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Health (1-year)
Health (1-year)
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List Price: $35.00
Our Price: $15.97
You Save: $19.03 (54%)

Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 months


Product Details

  • Binding: Magazine
  • Format: Magazine Subscription
  • Issues Per Year: 10
  • Label: Southern Progress
  • Magazine Type: Time magazine
  • Manufacturer: Southern Progress
  • Number of Issues: 10
  • Product Group: Magazine
  • Publisher: Southern Progress
  • Release Date: 2001-11-23
  • Studio: Southern Progress
  • Title: Health (1-year)
Avg Customer Rating: 3 stars

Product Description: Health is the smart woman's guide to life, covering beauty, well-being, fitness, and food/nutrition with intelligence, flair, and credibility. The magazine's lifestyle approach makes it a pleasure to read, not a duty. Health provides a sense of community along with empowering information, powerful narrative, and compelling art-all to reinforce the message that healthy living is the way to feel and look your very best.


Customer Reviews


5 stars To my health!!
This is my favorite health magazine. It has lots of articles with a little bit of advertising. Very beneficial with up to date knowledge. Love it!!


5 stars Women's Health
For so many years, women did not have information about their health issues in magazines or books. This is one of the best sources I have found for reliable information. Health [2-year subscription]


3 stars Renewing, but not ecstatic
I came to the site to renew, and will. I am only giving three stars because while I think that I routinely gain a great deal of useful information from the magazine, I don't like having to work my way through quite so much politically correct, definitely left leaning, verbiage to get at it. I haven't noticed much in the way of bias in favor of advertisers' products. Actually it seems fairly balanced that way. Of course they have advertising, and of course sometimes an article might mention something positively. That might actually mean that the product is a good one. I have noticed that products are criticized also. I subscribe to several magazines of this type so that I can gather information from multiple sources. All in all, I've decided that it is worth the subscription rate (though it annoys me some), but probably not worth the cover price.


4 stars Health Advice with Modern Appeal
Should you try out the hotel hot tub while on vacation or try the pool instead? This magazine has excellent advice for everything from travel concerns to fitness and beauty advice.

Recipes for natural salt scrubs with buttermilk mingle with the hottest advice on commercial beauty products. Do the new stick-on manicures work? What is the newest information on cancer prevention?

Dr. Andrew Weil has a 5-minute section with holistic-health advice where he explains why Wild Alaskan salmon and blueberries will keep skin youthful. Is the air in your home as clean as it could be?

Fun product pages offer seasonal comforts. For summer you may find yourself looking up beach blankets and fans. Special sections show you how to lose weight, even when on vacation. Interesting advice on how to beat stress and why you should find ways to increase the release of oxytocin.

The only thing in the magazine of concern seems to be the advice section which I read, but take some of her advice with a big pinch of salt. If someone thinks they are suffering from an addiction, they probably are. I'm at times rather surprised by her answers that seem to lean towards a casual approach to serious life-changing situations, although she seems to give women great advice about health issues when it comes to making them feel better about breast cancer or work situations.

~The Rebecca Review


3 stars lacks substance
This magazine could potentially be a great one filled with substance, but sadly, it reminds me of Real Simple: endorsing many products. Virtually most of the advice they shell out involves buying some book, or some other product. I like magazines that I can keep around for years, and refer back to them like a nostalgic memory. Maybe I'm the wrong demographic they're targetting (I'm a student), but I still think they could do better to balance the endorsements and real advice I can refer to. After all, it's a little dumb to waste money to buy the magazine, just so I can find more ways to buy things.