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Time To Fly - Surviving an Empty Nest

April showers may bring May flowers, but August brings empty nest syndrome to the thousands of women who say goodbye to a child going off to college. What can you do to to prepare yourself and make the transition easier?

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Linda's Women's Issues Blog

Good Day Sunshine - Vitamin D Reduces Risk of Hip Fractures in Women

Wednesday August 20, 2008
Vitamin D has become the hot topic in health and nutrition news. Articles and recent research suggest the so-called 'sunshine vitamin' may reduce the risk of certain cancers, including breast, colon, and prostate.

But one very real benefit exists for women who have adequate levels of vitamin D - the reduction of hip fractures. US News & World Report cites a study done by University of Pittsburgh researchers on vitamin D intake and hip fractures in women, and quotes Dr. Michael F. Holick, director of the Vitamin D Skin and Bone Research Laboratory at Boston University, on the vitamin D-fracture link:

"The good news is...the higher your vitamin D status, the lower the risk of your developing a hip fracture."...

Hip fractures can be devastating for older individuals. In fact, 50 percent of older people who suffer a hip fracture will end up in a nursing home and 20 percent will die within the first year due to complications such as a pulmonary embolism resulting from the fracture, Holick said.... According to the U.S. Institute of Medicine, people should get between 200 and 400 international units of vitamin D a day. The best way to get vitamin D, naturally, is by being out in the sun.

As little as 10 to 15 minutes of sun a day can give you all a vitamin D you need. Vitamin D is also available in small quantities in foods such as fish and milk.

Preventing hip fracture is another good reason to keep your vitamin D levels up, Holick said. "To get vitamin D levels to where they need to be to reduce the risk of hip fracture, you need to be taking at least 1,000 international units of vitamin D a day from a supplement," he advised.

Rebecca Curtis on Obama, Hillary, and the 'Bradley Effect'

Tuesday August 19, 2008
The buzz is that we're hours away from Obama's announcement of his VP pick.

Over at the Huffington Post, Rebecca Curtis makes one final eleventh-hour pitch for him to choose Hillary in "Summer Love, Fall Freak-Out: The Bradley Effect and Why Obama Will Lose Without Hillary." She brings up some interesting issues with regard to race, gender, hidden prejudices, and past history - particularly Tom Bradley's run for governor of California in 1982, from which the 'Bradley Effect' draws its name.

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