ScienceDaily: Living Well News |
- Eating eggs is not linked to high cholesterol in adolescents, study suggests
- Joint custody? Overnights away from home affect children's attachments
- Moving more may lower stroke risk
- Recommended calorie information on menus does not improve consumer choices
Eating eggs is not linked to high cholesterol in adolescents, study suggests Posted: 19 Jul 2013 05:39 AM PDT Although in the late 20th century it was maintained that eating more than two eggs a week could increase cholesterol, in recent years experts have begun to refute this myth. Now, a new study has found that eating more eggs is not associated with higher serum cholesterol in adolescents, regardless of how much physical activity they do. |
Joint custody? Overnights away from home affect children's attachments Posted: 19 Jul 2013 05:36 AM PDT In joint custody arrangements, infants who spent overnights away from their mothers had less attachment to their mothers, a new study shows. |
Moving more may lower stroke risk Posted: 18 Jul 2013 01:15 PM PDT Here's yet another reason to get off the couch: new research findings suggest that regularly breaking a sweat may lower the risk of having a stroke. |
Recommended calorie information on menus does not improve consumer choices Posted: 18 Jul 2013 01:15 PM PDT Researchers recently put menu labels to the test by investigating whether providing diners with recommended calorie intake information along with the menu items caloric content would improve their food choices. The study showed that recommended calorie intake information did not help consumers use menu labeling more effectively. |
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