
How To Reverse Skin Thinning
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Dr. Andrea Suarez makes it easy for us:
Not so thin-skinned after all
Skin thinning (skin atrophy) happens when both the outer layer (epidermis) and the deeper layer (dermis) become thinner, which makes your skin fragile, easier to bruise or tear, and slower to heal.
Collagen and elastin gradually decline after your 30s at a rate of about 1% per year, fibroblasts produce less structural protein, hyaluronic acid decreases so your skin holds less water, and sun-induced enzymes break down existing collagen.
How to slow or prevent skin thinning:
- Sun protection: daily broad-spectrum sunscreen, sun-protective clothing, and avoiding tanning beds reduce collagen-destroying UV exposure.
- Don’t smoke: smoking damages collagen production and accelerates dermal aging.
- Enjoy a balanced diet: sufficient protein, fruits, and vegetables support collagen formation and help avoid nutrient deficiencies that worsen skin fragility.
- Avoid unnecessary steroid use: long-term topical or systemic corticosteroids can cause skin atrophy if overused.
Treatments that can help reverse or improve thinning skin
- Topical retinoids: prescription retinoids such as tretinoin and tazarotene stimulate fibroblasts to produce collagen, reduce collagen-destroying enzymes, and increase epidermal cell turnover, which can gradually thicken skin.
- Hyaluronic acid: topical hyaluronic acid can improve hydration and elasticity, and studies using mid-size hyaluronic acid fragments showed improvements in skin thickness and fewer actinic purpura spots.
- Lactic acid (ammonium lactate): applying 12% ammonium lactate twice daily for several months can increase epidermal and dermal thickness while smoothing the skin.
Hormonal approaches to do both:
- DHEA creams or supplements: topical or oral dehydroepiandrosterone can increase oil production, hydration, and skin thickness in older adults.
- Estrogen therapy: bioidentical estradiol hormone replacement therapy can improve dermal thickness and collagen, amongst other markers of skin health.
For more on all of this, enjoy:
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Want to learn more?
You might also like:
Signs Of Low Estrogen In Women: What Your Skin, Hair, & Nails Are Trying To Tell You
Take care!
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Bath vs Shower – Which is Healthier?
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Our Verdict
When comparing bathing to showering, we picked the shower.
Why?
For the basic task of getting your body clean, the shower is better as it is an entirely one-way process. Clean water hits your body, dirty water leaves it, and no dirt is making its way back.
Baths do not have this advantage, and if you enter a bath dirty, you will then be sitting in dirty water. You will leave it a lot cleaner than you entered it (because a lot of the dirt stayed in the bathwater to be drained away after the bath), but not as clean as if you had showered.
One could argue soap or equivalent will prevent the dirt re-sticking, and that’s true, but it’s true for soap in the shower too, so it doesn’t offset anything.
Additionally, being immersed in water for more than 15 minutes can start to have a (paradoxically) dehydrating effect on the skin; this happens not only because of losing skin oils to the water, but also because of osmosis, the resultant mild edema, the body’s homeostatic response to the mild edema, then getting out the bath and drying, leaving one with the response having now just caused dehydrated skin.
Baths do have some health advantages! And these come primarily from the mental health benefits of relaxation in warm water and/or generally pampering oneself. Additionally, some bath oils or bath salts can be beneficial in a way that couldn’t be administered the same way in the shower.
Best of both worlds?
In some parts of the world (Thailand and Turkey come to mind; doubtlessly there are many others) there are traditions of first taking a shower to get clean, and then taking a bath for the rest of the bathing experience. As a bonus, the bathing experience is then all the more pleasant for the water remaining just as clean as it was to start with.
However, if you do have to pick one (and for the purpose of our “This or That” exercise, we do), then it’s the shower, hands-down.
Want to read more?
You might want to also take into account how it’s still possible to have too much of a good thing:
Enjoy!
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Is it too late to get a flu shot?
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It’s almost spring. And while respiratory infections seem to have passed their peak many people are still getting sick.
So is it still worth getting a flu shot?
The short answer is “yes”. If you haven’t had one already this year, it’s not too late.
milan2099/Getty Flu season started early, could end late
Flu seasons are notoriously unpredictable. Temperature swings, population immunity, and new viral strains are among factors influencing how widely the virus spreads.
Australia’s flu season usually runs from April to October, peaking between June and September.
But this year was different. It started early. Laboratory-confirmed cases between January and March 2025 were almost 60% higher than the same period in 2024. Since then, numbers have dipped slightly compared to last year.
However, we could still see thousands more cases before 2025 ends if the season follows last year’s pattern, and extends well beyond October.
This year, influenza A has been the dominant strain across all age groups. Think of influenza A as the more common, quickly evolving type of flu that often triggers larger, more severe outbreaks. The other main type, influenza B, evolves more slowly and usually causes milder illness, although it can still be serious, especially for children.
Is it still worth getting vaccinated in August?
Absolutely. While flu activity usually declines after July, the number of laboratory-confirmed cases of flu shows the virus does still circulate outside the typical flu season.
If you’ve already had flu this year, natural infection offers some protection. But this is generally less reliable and narrower than vaccination. Natural infection cannot reliably provide immunity in older people, who have a much poorer immune response to infection. For younger people, although their immmune system mounts a strong response, it is against the specific influenza strain that has infected them, and gives little protection against other strains. This is why vaccination is preferable.
If you are still sick with the flu, current recommendations are that you should wait until you are recovered before getting a flu shot. This allows your immune system to generate a strong response to the vaccine.
Once vaccinated, it takes about two weeks to develop immunity. Protection is strongest in the first few months.
Pregnant women and international travellers can benefit from vaccination at any time of year.
How well do they work?
Effectiveness of flu vaccines varies year to year, depending on how well the vaccine strains match those going around. This season, the match appears excellent – about a 98% match (for key strains).
However, the vaccine doesn’t completely protect you from getting infected (no vaccine does). This is because levels of immunity and our response to infection vary from person to person.
Flu vaccines are generally 40–60% effective against experiencing a negative health outcome, for example developing the flu and attending a GP practice or being hospitalised.
So vaccination against the flu is particularly important for high-risk groups such as elderly people, young children, pregnant women, and people with chronic (long-term) conditions.
Are they safe?
Data about vaccine safety are reassuring. According to AusVaxSafety, a surveillance system that monitors vaccine safety, since Mar 31 this year about 197,950 people have reported their experience after a flu shot, and 82% reported no adverse reactions.
The most common were mild and short-lived, such as a sore arm, headache or fatigue. Only 0.3% needed to see a doctor.
You cannot catch the flu from the vaccine itself. This is because it contains an inactivated or “killed” version of the virus. This means it is not live and cannot cause infection.
Which flu vaccine should I get?
All flu vaccines in Australia this year are quadrivalent, which means they protect against four strains.
There’s an option called Flucelvax Quad, which is produced in mammalian cells instead of chicken eggs. There are also special, higher-dose formulations for older adults, such as Fluad Quad for those 65 and older, and Fluzone High-Dose Quadrivalent for those 60 and over.
Your health-care provider will discuss the best option for you.
Is it free?
Under the National Immunisation Program, the flu vaccine is free for:
- children aged six months to under five years
- pregnant women
- adults aged 65 and over
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people from six months of age
- people with certain medical conditions, such as heart disease or with weakened immunity.
Everyone else can pay about A$20–30 at GPs or pharmacies. If your GP does not bulk bill, you may also need to pay an out-of-pocket cost for the consultation.
Currently, Queensland is the only state offering free flu vaccination to all ages over six months. But that program ends on September 30.
So what’s the verdict?
The bottom line is that it’s not too late to get vaccinated. Even as winter eases, getting a flu shot can make a real difference, protecting both you and the people around you from serious illness.
Correction: An earlier version of the article contained out-of-date statistics from AusVaxSafety about the flu vaccine, and implied flu vaccines made in chicken eggs were unsafe for people with egg allergies, which is not the case.
Adrian Esterman, Professor of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, University of South Australia
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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Parsnips vs Sweet Potato – Which is Healthier?
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Our Verdict
When comparing parsnips to sweet potato, we picked the sweet potato.
Why?
In terms of macros, there isn’t much between them: parsnips have very slightly more fiber and sweet potato very slightly more carbs and protein, but it’s close enough to fairly call it a tie, as we’re looking at average numbers, and the differences are within each other’s margins of variation (since exact figures will vary from plant to plant, soil to soil, etc).
In the category of vitamins, parsnips have more of vitamins B9, E, and choline, while sweet potatoes have more of vitamins A, B1, B2, B3, B5, B6, B7, and K. Thus, a clear win for sweet potatoes in this round.
When it comes to minerals, parsnips have more phosphorus and selenium, while sweet potatoes have more copper, iron, manganese, potassium, and zinc.
Adding up the sections makes for an overall win for sweet potatoes, but by all means enjoy either or both; diversity is good!
Want to learn more?
You might like:
Carb-Strong or Carb-Wrong? Should You Go Light Or Heavy On Carbs?
Enjoy!
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The 7 Approaches To Pain Management
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More Than One Way To Kill Pain
This is Dr. Deepak Ravindran (MD, FRCA. FFPMRCA, EDRA. FIPP, DMSMed). He has decades of experience and is a specialist in acute and chronic pain management, anesthesia, musculoskeletal medicine, and lifestyle medicine.
A quick catch-up, first:
We’ve written about chronic pain management before:
Managing Chronic Pain (Realistically!)
As well as:
Science-Based Alternative Pain Relief
Dr. Ravindran’s approach
Dr. Ravindran takes a “trauma-informed care” approach to his professional practice, and recommends the same for others.
In a nutshell, this means starting from a position of not “what’s wrong with you?”, but rather “what happened to you?”.
This seemingly subtle shift is important, because it means actually dealing with a person’s issues, instead of “take one of these and call my secretary next month”. Read more:
Pain itself can be something of a many-headed hydra. Dr. Ravindran’s approach is equally many-headed; specifically, he has a 7-point plan:
Medications
Dr. Ravindran sees painkillers (and a collection of other drugs, like antidepressants and muscle relaxants) as a potential means to an end worth exploring, but he doesn’t expect them to be the best choice for everyone, and nor does he expect them to be a cure-all. Neither should we. He also advises being mindful of the drawbacks and potential complications of these drugs, too.
Interventions
Sometimes, surgery is the right choice. Sometimes it isn’t. Often, it will change a life—one way or the other. Similar to with medications, Dr. Ravindran is very averse to a “one size fits all” approach here. See also:
The Insider’s Guide To Making Hospital As Comfortable As Possible
Neuroscience and stress management
Often a lot of the distress of pain is not just the pain itself, but the fear associated with it. Will it get worse if I move wrong or eat the wrong thing? How long will it last? Will it ever get better? Will it get worse if I do nothing?. Dr. Ravindran advises tackling this, with the same level of importance as the pain itself. Here’s a good start:
Stress, And Building Psychological Resilience
Diet and the microbiome
Many chronic illnesses are heavily influenced by this, and Dr. Ravindran’s respect for lifestyle medicine comes into play here. While diet might not fix all our ills, it certainly can stop things from being a lot worse. Beyond the obvious “eat healthily” (Mediterranean diet being a good starting point for most people), he also advises doing elimination tests where appropriate, to screen out potential flare-up triggers. You also might consider:
Four Ways To Upgrade The Mediterranean Diet
Sleep
“Get good sleep” is easy advice for those who are not in agonizing pain that sometimes gets worse from staying in the same position for too long. Nevertheless, it is important, and foundational to good health. So it’s important to explore—whatever limitations one might realistically have—what can be done to improve it.
If you can only sleep for a short while at a time, you may get benefit from this previous main feature of ours:
How To Nap Like A Pro (No More “Sleep Hangovers”!)
Exercise and movement
The trick here is to move little and often; without overdoing it, but without permitting loss of mobility either. See also:
The Doctor Who Wants Us To Exercise Less, And Move More
Therapies of the mind and body
This is about taking a holistic approach to one’s wellness. In Dr. Ravindran’s words:
❝Mind-body therapies are often an extremely sensitive topic about which people hold very strong opinions and sometimes irrational beliefs.
Some, like reiki and spiritual therapy and homeopathy, have hardly any scientific evidence to back them up, while others like yoga, hypnosis, and meditation/mindfulness are mainstream techniques with many studies showing the benefits, but they all work for certain patients.❞
In other words: evidence-based is surely the best starting point, but if you feel inclined to try something else and it works for you, then it works for you. And that’s a win.
Want to know more?
You might like his book…
The Pain-Free Mindset: 7 Steps to Taking Control and Overcoming Chronic Pain
He also has a blog and a podcast.
Take care!
Don’t Forget…
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Guava vs Orange – Which is Healthier?
10almonds is reader-supported. We may, at no cost to you, receive a portion of sales if you purchase a product through a link in this article.
Our Verdict
When comparing guava to orange, we picked the guava.
Why?
Both are great, but it wasn’t close:
In terms of macros, guava has 2x the fiber, more than 2x the protein, and just slightly more carbs, for a tidy first-round win.
In the category of vitamins, guava is higher in vitamins A, B3, B5, B6, B7, B9, C, E, and K, while oranges are higher in vitamin B1, yielding a 9:1 win to guavas here.
Looking at minerals, guava has more copper, iron, magnesium, manganese, phosphorus, potassium, selenium, and zinc, while oranges have more calcium, making this round an 8:1 win for guavas.
Adding up the sections makes for a very clear overall win for the guava, but by all means do enjoy either or both, as diversity is best!
Want to learn more?
You might like:
What’s Your Plant Diversity Score?
Enjoy!
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Hanging Exercises For Complete Beginners & Older Adults
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Hanging (not the kind with a gallows) is great for the heath, improving not just strength and mobility, but also—critically—looking after spinal health too. Amanda Raynor explains in this video how this exercise is accessible to anyone (unless you have no arms, in which case, sorry, this one is just not for you—though hanging by your legs will also give similar spinal benefits!).
Hanging out
Hanging can be done at home or at a park, with minimal equipment (a bar, a sturdy tree branch, etc).
Note: the greater the diameter of the bar, the more it will work your grip strength, and/but the harder it will be. So, it’s recommend to start with a narrow-diameter bar first.
Getting started:
- Start with a “dead hang”: grip the bar with hands shoulder-width apart, thumb wrapped around.
- Aim to hang without pulling up; build endurance gradually (10–30 seconds is fine at first).
- Work up to holding for 60 seconds in three sets as a fitness goal.
Progression:
- If unable to hang at all initially, use a chair or stool to support some body weight.
- Gradually reduce foot support to increase duration of free hanging.
- Start with 10 seconds, progressing by small increments (e.g: 15, 20, 25 seconds) until reaching 60 seconds.
Advanced variations:
- Move the body while hanging (e.g., circles, knee lifts).
- Experiment with different grips (overhand, underhand) for varied muscle engagement.
- Try scapular pulls or one-arm hangs for additional challenge and strength-building.
For more on all of this plus visual demonstrations, enjoy:
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Want to learn more?
You might also like:
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Learn to Age Gracefully
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