How an active social life could lower diabetes risk
New European research has found that a good social life could lower the risk of developing type 2 diabetes and pre-diabetes.
New European research has found that a good social life could lower the risk of developing type 2 diabetes and pre-diabetes.
The study also points to the negative effect of social networks and screen time, especially among children and young people.
Lately there’s been a lot of loss happening in my social network. Since I’m no stranger to death, it still strikes a deep, sad chord in me whenever I hear of young people dying, or of friends losing parents, all the more when they are still young, and the death is unexpected. Having lost my father, in the prime of his life at age 49, and my son, at the tender age of 4, I know from experience that death and its resulting healing journey is not easy, but navigable.
The teen years can sometimes be such an angst-ridden time. To begin with, there is a myriad of physical changes, which can, in turn, cause some pretty strong emotions.
d out as an expansive social network and quickly became a favorite among Philippine users for its ease of use in uploading content and its effective privacy controls. In those early days, Multiply quickly rapped subscribers who tried to use the network to sell stuff.
Facebook’s big stock offering on Wall Street must be followed by an intensive debate on Main Street about social media’s powerful impact on children, an expert on the topic says.
BACK when Facebook was a mere seed in the mind of Mark Zuckerberg—or the Winklevoss twins, depending on whose side you are on—Friendster was all the rage. To the younger
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