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Grapefruit Benefits

Eating Curry Every Week 'could Prevent Dementia'
Eating a curry once or twice a week could help prevent the onset of Alzheimer"s disease and dementia. The magic ingredient in curry is curcumin, a component of the spice, turmeric.
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Prereg Tutor Training Day And Prereg Trainee Pharmacist Programme 2009/10 - Booking Now
Registration forms for the prereg trainee pharmacist programme 2009/10 are now available to download on the NPA members" website. The NPA is also providing training on 26 June 2009 for prereg tutors that have enrolled their prereg on to the NPA"s programme.
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The Evolution Of Migraine From Episodic Headache To Chronic Disorder
Patients living with migraine have strong reason for new optimism concerning a positive future. Two review articles and an accompanying editorial, "The Future of Migraine: Beyond Just Another Pill," in the current issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings, are the basis for an ironic premise.
Mental Health

University Of Hawaii At Manoa Professor Co-Authors Article About Weight And Relationships

Dr. Janet D. Latner, an Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of Hawai"i at Manoa, has co-authored an article in the July 2009 edition of the Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy on "Weight Stigma in Existing Relationships." The research - conducted jointly by Professor Latner and New Zealand clinical psychologist Dr. Alice D. Boyes - addresses body image, weight, romantic relationships, and differences between men and women. Associations between body mass index (BMI) and relationship quality and other partner/relationship perceptions were investigated in 57 couples in New Zealand. Heavier women had lower quality relationships, which they predicted were more likely to end. They partnered with less desirable men and thought their partners would rate them as less warm/trustworthy. The male partners of heavier women judged the women"s bodies less positively and men rated heavier women as poorer matches to their ideal partners for attractiveness/vitality. In contrast, men"s BMIs were generally not associated with relationship functioning. These findings point to the potential mechanisms that may contribute to heavier women"s relationship difficulties. "Prejudice and discrimination are commonly directed at overweight individuals. However, few previous studies have examined whether weight stigma occurs within established romantic relationships. Our results suggest it does," said Dr. Latner. Janet D. Latner University of Hawaii at Manoa


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