Improving Physical Health, Saving Money Top New Year's Resolutions Improving physical health and saving money top the list of New Year’s resolutions for Americans, a YouGov survey released this week found.
Target Limits Purchases of Children's Medicines amid 'Tripledemic' Target is restricting purchases of specific children’s medicines as the nation endures what has been dubbed the “tripledemic” — a rise in cases of flu, coronavirus, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). Shoppers trying to find Tylenol, Advil, and Motrin are only allowed two per transaction on the store’s website
'Stranded on Christmas Eve:' Tesla Owner Posts Viral Video of Car Failing to Charge in Cold A video recorded by a Tesla owner has gone viral after he demonstrated how his Model S vehicle refused to charge at a Supercharger station due to the cold weather.
Siim Land Interviews Dr. Mercola About ‘EMF*D’ STORY AT-A-GLANCE I was recently interviewed by Siim Land about my new book, "EMF*D," described by Siim as "the most comprehensive guide … to everything you need to know about EMF." In it, I explain what electromagnetic fields (EMFs) are, the different types of EMFs you're exposed to, the harms
Does Green-Yellow Snot Mean You Have a Sinus Infection? STORY AT-A-GLANCE After you blow your nose, do you open the tissue and look? Although not many people talk about it, it's time to break that taboo and talk about the color of your snot.
Health Tips From the Godfather of Vitamin D Research STORY AT-A-GLANCE Bruce Hollis, Ph.D., professor of pediatrics at the Medical University of South Carolina, has published more than 200 papers on vitamin D.
How voluntary control over information and body movements determines “what it’s like” to have perceptual, bodily, emotional and mental experiences Two very fundamental aspects of phenomenal experiences underline the fact that they seem to have “something it’s like.” One aspect is the fact that experiences have a locus: they Can seem “external” (perceptual), “internal” (interoceptive, bodily or emotional) or “mental.” A second fundamental aspect is the imposingness of experiences.
Can Coffee Reduce Your Risk of Alzheimer’s Disease? STORY AT-A-GLANCE Coffee is an integral part of many people's morning and afternoon routines, with long lines at neighborhood coffee shops as testaments to its popularity.
What’s the covid jab doing to the brain? A year ago, on 13th December 2021, I explained why I feared that those had received the covid-19 jab might suffer brain damage. That fear was real. I now believe that many of those who have been jabbed with the toxic covid-19 junk are brain damaged. I believe their brain
19 Telltale Signs a Narcissist Is Done with You Relationships with narcissists are fraught at the best of times.
Actuaries raise alarm that Australians are unexpectedly dying at incredibly high rate The Australian government should be urgently investigating the “incredibly high” 13% excess death rate in 2022, the country’s peak actuarial body says. An extra 15,400 people died in the first eight months of the year, according to a new analysis of Australian Bureau of Statistics (“ABS”) data by
Has South Sudan’s Conflict Really Ended? December 15 marks the anniversary of South Sudan’s descent into a brutal civil war, a conflict in which all parties have committed abuses amounting to war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Nuclear-Powered France on the ‘Right Track’ to Avoid Blackouts - Minister Thanks to a raft of power-saving measures combined with its armada of nuclear power plants, France is now on the “right track” to avoid rolling blackouts this winter, one government minister has claimed. Bruno Le Maire, the minister of finance and the economy within Emmanuel Macron’s French government, has