May 21, 2013
House Call
House Call, January 2013
Western Baptist Health Source Summer 2012
Healthbreak Videos
Ron Pullen said he ignored warning signs leading to a heart attack and open heart surgery in 2005. Pullen, now back at work at Heartland Cares Clinic as a patient care coordinator, said fellow black Americans should visit events like Western Baptist Hospital's free screening on Aug. 4 to determine if they are at risk, learn warning signs and understand lifestyle changes that could prevent cardiovascular disease.
Western Baptist offering two free health events
Western Baptist Hospital will offer two free events to promote health in children and black Americans. Dr. Patrick Withrow, chief medical officer at WBH, said the community is invited to a free ...
Jul 27, 2011 | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend
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Alan Reed  | The Sun
Michael Cornwell stocks oils at Food World IGA of Future City. Store manager Barry Babb said customers seem split along generational lines about preferences for oils and fats. Older customers accustomed to butter, lard and less healthful products still purchase them. Younger customers concerned with health-conscious products prefer canola and olive oils.
The right oils make a difference with health
By Alan Reed areed@paducahsun.com Eating the right fats and oils may mean the difference between a healthy life and heart disease, obesity, diabetes and other problems. Georgia Boyd, a reg...
Jul 20, 2011 | 0 0 comments | 9 9 recommendations | email to a friend
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Boomers more obese than any other generation
Associated Press WASHINGTON — Baby boomers say their biggest health fear is cancer. Given their waistlines, heart disease and diabetes should be atop that list, too. Boomers are more obese th...
Jul 20, 2011 | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend
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Childbirth fair planned at Western Baptist
Staff report Parents-to-be can get useful information and tour the Birthing Center at Western Baptist Hospital’s annual free Childbirth Fair from 10 a.m. to noon Aug.13 in the atrium of Doctor’...
Jul 20, 2011 | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend
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Nutrition Quiz: Obesity study
By Sam McManis McClatchy-Tribune News Service All right, food indulgers: We’ve been busted. Harvard University researchers have just published a 20-year study that followed 120,000 men and wo...
Jul 20, 2011 | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend
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Alan Reed | The Sun
Jane Merry leaves her hospital room on a forray Friday, just 11 days after having both hips replaced. The anterior hip replacement is less invasive than traditional hip surgery, leading to quicker recovery and less pain.
Double hip replacement possible with less pain
By Alan Reed areed@paducahsun.com Jane Merry thinks recovering from simultaneous double hip replacement at Lourdes is a breeze compared to the debilitating joint disease that brought her to t...
Jul 13, 2011 | 0 0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend
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Seniors scared to admit they’re hallucinating
By Patricia Anstett McClatchy-Tribune News Service DETROIT — Joan Lyon didn’t know why she had almost daily visions of things that weren’t really there. “I’d tell my husband, ‘There are th...
Jul 06, 2011 | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend
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ALAN REED | The Sun
Lisa Bladon, a Purchase District Health Department RN, draws an injection for a sixth grade student. Students that age must now get boosters for chicken pox, tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis.
New guidelines for childhood immunizations
By Alan Reed areed@paducahsun.com Students new to Kentucky public schools, and some incoming sixth-grade students, may face a few more shots to be compliant with new state immunization requi...
Jul 06, 2011 | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend
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Fraternal twins with autism: Is risk in the womb?
BY CARLA K. JOHNSON Associated Press CHICAGO — Most of the risk of autism has been blamed by experts on inherited genes. Now, one of the largest studies of twins and autism shifts the focus t...
Jul 06, 2011 | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend
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Heart disease, No. 1 killer, can sneak up on women
BY LAURAN NEERGAARD Associated Press WASHINGTON — Heart disease can sneak up on women in ways that standard cardiac tests can miss. It’s part of a puzzling gender gap: Women tend to have d...
Jul 06, 2011 | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend
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