BORO NEWS & UPdates
Why Kids Should Try Multiple Sports At a Young Age and What Sports Teaches Them
Kids should try different sports as there are many positive aspects that can influence your path in life such as learning team skills, becoming a great athlete, teaching children skills in careers when they grow up or providing them a career in sports.
Healthy Blood Donors Urgently Needed To Donate Blood
New Jersey Blood Services (NJBS) is hosting a blood drive on Thursday, August 6th between 1pm-7pm at St. Mary's Church in Hillsborough.
How to Gain Control of Your Own Habits
Our habits end up shaping our lifestyles. This is why it is very important to conscientiously keep track of which habits we want to keep in order to create the most ideal lifestyles for ourselves.
Hillsborough Township Public Schools Provide An Update On Corona Virus
Earlier today, Dr. Lisa Antunes (Acting Superintendent) provided an update on the township’s preparedness to keep our schools safe from Corona Virus.
New Year’s Resolutions May Not be as Impossible to Keep as You Think
The New Year is always seen as a way to start anew, and this year is also the new decade. Take this opportunity to not just start anew, but also to start fresh and positively to have the amazing year you want to have and now hopefully can achieve as well.
Walk With A Doc
Hosted by Medicor Cardiology, a cardiology group in the Hillsborough/Bridgewater community for over forty years, Walk with a Doc is a program created to promote lifelong cardiac health. Cardiologists Dr. Steve Georgeson and Dr. Parag Patel walk alongside community members every month to encourage heart-healthy activities.
Free Cardiac Screening For Teen Athletes
On Saturday, February 2nd, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital Somerset is offering a free cardiac screening for teen athletes. Sudden Cardiac Arrest describes electrical problems in the heart that cause a dangerously irregular heart rhythm, which prevents blood flow throughout the body. Although it is rare, young athletes are more than twice as likely to experience SCA as compared to non-athletes.