Topic: Harvard School Of Public Health
A US-based study on Monday linked eating white rice to higher risk of developing type 2 diabetes, and backed long-held claims that brown rice is healthier than the white variety.People who ate at least five servings of white rice per week had ...
The leading cause of death for women in the U.S. is not breast, colon, or lung cancer, but heart disease. The good news is that myself and many experts, like Walter Willett M.D., Dr.P.H, a nutrition expert and professor at the Harvard ...
Eating two or more servings of fish a week may increase diabetes risk, according to a new study from the Harvard School of Public Health.. The study, published in American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, examined the link between fish and omega-3 fatty ...
Fat loss, particularly fat around the waistline, helps prevent cancer, diabetes, heart attack, stroke, kidney failure, depression, and other devastating kinds of chronic disease including Parkinson's, MS, and Lou Gehrig's disease (ALS). "The best way to maximize the probability of healthy survival ...
What you eat (and don't) may play a major role in your risk of developing type 2 diabetes, according to a new study from researchers at Tulane University and Harvard School of Public Health who tracked the eating habits of more than ...
9/19/2008 Print E-mail Scientists believe they have discovered a new class of hormones in mice, one of which may help stop or reverse obesity-related conditions such as insulin resistance and fatty liver, a new study says. The Harvard School of Public Health ...