Saturday, December 5, 2009

BODY:Vitamins: Know What You Are Popping





In my quest to stay healthy I have routinely turned to taking vitamins. But, I haven't always taken the time to research exactly what it is that I am putting in my body in the name of good health.

According to a recent NY Times article: Americans love vitamins. About half of adults take a daily multivitamin, according to industry data. And according to some theories, the economic downturn has inspired them to fortify themselves by swallowing more.
Sales over the last decade had been growing by about 4 percent annually. But this year, as more people are taking their health into their own hands, perhaps hoping to stave off doctor bills, vitamin sales are expected to grow by 8 percent to a total of $9.2 billion, according to Nutrition Business Journal, a market researcher and publisher.
About 42 percent of shoppers purchase their vitamins at natural and specialty retail outlets, like GNC and Whole Foods, according to the journal, while only 23 percent take the discount approach and buy their bottles at supermarkets and club stores. The other 35 percent buy through mail order or from a health care provider.
Of course, it’s controversial whether we should be taking vitamins at all. Recent studies have indicated that taking a multivitamin won’t protect you from heart disease or cancer. And experts maintain that if you eat well, you don’t need vitamin supplements.
“The evidence shows that a healthy diet and exercise are the best way to ward off disease; a vitamin cannot replace those benefits,” says Eric Rimm, associate professor of epidemiology and nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health.
But what if you don’t eat well or are chronically stressed out? Then, Professor Rimm says, there may be some benefit from taking a multivitamin.
As for the matter of cost: If you take only a daily multivitamin mainly as a medical insurance policy, it certainly won’t hurt your health — as long as you do not already eat a lot of fortified food. And it could help. But it will require spending some money. And if you take a multivitamin and a few individual vitamins and minerals, it’s even more worth your while to make sure you’re not paying more than you need to.
Here’s how to get the most vitamin for the least money.
USE ONLY WHAT YOU NEED Popping too many vitamin pills is not only a waste of money but can be bad for your health. Talk to your doctor about what added vitamins or minerals you might require; you can ask for a blood test to learn what you might be lacking.
For example, if you don’t get enough vitamin D — many people who live in the northern states or who wear sunscreen everyday are low on this crucial vitamin — then buy just a D supplement. Standard multivitamins will probably not have the levels of D you require (many doctors suggest taking 1,000 to 2,000 international units a day).
If your doctor recommends a specific supplement, like omega-3, ask in what form you should be taking it.
FIND A REPUTABLE SOURCE Vitamins and minerals are commodity items, and every manufacturer has access to the same ingredients. For that reason, researchers and scientists say paying more for a name brand won’t necessarily buy you better vitamins.
“When we measure levels of vitamins in the blood, we find the levels are the same whether the person was taking a generic brand or a name brand,” says Dr. Rimm, who has been studying the effects of vitamins for 20 years.
That said, don’t be too cheap. Purchase your vitamins from well-known retailers that do a brisk business and restock frequently, whether that’s Costco or Drugstore.com. Vitamins lose their potency over time and must be stored at, or below, room temperature. If bottles are sitting on a shelf in warm room or in direct sunlight, they may degrade even before their expiration date.
PRICE MAY NOT MEAN QUALITY While the Food and Drug Administration regulates vitamins as part of the nutritional supplement industry, it does not test them before they are put on the shelves. The F.D.A. places the responsibility on the manufacturer to ensure that its dietary supplement products are safe before they are marketed. All of which means that no matter what the price, quality is not assured.
ConsumerLab.com, a company based in White Plains that tests hundreds of vitamins each year, finds that 30 percent of multivitamins have a quality problem: the pills might have more or less of a stated ingredient, or they might not dissolve properly.
“We haven’t found any brand with a broad product line that makes every product well,” says Dr. Tod Cooperman, president of the company.
Taking exception to such assertions is the vitamin industry’s trade group, the Council for Responsible Nutrition. In response to questions, the council released a statement from Andrew Shao, a vice president for scientific and regulatory affairs.
Mr. Shao said that the F.D.A. allowed for “a reasonable amount of variation” — which he characterized as up to 15 percent more of an ingredient than the label might indicate. Mr. Shao said that manufacturers frequently add slightly more of an ingredient to ensure that the amount is at least at the level claimed on the label as the product nears the end of its shelf life.
In any case, ConsumerLab.com says it has found a few patterns that consumers may find helpful. Products sold by vitamin chains tend to be more reliable than drugstore brands, and Wal-Mart and Costco’s vitamin lines are usually worth considering. In a recent test of multivitamins, ConsumerLab.com found that Equate-Mature Multivitamin 50+ sold by Wal-Mart was just as good as the name brand Centrum Silver, but at less than a nickel a day is half the price.
Puritan’s Pride, a catalog and online retailer, also has very good prices, and Dr. Cooperman says that its products are generally good.
Curious consumers can subscribe to ConsumerLab.com for $30 a year and learn how other supplement brands fare in the lab’s tests.
CERTIFICATION SYMBOLS One quality check you can make, although it is not a perfect screening, is to see whether a product is certified by one of several nonprofit organizations that check supplements for purity and quality.
The two most commonly used groups are the United States Pharmacopeia (www.usp.org) and NSF International (www.nsf.org), according to Mr. Shao. Manufacturers voluntarily submit a product for review and, if it passes, the product can bear an approval seal, such as USP or NSF. Because the process is voluntary, Mr. Shao points out, the absence of the seal does not necessarily mean the product is of poor quality.
But at least the seal should mean you know what you’re getting. And with vitamins, anything beyond that simple assurance may not be worth paying for.

Contribution from the NY Times
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Tuesday, November 17, 2009

BODY: Gearing Up For Flu Season



Old school RX.

By Carl Chancellor

I was heading home the other evening on the orange line of the Metro when the woman in the seat next to where I was standing in the crowded car, begins sneezing and sniffling. To her credit the woman did sneeze into the crook of her arm, just like the President showed us to do, but I still wasn’t liking the fact that I was standing so near to her.

I shifted on my feet for an uncomfortable for a few seconds, trying to figure out my course of action. Maybe I have an overabundance of the polite gene in my makeup, because I was hesitant about bolting and thereby calling attention to the sneezing woman. But when the lady sneezed again and followed it with a cough, I knew I had to book.

I slowly shouldered my way through the bodies pressed against me and worked my way to the far end of the car, as far away from Swine Flu Sue as I could get.

The sneezing woman shot me a dirty look, obviously taking offense at my retreat. I’m sure she didn’t appreciate me acting as if she were contagious. Hey, but you can’t fault a brotha for being cautious, particularly with all the buzz about H1N1.

That was a few days ago. Today, my head is throbbing and I’m sneezing. I’m hoping it is just a cold and nothing more.

To ease my suffering I resorted to the old school remedy of honey, apple cider vinegar and lemon, with a bit of a twist–whiskey. I’ve been downing spoonfuls of the elixir all morning long. And although I’m still sneezing, I’m feeling mighty good.


Monday, November 16, 2009

BODY: Getting the Runaround on Losing Weight


Getting the runaround
Originally uploaded by van heland


By Carl Chancellor

I’m lifting weights. I’m burning up the miles on the treadmill. So why aren’t the pounds just melting away?

The reality is that without changing your diet and monitoring your caloric intake you are not going to shed those extra pounds.

Thinking that you will be able to gorge yourself at the kitchen table and then jog off the after effects of over indulgence is just not going to happen.

Researchers have found that people who exercise don’t necessarily lose weight. A study recently published in the The British Journal of Sports Medicine documents that disappointing but very real fact.

The study followed 58 overweight people as they underwent 12 weeks of supervised aerobic training without changing their diets. The results: the group lost an average of around seven pounds. Some of the study subjects lost less than four pounds.

How can that be? Hard exercise for 12 straight weeks and barely shed a few pounds. I mean, doesn’t exercise burn calories?

The quick answer is, yes. The problem is that most people only burn 200 to 300 calories in a typical 30-minute exercise session. You will put almost that many calories right back into your body when you reach for that bottle of Gatorade to cool off.

The only way to lose weight is through a combination of exercise and diet.

Push-ups ain’t going to help if you don’t push yourself away from the table first.


MIND: New Book On Sugar Ray Robinson Undisputed Winner


Sugar Ray Robinson
Originally uploaded by Drnard

By Carl Chancellor

The brotha had swagger to burn.

That fact comes across like an uppercut square to the chin in the new biography
Sweet Thunder: The Life and Times of Sugar Ray Robinson, by Wil Haygood.

The book captures the elegance, grace, pride and determination of one of the all time great boxers as it chronicles a life framed by the brutality of the ring and the turmoil of 20th century America.

Haygood, who is as artistic with the pen as Robinson was with his fists, crafts a lyrical biography that excites and enthralls as surely as Sugar Ray did in his many professional and amateur bouts. Robinson literally punches his way off the pages of Sweet Thunder to step away from mere facts and statistics–174-19-6 record; welterweight and 5-time middleweight champion–to become a flesh and blood character as real as a favorite uncle.

The prose of Haygood’s detail-rich book not only evokes the rage and fury of the ring but depicts the cultural upheaval of the 30s, 40s, 50s and early 60s.

Sweet Thunder is populated by iconic figures, who orbited around Robinson’s sun–Miles Davis, Lena Horne, Jake LaMotta, Langston Hughes, Sammy Davis, etc....The book faithfully paints a picture of the man and his times.

Be warned the book is a page-turner. Once you crack it open and start to read you will be down for the count.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

BODY:Are Black Men Afraid of Doctors?


Doctor's Tools
Originally uploaded by Dave Ward Photography

“Why don’t you guys get checkups?”

That was a question a female friend posed to me the other evening while having drinks. She just couldn’t understand why her boyfriend constantly puts off going to the doctor.

“He’s always complaining about this ache, or this pain, yet he won’t go to the doctor to have it checked out,” she said between sips of wine, the frustration clear in her tone.

Several of my male friends said they don’t go to the doctor because they are afraid that the doc might find something wrong. Then there is the attitude-- “Hell, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”

But how do you know it ain’t broke?


Hey, we black men aren’t alone when it comes from shying away from the doctors office. According to a recent survey by Men's Health magazine and CNN, one-third of American men have not had a checkup in the past year. Nine million men haven't seen a doctor in the last five years.

An American Medical Association study in 1990 found that men, regardless of their race, don't go to the doctor because of fear, denial, embarrassment and threatened masculinity.

* Each year, men make 150 million fewer trips to doctors than women (the disparity occurs in every age group, not just the years some women have prenatal checkups.) p
* One in nine men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer, yet few will have the easy and painless digital rectal exam and prostate specific antigen blood test to detect it (women, facing similar odds of breast cancer, are much more likely to examine their breasts regularly and have a mammogram).
* Men are at greater risk of stress-related illnesses than women, yet only 20 percent of the people in the typical stress-management program are men. Men are 30 percent more likely than women to have a stroke.
* One out of three male strokes occur before age 65. Each year, over 50,000 men die of emphysema, one of the most preventable diseases. It has been estimated that more than 3 million men are walking around with early type II diabetes, a disease with major complications, and don't know it.

I can’t count the number of times I’ve heard someone bemoan the fact that they didn’t see a doctor earlier–“Doc, said if the problem had been detected earlier, my chance would be better.”

We black men have bought into that macho myth, maybe more so than other groups. We were told to “suck it up and be a man”; “roll with the punches”; “take it like a man”; and, worst of all–“Boy, those better not be no tears I’m seeing.”

Everything we hear tells us that to be a man is to be bulletproof.

Well, guess what–You ain’t no Superman.

It usually takes no more than 20 minutes to get a basic physical–less than a half-hour for a physician to declare you healthy or detect potential problems.





Friday, May 8, 2009

Sinus Solutions

If you are suffering from chronic sinus problems try out this simply daily remedy that my sister recently turned me onto. Believe me the results have been wonderful.

The Neti Pot is a tried and true method of nasal irrigation that has been around for centuries. It is a ceramic pot that looks like a cross between and small teapot and Aladdin’s magic lamp. (Some drug stores sell a plastic version of the pot, which I use and is very effective, but I imagine will have to be replaced every few months or so.) The Neti pot is a therapy that uses a salt and water solution to flush out the nasal cavity.

Ear, nose, and throat surgeons recommend nasal irrigation for their patients who've undergone sinus surgery, to clear away crusting in the nasal passages. Many patients with chronic sinus symptoms from bacterial infections, allergies, and environmental irritants also have begun to regularly use the Neti pot or other nasal irrigation devices, claiming that these devices alleviate congestion, facial pain and pressure, and reduce the need for antibiotics and nasal sprays. Research backs up these claims, finding that nasal irrigation can be an effective way to relieve sinus symptoms when used along with standard sinus treatments.

The basic explanation of how the Neti pot works is that it thins mucus to help flush it out of the nasal passages. A more biological explanation has to do with tiny, hair-like structures called cilia that line the inside of the nasal and sinus cavities. These cilia wave back and forth to push mucus either to the back of the throat where it can be swallowed, or to the nose to be blown out. Saline solution can help increase the speed and improve coordination of the cilia so that they may more effectively remove the bacteria, allergens, and other irritants that cause sinus problems.

This following excerpt from the WebMD site explains more about the use and effectiveness of the Neti Pot.

How Do You Use the Neti Pot?

There aren't any official medical guidelines, but Neti pots usually come with an insert that explains how to use them. You might also want to ask your family doctor or an ear, nose, and throat specialist to talk you through the process so you can get comfortable with the Neti pot before trying it on your own.

Typically, to use the Neti pot you would mix about 16 ounces (1 pint) of lukewarm water with 1 teaspoon of salt. (Some people add 1/2 teaspoon of baking soda to buffer the solution and make it gentler on the nose, but there isn't any real proof that this improves the experience.)

Once you've filled the Neti pot, tilt your head over the sink at about a 45-degree angle. Place the spout into your top nostril, and gently pour the saline solution into that nostril.

The fluid will flow through your nasal cavity and into the other nostril. It may also run into your throat. If this occurs, just spit it out. Blow your nose to get rid of any remaining liquid, then refill the Neti pot and repeat the process on the other side.
How Often do You Need to Use the Neti Pot?

In studies, people with very severe sinus symptoms found relief from using the Neti pot or other nasal irrigation system daily. Three times a week was often enough once symptoms subsided.
Is the Neti Pot Safe?

Research has found that the Neti pot is generally safe. About 10% of regular users experience mild side effects, such as nasal irritation and stinging. Nosebleeds can also occur, but they are rare. Reducing the amount of salt in the solution, adjusting the frequency of Neti pot use, and changing the temperature of the water appear to reduce side effects.

To prevent infection, it's important to properly care for your nasal irrigation device. "People use these devices over and over again. They have to be clean," says Jean Kim, MD, PhD, assistant professor in the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Either wash the device thoroughly by hand, or put it in the dishwasher if it's dishwasher-safe. Follow by drying the device completely after each use.

Where Can I Find a Neti Pot?

Neti pots are available over-the-counter at many drug stores, health food stores, and online retailers. They cost between $10 and $20.

Stay healthy my brothers.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Stress Reducing Thoughts

A good friend passed these thoughts onto me.

If you read and give them some time to sink in I promise you'll come away with an enlightened perspective.


They're written by Andy Rooney , a man who has th e gift of saying so much with so few words.
Enjoy.......

I've learned
.... That the best classroom in the world is at the feet of an elderly person.

I've learned
.... That when you're in love, it shows.

I've learned
.... That just one person saying to me, 'You've made my day!' makes my day.

I've learned
.... That having a child fall asleep in your arms is one of the most peaceful feelings in the world.

I've learned
.... That being kind is more important than being right.

I've learned
.... That you should never say no to a gift from a child.

I've learned
.... That I can always pray for someone when I don't have the strength to help him in some other way.

I've learned
.... That no matter how serious your life requires you to be, everyone needs a friend to act goofy with.

I've learned
.... That sometimes all a person needs is a hand to hold and a heart to understand.

I've learned
.... That simple walks wi th my father around the block on summer nights when I was a child did wonders20for me as an adult.

I've learned
.... That life is like a roll of toilet paper. The closer it gets to the end, the faster it goes.

I've learned
.... That we should be glad God doesn't give us everything we ask for.

I've learned
.... That money doesn't buy class.

I've learned
.... That it's those small daily happenings that make life so spectacular.

I've learned
... That under everyone's hard shell is someone who wants to be appreciated and loved.

I've learned
.... That to ignore the facts does not change the facts.

I've learned
.... That when you plan to get even with someone, you are only letting that person continue to hurt you.

I've learned
.... That love, not time, heals all wounds.

I've learned
.... That the easiest way for me to grow as a person is to surround myself with people smarter than I am.

I've learned
.... That everyone you meet deserves to be greeted with a smile.

I've learned
.... That no one is perfect until you fall in love with them.

I've learned
... That life is tough, but I'm tougher.

I've learned
.... That opportunities are never lost; someone will take the ones you miss.

I've learned
.... That when you harbor bitterness, happiness will dock elsewhere.

I've learned
.... That I wish I could have told my Mom that I love her one more time before she passed away.

I've learned
.... That one should keep his words both soft and tender, because tomorrow he may have to eat them.

I've learned
.... That a smile is an inexpensive way to improve your looks.

I've learned
.... That when your newly born grandchild holds your little finger in his little fist, that you're hooked for life.

I've learned
.... That everyone wants to live on top of the mountain, but all the happiness and growth occurs while you're climbing it.

I've learned
.... That the less time I have to work with, the more things I get done.

Peace.



Monday, January 26, 2009

Get Off The Couch

All right drop and give me twenty!

You don’t have to wait to buy a gym membership to start getting in shape and start turning your life around. Turn off the television right now and get on the floor and do the exercise that in my opinion is the single most effective exercise for improving total body fitness–the PUSH UP.
There is no better or faster way of getting fit as doing push ups. When done properly push-ups work the chest, hands, forearms, biceps, triceps, shoulders, traps, upper back, lower back, abs, glutes, hamstrings, quads, calf and over course the most important muscle of all–the heart.
Still not convinced? Ok, push-ups offer the benefits of weight lifting, stretching and cardio training all in one simple and straight forward exercise.

Push ups are a core-strengthening exercise that help improve balance by strengthening and shaping up most important muscle groups in your body - the core.
Holding the proper push up form is a great exercise alone, without even performing any repetitions. The push up form benefits the abdominal muscles through simultaneously flexing and stretching. When the lower back muscles contract to stabilize your form, your abdominal muscles are inadvertently stretched. The quadriceps is also relied on heavily to maintain proper form, giving your legs a decent secondary workout.

The push up motion trains the chest, triceps and the anterior deltoids, while stretching the biceps and back. Some consider the push up to provide the best all around chest workout.
In addition, a high repetition push up workout will work wonders for overall cardiovascular health.

What’s best about the push up is that they can be performed anywhere at anytime. All you need is to set aside a few minutes each day and then make up your mind to workout.

The Basic Push Up:
Lie down on the ground with your face down. Keep your palms flat on the ground shoulder-width apart. Make sure that your feet are together and keep legs and back straight.
Look ahead and while you go down, try to touch the floor with your chin.
When you rise, try not to bend your back.
While going up, breathe out.
Pause and repeat the exercise.

The Advance Push Up:
One hand Push Up –open your legs wide while keeping one hand under the center of your chest. Place your free hand at the small of your back. Now, follow the same process outlined in the basic push up.
Try to do five push ups using each hand. (Don’t overdo these push ups since they cause heavy strain on the elbow)

Diamond Push Up and Wide Push Up
For this exercise position your thumbs and forefingers in a diamond shape. Place your hands beneath the center of your chest and proceed with the push up motion.
The wide push up is done by keeping your hands about 4 feet apart.

Remember, the push-up should be performed in a rhythmic motion. At first, aim for 6 to 8 reps of 3 and then slowly increase your reps. Before you know it you will be churning out 20 to 30 reps.

Now, as I said at the top of this post—Drop and give me 20!!!!

Can A Brotha Catch A Break?

It is no secret that when it comes to longevity African American men fare worse than white men. Disparities continue to persist despite recent advances in health care and outreach programs that target inequities in race and socioeconomic status. Here is a snapshot of some:

· LIFE EXPECTANCY The life expectancy for a black male child born in 2004 is 69.5 years, compared with 75.7 years for white males born the same year, according to the National Center for Health Statistics.



· PROSTATE CANCER African American men are more likely to get and die from prostate cancer than men of any other racial or ethnic group in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. An African American man has a 1-in-5 chance of being diagnosed with prostate cancer in his lifetime and a 1-in-20 chance of dying from the disease. Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death for African American men, behind lung cancer.

Scientists are studying possible reasons for these disparities, "including culture, environment and differences in the biology of the disease in African American men," the CDC reports.

· CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE About 42 percent of African American men have high blood pressure, compared with 31 percent of white men, according to the American Heart Association. Cardiovascular disease overall was also more prevalent among black men -- 41 percent, compared with about 34 percent of white men.

· PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AND OBESITY About 29.5 percent of black men report regular leisurely physical activity, compared with 33.4 percent of white men, according to the AHA. But black men fare better in the weight category than white men. About 63 percent of black men were overweight (having a body mass index of 25 or higher), compared with 69 percent of white men. And 27.9 percent of black men were obese (a BMI of 30 or higher), compared with 28.2 percent of white men.

· HEALTH STATUS Asian and white Americans are more likely to report being in excellent health, according to NCHS. In a 2005 survey, about 37 percent of whites and 36 percent of Asians reported excellent health, compared with 30 percent of African Americans.

(Information courtesy of the Washington Post)


Sunday, January 25, 2009

Black Men Are At Risk

According to numerous reports, African-American men as a group are not healthy and are far less healthy than any other racial group in America.

There are a number of societal reason why as a group black men are not enjoying optimum health. Those reasons include racial discrimination, lack of accessible and affordable health care, poverty, poor lifestyle choices, lack of adequate health insurance,insufficient medical and social services geared to African-American men, unemployment and under employment, to name a few.

There are also a number of cultural reasons undermining our health including poor diet, lack of exercise, lack of knowledge, which fall under the big umbrella of poor lifestyle choices.

What was that word, oh yeah--Choices...Choices are related to outcomes that are totally in your control. If nothing else, BMH will hammer on the idea of choice--you making good decisions that will be beneficial to your health.

Now for a few facts:Black Male Health Statistics:

As a group we, African-American men live 7.1 years less than other racial groups.

We have higher death rates than black women for all leading causes of death

We experience disproportionately higher death rates in all the leading causes of death
40% of black men die prematurely from cardiovascular disease as compared to 21% of white men

Black men are 5 times more likely to die of HIV/AIDS

44% of black men are considered overweight
24% are obese
Black men suffer more preventable diseases that are treatable
have a higher incidence of diabetes and prostate cancer
A high suicide rate. It is the 3rd leading cause of death in 15 to 24 year old

According to an article published in the May 2003 issue of the American Journal of Public Health, African American men are significantly less likely than white men to see a physician; 45 percent of African American men do not have a doctor they see regularly.

Men of color are also more likely to be uninsured -- 28 percent of African Americans are uninsured, compared to 17 percent of whites.

Studies that examine how different groups of men use Medicare show that even when health insurance and income differences are accounted for Black men receive fewer preventive services than white men like flu shots and colonoscopy screening.

The 10 Leading Causes of death in the U.S.(2001) Black Americans

  • Cardiovascular Disease

  • Cancer

  • Stroke

  • Unintentional injuries

  • Diabetes

  • Homicide

  • HIV/AIDS

  • Chronic lower respiratory disease

  • Nephritis

  • Septicemia
  • Source: Health, U.S., 2003

    Recommended Health Screenings for Men

    Blood Cholesterol Screenings
    Have your cholesterol checked at least every 5 years, starting at age 35. If you smoke, have diabetes, or if heart disease runs in your family, start having your cholesterol checked at age 20.

    Blood Pressure
    Have your blood pressure checked at least every 2 years.

    Colorectal Cancer Tests
    Begin regular screening for colorectal cancer starting at age 50. Your doctor can help you decide which test is right for you. How often you need to be tested will depend on which test you have.

    Diabetes Tests
    Have a test to screen for diabetes if you have high blood pressure or high cholesterol.

    Depression
    If you've felt "down," sad, or hopeless, and have felt little interest or pleasure in doing things for two weeks straight, talk to your doctor about whether he or she can screen you for depression.

    Sexually Transmitted Diseases
    Talk to your doctor to see whether you should be screened for sexually transmitted diseases, such as HIV.

    Prostate Cancer Screening
    Talk to your doctor about the possible benefits and harms of prostate cancer screening if you are considering having a prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test or digital rectal examination (DRE).


    Introducing BM3 (Black Men's Maintenance Manual

    The BM3 blog is an electronic maintenance manual for body, mind and soul.
    Concept: BM3 is geared to the specific health and lifestyle needs of African-American males ages 25 and up, with the core demographic being the 35 to 55 age group.
    My goal is to provide information that will improve the quality of life of black men who are in the peak earning years, who have established themselves and who are ready to take their lives to a new level.

    The key elements of the blog will be:

    Health /fitness/sex....How to get there and how to maintain. This section will focus on diet, nutrition, exercise, medical issues.

    Lifestyle/Fashion/Fine Living– Adding style, flair and sophistication to the areas of personal grooming, clothing, interior design, food, movies, leisure, music, literature, movies, finances/wealth building

    New fiction section: Short stories from established and new voices.

    Interviews–One on one features/interviews with news makers in the areas of politics, education, sports, entertainment, medicine/science

    So get ready to live your best life.