News & Articles
Color’s December Health Notes – Color
Linda Jiang
Color’s monthly Health Notes help you stay up to date on living a healthy life with the latest in health & wellness, genetics, and cancer. If you found this information interesting, sign up for our monthly Health Notes here.
Health & Wellness
13 Habits To Adopt In The New Year For A Long, Happy, Healthy Life
Self, by Zahra Barnes
New Year’s Resolutions. Those things you embark upon with such gusto on January 1, determined that this. Will. Be. The. Year. And then…life gets in the way. Late nights at work laugh in the face of decision to clock a 10K each A.M. …
How a great marathoner — Joan Benoit Samuelson — keeps going at age 60
Washington Post, by Marlene Cimons
In the summer of 1984, American Joan Benoit Samuelson, at age 27, won a gold medal in the inaugural women’s Olympic marathon, running a time of 2 hours 24 minutes 52 seconds. A year earlier, in 1983, she ran a women’s world record in the Boston Marathon ..
Carbs During Workouts May Fend Off Colds
New York Times, by Gretchen Reynolds
Until recently, many scientists believed that exercise reduces the body’s ability to fight off infections. Past studies had found, for example, that after workouts, especially strenuous ones, people had fewer infection-fighting white blood cells …
Genetics
How Doctors Could One Day Use Your DNA to Cure You
Wired, by Sarah Zhang
“I don’t mean to be morbid,” Eric Dishman told a friend as he was winding down his job at Intel. “But this may be the last time you see me.” Dishman, a longtime leader of the company’s health research division, was preparing to die …
One Weight-Loss Approach Fits All? No, Not Even Close
New York Times, by Gina Kolata
Dr. Frank Sacks, a professor of nutrition at Harvard, likes to challenge his audience when he gives lectures on obesity. “If you want to make a great discovery,” he tells them, figure out this: Why do some people lose 50 pounds on a diet while others on the same diet gain a few pounds? …
Aging Is Reversible — at Least in Human Cells and Live Mice
Scientific American, by Karen Weintraub
New research suggests it is possible to slow or even reverse aging, at least in mice, by undoing changes in gene activity — the same kinds of changes that are caused by decades of life in humans …
Cancer
Chicago Mag, by Bill Zehme
My first reaction to the diagnosis was not utter panic. What popped into my head was literally this: Well, at least it’s fashionable; all the best people get cancer. Mine was colorectal — stage 4 because of a couple of spots spread onto the liver …
42% Fewer U.S. Women Are Dying of Breast Cancer
Time, by Alice Park
Breast cancer deaths are down in many countries worldwide — but some still have major work to do. In the latest analysis of worldwide data from the World Health Organization, researchers led by Cecile Pizot from the International Research institute in Lyon, France, found that …
How much a decade of obesity raises your cancer risk
CNN, by Jacqueline Howard
The longer a woman is overweight or obese, the more her risk of cancer may increase along with the time. A new longitudinal study on postmenopausal women, published in the journal PLOS Medicine on Tuesday, reveals that …