Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Take Care of Your Eyes for the Future

Sunday, July 24th, 2011
Fashion eyeglasses that limit the lower part o...

Image via Wikipedia

There are many ways you can work to improve your vision. This is not something that you should take for granted and should do all that you can in order to maintain it and allow you to be able to protect it.

Why Protect Your Eyes

If you are looking to see your future and want to truly participate in UFX markets trading, then you will need to make sure you have the ability to see the tickers and know what is going on up to the minute to protect your investments. Here are some options to look at if your vision is faltering:

  • The most common way to correct your vision is with contacts and glasses. These allow you to be able to see very well without needing to have procedures that your insurance may not cover.
  • Corrective surgery is another option you may want to look at as well. Here you will be able to have close to perfect vision after going through a procedure and then not need to wear corrective lenses anymore.

In either situation it will still come down to eye protection and doing what you can to maintain healthy eyesight and not doing things that may damage or harm your eyes. If you are able to see well, but want to be abed to maintain that ability, you need to take care of the eyes you have and do what it takes to be able to continue forward in life with the sight that you do have.

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Control the High Cost of Eye Care

Friday, January 21st, 2011

If you wear glasses or contact lenses, you know exactly how expensive taking care of our eyes can be. Traditional health insurance usually doesn’t cover eye exams, glaucoma screenings, or corrective lenses. However, if you have a hard time seeing without glasses or contacts, it can dramatically impact your life to be without them. In some cases, it can even prevent you from driving a car or doing a good job at work. Let’s take a look at how vision insurance can help.

Vision Insurance Pays for Most Services

When you have vision insurance, it will pay for virtually every service provided by an optometrist. Whether you need a new eye exam, glasses, contact lenses, or x-rays, you’ll only have to pay a small percentage of the total cost. Instead of paying hundreds of dollars when you’re done with your regular vision screenings, you’ll only receive a small bill. Depending on your coverage level, it might be completely paid for! Take advantage of an online insurance quote today to find the best price on a policy that meets your specific needs.

Vision Insurance Can Even Pay for Lasik Eye Surgery

If you’ve always wanted to have Lasik Eye Surgery, vision insurance may be your answer. Many policies cover most of this cost. Just imagine how great it would be to not even need glasses or contact lenses anymore! Being able to see with perfect to near-perfect vision at all times is a dream many people with 20/20 vision take for granted. No more foggy glasses, dirty contact lenses, or squinting to see when you first get up in the morning! This surgery has been used by thousands of people including famous athletes and celebrities. Choose a feature-rich vision policy to help you pay for Lasik!

Don’t take your sight for granted! Shop around for a policy today to protect your vision.

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Best Links of August

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

http://www.gutefrage.net/picoftheday/bpoilspill.html

http://digg.com/story/r/How_Credit_Card_Companies_Make_Their_Money

http://digg.com/story/r/Should_We_Raise_Tax_Rates_on_the_Rich

http://digg.com/story/r/BP_hit_with_10bn_lawsuit_over_Texas_City_chemical_leak

http://www.gutefrage.net/picoftheday/carwrecks.html

http://digg.com/story/r/Telling_Swiss_Secrets_222_Billionaires_in_America

http://digg.com/story/r/REVIEWING_10_MILLIONAIRES_WHO_MADE_A_FORTUNE_AT_THE_FOREX

http://www.gutefrage.net/picoftheday/sporn.html

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What to Look For in a Finger Pulse Oximeter or Other Health Monitoring Device

Saturday, August 14th, 2010
Digitales Blutdruckmessgerät / Digital Blood P...
Image via Wikipedia

There are all kinds of medical monitoring devices on the market today. Some of them are very expensive and do all kinds of things. Others don’t cost nearly as much, but you won’t get as much functionality from them. When you’re looking for ways to monitor your health, one of the least expensive and easiest ways to do so can be through the use of a finger pulse oximeter. This device is simple and easy to use, and it can show you how fast your heart is beating and how much oxygen your blood is getting. That’s good to know if you have a medical condition, and also if you’re exercising.

When you look for medical monitoring devices like thermometers, blood pressure cuffs, blood sugar meters, and other items that can be used at home, make sure that you shop around. There are plenty of them that don’t cost a lot of money, but you’ll want to make sure it has a warranty and that it’s from a reputable company. Especially if you’re using it to closely monitor a health condition, you don’t want to get something that doesn’t work well or that you feel is too pricey for what it does. These devices are generally very affordable, but don’t automatically buy the cheapest one you find. Your health isn’t something you can put a price on.

Instead, look for the medical monitoring device that gives you the best value. That means buying the one that gives you the most features and the best warranty and convenience for the least amount of money. If you have a way to get a discount on it, that’s even better. Even though it’s easy to monitor some aspects of your health at home, you still want to make sure that you’re getting high-quality equipment that’s going to give you an accurate reading without a lot of hassle.

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Natural Treatments for Chalazions

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

Chalazions are hard cysts that develop in the eyelids as a result of blockage and inflammation of oil glands in the eyelid. Unlike their tiny cousins, sties, chalazions can get much larger than a pimple–so large, in fact, that sometimes they obstruct vision. The largest and worst of chalazions must be surgically removed. Symptoms of chalazions include swollen and tender eyelids that feel heavy, watery eyes, sensitivity to light, and large bumps under the eyelids that continue to grow as time goes by. Smaller chalazions are commonly mistaken for sties, but there is a distinct different: sties are painful. While they look much worse, chalazions are generally painless.

Despite their relatively painless state, chalazions can take years to go away without treatment. Even with treatment, the process can take months. Most chalazions will stay at a reasonable size, but the ones that grow too large can cause blurry vision in that eye, and in extreme cases, increase intraocular pressure enough to cause glaucoma. Astigmatism has been caused by large chalazions, as well. There are few treatments for chalazions, natural or otherwise, that are effective short of surgical removal by making small incisions inside of the eyelid. However, applying warm compresses to your eyes for 5 to 10 minutes several times per day can help alleviate the symptoms and may help prevent the develop of future chalazions.

Because there are over 100 oil glands in each eye and it only takes one being blocked to create a chalazion, there can be multiple chalazions in one or both eyes at any given time. People who tend toward getting chalazions may have them on their upper and lower eyelids, and have them return even after having a past case of them surgically removed. Some chalazions will never go away if you don’t get surgery. Chalazions can very rarely become cancerous, and all surgically removed cysts are tested with biopsies to determine that they are not cancerous. Due to the remote risk of cancer, as well as the risks of glaucoma and astigmatism, surgery is a better alternative than learning to live with larger chalazions.

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Natural Treatments for Blepharitis

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

Blepharitis is a chronic inflammation and redness of one or both eyelids. Symptoms include red, swollen lids, red eyes, a feeling of grit in the eyes, flaky skin on the top of the eyelids and sometimes in the eyebrows, cysts at the eyelid margin, and crusting at the edges of the eyes, particularly first thing in the morning. Some people with blepharitis get eye dryness, as well, and though the condition does not affect your eyes’ capacity to see, it often blurs vision due to a poor tear layer over the eye. Eyelashes can grow extra long and curled, or they may fall out and refuse to grow back as a side effect.

Chronic blepharitis can significantly damage your vision, decreasing it enough to affect your glasses or contact lenses prescription. Sometimes blepharitis can also cause sties–small painful bumps filled with pus–and larger cysts called chalazions to develop under and on the edges of the top and bottom eyelids. The crusting at the edges of the eyes can leave small ulcers that sometimes bleed after it cleared away, as well.

Those with Rosacea are more susceptible to developing blepharitis. Blockage of the oil glands under the eyelids leads to sties, chalazions and blepharitis. If you don’t have Rosacea, you can still get blepharitis by exposing your eyes to the staph virus. Staph blepharitis is contagious, and causes the eyes to ooze bright yellow or green secretions, matting the eyelashes and making the eyes feel sticky. Staph blepharitis is more common in women than men, and can start in childhood with recurring cases of it throughout life.

Blepharitis is treated and prevented in the same manner: a careful hygiene routine to keep the margins of the eyelids clean and to prevent the buildup of oils in the glands there. Gently holding a hot wet compress over the eyes for 2 or 3 minutes can help break down waxy buildup of oils in the glands. Compresses also help alleviate the painful redness and swelling of blepharitis; placing black tea bags, which contain tannic acid, over the eyes will help to kill off the staph bacteria.

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HEPA Vacuums – Are They Worth All the Hype?

Sunday, July 18th, 2010

For years, vacuum cleaner technology has been changing. Companies are always coming out with the latest and greatest things that are supposed to be better for cleaning. However, are those new gadgets really better? Some of them prove their worth over time, and others don’t. One of the most popular vacuum cleaning options today is the HEPA filter. HEPA vacuums have a special filter that’s designed to take out dirt and pollen and allergens that other filters would not be able to catch. Because these filters are supposed to do this, they’re advertised as being better for people with problems like asthma and allergies.

For moms, these kinds of vacuums are a good choice. They provide the opportunity to keep a home really clean and beautiful, and they allow family members with breathing problems to breathe a little more easily. It’s important that anyone who’s going to buy a vacuum check it out and see if it has a HEPA filter. Not everyone feels that these filters really make a lot of difference, but there will always be differing opinions. Only you can decide if you feel this filter is right for your family and helpful for your breathing.

Consider, though, that the filter certainly isn’t hurting anything, and vacuums with it don’t really cost more than vacuums that don’t have it. Rather than avoid it because you don’t think it will help, getting a vacuum with it is generally a better option. If it helps, that’s a bonus. If it doesn’t, you haven’t lost anything by having it in there. Be sure to read the instructions that come with your new vacuum, too, and see if you need to clean the filter periodically, or whether it needs replaced at specific intervals. That way, you’ll be sure to get the maximum benefit from your HEPA vacuum.

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