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Page 5 - ஏரி பிராந்திய ஆரோக்கியம் அமைப்பு News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Dealing With A Different Beast : Why Delta Has Doctors Worried

Dealing With A Different Beast : Why Delta Has Doctors Worried
medscape.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from medscape.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Intuitive eating: The non-diet diet

Intuitive eating: The non-diet diet Anita Marlay Special to the Lake Sun, USA TODAY NETWORK We are born to be intuitive eaters. Babies cry when they are hungry and stop eating when they are full. As frustrating as it is for parents at times, kids will eat or not eat depending on whether they are hungry, regardless if it’s mealtime. However, as we grow up, we listen less to our bodies and more to outside influences about food. We eat because the clock tells us it’s time. We believe we must clean our plates even if we are full or that dessert is a reward. We’re told that certain foods are good and others are bad. We go on crazy diets that force us to limit our food intake even though we may still be hungry. Intuitive eating can teach you how to get back to eating naturally.

Lake-area named COVID hotspot, tourism continues

LAKE OF THE OZARKS-  The Missouri Department of Health and Human Services declared Camden, Miller and Morgan counties; the three counties surrounding the lake. Despite this, the lake was still busy on Saturday. Lake Regional Health System sent a letter to the community and said things are bad followed with they are about to get much worse. Cara Harris, a visitor from Montana said she did not see any COVID-19 restrictions while on her trip and she was thrilled. I don t see any sign of anything and I love it. She hopes more people will come and enjoy the Lake as well.

COVID surging in Missouri as delta variant overwhelms hospitals

News Break Posted by   2 hours ago The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention assigned two federal surge team members to Missouri this week to help fight the state s COVID-19 surge. Missouri is among a growing list of states that have seen rising infections, with new cases increasing 46% over the last two weeks, from June 23 to July 7, with an average of 1,111 per week, up from 759 two weeks prior, according data from the Department of Health and Human Services. Over the past five weeks, infections have risen 180%. Missouri and neighboring Arkansas now lead the nation with the highest weekly case rates per capita, which translates into more than 100 per 100,000 residents. New COVID-19 hospital admissions also rose 30% over the same two-week span, and front-line workers say patients are becoming sicker more quickly.

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