Friday, September 4, 2009
Safety Health Tip...The Dangers of Hand Sanitizer
This is a safety health tip every parent and grandparent MUST read!! Family Friends too!
Yesterday, my youngest daughter, Halle who is just 4 years old, was rushed to the ER by her father for being severely lethargic and incoherent in her classroom. He was called to her school by the school secretary who said that she was 'VERY VERY SICK'!
He told me that when he arrived at her classroom, Halle was barely sitting in the chair. She couldn't hold her own head up and when he looked into her eyes, she couldn't focus them.
He immediately scooped her up and rushed her to the closest ER, and then called me. When he got there, they ran blood test after blood test and did x-rays, every test imaginable. Her white
blood cell count was normal, nothing was out of the ordinary.
When I arrived at the ER, the doctor there told us that he had done everything that he could do so he was transferring her to Saint Francis Hospital for further tests.
Right as we were leaving in the ambulance, her teacher arrived at the ER and told us that after questioning Halle 's classmates, she had found out that our little girl had licked liquid hand sanitizer off of her hands !!!
Hand sanitizer, of all things. But it makes sense. These days they have all kinds of different scents and flavors and when you have a curious child, they are going to put all kinds of things into their mouths.
When we arrived at the Saint Francis' Hospital ER, we told the ER Doctor there to check her blood alcohol level, and yes we did get weird looks, but they did it.
The results showed her blood alcohol level was 85%-- six hours after we first took her.. There's no telling what it would have been if we would have requested it at the first ER. Since then, her
school and a few surrounding schools have taken the liquid hand sanitizers out of all the lower grade classes, but what's to stop middle and high schoolers from ingesting this stuff?
Safety Health Tip: After doing research on the Internet, we found out that it only takes
about 3 squirts of the stuff ingested to be fatal to a toddler. For her blood alcohol level to be so high, it would be like someone her size drinking 120 proof liquor.
It doesn't matter what age. This could affect anyone of them ...
This can also be verified on truth or fiction, see below...
http://www.truthorfiction.com/rumors/h/hand-sanitizer.htm
This story was verified at:
http://www.snopes.com/medical/toxins/sanitizer.asp Click Here to Read More..
Thursday, August 20, 2009
New! One of the Foods That Lower Blood Sugar
Most Energy drinks and fat-burning drinks are notorious for stimulating belly fat due to high gycemic ingredients. There is a brand new product which has been certified Low Glycemic by the Glycemic Research Institute's government programs approved in the United States, Canada and United Kingdom.
How Does Exercise Affect Diabetes?
The 2 types of diabetes are type I and type II. Type I diabetes is characterized by the pancreas making too little or no insulin. An individual with diabetes type I will have to inject insulin throughout the day in order to control glucose levels. Type II diabetes, also known as adult-onset diabetes, is characterized by the pancreas not producing enough insulin to control glucose levels or the cells not responding to insulin. When a cell does not respond to insulin, it is known as insulin resistance.
The risk factors for type II diabetes include: inactivity, high cholesterol, obesity, and hypertension. Inactivity alone is a very strong risk factor that has been proven to lead to diabetes type II. Exercise will have a positive effect on diabetes type II while improving insulin sensitivity while type I cannot be controlled be an exercise program. Over 90% of individuals with diabetes have type II.
Exercise causes the body to process glucose faster, which lowers blood sugar. The more intense the exercise, the faster the body will utilize glucose. Therefore it is important to understand the differences in training with type I and type II diabetes.
- Allow adequate rest during exercise sessions to prevent high blood pressure
- Use low impact exercises and avoid heavy weight lifting
- Have a diabetic friendly energy drink nearby.
Before engaging in exercise, it is important for blood sugar levels to be tested to make sure that they are not below 80 to 100 mg/dl range and not above 250 mg/dl. Glucose levels should also be tested before, during, after and three to five hours after exercise. During this recovery period (3-5 hours after exercise), it is important for diabetics to consume ample carbohydrates in order to prevent hypoglycemia.
How Does Exercise Affect Diabetes?
Exercise will greatly benefit an individual with type II diabetes because of its positive effects on insulin sensitivity. Proper exercise and nutrition are the best forms of prevention for type II diabetics. It is important for training protocols to be repeated almost daily to help with sustaining insulin sensitivity. To prevent hypoglycemia, progressively work up to strenuous activity.
As with individuals with type I diabetes, carbohydrates should also be present during training to assist in raising blood sugar levels if the individual becomes low.
Sunday, August 9, 2009
Whats in Your Drinking Water?
The coming water crisis Across the country, long-neglected mains and pipes, many more than a century old, are reaching the end of their life span. When pipes fail, pressure drops and sucks dirt, debris, and often bacteria and other pathogens into the huge underground arteries that deliver
water......
Whats in YOUR drinking water?
Lead, chlorine, disinfection by-products, cryptosporidia, giardia, bacteria, endocrine disrupters, pesticides, etc.
The geographic region where people live is an important contributing factor to both the quality and availability of fresh waterIf you are provided with municipal water, the responsibility for your safe drinking water lies with the water provider.
Although water companies in the US and many other countries are strictly regulated and the treated water must meet certain minimum purity and safety standards, all water companies are not created equal.
You can reasonably assume that most are doing the best they can with the resources available to them. In general, though, the larger water companies (in the US anyway) have greater resources available to treat and distribute the water and maintain the distribution infrastructure. And, because they serve more people, they are required to meet stricter regulations.
Some information for well owners or people who use surface water for drinking: People with private water supplies are responsible for the safety of their own drinking water.
While all wells, springs, and surface water should be tested regularly, there are some situations where it is critical to know what is in your water:
- If you use surface water or water from an unconfined aquifer and have any sources of pollution nearby, you are at risk for contaminated water.
- If you or members of your family are at higher risk of health problems from contaminants, you should know what is in your water.
- If the quality of your water suddenly changes - new taste
The depth of a well is not usually as important as the type of aquifer from which the well draws. Well water from an unconfined aquifer is much more prone to contamination than water from a confined aquifer.
Poorly designed or maintained septic systems are a potential source of contamination for wells or springs mostly in unconfined aquifers. The most common contaminants from septic systems tend to be E. coli and nitrates, but if other chemicals are flushed into the septic system by you or your neighbors, they can become part of the ground or surface water pollutants as well.
Water Testing: If you use municipal water you should be able to obtain a water quality report yearly and, except for special circumstances, would probably not need to test your water. If you use well, spring, or surface water, it is important to test your water periodically for contaminants liable to be present in your water. Water quality from a water source can change over time - particularly in surface water or shallow, unconfined aquifers.
Where You Live:
Home Located in an Industrial Area: The range of possible industrial pollutants is extremely large. Important contaminants include heavy metals and many thousands of kinds of manufactured chemicals.
Whats in your drinking water could come from:
Emissions into the atmosphere that either settle onto or wash onto the earth's surface and from there into the surface or ground water.
Waste dumps that leak into surface or ground water.
Leakage from storage areas of chemical products or their precursors.
Accidents and spills during transport of chemicals.
Direct dumping of contaminants into surface water for disposal.
Home Located in an Agricultural Area: Farms can have many potential sources of pollution for the underlying water, including: manure lagoon, feedlot / barn, septic system, earthen silage pit, fuel storage tank, chemical storage area, chemical mixing area, dump or landfill, and fields on which fertilizers or pesticides have been applied. In addition to the health effects of nitrates on children, discussed above, nitrates in drinking water have also been associated with an increased risk for Non-Hodgkin lymphoma.Chlorinated Water and the Risk of Disinfection By-products:
Is your water Chlorinated? Most municipal water treatment plants use chlorine to disinfect the water before it leaves the treatment plant and/or keep the water biologically safe during the distribution process. Many well users also use chlorine to disinfect their water.
Chlorine, while an excellent disinfectant, reacts with organic material in the source water to produce a group of chlorinated organic compounds collectively known as Disinfection Byproduct (DBPs).
According to several EPA articles:
"While disinfectants are effective in controlling many microorganisms, they react with natural organic and inorganic matter in source water and distribution systems to form DBPs. Results from toxicology studies have shown several DBPs to be carcinogenic in laboratory animals.
Other DBPs have also been shown to cause adverse reproductive or developmental effects in laboratory animals. Several epidemiology studies have suggested a weak association between certain cancers (e.g., bladder) or reproductive and developmental effects, and exposure to chlorinated surface water.
More than 200 million people consume water that has been disinfected. Because of the large population exposed, health risks associated with DBPs, even if small, need to be taken seriously."
In general, the levels of DBPs are highest in treated water from sources with high organic matter content, such as rivers and lakes, and lowest when the source is groundwater. Within a single water supply, however, DBP levels can vary greatly, depending on both water quality and treatment conditions.
The DBPs include Total Trihalomethanes (TTHMs) (including chloroform, bromodichloromethane, dibromochloromethane, and bromoform), and Haloacetic Acids (HAAs) (dichloroacetic acid and trichloroacetic acid)
In 1979, the EPA set an interim Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) for TTHMs of 0.10 mg/l (or 100 microgram/l) as an annual average. This applies to any community water system serving at least 10,000 people that adds a disinfectant to the drinking water during any part of the treatment process. By 2002 the MCL for TTHMS will be lowered to 0.08mg/l (or 80 ug/l) and a MCL for HAAs will be set at 0.06mg/l.
In addition to laboratory studies showing cancers and reproductive problems in animals, there is a growing body of evidence based on epidemiological studies that implicates DBPs as contributing to problems during pregnancy.
Epidemiological evidence suggesting a weak association between the consumption of chlorinated drinking water and the occurrence of bladder, colon, and rectal cancer (and possibly even some brain cancers).
In epidemiological studies, investigators compare health effects in a population of people who drink water containing higher levels of DBS with a similar group of people who drink water with lower levels of DPS. According to some estimates, anywhere between two and seventeen percent of all bladder cancer cases in the U.S. may be due to DBPs. It is a tough balancing act between adding too little chlorine (resulting in more microbial contaminants and fewer DBPs), and too much chlorine (resulting in dead microbes and higher levels of DBPs).
A 1996 study by King and Marrett concluded "that the risk of bladder cancer increases with both duration and concentration of exposure to chlorination by-products". They found that those exposed to chlorinated surface water for 35 or more years had a 1.4 times increased risk of bladder cancer compared with those exposed for less than 10 years, and those exposed to an estimated THM level greater than 49 micrograms/liter for 35 or more years had 1.63 times the risk of those exposed for less than 10 years.
Populations At Greater Risk from Water Contaminants: Pregnant Women, Children, Elderly, Immuno-Compromised
Any person who requires water of a specific microbiological purity should follow the advice of their doctor or local health officials regarding the use and consumption of tap water treated by ANY purification system.
Don' Think You Have Lead in Your Water... Check again
Home Age and the Risk of Lead Contamination:
The age of your home can be an important indicator of whether lead might be a contaminant in your drinking water. Lead is a serious threat to human health and can adversely affect almost every organ in the human body. Lead contamination usually occurs in the home as water dissolves lead from household plumbing made with lead containing materials. Even many "lead-free fixtures still contain some lead. More likely than not, water in buildings less than five years old or that were built before about 1987 have some levels of lead contamination.
Boiling the water will not reduce the amount of lead. Young children and pregnant women have the greatest risk from even short term lead exposure. An adequate calcium intake can help protect against lead poisoning - but that is NOT a substitute for lead reducing methods discussed below.
Indicators for high lead content in your drinking water. Lead levels in your drinking water are likely to be highest if: your home has faucets or fittings of brass which contains some lead, or your home or water system has lead pipes, or your home has copper pipes with lead solder, and the house is less than five years old, or you have naturally soft water, or your water is acidic, (pH below 7), or water often sits in the pipes for several hours, or you use hot water from the tap to make formula or drinks you regularly notice blue/green stains on sinks, tubs, and fixtures (this is probably copper, but it is an indication of corrosive water which will also dissolve lead).
Check for Lead Water Pipes
Inside your home: locate the pipe leading to the kitchen tap, and follow it as far as possible until it exits your home. Unpainted lead pipes are dull gray and soft. If you scrape the surface gently with a knife, you will see the shiny, silver-colored metal beneath.
Try to find a place where the supply line is accessible (water meter for example) and check for indications of lead pipe. Other types of pipe in use Copper - bright copper-brown color may have silver colored metal around the soldered joints - the solder may contain lead. Iron/Steel - black, may be rusty, and is quite hard. The pipe may have a shinny galvanized coating. Plastic - may be white, blue, gray, black, etc.
Lead compounds may also be present in some plastic plumbing components. Lead may be used in the manufacture of the plastic plumbing products as a plasticizer. Plastic plumbing components that are certified by the NSF International do not contain lead. Plastic materials certified by NSF are recommended for potable water plumbing applications. Plumbing components made of bronze and brass contain 3% to 8% lead.
If your drinking water has not been tested for lead, or if it does contain lead, seriously consider taking the following precautions:
- If the water has not been used in a particular faucet for six hours or longer, run the cold water tap until the water is noticeably colder, about a minute, to "flush" the pipes.
- Use only cold water from the tap for drinking, cooking, and especially making baby formula.
- Hot water dissolves materials better than cold water and thus may contain higher levels of lead.
- Frequently clean the screens and aerators in faucets to remove captured lead particles.
- If building or remodeling, only use "lead free" piping and materials for plumbing.
- If you are served by a public water system contact your supplier and ask whether or not the supply system contains lead piping, and whether your water is corrosive.
- If either answer is yes, ask what steps the supplier is taking to deal with the problem of lead contamination.
- One indication that your water is corrosive (if you have copper pipes) is that you may notice blue/green stains in tubs, sinks, and around faucets. If your water is dissolving copper, and if there is lead in the pipes, solder, or fixtures, there is a good chance your water is also dissolving lead!
Contaminants and Sensory Clues:
Great looking, smelling and tasting water is no guarantee that you have safe water! Many contaminants, lead, mercury, E. coli, disinfection byproducts.
If your water normally looks, tastes, and smells good and then suddenly becomes cloudy (turbid) or acquires a bad smell or taste it may be an indicator that the purification process has failed. Immediately begin using water filtered with a high quality filter, bottled water, or otherwise purified water until you have determined that your water is safe. That would also be a very good time to consider looking for a permanent water filtration solution.
Personal Water Filtration Bottle
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The Relationship Between Foods High in Antioxidants and Health
Certain foods, chemicals and even air can trigger oxidative stress. This type of cell damage is a major culprit in many chronic diseases such as heart disease, cancer, and neurological conditions like Parkinson’s.
Free radicals are thought to be such bad factors because they are highly unstable, and wreak havoc on tissue in their quest to find a more stable state. Because antioxidants remove free radicals from circulation, they are protective against at least some of the chronic diseases that plague Americans.
The CDC (National Centers for Disease Control) estimate that 5 out of every 6 deaths in the US result from chronic disease, so the tiny free radical is a big problem.
It's all about dietary choice when it come to boosting antioxidants. Unprocessed whole fruits, vegetables and other plants are the primary source food high in antioxidants, though some fat-soluble nutritents found in fish and nuts are also rich. Herbs like cilantro and spices like ginger, cinnamon and cumin have very high ORAC scores. Oh yes, and chocolate is an ORAC superstar.
Curious? Here are a few foods and their ORAC scores.
Top-Scoring Foods High in Antioxidants
ORAC units per 100 grams (about 3 ½ ounces)
Many fruits and vegetables are known to be good sources of antioxidant vitamins, such as E, C, and beta carotene, a form of vitamin A. But these natural foods also contain other compounds, collectively known as phytonutrients, that may contribute to health.
Foods that score high ORAC score may also protect cells and their components from oxidative damage, according to studies of animals and human blood at the Agricultural Research Service's Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts in Boston. ARS is the chief scientific agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Early findings suggest that eating plenty of high-ORAC fruits and vegetables--such as spinach and blueberries--may help slow the processes associated with aging in both body and brain.
"If these findings are borne out in further research, young and middle-aged people may be able to reduce risk of diseases of aging--including senility--simply by adding high-ORAC foods to their diets," said ARS Administrator Floyd P. Horn.
In the studies, eating plenty of high-ORAC foods:
- Raised the antioxidant power of human blood 10 to 25 percent
- Prevented some loss of long-term memory and learning ability in middle-aged rats
- Maintained the ability of brain cells in middle-aged rats to respond to a chemical stimulus--a function that normally decreases with age
- Protected rats' tiny blood vessels--capillaries--against oxygen damage
It can be difficult to get all these foods high in ORAC value into our diets. There are excellent vitamin and mineral supplements that can assist with this.
Click Here to Read More..
Saturday, August 8, 2009
Low Glycemic Index Foods and Diabetes
What is the significance of Glycemic Index List of Foods?
- Low GI means a smaller rise in blood sugar and can help control established diabetes.
- Low GI diets can help people lose weight and lower blood lipids.
- Low GI diets can improve the body's sensitivity to insulin.
- High GI foods can help re-fuel carbohydrate stores after exercise.
- Breakfast cereals based on wheat bran, barley and oats.
- "Grainy" breads made with whole seeds.
- Pasta and rice in place of potatoes.
- Vinegar and lemon juice dressings.
In short, the goal should be to build a good plan including the low Glycemic Index foods.
- Hunger is minimized
- Less tendency to "cheat" or overeat
- Consequently, you can continue to lose body fat or maintain your weight - once the excess pounds have been lost.
- Foods that are low on the glycemic index will help alleviate mood swings and regulate energy levels.
- Foods that stimulate insulin surges can cause people to eat 60 - 70% more calories at the following meal.
- People who consume foods relatively high in glucose (such as white bread, most commercial whole wheat bread, and raisins) eat an average of 200 calories more at the next meal than those who eat fructose (a sugar found in fruits).
- Low glycemic index foods can be mixed with modest quantities of high glycemic foods without losing their hunger reducing effect.
***The purpose of the glycemic index chart is not to have you eliminate those nutritious choices from your diet. Instead, balance the foods that are "less desirable" by eating them with foods that are "desirable."
A low glycemic diet plan can be beneficial to:
- Diabetics
- Hypoglycemics persons with insulin resistance
- Syndrome X dieters
- Athletes
- Elevate insulin and blood glucose
- Stimulate fat-storage
- Exacerbate hyperactivity
- Reduce sports performance
- Low glycemic foods do not.
- Helping balance blood glucose and insulin levels
- Reducing excess body fat levels
- Increasing sports performance
Low glycemic food plans focus on reducing ingestion of foods that elevate insulin and stimulate fat-storage. We can't totally eliminate high glycemic foods from our diet, but we can be aware of the glycemic reaction that foods have so we can make better choice.
Low glycemic diet plans have been proven to reduce incidence of Type II diabetes and to help control Type I and II diabetes, hypoglycemia and hypertension. Low glycemic foods do not stimulate food-craving hormones like Neuropeptide Y and Lipoprotein Lipase. Stimulation of these hormones can cause chemically-triggered cravings for food and uncontrolled eating binges.GBG’s Energy Matrix™ is certified low-Glycemic by the Glycemic Research Institute’s (GRI) clinical trials program approved in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom (www.Glycemic.com).
Click Here to Read More..
Where Can I buy Glutathione Supplements?
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
Symptoms of Folic Acid Deficiency
Folic acid is known by a number of names. More commonly today, it is called folacin; but, as far as anemia is concerned, the two most popular names still used are “folic acid deficiency anemia” and “folate deficiency anemia.”
This type of anemia is a common, slowly progressive, megaloblastic anemia characterized by red blood cells that are larger than normal. The red blood cells are also deformed, and both their rate of production and their lifespan are diminished. Folic acid anemia occurs most often in infants, adolescents, pregnant and lactating females, alcoholics, the elderly, and in those with malignant or intestinal diseases.
Folic acid is needed for the orderly production of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in all tissue cells and is a component of three of the four DNA bases, thymine, adenine, and guanine; the fourth is cytosine. In bone marrow, it is required for the normal production of the red blood cells and for RNA synthesis. Folic acid circulates through and is stored in the liver and a deficiency is almost always because of insufficient amounts in the diet.
Absorption of folic acid occurs primarily in the upper small intestine and does not depend on built-in factors as vitamin B12 does. A deficiency of folic acid is more common than a cobalamin (B12) deficiency. Folic acid stores are also depleted more rapidly than cobalamin stores and, without proper dietary intake, a megaloblastic anemia will develop.
Clinical manifestations of folic acid anemia are similar to those of pernicious anemia except for the lack of neurologic symptoms common in a B12 deficiency. Evaluation is based on blood tests, measurement of serum folate levels, and signs and symptoms. Diagnosis is made following the Schilling test and a therapeutic trial of vitamin B12 injections to distinguish between folic acid deficiency anemia and pernicious anemia.
The elderly are particularly at risk for developing this type of anemia as their diets often wane for one reason or another, including a lack of interest in food, poverty, immobility, and/or ill-fitting dentures. Interestingly, when folate supplements are given to the elderly, good medical supervision must be undertaken as folate supplements can mask the megaloblastic anemia of B12 deficieny. Since the elderly are already at risk for B12 deficiency, giving folate supplementation by mistake, or by design, can aggravate an additional problem of B12 deficiency.
Alcohol abuse also contributes to this type of anemia since alcohol interferes with folate metabolism in the liver, resulting in a profound depletion of folate stores. Patients with neoplastic diseases and such skin diseases as chronic exfoliative dermatitis are also are at risk for folic acid anemia.
Folic acid deficiency anemia is common during pregnancy. Both folate and iron are essential for red cell production and during pregnancy there is an increased need to supply both the mother and the developing infant(s). This type of anemia is common in newborns because of the increasing survival rates of premature infants. Not only can it be a danger to the mother, but also contributes to fetal malformations. The most common birth defect resulting from a deficiency of this vitamin is spina bifida.
During the 1980s, a considerable body of evidence accumulated stating that spina bifida and other neural tube defects were associated with folate deficiency. It is now widely recognized that folate supplements are necessary and best started before pregnancy occurs since closure of the neural tube occurs by day 28 of pregnancy.
This is generally long before the woman knows she is pregnant. It was also established that receiving enough folate from fortified foods was nearly impossible and supplements were highly recommended.
Folic acid deficiency is also common in tropical areas where poverty results in a poor diet. In North America and other regions of the world where access to food is rarely a problem, folic acid deficiency still occurs because dietary needs are not met, especially during the growth of children and adolescents and during pregnancy. These age groups are more prone to folic acid deficiency anemia because of their heavy use of folate-deficient cow's milk, which also inhibits the absorption of iron, causing an additional risk of iron-deficiency anemia as well.
Causes of folic acid deficiency anemia include:
Alcohol abuse (alcohol prevents absorption of several nutrients especially the B vitamins)
Poor diets (common in alcoholics, the elderly, those living alone or in poverty, and infants, especially those with infections or diarrhea)
Impaired absorption because of intestinal dysfunction from such disorders as celiac disease, tropical sprue, regional jejunitis, Crohn's disease, or bowel resection
Bacteria competing for available folic acid
Overcooking of food, destroying valuable water-soluble nutrients, including a high percentage of folic acid
Limited storage capacity in infants
Prolonged drug therapy, especially from anticonvulsants and estrogens
Not addressing increased folic acid needs of certain age groups, as well as in patients with neoplastic diseases and some skin disorders (eg. chronic exfoliative dermatitis).
Signs and symptoms of folic acid deficiency anemia gradually produces clinical features similar to other megaloblastic anemias:
Progressive fatigue, shortness of breath, heart palpitations, weakness, Glossitis (inflammation of the tongue), nausea, anorexia, headache, fainting, irritability, forgetfulness, pallor and slight jaundice.
Conventional treatment consists primarily of folic acid supplements (about 400 mg. three times daily) and, more importantly, the elimination of contributing causes. Prophylactic doses are given in pregnancy or those considering getting pregnant. Parenteral administration of folic acid can relieve acute symptoms within 48 hours. Blood transfusions are given to treat severe cardiac or respiratory distress as a result of severe deficiency.
Good nutritional health supplements are a good, safe idea, even if you think you have a balanced diet.
Thursday, July 16, 2009
How Does Diet and Exercise Affect Your Health and Aging
Staying physically fit is probably the single most important thing you can do. Find an activity you enjoy and will do daily. Walking, swimming, dancing are all activities that help keep you physically fit.
What you eat affects many aspects of your health. Following the proper diet is absolutely necessary.
Proper nutrition is essential every single day. Eat regular meals and try to avoid too many unhealthy snacks. Consider taking good nutritional vitamin supplements.
Eat a good amount of fruits and vegetables everyday. Not only do they taste good, they also help you fight off heart disease and stroke. Eating fruit and vegetables can also help you control high blood pressure and cholesterol.
Visit your doctor often. They can help access your health and keep you updated as to what tests you need, how often you need them, monitor your medications and advise you as to the type of exercise that might be best for you.
Stress is unavoidable. There is no way to totally eliminate it but you can learn to control it and not let it take over your life. Regular exercise and healthy eating can help you control stress.
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Why is Nutrition Important?
Why is nutrition important?
Nutritional deficiency in people is more serious than we realize, as many as 2 out of every 3 deaths can be traced to nutritional and dietary deficiencies and/or overweight conditions.
Over 2 million premature deaths each year are due to nutrition related diseases with over 70% of premature deaths and doctor visits being diet and nutrition related.
What Keeps Cells From Getting Good Nutrition?
A certain amount of the problem can be traced to the way food is grown and harvested. Chemicals, fertilizers, over processing/over refining of foods- e.g. instant foods, high fat/sugar foods, foods that have been processed to make them tastier, have a longer shelf life, etc. all contribute to extra calories, salt and sugar and destroy vitamins and minerals.
Phytochemicals Complete a Balanced Healthy Diet
Our diet more than ever before contains fatty processed foods and less natural plant based foods. The effects of this growing trend can be seen in the awful statistics on Alzheimer's Disease, cancer, Atherosclerosis, Diabetes, Parkinson's Disease, heart disease, stroke and many other degenerative diseases.
Consumption of high fat foods obviously brings with it many problems, but the high intake of protein and simple carbohydrates creates an inadequate consumption of plant-based foods which have many health giving benefits. Plant based foods provide Phytochemicals which help with a balanced healthy diet.
Most people know that by eating plant-based foods that all essential fiber, vitamins and minerals are being added to our diets. What is not known so well is the many benefits of the phytochemicals that these plants can provide for a balanced healthy diet.
Phytochemicals come in several forms and different vegetables have higher concentrations of a particular phytochemical than others. Some of the main phytochemicals include:
- Flavonoids: citrus fruits, onions, cabbage, cucumber, parsley, tomatoes, broccoli, carrots, soybeans and berries.
- Isoflavones: Found in soy, peas, beans and legumes.
- Lignans: Found in walnuts, flaxseeds, pumpkin seeds and many other nuts and seeds.
- Carotenoids: Found in leafy greens, broccoli, carrots, pumpkin, squash, sweet potato and yams.
- Indioles:Found in brussels sprouts, cauliflower, turnips, bok choy, broccoli, cabbage and kale.
- Omega 3 Fatty Acids: Found in walnuts and flaxseeds.
- Plant Sterols: Found in squash, soybeans, peppers, tomatoes, cucumber and broccoli.
The list above is only a small segment of the entire phytochemical family which encompasses a very large and extensive range of nutrients.
What are the Benefits of Phytochemicals For a Balanced Healthy Diet?
Phytochemicals act in many ways to help your body in combating disease and health problems such as:
- Protecting the cells by blocking carcinogens that try to enter the cell walls.
- Fighting the malignant changes within cells that have already been penetrated by carcinogens.
- Boosting enzyme activity to increase the benefits of the various protective enzymes consumed within the diet.
- Combining with numerous vitamins to boost antioxidants activity to scavenge free radicals before they can cause damage within the body.
It is not necessary to know the names and benefits of the large range of phytochemicals that exist, what is important is to understand that maintaining a balanced healthy diet that contains a variety of fruits and vegetables will combine the benefits of the phytochemicals and vitamins to help you achieve your best health.
In addition to a balanced healthy diet, it is essential to take good nutritional health supplements that use extracts of fruits and vegetables, that way you can make sure that you are getting the necessary Phytochemicals everyday.
By reducing your high fat/processed food intake, increasing your intake of fruits and vegetables and taking good nutritional health supplements you will greatly reduce your chances of falling victim to the ever-growing list of degenerative diseases which plague the general population today as a result of following a typical western diet.
It is not only the damaging effects of high fat, high sugar foods in the western diet that allow cancer, heart disease etc. to develop, but the absence of the protective phytochemicals that are only found in plant foods.So eat plenty of fresh fruits and vegetables, stay away from high fat processed foods and take good nutritional health supplements. Arm yourself with an army of phytochemicals to fight the damaging effects of free radicals and carcinogens that will give you a level of health that most people will envy.
Good nutrition and good health are essential to the success of any individual. To see how you can join me in creating health and wealth for the masses, visit: my website.
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Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Nutritional Health Supplements Have Multiple Benefits
More than 187 million consumers in the year 2005 depended on daily nutritional health supplements to obtain the nutrients missing from their daily diet... nutrients that are needed to attain and maintain optimum health.
In a 2005 the Dietary Supplement Education Alliance (DSEA) found in a that certain dietary supplements helped seniors to live longer and enjoy more independent lives.
The Dietary Supplement Informaton Bureau (DSIB) also reported that nutritional health supplements help people live longer, healthier lives.
Healthcare costs can also be lowered with the help of nutritional health supplements which enable better health by receiving proper nutrients that are needed in the body for immune system boosting techniques.
A health claim for omega-3 fatty acids was recently issued by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA. Several other dietary supplements are scheduled to be added to the list in the near future.
Qualified health claims for dietary supplements are now being released to the public. Preventative care seems to be more widely accepted and practiced as healthcare costs and health insurance skyrocket.
Most individuals can potentially benefit from the use of nutritional health supplements. The following supplements may be of value to the immune system:
- Vitamin E may reduce free radical damage and cut the risk of diabetes, and cancer.
- Vitamin A helps support mucous membranes, and the skin.
- Vitamin C acts as an antioxidant to cells, and may reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease and some forms of cancer.
- Coenzyme Q10 may help generate energy for metabolism.
- Omega-3 fatty acids benefit the heart and the nervous system.
- Selenium may help protect against prostate cancer and is known as an anti-aging nutrient.
Individuals who use dietary supplements can save themselves money, save the healthcare system money, and in general have a more healthy and productive life.
Always Remember...You still have to eat a balanced healthy diet. Get as many vitamins, minerals, amino acids, and fatty acids in your diet as is possible. But, you can also consider taking nutritional health supplements to make-up for what is lacking. Soil depletion and other environmental deficiencies are very prevelent and taking dietary supplements is a good way to make sure that you get all the nutrition you may need.
Our Soils Are Depleted of Vitamins and Minerals
Chronic diseases caused by bad nutrition have reached epidemic proportions. Most people over 40 will suffer from one or more of these chronic diseases by the time they reach retirement. Diseases such as heart disease, cancer, diabetes, dementia, and vision loss are usually triggered from a lack of proper nutrition.
For decades the medical community discredited the nutrition experts when they mentioned the importance a balnced healthy diet as a basis of good health.
Then came a real shocker.
In the June 19, 2002 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association they announced: "Sub optimal intake of vitamins should be seen as a risk factor for chronic disease, especially in the elderly."
This tells us that today our food contains MUCH LESS nutrition and yet our needs for vitamins and minerals are MUCH GREATER than ever before in human history.
Here are some simple steps to take if you really and truly want to be health:
PLANTS ARE THE ONLY SOURCE OF ALL VITAMINS AND MINERALS FOR ALL LIVING CREATURES. Even animals that eat nothing but meat get the vitamins they need from somewhere down the food chain - from an animal or fish that eats plants.
PLANTS CREATE BODY-READY VITAMINS AND MINERALS FROM NUTRIENTS IN THE SOIL. The richer the soil, the more vitamins and minerals will be found packed into the plants. If vegetables are grown in poor soil they will have far lower levels of vitamins and minerals.
SOILS ARE BECOMING SAND and Are BECOMING DEPLETED AT A VERY RAPID RATE. Commercial farming really started to expand as the ability to transport the produce to new markets increased with trains and then trucks. This was a boon for consumers because they no longer had to grow their own vegetables. They could enjoy produce that was either out-of-season or wasn't able to grown in their own geographical area.
As commercial growers keep using the same fields year after year, the soils are losing more and more of their rich nutrients. As soils deplete, so does the vitamin and mineral content of the vegetables grown in that soil.
Chemical companies have come to their aid by providing chemicals that will force the plants to grow in poor soil.
There are a couple of problems with this:
The vegetables look great but contain far less vitamins and minerals they once did. They also absorb some of these chemicals and our bodies need even more vitamins to compensate for these toxins.
The vegetables we consume today give us far less nutrients than 100 years ago - yet we still need an abundance of them.
Genetic engineers have created vegetables that are more disease resistant, that grow faster, are more visually attractive, and are easier to harvest. For example: a new tomato was developed for growers primarily to take a 5-mile-per-hour impact from the faster picking machines and it has a very tough skin - you've more than likely have had some. Nothing is being done to increase the nutrient levels of the plants - or to enrich the soil.
Some vegetables and most fruits you buy in the store are picked before they're ripe, and often chemically treated so they ripen on the way to the grocer's shelf. This gives the produce a lot longer shelf life - less waste. As you probably know, produce picked at its ripe peak contains maximum nutrients - but spoil quickly. Vine ripened, fresh produce can be quite unprofitable for the grower and grocer.
On top of all this, consider the higher levels of air and water pollution, lower oxygen levels in the air we breath, and our fast paced, fast food societies of today. You can easily see that our wonderfully created bodies are being taxed to the max - and need more protection than ever before.
WHAT DO WE DO TODAY?
1. Make fresh, whole fruits, vegetables, and grains a larger part of your daily diet. These are the absolute best quality vitamins and minerals you can buy. Eat them raw, uncooked as much as possible. If necessary, cook the vegetables slowly at low heat to keep the nutrients at the highest possible levels. Simply put - the less processing the better. Most people do not eat even the minimum recommended amounts, yet we all need much more than that today.
2. Look for organically grown produce at your grocery store or health food store. Generally this produce will contain the much higher levels of nutrients - as they did a century ago - without the chemicals. They will however cost more but there are a LOT MORE nutrients and a much more succulent flavor than commercially grown produce.
3. Grow some of your own produce whether it is in a yard garden, patio pots, or inside the home in window pots. It's fun, very easy, decorative, puts oxygen in the air and the taste and nutrition is much better than store-bought.
4. No matter how perfect our healthy diet is, we ALL need to invest in GOOD nutritional health supplements today. Even nutrition experts, who eat an "ideal" diet, take vitamin supplements. Liquid vitamins are the best as the body more readily absorbs the nutrients.
You'll find good quality nutrtional health supplements at most reputable vitamin or health food stores. Best bet however is to buy online for the best price and selection of high quality vitamin supplements.
If we don't have good health at retirement, nothing else will matter. Nutritional health supplements are, by far, the cheapest health insurance and wisest retirement plan we can invest in. Click Here to Read More..