Can diabetics eat ice cream? 4 tips to enjoy it safely

Diabetics, Ice Cream

More than 40 million Americans are currently living with diabetes, and nearly 115 million more have prediabetes a condition that significantly raises the risk of developing the disease. For many of them, navigating food choices can feel overwhelming, and few treats spark more uncertainty than ice cream. The instinct is often to cut it out […]

8 foods you eat daily that trigger food poisoning

Food Poisoning

Each year, roughly 9.9 million Americans come down with a foodborne illness and according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a large portion of those cases originate not at restaurants, but right at home. While it is easy to point fingers at the last takeout order, the more likely culprits are hiding inside […]

Is yoga really enough exercise? 5 things to know

Yoga, Fitness, Exercise, Routine

When most people picture a yoga class, they imagine a quiet room, soft lighting and a group of people resting in Child’s Pose. But depending on the style, yoga can be far more physically demanding than that and it raises a fair question: can a dedicated yoga practice alone satisfy everything your body needs to […]

Loneliness may quietly damage memory in older adults

Loneliness

Feeling lonely could be doing more damage to the aging brain than previously understood but perhaps not in the way most people would expect. A new study involving more than 10,000 older adults across 12 European countries found that those who reported higher levels of loneliness performed worse on memory tests from the outset. Notably, […]

Fitness genes linked to lower disease risk

Fitness, Genes, Exercise

A growing body of research is shedding light on the connection between genetics, fitness, and long term health. A recent study published in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise suggests that some people may be biologically predisposed to higher levels of fitness, which could also be tied to a reduced risk of certain diseases. […]

Happiness alone fails to define real mental well being

Mental Well Being, Mental Health,

Ask a room full of people what it means to be mentally well and the answers will vary widely. One person might say it is about feeling happy. Another might point to resilience, strong relationships or getting enough sleep. Someone else might bring up therapy or managing stress. None of those answers are wrong, but […]

Oatmeal’s hidden benefit for cholesterol

Oatmeal, Cholesterol, Diet

For years, oats have been recognized for their ability to help manage cholesterol levels, largely due to a type of soluble fiber called beta-glucan, which binds to cholesterol in the digestive tract and helps move it out of the body. Oats contain beneficial plant compounds called phenolics that are structurally bound to the oat’s fiber. […]

How 1 quiet habit shapes how you move daily

Walking, Exercise, Heart Health, Blood Pressure, Habit, Step

Sleep dramatically controls how much you move each day and for most people, the plan to move more looks familiar: set a step goal, schedule a workout, summon enough willpower to follow through. Motivation is treated as the engine, and exercise is the destination. But a sweeping new study is turning that logic on its […]

How gut cell dangerously raises your cancer risk

Gut health

Most people think of inflammation the same way they think of a cold. Something flares up, the body fights back, things return to normal, and life moves on. The gut, in particular, seems to follow this pattern flare ups come and go, symptoms ease, and on the surface, everything looks fine. But a growing body […]

The 1 brain training type proven to cut dementia risk by 25%

Balance, Brain

Brain training apps, daily crosswords and memory exercises have long been marketed as tools for keeping the mind sharp with age. But a major long term study has found that most of these popular activities offer no meaningful protection against dementia. Only one specific type of training moved the needle and it’s not what most […]