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White House chef says Obamas eat seasonal

WASHINGTON (AP)—The White House has fully embraced one of eating’s hottest trends—seasonal cooking with ingredients grown at home.

Presidential chef Cristeta Comerford credits the change in the food coming from the White House’s kitchen to Michelle Obama’s decision in 2009 to start a garden on the South Lawn as part of her Let’s Move campaign to encourage kids to eat healthier.

Comerford says the garden has also inspired her in her own home, where she planted a plot and she and her 10-year-old daughter, Danielle, cook together. Comerford herself lost 15 pounds last year.

Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:44

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Smart Spending: Physician, heal my doctor bills

by Christina Rexrode
AP Business Writer

NEW YORK (AP)—Few things make me feel as clueless as a bill from my doctor’s office.

I don’t recognize the abbreviations or understand the jargon. I can’t tell when I’m being charged too much. And there’s no screen on the wall, at least not at my doctor’s office, tallying the cost of each extra test I agree to or question I ask.

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SHOP AROUND—Doctors look over X-rays in Chicago. Even people who studiously comparison-shop for their digital camera or winter coat don’t always realize they should do the same for medical services. But prices can vary significantly, so it pays to look around. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast, File)

Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:44

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Pittsburgh AIDS Task Force offers three unique prevention programs for African Americans

PATF

The mission of the Pittsburgh AIDS Task Force (PATF) is to support and empower all individuals living with HIV/AIDS and prevent the spread of infection. In just four years, PATF has launched three unique prevention programs aimed primarily at African-Americans throughout the region. As a result, PATF has reached thousands of people and has received national acclaim for its efforts.

Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:44

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HIV/AIDS

This sixth segment, with a focus on HIV/AIDS, is part of an eight-part series on health disparities in the Pittsburgh region. These segments are the result of a collaboration among the New Pittsburgh Courier, Community PARTners within the University of Pittsburgh’s Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI; http://www.ctsi.pitt.edu) and the Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh. Pitt School of Medicine Assistant Professor Michael Yonas, DrPH, sat down with Esther Bush, president and CEO of the Urban League of Greater Pittsburgh, to discuss this month’s focus on HIV/AIDS among African Americans in Allegheny County.

EstherBush
ESTHER BUSH

Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:44

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Be the Change: HIV/AIDS Faith-Based Anti-Stigma Campaign

PAPrevention

An African American woman learns that she is HIV-positive at the same time she learns that her sickly 2-year-old son has AIDS. Having accepted Christ a few years earlier, she fears her church family will find out and reject her. A young African American man shares how most of his mother’s friends stopped coming over to her house and no longer invited her to theirs once they learned that he had AIDS and had moved back home to get help with his care. “They acted as if she could give it [AIDS] to them just by my being in her house. They stayed away from her because of me.”

Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 19:44

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