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  • NewsSimone Olivero

    Little girl dresses as Superman for school photos

    (photo: Reddit)

  • HealthSimone Olivero

    Mom backs down on anti-vac stance after entire family contracts rotavirus

    Kristen O’Meara got an ugly wake up call recently when not only she and her husband contracted rotavirus, but so did her three daughters. After doing some research prior to the births of her three children, the Chicago mom considered herself a devout anti-vaccinator. “I scoured everything I could possibly find about why vaccines might be harmful.

  • HealthSimone Olivero

    Young mom credits drinking water with helping her drop 126 lbs

    “I felt ashamed. I did not like looking in mirrors. It made me feel gross,” 23-year-old Natalie Burtina tells the Daily Mail. 

  • NewsSimone Olivero

    This is why you should never let someone kiss your baby

    There’s something about babies that make people act irrationally. “This is what happens to babies when been in contact with a coldsore,” writes Amy Stinton in a Facebook post accompanied by a shocking image of her 14-month-old son Oliver. “Oliver now has the herpes virus and will have this for life.

  • EntertainmentSimone Olivero

    Mom shares her struggle to drop 156 lbs

    Over the last few years, Casey Gemmel had been focusing her time and effort on raising her three kids. So much so that she didn’t even realize that she had been gaining weight.

  • StyleSimone Olivero

    'Don't try to belittle me to being my skin' says model Winnie Harlow

    Canadian fashion model Winnie Harlow is a lot of things. Since the beginning of her career, Harlow’s name has been synonymous with her skin condition and the fact that she chooses not to cover up the patches of depigmented skin found on her face and body.

  • HealthSimone Olivero

    Thumb sucking and nail biting may not be gross habits after all

    “Our findings are consistent with the hygiene theory that early exposure to dirt or germs reduces the risk of developing allergies,” Sears said in a press release. The study comes out of New Zealand’s Dunedin School of Medicine and looked at 1,037 kids born between 1972 and 1973. In the early years, parents were asked to rate whether their children were frequent thumb suckers or nail biters.