Get the best of Oprah.com in your inbox. Sign up for our newsletters!
health (209 posts) Back to Life Lift Home
Photo: Thinkstock
Photo: Thinkstock
Like pretty much everyone else in America, I constantly find myself ignoring health advice I know to be sound. "Exercise is very important," I lecture my daughter, shooing her off to run at the playground while I stand stone-still, drinking my billionth coffee of the day, eating some simple carb, and pressing my cell phone to the side of my brain. So I'm relieved when I learn about some health-improving practice that I know I can actually maintain. Like being thankful.

Everyone has something to be thankful for, even on the most horrible, terrible, no-good, very-bad day. And remembering what we’re thankful for makes us feel a whole lot better.(That's why every week we make a list of things we're grateful for.) But it turns out it can also improve your health—Ocean Robbins’ comprehensive essay on the Huffington Post explores why.

According to Robbins, multiple studies have shown that when people keep gratitude journals—writing down one thing they are thankful for every day—they report more satisfaction with their lives, feel more optimism, feel more connected with others, and are kinder to the people around them. They even sleep better and feel more refreshed upon waking. One study even suggested that depressed people showed much lower levels of gratitude than non-depressed people. And you must read the whole essay for the fascinating formula that predicts whether marriages will fail or flourish.

All it takes is a moment to count your blessings, to tell friends and partners what you appreciate about them.  Try it. Look in the mirror and think about something you like about yourself, interrupting the mundane mantra of “Man, the mirror needs to be cleaned. Man, do my eyebrows need some attention...” After all, science has proven that this is good for you. And it’s easier than a sit-up, I’ll tell you that much.

More on gratitude:
Make November a month of Thanksgiving.
How to focus on what you have, not what you're going to get.

Topics: Happiness, Health
Photo: Thinkstock
Photo: Thinkstock
As if the scalp massage wasn't reason enough to go to the salon, researchers at Harvard's School of Public Health say that your hairstylist could potentially spot things other than split ends—like skin cancer. Since he/she gets a bird's eye view of your scalp, face, and neck (areas that are frequently exposed to UV rays and where more than 80 percent of the most common types of skin cancers occur, as reported by NPR.org) they could point out suspicious-looking moles or lesions that you may not even know are there or that your doctor might miss during a routine exam. Alan Geller, a senior lecturer at Harvard and co-author of the study, told NPR that most of the dermatologists he spoke with had melanoma cases referred to them by a hair professional and 37 percent of the 203 Houston-based hairdressers surveyed in the study checked their clients' scalps for anything abnormal without any formal training. Geller and his team are now educating Massachusetts-based stylists with the help of the Melanoma Foundation of New England on how to correctly identify the signs of skin cancer. And although I often prefer silence to salon small talk while I'm getting a trim, I hope that this becomes a nationwide initiative so that my hairdresser knows when it's imperative to speak up.

Do you think hairdressers should be trained on skin cancer as well as styling?

Read More
Health screenings: What to get from ages 19 to 91
The fake bake high

Topics: Beauty, Health
Photo: Dan Saelinger
Photo: Dan Saelinger
Last year, when Courtney Nichols launched SmartyPants vitamins—cherry- and citrus-flavored gumdrops—she was bombarded with e-mails from envious parents asking, "Can I take these, too?" So she and her cofounders created SmartyPants for grown-ups (with the same shape and taste, of course). Like the originals, Nichols says, they're the only all-in-one multivitamin gummies that contain 100 percent of the recommended amount of vitamin D as well as omega-3s (from eco-friendly, toxic-free fish oil). Plus, their candylike kick comes from organic sugarcane—not high-fructose corn syrup. But the best thing about them? For every bottle sold, the company donates a month's worth of vitamins to children in need.

($19 and free shipping with code OPRAH; smartypantsvitamins.com)

Keep Reading
Crunch time: 6 new healthy chips to try
Dynamic dietary duos
Bob Greene's better body boot camp
Topics: Health, Food
Photo: Thinkstock
Photo: Thinkstock

I’ve lost track of how many completely amazing and world-changing ideas for inventions I’ve had over the years. Probably because I’ve never actually made a single one. But isn’t there something appealing about having the cartoon, lightbulb-over-your-head idea, and then going ahead and actually making it happen? Sadly, due to my lack of engineering expertise, the world will probably never know my game-changing Umbrella Stroller That Doesn’t Tip Over design. And my so-ingenious-I-can’t-believe-I’m-revealing-it concept of Pneumatic Pet Tubes (you know, for when you only want to walk them one way and then send them home), still a pipe dream.

But shoes for the visually impaired? Good thing this wasn’t my idea, but that of Anirudh Sharma, an Information Technology Engineer from Rajasthan Technical University. According to this post on Pixelonomics, Sharma’s shoe system (called “Le Chal”) could replace the white cane and seeing-eye-dog as the best option for the visually impaired. Mild vibrations alert the walker when it’s time to turn and what direction; the vibrations grow stronger near the end of a journey. A built-in sensor lets the walker know of obstacles. Tests have gone well, and Sharma is planning to start producing and selling the shoes (for more updates, check out his fascinating blog). This design could no doubt change people’s lives--and it's almost as cool as a Pneumatic Pet Tube.

Read More:
The birth of an emoticon.
Unleash your own creativity.

Topics: Health, Tech
Photo: Thinkstock
Photo: Thinkstock
For most of us, sports drinks tend to be an acquired taste—one we only acquire after about an hour of hard, sweaty exercise. But new research shows that our refueling options now extend beyond artificial-tasting limeade, and include things many of us crave even when we're not finishing a a spinning class. Here are three delicious, non-traditional options that have proven health benefits:

Chocolate Milk
Low-fat chocolate milk (yes, the real deal -- we're not referring to fudge-flavored drinks) has been shown in studies involving cyclists, soccer players and runners to be just as effective as sports drinks in helping athletes recover. It provides fluids to help you rehydrate and carbohydrates to replace glycogen burned off during intense activity. This affordable treat also has protein that combines with the carbs to reduce muscle damage and hasten recovery, as well as an added bonus of calcium. 




Topics: Health
Photo: Thinkstock
Photo: Thinkstock
Anyone who's ever tried to lose weight is familiar with scale creep -- you know, the pounds that slowly accumulate once the diet officially ends, when it often seems as if it's even easier to gain weight than it was before.

This is due to many factors, most notably our tendency to fall back into some old habits like Belgian Waffle Sundays. But dieting, especially on-again-off-again, can have lingering effects on our appetites. We can vow that once we go off the diet, we'll only eat when we're hungry, and we'll stop as soon as we're full. But in a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, a group of Australian researchers measured the levels of hormones (including leptin and ghrelin) that are associated with hunger. They found that diet-induced weight loss not only altered hormone levels, but caused them to remain "perturbed" (i.e., at levels that made the subjects hungrier) for a full year. In other words, in the months after a diet, you can't trust yourself to know when you're hungry or full.

At first read, this makes weight loss seem like even more of a Sisyphean challenge. But it really just reinforces what we've heard a million times before: the only diet that works is one that we can sustain indefinitely. Viewed in that light, this new research can actually help us get smarter about how we try to get healthier.

Here are some long-term strategies for keeping the weight off:
Resisting donuts, fast food, and eating late at night
Becoming aware of mindless munching
How to stop binge eating
Topics: Health
Men! What are they thinking? We can't always answer that, but we'll be posting our favorite glimpses into their world in this space every Thursday.


* Movember is back! You don't have to be able to grow facial hair to support the charity event that raises awareness about men's health. (Movember)

* Brilliant people hanging out together: Johnny Cash and Shel Silverstein's duet. (Brainpickings)

* An Autistic teenager is manager of his high school's basketball team: Awesome. But it gets even better. (YouTube)

* "Sometimes I cried after the war, that she was not with me. Fate decided for us, but I would do the same again."—Jerzy Bielecki, who died last week, on the woman he fell in love with and helped to rescue while they were prisoners at Auschwitz. (NYTimes.com)
Photo: PATH.org
Photo: PATH.org
Every day for fourteen years, I took a birth control pill. This wasn't a hassle; I can count the number of times I missed one on one hand. The fatal flaw in this mostly-satisfying relationship appeared in my mid-twenties, when the estrogen in the pills triggered a skin condition called melasma and caused large brown spots to blossom on my forehead, cheeks and upper lip. I tolerated my smudgy-looking skin for a few more years, until my sister got engaged. When I thought about her wedding, I decided I didn't want my happy, excited face to be shadowed by brown spots, so I made an appointment with my dermatologist to discuss brightening treatments, and another with my gynecologist to talk about contraceptive alternatives.

Since breaking up with the pill, I've made do with the NuvaRing and then condoms, but I've been keeping my eyes open for a better long-term plan. That's one of the reasons I was inspired to weigh the pros and cons of the most popular birth control in the US for this slideshow. There are a few new contraceptive developments that piqued my interest. Any Seinfeld fan who's never really understood Elaine's passion for the Today sponge can now find out what all the hoopla was about, as the sponge is back and available at retailers like Walgreens, CVS and Target. For those looking for something more effective and longer-lasting, IUDs like ParaGard and Mirena have been redesigned, and among health researchers and gynecologists, they're the new "it" contraceptive. However, the device that has me the most excited is a different birth control blast-from-the-past.


Topics: Health
Photo: Jeff J Mitchell, Getty Images News
Photo: Jeff J Mitchell, Getty Images News
I once had a conversation with a man who, in addition to having an extremely demanding publishing industry job, had the strange habit of participating in triathalons. "I'd love to do something like that," I enthused, "but my knees kind of pop." He generously responded that this was okay because I'm a writer. I think he may have been implying that as writers we are allowed to be kind of slovenly and inactive. I've clung to these two great excuses for years. My knees pop. I'm a thinky person, not an exercisey person. Did I mention my knees pop?

But lately the unlikeliest people keep going and achieving athletic highs, I'm pretty sure with the intent of making me feel like a lazy bum. First there was the pregnant woman who gave birth hours after running the Chicago marathon. Then there was the blind kid who pitched a no-hitter, and the deaf motocross champion. But! People! My knees!

Now there's this: the 100-year-old-man who ran the Toronto Marathon. Are you kidding me? Finishing at 8 hours, 11 minutes, he wasn't even the last to finish. According to NPR, the Indian-born British citizen Fauja Singh took up running at age 80 and trains by running about 10 miles a day. The Guinness World Record holder runs to raise money for local charities, including one benefiting poor children. According to his trainer, his secret is a diet that consists mostly of tea, toast, and curry. Um, what's in the tea?

NPR has more, including a smile-inducing video of Singh crossing the finish line. GO FAUJA!!

Get moving:
Decode your exercise excuses
The excuse-busting workout plan



Photo: Thinkstock
Photo: Thinkstock

Seriously, grab a hanky. Here is the story of a woman who sacrificed herself so that her child could live. Stacie Crimm, of Ryan, Oklahoma, reportedly " laughed and cried all at once" when she discovered she was going to have a baby at age 41—she'd been told she couldn't become pregnant. A few months later Crimm started complaining to her brother of strange aches and pains.  Scans revealed that she had neck and head cancer, but she worried that chemotherapy would damage her unborn child and refused treatment. Soon the tumor reached her brain; Crimm collapsed and was rushed to the hospital, where they delivered her tiny, 2-pound, 1-oz baby girl. Although Crimm was in and out of consciousness, and little Dottie May needed intensive care, a sympathetic nurse at the hospital worked to get the baby to her mother, moving her in a capsule-like ICU, so that Crimm could hold her baby in her arms. She did, just that once. A few days later she died.

In accordance to her mother's wishes, the baby is being raised by Crimm's brother and his wife, who were able to take her home last week. NewsOK has the whole story, including photos of the irresistable Dottie May.

How about that nurse, right?
Agi Beo, for making a mother's dying wish come true, here's to you. The word "heroine" doesn't even begin to cut it.

More stories of everyday heros:
The untold story of the 9/11 boatlifts
Small acts of kindness to try today
People who make a difference



Topics: Parenting, Health
...
13
...
Advertisement
about   Life Lift
The Oprah blog is a place where you can find engaging news coverage, fresh inspiration, and the straight talk you've come to count on. A place that provides the tools you need to make a change—if not in the world—then at least in your little corner of it. It's a place that will raise your energy, lower your blood pressure and occasionally make you laugh—in short, a place of possibility.
Advertisement
Advertisement