Home    RSS Feed    Submit Articles        Terms of Use    Privacy     Bookmark and Share

FitnessHealthArticles.Com
RSS Feeds Add us to favorites
Make us your home page

 

For more information and special deals related to any of the issues on this page, please place your cursor over the double-underlined links. All link information supplied by Kontera.com

Categories
Aches & Pains
Back Pain
Acne
Addictions
Smoking
Alcohol
Aerobics
Aging
Allergies
Alternative
Anxiety
Aromatherapy
Arthritis
Asthma
Baby & Child Care
Beauty
Bodybuilding
Cardiac Heart Health
Child Health
Cholesterol
Dental Health
Depression
Diabetes
Diet
Disabilities
Diseases & Conditions
Drugs
Eye & Visual Health
Fatigue
Fitness
Health
Health Insurance
Healthcare Industry
Healthy Hair
Hearing
Home Remedies
Hygiene
Hypnosis
Medicine
Mens Health
Mental Health
Nursing
Nutrition
Occupational Health & Safety
Pharmacy
Phobias
Plastic Surgery
Posture
Public Health & Safety
Relationships
Sex Life
Reproductive Health
Running
Self Improvement
Senior Health
Skin Care
Sleep
Stress
Surgery
Teen Health
Vitamins
Walking
Weight Loss
Weight Training
Wellness
Womens Health
Yoga


Sources of Information - Health and Wellness
Author: David Jones
Website: http://www.online-health-care.com/
Added: Fri, 02 Nov 2007 07:10:55 -0400
Category: Health
Printable version | Email | Bookmark

Valid and reliable health information comes from respected journals, magazines, and newsletters. Such publications have health or medical editors and subject their articles to peer review and criticism by other scientists. In the consumption of information even from reputable, peer-reviewed sources, it is important to remember the advice of the editors of the New England Journal of Medicine.

What medical journals publish is not received wisdom but rather working papers. Each study becomes a piece of a puzzle ... No matter how important the conclusions, they should usually be considered tentative until a body of evidence accumulates pointing in the same direction.

Another source of health information and medical advice growing in popularity is the telephone. S Several telephone service businesses are now available that offer live interaction with health-care professionals . These services, which are available through toll-free 800 and/or moderately expensive 900 numbers, provide consumers with a private and convenient option for getting answers to questions ranging from the side effects of a medicine to the need for a second opinion regarding a particular diagnosis.

There are obvious limitations to what medical and pharmaceutical advice telephone services can provide because a telephone practitioner does not know a caller's medical history and cannot perform a physical examination. They are not a substitute for having a physician. Instead, they should be viewed as informational, advisory, and possibly helpful in deciding whether a medical procedure, test, or treatment is warranted.

Pharmacists are an excellent yet often overlooked source of information when a health product or medicine is called for. They can advise you on the value and benefit of over-the-counter and prescription medicines. And they can help assure that you get the right treatment and that you avoid treatments that could worsen your condition. To inform you about possible medications, the pharmacist will need answers to the following questions:

Is the medicine for you or someone else?

What symptoms are you trying to relieve?

What treatments have you tried? How well have they worked?

Do you have another disease that might affect this condition?

Are you taking other medications-prescription or nonprescription?

What have been the effects of similar medications used in the past?

You should be on guard for information that appears to be motivated by commercial interests and beware of the influence of advertising. Sometimes businesses invest more money in advertising than in the actual product it is promoting. One brand-name cereal, for example, costs $3.29. Only $.83 cents pays for the materials in the cereal; $1.24 pays for advertising. The rest goes to distribution and profits. The same cereal (comparable generic brand) without the advertising comes to consumers at a substantial savings. Also, claims based on anecdotes, case studies, testimonials, and personal observations may reflect personal bias or serve a hidden agenda.

Article Source: http://www.fitnesshealtharticles.com.

View all David Jones's articles


About the Author:
Mirror, mirror on the wall, What risks heart disease most of all-high blood pressure or high cholesterol, lack of exercise or too much stress, Type A behavior or a fatty diet, family history or cigarettes? If scientists had the answer, heart disease might not still be our number one killer.

More Health articles


:- Articles Search

Search our article database!

:- Recent Articles
Top 5 things you need to know when looking for Medicare Supplemental ( Medigap) Plans
The Connection Between ADHD and Low Magnesium Levels
Flexibility – The Forgotten Fitness Fundamental
Raw Food Diets: Benefits And Risks
Get Beautiful Skin with Different Skin Care Treatments
Chiropractic Medicine
Ideas to Get You Started for Opening a New Small Daycare
The Stair Climber Exercise Machine
GAMSAT Preparation
Adults With Dyslexia

:- Top Resources

Exercise Bike Tips : discover the latest news, information and resources about exercise bikes for better health and fitness.

Weight Loss Information : 101 tips for losing weight fast and naturally.

Lower Cholesterol Safely : Free guide to lower cholesterol safely in 30 days.

Tips and information about giving up smoking.

Mannatech

Best Diet Pills : Safe natural weight loss with the best diet pills without downsides or side effects.

Help hospitalized veterans

Orlando Figes


Buy Prevacid
Drug Rehab Centers In Florida




 

Copyright © 2006-2010 FitnessHealthArticles.Com. All Rights Reserved.