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For those who are not very healthy, try using SG2000, a Home and Medical Spa .. Call us if you want to hear more about it...you can try it first. We have a spa centre in Kuala Lumpur that we can take you. With just RM 20.00 - RM 35.00 you can have a try and feels the difference.. Dont think of loving your money too much, think of your health which is more important..you can always find more if you are healthy.. HURRY..CALL US AT 013-4861990 OR E-MAIL US AT nordi_jef@yahoo.com

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Friday, December 25, 2009

SG2000 Home and Medical Spa

Do you Know?
A lots of sickness can be from the result of low body temperature syndrom. Man are warm blooded. Naturally, our body temperature should be at at 37 degrees C, irrespective of what the outside temperature is. Carl Reinhold in 1881 had conducted a test on the body temperature of one million people and foun that the average body temperature was at 37 degrees C.

Prof Ishihara Yuni said:
If you are having these sickness: cancer, heart attack, diabetes, obesity, depression or others, then your body temperature must be below 37 degrees C.

Book Review 1:
Sickness From Cold by Ishihara Yuni
He said:

  • If youre sick, then your body temperature maybe lower than it should be
  • You can become better if you increase your body temperature
  • If your normal body temperature lowers by 1 degree, our immunity system will become lower by 30%
  • Cancer will become active and started to breed very fast if your body temperature ia below 35 degree C
  • These cancer cells can be destroyed by increasing your body temperature to 39.6 degree C.
  • Therefore cancer can be cured through

Book Review 2:
Heat Treatment via Far Infrared by Dr Sano Kentarou
He said:

  • Coldness are the causes of many kind of sickness
  • Taking a hot bath in a hot tub is the easiest way to increase your body
  • To increase your body temperature through internal warming you have to stay in hot water for about 60 minutes
  • Heat therapy is known to help cure many diseases such as cancer: either lung cancer, breath cancer, liver cancer or pancreatic cancer.
  • Research have shown that to reduce these cancer, the body temperature have to be increased as follows: lung cancer - 32.2%, breath cancer-56.3%, Liver canser- 66.7%, pancreatic cancer- 42.9%,
  • Research have also indicated that cancer can better be cured if you are healthy
  • The use of Far infrared is also another way to increase the internal body temperature, thus also a good way of reducing cancer
  • therefore the frequent use of SG2000 ia also a good treatmentof cancer

Motivation to keep healthy

People can make poor decisions when it comes to health--despite their best intentions. It's not easy abiding by wholesome choices when the consequences of not doing so (e.g heart disease, diabetes) seem so far in the future. Most people are bad at judging their health risks: smokers generally know cigarettes cause cancer, but they also tend to believe they're less likely than other smokers to get it So, what does it take to motivate people to stick to the path set by their conscious brain? How can good choices be made to seem more appealing than bad ones? Making Good Health Easy By Laura Blue Thursday, Feb. 12, 2009 Times

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It's seven weeks into the new year. Do you know where your resolution is? If you're like millions of Americans, you probably vowed to lose weight, quit smoking and drink less in 2009. You kicked off January with a commitment to long-term well-being--until you came face-to-face with a cheeseburger. You spent a bundle on a shiny new gym pass. Turns out, it wasn't reason enough for you to actually use the gym. People can make poor decisions when it comes to health--despite their best intentions. It's not easy abiding by wholesome choices (giving up French fries) when the consequences of not doing so (heart disease) seem so far in the future. Most people are bad at judging their health risks: smokers generally know cigarettes cause cancer, but they also tend to believe they're less likely than other smokers to get it. And as any snack-loat predicting their future behavior. You swear you will eat just one potato chip but don't stop until the bag is empty.

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So, what does it take to motivate people to stick to the path set by their conscious brain? How can good choices be made to seem more appealing than bad ones? The problem stumps doctors, public-health officials and weight-loss experts, but one solution may spring from an unlikely source. Meet your new personal trainer: your boss. American businesses have a particular interest in personal health, since worker illness costs them billions each year in insurance claims, sick days and high staff turnover. A 2008 survey of major U.S. employers found that 64% consider their employees' poor health decisions a serious barrier to affordable insurance coverage. Now some companies are tackling the motivation problem head on, using tactics drawn from behavioral psychology to nudge their employees to get healthy. "It's a bit paradoxical that employers need to provide incentives for people to improve their own health," says Michael Follick, a behavioral psychologist at Brown University and president of the consultancy Abacus Employer Health Solutions.

...continue 3

It's seven weeks into the new year. Do you know where your resolution is? If you're like millions of Americans, you probably vowed to lose weight, quit smoking and drink less in 2009. You kicked off January with a commitment to long-term well-being--until you came face-to-face with a cheeseburger. You spent a bundle on a shiny new gym pass. Turns out, it wasn't reason enough for you to actually use the gym. People can make poor decisions when it comes to health--despite their best intentions. It's not easy abiding by wholesome choices (giving up French fries) when the consequences of not doing so (heart disease) seem so far in the future. Most people are bad at judging their health risks: smokers generally know cigarettes cause cancer, but they also tend to believe they're less likely than other smokers to get it. And as any snack-loving dieter can attest, people can be comically inept at predicting their future behavior. You swear you will eat just one potato chip but don't stop until the bag is empty. So, what does it take to motivate people to stick to the path set by their conscious brain? How can good choices be made to seem more appealing than bad ones? The problem stumps doctors, public-health officials and weight-loss experts, but one solution may spring from an unlikely source. Meet your new personal trainer: your boss.

...continue 4

American businesses have a particular interest in personal health, since worker illness costs them billions each year in insurance claims, sick days and high staff turnover. A 2008 survey of major U.S. employers found that 64% consider their employees' poor health decisions a serious barrier to affordable insurance coverage. Now some companies are tackling the motivation problem head on, using tactics drawn from behavioral psychology to nudge their employees to get healthy. "It's a bit paradoxical that employers need to provide incentives for people to improve their own health," says Michael Follick, a behavioral psychologist at Brown University and president of the consultancy Abacus Employer Health Solutions. Paradoxical, maybe, but effective. Consider Amica Mutual Insurance, based in Rhode Island. Amica seemed to be doing everything right: it boasts an on-site fitness center at its headquarters. It pays toward Weight Watchers and smoking-cessation help, gives gift cards to reward proper prenatal care and offers free flu shots each year. Still, in the mid-2000s, about 7% of the company's insured population, including roughly 3,100 employees and their dependents, had diabetes. "We manage risk. That's our core business," says Scott Boyd, Amica's director of compensation and benefits. But diabetes-related claims from Amica employees had doubled in four years. "We thought, O.K.," Boyd says now, "we have to manage these high-risk groups a little better.