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Flu Shot Symptoms and who should get a flu shot

It's time for your flu shot this year, and you want to know who should get a flu shot. It's important to avoid the flu and stay h...

11/26/17

Type 2 Diabetes: 5 Simple Prevention Tips for Families

By: Joseph M Suria @ Freepik.com

Healthy lifestyle changes don’t have to be difficult

As more people develop diabetes each year, you may worry about the risks for you and your family. But, here’s the good news: You can do something about those risks.

Taking some simple steps now can help you avoid type 2 diabetes. In fact, making healthy lifestyle changes now can head off nearly three-quarters of all cases.

Having someone cheering you on at home makes it easier to make positive lifestyle changes. As a parent, spouse or caregiver, you can keep yourself and your family healthy by understanding your diabetes risk and making better choices for everyone.

11/15/17

Green Tea CR™ – 3 in 1 Super Formula Get Your FREE† bottle Today!

A Message from Chris Kilham the Medicine Hunter

I am so glad you have taken an interest in the Green Tea CR™ formula. As a Medicine Hunter, author and ethno-botanist, I have scoured the earth for decades searching for the most effective botanical ingredients to promote all aspects of human health. My Green Tea CR™ formula is the culmination of many years of investigative science and captures the power of 3 of my favorite ingredients... Green Tea, BCM-95 Curcumin and Resveratrol.



In Green Tea CR™ you experience the power of the -- big three -- the energizing attributes of Green Tea joining forces with the joint boosting benefits of BCM-95® BioCurcumin® plus Resveratrol for healthy aging.* Along with these three featured nutraceuticals, Green Tea CR fortifies the body's antioxidant defenses with Grape Seed extract, Pine Bark extract, Ellagic Acid, and Citrus Bioflavonoids. These ingredients support cardiovascular and circulatory health by helping to maintain healthy blood vessels.* BCM-95® BioCurcumin® rounds out this elite health-protecting formula with its unique benefits for joint comfort.*
Here is just a partial list of the benefits of green tea supported by research studies:
  • Green Tea helps with healthy weight management by increasing daily energy expenditure, i.e. helps the body burn calories.*
  • Green Tea helps maintain already normal blood sugar levels when used as a part of a diet for healthy, sensible weight control.*
  • Green tea enhances the body’s antioxidant defense systems and protects cells against free radical damage, promoting optimal cellular function.*
  • Green tea supports a healthy cardiovascular system via its antioxidant action.*
GET YOUR FREE BOTTLE!

The Pitfalls of Bottled Salad Dressings


What you pour on your super-food green salad may not exactly measure up to be health food. "I’ve been known to have tantrums in the salad dressing aisle of the grocery store," says chef, registered dietitian and author of Whole Cooking and Nutrition, Katie Cavuto. “Many of the store-bought salad dressing options contain ingredients that I would never use at home. They’ve got ingredients that we don’t need to be consuming on a regular basis. Plus, salad dressing is so, so easy to make yourself.

Cavuto suggests grabbing a jar with a lid (even a used-up peanut butter jar) and adding just three ingredients: 1 part extra virgin olive oil, 1 part vinegar or citrus juice, and a squirt of mustard.

If you’re still curious about how to pick a healthy bottled dressing, or, if you want more delicious dressing recipes, keep reading.


11/10/17

Weekend: Cook up healthy meal strategies


It’s that time of year again. School is in full throttle, which usually means rushed mornings, running kids to and from extracurricular activities, and urging homework to be finished. Don’t forget to add a long day of work into the equation.

Whatever your day-to-day balancing act may be, it’s likely that the last thing you want to think about when you walk through the door in the evening is, “What am I going to make for dinner?”

Well, the good news is you do not have to waste any more time contemplating this dreaded question. With a little planning, you can enjoy healthful meals while saving time, energy and money as well.

How My "Perfect" Diet Changed Once I Got Pregnant


Even before becoming a certified integrative nutrition health coach, I was a self-proclaimed "health nut," focused on eating all of the healthiest foods no matter what. I’ve been consistently obsessed with making sure I'm eating only organic, local, grass-fed, and pasture-raised meat, dairy, fruits, greens, and vegetables for as long as I can remember, and I've even cycled through all of the popular diets—from vegetarian and vegan to gluten-free, paleo, and grain-free.

The goal in all my healthy eating endeavors was to make sure I felt well: emotionally, spiritually, and physically. I’d been through a major health crisis and seen much of my family suffer from diseases that lifestyle habits and diets may have prevented. So I constantly made it my mission to not only eat well but to do so regardless of the cost or inconvenience.

After five years of transforming all areas of my life for the better, I finally settled on a way of eating that worked well for my body and mind. I found that by avoiding dairy, grains, added sugars, and gluten, I was free of the recurring sinus infections, yeast infections, skin rashes, digestive issues, panic, and anxiety.

And then I got pregnant.

Within days of finding out that I was unexpectedly (though happily) pregnant, I realized that I was going to have to start from scratch with my diet. Not only was I not able to eat much at all for months during my first trimester, but when I was able to eat, my body craved much of what I’d decided was no longer "healthy" for me. Specifically, I wanted grains—breads, pastas, crackers, and cereals. At first, I turned up my nose at those foods and decided I could power through this phase and stick to my previously "perfect" diet, but I lost that battle and the pregnancy hormones won out.

How hormones can change what's "right."

Hormones are an odd thing, and I’ve learned they can change everything about what is "right" for you and what feels good in your body. Plus, pregnancy is a wild animal that can’t be tamed. I’ve learned to let go of perfectionism, at least a little, and ask my body each day what it wants and find a way to give in to that, regardless of the rules I created for myself in the past.

Additionally, hormones make our pregnant bodies crave some of the oddest things. For me, it's been tuna salad and mandarin oranges. These days, I can eat 10 or more mandarin oranges in a day and still want more. As for tuna salad, it's something I've always liked—but never something I had to have. As a pregnant person, each day I wake up and start over with eating. I’ve had to learn to ask myself daily what is right for my body to eat (and do), and each day is different. One day it’s chicken soup, the next it’s pizza, and today I can't stop thinking about oatmeal. Forcing myself to eat only what I was eating before feels like a form of self-sabotage, not self-care.

Did I stop eating healthy food completely? No way.

No, I didn’t throw in the towel completely when it came to eating well. But I found that forcing myself to be grain-free and dairy-free just wasn’t going to work anymore. So I found a middle ground: I’d allow myself all the grains my body craved, but I also made sure they were free of gluten, as I’d been diagnosed with non-celiac gluten sensitivity (NCGS). Also, I allowed myself some butter and cheese—but in moderation.

Today, almost halfway through my pregnancy journey, I’ve come to terms with a few things. First, eating healthy doesn’t have to mean forcing myself to adhere to strict nutrition guidelines. Second, when making decisions about what’s "right" for my body, I connect to my intuition—my body’s messages and that sense of knowing. Finally, sometimes starting from scratch—when it comes to nutrition, diet, supplements, and exercise can be the best thing for me (and my baby).

This last one was a tough one for me, but I’ve found it to be true. I realized that a reset may be just what the doctor ordered. My body is constantly changing, even more now that I’m pregnant, and if I’m not flexible then I may be forcing a lifestyle and way of eating that is no longer serving me. I’ve decided to embrace this journey of starting over as a lesson and a blessing.

11/7/17

This Is Exactly What 6 Chefs Cook When They Want a Quick and Healthy Meal


Cooking healthy food that tastes as good as it is good for you can feel impossible at times. However, healthy and delicious homemade food is possible. Who better to offer up some sage wisdom on the subject than a few professional chefs? Though they may be capable of preparing decadent meals and unrivaled desserts, they also know how to channel those tasty flavors for a meal that offers just as much nutritional value as it does flavor points. 

Below read up on what six professional chefs whip up when they want something quick, easy, and healthy, as reported by Bon Appetit:

Filling salads. For Mason Hereford of Turkey and the Wolf, it's all about unique and inspired salad toppings.

11/6/17

Healthy Eating: Simple Ways to Plan, Enjoy, and Stick to a Healthy Diet

Eating healthy is about well-being, improving the mood and overall health. In order to eat healthier, you don’t have to give up your favorite dish or be on any restrictive diet. The online space is filled with conflicting diet and nutrition advice, and you can easily get overwhelmed after a while.

Don’t worry, it not just you, there are a lot of people feeling the same way. Don’t listen to all you hear about healthy eating and get well educated instead. These simple guidelines will help you to differentiate good from wrong, and hopefully, you’ll achieve to create a tasty, nutritious and colorful diet which will improve your mind and body.

Why is healthy diet good for your mood?




First of all, healthy eating can help you to maintain your perfect weight and lower risk for various health problems. On the other hand, the food you consume will also affect your sense of wellbeing. Your mood will be different if your diet is based on processed meals, fast food, and snacks filled with sugar and fat.

People who eat this way are more likely to get:

  • Depressed 
  • Stressed
  • Or can develop anxiety and bipolar disorder. 

In addition, bad diet may cause Alzheimer’s disease, trigger schizophrenia or ADHD.

Another option, which is much better for your health is to cook meals at home. Those meals should include less sugar and refined carbohydrates, and more fish, vegetables, and fresh fruits. By developing some healthy eating habits you can cure yourself or work on efficient prevention.


11/5/17

Elderly show us it's never too late to eat healthy

Many poor communities in South Africa have less access to healthy food, but one woman is determined to teach senior citizens in Mamelodi, Pretoria, about living a healthy and nutritious lifestyle. 



Reabetjoe Mokoko is an entrepreneur, student and aspiring dietitian who decided it is up to her to motivate and encourage the elderly in her community to change their eating ways.

"We live in times of non-communicable diseases – lifestyle diseases such as diabetes, hypertension – diseases that can be prevented by leading the correct lifestyle," she said.

"So if we are able to motivate and encourage people to lead healthy lifestyles, we actually protect them from things like diabetes and high blood pressure which have serious consequences."

The 27-year-old adds that her weekly visits to the Matomba/ Sinqobile Day Care for the elderly has opened her eyes to how little knowledge they have about healthy eating.

11/4/17

Hungry people pay more attention to junk food than healthy food

When hunger strikes, Ring Dings and pizza earn your attention far more than apples and wheatgrass, science says.

How to make The Most amazing Gluten Free Pizza
Freepik


HEADING TO THE grocery store for your weekly food run is never a good idea when you're hungry (or after smoking weed). Sure enough, a bunch of processed crap will inevitably end up in your basket while your belly rumbles and your brain searches for fuel.

But why that phenomenon happens was not well-understood by food scientists, until a new study from Johns Hopkins University tackled the topic. As it turns out, you don't even have to be in the grocery store for the effect to take hold.

11/1/17

Halloween costume WARNING: Why you should NEVER let your kids wear fashion contact lenses

HALLOWEEN costume contact lenses increases the risk of ending up in hospital and could leave you blind, doctors have warned.


  • Contact lenses could cause serious damage to eyes
  • May lead to blindness
  • Doctors warn not to share contact lenses
  • Don't let contact lenses come into contact with water

Wearing funky-coloured contact lenses with your scary halloween outfit is unlikely to cause any lasting damage, if they were bought at registered opticians or doctors.

But, more than half of people admitted buying cosmetic contact lenses from joke shops or over the internet, a survey revealed.

Without important safety checks and advice given by opticians when buying the lenses, the public risks serious damage to their eyes, according to the General Optical Council.


Healthy Now: Embrace Halloween with pumpkin cheesecake oatmeal


Remember that scene in "The Shining" where Jack Nicholson's wife read's her husband John's manuscript and discovers he has written hundreds of pages filled with "All work and no play makes Johnny a dull boy"?

Such a great, scary movie and perfect for Halloween. And such great words to live by: all work and no play is a dull way to go. At Truckee-Donner Recreation & Park District we embrace that philosophy and this time of year we tend to swing a little more toward the "play" and less toward the "work."