How High-Risk People Should Prepare for Their COVID Vaccine Appointment healthcentral.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from healthcentral.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The COVID-19 vaccines are here, and they’re being distributed by the millions. Chances are, you know at least one person who has received one. But as welcome as these long-awaited shots are, they’re also stirring up some controversy especially among those in the chronic community, who (understandably) have some questions. Like are these vaccines safe for everyone? And will they interact with my medications? Also, what are the side-effect risks?
For more info on psoriasis and the COVID Vaccine, check out our Facebook Live event, here!
We hear you. And we’re taking your questions straight from our Facebook pages to the desks of top chronic disease experts as part of our original series #ChronicVaxFacts. Today’s expert is Lisa Zaba, M.D., Ph.D., a dermatologist with Stanford Health Care in Palo Alto, CA. We asked Dr. Zaba to answer questions from psoriasis patients about the COVID vaccine.
A good stretch can help alleviate everything from post-workout muscle tightness to after-work stress. And according to new research, stretching may also help keep your blood pressure in check. A December 2020 study in the
Journal of Physical Activity and Health compared the effects of 30 minutes of daily stretching versus 30 minutes of daily walking, five days a week for eight weeks. The researchers found that stretching had a greater impact on lowering blood pressure than walking in people with normal-to-high levels or stage 1 hypertension.
“If people want to lower their blood pressure, they should probably incorporate some stretching into their exercise routine,” says Philip Chilibeck, Ph.D., study author and professor of kinesiology at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada. That is not to say that you should give up your regular forms of aerobic exercise like walking or biking. But when combined with these workouts, stretching can do more than just make you feel good it
What to Look for in a Heart Disease Doctor
Your relationship with your cardiologist matters. Here’s how to find the perfect match.
February 25, 2021
Call us sappy, but we’re in the mood to give our hearts a little love right now (and not just because February is Heart Health Month). Maintaining good heart health is essential to living a long and robust life, as evidenced by this sobering statistic: heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States for both men and women. More than 600,000 Americans die from it every year.
No one knows heart health better than a cardiologist, so we tapped Michael Blaha, M.D., director of Clinical Research for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease at John Hopkins Medicine in Baltimore, to explain how to find the right doctor and develop a lasting expert-patient relationship.