Heart Health Made Easy: How to Lower Blood Pressure & Cholesterol
September 9, 2011 by
Filed under Minerals
Heart Health Made Easy: How to Lower Blood Pressure & Cholesterol Easy to understand, practical take action guide takes you step by step to lower cholesterol and blood pressure naturally. Everything you need to know in one convenient easy to follow guide so you can stop searching for the answers you seek. Heart Health Made [...]
Samsung Healthy Living BM-501S Manual Digital Blood Pressure Monitor
April 14, 2011 by
Filed under Healthy Living
Samsung Healthy Living BM-501S Manual Digital Blood Pressure Monitor *Backed by the Good Housekeeping Seal Promise* Memory Feature: 48 Memory Storage Time and Date Indications: automatically keeps track of the time, month and day. Large 3 Row LCD Display Manually Controlled Inflation The Healthy Living Manual Inflation Blood Pressure and Pulse Monitor offers both high [...]
Samsung Healthy Living BT-412S Touchscreen Wrist Blood Pressure Monitor
December 25, 2010 by
Filed under Healthy Living
Samsung Healthy Living BT-412S Touchscreen Wrist Blood Pressure Monitor *Backed by the Good Housekeeping Seal Promise* Noise Control System: exclusive low-noise, rolling motor pump allows our monitors to offer quiet inflation. Memory Feature: stores up to 48 measurements along with the time and date for quick and easy comparisons. Time and Date Indications: monitor automatically [...]
Samsung Healthy Living Deluxe Automatic Inflate Blood Pressure / Pulse Monitor Reviews
October 26, 2010 by
Filed under Healthy Living
Samsung Healthy Living Deluxe Automatic Inflate Blood Pressure / Pulse Monitor 90 Total memory OneTouch Operation Large display 3 Memory Zones AC adapter included Easy to Read LCD DisplayProduct InformationBy monitoring at home you can manage your health between doctor visits. Home monitoring also provides you with a record of blood pressure measurements over time [...]
Samsung Healthy Living Ultra Deluxe Inflate Blood Pressure and Pulse Monitor
September 17, 2010 by
Filed under Healthy Living
Samsung Healthy Living Ultra Deluxe Inflate Blood Pressure and Pulse Monitor Automatic Ultra Deluxe Inflate for Blood Pressure and Pulse Monitoring 120 Total Memory with Large Display for Easy Reading One Touch Operation Backlight for Easy Viewing Standard and Large Cuff Included The Ultra Deluxe Inflate Blood Pressure and Pulse Monitor is one of Samsung’s [...]
Wild Fish Stocks Depleted by Feeding of Farmed Fish Like Salmon
January 30, 2010 by
Filed under Organic Foods
(NaturalNews) Rather than relieving pressure on wild fish stocks, the explosive growth of aquaculture has actually exacerbated this pressure, according to an international study led by Rosamond L. Naylor of Stanford University and published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences . The researchers surveyed trends in the farming of several different fish species, finding that by the end of 2009, half of all fish consumed in the world will have been raised on an aquaculture farm. This has led to a concurrent increase in demand for wild-caught fish meal and fish oil to feed these fish, including for vegetarian species such as tilapia and carp. “Our assumption about farmed tilapia and carp being environmentally friendly turns out to be wrong in aggregate, because the sheer volume is driving up the demand,” Naylor said. “Even the small amounts of fishmeal used to raise vegetarian fish add up to a lot on a global scale.” Fish fed on fish meal and oil grow faster and tend to have more flavor than fish fed on a natural diet, providing a profit incentive for fish farmers to buy more wild-caught fish. The researchers found that the amount of fish meal fed to vegetarian fish increased drastically in the early 1990s. Even though this trend began to reverse in 1995, carp and tilapia farms were still responsible for consuming more than 12 million metric tons of fish meal in 2007. Farmed salmon also place a huge burden on wild fish stocks, with five pounds of wild fish required to produce every pound of farmed salmon. “As long as we are a health-conscious population trying to get our most healthy oils from fish, we are going to be demanding more of aquaculture and putting a lot of pressure on marine fisheries to meet that need,” Naylor said. “Our thirst for long-chain omega-3 oils will continue to put a lot of strain on marine ecosystems,” she said. Sources for this story include: www.boston.com; www.scienceblog.com.