With the vacation season upon us, many of us start planning vacations and road trips to visit family and friends.
What a joy it is to finally check into your hotel room, have leisurely conversations over dinner or go sight-seeing with loved ones! Yet, let's be honest, not everything that comes with your vacation includes sandals, sandy beaches or sunshine.
During the course of a trip, sometimes we have to deal with a change in time zones, new and different foods or not drinking enough fluids. For some folks, this can occasionally lead to constipation. Best-selling author and international travel expert Joel Widzer, Psy.D, agrees, adding, "Even once travelers arrive safely at their destination, they often don't anticipate the possible effects of different cuisines and local foods. I always suggest they bring along a laxative to be on the safe side." There are several cures from home and constipation treatment.
Important tips to keep in mind that can help avoid becoming constipated are to stay hydrated, eat well-balanced meals and not ignore the urge to have a bowel movement. These are not only a good recommendations while traveling, but also good practices to follow at home. However, if you still happen to experience constipation, try Senokot tablets. There are several cures from home and constipation treatment.
Recommended by physicians and pharmacists for over 55 years, Senokot products contain a natural vegetable laxative ingredient that provides gentle, overnight relief from occasional constipation. Now available in a small, easy-to-travel package of four tablets, Senokot TO GO tablets are a convenient travel companion as we enter the vacation season. Please read full product label before use.
For more information, go to www.senokot.com.
Fat Chance: Diet Coke Fights Obesity?
For related articles and more information, please visit OCA's Food Safety page and our Millions Against Monsanto page.Overweight 6-Year-Old Vows To Change Lifestyle After Second Heart Attack
HOUSTON—Describing his second heart failure in the span of two years as “a real wake up call,” obese 6-year-old Nicholas Bleyer announced Tuesday that he was finally trying to turn his life around.Obesity rates rise in county schools
By the time students in Forsyth County reach high school, more than 40 percent of them are overweight or obese, according to a BMI study released by Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Schools.