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Showing posts from March, 2021

Mental Health 101: How to End School Anxiety

  One way or another, most of us spend a good deal of our lives at school, dealing with it in multiple dimensions. It impacts our relationships with our friends and families, not to mention our-very-selves. If not properly addressed, the fear of failure that often manifests itself around exam periods might turn into a constant state of anxiety and continue to haunt us day and night even beyond formal education years.  Knowing how to overcome it, therefore, has an enormous potential to improve how much we make out of our most valued treasure in this life -- our time. I suggest you spare the next couple of minutes and read on to start the change today. Prioritize Education and Learning, Not The School Itself Answer me one thing first: Why do you go to school? As small kids, we started doing so because our families or caretakers wanted us to. And because everyone did the same, we never questioned, at least not initially, why we became a student all of a sudden. Those were the years when w

Pandemic Denies Cancer Patients Life-Saving Treatments

When Adrian Rogers (46) was diagnosed with colorectal cancer in the summer of 2018, the term 'coronavirus' was literally unknown outside a small group of scientists and medical professionals directly dealing with it. Only two-and-a-half years later, however, it was to push Rogers and millions of other people to death worldwide; and not necessarily because they were infected with the incredibly dangerous pathogen.  Rogers was forced to miss a scheduled, potentially life-saving operation in Manchester in April 2020 because of the overburdened health system in the UK and sadly did not live to see the next spring. The planned surgery could not go ahead because Rogers' immune system was already compromised because of the multiple rounds of chemotherapy he had received as a cancer patient and the doctors considered it to be too risky to place him in an intensive care unit with coronavirus patients post-operation.    "I definitely feel we wouldn't be where we are now if

Turkey Coronavirus Cases More Than Double in Three Weeks

Turkey Country Risk Map: Orange (High Risk), Red (Extreme Risk). Source: Turkish Health Ministry. The number of reported Covid-19 cases in Turkey has grown more than two-fold after three weeks into a "controlled normalization period" kicked off to ease the economic toll the pandemic has taken on the country's economy. There were a total of 22,216 positive results out of 201,215 tests ran on March 22, the Turkish health ministry said Monday. That was up 8.75% just over the day before and a shocking 124% compared to March 1, the day the country allowed the re-opening of a slurry of businesses including cafes and restaurants for dining in 64 of all its 81 provinces. According to official figures, 117 people died of Covid-19 on March 22, up from 69 on March 1. The latest tally brought the number of fatalities the country reported due to the highly infectious disease since the start of the pandemic to 30,178.      

Five Ways to Escape Lockdown Depression

After more than a year into the Covid-19 pandemic, it is still not clear when we could go back to the normal as we know it. Mentally, most of us have already had the worst episode of our lives but there is no guarantee that our hard-fought struggle will be over soon.  The chances are there will always be some level of unnerving measures everywhere we go outside our homes in the foreseeable future, even though, at the best, we do not wake up to the news of thousands of more deaths every day anymore.  So, it is time we adopt certain lifestyle changes to make sure we outlive this tiny yet incredibly cunning and dangerous virus as a perfectly healthy human being, both in body and in spirit. Here are five easy-to-follow suggestions: Fight the disease, not the measures Granted, all of us are tired and we do not want to be afraid or constrained any longer. We just want to be our old selves again. The thing is the price we might have to pay for forcing our way into it is too high. Any prematur