Your baby’s first tooth will likely pop up sometime between 6 and 12 months old, though there’s a wide range of normal. Teething signs often begin earlier, as early as 3 months old. Before your baby’s first tooth erupts, you might notice fussiness, drool, facial
Read MoreLatina Dietitians Share Healthy Breakfast Ideas From Their Cultures
Breakfast has long been touted as the most important meal of the day, with an emphasis on choosing healthy options to power you through the day ahead of you. While there are certainly mistakes you want to avoid making at breakfast, incorporating your cultural foods
Read More‘Crisis’ Brewing In U.K.’s Overstretched Mental Health Services
Female counselor gestures while talking with female client. The counselor is holding eyeglasses and … [+] a pen. getty Members of the U.K.’s parliament have warned growing demand for mental health services is already outstripping supply, with more than a million people waiting for care.
Read MoreAlberta’s first public mental health park opens in Calgary – Calgary
Alberta’s first park dedicated to enhancing mental health officially opened in Calgary on Saturday. The climbing boulder has become a popular spot to scramble up the Brawn Family Foundation Rotary Park in northwest Calgary. Like everything else at the park, it was designed with teens
Read More7 healthy lifestyle changes that could help reduce risk of depression, says study: ‘Enormous benefits’
Depression rates are higher than ever, with nearly 30% of U.S. adults reporting a diagnosis at some point in their lives. While many factors come into play, there are some healthy steps people can take to reduce their risk of slipping into sadness, as revealed
Read MoreExperts learn how brushing your teeth affects your brain
Stay ahead of the trend in fashion and beyond with our free weekly Lifestyle Edit newsletter Stay ahead of the trend in fashion and beyond with our free weekly Lifestyle Edit newsletter Looking after your teeth also takes care of the brain, experts have found.
Read MoreTake care of your teeth to boost brain health, ward off Alzheimer’s risk
Poor dental health can lead to decline in brain volume, and increase the risk of Alzheimer’s disease, warned a study. The study, published in the journal Neurology, found that gum disease and tooth loss were linked to brain shrinkage in the hippocampus, which plays a
Read MoreWhy More Low-Income People in BC Can’t Get Dental Care
When deyna gillis’s dentist of several years wouldn’t treat him anymore, gillis blamed the British Columbia government, not the dentist. Announcements, Events & more from Tyee and select partners CONTEST: Win Festival Passes to VIFF One lucky Tyee reader will win two full passes to
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