Five Questions Important to a Man’s Health
If you’re a man looking to improve your health, you can start by answering these five questions.
If you’re a man looking to improve your health, you can start by answering these five questions.
A cancer diagnosis can be difficult to deal with. Knowing what to ask and who to turn to for support can help.
If you think you’re alone in feeling lonely, you’re not. Far from it, in fact. According to a U.S. Surgeon General report on social connection, as many as half of all Americans say they feel the same way.
If you’re a woman looking to improve your health, you can start by answering these five questions.
SCAN member Dave J. lives alone in a mountain cabin he and his wife shared before she passed away three years ago. Without his own car, Dave rarely leaves home. Family members are far away; most of his friends are gone. At age 79, Dave would have little contact with the outside world if it wasn’t for the virtual meetings with a group of SCAN members every Friday morning.
Turn to your SCAN benefits for help with loneliness and its challenges.
A patient portal at your medical group and your SCAN online member account are different in some ways and alike in others. But together, they give SCAN members a more clear and complete picture of their healthcare and more opportunity for better coordinated care.
Your One Pass fitness benefit became effective on January 1.* One Pass gives you access to thousands of gyms across the country. All you need is your One Pass member code to unlock your access to gyms and other fitness options.
The facts are clear. Women who have regular mammograms are less likely to need surgery to remove a breast or to need chemotherapy and more likely to be cured. And now, thanks to mammograms and state-of-the-art cancer treatment, most women with early breast cancer are expected to be long-term survivors. And yet, some women still put off getting a mammogram. Let’s look at the reasons—and see why these excuses just don’t add up.
“You must accept certain things in life. That doesn’t mean you like them. But accepting them relieves you of resentment that can cause a lot of problems. Then you can move forward in a positive way.” —Cheryl M., SCAN member and Peer Advocate
If you’re a caregiver who feels more stress than good cheer during the holidays, consider trying these seven stress-busters to create a more joyful holiday season for you and your loved one.
Taking these five steps to protect your heart during the holidays will make it less likely you have a heart attack, stroke or other heart problems.