Wednesday, July 10, 2013

What’s the best way to prepare for travel when you have chronic medical conditions?

Posted June 07, 2013, 2:00 am bigstock-always-together-18384098

In a few months, my husband and I are taking our first trip abroad. We both have chronic medical conditions. How should we prepare for our trip?

Many people with medical conditions enjoy foreign travel. But your preparation will need to involve more than just reading some guidebooks.

First, check in with your doctor. He or she may have specific concerns or advice for you. If you have diabetes, for example, your blood sugar level is affected not only by how much you eat, but by how much you exercise. And during vacations, both of these can change substantially. So ask yourself what the impact on your eating and exercise is likely to be from the vacation you have planned.

Since you’re traveling internationally, find out if you need vaccinations or preventive medications. You can check the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) website (cdc.gov/travel), or ask your doctor. Try to get your shots four to six weeks before your trip, as some vaccinations need time to kick in.

If you take prescription medications, pack more than enough to last through your trip, in case your return gets delayed. And carry your medications in your carry-on bag, not in your checked luggage in case it gets lost. (The TSA makes an exception to the “no more than 3.4 ounces of liquids or gels” rule for prescription medications and necessary medical supplies.) That’s what I have done ever since, 20 years ago, I spent the first two days of a trip trying to get replacement medicines in a foreign country because my luggage was lost.

Also, carry a list of your medications, with both the generic and brand names. And bring along a doctor’s note if you have a pacemaker or other implanted device; you may need it when going through security checkpoints.

Get the name of a doctor or hospital at your destination. There are organizations on the Internet that maintain the names of English-speaking doctors with good reputations in many countries around the world. They also identify trusted hospitals. One example is the International Association for Medical Assistance to Travelers.

I can’t personally vouch for the quality and integrity of the doctors and hospitals linked to these organizations. I can say that many of the organizations have boards of directors populated by doctors affiliated with major U.S. academic medical centers. And check with your insurance to see what you need to do in case of an emergency.

If you easily suffer from motion sickness, take medicine in your carry-on bag. In addition, pack the following in your checked luggage:

antidiarrheal medication, a laxative and an antacid;antihistamine and 1 percent hydrocortisone cream for mild allergic reactions;cold medicine;medications for pain relief or fever;antifungal and antibacterial ointments;lubricating eye drops;basic first-aid items (adhesive bandages, gauze, elastic bandage, antiseptic, tweezers, scissors, cotton-tipped applicators).

With a little advance planning, you and your husband can enjoy a healthy and safe vacation.

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Going Golfing? Shop Your Look on Puma's New StyleCaddie App

One doesn't usually think of women's golf as the most fashionable sport out there; for a long time, options for ladies on the links were limited and generic, at best. Recently, though, there's been an influx of hot female talent on the green -- and naturally, hot fashions followed suit. Several brands have been spearheading chic style on the golf course in recent years, and Puma's been at the helm. Now, the brand's released an awesome new app that fuses golf, fashion and technology -- the Puma StyleCaddie, out today for iOS and Android.

First and foremost, Puma Golf has an amazing Spring/Summer line of women's gear and apparel -- think ombre prints, henley sweaters, cute pastel polos and more. And now, to encourage mixing, matching, and (of course) social sharing, they've got this really fun app: Just select a female silhouette and dress it up, paper doll-style, with tops, bottoms, shoes and accessories. Change colors, rotate it 360 degrees -- you can even upload a photo of your own face for the model to "wear," then share your creations on Facebook and Twitter.

Prefer to shop pre-built outfits? The Lookbook tab will show you some of Puma Golf professionals Lexi Thompson and Blair O'Neal's favorite ensembles for everything from the driving range to post-match cocktails -- in patented Puma Golf performance fabrics warmCELL, coolCELL, dryCELL, windCELL and stormCELL. Because once we dress like them, we're bound to swing like them, too ... right?

Downloading the free #PumaStyleCaddy app? Tweet us your creations at @amandaemac and @SELFmagazine!

RELATED LINKS:

Image Credit: Courtesy of Puma


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Get Sexy Summer Shoulders in One Move

Scary thought: Bikini season is around the corner. No worries -- our totally free Drop 10 diet and fitness plan will help you lose 10 pounds in just five weeks. One of the secrets to your success? Your Drop 10 trainers, Karena and Katrina of ToneItUp.com, aka the bikini bod magicians.

For today's Tone It Up Tuesday, K+K are sharing a strength-building bonus move to keep your Drop 10 workout fresh. Not a Drop 10 member yet? Sign up now, it's totally free!

THIS WEEK'S TIP

Refresh your jams. Still listening to the workout playlist you made in 2012? Mix it up, girlfriend! A good list of songs is one of the best ways to stay psyched to do your workout. Aim to change yours up every week.

Tip-toe reach

THIS WEEK'S BONUS MOVE

Tip-toe reach
Karena demos the move with water bottles (you really can use anything for weights!), but for the best results, pick up your 8- to 10-pound dumbbells.

Log in (or sign up!) to see the complete move!


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Heart Device 'Shock' Anxiety May Hamper Sex Life

Study found more sexual dysfunction among men, women with implanted defibrillatorsOne additional hour of shuteye reduced depressive

By Robert Preidt

HealthDay Reporter

FRIDAY, June 7 (HealthDay News) -- Anxiety-related sexual problems occur among young adults with congenital heart disease who have implanted heart defibrillators, a new study finds.

Their anxiety about the possibility of receiving a shock from their implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) can lead to sexual dysfunction, according to the study in the June issue of the journal HeartRhythm.

The researchers looked at 70 patients with an ICD and 110 patients without an ICD, average age 32, and found that those with ICDs had a high level of shock-related anxiety. Elevated anxiety was associated with poorer sexual function in both men and women.

This is the first study to reveal that shock-related anxiety is associated with sexual dysfunction in young adults with ICDs, according to the researchers. They said the findings point to the need to address these issues in order to improve the quality of life for these patients.

"ICDs are increasingly being implanted in this young and vulnerable patient population, yet the psychosocial issues are often overlooked. Our study is an example of dynamic research intended to help us better understand this growing population," lead author Dr. Stephen Cook said in a news release from the Heart Rhythm Society.

"Improving outcomes and the quality of life in these young adults is critical and our results clearly show the importance of addressing their psychological well-being," added Cook, who is with the Adult Congenital Heart Disease Center at the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Congenital heart defects are among the most common types of birth defects, according to the news release. In 2000, the estimated number of U.S. adults with congenital heart disease was between 650,000 and 1.3 million, and the number rises each year. This means that a growing number of adults with congenital heart defects are receiving ICDs.

For patients with shock-related anxiety, early identification might lead to help such as education, treatment planning and referral to a mental health expert, the study authors said.


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REVIEW: Old Mary's


When we heard there was a new cocktail joint in town, we made tracks almost instantly to Lancaster Gate's new gaff, Old Mary's.

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Reason for loosing weight//How you chose a goal weight??

Hey, I just joined CC. I'm wondering how you all chose your goal weight. First off, I'm 5'6" and have a small frame. Right now I'm 120 lbs. I used to train rhythmic gymnastics for 2 hrs 4 times a week.(3 mo. Ago) I was 120, but with long muscles. I set my goal to 108 and I'm starting training again. Is this to low? Because at 15 yrs. I could be 102 and not be under weight. I'm wondering if my sporting has messed up my idea of a healthy weight.

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Parents Will Push for Medication, Even If Doc Says Not Needed

Title: Parents Will Push for Medication, Even If Doc Says Not Needed
Category: Health News
Created: 4/1/2013 10:35:00 AM
Last Editorial Review: 4/1/2013 12:00:00 AM

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Jessica Alba on the street in LA


Jessica Alba wears a white zipped denim jacket, green chinos, reflective Ray Bans and a canvas satchel on the street in LA - vote on celebrity fashion, style and red carpet looks in GLAMOUR.COM’s Dos and Don’ts

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Matchless strategy for tick removal; 6 steps to avoid tick bites

Patrick J. Skerrett
Posted June 07, 2013, 9:51 am Tick on grass

My first tick sighting was a mixture of horror and fascination. It happened during my one and only experience with summer camp, on the shores of Alma Lake in north-central Wisconsin. One of my cabin mates discovered a big, fat tick burrowed into the skin of his belly. “Gross!” we chorused, unable to stop looking. Ideas for how to remove the tick swirled fast and furious. The leading contender was to light a match, blow it out, and touch the hot tip to the back end of the tick. As we scurried around looking for matches, cooler heads prevailed and the kid went off to the nurse for a more effective form of tick removal.

Knowing how to remove a tick is a useful skill for anyone who spends time outdoors, or who cares for someone who does. The sooner a tick is removed—correctly—the less likely the critter can deliver microbes that cause Lyme disease or other tick-borne diseases.

There are several folk remedies for removing a tick. Touching it with a hot match is a common one. Others include covering it with petroleum jelly or nail polish (in theory to suffocate it), or freezing it off. These are all supposed to make the tick “back out” of the skin on its own. But they often have the opposite effect, forcing the tick to hold tight, burrow deeper, and possibly deposit more of its disease-carrying secretions into the wound, which increases the risk of infection.

The best way to remove a tick? Here’s what the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend: Use a pair of fine-tipped tweezers to grasp the tick as close to the skin as possible. Then pull it out with a steady motion. Once the tick has been removed, clean the skin with soap and water. Dispose of the tick, which is probably still alive, by placing it in alcohol or flushing it down the toilet.

A tick feeds by way of a two-pronged mouthpart (hypostome) held in place with salivary cement and secured with tiny backward-pointing barbs. To remove the tick, use narrow-tipped tweezers and grasp it as close to the skin as possible; then pull upward slowly and steadily. If the mouthpart remains in the skin, try to remove it. If you can't, check with your clinician. Wash your skin and hands with soap and warm water. Try not to crush or squeeze an attached tick. A tick feeds by way of a two-pronged mouthpart (hypostome) held in place with salivary cement and secured with tiny backward-pointing barbs. To remove the tick, use narrow-tipped tweezers and grasp it as close to the skin as possible; then pull upward slowly and steadily. If the mouthpart remains in the skin, try to remove it. If you can’t, check with your clinician. Wash your skin and hands with soap and warm water. Try not to crush or squeeze an attached tick.

For most people who are bitten by a tick, removal ends the saga. For others, though, it is just beginning.

In the United States, the most common tick-borne disease is Lyme disease. It is caused by Borrelia burgdorferi, a bacterium carried to humans by infected blacklegged ticks, also known as deer ticks. Most cases of Lyme disease follow the bite of an immature deer tick, which is about the size of a poppy seed. Adult deer ticks can also transmit Borrelia burgdorferi, but they are larger and more likely to be seen and removed before they’ve had time to infect a person.

Lyme disease continues to spread across the Northeast and upper Midwest, and is now found in most states. The CDC has an interactive map that shows its spread from 2001 to 2011.

Infection with Borrelia burgdorferi often—but not always—causes a rash that looks something like a red bull’s eye soon after the tick bite. Treatment with antibiotics can usually prevent any short- or long-term repercussions. If the infection isn’t treated, problems can develop in other parts of the body, including the joints, heart, and nerves. It can also cause arthritis that persists months or years after the tick bite.

Some people with Lyme disease and some community doctors have argued that Borrelia burgdorferi can somehow evade courses of antibiotics and become a chronic infection that needs long-term antibiotic treatment—even though conventional antibody tests are negative. Chronic Lyme disease has been blamed for causing pain, fatigue, muscle aches, loss of memory and thinking skills, and a host of other problems.

Most Lyme disease experts don’t believe active infection persists after antibiotic treatment and once blood tests are negative for antibodies. They’ve been critical of what they see as unreliable tests for infection and unwarranted, possibly harmful, long-term antibiotic therapy.

A recent front-page article in the Boston Globe highlighted the controversy around Lyme disease and its treatment.

Other tick-borne diseases include:

babesiosisehrlichiosisRocky Mountain spotted fevertularemiatickborne relapsing fever

The only foolproof method for staying tick free is avoiding areas where they lurk. That means staying out of brush and high grass in and around wooded areas.

If you like to be outdoors and find yourself frequenting those environments, the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station has published an excellent comprehensive handbook about tick management. If you don’t have the time to read all 80 pages, here are six tips for protecting yourself from ticks, culled mainly from that handbook.

1. Wear light-colored clothing. Light colors make ticks easier to spot, especially tiny deer tick nymphs.

2. Tuck your pants inside your socks. It may not be a flattering look, but it creates a physical barrier against ticks.

3. Use insect repellent. Most of the chemicals that repel mosquitoes are somewhat effective against ticks, although it may take a heavier concentration of DEET — between 30% and 40% — to really keep them away. Permethrin is a stronger chemical that kills ticks as well as repels them. Products containing permethrin should be sprayed on clothes, not on the skin. Picaridin repels mosquitoes and other insects but not ticks.

4. Stay in the middle of the path (or fairway). Ticks can’t fly or jump, so they can only get on you if you come into contact with the kind of environment they live in: moist, often shady, wooded areas, with leaves, low-lying plants, and shrubs.

5. Think sunny. Ticks don’t do well in dry, open areas. Lawn furniture and playground equipment should be set back from the edge of wooded, shady areas. If you’re picnicking, pick a patch of well-tended lawn or some open ground.

6. Inspect yourself and your children (and your pets), especially the legs and groin. Ticks usually get picked up on the lower legs and then climb upward in search of a meal. The odds of contracting Lyme or other tick-borne disease are minimized if a tick is removed soon after it’s attached, and there’s no risk if it’s still crawling around. The shower is a good place to conduct a tick check. Feel for any new bumps on soaped-up skin.

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Kate Middleton to trademark her name


The Duchess of Cambridge will soon be following in the footsteps of model of the moment Cara Delevingne.

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Your Stroke Risk Can Shrink With 7 Lifestyle Changes

Controlling blood pressure is most important, large U.S. study foundMany of these patients suffer from hypochondria,

By Robert Preidt

HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, June 6 (HealthDay News) -- Certain lifestyle changes could greatly reduce your stroke risk, according to a new study.

Researchers calculated stroke risk among nearly 23,000 black and white Americans aged 45 and older. Their risk was assessed using the American Heart Association's Life's Simple 7 health factors: be active, control cholesterol, eat a healthy diet, manage blood pressure, maintain a healthy weight, control blood sugar and don't smoke.

During five years of follow-up, 432 strokes occurred among the participants. All seven factors played an important role in predicting stroke risk, but blood pressure was the most important, according to the study, which was published June 6 in the journal Stroke.

"Compared to those with poor blood pressure status, those who were ideal had a 60 percent lower risk of future stroke," study senior author Dr. Mary Cushman, a professor of medicine at the University of Vermont in Burlington, said in a journal news release.

Cushman and her colleagues also found that people who didn't smoke or quit smoking more than a year before the start of the study had a 40 percent lower stroke risk.

For the study, the researchers categorized the participants' Life's Simple 7 scores as inadequate (zero to four points), average (five to nine points) or optimum (10 to 14 points). Every one-point increase was associated with an 8 percent lower stroke risk. People with optimum scores had a 48 percent lower risk than those with inadequate scores, and those with average scores had a 27 percent lower risk.

Overall, blacks had lower scores than whites, but the association between scores and stroke risk was similar for blacks and whites.

"This highlights the critical importance of improving these health factors since blacks have nearly twice the stroke mortality rates as whites," Cushman said.

Each year, about 795,000 people in the United States have a stroke, which is the No. 4 killer and a leading cause of long-term disability in the country, according to the American Heart Association.


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David Beckham opens up about family life


David Beckham has opened up about his family life, insisting that he and wife Victoria are constantly striving to give their children as normal an upbringing as possible.

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Lose weight

Hello everyone !

I'm 18 years old, I'm 5'4 and I weigh around 67 kilos, which is around 150 pounds. I'm depressed because I feel extremely fat since my fat only seems to go in the wrong places like my arms which I can't hide. I need to lose 30 pounds. Would anyone help me ? Does anyone understand my stupid yet important problem ? ( important => for me ). For once in my life, I would like to not be ashamed of my body. Thanks !


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Health Tip: Tackling Family Dinners

Title: Health Tip: Tackling Family Dinners
Category: Health News
Created: 4/1/2013 8:35:00 AM
Last Editorial Review: 4/1/2013 12:00:00 AM

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The Morning Scoop: Running Endurance Tips, Worst Cities for Spring Allergy Sufferers and More!

Are you a spring allergy sufferer? Find out how your hometown stacks up against other U.S. cities based on factors like pollen levels and the number of board-certified allergists in the area. [CNN]

Are organic foods always better? A new study suggests the "organic" label can bias consumers for what's been dubbed the 'Health Halo Effect.' [Science Daily]

Three months after the Newtown shooting, the state of Connecticut is poised to pass what could be the nation's strictest gun control package. [The Daily Beast]

You may be about to learn a lot more about your noggin: Today, President Obama is expect to unveil an initiative to map the human brain in 2014. [NYTimes]

Image Credit: Riccardo Tinelli


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farmers walks

Since I live in a rural area, a carry things more than an average person, I guess. Mostly a lot of water jugs. Recently, I just tried out some official "farmer's walks" with dumbbells. Various weights. Various distances. I'm  very curious what other people think of this exercise, if they do it, what weight they hold, and how far they walk, etc.

My grip is good, so mostly what gets tired on me seemed to be my upper traps. Everything had to stay pretty tight while I was walking though. What is this exercise supposed to improve? Has anyone attributed this exercise to some beneficial result, after doing it regularly?

OGR


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