Coffee May Cut Risk of Depression in Women
Drinking coffee may lower women’s risk of depression, a new study says…….click here to continue reading
Drinking coffee may lower women’s risk of depression, a new study says…….click here to continue reading
MONDAY, Sept. 26 (HealthDay News) — Coffee lovers, take heart: Women who drink four or more cups of caffeinated coffee daily seem to have a lower risk of depression than those who don’t drink java or stop at one cup a day, a new study suggests…….click here to continue reading
Depression may go hand in hand with a number of other physical health problems, including heart disease, cancer and diabetes. Now the latest evidence suggests that depression may also increase the risk of stroke. Reporting in the Journal of the … Continue reading ?……click here to continue reading
Many people may become depressed after they experience a stroke, but new research shows that depression may actually increase risk of stroke and of dying from that stroke…….click here to continue reading
Moving Beyond Depression: A Whole Person Approach to Healing is a thorough, comprehensive book dedicated to helping the individual. This is not a cookie-cutter, classifying approach; Jantz believes that depression is individually experienced and must be treated as such…….click here to continue reading
More than a third of blind and visually-impaired people could also be suffering from depression, it is claimed…….click here to continue reading
 Researchers have compiled data from multiple studies and found that people with depression are more likely to have a stroke than those who are mentally healthy, and their strokes are also more likely to be fatal. The research, published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), analyzed data consisting of 28 studies and including more than 315,000 patients. The ………click here to continue reading
People suffering from depression are slightly at a greater risk of stroke or death due to the condition, a new study says…….click here to continue reading
FRIDAY, Sept. 23 (HealthDay News) — New research suggests that depression and other factors may keep Hispanic women who have survived breast cancer from getting screenings that could pick up signs of colorectal or ovarian cancer…….click here to continue reading
People with depression are more likely to have a stroke than their mentally healthy peers, and their strokes are more likely to be fatal, according to a new analysis published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association…….click here to continue reading