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Environmental News Network

WEBCardio-Fitness Cuts Death and Disease by Nearly 20%. Running, cycling, or swimming – if you regularly exercise, you’re well on track for a long and healthy life, as groundbreaking …

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Billions of People Still Breathe Unhealthy Air: New WHO Data

WEBAlmost the entire global population (99%) breathes air that exceeds WHO air quality limits, and threatens their health. A record number of over 6000 cities in 117 …

Category:  Health Go Health

Chronic Exposure to Air Pollution May Increase Risk of …

WEBChronic exposure to fine particulate air pollutants (PM2.5) may increase seniors’ risk of hospitalization for a variety of cardiovascular conditions, according to a new study led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

Category:  Health Go Health

Environmental News Network

WEBPrevious Article Declines in Shellfish Species on Rocky Seashores Match Climate-Driven Changes; Next Article Open Sesame! Researchers Discovered the …

Category:  Health Go Health

Study Shows a Healthy Diet is Linked with a Slower Pace of Aging

WEBA healthier diet is associated with a reduced dementia risk and slower pace of aging, according to a new study at Columbia University Mailman School of Public …

Category:  Health Go Health

Are Healthy Foods Automatically Sustainable, Too

WEBPerceptions about sustainability and healthy food choices are closely linked, as a study at the University of Konstanz shows. Perceptions about sustainability and …

Category:  Food Go Health

How Dust Affects the World’s Health

WEBDoctors and public health experts agree that breathing fine particulate matter (PM2.5) can be harmful to human health. The airborne particles—thirty times smaller than the width of human hair—can pass easily into the lungs and bloodstream, where they can increase a person’s risk of dying from heart disease, stroke, lung cancer, …

Category:  Cancer Go Health

More Green Spaces can Help Boost Air Quality, Reduce Heart …

WEBGreen spaces – trees, shrubs and grasses – can improve air quality and may lower heart disease deaths, according to preliminary research to be presented at the …

Category:  Health Go Health

Breathing Highway Air Increases Blood Pressure, UW Research Finds

WEBA global perspective on environmental issues. Our mission is to inform, educate, enable and create a platform for global environmental action.

Category:  Health Go Health

Walking More Than Five Flights of Stairs a Day Can Cut Risk of …

WEBForget walking 10,000 steps a day. Taking at least 50 steps up the stairs each day could significantly slash your risk of heart disease, according to a new study from Tulane University.

Category:  Health Go Health

Environmental News Network

WEBHealth benefits of using wind energy instead of fossil fuels could quadruple if the most polluting power plants are selected for dialing down, new study finds.

Category:  Health Go Health

Air Pollution-Related Hospitalization for Chest Pain, Heart Attack

WEBShort-term increases in fine particulate air pollution (PM2.5) during the summer and winter months in a mountain valley region of Utah were associated with increased health care visits for heart attack and unstable chest pain; however, the risk for each cardiac event differed by season, according to a preliminary study to be presented …

Category:  Health Go Health

Environmental News Network

WEBTo address plastics and other problems that could affect human health, NIH and the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) are jointly funding four new Centers for Oceans and Human Health and renewing two centers as part of a marine-related health research program.

Category:  Health Go Health

Environmental Natural Substances that Cause Illness

WEBWhen we think of pollutants, we tend to think of chemicals with long and sometimes unpronounceable names: hexavalent chromium, polybrominated diphenyl …

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8-Hour Time-Restricted Eating Linked to a 91% Higher Risk of

WEBAn analysis of over 20,000 U.S. adults found that people who limited their eating across less than 8 hours per day, a time-restricted eating plan, were more likely …

Category:  Health Go Health

How vulnerable to flooding is New York City

WEBA report just released in the most recent issue of the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society offers hope that a new high-resolution storm surge modeling …

Category:  Health Go Health

Environmental News Network

WEBClimate Change Could Become the Main Driver of Biodiversity Decline by Mid-Century. Global biodiversity has declined between 2% and 11% during the 20th century due to …

Category:  Health Go Health

Planning at Multiple Scales for Healthy Corals and Communities

WEBGovernments in the Mesoamerican Reef region are exploring the use of nature-based solutions to strengthen coral health and societal benefits for coastal …

Category:  Health Go Health

Forecasting Microbiomes for Sustainability and Health

WEBMicrobial communities, or microbiomes, are essential for safeguarding human and environmental health through the most widely used biotechnological …

Category:  Health Go Health

Study Suggests People In Urban Areas With More Green Space …

WEBA new study from the Texas A&M University School of Public Health suggests that city dwellers who have more exposure to urban green spaces require …

Category:  Health Go Health

New Research Suggests Conservation Biologists are Setting …

WEBA new study by University of Adelaide and Macquarie University (Australia) scientists has shown that populations of endangered species are unlikely to persist in …

Category:  Health Go Health

Experts Warn Climate Change Will Fuel Spread of Infectious Diseases

WEBA team of infectious diseases experts is calling for more awareness and preparedness in the medical field to deal with the impact of climate change on the …

Category:  Medical Go Health