sex life

Financial incentives may help lose extra kilos--study

In a major breakthrough study that could help tackle the problem of obesity that has become a global epidemic, a panel of British researchers have found that bribery could help shed those extra kilos.

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According to the findings of the new monetary scheme introduced by scientists, money works as a great motivator when it came to shedding flab.

University of Sheffield experts, led by Dr. Clare Relton, conducted the novel research that was aimed at finding the impact of financial incentives on weight loss.

Dr. Clare Relton said, “The successful recruitment to this program suggests that a financial incentives weight-loss program may be acceptable to the general public and to NHS (National Health Service) employees, and to both men and women.”

Diabetes plays spoilsport with sex lives of older adults--study

As per a new study report by the researchers at the University of Chicago, U.S., middle-aged and older adults are very much sexually active, though; their sex life can get affected if suffering from diabetes.

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Men with diabetes are also at the higher risk of suffering from lack of sexual appetite and erectile dysfunction.

The study researcher Stacy Lindau, MD, associate professor obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Chicago Medical Center, said in a press statement:

"Patients and doctors need to know that most middle age and older adults with partners are still sexually active despite their diabetes. However, many people with diabetes have sexual problems that are not being addressed."

Quit smoking to improve erectile dysfunction, sex life--study

As per a new study conducted by the University of Hong Kong School of Public Health and Nursing, giving up smoking not just improves erectile dysfunction problem but also gives smoking-quitters a chance to enjoy a better sex life.

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To come to this conclusion medical experts at the University surveyed more than 700 men, suffering from erectile dysfunction, aged 30 to 50 over the three-year time period and provided some strong evidences that links quitting smoking with improvement in erectile dysfunction.

Sophia Chan, a professor who led the survey, revealed in a press statement that erectile dysfunction is “quite prevalent” in Asia and China.

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