How targeted interventions can reduce risk
Targeted lifestyle changes can have a significant impact on your risk profile for cancer.
Targeted lifestyle changes can have a significant impact on your risk profile for cancer.
Drinking coffee can improve heart health, protect against Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, and protect against several forms of cancer. Here’s why you might want to consider adding a few daily cups.
Common contaminants may be increasing your risk of cancer and other dangerous diseases.
Radon gas is second only to smoking as a cause of lung cancer. Testing your home for this odorless, colorless, tasteless gas is vitally important to your health and the health of your family.
Microplastics are ubiquitous and have been found in the most remote parts of the world. Their ties to respiratory, digestive, fertility, and neurological issues, as well as several cancers, means it’s important to reduce your exposure.
Hypertension, or high blood pressure, affects one in eight adults aged between 20 to 40 worldwide,[1] and one in three adults between ages 40 and 59.
Inflammation is a normal response to infection or injury in the body, and is in fact a sign of the body working hard to heal itself.
Chewing tobacco and snuff don’t carry all of the same risks as cigarettes, but they still significantly increase the risk of several types of cancer.
Brushing your teeth twice a day keeps plaque and bacteria in check, which can help prevent dental problems such as cavities, gum disease, and oral infections.
Excessive exposure to the UV rays in sunlight is a known melanoma risk, but that risk increases significantly inside a tanning bed.
Catch shares cutting-edge science and simple actions that could change your future.
The Catch program, products, and services are intended only for maintaining and encouraging a healthy lifestyle and are not to be used for the diagnosis, cure, management, prevention, or treatment of any disease or condition. The Catch membership, products, and services should never be used for medication management or dosing decisions.