Health News

Features

  • Davenport teacher named NFL Play 60 champion

    Davenport teacher named NFL Play 60 champion

    Changing the way kids think about physical education and their health Susan Searls, a physical education teacher at Davenport School of the Arts (DSA), was recently named an NFL PLAY 60 FITNESSGRAM project champion along with 24 other teachers and faculty members from schools around the United States.

  • Pop Quiz: Are you a ‘good’ patient?

    Pop Quiz: Are you a ‘good’ patient?

    Find Out if You Make the Grade, and Learn Some Tips along the Way It’s not easy being hurt, sick or suffering from a long-term disease or condition, but achieving optimal health can be even more elusive if you believe in the erroneous Good Patient Syndrome.  With this syndrome, you may think it’s bad manners…

  • Q & A: What it takes to work on the front lines of patient care

    Q & A: What it takes to work on the front lines of patient care

    Paula Miller talks about the challenges and rewards of being a nurse There to get you settled when you arrive, and there to discharge you when you leave, nurses are an integral part of quality care in the field of medicine. We interviewed Paula Miller, director of quality at Bartow Regional Medical Center, about what it…

Columns

  • Senior Care: Oral hygiene and its importance for your senior loved one

    Senior Care: Oral hygiene and its importance for your senior loved one

    DENTAL HEALTH is important at any age, but it’s especially true for our senior populations. Today’s seniors likely didn’t have the benefit of fluoridated water and other products as children, and there are few healthcare programs that offer comprehensive dental care; both Medicaid and Medicare only offer scant coverage at best. The issue is so…

  • Editor’s Dose: Daily steps toward a healthier heart — so you don’t skip a beat

    Editor’s Dose: Daily steps toward a healthier heart — so you don’t skip a beat

    IN MY FAMILY, there is a history of a blood disease, which causes the person to produce too many red blood cells. This, in turn, causes the blood to be too thick, which puts the person at increased risk for heart attack or stroke. Although this rare condition is not linked to heart disease, it…

  • Senior Care: Talking to your loved one about senior driving safety

    Senior Care: Talking to your loved one about senior driving safety

    DRIVING OFFERS freedom and self-sufficiency to us all, but there could come a time when your senior loved one should give up driving for good. Unfortunately, not every elderly driver is able to admit that he or she should hang up the car keys. It may be up to you to talk to your loved…

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