Public health messaging loves a good trope: just move. Doctors tell us to hit the gym, take the stairs, and obsess over ...
In an economy that's hardly sustaining any payroll growth outside of the healthcare sector, and amid persistent fears of ...
Someone asked “What’s your “I should’ve died but didn’t” story?” and people shared the experiences that really made them ...
Now, AI is rebuilding what was torn down, and it’s not building the same thing. To navigate the dust and noise of this ...
Buffalo’s Arakan Rohingya community was rattled after a disabled man’s death. “Our worry comes from future incidents that may ...
The Owensboro Human Relations Commission board has a goal of raising its public profile this year to bring more attention to ...
A new collection of essays looks at the tortured relationship between the United States and its workers. It’s called “Capturing Labor,” and it’s co-edited by Texas State University professors Jessica ...
Global levels of physical activity have not improved over the past two decades, despite widespread policy development and adoption, and large disparities persist across gender and socioeconomic groups ...
Dance teachers, health researchers, urban planners — they all have a desire to get people moving. But globally, exercise rates have remained stagnant.
The short-term pain is real, and we are not ready for it. The long-term picture, Stiglitz argues, is something else entirely.
Walking is low impact, accessible, and free. But does walking build muscle? In a study on global participation rates in sport, walking was found to be the most popular physical activity among adults ...