How I Finally Got My ApoB Down After Years Of Heart-Healthy Habits
Jason Wachob, founder of mindbodygreen, discovered his ApoB remained elevated despite a decade of clean eating and exercise. Standard lipid panels had shown normal LDL, but ApoB testing revealed excess atherogenic particles, prompting a deeper health assessment. After intensifying diet and lifestyle with limited effect, he added the cholesterol‑absorption inhibitor ezetimibe, which lowered his ApoB from 71 to 59. The experience underscored the importance of advanced lipid testing and combining medical therapy with lifestyle for high‑risk individuals.

Music and Health: ‘Physicians May Prescribe Music in the Same Way They Prescribe Exercise’
At SXSW’s Take Action summit, a panel of musicians, neuroscientists, and music‑tech executives argued that music should move from awareness campaigns to a prescribed health intervention. Researchers cited evidence that music strengthens neural pathways, aids dementia patients, and improves mental...

School Phone Bans Not Enough to Cut Screen Time Alone, Researchers Say
A University of Birmingham study reveals that strict smartphone bans in secondary schools improve in‑class concentration but do not curb overall screen time, as pupils often shift usage to evenings at home. The research shows restrictive policies can worsen sleep...

The Cognitive Aftercare Gap: Cancer Care Is Data-Rich, but Brain Recovery Is Unmanaged
Cancer survivorship is increasingly recognized, yet cognitive impairment—often called "brain fog"—remains invisible in most oncology workflows. Studies show up to 75% of patients experience cognitive changes during treatment, with roughly 35% continuing months or years afterward. The gap stems from...
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What Is Post Infidelity Stress Disorder?
Infidelity often leaves a psychological scar that clinicians refer to as post‑infidelity stress disorder (PISD). Though not an official DSM diagnosis, a 2021 study found 30‑60 % of betrayed partners experience anxiety, depression, intrusive memories and sleep problems similar to PTSD....

Men Can Get Out of the Manosphere. Here’s What Former Incels Say About Why They Left
A new Australian Institute of Criminology study examines why some men exit incel and broader manosphere communities. Interviews reveal participants initially join during periods of insecurity, finding temporary solidarity but later experiencing an "unhealthy loop of depression" as echo chambers...
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Effects of Narcissistic Abuse
Recent coverage outlines the extensive psychological and physical fallout from narcissistic abuse, highlighting anxiety, depression, PTSD, loss of self‑worth, and chronic hypervigilance. Survivors often experience trust deficits, decision‑making paralysis, and somatic symptoms such as headaches and sleep disturbances. The article...
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How Long Does Hydrocodone Withdrawal Last?
Hydrocodone remains the most prescribed opioid in the U.S., with 83.6 million prescriptions in 2017 and 6.3 million misusers. Withdrawal typically starts 8–24 hours after the last dose, peaks on days two to three, and subsides within a week for most patients. Symptoms...

5 Ways to Move From Combative to Connected in Marriage
An author recounts a combative marriage that transformed by shifting focus from personal expectations to connection. He outlines five practical strategies: truly knowing each other, creating shared habits, deliberately bringing joy, discussing the underlying why, and reflecting together. Each tactic...

How High-Performing Entrepreneurs Design Their Businesses to Prevent Burnout and Constant Chaos
High‑performing entrepreneurs are shifting from relentless hustle to intentional slack. They schedule only 80 % of their weeks, add staff before teams hit full capacity, and treat AI as a time‑filter rather than a task‑generator. By auditing false urgency and delegating...

How to Read Your DEXA Body Composition Results (Without Misinterpreting Them)
DEXA (Dual‑Energy X‑ray Absorptiometry) scans now appear in gyms and wellness clinics, offering a low‑dose X‑ray that quantifies bone density, total body fat, visceral fat, and regional lean mass. The technology provides a detailed map of fat distribution, including visceral...

Just 20 Minutes of Physical Activity May Benefit Your Memory
Researchers using intracranial EEG recorded a surge in hippocampal ripple activity after participants completed a 20‑minute moderate cycling session. The increase in high‑frequency ripples, which are linked to memory consolidation, was stronger in participants with higher heart rates, indicating intensity‑dependent...

Lifestyle Choices, Early Intervention Key to Alzheimer's Prevention, Experts Say
The Spring 2025 Alzheimer’s Association Research Roundtable highlighted a shift toward early detection and prevention of Alzheimer’s disease, emphasizing new biomarkers that can identify pathology years before symptoms appear. The meeting underscored the U.S. POINTER trial’s evidence that multi‑domain lifestyle interventions...
What to Expect on TRT?
An individual with mid‑range testosterone (488 ng/dL) plans a TRT protocol of 160 mg testosterone cypionate split twice weekly and 50 IU hCG weekly. They seek guidance on expected physiological changes, timeline, potential side effects such as hair loss, and whether the hCG...

Do You Really Need Closure?
The article examines the human drive for closure after traumatic events, highlighting its psychological roots and the mixed outcomes of seeking definitive answers. Researchers Arie Kruglanski and Dan McAdams show that while closure can aid decision‑making and emotional transition, it...

Global Wellness Summit to Hold 20th Anniversary Event at Angsana Laguna Phuket in 2026
The Global Wellness Summit will celebrate its 20th anniversary at Angsana Laguna Phuket from November 10‑13, 2026. The invite‑only conference is slated to be the largest in the organization’s history, drawing CEOs, physicians, investors, technologists and policymakers. Four co‑chairs—representing finance,...

Sitting Can Actually Protect Your Brain — If You Do It Right (M)
Recent research suggests that not all sitting is detrimental; specific sitting postures and practices can actually safeguard cognitive function. Studies indicate that mindful, upright sitting improves cerebral blood flow and reduces stress hormones, both of which are linked to better...

Returning: House of Wellness
House of Wellness returns to Seven on March 31 with original hosts Melissa Doyle, Shane Crawford, Yvie Jones and Dr Ahmed Kazmi. The new season adds high‑profile guests such as Dave Hughes, Boy & Bear, Vika & Linda, Sammy J and rapper 360, and introduces segments...
Smokeless Nicotine Seen as 'Bridge' For Military Members, Veterans Quitting Cigarettes
The Department of Defense and Veterans Affairs are promoting smokeless nicotine as a transitional tool to help service members and veterans quit combustible cigarettes. About 30% of active‑duty personnel use tobacco, roughly twice the civilian rate, prompting a new joint...

This Beloved Pose Is One of the Most Difficult in All of Yoga
Savasana, often called the hardest pose for Western students, challenges practitioners by demanding pratyahara—the withdrawal of the senses—rather than physical flexibility. The article explains why modern, high‑stress lifestyles make stillness difficult and outlines physiological benefits such as lowered blood pressure,...

The Most Effective ‘Dose’ Of Work For Mental Health
A UK longitudinal study of 71,000 people found that just one eight‑hour workday per week reduces the risk of mental health issues by about 30 percent. Benefits plateau after eight hours, with no additional well‑being gains from longer weeks despite...

Study Shows 3-Hour Night Fast Improves Heart Health, Blood Pressure, and Blood Sugar
A Northwestern University study involving 39 overweight adults found that abstaining from food for at least three hours before bedtime improves cardiometabolic markers without altering calorie intake. Over a seven‑and‑a‑half‑week trial, participants who kept a 3‑hour night fast showed lower...

Starting Your Day in a Better Way
The article urges replacing morning doomscrolling with “hope scrolling,” a practice of prayer and Bible reading before checking phones. Kevin A. Thompson outlines three reflective questions to extract personal hope from Scripture and share it throughout the day. Thompson discusses...

The Role of Ergonomics in Preventing Soft Tissue Injuries Caused by Heavy Equipment Handling
Construction firms face rising soft‑tissue injuries from heavy‑equipment handling, driven by whole‑body vibration, awkward postures, and repetitive motions. Integrating ergonomic principles—adjustable seats, low‑force controls, panoramic visibility, and climate‑controlled cabs—can dramatically lower injury risk. The article outlines specific design features that...

Get a Fuller Picture with Fitbit's Personal Health Coach
Fitbit unveiled the next phase of its AI‑driven personal health coach, boosting sleep‑stage accuracy by 15% and introducing a more granular Sleep Score that tracks latency and interruptions. The company highlighted new research published in *Nature* that predicts insulin resistance...
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How Photography Helped Me See My Postpartum Body Through a New Lens
The author, a photographer and new mother, describes how postpartum body changes sparked shame and self‑criticism. By turning her camera on herself, she created self‑portraits that reframed stretch marks, a "mom pouch," and other changes as symbols of strength. This...
Effectiveness of Cryotherapy on Pain Intensity, Range of Motion, Swelling and Function in the Postoperative Care of Musculoskeletal Disorders: A...
A systematic review and meta‑analysis of 28 randomized trials involving roughly 3,000 postoperative patients evaluated cryotherapy’s impact on pain, range of motion, swelling, and function after musculoskeletal surgery. The analysis showed statistically significant pain reductions (MD −0.77 to −0.41) and modest improvements...
It Is Not All About Strength: Rethinking Mechanistic Assumptions in Exercise-Based Rehabilitation for Musculoskeletal Pain Relief
The editorial challenges the long‑standing belief that increasing muscle strength is the primary driver of pain relief in exercise‑based rehabilitation for musculoskeletal conditions. It reviews systematic reviews and mediation analyses across Achilles tendinopathy, patellar tendinopathy, rotator‑cuff shoulder pain, patellofemoral pain,...
Stepping Into Play: A FIFA Decision Aid for Football Participation After Childbirth
The British Journal of Sports Medicine published a study describing the FIFA Stepping into Play decision aid, designed to guide football participation after childbirth. Developed through a five‑phase knowledge‑to‑action process, the tool integrates health‑screening, biopsychosocial questionnaires and a seven‑stage training framework....
Taking the Best From the Two Worlds: The Benefits of Combining Athlete Mental Health Screening with Brief Clinical Intake Interviews
The editorial in the British Journal of Sports Medicine advocates pairing the Sport Mental Health Assessment Tool (SMHAT‑1) with brief clinical intake interviews by sport psychologists. The authors report that this hybrid model was applied in over 4,000 screenings of...
Screen Time Surges for Desk Workers, Straining Eyes and Productivity
The third annual Workplace Vision Health Report reveals desk workers now log an average 99.2 hours of screen time per week, up from 97 hours last year. Seventy‑one percent say screen‑related eye strain is hurting their performance, equating to roughly...
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Caring for the Caregiver: The Power of Touch When You’re Always the One Giving
Parents who constantly give physical comfort often end the day feeling "touched out," yet research shows restorative touch is essential for their well‑being. Experts from the American Physical Therapy Association and massage professionals highlight that chronic muscle tension, sleep loss,...

Your Partner May Wake You up Six Times a Night – but Does It Matter?
Sleeping with a partner leads to significantly more nighttime awakenings, with research showing up to six disturbances per night compared to sleeping alone. While many couples subjectively feel they sleep better together, objective measurements reveal increased sleep fragmentation. The study...
You Know Something's Wrong with Your Teen, but They Say They're Fine - Dr Billy Garvey's 4 Tips for What...
Dr Billy Garvey, a developmental paediatrician with 25 years of experience, appeared on the Netmums podcast to address parents who suspect their teenager is struggling despite claims of being fine. He emphasises that teen distress often stems from temperament, not...

How PracticeLab Volume 2 Equips You for Client Challenges
PracticeLab Volume 2 introduces a curated set of evidence‑based worksheets designed for therapists, coaches, and educators. The collection addresses five high‑impact client concerns—anxiety, perfectionism, relationships, conflict resolution, and behavioral change—offering CBT‑style exercises, visual mapping tools, and habit‑formation templates. Available in both...
You Can Use Music to Escape Your Negative Thought Loops
Recent neuroscience research shows that listening to music can interrupt the brain's default mode network, curbing negative thought loops and associated pain. Experiments reveal that heroic‑sounding music prompts empowering mental imagery, while sad music fosters calmer, albeit demotivating, reflections. Active...
Book Review: How We Thrive
Stephanie Malia Krauss’s *How We Thrive* expands her Whole Child framework to include adults, arguing that modern life’s four "over" conditions—overtapped, overworked, overstimulated, overwrought—create a relentless storm. She introduces “rehumaning,” a return to evolutionary essentials across body, mind, heart, and...

What’s Behind the Injectable Peptide Craze? – Podcast
Injectable peptides such as BPC‑157, GHK‑Cu and TB‑500 have surged in popularity among biohackers despite lacking regulatory approval. The Guardian podcast explores why these grey‑market compounds have become mainstream, featuring insights from journalist Adrienne Matei and Imperial College peptide researcher...

Australia’s New Physical Activity Guidelines Won’t Shift the Needle – Here Are 4 Better Ideas
Australia released its first 24‑hour movement guidelines for adults, adding sleep recommendations and step targets. The guidance emphasizes 7‑9 hours of quality sleep and 7,000 daily steps but stops at advice without funding or regulatory changes. Critics argue that without...

Weight Management Gaining Attention in China, but Actions Still Lacking: Junshi Chen
Professor Junshi Chen highlighted China’s three‑year obesity‑prevention campaign launched in 2024, noting that public awareness of weight management has surged. While hospitals are opening obesity clinics, Chen warns that preventive actions remain insufficient, with 34.8% of adults overweight and 14.1%...

Research to Gauge Effectiveness of Free Workplace Health Initiatives
A £3.7 million, five‑year research programme led by the University of Birmingham will assess the effectiveness of free workplace health and wellbeing initiatives, known as WHISPAs, for small and medium‑sized enterprises. Funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research,...

Guidelines Recommend Cholesterol Screening, Treatment for Individuals as Young as Age 30
The American Heart Association released new cholesterol guidelines recommending routine lipid screening for adults starting at age 30, a shift from the previous 45‑year threshold. The recommendations pair early detection with individualized treatment, including lifestyle counseling and statin therapy for...

Many Women Over 40 Avoid Jumping Workouts—But This Simple Exercise Is the Key to Stronger Bones
Women over 40 are often warned against jumping exercises, yet new research shows plyometrics dramatically improve bone mineral density and reduce fracture risk. Studies in *Current Osteoporosis Reports* and *BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders* confirm that adding high‑impact drills to strength routines...
Can Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy Help You Live Longer?
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT), once confined to treating decompression sickness and serious medical conditions, is now being repackaged as a high‑end wellness service. Proponents claim it enhances cognition, slows skin aging, and extends lifespan, yet peer‑reviewed studies do not substantiate...

These Leisure Activities Make You More Fulfilled & Creative At Work (M)
Dr Jeremy Dean argues that leisure activities are a hidden driver of workplace fulfillment and creativity. He cites psychological studies showing that hobbies such as gardening, playing music, reading fiction, and volunteering improve mood, cognitive flexibility, and intrinsic motivation. The article...

How to Find Your Balance in Any Challenging Standing Pose
The article revisits Utthita Hasta Padangusthasana, framing the pose as a fluid sequence rather than a static snapshot. It introduces Moshe Feldenkrais’s concept of "acture," emphasizing effortlessness, reversibility, and breath ease throughout the movement. Detailed foot‑arch drills, prop‑based progressions, and...

Can You Really Become Addicted to Love or Sex?
Recent research distinguishes love‑related compulsions from formal addiction, noting strong ties to anxious attachment rather than a DSM‑defined disorder. In contrast, compulsive sexual behavior disorder (CSBD) gained official recognition in the ICD‑11, highlighting its neuro‑behavioral parallels to substance addictions. Clinicians...

Weighted Planks: The Core Exercise That Can Build Total Strength
The weighted front plank adds external resistance to the classic forearm hold, turning a static endurance move into a true strength drill. By placing a plate or vest on the upper back, lifters force the core to brace against downward...

The 48-Hour Oatmeal Diet That Could Improve Heart Health by 10%
A two‑day oatmeal‑only diet cut LDL cholesterol by 10% in a German clinical trial. The 48‑hour regimen, providing 300 g of oats three times daily, also produced an average two‑kilogram weight loss and slight blood‑pressure reductions. Remarkably, these improvements remained evident...

Magnesium Vs. Melatonin: Which Is Better for Sleep?
Sleep remains a top performance metric, prompting many to turn to over‑the‑counter aids. Melatonin acts as a circadian‑time‑setter, helping those with jet lag or shift‑work schedules fall asleep a few minutes faster, though dose accuracy varies widely. Magnesium supports relaxation...