coffee drinkers, “they do not indicate that anyone should change their coffee drinking preferences,” said the lead author, Erikka Loftfield, a graduate student at the Yale School of Public Health. “The most important thing a person can do to reduce risk is to reduce sun and ultraviolet light exposure.”The study, in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, controlled for age, sex, education, smoking, physical activity, alcohol consumption and other health, behavioral and genetic factors, but
Coffee May Cut Melanoma Risk - NYTimes.com
9 years
inThe New York TimesInternational New York TimesSearchGoShareTweetMoreSubscribeSubscribeMy accountLog inBlogsWELLCoffee May Cut Melanoma RiskShareBy NICHOLAS BAKALARJanuary 22, 2015Drinking coffee is associated with a slightly reduced risk for skin cancer, a new study has found.Researchers used health and dietary data on 447,357 non-Hispanic whites ages 50 to 71 who were cancer free at the start of the study and followed them for an average of 10 years. Over the course of
Coffee May Cut Melanoma Risk - NYTimes.com
9 years
greatest burrito they ever had, winning a local art competition, traveling abroad for the year, attending their favorite artist’s concert, scuba diving for their first time, losing a loved one.. And once you finally meet them in the future, you’ll be able to hear those stories that in fact happened at this very moment. I thought that was kinda cool to think about.
The person you’re going to spend the rest of your life with is out there creating memories that you'll hear about when you eventually meet them. : Showerthoughts
9 years
Did you know that The New York Times drug-tests its employees? Or The Washington Post? Or—as one former employee recently told us—The New York Daily News? We were surprised as well! So we began asking around, using the testimony of spokespeople (if they talked to us) and current or former employees (if they didn’t) to assemble the list below.
8 Big Media Companies That Still Drug-Test Their Employees
9 years
What exactly is so bad about worrying alone? Can you explain a few reasons why it's so detrimental?Worrying alone does not have to be toxic, but it tends to become toxic because in isolation we lose perspective. We tend to globalize, catastrophize, when no one is there to act as a reality check. Our imaginations run wild. Indeed, Samuel Johnson, a prodigious worrier himself, called worry a "disease of the
Why You Should Never Worry Alone -- Science of Us
9 years
Did you know that a teaspoon of honey (raw is best) and a 1/4 teaspoon of cinnamon will usually knock out a cold within a day or two?Take twice a day for 3 days for best results. My small grandson, age 3 loves this combo (I mix it in a small bowl and then feed it to him on a spoon, having a glass of water for him to drink down
Honey and Cinnamon~ A Simple Cold Home Remedy that Kids Love! | Health, Home, & Happiness (tm)
9 years
Marriott International is testing out new in-room entertainment in eight hotels across its chain (which is, admittedly, a relatively small test considering the chain operates more than 4,000 properties in over eighty countries) that includes the ability to watch Netflix, Hulu, or listen to Pandora from the high-def television in the room.
Marriott Considers Offering Netflix, Hulu And Pandora In Hotel Rooms | TechCrunch
9 years
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