| Papers [1-16] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7] | | Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —> | Search results on "ANTI AGING HERBS LIFESTYLE": |
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Anti-Aging with Herbs & Lifestyle Changes, 2006. A discussion and review of literature pertaining to natural anti-aging methods and techniques. 4,742 words (approx. 19.0 pages), 10 sources, MLA, AU$ 195.95 »
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Abstract This paper reviews various literary sources that present different methods and tactics that facilitate anti-aging naturally. This paper discusses what can be done in order to bring to light innovative and practical approaches to a strategy of health, happiness and vitality.
Outline:
Introduction
Healthy Updates: Reliable Newspaper and Internet Sources
A Wealth of Health-focuses Literature Found in Books
'Age-Proof Your Body: Your Complete Guide to Lifelong Vitality'
'The Handbook of Clinically Tested Herbal Remedies, Volume 1'
'Food - Your Miracle Medicine'
"Water - The Stuff of Life" (Phillip Day)
'Culpeper's Complete Herbal'
'Tyler's Honest Herbal'
'Is Yoga A Back Remedy?'
From the Paper "What determines the won or lost category for those cells in our bodies is what we take in our bodies as food; "Their sole source of energy is the food you give them," Carper continues, and the latest and best research available validates the "long-held human wisdom that food does have medicinal powers."
Indeed, since the emergence of human civilizations, people have relied on "forests, fields and gardens" for our medicines, and roughly 75 percent of the people in the world still do rely on the forests, fields and gardens for their sustenance. Carper alludes to the wisdom of James Duke, a botanist and specialist in medicinal plants with the U.S Department of Agriculture, who believes that "if a food has a wide folklore reputation as a remedy for specific diseases," that in itself provides "some proof" of that food's "potential validity" (Carper, 5). "
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Lifestyle Drugs, 2005. A discussion on the importance of recreational and life style drugs. 2,220 words (approx. 8.9 pages), 29 sources, MLA, AU$ 110.95 »
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Abstract This paper examines how the expanding number of lifestyle drugs can soon be expected to reach the consumer driven marketplace. It looks at how this expanding availability of drugs that can be used to change appearance, cognitive and physical capacities is changing the social fabric of culture and poses a difficult challenge to healthcare service providers. It also discusses whether there is any actual physiological need for lifestyle drugs and contends that lifestyle drugs are a fact of modern culture and will continue to play an ever-increasing role in economy-health-society model.
Outline
Defining Lifestyle Drugs
Implications Inherent in the Definition of Lifestyle Drugs
Pharmacological Approaches to Problems of Lifestyle Choice
Consequences of Increasing Usage
Economic Considerations
Misuse of Lifestyle Drugs
Lifestyle Drug-Substitution Strategy
From the Paper "A key element in the consideration of lifestyle drugs is how they are to be paid for. These new lifestyle drugs come at a time when health care budgets are universally stretched, funding of these drugs could only come at the expense of other more traditional medical treatments.
Lifestyle drugs which address impotence, hair loss, smoking cessation and obesity are rapidly increasing their market share of the pharmaceutical market (Dickman, 2001). In this regard, the pharmaceutical industry has made significant increases to their direct to consumer advertising, from 790million USD in 1996 to 1.8billion USD in 1999 in America alone (IMS Health Report, 2000). In the UK it was predicted that sildenafil alone would cost the health care system 1.3billion GBP (Beecham, 1999), actual costings so far haven't reached these proportions. However, health care budgets could be threatened by wide spread use of lifestyle drugs, especially since sildenafil is only the first of a new wave of lifestyle drugs. "
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Lifestyle and Sustainability, 2005. A discussion on how a person's lifestyle choices affect society. 3,361 words (approx. 13.4 pages), 15 sources, APA, AU$ 153.95 »
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Abstract In today's society, people feel that they must have many things to make their lives more comfortable. They feel they must have multiple cars, refrigerators and multiple televisions in their homes. Few realize the extent of energy being wasted and the impact it is having on the environment. This paper on lifestyle and sustainability discusses what impacts the choices people make can have on society and industry.
Outline
Lifestyle and Sustainability: Yes We Can!
Description of LOHAS
Sustainability
Global Impacts
Analysis of Lifestyles
Financial Observation
Environmental Practices in Corporate Cultures
Consumer Behaviors and Their Environmental Influence
From the Paper "LOHAS is an acronym for Lifestyles of health and sustainability. They are comprised of a segment of the population who has made the conscious decision to leave as small a destructive footprint on earth as they can manage. They see the impact of years of careless mismanagement of the earth's resources and they aim to reverse the mindset that American's are unwilling to pay more for goods that are obtained in an ecologically sustainable manner. This market segment emerged from a desire to have food free from pesticides, herbicides and other chemicals. As their knowledge grew and more products became available their interests turned to solar energy, windmill energy, energy efficient appliances, natural and herbal health products, cleaning supplies, clothes derived from all natural fabrics and homes built from sustainable materials. (Peterson, 2005)"
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Pets and Lifestyle, 2008. This paper is a research project to study the relationship of pet ownership and a healthier lifestyle and life-satisfaction. 920 words (approx. 3.7 pages), 3 sources, APA, AU$ 52.95 »
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Abstract This paper states that the hypothesis for this study is that pet owners would have a healthier lifestyle and a higher life-satisfaction rating than non-owners. The author reports that the participants of this study consisted of a group of 100 students who elected to take this survey for class credit. The author relates that the results of this study did not support this hypothesis suggesting that there was no significant relationship between pet ownership and lifestyle choices or life-satisfaction. The paper concludes that the reason this study contradicts previous studies, which revealed a positive relationship between pet ownership, health, and well-being, is that the sample was young, lived with other people and was not random.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Method
Participants
Materials
Procedure
Results
Figure. Correlation of Pet Ownership and Life-Satisfaction
Discussion
From the Paper "To gather data for this study, an online survey was prepared and put on the SONA Systems website. This survey consisted of several multiple-choice questions regarding pet ownership, health, and lifestyle choices. The survey also asked for demographic information, such as age and gender. One example question is "how would you rate your life-satisfaction?" And the responses available included: very satisfied, fairly satisfied, unsure, fairly unsatisfied, and very unsatisfied. The same format was used to ask questions regarding behaviors such as smoking, drinking, and fast food intake."
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The Benefit of Herbs, 2002. Report on the health benefits of herbs. 650 words (approx. 2.6 pages), 2 sources, AU$ 42.95 »
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Abstract The following is a on the benefits of herbs in natural health.
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Lifestyle of the Ichthyosaur, 2004. An examination of the lifestyle of the ichthyosaur. 3,789 words (approx. 15.2 pages), 9 sources, MLA, AU$ 167.95 »
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Abstract This paper looks at the habits and characteristics of the ichthyosaur, which is a family of marine reptiles that existed during the same era as the dinosaurs. The paper looks at the lifestyle of the species and focuses on various extinction theories.
Introduction
Well-Adapted to Ocean Life
Diet
Reproduction
Locomotion
Deep Divers
Conclusion
From the Paper "Ichthyosaur fossils were discovered in the late nineteenth century, before the first dinosaur fossils were discovered, and received little acclaim. It wasn?t until the recent discovery a few years ago of a small amount of new specimens in Japan and China that a wider interest in ichthyosaurs? was revived. The ichthyosaur is a fish-shaped tetrapod of the diapsid family. Tetrapod means four-limbed vertebrate. Diapsids are classified as having two openings in the skull and is a classification that encompasses reptiles and birds. There is much fossil evidence to support the conclusion that ichthyosaurs were descended from terrestrial, or land-dwelling, reptiles. One such example is that Ichthyosaurs were air-breathers like cetaceans."
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Growing Herbs, 2004. An overview of how to grow herbs and the benefits of chamomile, lavender, and ginseng. 2,322 words (approx. 9.3 pages), 9 sources, MLA, AU$ 114.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses how herbs have been grown and used for centuries as folk remedies, fragrant additions to sachets and soaps, and as decorative elements in gardens. In particular, it examines how lavender, chamomile, and ginseng may all serve important health-related causes and be both a charming visual addition to the garden and an important contributor to a family?s health.
From the Paper "Traditionally, chamomile has been used to treat a wide range of symptoms. It seems to work as a mild sedative that reduces inflammation and irritation, calms muscle spasms and hastens general healing. It may also have some antimicrobial properties. In practice, this means that chamomile tea is great for calming the nerves before bed, and also helps with sore throats, coughs, stomach and tooth aches, and other common ailments of the throat and stomach that involve irritation, swelling, and spasms. It has also been used in a poltice for skin problems ranging from acne to burns to chickenpox. It is less well publicized, but still true, that chamomile can be combined with other more powerful herbs to help promote the onset of a delayed menstruation or to terminate a pregnancy in very early stages. It causes uterine contractions in large doses, but is also soothing to the pain associated with such contractions, making it a good combo herb for menstrual problems of all sorts."
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Lifestyle Hotels in Modern Shanghai, 2004. A comprehensive examination of the popular housing alternative in 21st century Shanghai known as lifestyle hotels. 3,182 words (approx. 12.7 pages), 17 sources, MLA, AU$ 148.95 »
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Abstract This paper develops the argument that a small lifestyle hotel will not be able to finance itself without a combination of apartment units; sales of the apartment units will serve to generate an enormous amount of the revenue required to pay back to creditors in comparison to just selling a hotel room on a daily basis. The goal of the paper is to determine the outcome of both approaches using the positive and phenomenologist approaches. A brief discussion of Shanghai?s current and future opportunities and challenges is followed by a review of these two methodological approaches to research. A determination of the appropriateness of one over the other is then followed by a summary of the research in the conclusion.
From the Paper "Background and Overview. According to Wakeman and Yeh (1992), the tenfold increase in Shanghai's population between 1842 and 1945 was largely a result of Chinese immigration from the countryside into the city, especially into the International Settlement (which doubled in numbers between 1895 and 1910 and doubled again between 1910 and 1930) and the French Concession (which almost tripled between 1895 and 1915 and more than tripled again between 1915 and 1930). ?From the 1850s on, each new social disturbance in the interior sent tens of thousands of Chinese refugees to Shanghai, seeking protection under the English and French flags? (Wakeman & Yeh 1992, p. 1). Since the Communist victory in 1949, however, Shanghai has emerged as an industrial giant whose products supply China's growing domestic demands. The city has also experience pronounced physical changes with the establishment of industrial suburbs and housing complexes, the improvement of public works, and the creation of parks and other recreational facilities (Shanghai 2004)."
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Cardiovacular Diseases and Lifestyle Factors, 2004. Explores the various lifestyle factors in developed countries that can have an effect on cardiovascular health. 1,753 words (approx. 7.0 pages), 11 sources, MLA, AU$ 90.95 »
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Abstract Detailed description of the effect of stress, substance abuse, diet and exercise on cardiovascular health. It is written in simple phrasing and medical terms are explained.
From the Paper "Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) result in 1/3 of global death in 1999. According to a World Health Organization report, CVD will become the leading cause of death in developed countries by 2010. Although genetic influence could trigger off underlying cause, most experts recognize that lifestyle influence still remain the most important factor for CVD through suppression of the disease. Lifestyle factors refer to options made on a daily basis with alternatives provided. A combination of unhealthy diet, sedentary lifestyle, high level of stress and drugs can prove detrimental to the cardiovascular system."
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Lifestyle Choices, 2005. This paper examines research about women's ability to make choices regarding life circumstances after childbirth. 4,500 words (approx. 18.0 pages), 18 sources, AU$ 286.95 »
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Abstract The paper evaluates the theories related to women's lifestyle choices in the modern world. The paper discusses how women possess the choice to work outside the home, to bear children and to balance these objectives as they seek to satisfy a lifestyle that is best suited for their own personal needs. The paper explains how in this context, women possess their own options and must act upon them whenever possible.
From the Paper "In modern society, there are a number of key issues that are commonly raised after women bear children, as they possess many choices after this life-changing event has taken place. For instance, it is a woman's prerogative to return to her place of employment, or she might consider remaining in the household as a stay-at-home mother. Regardless of her choice, it is critical that she is given the right to make such a decision from her own free will, regardless of her external environment. There are a number of theories that have evolved with regards to these circumstances and they reflect the ever-changing conditions of the modern world and the importance of a woman's ability to make decisions independently at all times. The following discussion will evaluate relevant research related to the ability to make choices regarding life circumstances after childbirth."
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Herbs and Athletes, 2006. A discussion on herbal supplements and their effects on athletes. 965 words (approx. 3.9 pages), 5 sources, MLA, AU$ 55.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses the negative and positive effects on athletes of herbal supplements. It looks at how most herbs are marketed to athletes with little or no solid data to back up the claims for improved performance, increased muscle mass, or enhanced energy on the field. It also suggests that more research on herbs, health, and athletic performance is needed to better assess efficacy and safety.
From the Paper "Sports-related uses of herbs include enhancing performance in prolonged endurance events, inducing muscular hypertrophy and increasing strength, decreasing body fat, speeding recovery, and improving performance in team sports (Bucci, 2000). Many athletes may use herbal products to try to aid in healing after an injury, to decrease inflammation, to manage pain, to stay more alert, and to boost immunity and optimize their chances of staying healthy in and out of season, enabling them to compete at the highest level."
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Lifestyle Advertising and the Breakdown of Rationality., 2002. A look at these concepts with reference to George Orwell's writings. 1,150 words (approx. 4.6 pages), 3 sources, AU$ 71.95 »
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Abstract This paper examines George Orwell's theme of how the tampering with language by the state project of power results in the emergence of double think as a form of the breakdown of rationality. The paper connects this to the popular acceptance of lifestyle advertising in capitalist society. What happens in this process is that a certain uniformity is molded and free choice is minimized.
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Lifestyle Values and Marketing Strategy, 2002. An analysis of the Marlboro cigarettes advertising strategy and how the company created its manly image. 1,000 words (approx. 4.0 pages), 2 sources, MLA, AU$ 57.95 »
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Abstract A look at how companies pitch their products to appeal to their customers' lifestyles. Theories of marketing and advertising strategies are examined. The Marlboro Cigarette company's advertising pitch of the Marlboro Man is analyzed in order to understand the link between products and lifestyles.
From the Paper "There are two significant steps how a customer decides whether he or she will buy the product or not. First, the product has a strong appeal if it is a primary need of the customer for its literal function. Second, customers will buy the product if they find their value or lifestyle is related to it; this one is that the product makers mostly will encourage to boosting the sales. Advertisement should be designed effectively to bring the product value to the primary need of the customers, as if they really need it, by exploiting the different side of customers? life, then finding catchy lines to persuade them (in seconds) to improve their style, to get more acknowledgement, or to be ?like the man on TV?."
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Anglo-Saxon Medicine: Herbs, Charms and Prayers, 2001. A comparison of modern medication to that of the past. 3,255 words (approx. 13.0 pages), 10 sources, AU$ 150.95 »
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Abstract An examination of Anglo-Saxon medication. The author looks at what Anglo-Saxons used as a form of medication, such as their use of herbs. The author compares medicine of today to that of the past.
From the Paper "At the time Beowulf was written, Anglo-Saxon medicine consisted of two primary components:some remnants of scientific knowledge (interwoven with Christian doctrine) left over from the Roman occupation and the pagan superstitions and magic lore that the Anglo-Saxons themselves brought from the continent. Their medical practices became a curious mixture of these elements which included herbal salves and tinctures, recitation of magic charms, and the invocation of Christ and the Saints through the Mass. Thus, armed with almost no factual knowledge of disease and its causes, no x-rays, no MRIs, and no synthetically produced medications, the Anglo-Saxons dealt with a compendium of medical problems similar to those which face the modern world today.'
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The Abercrombie and Fitch Lifestyle, 2004. Describes the advertising tactics of the Abercrombie and Fitch clothing store. 2,298 words (approx. 9.2 pages), 9 sources, MLA, AU$ 113.95 »
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Abstract This paper discusses the controversial advertisements of Abercrombie and Fitch. The paper points out the company's reliance on sexual images to advertise its products and the controversy this advertising strategy has created. The paper points out that, while using nude models to advertise clothing may seem contradictory, it is actually quite effective. The intent of these advertisements is to sell an image and then make consumers associate that image with the product. This is the objective of Abercrombie and Fitch and the reason for the controversy. The paper goes on to explain that parents and the general public feel that the image being sold promotes a lifestyle without morals or values and that these advertisements have too much influence on adolescent behavior. Attached after the bibliography are two of the advertisements described in the paper.
From the Paper "Starring an alluring, bare, sexy, young model, with her mesmerizing green eyes transfixed on an outlying point, one would naturally think that this sensual black and white photograph could have nothing to do with clothing. Her petite arms are crossed diagonally along her torso, with her hands covering each breast barely. Her long, wavy, brown hair is lying messily in front of one shoulder and behind the other. The look on her face is serious, seriously seductive, that is. She is wearing nothing, leaving only what is behind her hands to the viewer?s imagination. One shift of her fingers, and you just might see everything."
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Settings and Setup, Lifestyle and Prose, 2000. An analysis of "Wuthering Heights" by Emily Bronte and "Pride and Prejudice" by Jane Austen. 950 words (approx. 3.8 pages), 4 sources, MLA, AU$ 54.95 »
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Abstract The paper explores and compares the two works, "Wuthering Heights" by Bronte and "Pride and Prejudice" by Austen, and analyzes them based on biographical elements found in each book obviously drawn from their authors' lives. The character, themes and settings are also discussed.
From the Paper "The novels of Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte and Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen are vastly dependent on their settings to convey both character behavior, and the lifestyles of their respective authors. At first, from their opening paragraphs, one does not realize the gulf of difference that separates these works. Both begin with the leasing of a property to a man of some mystery. However the similarities end there."
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