Being a snorer and being overweight are interchangeably linked. In other words, obesity can cause snoring and snoring can cause obesity. Health experts say that 99 among the 100 snorers are obese. They recommend adopting an appropriate lifestyle
If you have been thinking that snoring is a sign of deep sleep, you are mistaken. It is a sign of poor and disturbed sleep. We have a health expert share with us some helpful tips to combat snoring
million people already internally displaced within this country. ellison barber, thank you. health officials are warning about a so-called tripledemic as millions of families get together for the holholidays. covid, the flu, and rsv are pushing hospitals to the brink. across the country, more than three-quarters of hospital beds are full. joining us is nbc news medical analyst dr. vin gupta. doctor, i know you re in regular practice. you probably are answering these questions for your patients every day. how can americans tell the difference between covid, the flu, and rsv? well, lindsey, good morning. happy thanksgiving. for those wondering how to tell the difference, because we don t have any at-home test that can test for all three at the same time, hopefully that comes down the pike soon, rsv, especially in young kids less than 2, can caused high-pitched wheezing, noisy breathing, nostrils can
just respiratory symptoms, but extra respiratory symptoms like gi issues. even brain fog, characteristic of long covid. so covid can it can impact any organ in the body. flu, high fevers, rsv, noisy breathing, especially in babies. so rsv and flu complicating matters. we have been hearing for a while now, we have talked about it a number of times on the show, the belief that the nation is primed, sadly, for a real winter covid surge. have we started seeing that yet or do we think that s a little deeper into the cold weather? jonathan, we re expecting that mid-january, actually. so right now the level of immunity we have seen from infection, plus all the vaccines, that s delaying what we expect to be maybe a modest winter surge into the middle of january. so we still have a few months yet. we re not seeing a lot of covid related hospitalizations among