Who’s hogging our antibiotics?

June 4th, 2009

According to the new ad campaign from the Pew Charitable Trusts,

Here are the facts:

Up to 70 percent of U.S. antibiotics go to farm animals that aren’t sick, to offset overcrowding and poor sanitation. This practice promotes the development of deadly strains of drug-resistant bacteria that can spread to humans.

Consumers are exposed to resistant bacteria through the handling and consumption of contaminated meat, through produce that has been exposed to resistant bacteria in soil and water, or even through direct contact with the bacteria in the environment.

Antibiotic-resistant infections cost the U.S. health care system at least $4 to $5 billion per year. One reason is the misuse of antibiotics on factory farms, which promotes the development of drug-resistant diseases.

Each year 325,000 hospitalizations and 5,000 deaths occur due to people eating food contaminated by dangerous pathogens and bacteria such as Salmonella and E. Coli, which are often antibiotic resistant.

Food-borne bacteria are more dangerous in their antibiotic-resistant forms, because they are harder to treat and may require multiple antibiotic treatments, longer hospital stays and other interventions before finally being eliminated.

Noticed on the Beyond Green blog.

Oh, Lard. Not again!

June 3rd, 2009

I have a simple test for sniffing out the worst kind of food and nutrition journalism. Try to discern if it carries an implicit message that “everything you thought was bad for you is good for you again sooner or later.”

Good nutrition advice is fairly stable, with a modest drift noticeable from half-decade to half-decade, not week to week. Pollan’s version: “Eat food. Mostly plants. Not too much.” The federal government’s Dietary Guidelines for Americans, though more heavy on nutritionism, basically agree. They are adjusted a bit every five years, and some say the revisions should be once per decade.

Regina Schrambling’s article on Slate yesterday saves us the trouble of looking for the implicit message. The first sentence is: “Wait long enough and everything bad for you is good again.”

The article whitewashes . . . lard. Time permits just the briefest summary of the nutrition evaluation: fine in very small quantities, bad for health and the environment in large quantities, and in all cases not deserving of a whitewash.

Where did I see this theme just recently?

Oh, yes, it was the blog post titled “lard is good” by Shauna James Ahern — the gluten-free girl — who has disappointed her fans by blogging now with sponsorship by . . . the National Pork Board, the semi-public board that uses the federal government’s powers of taxation to collect mandatory assessments for promoting pork. I wonder if Schrambling read that post?

A question (not just an answer): How much does a nutritious diet cost?

June 2nd, 2009

How much does a nutritious diet cost?

Some say that the high price of healthy food is making us obese and unhealthy. Others wonder how that could be so, because (even with recent inflation) food of all sorts has been comparatively cheap in the United States for many years, due to government policy and technological change in the food system.

The leading source of disagreement about the cost of an adequate diet is different definitions of “adequate,” not different price estimates. Your estimate of the minimal necessary cost depends on your opinion on questions like the following:

  • whether a high level of meat and dairy is necessary for an adequate diet,
  • whether your vision of healthy food includes foods marketed as healthy (organic yogurt, low-fat cereal) or simple basic staples (whole grain rice, cabbage, carrots),
  • whether diets should be judged by their adherence to USDA’s Pyramid recommendations,
  • whether diets should be judged by their adherence to the National Academies’ nutrient recommendations, and
  • whether you think low-income people can cook at home, or whether instead convenience and restaurant foods are central to your definition of adequacy.

More subtly, your estimate of minimal cost depends on your opinion about whether people can change their diets in order to meet cost and nutrition goals, or whether it is inevitable that any realistic diet closely resembles the current average diet.

Reasonable answers about the cost of a nutritious diet, corresponding to different definitions of nutritious, range from even less expensive than the federal government’s Thrifty Food Plan to much more expensive.

No wonder this issue generates a lot of argument! Most people on all sides of this issue leave these key assumptions implicit and unstated. Yet, these assumptions strongly influence conclusions about minimal costs.

In a recent article in the Journal of Consumer Affairs (free abstract, pay site for full article), “Using the Thrifty Food Plan to Assess the Cost of a Nutritious Diet,” Joseph Llobrera and I use USDA’s Thrifty Food Plan (TFP) framework to clarify the relationship between assumptions and cost estimates for nutritious diets. Let me know by email if your library does not have the journal. There is a related seminar on the Friedman School website. If you would like to play around with these models yourself, see our Thrifty Food Plan calculator. In both the seminar and the calculator, I should have emphasized more strongly that all of the dollars are in 2001 dollars per adult in the household, not adjusted for inflation (if you didn’t know this, the amounts would seem unrealistically low).

For some readers, the whole computation will seem beside the point. They may reason that is clearly wrong to set the TFP cost target too low, but harmless to set it too high, so why not just pick the highest estimate? For a number of reasons, I think better food assistance policy comes from trying to choose the right estimate for a minimal cost target, rather than padding the estimate too much.

In the article, we find that the USDA’s Thrifty Food Plan cost level can purchase a nutritious diet if (1) you think nutrient constraints (adequate protein, for example) are more important than food category constraints (plenty of meat), or (2) if you think it is reasonable to expect people to drastically change their current consumption pattern. If, instead, you think substantial meat and dairy amounts are essential to an adequate diet and you defer to the current consumption pattern of low-income consumers, you will probably prefer a more generous TFP cost target.

maxgxl fatigue testimonial

May 31st, 2009

At 64 years young, Wayne Lloy is grateful for the introduction of Maxgxl into his program, “my training and energy went thought the roof. For the first time in my life I was able to train twice a day with equal intensity and less fatigue, my recovery times were considerable shorter and I actually trained 7 days a week. My knee problem which prevented me from running was gone I was now running intervals with 8 minute miles. I have not run in over 20 years and had surgery on one knee. A problem I had called white hand… woke me up every night to get the blood flow back to my hands was gone.”

Wayne Lloy found Maxgxl at a health and wellness show in Winnipeg. I took the product faithfully and have reaped the benefits as my body has a tool it always needed and produced naturally and that was already in ever cell increasing it to levels that I had in my 20’s. When my new friend Thomas McKee approached me about sharing this with others and wanted to show me the business end I said that I didn’t need the money. He said to me then do it to help people this was why you got into natural medicine in the first place and this is as natural as it gets you are giving the body the first ever compound patented Glutathione Accelerator in history. Now I just want to share Dr. Keller’s message and the Max products with everyone.

Australia MaxGXL

May 31st, 2009

Max International is starting it international expansion opening in the Phillipines shortly in July. For those in waiting for MaxGXL in Australia there is a longer wait before Max opens officially here.

However this provides an excellent opportunity for those who want to prepare for the official launch here. Learning about the products and how to market online will help you get off to a racing start when it opens here.

MaxGXL, NFuze and MaxWLX are 3 amazing products that are getting outstanding results with the people that have been using them. MaxGXL is the first Glutathione accelerator with a composition patent because of its unique effect and efficacy,

Search Engine Optimisation is how to get good rankings in the search engine. If you are wanting to markteing online then you would want to start promoting your personal business site now as it takes time to see results.  Contact us at Max International Australia to receive free coaching on SEO and Internet Marketing today.

WSU invites Michael Pollan to speak

May 28th, 2009

As you saw in the comments section on the U.S. Food Policy post about the Washington State University (WSU) controversy, food safety attorney and WSU alum Bill Marler issued a challenge to the university.

University officials had claimed that financial problems were responsible for the cancellation of a freshman orientation reading program centered on Michael Pollan’s Omnivore’s Dilemma. Others had implicated pressure from state agribusiness interests with influence in university leadership. Marler’s challenge, designed to distinguish between these two theories, was to offer to write a check himself for a visit by Pollan to the WSU campus. If the university’s problems were really financial instead of political, Marler reasoned, it would accept his offer.

WSU accepted Marler’s offer, the attorney’s blog reported yesterday afternoon.

I knew it was the economic pressures that public education is facing and not any political pressure that caused the change in the reading of Omnivore’s Dilemma and Michael Pollan’s visit to Pullman. The WSU I graduated from and served, would not bend to that kind of small mindlessness.

Why be cynical? Who cares if the attorney is enjoying a bit of grandstanding? Why quibble about inconsistencies in the university’s original position? What’s the point in asking whether Pollan really needed either the additional publicity or the speaker’s fee? This outcome makes everybody look better than they would under any alternative scenario.

Broccoli is Powerful Medicine

May 13th, 2009

I hated broccoli as a kid. To me it was right up there with liver, well, almost. I avoided broccoli like the plague. At fifteen years of age I started to read articles on health.

This was mainly due to the pictures of Arnold Schwarzenegger and Lou Ferrigno hanging on my wall. I wanted to know not only how these guys got so huge, but stayed so lean while doing it.

The bodybuilding magazines were full of articles on nutrition and even though most of it was crap, I read through every article I could get my hands on.

For me, like Arnold, it was just a matter of time before I reached my goal of being on the cover of Muscle Builder. So began my journey into all things nutritious and other things not so nutritious. But for now, we’re going to concentrate on the nutritious.

I resisted as best I could against all of the evidence for broccoli, but it was overwhelming. My Mom tried hard to get me to eat it as a kid, telling me it was “good for me”, but now came proof after proof through my research.

At seventeen I started eating broccoli, and I’m sure as heck glad I did. It’s been twenty seven years since then and I lost count of how many studies on the benefits of broccoli there are now, close to three billion I think.

But when you take a closer look at this vegetable it’s not hard to believe broccoli could be the king of them all. Some of the nutrients found in broccoli include vitamins C, K, A, B1-3, B5&6, E, Zinc, Calcium, Iron, Potassium, Magnesium, Manganese, Omega 3 Fatty Acids, Phosphorus, Tryptophan, Folate, Protein and Dietary Fiber among others.

Broccoli works against prostate cancer, breast cancer, multiple myeloma, lung cancer, colon cancer, and even cancers of the organs like liver cancer.It speeds up the removal of estrogen from the body, helping suppress breast cancer.

Broccoli is rich in cholesterol-reducing fiber and has anti viral and anti ulcer activity. It is a super source of chromium that helps regulate insulin and blood sugar. Broccoli also fights anemia, and lessens the risk of spina bifida.

Because of its high levels of vitamin C, beta carotene, and fiber, broccoli is a powerful antioxidant that helps to prevent damage to cells caused by free radicals, believed to be a factor in cancers, Alzheimer’s, heart disease, arthritis, and in the aging process itself.

The high fiber content of broccoli is also of benefit in cases of diabetes. Broccoli also has as much calcium as milk; this is a good source of nutrition for those with osteoporosis or calcium deficiencies. Broccoli is the miracle which the drug makers seek to package and sell.

In short, eat your broccoli, your body will reward you. And keep in mind that boiling broccoli or cooking it with any method that immerses it in water while it cooks removes many of the valuable nutrients. Steaming or even stir frying broccoli does a far better job of preserving the healthy effects.

Of course, eating it raw is great. I almost always eat it raw in salads, but before I do I like to give it a spraying over with either hydrogen peroxide or vinegar to remove pesticides.

Also, when you’re shopping for broccoli, look for it to have fresh looking light-green stalks of consistent thickness. The bud clusters should be compact and dark green, and may have some purple tinge.

Let your food be your medicine and your medicine be your food. Hippocrates

Author:

Copyright 2008 John Franco. John Franco has been directly involved in the Health and Fitness Industry for close to thirty years. To read more tips and techniques like the one in this article, please visit us at http://formenoverforty.blogspot.com

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Papayas: A Powerhouse Of Digestive Enzyme Nutrition

May 13th, 2009

Sweet and succulent, this elongated, pear shaped fruit is loaded with more vitamin C than an orange. It has a velvety soft, almost buttery-like, texture which Christopher Columbus described as “fruit of the angels”. Once considered quite rare and exotic for most of us, papayas are now commonly found in most larger end supermarket chains. The seasonal peak of the papaya is early summer to fall. But, as a tropical plant, the tree can bear fruit year round.

Key nutrients found in this warm weather fruit are vitamins A, B-9 (folate) C, E, K, and a great source of dietary fiber. They also contain calcium, potassium, phosphate, magnesium, copper, and more iron than most fruits with fewer calories. While they are very sweet to the taste, they are, also surprisingly, relatively low in sugar. And another plus, this fruit is one of the least likely to be contaminated with heavy pesticide spraying.

Yellow and orange flesh colored vegetables and fruits, like certain varieties of the smaller varieties of papaya, contain various amounts of plant antioxidants like vitamins A, C, E, and K. Nutritional scientists are currently, and extensively, studying the different classifications of phytochemicals, like carotenoids and bioflavonoids, that are found in plant foods for their potential health benefits.

Some of the many positive health effects associated with eating papayas include:

* Offers protection against developing heart disease by preventing atherosclerosis of blood vessels due to its high vitamin C content. The high concentration of carotenoid phytochemicals and antioxidant vitamins A and E help prevent the oxidation of cholesterol that can build up inside artery walls.

* Provides protection against developing colon cancer with a complex nutritional source of antioxidants, phytochemicals, minerals, and fiber.

* Contains several unique protein-digesting enzymes, including papain and chymopapain. These enzyme substances help reduce inflammation in diseases like asthma, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and improves healing of burn wounds.

* The vitamin A and C content, which is made from the beta carotene in papayas, are both needed for the support of a healthy immune system. A wonderful fruit choice for the prevention of systemic ear infections, colds, and flu.

* Fruits like the papaya, and many others, may provide better protection against age-related macular degeneration than carrots in adulthood. Three or more servings of fruit a day lowers the risk of developing this eye disease in older adults by 36 percent.

This fruit has an amazing concentration of two proteolytic enzymes called papain and chymopapain that enables the digestion of protein. Papain, the most important and abundant of the two, is extracted and dried from the green fruit. It has been used for tenderizing meat for years, used to heal wounds, soften, and cleanse the skin, and is one of the primary ingredients used in natural digestive aid supplements.

According to Dr. Lytton-Benard, Yale University, consistently poor digestion leaves the body without proper nutrients. Those who often find it nearly impossible to digest a high protein meal, will find the rejuvenating effects of papaya juice, or dry supplement form, marks the turning point on the climb back up to vitality and good health.

When selecting a fresh papaya, always avoid those that are dark green. They may not fully ripen. A ripe fruit will smell mildly sweet, and you can hasten the ripening of a slightly green fruit at room temperature by placing it in a paper bag for a day or two. The papain concentration is highest when the fruit is green, and lessens when it fully ripens. The papayas outer skin layer turns a golden-yellow color when fully ripe, and the flesh can range from pink and red to bright orange, depending on the specific variety of the fruit.

There are two varieties commonly found in the United States. The ‘Solo’ variety is grown in Hawaii. It is called solo because it is small, usually about 7 inches long, weighs about a pound, and is easily eaten by one person. The Maradol variety is grown in Mexico or Central America. It is a much larger fruit, measuring up to 20 inches in length, and can weigh up to 5 or 6 pounds.

To eat the fruit like a melon slice it lengthwise and scoop out the slick, black seeds in the center. Refrigerate any left overs and eat within a couple of days.

The flavor of the papaya has been described as having an apricot taste with a twist of ginger. The flesh of the fruit can be used and mixed in all types of recipe dishes, from salads and meat marinades to adding with other fruits in the blender for fruit smoothies.

Any way you choose to slice and eat them, the wide variety of nutrients that are available in a papaya helps support a healthy body. It is one of many fruits that can help you enjoy a happier life inside your skin.

Author:

Brenda Skidmore has spent the last five years actively researching natural health care alternatives. It is her sincere desire to empower others by sharing this important information. To improve your health today visit
mywater4life.com

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Eat Your Way To Better Knee Health: By Increasing Vitamins C And D Levels

May 12th, 2009

Osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee joint is a crippling disease that affects the entire joint including the articular cartilage, bone, and soft tissues. It is the most common form of joint disease, and the main cause of musculoskeletal disability in the aging population group. OA is a very frustrating and painful condition that affects an individual’s freedom of movement.

Osteoarthritis of the knee causes a roughening and thinning of the cartilage, the semi-hard tissue that sandwiches (cushioning) between the upper and lower leg bones. Knee cartilage is called ‘meniscus’ and forms a disk-like shaped cushion protecting the leg bones from impact during hinged movement. In the beginning stages of OA of the knee, and in progression of the disease, the meniscus develops cracks and gradually wears away. Physical symptoms resulting in pain, stiffness, grinding noises are noticed as bone rubs against bone.

Recently, a ten year nutritional study was conducted on 300 healthy, middled aged adults, who had no physical signs of knee joint pain or injuries. The study participants amounts and frequency of fruit consumption, as they are notably high in antioxidant vitamin C nutrition and water content, were estimated upon entry into the study period.

Ten years later, the study subjects were tested for cartilage volume, bone mass, cartilage defects and bone marrow lesions using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The lead investigative author of this published study, Yuanyuan Wang, Dept. of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Central and Eastern Clinical School, Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Australia used MRI as a reliable visual tool to measure the results. MRI is currently the best, and most non-evasive, method of viewing joint structure in normalcy or in stages of disease.

This decade-long study indicated the impact of increased vitamin C levels on OA disease of the knee, by a lessening of bone marrow lesions, and reduction of bone size, both are important predictors of this disease, by 50 percent.

In a similar study conducted by Dr. Timothy E. McAlindon, a rheumatologist at Boston University Medical Center, published the results of an 8-year dietary investigation performed on 556 elderly individuals. McAlindon found those, whose knee x-rays showed signs of early stages of OA, were not as likely to experience the full-blown progression of the joint disease eight years later if their dietary intake and blood levels of vitamin D were higher than the recommended daily amount. Most of the participants in this study supplemented with vitamin D.

Dr. McAlindon, and other colleagues involved in this particular study, theorized that vitamin C may help repair and maintain collagen, a major component of cartilage. They also maintain a recognizable fact, among medical researchers, of vitamin D’s positive, hormone-like affects on bone cells and growth, and that vitamin D may affect the surrounding bone material in joints as well. They agree that supplementation of vitamin D may be warranted for people who, geographically, live where they can not freely partake of it from the sun year round.

And, while I am in agreement with the importance of these promising new investigative studies, that focus on basic nutrient’s protective and slowing down powers in relationship to joint disease with their increased intakes, why does adequate hydration levels seem to be, largely, ignored?

According to Dr. F. Batmanghelidj, M.D., Author of “Your Body’s Many Cries For Water”, states, “that arthritic joints and their pain are to be viewed as indicators of a water deficiency in the affected joint cartilage surfaces. In some arthritis pain, a salt shortage may also be a factor. The cartilage surfaces of bones in a joint contain a lot of water. The lubricating property of this ‘held water’ is used in the cartilage from the two opposing surfaces to freely glide over one another during joint movement”.

While more dietary studies are certainly welcome, and would definitely be helpful in confirming earlier test study results, how might including the investigation of what most people drink every day have on the beneficial effects of nutrient therapy? Especially, as it is estimated that around three-quarters of the human population is walking around in a state of chronic dehydration. The reason seems to be because there are so many different types of home prepared (or manufactured) beverages competing with our voluntary choice in what to be drinking instead of pure water, and it is commonly considered not unimportant knowledge by most people, medically educated or not.

When a certain individual may not seem to be benefiting from nutrient therapy, alone, in the prevention of joint disease, how might increasing their pure water intake level effect the overall out come? As Dr. B points out, in his wildly popular self-help book, in his simplistic, educated, and 20 plus years of clinical experience using water as a medicine, water seems to be the glue-like fluid substance that binds all this other stuff together. Without adequate water levels inside the body, the healing effects of nature’s basic nutrients will not be fully enjoyed or experienced.

About the Author:

Brenda Skidmore has spent the last five years actively researching natural health care alternatives. It is her sincere desire to empower others by sharing this important information. To improve your health today visit
mywater4life.com

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Live Longer: Eat An Olive Oil-Rich Diet

May 12th, 2009

Anyone who has travelled to the Mediterranean can tell you about the wonderful, healthy food in that region. Much of the health benefits and flavor are due to the generous use of olive oil on salads, pasta, vegetables, fish, and almost anything else. Researchers are learning that people who consume olive oil regularly - especially in place of unhealthy fats such as animal fats, hydrogenated oils, and vegetable oils like corn oil - have much lower rates of heart disease, athersclerosis, diabetes, colon cancer, and asthma.

Olive oil is made from the crushing and then the subsequent pressing of olives. It is a natural juice that preserves the taste, aroma, and nutrients of the olive fruit. Extra virgin olive oil - derived from the first pressing of the olives - has the most delicate flavor and the most health benefits.

The Health Benefits of Olive Oil

1. It protects against heart disease. Studies show that two tablespoons of olive oil per day decreases total- and LDL cholesterol. It decreases atherosclerosis and protects the lining of our blood vessels, thus preventing high blood pressure.

2. It protects against breast cancer. Oleic acid, the primary monounsaturated fatty acid in olive oil, has been shown to reduce the expression of certain oncogenes related to aggressive breast cancer tumor growth.

3. It reduces abdominal fat and insulin resistance. Diets high in olive oil, as compared to those high in saturated fat, prevent belly fat accumulation and insulin resistance, which are associated with type 2 diabetes.

4. It decreases rates of asthma and rheumatoid arthritis. The monounsaturated fats in olive oil are used to decrease inflammation in the body, thereby reducing inflammation involved with asthma and arthritis.

5. It decreases osteoporosis. Polyphenols in olive oil greatly decrease the inflammation-mediated bone loss associated with osteoporosis.

6. It has anti-oxidant properties. Polyphenols in olive oil protect DNA from free radical damage.

7. It protects against colon cancer. The olive oil polyphenols protect the lining of the colon, blocking the carcinogenesis pathway.

Practical Tips

* To get the most health benefits and flavor from your olive oil, add olive oil to foods immediately after cooking.
* Instead of serving butter, fill a small bowl with olive oil and use as flavoring for your whole grain bread.
* Along with balsamic vinegar and lemon juice, rely on olive oil as your first choice for dressing salads.
* Drizzle olive oil over steamed vegetables, soups, grains, beans, and potatoes to enhance the flavor of your food.
* Add a tablespoon of olive oil to your morning eggs.

Purchasing and Storing Your Olive Oil

Because olive oil can become rancid when exposed to air, light and heat, there are some important guidelines to follow when purchasing and storing your olive oil. Look for olive oils that are sold in dark, tinted bottles since the packaging will protect the oil from oxidation caused by light exposure. Make sure the oil is displayed in a cool area away from any light or heat sources. Instead of choosing the bottle in the front of the store’s display, choose the bottle in the back that has been protected from light exposure. At home, store your oil in a dark, cool place, such as a cabinet or pantry, instead of leaving it on the kitchen counter or table, which will lessen the oil’s health benefits. Keep your olive oil bottle tightly sealed. Be sure to buy only cold pressed, extra virgin olive oil for the best health benefits.

Make a positive choice for your health by incorporating a Mediterranean-style diet rich in olive oil. Especially when replacing unhealthy fat sources, olive oil will help you to live longer by decreasing the risk of many diseases. To enjoy the taste, aroma, and nutrients of the Mediterranean, grab yourself a bottle of cold pressed, extra virgin olive oil today!

Author:

For more health tips and published research with vertigo, migraine, Multiple Sclerosis and Parkinson’s disease patients by Dr. Erin Elster, D.C., upper cervical chiropractor, in Boulder, Colorado, visit her website www.erinelster.com.

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