People often ask me if it is actually possible to live to age 100, especially if they had bad habits in the past. I always answer that while aging is inevitable, poor health is not. Read on to find the most effective ways to live to 100.

The past two years have seen a dramatic increase in the number of MRIs being performed on the breasts of women newly diagnosed with an early-stage breast cancer.

Results of a large U.S. study published this year found that men with severe OSA were 2 times more likely to die from all causes, than were men without OSA, and 50 percent more likely than men with moderate OSA.

More and more women who are otherwise healthy but who are at high risk for developing breast or ovarian cancer are choosing to have a prophylactic double mastectomy or oophorectomy as a precaution against cancer.

There are in fact quite a few things you yourself can do after breast-cancer treatment to help reduce your risk of developing this disorder.

Here are some things you can do to reduce your family's and your own personal exposure to chemical toxins.

When a woman is diagnosed with breast cancer, she focuses on 2 things--saving her life and, once it's confirmed that she'll live, then saving her breast. The threat of getting a disorder called lymphedema after she's through with treatment never enters her mind.

I'm delighted that President Obama has said he will not sign a health care bill unless it includes an emphasis on efforts to prevent disease as a way of cutting the future costs of health care. But where would all the money come from to pay for such preventive services?

An active love life is good for both your health and your relationship. In fact, people who enjoy regular intimacy live longer. To boost your libido naturally, here are 7 foods and herbs that heat up passion.

Breaking news from the Nurses Health Study! Breast-feeding baby for even 3 months reduces risk by 59 percent for women who have a previously diagnosed sister or mother.