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Home » Journal » Allergies, Seasonal Allergies
Seasonal Allergies Health Articles
November 9th, 2007 by Zuri Phillips
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Seasonal allergies can seriously impair your fun in the sun each year. However, knowing the difference between spring and summer allergies can help you identify your own allergens.
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November 2nd, 2007 by Lauren Michael
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The best protection is to avoid pollen by staying indoors in air conditioning during the season that most affects that person.
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October 29th, 2007 by Lauren Michael
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Ragweed season is mid-August until the frost kills the plants. With it affecting so many people, there are a lot of questions about this allergy.
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October 26th, 2007 by Lauren Michael
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Ragweed allergy symptoms can range from mild to severe causing most of these suffering from them to pray for rain—or frost—to end their misery.
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October 22nd, 2007 by Zuri Phillips
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If you are one of the 39 million Americans that falls victim to seasonal allergies, you know that pollen is not your friend. What else do you know about pollen?
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August 15th, 2007 by Kristin Deloise
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Do ragweed allergies keep you from living a full life? If so, you share your problem with millions of Americans. According to The Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America, ragweed allergies account for more than 75% of all allergies to pollen. Ragweed allergies can significantly decrease your quality of life, and even cause you to miss out on experiencing outdoor events and spending time outdoors.
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August 15th, 2007 by Kristin Deloise
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Does the site of your long grass make you feel sick? Do you dread mowing your lawn in fear of the consequences? If mowing your grass, or even the thought of having to mow your grass makes your eyes water and your nose start to run, you are not alone.
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August 9th, 2007 by Lauren Michael
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After long, cold, dead winter, most people really look forward to spring. It is the season of new life, and it is exciting to see trees budding, the grass turning green, and flowers opening their blooms. Most people can enjoy it—just not the twenty-six million Americans with chronic seasonal allergies.
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August 9th, 2007 by Lauren Michael
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Early to mid-August is a dreaded time for certain allergy sufferers. This is about the time ragweed season officially begins. Up to seventy-five percent of Americans with allergies to pollen-producing plants are allergic to ragweed. Ragweed season—to those sufferers—brings on a significant decrease in their quality of life.
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August 8th, 2007 by Samantha Kellog
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What are Seasonal Allergies? Seasonal Allergies are often known and referred to as hay fever and are often related to common allergens such as grasses and pollens, dust and dust mites, animal dander, molds, food sensitivities and stressors to the immune system.
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