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420
Yavvanam Kaatesina Bewarse Username: 420
Post Number: 3729 Registered: 12-2006 Posted From: 213.134.253.158
Rating:N/A Votes: 0(Vote!) | Posted on Monday, April 14, 2008 - 11:33 pm: | |
<<nenu only barber shop la 2 months ki oka sari tv soottaa.. adi oka 20-30 mins>> PDA and rest of the time LaaafTaap muundu Ettukonee Masaala Sutaaava ~@~ |
Pda
Celebrity Bewarse Username: Pda
Post Number: 20633 Registered: 06-2006 Posted From: 129.138.250.120
Rating:N/A Votes: 0(Vote!) | Posted on Monday, April 14, 2008 - 5:56 pm: | |
adi kooda edo tappaka baa .. aa shop la musalodu cnn edataadu .. ippatike 8 hrs padukovataniki time salatam laa inka tv ante kattame baa Everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler. |
Tingari_xx
Yavvanam Kaatesina Bewarse Username: Tingari_xx
Post Number: 4841 Registered: 08-2006 Posted From: 76.109.180.176
Rating:N/A Votes: 0(Vote!) | Posted on Monday, April 14, 2008 - 5:54 pm: | |
//nenu only barber shop la 2 months ki oka sari// pda ba 2 months ki oka sari aa, u mechicho miser For everything , there is a first time and next time |
Andhramass
Celebrity Bewarse Username: Andhramass
Post Number: 19961 Registered: 07-2006 Posted From: 203.26.122.12
Rating:N/A Votes: 0(Vote!) | Posted on Monday, April 14, 2008 - 5:35 pm: | |
nenu only barber shop la 2 months ki oka sari tv soottaa.. adi oka 20-30 mins anthey naaaa మాస్ అంటే ఇష్టం, బెజవాడ అంటే ప్రాణం |
Rrc
Yavvanam Kaatesina Bewarse Username: Rrc
Post Number: 4323 Registered: 04-2006 Posted From: 70.103.105.131
Rating:N/A Votes: 0(Vote!) | Posted on Monday, April 14, 2008 - 5:32 pm: | |
In order to WIN u've to be in the game. Learn the rules of the game and play it better than any one else. |
Pda
Celebrity Bewarse Username: Pda
Post Number: 20632 Registered: 06-2006 Posted From: 129.138.250.120
Rating:N/A Votes: 0(Vote!) | Posted on Monday, April 14, 2008 - 5:28 pm: | |
nenu only barber shop la 2 months ki oka sari tv soottaa.. adi oka 20-30 mins Everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler. |
Andhramass
Celebrity Bewarse Username: Andhramass
Post Number: 19960 Registered: 07-2006 Posted From: 203.26.122.12
Rating:N/A Votes: 0(Vote!) | Posted on Monday, April 14, 2008 - 5:26 pm: | |
Too little sleep and too much TV can make tots overweight Babies and toddlers who sleep for less than 12 hours a day and watch too much television are twice as likely to be overweight by the time they are three, according to a new study. Researchers at the Harvard Medical School's Department of Ambulatory Care and Prevention found that sleeping less than 12 hours a day and watching more than two hours of television had a 16 percent chance of becoming overweight by age 3. "Mounting research suggests that decreased sleep time may be more hazardous to our health than we imagined," says Elsie Taveras, MD, assistant professor in Harvard Medical School's Department of Ambulatory Care and Prevention and lead author on the study. "We are now learning that those hazardous effects are true even for young infants," she added. The study team identified 915 mother-infant pairs from Project Viva, a long-term study of the effects of diet and other lifestyle factors on maternal and child health over time. nfant weight and measurements were taken at several in-person visits up to three years of age. Mothers reported how many hours their child slept per day on average at 6 months, 1 year, and 2 years postpartum. Parents were also asked to report the average number of hours their children watched television on weekdays and weekends. The combination of low levels of sleep and high levels of television viewing appeared to be synergistic and was associated with markedly higher BMI scores and increased odds of becoming overweight. "Although previous studies have shown a similar link between sleep restriction and overweight in older children, adolescents, and adults, this the first study to examine the connection in very young children," says Matthew Gillman, MD, SM, Harvard Medical School associate professor and director of the Obesity Prevention Program in the Department of Ambulatory Care and Prevention. Gillman is also the study's senior author. According to the researchers, these study results support efforts to reduce television viewing and to promote adequate sleep in efforts to prevent and reduce unhealthy childhood weight-gain. Children who are overweight are often at higher risk for obesity and related conditions, such as hyperlipidemia, hypertension, asthma, and type II diabetes, later in life. "Getting enough sleep is becoming more and more difficult with TV, Internet, and video games in the rooms where children sleep," says Dr. Taveras. "Our findings suggest that parents may wish to employ proven sleep hygiene techniques, such as removing TV from children's bedrooms, to improve sleep quality and perhaps sleep duration," she added. The study is published in the April 2008 issue of Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine. (ANI) మాస్ అంటే ఇష్టం, బెజవాడ అంటే ప్రాణం |
Andhramass
Celebrity Bewarse Username: Andhramass
Post Number: 19959 Registered: 07-2006 Posted From: 203.26.122.12
Rating:N/A Votes: 0(Vote!) | Posted on Monday, April 14, 2008 - 5:25 pm: | |
TV in bedroom linked to unhealthy habits in teens Teens who watch TV in their bedrooms are less likely to engage in healthy habits such as exercising, eating fruits or vegetables, and enjoying family meals, according to a new study. Apart from this, the study by researchers at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health, also revealed that such children also consumed larger quantities of sweetened beverages and fast food, were categorized as heavy TV watchers, and read or studied less than teens without TVs in their bedrooms. "The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that parents remove television sets from their children's bedrooms. Despite this recommendation, almost two-thirds of our sample had a bedroom TV, which appears to be a factor for less than optimal behaviour," said Daheia Barr-Anderson, Ph.D., M.S.P.H., lead author of the study. The researchers examined a group of 781 socio-economically and ethnically diverse teens as part of the School of Public Health Project Eating Among Teens (EAT) study on the basis of their television viewing habits, study habits, grades, diet, exercise habits, and family connectedness. Almost two-thirds of the participants had a television in their bedroom or sleeping area, and those who did watched four to five more hours of television every week. The results indicated that girls having a TV in their bedrooms tended to spend less time in vigorous activity each week than girls without TVs in their rooms (1.8 versus 2.5 hours). Also, they consumed fewer vegetables (1.7 versus 2 servings per day), and had fewer family meals (2.9 versus 3.7 meals per week). On the other hand, boys having TVs in their rooms not only had lower fruit intake (1.7 versus 2.2) and fewer family meals (2.9 versus 3.6), they also scored low on the grade point average compared with those who did not have TVs in the bedroom (2.6 versus 2.9). Barr-Anderson suggests that the first step parents can take to help their teens decrease unhealthy behaviours is to keep, or remove, a TV from the bedroom of their teen. Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, Ph.D., principal investigator of Project EAT noted: "Our findings suggest the importance of not having a television in a child's bedroom. When families upgrade their living room television, they may want to resist the temptation to put the older television set in their children's bedroom." The study, "Characteristics Associated With Older Adolescents Who Have a Television in Their Bedrooms," will be published in the May edition of Pediatrics, the official journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics. (ANI)} మాస్ అంటే ఇష్టం, బెజవాడ అంటే ప్రాణం |
Andhramass
Celebrity Bewarse Username: Andhramass
Post Number: 19958 Registered: 07-2006 Posted From: 203.26.122.12
Rating:N/A Votes: 0(Vote!) | Posted on Monday, April 14, 2008 - 5:23 pm: | |
Ritesh, a mechanical engineer, based in Pune, often complains that when he gets home every night from work, his wife Mugdha has no time for him. And there's Mehek, a BPO executive, who has erratic work timings. She thinks she is second priority for her husband Madhu Mehta. For some like Mugdha and Madhu, television has become an addiction. For Mugdha, the addiction is incidental. She quit her job to take care of her child. "I was too busy to watch TV earlier. Now that my child is old enough, I have a lot more free time. Since Ritesh is always so busy, my television set is my partner," she states matter-of-factly. Compatible schedules Narendra and Nisha Pillai are both TV addicts. Married for three years, this couple equates this to 'spending quality time together'. Since both work in media, their choice of programmes are similar. Fighting over the remote control is rare, they say. Nisha says they catch up on domestic matters during ad breaks. "I don't think television viewing is eating into our quality time. It's always us and the television. " iya and Milind Patil, learnt a lesson when they shifted the television set into the bedroom. "Then we were spending more time channel surfing than with each other and promptly moved the set out of our bedroom," says Rina. Three's a crowd For others like Halbe and his wife, the remote control was always a bone of contention with their college-going daughter. As a remedy, separate television sets were brought for each person in the house. మాస్ అంటే ఇష్టం, బెజవాడ అంటే ప్రాణం |
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