Category: Uncategorized

  • 5 great tips for sustainable summer living

    5 great tips for sustainable summer living

    Sustainable living treads lightly on natural resources and follows a rethink, reuse, repurpose mantra to minimize waste. Big and small wallet-friendly tips can help you save money and befriend our planet this summer, says Dr. Wynne Armand, a primary care physician at Harvard-affiliated Massachusetts General Hospital, and associate director of…

  • How health care leaders can prioritize health equity for the LGBTQIA2+ community

    How health care leaders can prioritize health equity for the LGBTQIA2+ community

    Editor's note: Health inequities have long been an issue for people in the LGBTQ+ community. We're pleased to share a post from our colleagues in Corporate Learning at Harvard Medical School focusing on solutions that health care leaders can champion. Health care business professionals can improve patient outcomes and reduce…

  • Prostate cancer: Brachytherapy linked to long-term risk of secondary malignancies

    Prostate cancer: Brachytherapy linked to long-term risk of secondary malignancies

    When cancer patients are treated with radiation, it’s possible that the therapy itself may cause new tumors to form in the body later. Radiation kills cancer cells by damaging their DNA, but if the treatments cause genetic damage to normal cells near the radiation target, there’s a small risk that…

  • One surprising effect of wildfires: Itchy, irritated skin

    One surprising effect of wildfires: Itchy, irritated skin

    Are you finding yourself with itchy, irritated skin that you can’t stop scratching? Or have you wondered why your child’s eczema is suddenly worse and so hard to control? Mounting evidence suggests that wildfires, which are increasing in intensity and frequency, contribute to skin problems, including eczema flares. What is…

  • The cicadas are here: How’s your appetite?

    The cicadas are here: How’s your appetite?

    You’ve probably heard the news: Cicadas are coming. Or — wait — they’re already here. And are they ever! Due to an unusual overlap of the lifecycles of two types (or broods) of cicadas, trillions of cicadas are expected to emerge in the US by the end of June, especially…

  • What is cognitive behavioral therapy?

    What is cognitive behavioral therapy?

    Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) teaches people to challenge negative thought patterns and turn less often to unhelpful behaviors. These strategies can improve your mood and the way you respond to challenging situations: a flat tire, looming deadlines, family life ups and downs. Yet there’s much more depth and nuance to…

  • Orienteering: Great exercise and better thinking skills?

    Orienteering: Great exercise and better thinking skills?

    Picture this: you’re with friends in an unfamiliar forest using only a map and a compass to guide you to an upcoming checkpoint. There are no cell phones or GPS gadgets to help, just good old brainpower fueled by a sense of adventure as you wind through leafy trees and…

  • Swimming lessons save lives: What parents should know

    Swimming lessons save lives: What parents should know

    Before going any further, here’s the main thing parents should know about swimming lessons: all children should have them. Every year, over 4,500 people die from drowning in the United States — and, in fact, drowning is the leading cause of death for children ages 1 to 4. Swimming lessons…

  • Health care should improve your health, right?

    Health care should improve your health, right?

    It’s undeniable: modern medicine offers ever-expanding ways to heal and prevent disease. But it’s also true that health care can cause harm. One analysis found that about 6% of health care encounters caused preventable harm, leading to thousands of deaths each year. And it’s not just errors that cause trouble.…

  • Power your paddle sports with three great exercises

    Power your paddle sports with three great exercises

    On the Gulf Coast of Florida where I live, the telltale sign of summer is not an influx of beachcombers, afternoon storms that arrive exactly at 2 p.m., or the first hurricane warning, but the appearance of hundreds of paddleboarders dotting the inlet waters. From afar, paddleboarding looks almost spiritual…