Life Science Company News

ProfNet Expert Alerts Available on Winter Health Habits, Raising an Aging Parent, Adult ADHD and more

NEW YORK, Dec. 13, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- Below are experts from the ProfNet network who are available to discuss timely issues in your coverage area.  

You can also submit a query to the hundreds of thousands of experts in our network – it's easy and free. Just fill out the query form to get started: http://prn.to/queryform 

EXPERT ALERTS 

  • Start These Winter Health Habits Now
  • Use Mindfulness to Practice Year-Round Gratitude
  • Raising an Aging Parent
  • Why Adult ADHD Is On the Rise
  • Photosensitive Epilepsy Triggers
  • Photosensitive epilepsy in children and adolescents

MEDIA JOBS 

OTHER NEWS & RESOURCES 

  • Year-End Review: Top Social Media Campaigns of 2019
  • Blog Profiles: Personal Growth Blogs

------------------------------------------------------------------- 

EXPERT ALERTS: 

Start These Winter Health Habits Now
Holistic Physician and Author
Dr. Bradley Nelson
"1) Eat for Energy – When our vibrations are low, we often turn to 'comfort foods,' but the irony is that most of these so-called foods of comfort, while perhaps initially pleasant to the palate, can have a net-negative effect on our emotional healing. On the other hand, think of how great you feel when you do a cleanse or go a few days eating fresh, locally-sourced fruits, vegetables, and lean meats while drinking lots of water. When you adopt this way of eating and are mindful of what you put into your body, you are living in harmony with your highest self. 2) Move More, Eat Less – Thirty minutes of moderate exercise each day will greatly improve your strength and stamina, and if partnered with mindful meditation it can keep your brain free from clutter. Just three 10-minute walks throughout the day can help keep you physically fit and emotionally strong. 3) Embrace Gratitude – Most of us have found ourselves in a downward spiral of negativity. A nearly perfect lifeline to pull yourself out of the pity party and approach your higher self is gratitude: 99 percent of the time, you will find that your life is not as bad as you are currently viewing it. Keeping a gratitude journal keeps negativity at bay. 4) Let Go of the Past – One of the most important steps on your way to becoming your highest self may be simply to let things go; in other words, practice acceptance. Some people and situations are never going to change, and if you continue to fight against that, you are just wasting energy on this resistance persistence."
Veteran holistic physician Dr. Bradley Nelson is one of the world's foremost experts on natural methods of achieving wellness. He has certified thousands of practitioners worldwide to help people overcome physical, mental and emotional discomfort of all kinds by releasing their emotional baggage. His best-selling book "The Emotion Code" provides step-by-step instructions for working with the body's healing power. A newly revised and expanded edition of "The Emotion Code" is now available (May 2019, St. Martin's Press). For more information and a free Emotion Code Starter Kit, visit www.emotioncodegift.com.
Online Press Kit: http://drbradleynelson.onlinepresskit247.com 
Websites: www.DrBradleyNelson.com and www.DiscoverHealing.com 
Contact: Jennifer Thomas, jennifer.wasabi10@gmail.com

Use Mindfulness to Practice Year-Round Gratitude
Julie Potiker
Author, Mindfulness Expert
Mindful Methods for Life
"A simple way to get started with your very own gratitude practice is to keep a journal. Visit your favorite bookstore or craft store and pick out a journal that inspires you. Keep it by your toothbrush for easy access. Make yourself write longhand instead of typing on a device. The physical act of writing has more benefits for your neural health than typing on a keyboard. But if typing on a keyboard is the only way you are comfortable doing it, type away! It's better to type than not doing it at all. Notice times when you feel joy during the day. Take in that good mental state for a couple of breaths, allowing it to turn into a neural trait. What fires together wires together! Before you go to bed at night, answer these two questions in your journal: What are you grateful for today? What did you enjoy today?"
Author and mindfulness expert Julie Potiker is an attorney who began her serious study and investigation of mindfulness after graduating from the Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction program at the University of California, San Diego. She was trained by Kristin Neff, Christopher Germer and UCSD as a Mindful Self-Compassion Teacher. She went on to study with Rick Hanson, becoming a graduate of his Positive Neuroplasticity Training Professional Course. Potiker also completed Brené Brown's Living Brave Semester. Now, she shares these and other mindfulness techniques with the world through her Mindful Methods for Life trainings and her new book: "Life Falls Apart, but You Don't Have To: Mindful Methods for Staying Calm In the Midst of Chaos." She holds a B.G.S. from the University of Michigan and a J.D. from George Washington University. Visit www.MindfulMethodsForLife.com.
Online Press Kit: www.JuliePotiker.OnlinePressKit247.com 
Website: www.MindfulMethodsForLife.com 
Contact: Jennifer Thomas, jennifer.wasabi10@gmail.com

Raising an Aging Parent
Dr. Ken Druck
Author, clinical psychologist
"If we're fortunate, we're getting older. How we deal with aging defines the quality of our lives more than most of us realize. How we show up for our aging parents — whether we have been 'good' sons or daughters and 'raised' our parents up in their time of need — matters in the larger scheme of things. The second half of life is as critical to the character and quality of our lives as the first."
Dr. Ken Druck is an authority on courageous living and author of the new book "Raising an Aging Parent: Guidelines for Families in the Second Half of Life." A best-selling author and mental health expert, he has spent four decades helping people grow more courageous, compassionate, and resilient through even the most severe adversity, tragedy, and loss. His pioneering work in psychology over the past 40 years has included Executive Coaching/Consulting, Visionary Leadership, The Psychology of Men, Parent Effectiveness, Healing After Loss, Resilience and, most recently, Courageous Aging, the title of his previous bestselling book.
Featured regularly in national and international news, including CNN, Huffington Post and The New York Times, Dr. Druck has shaped our worldview of what it means to live honorably, courageously, purposefully, and fully. He is widely recognized as a lifeline to the countless thousands of individuals, families, communities, and organizations he's helped. His body of work, including the founding of The Jenna Druck Center to honor the life and spirit of his daughter, set a new standard of bereavement care and healing following tragedies like 9/11, Columbine, Katrina, and Sandy Hook. He was awarded the "Distinguished Contribution to Psychology" and "Visionary Leadership" awards for his community service and lifetime achievements.
Dr. Druck holds a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology from Fielding Institute and a bachelor's degree from Hofstra University. He is a rock drummer who has jammed with bands including Blue Oyster Cult, as well as a lifelong athlete who played soccer on the US Team in the Senior Olympics and was named "All New England" in basketball and soccer in high school. Voted "Best of YPO" as a speaker, Dr. Druck was known as "Dr. Ken" on Oprah before there was a Dr. Phil. He started the nation's first Community Editorial Board for the San Diego Union Tribune, and trains his service/therapy dogs. A member of the prestigious Transformational Leadership Council, he is active in civil politics and in environmental causes through the Sierra Club and Torrey Pines Association. Dr. Druck is well recognized as a community leader in San Diego.
Dr. Druck lives and maintains a small coaching and consulting practice on the ocean in Del Mar, California, writing and speaking prolifically on the subjects he loves, working on community service and civility projects, and enjoying the quiet beauty of his life with his fiancé, Lisette, their four-legged boxer, Jack, and their family. Learn more at www.kendruck.com.
Online Press Kit: https://kendruck.onlinepresskit247.com
Website: www.kendruck.com
Contact: Anita Jakab Kovacs, ibookinterviews2@gmail.com 

Why Adult ADHD Is On the Rise
Dr. John Kruse
Neuroscientist, psychiatrist, author
"[R]ates of ADHD may be increasing because so much of our environment (social media, screen time, poor sleep, poor diet, poor exercise) seems to encourage brains to develop in more ADHD-like ways."
John Kruse, M.D., Ph.D., is a neuroscientist, psychiatrist, and author of the book, "Recognizing Adult ADHD: What Donald Trump Can Teach Us About Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder." With 25 years of psychiatry experience, Dr. Kruse specializes in treating adults with ADHD. For more information, please visit www.drjohnkruse.com.
Online Press Kit: https://drjohnkruse.onlinepresskit247.com 
Website: www.drjohnkruse.com
Contact: Michelle Tennant, michelle@wasabipublicity.com 

Photosensitive Epilepsy Triggers
Jacqueline French, MD
Chief Medical & Innovation Officer
Epilepsy Foundation
"For about 3% of people with epilepsy, exposure to flashing lights at certain intensities or certain visual patterns can trigger seizures. When going to the theatre to see a movie containing flashing lights or watching a video online, people with photosensitive epilepsy should use caution."
Dr. Jacqueline French is a professor in the New York University (NYU) Department of Neurology and Comprehensive Epilepsy Center. She is the past president of the American Epilepsy Society (AES) and is the 2005 recipient of the AES Service Award and the 2013 Epilepsy Foundation Hero award. She has served on the AES board and is the past Secretary of the American Society of Experimental Neurotherapeutics. She has authored more than 200 articles and chapters, is the editor of three books, and lectures internationally on clinical trials and use of antiepileptic drugs.
Website: www.epilepsy.com 
Contact: Jackie Aker, jaker@efa.org

Photosensitive epilepsy in children and adolescents
Elaine Wirrell, MD
Co-Editor-in-Chief
Epilepsy Foundation
"For about 3% of people with epilepsy, exposure to flashing lights at certain intensities or certain visual patterns can trigger seizures. This condition is known as photosensitive epilepsy and it's more common in children and adolescents."
Dr. Elaine Wirrell is the director of pediatric epilepsy and professor of neurology at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. She is the co-chair of the Nosology and Status Epilepticus Task Force and a member of the Psychiatric Issues in Pediatric Epilepsy Task Force of the International League Against Epilepsy. She is also the chair the Pediatric Content Committee at the American Epilepsy Society and a member of the Medical Advisory Board for the Dravet Syndrome Foundation.
Website: www.epilepsy.com 
Contact: Jackie Aker, jaker@efa.org

**************** 

MEDIA JOBS: 

?Following are links to job listings for staff and freelance writers, editors and producers. You can view these and more job listings on our Job Board: https://www.cisionjobs.com/jobs/united-states/  

***************** 

OTHER NEWS & RESOURCES:

Following are links to other news and resources we think you might find useful. If you have an item you think other reporters would be interested in and would like us to include in a future alert, please drop us a line at profnetalerts@cision.com

  • Year-End Review: Top Social Media Campaigns of 2019. As 2019 comes to a close, it can be difficult to remember which social campaigns cut through the noise to stand out from the crowd. These brands hit the mark and left a lasting impression: https://prn.to/35ipuz2.
  • Blog Profiles: personal growth Blogs. Each week, we feature blogs we love to follow. This week is all about personal growth: https://prn.to/2PizJxD.

**************** 

PROFNET is an exclusive service of PR Newswire.

To contact ProfNet: profnet@profnet.com or 800-776-3638, ext. 1

Cision View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/profnet-expert-alerts-available-on-winter-health-habits-raising-an-aging-parent-adult-adhd-and-more-300974856.html

SOURCE ProfNet

- 14 Dec 2019
Back to overview

Enhance your business development with Biotechgate