Sara Moniuszko is a health and lifestyle reporter at CBSNews.com. Previously, she wrote for USA Today, where she was selected to help launch the newspaper's wellness vertical. She now covers breaking ...
You know the feeling. You’re suddenly woozy, feeling unsteady, your head starts throbbing while you’re in a vehicle, on a boat or an amusement park ride. Motion sickness doesn’t discriminate. And ...
The old wives' tale turns out to have some real data behind it.
Cars may be a modern phenomenon, but motion sickness is not. More than 2,000 years ago, the physician Hippocrates wrote "sailing on the sea proves that motion disorders the body." In fact, the word ...
For someone who suffers from motion sickness, traveling is almost guaranteed to be uncomfortable. Road trips don’t sound like an adventurous way to see the country; they sound like a drawn-out torture ...
For folks who are prone to motion sickness — that woozy, lightheaded, nauseous feeling when you get when moving in a car, ship, plane, or train — traveling is no fun at all. But a recent study from ...
Start with home strategies like eating bland meals and ginger, and escalate to medication if necessary. Credit...Eiko Ojala Supported by By Annie Sneed This guide was originally published on May 14, ...