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Amy Schumer to Body Shamers: “I Look Strong and Healthy”

Take that, trolls. Once again, Amy Schumer is using her influence to take a stab at body shamers—just in time for the summer.

On Wednesday, Schumer posted an image to her Instagram from her recent vacation to Hawaii, where she was celebrating her 6-month anniversary with her boyfriend. In it, she’s rocking an all-black one-piece bathing suit and is ankle-deep in some foamy surf, clearly enjoying her time in paradise. She sends a preemptive message to those who make rude comments about her size in the caption: “I meant to write ‘good morning trolls!’ I hope you find some joy in your lives today in a human interaction and not just in writing unkind things to a stranger you’ve never met who triggers something in you that makes you feel powerless and alone.”

RELATED: 5 Famous Women on How They Stay Body-Positive

The comedian has been repeatedly attacked online due to her size, which has led her to advocate for wider body acceptance. Recently, Schumer released an online sketch about dealing with rude salespeople as not one of the “thinner customers.” She has also been open about her size, detailing her struggles with “thigh rub” as well as bravely posing nude for the 2016 Pirelli calendar.

“This is how I look. I feel happy. I think I look strong and healthy and also like miss trunchbull from Matilda,” Schumer wrote to finish her post. We’re inspired by her confidence—feeling happy, healthy, and strong is so important.

Instagram Photo

 

Schumer has also been vocal about stopping the use of appearance-related terms that are only used to describe women.

Response to the Instagram post has been positive. “Beautiful, strong and intelligent. I feel sad that lovely women have to defend themselves. I feel sad that this has to be our dialogue as women, but also so pleased that there are women who challenge the traditional archetypes. Thanks for showing young women that we can be strong physically and mentally!” wrote one commenter.

It seems crazy that in 2016 we are still dealing with body-shaming, but here’s to the inspiring athletes and celebrities who are challenging the stereotypes and shaping the new normal.

 

 




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Hepatitis C Patients More Likely to Drink, Study Finds

WEDNESDAY, May 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) — People infected with hepatitis C are more likely to be current or former heavy drinkers, a new study suggests.

Unfortunately, alcohol may accelerate the liver damage associated with the virus, the researchers added.

Adults with hepatitis C were three times more likely to have five or more drinks daily — currently or in the past — than people who didn’t have the virus, according to the study published recently in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

“Alcohol promotes faster development of fibrosis and progression to cirrhosis [scarring of the liver] in people living with hepatitis C, making drinking a dangerous and often deadly activity,” said lead investigator Amber Taylor, from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Division of Viral Hepatitis.

“In 2010, alcohol-related liver disease ranked third as a cause of death among people with hepatitis C,” Taylor added.

Hepatitis C is a liver infection caused by a virus transmitted by blood, such as by sharing needles. Chronic hepatitis C can result in long-term health problems such as liver cancer, according to the CDC.

In the United States, alcohol abuse claims nearly 88,000 lives each year, the researchers reported. Drinking is particularly harmful for those with hepatitis C, they noted.

For the study, researchers analyzed data from the U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey on more than 20,000 people. Specifically, they examined hepatitis C infection rates among the following four groups: those who never drank, former drinkers, current non-heavy drinkers, and current heavy drinkers.

Although the study was not designed to prove cause-and-effect, the investigators found higher rates of hepatitis C among former drinkers and current heavy drinkers than those who never drank or only drank in moderation.

A follow-up survey of participants who had been infected with the virus at some point in their lives showed that 50 percent were unaware of their hepatitis C status.

“Half of all people living with hepatitis C are not aware of their infection nor the serious medical risks they face when consuming alcohol,” Taylor said in a journal news release.

“This highlights the need for increased diagnosis, as well as comprehensive and effective interventions to link hepatitis C-infected individuals to curative treatments now available and provide education and support needed to reduce alcohol use,” she added.

The CDC recommends that everyone born between 1945 and 1965 be tested at least once for hepatitis C. Those who test positive for the virus should be screened for alcohol use, the agency advises.

The researchers said their findings could help health care providers develop more effective treatment strategies and interventions for their patients.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provides more information on hepatitis C.





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What Doctors Aren’t Telling Obese, Young Adults

WEDNESDAY, May 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Many obese young adults in the United States don’t know they’re at increased risk for kidney disease, researchers report.

“Even though chronic kidney disease typically manifests in older people, the disease can start much earlier but often is not recognized early on,” said study leader Dr. Michal Melamed, an associate professor of medicine at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, in New York City.

Melamed’s team analyzed data from nearly 7,000 adults, aged 20 to 40, across the United States. The researchers found that 11 percent of obese Mexican-Americans and about 6 percent of obese whites and blacks had elevated levels of the protein albumin in the urine.

This condition, called albuminuria, is a sign that the kidneys are not functioning normally. It puts you at increased risk for chronic kidney disease, the researchers said.

Among young adults with albuminuria, less than 5 percent had been told they had kidney disease, according to the findings published online May 25 in the journal PLoS One.

“Clearly, clinicians and public health officials need to do more to identify and treat young people at risk for early progressive kidney disease so they can adopt the behavioral changes to prevent [kidney disease] from occurring,” Melamed said in an Albert Einstein news release.

About one-third of Americans are at risk for chronic kidney disease during their lifetime, typically when they’re older.

“Because treatment options for [chronic kidney disease] are limited, prevention is the best approach for those at risk,” Melamed added. “A healthier lifestyle in young adults will go a long way toward promoting kidney health later in life.”

Previous research has suggested that abdominal obesity may harm kidney function earlier than high blood pressure and diabetes, both of which are associated with obesity. Abdominal obesity is defined as having a waist circumference of 35 inches or more for non-pregnant females and 40 inches or more for males, according to the U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.

More information

The U.S. National Institutes of Health explains how to keep your kidneys healthy.





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‘Fat Shaming’ Begins in First Grade

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, May 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) — As early as first grade, severely obese children are getting teased, picked on and bullied more than normal-weight kids, a new study finds.

The new research also found that these severely obese youngsters are more likely to be depressed and withdrawn. Obese children may turn to eating to cope with the pain of rejection or skip school to avoid being bullied, the researchers said.

“The social climate at school can exacerbate weight and learning problems because it is so unpleasant,” said lead researcher Amanda Harrist, a professor of child development at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater.

For many obese kids, home may not be much better, she said. Other studies have shown that obese children often have families that don’t handle their emotions well and make fun of their kids’ feelings, Harrist said.

“At school, these kids are teased and picked on, and nobody is playing with them, and they go home and don’t get emotional support,” she said.

Teachers need to be sensitive to the fact that these kids are being mistreated, Harrist said. But teachers can be biased against obese children, too — even overweight teachers are sometimes biased, she added.

School programs that focus on accepting people who are different may be one way of overcoming weight bias and improving the school environment for obese kids, Harrist said.

“If teachers are aware of the social and emotional life of overweight children, they can make the school environment a place where these children feel OK about themselves, and give them more chance of succeeding,” she suggested.

According to Dr. Scott Kahan, director of the National Center for Weight and Wellness, “Addressing obesity isn’t only about healthy foods and physical activity — we need to deal with these consequences of obesity.” Kahan is also a spokesman for the Obesity Society.

From adults to adolescents to young children, there is an incredible amount of stigma, mistreatment and ostracizing of obese people, said Kahan, who was not involved with the new study.

“Weight stigma leads to poor health outcomes — from physical outcomes, like raising blood pressure and stress — to emotional health outcomes, like depression, poor quality of life and, ultimately, more weight gain,” Kahan said.

For the study, Harrist and colleagues gathered data on nearly 1,200 first graders from 29 rural schools in Oklahoma. Rates of obesity among adults in the counties where the children lived ranged from 28 percent to 41 percent. Most of the students came from low-income white families, but about 20 percent of the kids came from American Indian families.

Obese children are those who weigh more than 95 percent of children their same age, the researchers said. Severely obese children are heavier than 99 percent of kids their age, they added.

The investigators found that the heaviest children suffered most. Severely obese kids were teased more than overweight kids and weren’t mentioned by other children as those they wanted to play with, the study authors said.

Severely obese children were often identified as least favorite playmates and were rarely mentioned as a most favorite playmate, the findings showed.

Consequently, severely obese children had more teacher-rated symptoms of depression than overweight and healthy weight children, the study authors said.

Compared with other children, obese and severely obese children were more likely to complain of physical problems, such as pain, and also went to the school nurse more often. These physical problems may be the result of psychological stress, Harrist said.

The report was published online May 25 in the journal Child Development.

“Obesity persists as one of the last bastions of socially acceptable prejudice, in large measure because many people feel the victims of this condition deserve to be blamed for it,” said Dr. David Katz. He is director of the Yale University Prevention Research Center and president of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine.

“This quite sad study shows that even young children are subject to obesity bias, which quite literally adds insult to injury,” he said.

Fixing obesity bias can start with any of us, beginning with compassionate understanding, Katz said.

“When we stop blaming the victims of the obesity epidemic, our children will learn to do likewise,” he said. “We will still have miles to go to undo the injury of obesity, but we can stop adding the insult any time we decide.”

More information

For more on childhood obesity, visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.





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Here’s What It Really Feels Like to Have Psoriasis

Actress Ciena Rae Nelson took to Instagram last week to post a powerful message about psoriasis with a pair of side-by-side photos: On the left, her face during a flare-up, the red, scaly patches just visible beneath her makeup. On the right, the same photo, but edited to enhance the color and details—and portray what the skin disease actually feels like.

Instagram Photo

RELATED: 12 Celebrities with Psoriasis

Psoriasis is an autoimmune disease affecting an estimated 7.5 million people in the U.S. It causes skin cells to grow at a faster rate, leading to itchy lesions that can sometimes be painful. The condition is often diagnosed in early adulthood (between ages 20 and 35) and nearly one-third of those who suffer from it have a family history of the disease. There isn’t a cure, but avoiding or minimizing possible triggers—such as stress, alcohol, and exposing your skin to cold, dry air—can help keep flare-ups under control.

As if the skin symptoms weren’t bad enough, nearly 30% of people with psoriasis develop psoriatic arthritis, a painful condition in which their joints become stiff and inflamed during flare-ups. Nelson mentions this additional struggle in her Instagram caption, noting that it’s an “#invisibleillness.”

Her recent post isn’t the first time the actress has spoken out about her disease. In March, she posted a selfie with red, inflamed lesions all over her face and chest. The caption begins, “This is me 2 years ago just before I went to the hospital for severe dehydration and a fever. Skin conditions are not cosmetic issues. They cause physical pain and suffering and oftentimes a feeling of being trapped in your own body, on top of the social anxiety many people face because of them.”

Instagram Photo

RELATED21 Tips and Tricks for Treating Psoriasis

Nelson goes on to explain that the adjective “itchy” doesn’t quite cut it as a description of the discomfort: “I personally struggle with sleep deprivation due to constant, widespread itchiness that feels more like I’m being stung or bitten then I am ‘itchy.'”

As Nelson’s posts portray, psoriasis doesn’t just mean having dry patches of skin. It can be debilitating, for a variety of reasons.

Her advice? “Hydrate. Get enough sleep. Eat healthy foods. Nourish your biggest organ, and all the rest while you’re at it.”

For more information about psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis, visit the National Psoriasis Foundation site.




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Kids’ Grades May Suffer When Families Move

WEDNESDAY, May 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Moving to a new home may harm young children’s school performance, a study suggests.

Youngsters who get uprooted are also more likely to have developmental problems, the researchers found. However, the study could not prove a cause-and-effect relationship.

The research included information on more than 19,000 children across the United States. The kids were followed from kindergarten through eighth grade.

A child’s age at the time of a move may make a big difference, the study authors noted. And the more times a child moved, the more potential for problems, the findings suggested.

“Moves during both early and middle childhood were associated with decreases in children’s social skills and increases in emotional and behavior problems, and these effects lasted for years,” said study leader Rebekah Levine Coley. She is a professor of applied developmental and educational psychology at Boston College.

Moves during mid-childhood or early teen years were linked to shorter-term effects on reading and math skills, Coley said. The effects of moving during those years also seemed to diminish over time, she added in a news release from the Society for Research in Child Development.

Reading and math scores went down with each additional move. Each move was also tied to poorer social skills, and higher rates of emotional and behavioral problems, the study reported.

The investigators also said that moving to a new home — even without changing schools — can disrupt daily routines, which can interrupt children’s focus on their schoolwork and inhibit learning.

Moving may be necessary due to job changes or high housing prices, said study co-author Melissa Kull, formerly a doctoral student at Boston College.

To help families, “policymakers, school leaders and teachers must develop strategies to counter the interruptions that home and school moves pose to children’s education and healthy development,” Kull added. She’s now a research scientist at the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.

The study was published May 25 in the journal Child Development.

More information

The American Academy of Pediatrics explains how to help children adjust to a move.





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Predeployment Riskiest Time for Military Suicide Attempts

By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, May 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Suicide attempts in the military aren’t necessarily combat-driven. At the height of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the U.S. Army soldiers most likely to try to kill themselves were never deployed, new research shows.

Moreover, risk was greatest just two months into service, according to the study of more than 163,000 soldiers.

But the findings aren’t a sign that going to war protects soldiers against suicide. “It is more likely that those who are not deployed are already at a higher risk for suicide, and that is one of the reasons they were not cleared to deploy,” said Alan Peterson, professor and chief of behavioral medicine at University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. Peterson, a military mental health researcher, wasn’t involved in the study.

Suicide rates within the military exploded during the wars of the last 15 years, said study lead author Dr. Robert Ursano.

“Suicide rates in the Army have traditionally been about half of those in a similar civilian population,” said Ursano, director of the Center for the Study of Traumatic Stress at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, in Bethesda, Md. “During the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the rates increased and surpassed those of civilians. They have remained high.”

Studies of suicide in the military tend to focus on actual suicides. But the new research, part of a wider effort to understand the problem and explore solutions, looks at suicide attempts.

The researchers analyzed a large sample of soldiers who served between 2004 and 2009. The focus was on 9,650 soldiers who attempted suicide, and they were separated into three groups: currently deployed, previously deployed and never deployed.

Researchers found those never deployed and women were more than three times as likely to try suicide. Others at highest risk of a suicide attempt were soldiers in their first two years of service, and soldiers who’d received a mental health diagnosis in the previous month.

Those never deployed made up 40 percent of all the soldiers, but 61 percent of those who committed suicide, the study found.

Risk of trying suicide for the never-deployed soldiers was highest in the second month of service. That’s likely because “soldiers early in their career are facing the stress of entering the Army and of possible deployment,” Ursano said.

Peterson pointed to another possible explanation: Trying to kill yourself is one way to get discharged early in military service.

For those on their first deployment, risk of attempted suicide was highest in their sixth month of deployment, the researchers found. And for those sent into duty in the past, risk was highest in the fifth month following their return.

“During deployment, when the enemy is trying to kill you, the natural human reaction is one of self-preservation,” Peterson said. “This may help explain some of the reduced risk for suicide during deployments.”

After deployment, Peterson said, soldiers can face another kind of mental-health burden: “Service members have more time to think about their deployment experiences. Those with PTSD, depression, substance-use disorders and guilt and shame related to deployment are at increased risk for suicide,” he said.

How can the new research be useful? “Our goal is to identify who, when and where people are at risk,” Ursano said. “This provides helpful information on which groups to develop interventions for as well as possible mechanisms [that] increase risk.”

Peterson, who praised the new study, said more research is needed to detect and treat soldiers at risk. As for strategies, he was co-author of a small study published last year that suggests brief therapy aimed at changing thinking — cognitive behavior therapy — can help soldiers who’ve made a previous suicide attempt or plan.

The new study appears in the May 25 issue of JAMA Psychiatry.

More information

For more about military suicide, see Stop Soldier Suicide.





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Common Abnormal Heart Rhythm Linked to Cancer Risk

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, May 25, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Women with a common heart rhythm abnormality may be at an increased risk of developing cancer, particularly of the colon, a new study suggests.

“We found a significant relationship between atrial fibrillation and cancer,” said lead researcher Dr. David Conen, of the University Hospital in Basel, Switzerland.

But the study cannot prove that atrial fibrillation causes cancer, only that an association exists between them, Conen added.

Among nearly 35,000 healthy women followed for about 20 years, those who developed atrial fibrillation had a 60 percent increased risk of cancer diagnosis, the researchers found.

The association may be due to a real connection between atrial fibrillation and cancer, although this seem less likely than that people have shared risk factors for both conditions, including smoking and obesity, he said.

Men probably have the same risk, he said. “There is no reason to believe the risk isn’t the same in men as in women,” Conen explained.

According to Conen, the best way to reduce the risk of atrial fibrillation or cancer is to lose weight, quit smoking and to exercise. “If you reduce risk factors, you are also going to reduce cancer risk,” he said.

For the study, Conen and colleagues followed nearly 35,000 women aged 45 and older who took part in the Women’s Health Study. The participants did not have atrial fibrillation or other heart problems or cancer when the study began. The women were followed between 1993 and 2013 to see if they developed atrial fibrillation or cancer.

During the follow-up period, 4 percent of the women developed atrial fibrillation and about 15 percent were diagnosed with cancer, the investigators found.

Conen’s team said that atrial fibrillation was a significant risk factor for cancer, even after taking other risk factors into account.

The increased risk was higher within three months after developing atrial fibrillation, but the risk persisted over the long term, and an increased risk of dying from cancer was also seen, according to the study.

The researchers looked specifically at lung, breast and colon cancer. The strongest association with atrial fibrillation was seen for colon cancer, Conen said.

Conversely, among women who had cancer, the risk for developing atrial fibrillation was seen only in the three months after diagnosis, he said.

Atrial fibrillation is the most common type of abnormal heartbeat, and is associated with an increased risk of stroke and other heart problems, the study authors noted.

The report was published online May 25 in the journal JAMA Cardiology.

Dr. Emelia Benjamin is a professor of medicine and epidemiology at Boston University School of Medicine and co-author of an accompanying journal editorial. She pointed out that “atrial fibrillation affects about 33 million people worldwide, so it’s a very common condition.”

Benjamin doesn’t believe that atrial fibrillation causes cancer, so she said that people with the condition should not worry about also developing cancer.

“I don’t want people to be concerned that if they have atrial fibrillation they are going to get cancer,” she said. “I don’t want people to worry about that.”

More information

Visit the American Heart Association for more on atrial fibrillation.





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Kate Hudson’s Under-Eye Treatment Looks Like Something Out of a Sci-Fi Movie

We’ve definitely seen our fair share of unusual beauty treatments—fish pedicures, vampire facials (we’re looking at you, Kim Kardashian), and using egg mousse as body oil are only a few that come to mind. But Kate Hudson might have just introduced us to the scariest under-eye treatment we’ve literally ever seen.

No, we’re not talking about your standard sheet mask (that probs doesn’t scare anyone at this point) or even a gel-like sticker you secure under your eye after a rough night. Kate’s under-eye patches are a bit more, um, technical?

RELATED: Kate Hudson Is Gorgeous in a Slinky Purple Gown

kate-hudson

First of all, it looks like something out of a sci-fi movie—two patches connected with a wire that ends with a beeper. The actress took to Snapchat to document her experience with this odd beauty gadget, and even though she swears it works, Hudson also says it hurts her eyes a lot.

We believe the exact words she used are: “I am in so much pain.” Yikes. But then again, a bikini wax isn’t a walk in the park.

Ahh, the things we do for beauty.

This article originally appeared on InStyle.com/MIMI.




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Most Americans Think Burgers Are Healthy

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

A new survey reveals that 82% of Americans who eat hamburgers think that the sandwich is a good source of nutrients.

Researchers with the market research group Mintel polled 1,767 Americans who had ordered a burger from a restaurant in the last three months. 62% of the people said they love burgers—and the numbers were strong even among Millennials, the generation most likely to say that menu healthiness is important to them when they choose a restaurant. Americans’ obsession with burgers isn’t surprising, but the sandwich’s perceived healthiness is, given the fact that the World Health Organization (WHO) recently announced that processed meat is a carcinogen and red meat likely causes cancer.

While burgers are good sources of protein, iron and vitamin B12, they come with a lot of problems, according to nutrition experts—particularly the fatty meat, sugary ketchup and refined grain buns.

The new survey did find that even burger lovers know they could choose a healthier sandwich. People want more chicken and turkey burgers, the survey found, which are considered healthier options.

This article originally appeared on Time.com.




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