News
Hosted on MSN2mon
Sedentary lifestyle, increasing screen time, prolonged desk job and junk diets fuel a fatty liver epidemic among India’s youth - MSNSedentary lifestyle, increasing screen time, prolonged desk job and junk diets fuel a fatty liver epidemic among India’s youth. Story by TOI Lifestyle Desk • 4d.
Driving a taxi isn’t the healthiest profession. The sedentary job and long hours can lead to joint and back pain as well as heart issues. But in at least one area, taxi drivers do quite well.
People with highly sedentary jobs — accounting for 80% of the current US workforce — face a significantly higher risk of insomnia, according to a new study published January 7 in the Journal ...
“Drivers want to be healthier, and a lot of them just don't know where to start. I really think that trucking companies have the ability to be that spark,” Manera said.
The study – published in the Journal of Occupational Health Psychology in January – found that people with sedentary jobs face a significantly heightened risk of insomnia.
Employees with sedentary jobs experience a 37% increase in insomnia symptoms, says new study; Those working non-traditional hours have a 66% higher risk of needing ‘catch-up sleep ...
With this new information, it is unlikely you can just quit your sedentary job. You can, however, make small and incremental changes to your sleep pattern today.
As more people sit - literally - in more sedentary jobs, they're packing on the pounds, and it's this inertia that's a major contributor to the obesity epidemic, new research suggests. Staring at the ...
People with highly sedentary jobs — accounting for 80% of the current US workforce — face a significantly higher risk of insomnia, according to a new study published January 7 in the Journal ...
People with highly sedentary jobs — accounting for 80% of the current U.S. workforce — face a significantly higher risk of insomnia, according to a new study published January 7 in the Journal ...
People with highly sedentary jobs — accounting for 80% of the current US workforce — face a significantly higher risk of insomnia, according to a new study published January 7 in the Journal ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results