Tuesday, 30 September 2014

Good, Eliminate High Tax Rates by Helping The Carter Center

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Good, did you know your IRA could be taxed as much as 75 percent upon your death?

By leaving all or a portion of your IRA to The Carter Center, you’ll eliminate high tax rates while providing hope to future generations. You’ll also join a special group of supporters known as the Carter Center Legacy Circle. Making this change is easy. Please call us today!
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The Dangers of Do-It-Yourself Wills
DIY estate planning seems like a great way to save time and money. But is it really?
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Chief Development Officer, Estate & Gift Planning
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Thursday, 25 September 2014

RSVP Now for "China Town Hall: Local Connections, National Reflections"

Good, please join us for this upcoming Conversations at The Carter Center event.

 
China Town Hall: Local Connections, National Reflections
Date: Thursday, Oct. 16, 2014, 7-8 p.m. EDT
Location: Cecil B. Day Chapel, The Carter Center
453 Freedom Parkway, Atlanta, GA 30307
Reservations are free and required.

Reserve Your Seats Now »

Presented in partnership with the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations, this discussion will feature a keynote address by President Carter, followed by a Q&A moderated by Steve Orlins, committee president.

If you cannot attend in person, the event will be webcast live at www.cartercenter.org.
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Tuesday, 23 September 2014

Carter Center News: September 2014

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Good, thank you for advancing the mission of The Carter Center with your support!

 

 
Raising Mental Health Awareness

Univision Atlanta’s Amanda Ramirez took advantage of the resources and experts available through the Rosalynn Carter Fellowships for Mental Health Journalism to produce an in-depth and well received television news series exploring mental health in the Latino community.

Watch the video »

 
     
 

Living with Lymphatic Filariasis

About 120 million people worldwide are infected with this neglected tropical disease which causes enormous swellings of the limbs and genitals and dangerous secondary infections.

Watch the video »

 
     
 

Cultivating Connections with China

Connected by economic, political, financial, and environmental interests, the United States and China maintain a delicate bilateral relationship, one critical to global peace and prosperity.

Watch the video »

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

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Sunday, 21 September 2014

Why is stretching so important? The benefits will surprise you

Learn how stretching and flexibility can help you improve your balance and prevent falls!

Learn how stretching and flexibility can help you improve your balance and prevent falls!

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September 21, 2014

Special Announcement Harvard Medical School
 

Discover simple stretches that improve balance, increase flexibility, and ease pain!

Stretching
35 stretches to ease pain and improve flexibility
Over 100 tips and techniques
Special Bonus Section: Warming Up for Sports
And more!
Read More

Plus you’ll get FREE online access to additional stretching exercises with master trainer Josie Gardiner. Watch Now.

Pretzel Stretch

Dear Reader,

Does it hurt to turn your head to see cars in the lane behind you? Do your knees and back feel stiff and achy? Is it difficult to reach the cereal on the top shelf or bend down to pick up something off the floor?

Would you like to find an easy way to become more flexible, ease pain, improve your balance and prevent falls that can threaten your independence?

Then take a look at this new edition from Harvard Medical School — Stretching: 35 stretches to improve flexibility and reduce pain.

In this Special Health Report, you’ll discover:

How a tight ankle or calf muscle can make you more likely to fall.
The secret to making arthritic joints more flexible.
4 ways to make stretching easier!
The trick to being flexible enough to touch your toes! Check out page 5.
The best stretches to do to increase your range of motion.
2 muscles that can give you a pain in the back. (And how you can get relief.)
And so much more!

You’ll learn how stretching and flexibility can help you improve your balance and prevent falls. Plus, you’ll get photos of master trainer Josie Gardiner performing 35 different stretches, as well as her tips for how to customize them to your ability. You’ll find moves to boost overall flexibility and loosen up tight muscles, plus specific stretches to ease back pain, sore knees, and the neck and shoulder pain that comes from spending too much time sitting at a desk staring at a computer!

To see how effective stretching can be — watch the video at right now.

Plus, you’ll get a special section on the stretches that warm you up before your workout, and charts that detail which stretches are best for a variety of sports, like golf, tennis, cycling, walking, swimming, and more.

Don’t miss this amazing report! Click here and you’ll SAVE 30% today. There’s no risk.

Sincerely,

Anthony Komaroff, M.D.
Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Senior Physician, Brigham and Women's Hospital
Editor in Chief, Harvard Health Publications

P.S. Click here now to see the move that can ease low back pain and even sciatica.

Harvard Medical School offers special reports on over 50 health topics.
Visit our website at http://www.health.harvard.edu to find reports of interest to you and your family.

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Saturday, 20 September 2014

5 of the best exercises you can ever do

Some of the best physical activities for your body don���t require the gym. The following ���workouts��� can do wonders for your health.
HEALTHbeat
September 20, 2014
Harvard Medical School

5 of the best exercises you can ever do

If you’re not an athlete or serious exerciser — and want to work out for your health or to fit in your clothes better — the gym scene can be intimidating. Just having to walk by treadmills, stationary bikes, and weight machines can be enough to make you head straight back home to the couch.

Yet some of the best physical activities for your body don’t require the gym or require you to get fit enough to run a marathon. These “workouts” can do wonders for your health. They’ll help keep your weight under control, improve your balance and range of motion, strengthen your bones, protect your joints, prevent bladder control problems, and even ward off memory loss. 



Product Page - Exercise
What can improve your mood, boost your ability to fend off infection, and lower your risk for heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, and colon cancer? The answer is regular exercise. It may seem too good to be true, but it's not. Hundreds of studies demonstrate that exercise helps you feel better and live longer. This report answers many important questions about physical activity. It will also help guide you through starting and maintaining an exercise program that suits your abilities and lifestyle.

Read More

No matter your age or fitness level, these activities can help you get in shape and lower your risk for disease:

  1. Swimming. You might call swimming the perfect workout. The buoyancy of the water supports your body and takes the strain off painful joints so you can move them more fluidly. “Swimming is good for individuals with arthritis because it’s less weight-bearing,” explains Dr. I-Min Lee, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. 
    Research finds that swimming can improve your mental state and put you in a better mood. Water aerobics is another option. These classes help you burn calories and tone up.

  2. Tai chi. Tai chi — a Chinese martial art that incorporates movement and relaxation — is good for both body and mind. In fact, it’s been called “meditation in motion.” Tai chi is made up of a series of graceful movements, one transitioning smoothly into the next. Because the classes are offered at various levels, tai chi is accessible, and valuable, for people of all ages and fitness levels. “It’s particularly good for older people because balance is an important component of fitness, and balance is something we lose as we get older,” Dr. Lee says.

    Take a class to help you get started and learn the proper form. You can find tai chi programs at your local YMCA, health club, community center, or senior center.

  3. Strength training. If you believe that strength training is a macho, brawny activity, think again. Lifting light weights won’t bulk up your muscles, but it will keep them strong. “If you don’t use muscles, they will lose their strength over time,” Dr. Lee says.

    Muscle also helps burn calories. “The more muscle you have, the more calories you burn, so it’s easier to maintain your weight,” says Dr. Lee. Strength training might also help preserve your ability to remember.

    Before starting a weight training program, be sure to learn the proper form. Start light with just one or two pounds. You should be able to lift the weights 10 times with ease. After a couple of weeks, increase that by a pound or two. If you can easily lift the weights through the entire range of motion more than 12 times, move up to slightly heavier weight.

  4. Walking. Walking is simple yet powerful. It can help you stay trim, improve cholesterol levels, strengthen bones, keep blood pressure in check, lift your mood, and lower your risk for a number of diseases (diabetes and heart disease, for example). A number of studies have shown that walking and other physical activities can improve memory and resist age-related memory loss.

    All you need is a well-fitting and supportive pair of shoes. Start with walking for about 10-15 minutes at a time. Over time, you can start to walk farther and faster until you’re walking for 30 to 60 minutes on most days of the week.

  5. Kegel exercises. These exercises won’t help you look better, but they do something just as important — strengthen the pelvic floor muscles that support the bladder. Strong pelvic floor muscles can go a long way toward preventing incontinence. While many women are familiar with Kegels, these exercises can benefit men too.

    To do a Kegel exercise correctly, squeeze and release the muscles you would use to stop urination or prevent you from passing gas. Alternate quick squeezes and releases with longer contractions that you hold for 10 seconds, and then release for 10 seconds. Work up to three sets of 10-15 Kegel exercises each day.

Many of the things we do for fun (and work) count as exercise. Raking the yard counts as physical activity. So do ballroom dancing and playing with your kids or grandkids. As long as you’re doing some form of aerobic exercise for at least 30 minutes a day, and you include two days of strength training a week, you can consider yourself an “active” person.

For additional information on this and other questions about getting started on a healthy exercise program, buy the Special Health Report Exercise: A program you can live with from Harvard Medical School.

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Featured in this issue

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Exercise

Featured content:


The inside scoop: Exercise and your body
What can exercise do for you?
The fundamentals: What you need to know to get started
Creating a personal exercise plan
SPECIAL BONUS SECTION: Getting in gear
•  ... and more!

Click here to read more »
Harvard Medical School offers special reports on over 50 health topics.
Visit our website at http://www.health.harvard.edu to find reports of interest to you and your family.

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Copyright © 2014 by Harvard University.
Harvard Health Publications, 10 Shattuck Street, 2nd Floor, Boston, MA 02115, USA

* Please note, we do not provide responses to personal medical concerns, nor can we supply related medical information other than what is available in our print products or website. For specific, personalized medical advice we encourage you to contact your physician.