Topic: Drexel University School Of Public Health
If your neighborhood provides opportunities for exercise with safe streets, sidewalks and parks, and has access to quality food markets, your risk for type 2 diabetes might be lower.. A study that appears in this month's Archives of Internal Medicine, shows ...
People who live in neighborhoods that promote physical activity and offer access to healthy foods may be less likely to develop type 2 diabetes, researchers say.. Their study included 2,285 people, aged 45 to 84, living in neighborhoods in Baltimore, Forsyth ...
People who live in neighborhoods that promote physical activity and offer access to healthy foods may be less likely to develop type 2 diabetes, researchers say.. Their study included 2,285 people, aged 45 to 84, living in neighborhoods in Baltimore, Forsyth ...