WesWELL

September 12, 2008

WesEMT

Filed under: General — Lisa Currie @ 3:25 pm

An EMT training course is available through the WesEMT student group, a WSA-recognized organization. The training is geared towards qualifying students to take the state and national exams to become EMT-Bs (Basis life support technicians). The cost of the class is $500; limited financial aid is available. The course will be taught by Emily Masters.

Interested students are encouraged to attend the WesEMT informational session:

Sunday, September 21, 2008
5:00pm
Fisk 210

The class will run every Sunday thereafter from 5:00 to 9:00pm. Not all classes run the full four hours; others run late.

Contact Laurel Dezieck ‘11 at ldezieck@wesleyan.edu with questions.

Please note: WesEMT is NOT affiliated with WesWELL or the Davison Health Center. This information is simply provided as a service to the Wesleyan community.

September 8, 2008

Registration now open for non-credit fitness classes

Filed under: Fitness, Non-Credit Classes — Lisa Currie @ 1:13 pm

Kung Fu Kitties

Registration is now open for the non-credit fitness classes offered by WesWELL. Fall 2008 offerings are:

  • Yoga (6 sections)
  • Practical Self Defnese (2 sections) –> new this semester!
  • Hung Ga Five Animal Kung Fu
  • Meditation
  • Tai Chi
  • Temple Lineage Shaolin Kung Fu
  • Cardio Kickboxing
  • Mat Pilates –> new this semester!

Many classes are taught by Wesleyan students and alumni who are certified to teach their respective class. Each class meets for 12 weekly sessions, stating the week of September 14 and running through Reading Week, except during Fall Break and Thanksgiving Break. Fees vary and are payable by student account charge, cash or check at the first class attended.

Visit the Non-Credit Classes website for complete details on how to register, fees, equipment needed and all policies governing the classes.

Contact Lisa Currie, Director of Health Education at 860.685.2466 or lcurrie@wesleyan.edu with questions.

September 2, 2008

Dandelions & Mud Puddles

Filed under: Fun Stuff, Well-being — Lisa Currie @ 9:21 am

 

dandelion

We can see dandelions as a weed that invades the pristine beauty of our gardens.
Or, we can see it as a beautiful flower or a fluffy white ball to wish upon or as a source of nourishing food and drink.

We can see a mud puddle and see only dirty shoes, soiled clothes, and stained carpets.
Or, we can see it as a pool to stomp in, splash around in, and have fun.

We can feel a wind and worry about how it will muss our hair or toss leaves on our manicured lawns.
Or, we can close our eyes, let it massage our face, and imagine we’re soaring on an updraft like an eagle.

We can see a rain storm and see only that we will be drenched, depressed by the grayness, and that the warm rays of the sun will disappear.
Or, we can sing and play in the rain as if it was a water fountain, realize the raindrops are nourishing our gardens, and think warmly of the sun that still shines above the gray clouds.

How do you choose to view attending to your health?

As a chore? As something the government guidelines say you should do a certain number of minutes a day or in a particular combination of foods or by not doing this or not doing that? As a requirement to check off your “To Do” list, if you get around to doing it at all?

Or as a gift to yourself? As a way to keep your mind, body and spirit strong and functioning in a way that will help you reach your goals? As a means to the end of being a successful person who can give of themselves freely since their cup is filled to overflowing?

How do you choose to view attending to your health? It may make all the difference.

 

 

 

August 27, 2008

What East African distance runners can teach us about managing stress

Filed under: Emotional Health, Stress Management — Lisa Currie @ 11:04 am

As students have begun arriving on campus for the start of another exciting year, many of my colleagues have been sharing a common thought with you: it is a sign of strength — not weakness — to ask for help when you need it. Whether that come in the form of asking your RA about where an office is located or seeking out an academic tutor, asking for help is the best way to ensure your own success at Wesleyan and beyond. 

African runners

Now the Mayo Clinic reminds us that asking for help by creating your own support system is key to your health, by sharing the story of East African distance runners. Lessons learned?

  1. We need to take care of ourselves as did these runners.
  2. If we are isolated, if we are marginalized, if we are without a support system, we are at a profound disadvantage dealing with life’s stresses.

Stress is probably the most common health complaint I hear about from students; it’s even worn as a badge of honor by some. But dealing with life’s stressors — which will never completely go away, just change as time passes – is a skill that is best learned now when you’re in a supportive environment like a college campus.

Very simply put, stress management is about consciously choosing how to respond to what is happening in your life, rather than letting your stressors take charge. And your support system — your friends, family, Peer Advisor, RA or House Manager, professors, other campus offices, or whoever helps you — will make all the difference in your health and well-being personally and academically.

Wesleyan ResourcesStress Management

August 19, 2008

Better to be Fat and Fit than Skinny and Unfit

Filed under: Body Image, Fitness, Health News, Physical Health, Weight Loss & Gain — Lisa Currie @ 9:44 am

From the New York Times…

Often, a visit to the doctor’s office starts with a weigh-in. But is a person’s weight really a reliable indicator of overall health?

Increasingly, medical research is showing that it isn’t. Despite concerns about an obesity epidemic, there is growing evidence that our obsession about weight as a primary measure of health may be misguided.

Last week a report in The Archives of Internal Medicine compared weight and cardiovascular risk factors among a representative sample of more than 5,400 adults. The data suggest that half of overweight people and one-third of obese people are “metabolically healthy.” That means that despite their excess pounds, many overweight and obese adults have healthy levels of “good” cholesterol, blood pressure, blood glucose and other risks for heart disease.

At the same time, about one out of four slim people — those who fall into the “healthy” weight range — actually have at least two cardiovascular risk factors typically associated with obesity, the study showed.

To be sure, being overweight or obese is linked with numerous health problems, and even in the most recent research, obese people were more likely to have two or more cardiovascular risk factors than slim people. But researchers say it is the proportion of overweight and obese people who are metabolically healthy that is so surprising.

“We use ‘overweight’ almost indiscriminately sometimes,” said MaryFran Sowers, a co-author of the study and professor of epidemiology at the University of Michigan. “But there is lots of individual variation within that, and we need to be cognizant of that as we think about what our health messages should be.”

The data follow a report last fall from researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Cancer Institute showing that overweight people appear to have longer life expectancies than so-called normal weight adults.

But many people resist the notion that people who are overweight or obese can be healthy. Several prominent health researchers have criticized the findings from the C.D.C. researchers as misleading, noting that mortality statistics don’t reflect the poor quality of life and suffering obesity can cause. And on the Internet, various blog posters, including readers of the Times’s Well blog, have argued that the data are deceptive, masking the fact that far more overweight and obese people are at higher cardiovascular risk than thin people.

Part of the problem may be our skewed perception of what it means to be overweight. Typically, a person is judged to be of normal weight based on body mass index, or B.M.I., which measures weight relative to height. A normal B.M.I. ranges from 18.5 to 25. Once B.M.I. reaches 25, a person is viewed as overweight. Thirty or higher is considered obese.

“People get confused by the words and the mental image they get,” said Katherine Flegal, senior research scientist at the C.D.C.’s National Center for Health Statistics. “People may think, ‘How could it be that a person who is so huge wouldn’t have health problems?’ But people with B.M.I.’s of 25 are pretty unremarkable.”

Several studies from researchers at the Cooper Institute in Dallas have shown that fitness — determined by how a person performs on a treadmill — is a far better indicator of health than body mass index. In several studies, the researchers have shown that people who are fat but can still keep up on treadmill tests have much lower heart risk than people who are slim and unfit.

In December, a study in The Journal of the American Medical Association looked at death rates among 2,600 adults 60 and older over 12 years. Notably, death rates among the overweight, those with a B.M.I. of 25 to 30, were slightly lower than in normal weight adults. Death rates were highest among those with a B.M.I. of 35 or more.

But the most striking finding was that fitness level, regardless of body mass index, was the strongest predictor of mortality risk. Those with the lowest level of fitness, as measured on treadmill tests, were four times as likely to die during the 12-year study than those with the highest level of fitness. Even those who had just a minimal level of fitness had half the risk of dying compared with those who were least fit.

During the test, the treadmill moved at a brisk walking pace as the grade increased each minute. In the study, it didn’t take much to qualify as fit. For men, it meant staying on the treadmill at least 8 minutes; for women, 5.5 minutes. The people who fell below those levels, whether fat or thin, were at highest risk.

The results were adjusted to control for age, smoking and underlying heart problems and still showed that fitness, not weight, was most important in predicting mortality risk.

Stephen Blair, a co-author of the study and a professor at the Arnold School of Public Health at the University of South Carolina, said the lesson he took from the study was that instead of focusing only on weight loss, doctors should be talking to all patients about the value of physical activity, regardless of body size.

“Why is it such a stretch of the imagination,” he said, “to consider that someone overweight or obese might actually be healthy and fit?”

Use the comments section below to discuss this issue.

August 18, 2008

Stress and the Immune System

Filed under: Emotional Health, Stress Management — Lisa Currie @ 10:10 am

The new academic year hasn’t even started and perhaps you’re already feeling stressed out. Experiencing stressors in our lives may be inevitable, but how we respond to them is the key to keeping your stress at a manageable level.  Letting stress go uncontrolled can have a negative impact on our emotional as well as physical health.

A new study, discussed in Scientific American, indicates that the impact of stress may be greater on our physical bodies than previously thought, especially our immune systems.

It might seem counterintuitive, but Kiecolt-Glaser believes that stress makes our immune systems less effective because it actually elicits an immune response itself. Stress, she says, causes the body to release pro-inflammatory cytokines, immune factors that initiate responses against infections. When the body produces these cytokines over long periods of time—for instance, as a result of chronic stress—all sorts of bad things can happen. Not only does it hamper our body’s ability to fight infection and heal wounds, but chronic inflammation also increases our risk of heart disease, osteoporosis, and autoimmune diseases including type 2 diabetes.

What’s more, because regular stress causes a chronic immune response, it can also increase a person’s risk for allergies, which occur when the body elicits a chronic immune response against something that’s not really dangerous (like pollen). In her most recent study, announced yesterday, Kiecolt-Glaser found that when people are under lots of stress—for instance, when they are forced to deliver a speech or do difficult math problems on the spot—their allergies worsen over the course of the next day.

Read the full article here.

Discussion Question: Experiencing stress is not inevitable; it’s about responding in a manner that helps you rather than hurts you. What small steps can you take this semester to manage your stress more effectively?

Wesleyan Resources: Stress Management

August 12, 2008

Something Quotable for 8.12.08

Filed under: Quotable — Lisa Currie @ 9:32 am

“Freedom is actually a bigger game than power. Power is about what you can control. Freedom is about what you can unleash.” ~ Harriet Rubin

August 11, 2008

FYI: The WesWELL Resource Library is searchable online

Filed under: FYI, Services, Sexual Health — Lisa Currie @ 10:07 am

WesWELL Resource Library

The WesWELL Resource Library, located in Room 204 of the Davison Health Center, houses a collection of books, journals, periodicals, brochures, and videos on various health and wellness issues. Our stock of free safer sex supplies is also located in the same room. 

Many students access the Resource Library for personal information, research for a project, or to help a friend or family member.  Residence Life student staff may want to pick up ready-made “Bulletin Boards in a Bag”, the well-known brown paper “condom bags”, or even health-oriented posters for bulletin boards. A copier is available for making small quantities of copies of materials for personal use or for posting in your living area.

To search our online catalog of our books and videos, click here. Or from the main page of the Olin Library website, click on Departmental Collections, then WesWELL.  

The Library is open the same hours as Health Services, although WesWELL staff members are typically not present during evening and weekend hours. If you have a question, contact the staff at 860.685.2466 or by email at weswell@wesleyan.edu.

Click on FYI in the Categories list to view other informational posts about WesWELL’s services and offerings.

August 1, 2008

Wanted: Your Wescipes

Filed under: General — Lisa Currie @ 10:30 am

recipe

Presumably, since it’s summer, you have a few more minutes each day to spend on food preparation than during the busy-ness of the academic year.

With that hopeful attitude, we’re looking for students, faculty and staff who want to share their favorite healthy recipes with the rest of Wesleyan. And since we can’t resist adding Wes to the front of everything either, they’re our own little collection of Wescipes!

Click on the “Submit a Wescipe” link in the upper right corner (or go here) for the details on what information to send us. We’ll publish the Wescipes periodically throughout the year.  Be a WescipeCeleb!

And you can always click on Wescipes in the Categories list if you want to browse the archives for cooking inspiration!

 

FYI: The Davison Health Center houses three health offices

Filed under: Services — Lisa Currie @ 10:04 am
Davison Health Center
(photo: Olivia Bartlett)

The Davison Health Center, pictured above during a snowy March day, is home to three separate but related health offices. Functioning as three parts of a whole, these offices offer “one stop shopping” for the health needs of Wesleyan students.  All three offices are located in the Davison Health Center, 327 High Street, adjacent to the CFA Theater and Malcolm X House.

The three offices are:

WesWELL, the Office of Health Education focuses on prevention education on health issues, including this blog. You are likely to meet our health educator, Lisa Currie, and the Peer Health Advocates, a student peer education group, in your residential living area or elsewhere on campus offering workshops and discussions on a variety of health issues. Look for our annual Sexual Health Expo each spring, too! We also offer non-credit classes in yoga, meditation, Tai Chi, Kung Fu and more. You are also welcome to drop in the office to visit our Resource Library, pick up free safer sex supplies, or ask a question to help yourself or a friend.  The office is located on the second floor of the Davison Health Center.

Web www.wesleyan.edu/weswell
Phone 860.685.2466 
Email
weswell@wesleyan.edu or lcurrie@wesleyan.edu

Health Services provides confidential medical care for illness, injury, sexual health, travel consults, allergy, and more. All visits are included in your Wesleyan student fees, though there can be charges for lab tests and such. Led by medical director Dr. Davis Smith, and administrative director Joyce Walter, the large staff of Health Services can serve as your primary care provider while you are at Wesleyan and also work with your doctor at home as needed. Appointments are strongly encouraged, though walk-ins for urgent needs will be accommodated. Call Health Services at 860.685.2470 for an appointment or with your questions.

Web: www.wesleyan.edu/healthservices
Phone: 860.685.2470
Hours: Monday through Thursday, 9:00am to 7:00pm; Friday, 9:00am to 5:00pm; Saturday, 12:00pm to 4:00pm
Note: An on-call physician is available after hours when classes are in session by calling 860.685.2470 and selecting option 2.

The Office of Behavioral Health for Students (OBHS) provides confidential mental and emotional health support in individual and group settings. The office exists expressly to help Wesleyan students (undergraduate and graduate) to deal effectively with emotional, personal, interpersonal and situational issues which cause unhappiness, frustration and/or disruption to their lives.  Call 860.685.2910 for an appointment.

Web: www.wesleyan.edu/obhs
Phone: 860.685.2910
Hours: Monday through Friday, 9:00am to 4:30pm
Note: An on-call therapist is available after hours when classes are in session by calling 860.685.2910 and following the prompts.

 

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