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Answering
Your Questions About Immunity
Your immune system is crucial in maintaining
your healthso it's important to keep it in good order.
But how do you do that? People talk about boosting immunity as if
it were a task similar to building muscles or reducing blood cholesterol.
Hundreds of ads for supplements and other products promise to boost
immunity. But keeping your immune system in good shape is a complicated
task. "How do I boost immunity?" is really the same question
as "What can I do to stay well?"

New Advice
on Pain Relief
Pain relievers can work wonders, allowing
many people to carry on with their lives despite disabling arthritis,
for instance, or recurrent headaches. But all pain relievers,
prescription or over-the counter (OTC), have potential risks, especially
when used long term for chronic pain. Recent studies have raised
concerns—some new, some old—about these widely used
drugs. In December the FDA proposed tougher warnings on labels,
but it may take a year for these to appear on packages. Here
are the concerns—and what to do about them.

Maintaining
Mental Health in Time of Crisis
The attacks on New York City and the Pentagon
in September, among many other results, have played havoc with our
mental and emotional life. No one knows how many people sought crisis
counseling in the aftermathor needed it and did not seek it.
The list of traumatized people was very long: rescue workers, those
who had lost friends, colleagues, spouses, parents and other family
members, and eyewitnesses to the disasters, in reality or on TV.

New
Advice for a Healthy Heart
We reported in February on the growing popularity
of cholesterol-lowering "statin" drugs, which many healthy
people take to prevent heart disease. Among the most widely prescribed
drugs in the world, statins will surely be even more popular now
that an important government-sponsored panel of heart disease experts
has announced aggressive new recommendations for treating high blood
cholesterol.

What
You Should Know About Your Drinking Water
The U.S. and Canada, as well as most other industrialized
nations, have a right to be proud of their drinking water. Safe
public water is one of the triumphs of the last century.

The
Wellness Guide to Preventive Care
A recent government study showed that
more than half of all Americans do not receive many of the important
preventive services they needthat is, immunizations, screening
tests for early detection of disease, and education about healthy
habits and injury prevention. Why not?

Managing
Arthritis: Q & A's
The term "arthritis" covers several
joint diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, a chronic inflammation
of tissue surrounding the joints, which often begins early in life.
Osteoarthritis (OA)the subject of this articleis more
common, and is a chronic degenerative joint disease that usually
affects older people. Unlike rheumatoid arthritis, it's not characterized
by inflammation, but is a breakdown of cartilage, the tissue that
cushions the joints.

Diabetes Prevention:
The Test
Diabetes is about to become a concern for millions of middle-aged
Americans who never gave it much thought before. The American Diabetes
Association, backed by federal health authorities, recently called
for routine screening of all
Americans starting at age 45, using a
simple, inexpensive test, in order to detect more cases of Type
2 diabetes earlier.

Demystifying
Stress
Stress is a word on everybody's lips.
But how any two people define it can differ dramatically. Scientists
increasingly look at stress as an important factor in the origin
of illness.

Alcohol: Weighing the Benefits
and Risks for You
It's hard to say exactly how many Americans
die as a result of alcohol consumption. And it's even harder to
figure out how many deaths from heart disease are prevented by "moderate"
drinking. Moreover, such a weighing of the beneficial and adverse
effects of alcohol doesn't take into consideration the big differences
between the two groups involved. While most alcohol-related deaths
occur in relatively young people, the deaths prevented by alcohol
are generally in older age groupsthose with high rates of
cardiovascular disease.

Answering
Nine of Your Cholesterol Questions
"Cholesterol" is a household word, but still
an elusive concept for many people. And no wonder. Biochemistry
is hardly simple, even for biochemists. Here are a few cholesterol
review notes.

Hormone
Therapy and Women's Hearts
Does hormone therapy:
(a) protect women from heart attack?
(b) increase their risk of heart
attack?
(c) make no difference, one way or
the other?
For years the answer was thought to be (a). But recent research
has left researchersand the publicwith a nagging feeling
of uncertainty.
New
Advice About Bone-Density Tests
Do all women in their fifties need a bone-density test? No, but
a great many could benefit from knowing how their bones measure
up. And at age 65 all women should be tested. This is a change in
our recommendation from a few years ago, when we did not advise
even women over 65 to be routinely tested.

The
Ups and Downs of Hypertension
What's the most important number to know? Not
your net worth, your age, or even the PIN number for your ATM card.
It's your blood pressure. You should know this number and what it
means. Nearly one-third of people with high blood pressure don't
know they have it.

How to Lower
Your Cancer Risk
The newspapers and other media are rife with
reports that this or that food or chemical or environmental factoreverything
from canaries to toasterscauses cancer. But most reports are
given out of context, and it's easy to lose sight of the big picture
and of the scientific progress that's been made in understanding
and preventing cancer.

Preventing
Heart Disease
Scientists now know far more about the major
controllable risk factors for coronary artery disease (CAD) than
for most other diseases. A risk factor merely increases the probability
that you will develop CAD; it doesn't guarantee that you will develop
it, nor does its absence (or even the absence of all risk factors)
guarantee that you won't have a heart attack.

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