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The low-fat home

Is your house making you fat? A feature in the May issue of Redbook says it might be by interfering with your ability to eat healthfully.

Here are some of the 18 “fix-it” solutions the article suggests:

– Hide away these appliances–the deep fryer, the bread machine and the ice cream maker. Replace them with a blender, a slow-cooker and a steamer.

– Rid your kitchen of clutter and appliance chaos. That way, you’re more likely to cook healthier foods at home than to order in unhealthy meals.

– Get a pretty bowl, fill it with fruit and make it a colorful centerpiece so this healthy food choice is within easy reach.

– Keep a small cutting board on the counter, the easier to find when you need to slice vegetables for snacks.

– Rearrange your living room so the television isn’t the focal point.

– Donate your fat clothes so it’s not so comfortable to abandon your diet and exercise.

– Set your table for portion control, using tall, skinny glasses for juice and salad plates in place of main-course plates so you aren’t tempted to eat too large a portion.

Fertility takes a hit

Couples looking to get pregnant through in-vitro fertilization may have problems if marijuana has been part of their past.

A study from the University of California at San Diego found that women who had smoked pot more than 90 times in their life had 27 percent fewer eggs retrieved and one fewer embryo available to transfer to the uterus.

Those women who had smoked just 10 times in their lives gave birth to babies that were 17 percent smaller, reports a story in the May issue of Elle magazine.

Men’s pot smoking also has an effect. When the men used pot, their spouses also had one fewer embryo for transfer.

Pot use among couples without fertility issues may be similarly affected, says James Grifo, director of the division of reproductive endocrinology at New York University Medical Center.

Workouts heal

Do you want to heal more quickly from an injury, a cold or surgery? Then exercise more and quit arguing, say researchers at Ohio State University in the May issue of More magazine.

Among people over age 50, those who worked out regularly healed from a cut as much as 10 days earlier than those who didn’t exercise.

As for couples who fought a lot, it took an average of two days extra for a blister to heal.