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What your favorite sleep position reveals about your personality & desiresBody language oftentimes reveals more about what were thinking and feeling than words do. Even your favorite sleep position can say a lot about your personality, what you fear and what you believe in. Buzz60’s Johana Restrepo has more.
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Sauna bathing for your heart healthIt's not a replacement for exercise but a sauna session results in some similar cardiovascular benefits. How a relaxing stint in the sauna is good for your heart -- and your mind.
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Expert discusses life in the Bay Area with coronavirus
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What your favorite sleep position reveals about your personality & desires
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Elderly man with Alzheimer's finds comfort with robotic cat
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Sauna bathing for your heart health
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New eye scan could help detect early signs of autism
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Top 5 teeth-cleaning mistakes that make your dentist cringe!
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The unique way South Korea is testing for coronavirus
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Pandemic vs. epidemic: What sets them apart?
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Being sleepy at work may make your colleagues not want to talk to you
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Why your butt looks the same no matter how many squats you do
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Is it really ok to eat a potato-a-day?
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Your pressing coronavirus questions, answered
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People are hanging eucalyptus in their showers for this reason
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Scientists examine what motivates people to achieve a goal
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Do we need to be worried about the coronavirus? "It is a new virus, and new viruses are unpredictable," said Dr. Arthur Reingold, head of epidemiology at UC Berkeley's School of Public Health.
One of the big unknowns is if coronavirus is transmissible on surfaces like door knobs or computers.
"The question is how long does it remain infectious on the surface. Is it a matter of days? Some viruses remain infectious on a surface for a week or more," Dr. Reingold said. "Others more like a day or two. For this virus, we certainly don't know and no one has figured that out yet as far as I know."
Should people in the Bay Area avoid things right now like postponing elective surgery or avoiding mass transit?
"I personally would not change any of those things for myself or for my family," Dr. Reingold said. "I don't think they need to change their habits. I am not changing my habits. I'll get on BART, I'll pick my wife up from the airport tonight. Within the U.S. right now, I am personally not planning to change my behavior at all," he said.
For international travel, Dr. Reingold said he will weigh the risk of getting quarantined somewhere, but he's not necessarily worried about getting sick himself.
Dr. Michael Ryan, Executive Director, World Health Organization explained the importance of those quarantines. "We have to keep this virus slowed down because health systems around the world, north and south, just aren't ready," he said.
Go here for the latest news, information and videos about the coronavirus.
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