Write an article based on this "Determine whether you are at risk for dysentery. Look for symptoms of bacillary dysentery. Check for symptoms of amoebic dysentery."
article: The largest dysentery risk is living or spending extended periods of time in areas that lack proper sanitation. If you live in or have recently visited an underdeveloped or developing country, your chances of contracting dysentery are much greater. If you have been high-risk area and feel any symptoms, contact your doctor immediately.  People who live in group housing or participate in extended group activities have an increased risk as these situations make the bacteria easier to spread. Outbreaks are common at daycares and community centers, community pools, nursing homes, jails, and barracks. Toddlers are also typically at a higher risk than adults. Bacillary dysentery generally appears within 1 to 3 days of infection and often has symptoms mild enough that no medical intervention is required. The most common symptoms are a mild stomach ache or cramps and diarrhea. Other symptoms may include:  Blood or mucus in your feces Severe abdominal pain or cramping Fever Nausea Vomiting Typically the more severe form of this condition, amoebic dysentery can last for several weeks. Left untreated, it may cause ulcers, eat through intestinal walls, and spread through the bloodstream into other organs. Symptoms may include:  Watery diarrhea Mucus, blood, or pus in your stool Severe abdominal pain or cramping Fever and/or chills Pain when passing stool Fatigue Intermittent constipation

Write an article based on this "Allow yourself to feel your emotions. Try to focus on other things. Think about how you want your relationship to be. Forgive yourself. Know your limits."
article: The first thing that you need to do in order to move past your partner’s emotional affair is to acknowledge how you feel. You may be experiencing a range of emotions, such as anger, fear, and sadness. Give yourself permission to feel these emotions and deal with them one by one.  Writing about your feelings may help. Try taking 15 to 20 minutes per day to check in with your emotions and write about them. You may also feel the need to express your emotions in other ways, such as screaming to express anger or crying to express sadness. Allow yourself to express your emotions in appropriate ways. For example, you might scream in your car while driving on the freeway alone or have a good cry when you are at home. You may find yourself dwelling on what your partner did to you, but this will not help you to move on. You have a right to feel the way that you do, but dwelling on your partner’s betrayal will only hurt you. Instead, try to distract yourself with engaging activities, such as:   Meditation. Meditation is an excellent stress relief strategy. It can help you to dispel unwanted thoughts and focus on the present instead. Try taking a meditation class to help you develop this skill.  Getting more exercise. Exercising is necessary for good health. It can also help to relieve stress and distract you from worries about your affair. Try to get at least 30 minutes of cardiovascular exercise every day. For example, you might include 30 minutes of walking, running, biking, dancing, or swimming into your daily schedule.  Making plans with your friends. Getting together with a friend can help you to relax and forget about your problems for a while. Go to see a movie, have dinner, or grab a cup of coffee.  Picking up a new hobby. For example you might try weight lifting, knitting, or cake decorating. Choose something that is fun and engaging for you. You may have an ideal vision of your relationship with your partner, or at least a vision of how it could be better than it is now. Think about this vision and try to identify what needs to happen in order to get there. What needs to change? What specific things do you or your partner will need to do differently? For example, if you want your relationship to be more honest and open, then you and your partner might agree to only tell each other the truth, even about little things. Or, if you want your relationship to be more spontaneous, then you and your partner might agree to surprise each other once every week, such as with a small gift or a surprise date. Before you can forgive your partner, you need to forgive yourself for any resentment you are feeling towards yourself. If you have identified something specific that you think may have caused your partner to have an emotional affair, then use that as part of your statement of forgiveness.  For example, if you think that taking on extra hours at work may have played a role in your partner’s emotional affair, then forgive yourself for putting work before your relationship. You might say something like, “I am human and I made a mistake. I put my career ahead of my marriage and my partner turned to someone else for companionship. I am upset that it happened, but I am willing to forgive myself and move on.” Although it is possible for a relationship to recover from infidelity, there are situations where this is not possible. Sometimes affairs continue or there is simply no trust left in the relationship.  If you cannot seem to get past your partner’s affair or if the affair is still going on, then it may be time for you to move on. Keep in mind that recovering from an affair takes time and persistence. If you and your partner are both willing to work on the relationship, then it may be even stronger in the end.

Write an article based on this "Know the symptoms of breast engorgement. Learn about complications of breast engorgement and when to seek help."
article:
When your breasts first begin to make milk after you deliver your baby, they may feel warm, swollen, and heavy, even uncomfortably so. Symptoms of prolonged breast engorgement after the first 2-5 days include:  breasts that are swollen, firm, and painful flattened, hard areolas (the darker part of the breast around the nipple). This can make it more challenging for the baby to latch on. breasts that seem shiny, warm, hard, or slightly lumpy to the touch (in more severe cases) a slight fever and/or enlarged lymph nodes in the armpits If you find the soreness of your breasts is worsening, or you notice redness or lumpiness to the skin, or pain or burning when feeding, you may have plugged milk ducts or "mastitis" (an infection of the breast).   Plugged milk ducts generally means symptoms of redness, lumpiness, and/or increased pain in the breast secondary to too much milk. It is basically a more serious form of breast engorgement, and you are also more prone to developing an infection in the breast when you have poor milk flow (called "mastitis").  Plugged ducts can also occur for other reasons (where the duct is truly blocked by something else, other than just milk), but this is less common. If you suspect you may have plugged milk ducts or mastitis (both have similar symptoms, but mastitis usually has the added symptom of a fever and/or chills), it is important to see your doctor promptly for treatment. You may need to take an antibiotic. If you do not treat mastitis promptly, it can turn into an abscess that could require disfiguring surgery to treat.