Aerobic exercise
Learning Center
Roseola
Learn about the causes of and home-care tips for this common viral infection that often affects children by age 2, causing a high fever followed by a rash.
Rubella
Learn more about the symptoms and prevention of this contagious viral infection best known for its distinctive red rash.
Testicular torsion
Sudden, severe pain in the scrotum could be testicular torsion. Learn about symptoms and treatment for this health emergency.
Tonsillitis
Learn about the causes and treatment of tonsillitis, a common cause of sore throat in children.
Traumatic brain injury
If a head injury causes a mild traumatic brain injury, long-term problems are rare. But a severe injury can mean significant problems.
Umbilical hernia
Learn about this condition in which your intestines create a bulge near your navel.
Viral gastroenteritis (stomach flu)
This condition, often called stomach flu, is usually harmless, except for infants and people with immunosuppression. Symptoms can usually be managed.
Whooping cough
Learn more about the symptoms, causes, treatment of this highly contagious, vaccine-preventable lung infection.
Walking for fitness: Staying motivated
Starting a walking program is easy. Sticking with it is trickier. To stay motivated, try these tips: 1. Set goals, such as walking every day or walking for a set amount of time. 2. Make walking enjoyable. Find someone to walk with you or simply soak in the scenery. 3. Vary your routine. If you walk the same route every day, boredom may set in. Instead, mix it up with several different routes. Just remember to be safe: Tell a family member which route you're taking.
Walking for fitness: Overcoming setbacks
Don't give up if your walking program goes off track. Get back in the game with these four tips: 1. Stop beating yourself up. Shrug it off as a temporary setback, even if it happens more than once. 2. Re-evaluate your goals. Make sure your goals are neither too hard nor too easy. 3. Get going. Just do some form of exercise today, even if it's only for 5 minutes. 4. Keep planning. Figure out ways to fit in a walk even if you're going on a trip, working overtime or juggling family duties.
Refine Your Search
Type
- All
- Disease (234)
- Article (62)
- Answer (46)
- TestProcedure (36)
- HealthTip (8)
- Video (6)
- Symptom (5)
- SlideShow (3)
Gender
Age
- All
- 02 months to 2 years infant/toddler
- 45 to 64 middle
- 19 to 44 younger
- 03 to 5 years preschool
- 06 to 12 years elementary/preteen
- 13 to 18 years teen
- 00 birth to 01 month newborn
- 65 to 80 older
- 80 and over
- 06 to 10 years elementary
- 29 to 40 middle
Focus
- All
- Clinical Treatment (19)
- Prevention (17)
- Home Treatment (14)
- Complication (11)
- Causal Risk Factor (10)
- Symptom (reportable) (10)
- Definition (7)
- Test (6)
- Risk factor (4)
- Unproven treatment (2)