with your overall posture. Basically, toned shoulders are a win-win no matter how you look at it.

Now that you’re convinced, check out my six-move routine for toned shoulders. Repeat the circuit three times a week to get cocktail-dress ready by New Year’s Eve.

Alternating shoulder press

Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart and your arms at your sides. While holding two medium dumbbells, extend your left arm straight out to the side while holding the other dumbbell at a 90 degree angle out to the side of your right ear (A). Continue holding your left arm out while your right arm presses up until it is straight up in the air (B). Bring your right arm back to a 90 degree angle and repeat for 12-15 reps. When you’ve finished, repeat on the other side.

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jennifer Cohen

RELATED: Get Rock-Star Arms Right Now

Arnold press

Stand with your feet slightly wider than shoulder-width apart, holding two medium dumbbells. Bring the dumbbells in front of your face with your arms bent and your palms facing you (A). From here, bring both elbows out to the side while rotating your palms so they face outwards. At this point, your arms should be at a 90 degree angle on the outside of your ears (B). Next, press both arms straight up above your head until your arms are straight, but not locked out (C). Release your arms back to the first position and repeat for 12-15 more reps.

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Jennifer Cohen

Bent-over rear delt fly

Grab two medium dumbbells and stand with your feet shoulder-width apart, with your knees bent. Hinge forward slightly from your hips while keeping your back flat. Next, hold the two dumbbells in your hands with your arms bent at about a 45-degree angle and your palms facing you (A). From here, slowly lift your arms as if your thumbs were being pulled towards the ceiling. Stop when your arms are parallel with your shoulders (B)  and release back to starting position. Repeat for 12-15 reps.

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jennifer Cohen

Pike push-ups on the bench

Stand about two feet away from a step or bench and place your hands on it so that your fingertips are facing each other (A). Start out with a higher surface for beginners and as you get stronger, you can use a lower surface. Keep your legs straight (but not locked out), back flat, and stand up on your toes. From here, bend your elbows to lower your head toward the bench or step (B). Go as low as you’re able to and then press back up to starting position. Repeat this for 8-10 reps.

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jennifer Cohen

Upright row

Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart, shoulders back, and holding two dumbbells about an inch in front of your thighs with your palms facing your body (A). While keeping the dumbbells close to your body, raise the dumbbells straight up towards your nose using your shoulders. Stop when your elbows are parallel with your shoulders (B) and release back down. Repeat for 12-15 reps.

RELATED: Want Kelly Ripa’s Toned Arms? Do This Move

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jennifer Cohen

Dumbbell curl to press

Stand with your feet shoulder width apart and dumbbells at your sides with your palms facing outwards (A). Perform a bicep curl and then rotate your elbows and hands out to your sides (B). From here, press straight up until your arms are directly overhead (C). Lower down and repeat for 10-12 reps.

Photo: Jen Cohen

Photo: Jennifer Cohen

Looking for more articles like this? Check out 4 Moves for a Toned Back and Upper Body.

Jennifer Cohen is a leading fitness authority, TV personality, entrepreneur, and best-selling author of the new book, Strong is the New Skinny. With her signature, straight-talking approach to wellness, Jennifer was the featured trainer on The CW’s Shedding for the Wedding, mentoring the contestants to lose hundreds of pounds before their big day, and she appears regularly on NBC’s Today ShowExtraThe Doctors, and Good Morning America. Connect with Jennifer on FacebookTwitterG+ and on Pinterest.

 




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Brain Gains for Older Adults Who Start Exercising

MONDAY, Nov. 30, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Beginning an exercise program may help protect older adults’ brains or even reverse early mental decline, a small study suggests.

Researchers placed 34 inactive people, aged 61 to 88, on an exercise regimen. It included moderate-intensity walking on a treadmill four times a week for 12 weeks.

On average, heart/lung health improved about 8 percent over that time, the researchers found.

Brain scans also showed an increase in the thickness of the participants’ cortex, the outer layer of the brain that typically shrinks with Alzheimer’s disease. Those with the greatest improvements in physical fitness had the most growth in the cortex, the University of Maryland researchers found.

The thickening of the cortex occurred in both healthy people and those with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), an early stage of Alzheimer’s disease, the study showed.

The study was published recently in the Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society.

“Exercise may help to reverse neurodegeneration and the trend of brain shrinkage that we see in those with MCI and Alzheimer’s,” senior study author Dr. J. Carson Smith, an associate professor of kinesiology, said in a university news release.

“Many people think it is too late to intervene with exercise once a person shows symptoms of memory loss, but our data suggest that exercise may have a benefit in this early stage of cognitive decline,” Smith added.

The study can’t prove definitively that exercise led to the brain gains. However, previous studies have found that exercise can benefit other areas of older adults’ brains.

The authors of the new study said further research is needed to determine if moderate physical activity can delay or reverse mental decline and help people remain independent as they age.

More information

The U.S. National Institute on Aging discusses healthy brain aging.





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Genes May Help Shield Seniors From Mental Decline: Study

MONDAY, Nov. 30, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Humans have evolved to have gene variants that protect older adults from mental decline, new research suggests.

“We unexpectedly discovered that humans have evolved gene variants that can help protect the elderly from dementia,” study co-leader Dr. Ajit Varki, a professor of medicine and cellular and molecular medicine at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, said in a university news release.

“Such genes likely evolved to preserve valuable and wise grandmothers and other elders, as well as to delay or prevent the emergence of dependent individuals who could divert resources and effort away from the care of the young,” Varki added.

Among vertebrates, humans and certain whales are exceptions to the rule that individuals die when they are no longer able to reproduce, the study authors said. This means that older people can continue to pass down important knowledge and help with tasks such as caring for grandchildren.

Varki and colleagues found that levels of a CD33 gene variant that protects against Alzheimer’s are four times higher in humans than in chimpanzees. They also found that the APOE2 and APOE3 gene variants appear to have evolved to protect against dementia.

The study was published Nov. 30 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

“When elderly people succumb to dementia, the community not only loses important sources of wisdom, accumulated knowledge and culture, but elders with even mild cognitive [mental] decline who have influential positions can harm their social groups by making flawed decisions,” study co-leader Pascal Gagneux, an associate professor pathology, said in the news release.

“Our study does not directly prove that these factors were involved in the selection of protective variants of CD33, APOE and other genes, but it is reasonable to speculate about the possibility. After all, inter-generational care of the young and information transfer is an important factor for the survival of younger kin in the group and across wider social networks or tribes,” he explained.

More information

The Alzheimer’s Association offers tips to maintain your brain health.





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Sugar-Free Sodas, Candy Can Still Damage Your Teeth

MONDAY, Nov. 30, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Even sugar-free sodas, sports drinks and candy can damage your teeth, a new study warns.

Australian researchers tested 23 sugar-free and sugar-containing products, including soft drinks and sports drinks, and found that some with acidic additives and low pH levels (a measure of acidity) harm teeth, even if they are sugar-free.

“Many people are not aware that while reducing your sugar intake does reduce your risk of dental decay, the chemical mix of acids in some foods and drinks can cause the equally damaging condition of dental erosion,” said Eric Reynolds. He is laureate professor and CEO of the Oral Health Cooperative Research Center at Melbourne University.

Dental erosion occurs when acid dissolves the tooth’s hard tissues. “In its early stages erosion strips away the surface layers of tooth enamel. If it progresses to an advanced stage it can expose the soft pulp inside the tooth,” he explained in a university news release.

Reynolds and his colleagues found that most soft drinks and sports drinks caused dental enamel to soften by between 30 percent and 50 percent. Both sugar-free and sugar-containing soft drinks and flavored mineral waters caused measurable loss of the tooth surface.

Of the eight sports drinks tested, six caused loss of tooth enamel. The researchers also found that many sugar-free candies contain high levels of citric acid and can erode tooth enamel.

Just because something is sugar-free doesn’t necessarily mean it’s safe for teeth, Reynolds said. The study highlights the need for better product labeling and consumer information to help people choose food and drinks that are safe for their teeth, he added.

Reynolds offered several tips to help you protect your teeth. Check product labels for acidic additives, especially citric acid and phosphoric acid. Drink more water (preferably fluoridated) and fewer soft drinks and sports drinks. And, finally, after consuming acidic food and drinks, rinse your mouth with water and wait an hour before brushing your teeth. Brushing immediately can remove the softened enamel, he said.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians outlines how to keep your teeth and mouth healthy.





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Human Brains Aren’t Distinctly Male or Female, Study Says

By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Nov. 30, 2015 (HealthDay News) — There’s no such thing as a distinctly male or female brain, new research suggests.

An analysis of more than 1,400 MRI scans suggests that biologically unmistakable sex differences don’t extend to the brain. Instead, the brain is home to a mix of masculine and feminine characteristics, the researchers found.

“This is the first study to look at the brain as a whole and ask whether brains are of two types. The answer is no,” said study lead author Daphna Joel, a psychologist and professor at Tel-Aviv University in Israel.

“Each person possesses a unique mosaic of characteristics: some more common in females compared to males, some more common in males compared to females, and some common in both,” Joel said.

The question has been debated throughout the ages: Are human brains as gender-specific as chromosomes and sexual organs are in most people? Or are things more complicated?

To gain more insight, Joel and colleagues analyzed MRI brain scans of 1,400 people. They found that the brains of males and females tended not to stand apart in terms of gray matter, white matter and connections inside the brain. (Gray matter refers to brain cells known as neurons; white matter connects neurons to each other.)

The findings revealed that “many more brains” included both traits that are more common in females and traits more common in men, Joel said.

The researchers also analyzed three previous studies of personality traits, actions and attitudes involving more than 5,500 people. Again, they found that it’s rare for people to be consistently masculine or feminine in the way they act. Instead, people tend to have a mix of male and female traits.

Still, Joel said the new study doesn’t address how your actions reflect your gender. “We did not deal at all with the questions where differences in brain and behavior come from — nature or nurture — nor did we attempt to link differences in brain structure to differences in behavior,” she said.

However, the findings suggest people shouldn’t be treated differently based on their sex, she said.

“For example, single-sex education is often advocated on the basis of the claim that such schools can specifically cater to ‘boy brains’ and ‘girl brains,'” she said.

“Our results undermine the entire concept of boy/girl brains. Who has a boy brain? The few boys who are consistently at the male end?” Joel said. “And if these boys have a ‘boy brain’ then what type of brain do the other boys have?”

In general, she added, any argument “that builds on the assumption that girls’ brains are like this and boys’ brains are like that — or that girls are like this and boys are like that — is in trouble.”

Dr. Meng-Chuan Lai, an assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Toronto, agreed.

“Over the decades, scientists have already learned that most features of the brain and mind between male and female animals, including humans, are not categorically distinct,” Lai said. It’s akin to body height in humans, she said. “On average, males are taller, but there are many female individuals who are taller than male individuals.”

How does this new research fit in? “This paper strengthens this common scientific view,” said Lai, who wasn’t involved in the study.

The study is published in the Nov. 30 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

More information

For more about the brain, see the U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.





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5 Lip Liner Mistakes You’re Probably Making

Getty Images

Getty Images

Lip liner has acquired a bad rap over the years, and for good reason: Use too dark of a color and you’ll look dated (enter ‘90s grunge flashbacks). Draw too far outside of your natural lip line and you’ll look about as natural as Kylie Jenner. When used correctly, though, a lip pencil can help you achieve the subtle fullness that makes your natural lips stand out that much more. “It adds definition by creating precise lines, works as primer to prevent feathering and creates the illusion of a plumper pout,” explains Los Angeles-based celebrity makeup artist Kayleen McAdams. Here, she shares the top mistakes liner-lovers make, plus her secrets for getting it right, every time.

Mistake: Choosing the wrong hue

To achieve the desired look, you have to choose your liner wisely. If you’re going for the illusion of bigger lips, choose a liner that is one shade darker than your lipstick. Blessed with a naturally plump kisser? Opt for a matching color. McAdams recommends MAC Cosmetics Lip Pencils ($17; nordstrom.com): “The shade range is wide and they have unbeatable staying power.”

Mistake: Lining lips before lipstick

Instead, apply a coat of lipstick first. “The color will help make the rim of your mouth more apparent, so you can go in and build up or define uneven edges,” McAdams says.

RELATED: 8 Best Overnight Beauty Products to Wake Up Gorgeous

Mistake: Working too fast

“Don’t try and conquer the entire circumference of your mouth in one swoop,” McAdams says. Instead, she suggests using small, light-handed strokes. Start by defining the center of lips—cupid’s bow and bottom—then carefully work your way out toward the corners.

Mistake: Not blending enough

The last thing you want to see is a harsh line, especially as your lip color fades throughout the day. Buff the edges with a Q-tip to soften the look of the liner, then swipe on a final coat of lipstick and smooch lips together to blend.

Mistake: Skipping shine

For an extra boost, dab a creamy highlighter on the Cupid’s bow and the center of the bottom lip. “The subtle sheen will reflect light, making lips look shapely,” says McAdams. Try NARS Shadow Stick in Goddess ($28; sephora.com). “It’s meant for eyes, but it also works beautifully on the lips,” she confides.

RELATED: 9 Glam Gifts for Beauty Addicts




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Minority Patients in ER Less Likely to Get Painkillers for Abdominal Pain

MONDAY, Nov. 30, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Minority patients are much less likely than white patients to be given pain medications when they seek emergency department treatment for abdominal pain, a new study shows.

Minority patients were also more likely to have longer ER waiting and visit times and less likely to be admitted to the hospital, the study revealed.

“These findings add to the overwhelming evidence that racial/ethnic disparities not only exist, but are endemic in health care settings,” study co-author Dr. Adil Haider, director of the Center for Surgery and Public Health at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said in a hospital news release.

“Particularly important is the fact that these differences in pain medication use were concentrated in hospitals that treated the largest percentages of minority patients and among those reporting the severest pain, indicating that hospital-level factors may play an important role in eliminating disparities” Haider explained.

Researchers reviewed information from more than 6,700 visits to ERs across the United States between 2006 and 2010. About two-thirds of the people in the study were white. Twenty percent of the patients were black, about 14 percent were Hispanic and 5 percent were another race, the study authors noted.

The researchers found that minority patients with new abdominal pain were 22 percent to 30 percent less likely than whites to receive any type of pain medication. They also found that minorities were 17 percent to 30 percent less likely to receive narcotic painkillers.

Overall, pain medications were given to 57 percent of whites. But, in minority patients, just 53 percent of Hispanics, 51 percent of blacks, and 47 percent of people in other racial/ethnic groups were given pain drugs, the study found.

The study is published in the December issue of the journal Medical Care.

“I believe that equality is the cornerstone of medicine, and that it is our responsibility as healthcare providers to address disparities head-on not just in pain management but in all aspects of care,” Haider concluded.

More information

The U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke has more about pain.





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Doctor-Patient Relationship May Suffer When Technology Takes Over: Study

By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Nov. 30, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Doctors who rely heavily on computers while in the exam room may run the risk of harming their relationships with their patients, a new study suggests.

Patients are less likely to rate their care as excellent when clinicians spend a lot of time on the computer when they are seeing a patient, said study author Dr. Neda Ratanawongsa. She is an associate professor at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), School of Medicine.

The study authors think patients might feel slighted if their doctor spends more time focused on a computer screen than looking over their ailments or listening to their concerns.

“It may be that they aren’t getting the attention or connecting with their provider in a way that they used to, or that they still do with other providers,” Ratanawongsa said.

Federal health care reform has placed great emphasis on the use of electronic health records, making computers a “third wheel in the exam room” that’s “been insinuated into the doctor-patient relationship,” said Dr. Wanda Filer, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians.

Doctors frequently spend much of an office visit at the keyboard, inputting information into a health record rather than giving the patient a once-over, said Filer, who is a family physician in York, Penn.

“We’ve taken this technology and we’ve embraced it, but I think a lot of us don’t believe it’s ready for prime-time,” she said. “We’ve got this interloper in the exam room, but it’s not there to help with the medical side as much as it’s there to check boxes for insurers.”

The two-year UCSF study involved 71 encounters among 47 patients and 39 clinicians at a safety net clinic, which serves people with less access to health care.

About 83 percent of patients whose doctors barely bothered with the computer rated their care as excellent in follow-up surveys, the study showed.

On the other hand, only 48 percent of patients whose doctors engaged in heavy computer use felt they’d received excellent care, according to the research published online Nov. 30 in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine.

Doctors who spend a lot of time looking at the computer may not be as focused on their patient and can miss crucial information provided during the encounter, Ratanawongsa said.

“If you’re not paying attention to a person, you can miss very important cues, especially nonverbal cues like the expression on their face or their body language,” she said.

That could be more of a problem at safety-net clinics, where patients are less likely to understand basic health information and more likely to face a language barrier, said Richard Frankel, a professor at the Indiana University School of Medicine, in Indianapolis.

“One way of knowing if a person is following along and understanding what you’re saying is by observing their nonverbal behavior,” said Frankel, who wrote an editorial that accompanied the study.

As federal requirements for electronic health records increase, the demands they place on doctors will increase, Ratanawongsa added. “If anything, things will intensify with the new records,” she said.

Filer said she makes a point of not using the computer during an examination. “I prefer to come back and document at a nurse’s station, and dedicate my time in the exam room to the patient,” she explained.

But Frankel said that approach might be counter-productive. “We know the most accurate and complete information is obtained at the point of care, rather than an hour later or a day later,” he said.

To help keep their focus on the patient, doctors might consider bringing a scribe into the exam room to take notes during the office visit, Ratanawongsa said.

Doctors also might turn the computer screen so that the patient can see it as well, Frankel said. That way, the computer could become a tool that helps a physician educate their patient on their own health status. Patients looking over a doctor’s shoulder also might be able to catch any errors or typos in their health record.

Patients who feel they’re being ignored thanks to the computer should say something to their doctor, Frankel added. “If you don’t speak up, the behavior will never get corrected,” he said.

Finally, Filer believes that more pressure needs to be placed on federal officials and computer software vendors, to make electronic health records more of a help than a hindrance in the exam room.

“We need the next generation of electronic health records, and we need them to be designed so they’re a tool and not a means to an end,” she said. “It needs to be a support, and not a hindrance, to the doctor-patient relationship.”

More information

For more on electronic health records, visit the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.





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Dangerous ‘Kissing Bug’ Spreads to More Than Half of U.S.

kissing-bug

TIME-logo.jpg

A dangerous insect known as the “kissing bug” has crawled its way through more than half of the U.S., health officials said.

The blood-sucking bugs that usually feed on the faces of their victims have been reported in 28 states, mostly in the South, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The kissing bug recently made its way to Georgia, Alabama and California, although health officials said the insect has been around the U.S. since the 1850s.

The insect, also called the triatomine bug, resembles a cockroach and has been known to carry a parasite that causes Chagas disease, which can be fatal if left untreated, the CDC said. There are currently about 300,000 cases of Chagas in the U.S., although most of those people were infected in Latin America, according to the agency.

It’s rare to contract Chagas from the kissing bug and it takes more than just a single bite, CDC spokeswoman Amy Rowland told TIME in an email. According to Rowland, transmission only occurs when the bug’s feces gets rubbed into a break in the skin or comes in contact with the eye.

The bugs are typically found outdoors but they can tend to hide under beds and mattresses, according to the CDC.

This article originally appeared on Time.com.




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These Period Tracker Apps Will Make Monitoring Your Cycle So Much Easier

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

Thanks to technology, the days of marking upcoming periods with a red dot in our calendars are officially behind us. As the New York Times recently noted, there are now more than 200 period tracking apps available in the App store. These downloads (many of them free) take the guesswork out of your menstrual cycle by monitoring your periods, notifying you when you’re most fertile, and alerting you to impending PMS. Some even offer additional perks like access to exclusive online forums, health tips on what to expect at different times of the month, and personalized horoscopes that are synced to your cycle. I downloaded about a dozen of the most popular apps available to see which work best. Here, my top four picks.

RELATED: 4 Cycle-Tracking Apps to Help You Get Pregnant

Clue

clue-period-tracker-app

How it works: Of all the period tracker apps I downloaded, Clue was by far my favorite and the one I’ll likely continue to use. Not only does it have a sleek, easy-to-use interface, but it also gets bonus points in my book for not having tons of flowers in the design (seriously, almost all the other apps were covered in pink and purple daisies).

To get started, you’ll be prompted to answer a few basic questions about your health (date of birth, date of your last period, weight, height, etc.). After you complete the questionnaire, you can begin monitoring your current cycle to track your upcoming period, fertile window, and when you might experience PMS.

If you use the app only occasionally, you’ll still be able to get a quick picture of your cycle. But if you log on daily and are diligent about recording your “data” (how many hours of sleep you got the night before, whether or not you exercised, etc.), Clue is able to convert that information into insights—so you’ll eventually have a better idea of how your cycle affects the way you feel at different times of the month.

Download it: Free on iTunes and Google Play

RELATED: The 9 Best Workouts to Do When You Have Your Period

Eve

eve-period-tracker-app

How it works: Like Clue, Eve asks you to complete a brief questionnaire about your health when you first download the app. Eve also closely resembles Clue with its cycle chart (that similarly lets you toggle between a circle or calendar view). There’s also a “Feed” tab where you can log how you’re feeling each day.

What really differentiates Eve from other period tracker apps, though, is its active community. There, you can connect with other users in a variety of different forums like “Love & Sex” and “Sexplanations.” (Note: while online communities are a great resource for sharing experiences and getting ideas, we wouldn’t recommend taking health advice straight from message boards like these—if you have a medical question, always be sure to consult your doctor).

Download it: Free on iTunes

RELATED: The Best and Worst Foods for Bloating

P.C.

pc-period-tracker-app

How it works: Try not to let the slightly vague name and magenta flower logo deter you: the P.C. app has an extremely user-friendly interface and loads of handy tools. I like the quick-view homepage (above, left) that gives you a top-line overview of where you’re at in your cycle, as well as the “Reports” where you can track your health more closely. If you’re trying to conceive, the “Intercourse” report (above, right) would be particularly helpful for monitoring your most fertile days.

Download it: Free on iTunes and Google Play

RELATED: 10 Things That Mess With Your Period

Mood Horoscope and Period Tracker

horoscope-period-tracker-app

How it works: Finally, if you’re the kind of person who loves reading a daily horoscope, this app is for you. It’s definitely more horoscope- than period-tracker focused, but provides personalized horoscopes based on where you’re at in your cycle, making it a fun complement to the more cycle-focused apps on this list.

Download it: Free on iTunes

RELATED: All Your Period Problems, Solved (Like What’s Normal and What’s Not)




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