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Added on the 20/03/2017 15:04:41 - Copyright : Wochit
Nina Agdal recently posted her latest magazine cover, but that wasn't the only thing the stunner shared with her 1.2 million Instagram followers.
Gizmodo reports certain bacteria spread by cat scratches and other animal exposures can sometimes have a dramatic impact on the brain. A new study profiles a group of patients with psychiatric illness who simultaneously showed signs of infection from bacteria called Bartonella. Bartonella bacteria aren’t usually linked to serious illness in people. But certain groups, like those immunocompromised, might be more vulnerable generally. The rod-shaped Bartonella bacteria can survive and replicate inside other cells, much like viruses. This ability allows them to evade conventional tests for detecting infection and makes it harder for antibiotics to kill them. Bartonella henselae is the most commonly seen infection in humans and causes cat scratch disease--also called cat scratch fever. Despite the name, B. henselae and other disease-causing Bartonella can be spread through dogs and other mammals, and parasites like ticks, fleas, and lice. I
Billie Eilish left a message to bodyshamers on her Instagram Story today after paparazzi photos of her in a camisole and shorts out in Los Angeles spread and got attention on social media. Eilish is known for wearing baggy clothes in part because she doesn't want people to sexualize her. MEGA/FCPAS On her IG Story, Eilish reposted blogger Chizi Duru's TikTok. Duru says in the clip, "Y’all gotta start normalizing real bodies, okay? Not everybody has a wagon behind them, okay? Guts are normal; they’re normal.
Public health officials haven't held back in linking obesity to worse outcomes for patients with the novel coronavirus COVID-19. But organizations such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are, under the guise of matter-of-factness, covertly fat-shaming the overweight. Body relationship coach Ivy Felicia says the messaging around weight and COVID-19 might negatively affect those at higher weights. HuffPost reports eating disorder therapist Shira Rosenbluth also takes issue with the weight loss campaigns public health officials are promoting right now. Telling higher-weight people they’re more likely to die, for them to be under that kind of stress, is obviously very unhealthy. Shira Rosenbluth Eating disorder therapist
Kelly Brook admits that she has "embraced" her body in the wake of turning 40.
American star Tyra Banks has revealed she is teaching her son to "love all body types".