IV Vitamin Therapy in Elizabeth, NJ | Juventee Medical Spa

IV Vitamin Therapy is a highly effective way to compliment and supplement your health and wellness regimen.

IV Vitamin Therapy in Elizabeth, NJ

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IV Vitamin Therapy Elizabeth, NJ

If you're like most adults, your parents probably loaded you up with vitamin C whenever you had the sniffles or a cold. Your younger self might not have believed it worked, but as it turns out, your parents were onto something. According to doctors, vitamin C is one of the most important vitamins to consume. It might not be the cure-all for the common cold, but it absolutely helps maintain your immune system so you can fight the cold quicker. Also known as ascorbic acid, vitamin C also protects your body from prenatal health issues, cardiovascular problems, eye diseases, and even wrinkly skin.

When your body lacks vitamin C for a long time, you're sure to notice. Though vitamin C deficiency is relatively rare in the U.S., adults who go long periods without it may get sick frequently and suffer from other immune system issues. In extreme cases, people may get scurvy, which causes a litany of issues like joint pain, bleeding gums, and depression.

Vitamin-C

B vitamins like riboflavin (B2), niacin (B3), folic acid (b9), and cobalamin (B12) play a crucial role in keeping you healthy and maintaining your overall wellbeing. If you want a healthier body, B vitamins are critical, as they are literally building blocks that help preserve your brain functionality, cell metabolism, and energy. For pregnant women, B vitamins in IV drips are especially important because they help your new baby's brain develop while in the womb. B vitamins have also been shown to prevent congenital disabilities. Plus, they help ease feelings of nausea, which is a big bonus for moms and dads alike.

When your body is vitamin B deficient, you're putting yourself at risk of many health problems, such as complications with pregnancy, nervous system disorders, amenia, and gastric cancers.

Vitamin-B

Like the other vitamins and nutrients on this page, magnesium plays an important part in your body's total health. As a cofactor or helper molecule, magnesium has a role in 600+ bodily functions, including protein formation, nerve function, gene function, muscle movement, and energy production. If you're having a stressful day or week, high-potency magnesium has been shown to have relaxation properties that help calm your nerves and muscles. Unfortunately, most Americans don't get enough magnesium in their diets.

When your body is magnesium deficient, you could be playing with fire. Magnesium deficiency has been linked to chronic health concerns like osteoporosis, diabetes, and even heart disease. If you're feeling unusually weak or suffering from irregular muscle cramps, a vitamin IV session from Juventee could be the solution you need.

Magnesium

Just about every health food and drink in the stores boasts high levels of antioxidants. That's great, but what are they? Antioxidants are substances shown to slow or prevent cell damage from free radicals. Free radicals are unstable molecules linked to inflammation, disease, and forms of cancer. According to the National Library of Medicine, antioxidants also act as hydrogen and electron donors, as well as enzyme inhibitors.

Most humans get some types of antioxidants naturally through eating and drinking. However, IV vitamin therapy is a much more effective way to fight back against free radicals with antioxidants. When your body lacks antioxidants, free radical production increases, which causes oxidative stress - a harmful situation linked to arthritis, cancers, strokes, and Parkinson's disease.

Antioxidants

Thankfully, Juventee's IV vitamin therapy in Elizabeth, NJ contains antioxidants that may scavenge and reduce the free radicals affecting your health.

Some additional vitamins and nutrients found in most IV vitamin therapies include:

  • Calcium
  • Amino Acids
  • Threonine
  • Arginine
  • Tryptophan
  • Vitamin E
  • Vitamin D
  • More

Treat Your Body Right with IV Vitamin Therapy from Juventee

If your goal is to nourish your body with nutrients and vitamins, Juventee's IV vitamin therapy in cityname, state is the key you need to unlock success. We believe that balance is key to your health and wellness, which is why our specialists employ the most innovative medical advances in our treatment options and products. Unlike other vitamin IV clinics, our focus is on providing you with a full range of health services to help you reach your full potential.

That way, you can satisfy your aesthetic, physical, and nutritional needs while positively impacting your emotional wellbeing too. If you're on the fence about getting healthy and re-discovering the joys of youth, contact our office today. It would be our pleasure to talk about your concerns and how our preventative, proactive treatments like IV vitamin therapy can help on your journey to health.

IV Vitamin Therapy Elizabeth, NJ

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Latest News in Elizabeth, NJ

Biden administration says closure of ICE detention center in N.J. would be ‘catastrophic’

The Biden administration is siding with a private prison corporation’s legal effort to keep an immigration detention center in Elizabeth from shuttering, claiming its impending closure would be “catastrophic” to federal immigration efforts.The U.S. Department of Justice in ...

The Biden administration is siding with a private prison corporation’s legal effort to keep an immigration detention center in Elizabeth from shuttering, claiming its impending closure would be “catastrophic” to federal immigration efforts.

The U.S. Department of Justice in a Wednesday legal filing calls New Jersey’s 2021 law banning all immigration detention contracts — the agency refers to the law as AB 5207 — unconstitutional and says closing the Elizabeth facility would harm the federal government amid an influx of migrants and closures of other detention centers around the nation.

“The lack of detention resources in New Jersey has already had a severe impact on national security, public safety and border security operations in a critical area of the nation. And if the Elizabeth facility is forced to close due to AB 5207, those severe impacts will become catastrophic,” wrote Robert Guadian, deputy assistant director for field operations at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

CoreCivic, the world’s largest private prison operator, runs the Elizabeth Detention Center, the only facility in New Jersey that still holds a contract with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to house immigrant detainees, a pact that is set to expire Aug. 31. CoreCivic in February filed a lawsuit against the state calling the 2021 New Jersey law unconstitutional, and it wants the judge overseeing the case to bar the state from enforcing the law as the case winds its way through the courts.

In the Wednesday filing — known as a statement of interest — attorneys for the Department of Justice say the judge can issue a permanent injunction in favor of CoreCivic.

They call the Elizabeth facility “mission critical” because of its proximity to Newark and JFK airports, which offer regular direct flights out of the United States and are “crucial” for removals, the filing says. It also says shutting down the center would lead to the possible release of “dangerous noncitizens.”

Without the Elizabeth facility, ICE would not only have to transport migrants to other facilities outside of New Jersey, but it would also spend more on agents’ overtime pay and travel expenses. The ICE facility in Pennsylvania is a four-hour drive from Newark airport, which would create 12-hour days for officers, according to Wednesday’s filing.

The federal government agrees with CoreCivic’s complaint that the state law violates the Constitution’s supremacy clause, which bars states from passing laws overriding federal statutes. A California law banning private, for-profit prisons and immigration detention facilities was gutted by a federal appeals court last year for violating the supremacy clause.

“New Jersey may prohibit immigration detention for those in its own custody, but it has no lawful interest in imposing that choice on the United States,” Wednesday’s filing says.

A coalition of advocacy groups called the federal government’s decision to side with CoreCivic “bitterly disappointing but unsurprising.” In a statement, they called on Gov. Phil Murphy and all elected officials to speak out against the Biden administration’s “attempt to undermine New Jersey values.”

Immigrant advocates spent years calling on officials to shut down New Jersey’s ICE detention sites — there were four until 2021, three of them at county jails — leading the state Legislature to pass a bill barring all state, county, and local agencies, including private detention facilities, from renewing, extending, or entering into new immigration detention agreements. While the bill awaited Murphy’s signature in 2021, ICE and CoreCivic renewed their contract for two years.

Murphy signed the legislation in August 2021. Within three months of the law going into effect, Essex, Hudson, and Bergen counties ended their long-standing contracts with ICE.

That left the Elizabeth Detention Center as the last immigrant detention center open in New Jersey. It can house about 300 detainees, and housed an average daily population of 156 people so far in 2023, according to ICE.

Activists want immigrant detainees to be released back to their families. But ICE will try to relocate detainees outside of New Jersey if the Elizabeth center closes, which the agency concedes will limit access to families and counsel and also slow immigration proceedings.

If other states pass laws similar to New Jersey’s, it would have a “near catastrophic impact on ICE’s ability to meet its mission,” attorneys for the federal government said in Wednesday’s filing.

Archdiocese of Newark opens third Mercy House in Elizabeth to help community in need

ELIZABETH, New Jersey (WABC) -- After opening its second facility last year in Jersey City, the Archdiocese of Newark has cut the ribbon on its third Mercy House location, dedicated to serving the community.The newest Mercy House, located at 249 Court Street, immediately began serving on Wednesday, meeting the needs of families in Elizabeth, who could use some extra help....

ELIZABETH, New Jersey (WABC) -- After opening its second facility last year in Jersey City, the Archdiocese of Newark has cut the ribbon on its third Mercy House location, dedicated to serving the community.

The newest Mercy House, located at 249 Court Street, immediately began serving on Wednesday, meeting the needs of families in Elizabeth, who could use some extra help.

"Whether it's diapers, food, clothing and also spiritual needs, some come broken and we have a front seat to miracles," said Mercy House Director Cheryl Riley. "We see the face of Christ in everybody, and we meet them where they are and help them."

The Archdiocese of Newark with the help of many parishes, raised money and collected household items to ensure this newest Mercy House facility remains stocked.

"We've got migrants and people in the community in desperate need," said Chancellor of the Archdiocese of Newark Sister Donna Ciango.

The new location is not residential, like Mercy House in Jersey City, but some of its clients were there Wednesday to toast the new location.

Without the help from Mercy, they had no home.

"I used to sit at the bus stop," said Mercy House resident Devern Jones. "I wasn't supposed to be there."

As they open the doors to the Elizabeth location, the Archdiocese is already at work on a fourth Mercy House in Bogota.

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Nine most expensive homes sold in the Elizabeth area, Sept. 11-17

A house in Elizabeth that sold for $839,000 tops the list of the most expensive residential real estate sales in Elizabeth area in the past week.In total, 11 residential real estate sales were recorded in the area during the past week, with an average price of $440,818. The average price per square foot was $322.The prices in the list below concern real estate sales where the title was recorded during the week of Sep. 11 even if the property may have been sold earlier.9. $306,000, condominium at 969 South Street...

A house in Elizabeth that sold for $839,000 tops the list of the most expensive residential real estate sales in Elizabeth area in the past week.

In total, 11 residential real estate sales were recorded in the area during the past week, with an average price of $440,818. The average price per square foot was $322.

The prices in the list below concern real estate sales where the title was recorded during the week of Sep. 11 even if the property may have been sold earlier.

9. $306,000, condominium at 969 South Street

The 964 square-foot condominium at 969 South Street, Elizabeth, has been sold. The transfer of ownership was settled in September and the total purchase price was $306,000, $317 per square foot. The condominium was built in 2007. The deal was finalized on Sep. 5.

8. $370,000, single-family residence at 191 La Grande Ave.

The sale of the single-family house at 191 La Grande Ave., Elizabeth, has been finalized. The price was $370,000, and the new owners took over the house in August. The house was built in 1945 and has a living area of 896 square feet. The price per square foot was $413. The deal was finalized on Aug. 31.

7. $445,000, single-family home at 716 Cleveland Ave.

The sale of the single family residence at 716 Cleveland Ave. in Elizabeth has been finalized. The price was $445,000, and the new owners took over the house in September. The house was built in 1924 and has a living area of 1,576 square feet. The price per square foot was $282. The deal was finalized on Sep. 5.

6. $469,000, detached house at 153 Williamson Ave.

The property at 153 Williamson Ave. in Hillside has new owners. The price was $469,000. The house was built in 1924 and has a living area of 2,545 square feet. The price per square foot is $184. The deal was finalized on Aug. 30.

5. $470,000, single-family house at 223 Hollywood Ave.

The 896 square-foot detached house at 223 Hollywood Ave. in Hillside has been sold. The transfer of ownership was settled in September and the total purchase price was $470,000, $525 per square foot. The house was built in 1958. The deal was finalized on Sep. 1.

4. $470,000, detached house at 484 Madison Ave.

A sale has been finalized for the single-family house at 484 Madison Ave. in Roselle Park. The price was $470,000 and the new owners took over the house in September. The house was built in 1923 and the living area totals 1,352 square feet. The price per square foot ended up at $348. The deal was finalized on Sep. 5.

3. $475,000, single-family house at 213 Halsted Road

The property at 213 Halsted Road in Elizabeth has new owners. The price was $475,000. The house was built in 1925 and has a living area of 1,464 square feet. The price per square foot is $324. The deal was finalized on Sep. 5.

2. $485,000, single-family home at 1223 Broadway

The property at 1223 Broadway in Hillside has new owners. The price was $485,000. The house was built in 1934 and has a living area of 2,391 square feet. The price per square foot is $203. The deal was finalized on Aug. 31.

1. $839,000, single-family residence at 567 Pennsylvania Ave.

The 1,360 square-foot single-family house at 567 Pennsylvania Ave. in Elizabeth has been sold. The transfer of ownership was settled in August and the total purchase price was $839,000, $617 per square foot. The house was built in 1900. The deal was finalized on Aug. 31.

Real Estate Newswire is a service provided by United Robots, which uses machine learning to generate analysis of data from Propmix, an aggregator of national real-estate data.

Gov. Livingston’s overtime victory is first win over No. 17 Elizabeth in 14 years

Fourteen years.That’s how long it had been since Gov. Livingston defeated Elizabeth in boys soccer before Monday night’s Union County Conference Watchung Division matchup.Heading into Williams Field on Monday, the Highlanders had been 0-9 against the Minutemen, ranked No. 17 in the NJ.com Top 20, and had been outscored 25-2 dating back to Sept. 5, 2014.Complete Box Score »But history was rewritten by Gov. Li...

Fourteen years.

That’s how long it had been since Gov. Livingston defeated Elizabeth in boys soccer before Monday night’s Union County Conference Watchung Division matchup.

Heading into Williams Field on Monday, the Highlanders had been 0-9 against the Minutemen, ranked No. 17 in the NJ.com Top 20, and had been outscored 25-2 dating back to Sept. 5, 2014.

Complete Box Score »

But history was rewritten by Gov. Livingston when senior Derek Cubero scored the game-winning goal in the 86th minute on a free kick that gave the Highlanders a 2-1, overtime victory for their first win over Elizabeth in more than a decade.

“So basically on the free kick I was just trying to get the ball in the box, find someone and I think I got lucky,” Cubero said. “It just went in. Nobody touched it. It feels amazing.”

Monday’s win was the fifth in a row for Gov. Livingston, which moved from the Mountain Division into the Watchung Division this season with the likes of Elizabeth, Westfield, Scotch Plains-Fanwood, Union and Summit. And so far, the Highlanders are proving they belong with some of the top teams in the county. Their win over No. 17 Elizabeth is the second win over a Top 20 team this year as they dealt then-No. 8 Union its first loss last week, and also battled then-No. 18 Westfield to a 0-0, double-overtime tie on Sept. 26.

“We came in with a lot of belief and 100 percent confidence, and while we haven’t scored against them in a while, we’ve been in good games with them and we’ve had very good chances,” said Gov. Livingston’s Kevin Fontana, who is in his third year as head coach. “Things didn’t go our way in those games and it’s great when they do go your way. I have a great group of seniors that have been really successful in their four years within this program, other guys mix in but it’s really all credit to them, the way that they work hard for 80 minutes. There’s never a minute where they’re not doing what they’re supposed to do.”

On Monday night, Elizabeth, which was riding a five-game win streak, dominated the first 10 minutes of play as the Minutemen continually pushed into the Highlanders’ side of the 50-yard line. But in the 11th minute Blake Ortiz was fed the ball and he took advantage of a goalie miscue to send the ball into the bottom right corner of the net for a 1-0 lead.

“Composure, it’s just keeping your head, imagining you’re going to score and you just put it away,” Ortiz said of his goal. “It was huge, their heads went down, I would say, for the majority of the half, it really gave us momentum, it just got us going for the second half as well.”

The Minutemen didn’t let the one-goal deficit get them down for long, and in the 55th minute Brandon Quishpi-Aquiles scored his 10th goal of the season to tie the game 1-1.

“We just group up, talk to each other, we can’t put our heads down because when we put our heads down we concede two, three more and that’s how people lose games,” Ortiz said of how the Highlanders reacted to the equalizer. “You just have to keep your head up and keep driving.”

Quishpi-Aquiles’ goal was the eighth goal of the season that the Highlanders have given up in 12 games, and their three losses came in 1-0 games against Bridgewater-Raritan, then-No. 9 Scotch Plains-Fanwood in double-overtime and Brearley. The defense, anchored by senior goalie Gabriel Sokolnicki, has posted five shutouts.

“They give us momentum because every loss we’ve had has either been a fluke or it’s been down to the wire,” Ortiz said. “So we look and we can take on these big teams and these big Group 4 teams and if we can compete with them for a full game it’s just momentum.”

That momentum will be needed to carry Gov. Livingston as it has advanced in the Union County Tournament and will face third-seeded Westfield in the quarterfinals on Wednesday. The Highlanders have lost five-straight games against the Blue Devils dating back to 2015. Last year, Gov. Livingston managed to upset Scotch Plains-Fanwood 1-0 in the county quarterfinals before falling to Elizabeth in the semifinals.

But the Highlanders seem to be on an upset tour this season, and will look at Westfield as just another team standing in their way of the ultimate goal.

“We came into many, many games as the underdog and a lot of time we come out on top,” Ortiz said.

Lauren Knego can be reached at

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10 most expensive homes sold in the Elizabeth area, June 26 - July 2

A house in Elizabethport that sold for $839,000 tops the list of the most expensive residential real estate sales in Elizabeth area in the past week.In total, 17 residential real estate sales were recorded in the area during the past week, with an average price of $468,029. The average price per square foot was $323.The prices in the list below concern real estate sales where the title was recorded during the week of June 26 even if the property may have been sold earlier.10. $460,000, detached house at 213 Magie Ave....

A house in Elizabethport that sold for $839,000 tops the list of the most expensive residential real estate sales in Elizabeth area in the past week.

In total, 17 residential real estate sales were recorded in the area during the past week, with an average price of $468,029. The average price per square foot was $323.

The prices in the list below concern real estate sales where the title was recorded during the week of June 26 even if the property may have been sold earlier.

10. $460,000, detached house at 213 Magie Ave.

The sale of the single-family house at 213 Magie Ave., Roselle Park, has been finalized. The price was $460,000, and the house changed hands in June. The house was built in 1917 and has a living area of 1,273 square feet. The price per square foot was $361. The deal was finalized on Jun. 14.

9. $470,000, single-family house at 617 Maplewood Ave.

The 1,280 square-foot single-family home at 617 Maplewood Ave. in Roselle Park has been sold. The transfer of ownership was settled in June and the total purchase price was $470,000, $367 per square foot. The house was built in 1950. The deal was finalized on Jun. 14.

8. $500,000, single-family residence at 1057 North Ave.

A sale has been finalized for the single-family residence at 1057 North Ave. in Elizabeth. The price was $500,000 and the new owners took over the house in June. The house was built in 1915 and the living area totals 1,222 square feet. The price per square foot ended up at $409. The deal was finalized on Jun. 15.

7. $500,000, single-family home at 1100-1102 Harding Road

The sale of the single family residence at 1100-1102 Harding Road in Elizabeth has been finalized. The price was $500,000, and the new owners took over the house in June. The house was built in 1931 and has a living area of 1,722 square feet. The price per square foot was $290. The deal was finalized on Jun. 15.

6. $510,000, single-family home at 1027 North Ave.

The 1,212 square-foot detached house at 1027 North Ave., Elizabeth, has been sold. The transfer of ownership was settled in June and the total purchase price was $510,000, $421 per square foot. The house was built in 1916. The deal was finalized on Jun. 13.

5. $525,000, single-family house at 135-139 Court Street

The property at 135-139 Court Street in Elizabeth has new owners. The price was $525,000. The house was built in 1900 and has a living area of 941 square feet. The price per square foot is $558. The deal was finalized on Jun. 19.

4. $580,000, single-family residence at 931 Revere Drive

The property at 931 Revere Drive in Hillside has new owners. The price was $580,000. The house was built in 1939 and has a living area of 1,630 square feet. The price per square foot is $356. The deal was finalized on Jun. 14.

3. $585,000, detached house at 284 W. Webster Ave.

The property at 284 W. Webster Ave. in Roselle Park has new owners. The price was $585,000. The house was built in 1900 and has a living area of 2,187 square feet. The price per square foot is $267. The deal was finalized on Jun. 13.

2. $605,000, single-family residence at 313 E. Webster Ave.

The property at 313 E. Webster Ave. in Roselle Park has new owners. The price was $605,000. The house was built in 1929 and has a living area of 1,542 square feet. The price per square foot is $392. The deal was finalized on Jun. 13.

1. $839,000, single-family home at 31 S. Fifth Street

The sale of the single family residence at 31 S. Fifth Street in Elizabethport has been finalized. The price was $839,000, and the new owners took over the house in June. The house was built in 1901 and has a living area of 1,092 square feet. The price per square foot was $768. The deal was finalized on Jun. 19.

Real Estate Newswire is a service provided by United Robots, which uses machine learning to generate analysis of data from Propmix, an aggregator of national real-estate data.

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