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Stand, Don’t Sit, to Get Healthier, Scientists Say

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, July 30, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Sitting too long may be hazardous to your health, even if you exercise regularly, Australian researchers report.

A new study found that sitting appears to be linked to increased blood sugar and cholesterol levels, which can lead to added weight, diabetes and heart ills. But standing more helps improve all these measures and can give you a trimmer waist to boot, the researchers said.

“Switching some of your sitting time to standing could have benefits for your heart and metabolism,” said lead author Genevieve Healy, a senior research fellow at the University of Queensland in Herston.

“More time spent standing rather than sitting could improve your blood sugar, fats in the blood and cholesterol levels, while replacing time spent sitting with time walking could have additional benefits for your waistline and body mass index,” she said.

However, the study did not prove a cause-and-effect link between standing and walking more and better health.

The report was published July 31 in the European Heart Journal.

For the study, Healy and colleagues gave activity monitors to 782 men and women, aged 36 to 80, who took part in the Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle Study.

The monitors kept track of how long each participant spent sitting/lying down, standing, walking and running.

In addition, participants provided blood samples, measurements of their blood pressure, waist circumference, and height and weight (body mass index). The monitors were worn 24 hours a day for seven days.

The researchers found that an extra two hours per day spent standing rather than sitting was associated with approximately 2 percent lower blood sugar levels and 11 percent lower average triglycerides (a type of fat in the blood).

More standing time was also associated with an increase in HDL (“good”) cholesterol and a drop in LDL (“bad”) cholesterol, the investigators found.

Moreover, replacing two hours a day of sitting time with walking or running was associated with about 11 percent lower average body mass and an almost 3-inch smaller waist.

The researchers also found that average blood sugar levels dropped by about 11 percent and average triglycerides by 14 percent for every two hours spent walking rather than sitting, while HDL cholesterol levels were higher.

“Get up for your heart health and move for your waistline,” Healy said.

Dr. Gregg Fonarow, a professor of cardiology at the University of California, Los Angeles, said, “Many studies have found that the amount of sedentary time is associated with an increased risk of diabetes, heart disease and premature death.”

People who sit for prolonged periods have a higher risk of early death, even those who regularly exercise, but the risk is most pronounced in men and women who do little or no exercise, he said.

It’s clear that sitting down for too long is bad for people’s health, said Dr. Francisco Lopez-Jimenez, a cardiologist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and author of an accompanying journal editorial.

“As a society, we have been focused too much on exercise and have paid less attention to the importance of just moving,” he said.

Lopez-Jimenez said that even if you exercise, sitting for long periods is a marker of a sedentary lifestyle.

Society, he said, values sitting and using labor-saving devices over standing, walking and moving.

“People need to recognize the importance of not sitting too long during the day,” Lopez-Jimenez said. “Avoid the mindset that says, ‘Do the least amount of effort.'”

More information

Visit the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for more on decreasing sedentary behavior.





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3 Sports Bras That Caitlyn Jenner (or Anyone) Would Love

The series premiere of I Am Cait, the new docu-series on E! about the life of Caitlyn Jenner (formerly known as Bruce Jenner) was an emotional roller coaster. We witnessed everything from her daughter Kylie seeing her for the first time as Caitlyn, to Kanye West offering his support, to Jenner’s mom Esther admitting how difficult this transition has been for her.

We also saw the former Olympian flex her muscle, and find new appreciation for a topic near-and-dear to our hearts: “Now I know why girls need sports bras,” she quipped during a game of tennis on Sunday’s episode.

Photo: Giphy

We hear you, Caitlyn! The right sports bra is a crucial part of a woman’s exercise arsenal, and your choice can totally make or break a workout. That’s why we wanted to take this opportunity to recommend a few new bras we are super obsessed with right now.

Give any one of these three high-performers a try. (You can thank us later.)

Power Print

Photo: courtesy of New Balance

Photo: courtesy of New Balance

Perfect for A-cups, the New Balance Psych Tenderly Obsessive ($46, newbalance.com) is a hybrid of encapsulation and compression styles that brace breasts while limiting bounce. Plus mesh keeps you cool when temps heat up.

RELATED: 8 Sexy Sports Bras (That Still Support the Girls)

Box Babe

Photo: courtesy of Reebok

Photo: courtesy of Reebok

Tackling an extra tough WOD (workout of the day)? The UVP 50+ Reebok CrossFit Bra Built With Kevlar ($100, reebok.com) has strategically placed Kevlar—a synthetic fiber used as a reinforcing agent— along the straps for added durability. Perfect for those days you’re working on push presses, clean and jerks and back squats.

RELATED: How to Buy a Bra That Actually Fits

Mat Mate

Photo: courtesy of Brooks Running

Photo: courtesy of Brooks Running

The Moving Comfort Hot Shot ($42, brooksrunning.com) reins in your bosom without being constricting (read: so long sausage casing!), so you can flow through yoga class with ease. And its pretty tow-toned hue, which visually shapes breasts, is the perfect excuse to go sans shirt.

RELATED: How to Choose the Best Sports Bra for You




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How Kate Winslet Talks to Her Daughter About Body Positivity

Photo: Courtesy of MIMI/John Phillips/UK Press via Getty Images

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Kate Winslet made an appearance on the July 27 episode of NBC’s Running Wild With Bear Grylls, where she talked about how she didn’t have a body-positive female role model growing up.

“When I grew up, I never heard positive reinforcement about body image from any female in my life,” Winslet told Grylls . “I only ever heard negatives. That’s very damaging, because then you’re programmed as a young woman to immediately scrutinize yourself and how you look.”

The 39-year-old Oscar winner hopes to be a positive role model for her own teenage daughter, Mia.

“I stand in front of the mirror and say to Mia, ‘We are so lucky that we got a shape. We’re so lucky we’re curvy. We’re so lucky we’ve got good bums,'” Winslet said. “And she’ll say, ‘Mommy, I know, thank God.'”

In other words, Kate Winslet is the best mom ever—not to mention a positive body role model to millions of young women. “Happiness it isn’t a search for facial or physical perfection,” she said. “It comes from inside.”

This story originally appeared on MIMIChatter.com

popsugarblack_small.jpg MIMI Chatter is an endless stream of beauty content. We bring together the must-knows and the how-tos from your favorite sites, beauty influencers, our editors, and YOU.



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1 in 5 U.S. Adults Has a Physical, Mental Disability: CDC

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, July 30, 2015 (HealthDay News) — More than 50 million Americans live with a disability, health officials reported Thursday.

The most common disabilities are mobility limitations, such as having serious difficulty walking or climbing stairs — affecting one in eight adults — followed by disabilities in thinking and/or memory, independent living, seeing and self-care, according to a new report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“This report is a snapshot of the percent of adults with disabilities in the U.S., so we can get a better understanding of who people with disabilities are,” said researcher Elizabeth Courtney-Long, a health scientist at the CDC’s National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities.

The researchers found that most people with disabilities live in southern states, such as Alabama (31.5 percent), Mississippi and Tennessee (31.4 percent).

Although why these states tend to have the highest number of disabled people isn’t known, the researchers suggested that states in the South have higher rates of chronic diseases, such as heart disease and diabetes, which may be linked to disability.

People with disabilities were also more likely to be aged 65 and older, Courtney-Long said.

In addition, the researchers found blacks (29 percent) and Hispanics (26 percent) were more likely to suffer from disabilities than whites (nearly 21 percent).

Moreover, education and income levels appear to have strong ties to disability rates. Nearly 40 percent of people in the study who had less than a high school education reported a disability. Also, about 47 percent of people who had annual household incomes of less than $15,000, and about one-third of unemployed people who were able to work reported a disability, the study found.

According to the report, more women than men have a disability (more than 24 percent versus nearly 20 percent, respectively).

Costs for maintaining health among people with disabilities were estimated at nearly $400 billion in 2006, the researchers reported. More than half of these costs were related to non-independent living, such as institutional care and personal-care services.

The findings were published July 31 in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

“We are all at risk of having a disability at some point in our lifetime,” CDC Director Dr. Tom Frieden said in a CDC statement. “Health professionals and health care systems need to meet the needs of this growing population,” he added.

Dr. David Katz, director of the Yale University Prevention Research Center in New Haven, Conn., said that much of the disabilities and chronic disease people suffer from can be eliminated.

“Life expectancy is rising in the United States, which can convey a false sense of security about our health,” Katz said.

The National Academy of Medicine has issued reports showing that health and vitality are not keeping pace with longevity, and that the gap between the two is potentially widening, he said.

“Although medical advances help delay death, they cannot confer genuine vitality,” Katz said. “The consequence of a longer life span, but a health span that is not keeping pace, is more years encumbered by chronic maladies and disabilities,” he said. “Much of this is preventable.”

By eating well, being active and not smoking, as much as 80 percent of chronic diseases could be prevented, as well as the disability that accompanies them, Katz said.

“The true prize is a combination of more years in life, and more life in years — and the best medicine for producing that outcome is not at the cutting edge of biomedical advance — it is lifestyle,” he said.

All disability cannot be prevented, Katz said. “But much of the disability we encounter in our culture is indeed a byproduct of choices we make both individually and collectively, choices that we can alter,” he said.

More information

Visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for more on disabilities.





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Older Smokers With Migraines May Face Added Stroke Risk

THURSDAY, July 30, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Older smokers who experience migraines appear to be at increased risk of stroke, a new study suggests.

The study included nearly 1,300 people, average age 68, who suffered migraine headaches with and without aura. Migraine with aura is a migraine that’s preceded or accompanied by visual effects such as flashes of light or blind spots, or by tingling in the hands or face.

The study participants were followed for an average of 11 years to see how many had a heart attack or stroke. The findings were published online July 22 in the journal Neurology.

The researchers did not find an association between migraine and the risk of either heart attack or stroke in nonsmokers. But among smokers, migraine was associated with a threefold increased risk of stroke.

However, even though the study found an association between migraine and stroke risk in smokers, it did not prove a cause-and-effect relationship.

“Statistically, we could not rule out the possibility that the relationship between migraine and stroke in smokers was due to chance, however, we believe the association is consistent with other studies,” study author Dr. Teshamae Monteith said in a journal news release. Monteith is director of the headache program at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.

“Our findings may provide more evidence as to why quitting smoking is important for people who experience migraine,” she added.

“While this investigation of migraine and vascular events in older people found that only smokers with migraine have an increased risk of stroke, earlier studies have shown that women younger than 45 who have migraine with aura are also at an increased risk of stroke, whether or not they smoke,” Monteith said.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about migraines.





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Google Can Now Tell You When Your Gym Is Too Crowded

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

Hate waiting on a treadmill or locker-room hair dryer? A new tool just rolled out by Google will fix that: Search a place using your smartphone, and with your result you get a daily chart of when places like your gym, Whole Foods, or DMV are most and least crowded. It works by using foot traffic data collected from phones (yes, you’re being tracked, but it’s anonymous).

I Googled my gym—Equinox in Mamaroneck, NY—clicked on the more icon and learned that if I’m going after work (doubtful!), I’m way better off waiting until 8:30 rather than braving 7, the evening’s craziest hour. And going off-peak could even help you get stronger by making you more confident to tackle weight work.

Some of this is self-evident, for sure. But the new intel (which is only available on mobile devices) can actually be game-changing. What if you learned, as I did, that your typical time to hit Trader Joe’s (before dinner on Sunday) is ALL WRONG? That it’s in fact the absolute WORST hour of the week to pick up quinoa and zucchini and down free coffee? You might just go on Saturday at 9am instead. That is, if you aren’t too busy enjoying some peace and quiet at the near-empty gym.

RELATED: This Tinder-Inspired App Lets You Swipe Right for Recipes




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Just 1 in 3 Seniors With Diabetes Has Disease Under Control

THURSDAY, July 30, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Only one-third of American seniors with diabetes have their disease under control, a new study finds.

“This research gives us a good picture of diabetes control in older adults and gets us thinking about what it means that older Americans are not meeting clinical targets and how we should address this from a public health perspective,” study leader Elizabeth Selvin, a professor of epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, said in a school news release.

The study included almost 1,600 diabetes patients, aged 65 and older, in Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi and North Carolina. The researchers looked at whether the participants met American Diabetes Association guidelines for three key measures of good diabetes control: blood sugar, blood pressure and cholesterol levels.

The results showed that only one in three of the patients had diabetes controlled as defined by the ADA guidelines. Some experts consider the ADA guidelines too demanding for seniors. But even using less stringent measures, the researchers found that many of the patients did not have their diabetes under control.

“There is tremendous debate about appropriate clinical targets for diabetes in older adults, particularly for glucose control. Are some older adults being over-treated? Are some being undertreated? These are questions for which we don’t have answers,” Selvin said.

The study also found significant racial disparities, particularly in women, in how well diabetes is managed. Black women were much less likely than white women to have control of blood sugar, blood pressure and cholesterol levels, the researchers said.

The study appears in the July issue of the journal Diabetes Care.

One reason why seniors with diabetes may have more difficulty keeping their disease under control is that many of them have other health problems that may require more immediate attention from doctors, according to study co-author Christina Parrinello, who is also at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Parrinello noted that many of the complications associated with poor diabetes control take a long time to develop, possibly longer than the life expectancy of a patient with other illnesses.

Failure to keep diabetes under control increases the risk of long-term health problems such as nerve damage, blindness and kidney disease, the researchers noted.

More information

The U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases has more about diabetes control.





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Too Few U.S. Teens Getting HPV Vaccine: CDC

By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, July 30, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Most boys and a large portion of girls in the United States have not received even a single dose of the cancer-preventing human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, even though some slow progress has been made, federal researchers report.

Four out of 10 girls and six out of 10 boys, aged 13 to 17, have not started the recommended HPV vaccine series, leaving them vulnerable to developing a wide array of cancers, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Every year, about 27,000 women and men in the United States are diagnosed with a cancer caused by HPV infection, the CDC said.

HPV vaccination could prevent the majority of these cancers from ever developing, said Dr. Anne Schuchat, assistant surgeon general and director of CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases.

Nearly all cervical and anal cancers are caused by HPV, the CDC said. The virus, which is sexually transmitted, also causes about 70 percent of throat cancers, 75 percent of vaginal cancers and 63 percent of cancers of the penis, according to the CDC.

“HPV vaccine prevents cancer,” Schuchat said. “I know many parents are starting to think about their back-to-school lists, and it’s a great time to make sure your preteens have gotten all their recommended vaccines.”

Data for the latest report came from the CDC’s 2014 National Immunization Survey-Teen. The survey included almost 21,000 teens aged 13 to 17 in 2014.

The latest estimates show that 60 percent of adolescent girls and 42 percent of adolescent boys had received one or more doses of HPV vaccine by 2014, the survey noted. This was an increase of 3 percent for girls and 8 percent for boys from 2013.

But HPV vaccinations still lag far behind two other vaccines also recommended for kids 11 and 12: the meningitis and Tdap vaccinations.

About 87 percent of teenagers have received at least one dose of the Tdap vaccine, which protects against tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis (whooping cough), and 79 percent have received the meningitis vaccine, the CDC reported.

In addition, the improved numbers are due to just a handful of states and local areas that achieved more substantial increases in HPV vaccine coverage than the rest of the nation, Schuchat said.

“We are seeing patchwork progress,” she said. “There’s still quite a range in HPV vaccination coverage across the country.”

The problem isn’t the cost of the HPV vaccine, as private insurers are required to cover it without co-pay and government programs are available to provide it free to children in low-income families, Schuchat said.

Instead, she feels the main roadblock to progress is that doctors are not making a strong enough recommendation to parents in favor of the HPV vaccine.

“Surveys of parents identify not receiving a recommendation as a critical gap,” Schuchat said. “We have asked parents about whether cost is an issue, and that is not showing up in our list of the top concerns.”

The CDC is urging family doctors to “recommend HPV vaccines in the same way and on the same day you recommend other routinely recommended teenage vaccinations,” she said.

“A provider recommendation is really important, and parents are waiting for that on those doctor visits,” she concluded.

The states that significantly increased HPV vaccinations include Georgia, Illinois, Montana, North Carolina and Utah. The report also noted large increases in Chicago and Washington, D.C., which contributed to the overall progress.

“The large increases in these diverse parts of the country show us it is possible to do much better at protecting our nation’s youth from cancers caused by HPV infections,” Schuchat said. “We are missing crucial opportunities to protect the next generation from cancers caused by HPV.”

Georgia, Utah and the two cities received federal funding from the CDC in 2013 to improve HPV vaccination coverage, and that money appears to have helped, the report said.

Single-dose HPV vaccination coverage is highest in Rhode Island, where 76 percent of girls have received at least one shot, and lowest in Kansas, where only 38 percent of girls have started the series.

About 57 percent of girls in Washington, D.C., have received the full series of three shots, compared with just 20 percent in Tennessee, the findings showed.

The first vaccine to prevent HPV infection received its license in 2006. It initially was recommended only for girls, to protect them against cervical cancer, but in 2011 the CDC revised its guidelines to recommend HPV vaccination for boys as well.

The CDC now recommends the vaccine for girls and boys at age 11 to 12. There are three vaccines that can prevent infection with certain cancer-related strains of HPV: Cervarix, Gardasil and Gardasil 9.

The survey results were released July 30 in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

More information

For more information on HPV, visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.





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New Stem Cell Tactic Shows Promise for Heart Failure

By Amy Norton
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, July 30, 2015 (HealthDay News) — A new method for delivering stem cells to damaged heart muscle has shown early promise in treating severe heart failure, researchers report.

In a preliminary study, they found the tactic was safe and feasible for the 48 heart failure patients they treated. And after a year, the patients showed a modest improvement in the heart’s pumping ability, on average.

It’s not clear yet whether those improvements could be meaningful, said lead researcher Dr. Amit Patel, director of cardiovascular regenerative medicine at the University of Utah.

He said larger clinical trials are underway to see whether the approach could be an option for advanced heart failure.

Other experts stressed the bigger picture: Researchers have long studied stem cells as a potential therapy for heart failure — with limited success so far.

“There’s been a lot of promise, but not much of a clinical benefit yet,” said Dr. Lee Goldberg, who specializes in treating heart failure at the University of Pennsylvania.

Researchers are still sorting through complicated questions, including how to best get stem cells to damaged heart muscle, said Goldberg, who was not involved in the new study.

What’s “novel” in this research, he said, is the technique Patel’s team used to deliver stem cells to the heart. They took stem cells from patients’ bone marrow and infused them into the heart through a large vein called the coronary sinus.

Patel agreed that the technique is the advance.

“Most other techniques have infused stem cells through the arteries,” Patel explained. One obstacle, he said, is that people with heart failure generally have hardened, narrowed coronary arteries, and the infused stem cells “don’t always go to where they should.”

Researchers have also tried to directly inject stem cells into the heart during surgery or through a catheter. But only a limited number of cells can be safely injected that way, Patel said.

The new approach, he said, allows a bigger stem cell “dose.”

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 5 million Americans have heart failure — a chronic, progressive condition where the heart cannot pump blood efficiently enough to meet the body’s needs. Often, it arises after a heart attack damages the heart muscle.

Stem cells are primitive cells that can develop into different types of body tissue. Adults have stem cells in their bone marrow that give rise to blood cells. They also have small pools of stem cells within organs, including the heart.

Many researchers believe that if they can harness stem cells’ natural capacity for repair, it could open a new option for advanced heart failure.

The current study, published July 27 in the journal Stem Cells Translational Medicine, is one of the latest efforts.

Patel’s team recruited 60 patients with severe heart failure. They randomly assigned 48 to receive stem cell therapy along with their usual care, and 12 to stay with standard care only — which typically involves medications that lower blood pressure, reduce strain on the heart and rid the body of excess fluid.

The stem cell therapy appeared safe, with no adverse effects linked to the treatment itself, the researchers say. And after one year, the patients showed a modest improvement in the heart’s “ejection fraction” — the amount of blood pumped out to the body with each contraction.

Goldberg said there are “theoretical advantages” to infusing stem cells via the coronary sinus. “It’s simpler and probably safer,” he said, than injections or infusions through heart arteries.

The big question, though, is does it work?

Scientists aren’t even sure what stem cells do at the site of heart damage. Patel said it’s unlikely that stem cells from the bone marrow magically become heart-muscle cells. Instead, they probably release hormones and other compounds that spur the growth of new blood vessels and help “remodel” the heart muscle.

Dr. Christopher O’Connor, editor-in-chief of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology: Heart Failure, agreed that the new technique might get more stem cells to the heart muscle.

The ultimate question, though, is whether any approach to stem cell therapy can change the course of heart failure, O’Connor said.

“We don’t know if this will translate into clinically meaningful outcomes — patients feeling better and living longer,” O’Connor said. Still, he added, “the field is moving forward.”

More information

California’s Stem Cell Agency has a primer on stem cell basics.





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Move of the Week: Perfect Lunge

Yes, we know you’ve done a lunge beforebut are you sure you’re doing it right? This move is a low impact body-weight move that tone your butt, hips, and thighs, but doing them wrong can be bad news for your body. Watch Health contributing fitness editor, Kristin McGee demonstrate how to do this move perfectly, so you can tone your entire lower body while staying healthy and pain-free.

RELATED: 18 Exercises to Tone Your Butt, Thighs and Legs

Here’s how to do it: Stand tall with your feet hip distance apart with toes pointing forward, keep your core tight and your back straight. Then, step your right foot forward about two feet, lower your body so that both legs make 90 degree angles and push off with your right leg to return to the standing position.

Trainer tip: Common knee-busting mistakes include letting your knee extend beyond your toes and letting your back knee hit the floor. Remember to keep your front shin straight and have your back knee hover a few inches above the ground to prevent injury.

Try this move: Perfect Lunge 

RELATED: 10 Exercises for Healthy Knees




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