Face Exercises
Face ExercisesTop of Mind with Julie Rose • Season 1, Episode 990, Segment 4
Jan 22, 2019 • 9m
(Originally aired:1/25/2018) Guest: Murad Alam, MD, Vice Chair and Professor, Department of Dermatology, NorthwesternUniversityFeinberg School of Medicine If you search for “face yoga” on YouTube, you’ll end up with so many videos of people contorting their faces in crazy wayswhile promising that you’ll look years younger if you follow suit. “Get the benefits of plastic surgery without going under the knife!” You’re right to be skeptical. Dermatologist Murad Alamsure was. And then he decided to do a scientific experiment testing the effectiveness of these exercises. Now he’s singing a different tune.
 Fear of Blood
Fear of BloodJan 22, 201916mGuest: Christopher France, PhD, Professor of Psychology, Ohio University  Up until quite recently, I refused to donate blood. I did it once or twice in college and nearly fainted both times. So I spent the next 20 years convinced I just couldn’t donate. But it turns out I can give blood, if I master the panic that rises in my gut when the needle goes into my arm and I see my own blood start flowing out. I’ve donated successfully a few times recently – so I know it’s possible. Fainting – or feeling faint – is the most common negative side effect of donating blood, but it’s actually very very rare. Yet, many of us think it’s common, and it’s a reason people steer clear of donating.
Guest: Christopher France, PhD, Professor of Psychology, Ohio University  Up until quite recently, I refused to donate blood. I did it once or twice in college and nearly fainted both times. So I spent the next 20 years convinced I just couldn’t donate. But it turns out I can give blood, if I master the panic that rises in my gut when the needle goes into my arm and I see my own blood start flowing out. I’ve donated successfully a few times recently – so I know it’s possible. Fainting – or feeling faint – is the most common negative side effect of donating blood, but it’s actually very very rare. Yet, many of us think it’s common, and it’s a reason people steer clear of donating.