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Volume, year and issue: fall  2004
issue 10.2

Friends, fun, fitness

Form a team and take the getfit@mit challenge

What does it take to start an exercise program and stick with it?

Will power? Motivation? Determination? A clear goal?

What worked for Ruth Fishbein was peer pressure.

 

In the spring of 2003, when MIT's Center for Health Promotion and Wellness sponsored the "Tour de MIT," a fitness challenge for MIT Medical employees, Fishbein, MIT Medical's performance improvement and risk management coordinator, joined one of the teams. "Before the fitness challenge, I did try to exercise," she says, "mostly walking, but I was not terribly consistent." Go to story

frosty leaf photo

Link to getfit section


Joanne Cavignano's co-workers in MIT Medical's Dental Service call her "the sergeant." It's a title the dental assistant wears proudly. Go to New Staff

Link to New Staff section


Link to New Staff section
Family Nurse Practitioner
Cambridge

Read more about Richard and others in their new roles at MIT. Go to New Staff

Link to News section


Link to News section

Registration is underway for winter wellness classes, sponsored by MIT Medical's Center for Health Promotion and Wellness. Go to News Article

Link to Ask Lucy


Link to Ask Lucy

Dear Lucy: Could the ability to belch on cue cause acid reflux disease? Go to Ask Lucy

Link to Avoiding the flu


Link to Avoiding the flu
It's in your hands

With this year's flu-vaccine shortage has come a barrage of flu-prevention tips, chief among them the admonition to wash your hands often.

Though it sounds like the advice you got from your mother in childhood, MIT internist and infectious disease specialist Howard Heller, M.D., says that "hand hygiene"-which includes frequent hand-washing-is one of the best ways to avoid not only the flu, but also colds. "Most respiratory viral infections, including influenza, are spread through indirect contamination," he explains. "Viruses can live on the surfaces of objects for several hours. So, when you touch a surface that has been contaminated by an infected person, and then touch your nose or mouth, you can spread the virus to your own body." Go To Feature Story

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summer 2004: issue 10.1

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