TERRE HAUTE — You hate to throw away all those magazines you have laying around the house — after all, they cost money — but what do you do with them?
Well, does Volunteer Services at Union Hospital have a deal for you: Just take your magazines to their office on the first floor of the hospital and they’ll take them off your hands. You don’t even have to remove your name and address labels; the volunteers will do it for you.
After that, the magazines will be distributed to waiting areas in the hospital for visitors to read while they wait for an appointment or to find out how a loved one is doing. There’s only one rule: No magazines older than six months, please.
It’s a win-win situation. You get rid of some clutter while at the same time helping people pass the time during what is often a stressful situation.
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If you have a child who needs a sports physical for school, mark May 16 on your calendar. The Clay City Center for Family Medicine at 316 Lankford St. will offer free physicals from 3 to 7 p.m. that day.
The center, which is just across the street from Clay City High School, has been giving the free physicals for about 14 years now, says Nancy Hyatt, who’s the receptionist “and apparently the PR person now, too.”
On average, about 200 school-age athletes show up for the annual free physical day. “We have eight exam rooms, a doctor in every room and I control the front,” Hyatt said. “We have stations for height, weight, blood pressure and an eye exam, then the doctor checks you out.”
The center usually is staffed by two physician’s assistants and its medical director, Dr. Eric Beachy. Residents from Union Hospital’s Family Practice Center will be helping out with the sports physicals on May 16. The usual cost of a sports physical, by the way, runs from $70 to $100, Hyatt said.
You don’t even have to live in Clay County to take advantage of the physicals: “Anybody can come,” Hyatt said. “Just show up.”
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If you’re a college student, you’d better watch those keggers. There’s a small, non-published study out you may want to hear about. Seems that too much drinking — even in college students — may lead to an increased risk of heart disease.
In a small study of about 25 college students, an undergraduate researcher at the College of St. Benedict in St. Joseph, Minn., found significantly higher levels of C-reactive protein in heavy drinkers. C-reactive protein is a marker for inflammation that may be linked to heart disease.
The study, presented at a recent American Heart Association meeting, found a C-reactive protein level of 0.85 milligram in non-drinkers, 0.58 mg in moderate drinkers, and 1.25 mg in heavy drinkers. On average, C-reactive protein levels are 0.9 mg.
Moderate drinkers were identified as those who had two to three drinks once or twice a week. Heavy drinkers had three or more drinks at least three days a week or five or more drinks in one sitting at least twice a week. Those listed as non-drinkers had no more than one drink on no more than one day a week.
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Yes, you know you should get a colonoscopy to check for colon cancer. Yes, you know that getting regular checks are your best way to prevent colon cancer. Yes, you kind of keep putting it off because you just don’t like to think about how it’s done.
The June 1 issue of “Cancer” says some centers are using CT scans to screen for polyps in the colon that could develop into cancer. The virtual colonoscopy is not only non-invasive, a mathematical model comparing CT scans to more traditional methods of detection found it to be safer and more cost-effective while being nearly as effective in preventing cancer.
In the model, no screening resulted in 2,940 cases of cancer. Flexible sigmoidoscopy resulted in a reduction of 31.4 percent of that number; standard colonoscopy reduced the number by 40.4 percent; and virtual colonoscopy by 37.8 percent if the size limit was ignored.
“The best screening test for a given individual may well be the test they are both willing and able to undergo,” said the authors, who are from the University of Wisconsin. They added that virtual colonoscopy should be considered as “an additional effective option to increase overall compliance” in having the test done.
Features
Health Matters: Hospital will use old magazines
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Terre Haute museums keeping history alive
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Treat your valentine with a rose and song
A rose is a rose … until it is sent anonymously in February with a lyrical, heartfelt appreciation.
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Turn-of-the-century tea shines during season of romance
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Catfish tournament returns to Turtle Creek Reservoir
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Actors needed for 3D films to be shot in Bloomington
The Indiana University 3D Production Class is seeking local talent to cast in its 3D Student Film Showcase to be screened at IU Cinema at 6:30 p.m. on May 1.
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Rosedale students, staff to prove they’ve Got Talent
Rosedale’s Got Talent and a Country Rhodes Fish Fry make for an exciting day in Rosedale on Feb. 18.
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Terre Haute artist putting ‘The Good Housewife’ on exhibit in New Harmony
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ISU School of Music scholarship concert Sunday
Tickets are available for the Indiana State University School of Music’s 21st annual Wind/Percussion Scholarship Concert, scheduled for 4 p.m. Sunday in Tilson Auditorium in Tirey Hall.
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Fowler Park Pancake Breakfast coming up
The Vigo County Parks and Recreation Department will host the 26th annual Pancake Breakfast from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Feb. 18 and Feb. 19 in Fowler Park Log Barn.
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EIU readies love songs for Valentine’s Day
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‘Play It Again Sam’ to open at Old Town Theatre
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Traveling Civil War exhibit makes history personal
Civil War history will come alive for visitors to the Sullivan County Public Library who experience “Faces of the Civil War,” a traveling exhibition created and managed by the Indiana Historical Society.
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Dicky James and the Blue Flames give strong performance in Memphis
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‘All Dolled Up’ exhibit opens today VU’s Shircliff Gallery
“All Dolled Up,” an exhibition of handmade dolls, will open today at Vincennes University’s Shircliff Gallery of Art.
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Marshall Senior Diners’ Club staging ‘Movie Monday’
Senior Diners’ Club at Harlan Hall in Marshall will be sponsoring a “Movie Monday” at 1 p.m. Feb. 27 following lunch.
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Concerts: Feb. 9, 2012
An asterisk (*) indicates tickets are available through Ticketmaster.com.
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Butler Theatre to present version of ‘Tartuffe’ starting Wednesday
Butler Theatre presents a contemporary version of Moliere’s “Tartuffe” beginning Wednesday in Lilly Hall Studio Theatre 168.
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VIDEO: On the Banks of the Wabash far away …
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Story of homeland foundation of vocal group
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Original copy of 13th Amendment at Lincoln Library & Museum
A fully signed and recently restored copy of the Congressional resolution for a 13th Amendment to the Constitution, the official act that would abolish slavery in the United States, will be on display in the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library & Museum’s Treasures Gallery.
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RCAA member presents ‘Waterfalls’ at Vigo Library
February brings a stunning exhibit of waterfalls by photographer Spencer Young to the Vigo County Public Library in Terre Haute.
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River Wools’ Stitch Red/Wear Red part of First Friday events
Downtown Terre Haute’s First Friday is a monthly evening that encourages collaboration among downtown merchants, museums, galleries, and university and commercial venues.
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