this did not hlep me at all im going to sue u
"things that the person doing the experiment changes"
NO; as far as our science knows, its not cureable yet.
lower intake of saturated fat and trans fat
Absolutely not. Leukemia is a form of blood or bone marrow cancer and is not transmitted through needles, sex or any other methods, unlike AIDS and HIV. I know because my loving husband has lived with it bravely for years.
Ultimately the person who has diabetes is in charge of managing it, due to the fact that diabetes is a 'lifestyle' disease. It is what we choose to do that causes us to have this illness. So with lifestyle changes it can be managed successfully
Yes there is at present no cure for Arthritis's. There are over 100 different forms of arthritis. Modern medicine and therapies as well as lifestyle changes put arthritis sufferers in a much better position then ever to control this illness.
Epilepsy is a neurological condition that disturbs the electrical functioning of the brain. It results in altered consciousness and seizures. The most common symptom of epilepsy is repeated seizures, the nature of which varies from one type of epilepsy to the other. As different people have different triggers, what changes may need to be made will differ from person to person. Lifestyle changes will not treat epilepsy as such, but will help people to have less seizures.
Four influences on health status are lifestyle, environment, age, and attitude. A person has no control over age, but they do have control over their attitude and lifestyle. Environment is something that some people have control over, and some people do not.
The four influences on health status are genetics (30%), environment (20%), healthcare access and quality (15%), and lifestyle behaviors (35%). An individual has less control over genetics, moderate control over environment and healthcare access/quality, and significant control over lifestyle behaviors through choices such as diet, exercise, and substance use.
Lifestyle is the way a person conducts their life
As with cancer, leukemia is considered 'permanent' - something that can go into remission, but will generally stay with you forever. There are ways to get leukemia under control (after 5 years of remission, medical staff usually consider leukemia 'cured'), depending on the severity and type of leukemia. The most common methods consist of regularly taking prescribed medicine for it and going through chemotherapy and radiation treatments. Afterwards, you'll have to see whether or not the treatment(s) successfully forced the leukemia into remission. If not, then the patient will have to go for another round, either until the leukemia goes into remission or until the medical staff decide that it is a hopeless case. Leukemia may, despite being in remission for a while, still resurface no matter the state your body is in.
high