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Asthma and allergy awareness

Asthma and allergy awareness

With asthma rates on the rise, here's how to manage symptoms

1:29 PM EDT, May 4, 2011

BOOSTER SHOTS: Oddities, musings and news from the health world

With asthma rates on the rise, here's how to manage symptoms

The rise in asthma rates has researchers a bit baffled. But while they focus on figuring out the reason, people with asthma have more practical concerns: preventing and controlling asthma attacks.

Alleviating season allergy symptoms naturally

April 25, 2011

The Healthy Skeptic

Alleviating season allergy symptoms naturally

It's hard to feel upbeat about spring weather if you suffer from seasonal allergies. While other people can spend all day outside without a sniffle, you can barely look at a field of grass or an oak tree without turning into a watery, miserable mess.

Sneeze-proof your home

3:05 PM EDT, April 11, 2011

Sneeze-proof your home

You don't have to look far to find environmental allergy triggers. In fact, nearly all of them can be found inside your home. Fortunately, they're relatively easy to lessen or banish. Follow these tips from allergy specialists to allergy-proof your abode.

Getting older, getting asthma

3:02 PM EDT, April 11, 2011

Getting older, getting asthma

Asthma is often overlooked in older patients, but why?

Aging out of allergies

2:59 PM EDT, April 11, 2011

Aging out of allergies

Two years after outgrowing a peanut allergy, Holly Sweenie finally took a peanut butter and jelly sandwich to school. "It took me a long time to get up the courage to pack one," said Sweenie's mom, Susan, of Canton, Mass. "I assumed allergies were something she'd always have."

Home away from home for those with allergies

2:55 PM EDT, April 11, 2011

Home away from home for those with allergies

At a time when hotels promise everything from custom ice-cream room service to complete wedding proposal preparations, it's no surprise that they're also offering hypoallergenic rooms.

Why do more of us have allergies, asthma?

2:57 PM EDT, April 11, 2011

Why do more of us have allergies, asthma?

If you think that people are scratching, wheezing and sneezing more frequently, you're right. Worldwide, eczema, asthma, hay fever and food allergies have nearly doubled in the past 20 years, says Dr. Marc McMorris, clinical associate professor at University of Michigan and medical director of the university's allergy specialty and food allergy clinic.

Tiny specks of trouble

2:53 PM EDT, April 11, 2011

Tiny specks of trouble

Anyone who's yearned for a clean house can attest to the seemingly supernatural properties of dust. No sooner have you banished it from the bookshelf than it peeks out from under the bed, shape-shifting from powdery and puffy to sticky and stringy. But the menace of dust can extend beyond the realm of housekeeping and damage your health in serious ways.

Food allergies not tied to eczema for most

2:50 PM EDT, April 11, 2011

Food allergies not tied to eczema for most

Eczema is notoriously difficult to treat in children. The torturous dry-skin disease causes intense itching and sleeplessness, and sometimes parents try making dietary changes in addition or in place of conventional treatments.

Asthma & allergies research roundup

2:46 PM EDT, April 11, 2011

Asthma & allergies research roundup

First-born child? Sorry about that. The likelihood of food allergies shrinks the lower down in your family birth order your are, according to a study out of Kyoto University in Japan. Surveying of the parents of 13,000 children between ages 7 and 15, researchers found that 4 percent of first-borns suffered from food allergies.

Breathing life into the game

2:42 PM EDT, April 11, 2011

Breathing life into the game

If you compiled a roster of world-class athletes with asthma, the list would be long — and impressive. From marathon world record holder Paula Radcliffe, to former NBA stars Dennis Rodman and Dominique Wilkins, to tennis star Mary Joe Fernandez and Olympian Jackie Joyner-Kersee, asthmatics have set records and won medals in nearly every sport.

Promise this will only hurt for 5 years

2:39 PM EDT, April 11, 2011

Promise this will only hurt for 5 years

Michelle Jason's allergies were so bad that constant migraines arose from her clogged sinuses. Surgery unclogged them, but she knew it was time to do something drastic.

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