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Category Archives: Diet And Food
Diet.com to Host Spring Fitness Challenge, Prepare Dieters for Summer Months Ahead
Posted: March 29, 2012 at 3:25 pm
Brookline, MA (PRWEB) March 29, 2012
Diet.com, one of the web's leading resources for diet, fitness and nutrition content and tools, has announced that the site will host an 8-week Spring Fitness Challenge for its members starting this April. The Challenge, which will begin on Monday, April 2 and run through May 27, aims to motivate members to get into shape for summer.
Diet.com's new Spring Fitness Challenge comes on the heels of the website's annual New Year's Weight Loss Challenge, which earlier this year drew over 500 participants from all over the world. The Spring Fitness Challenge will be hosted on Diet.com's Blogs pages, where each week they'll feature a new printable, trainer-designed workout routine. The workouts will increase in difficulty each week, progressing participants through a wide range of exercises to help them push themselves and set new goals.
According to Diet.com, participants will have the option to print their workout each week or to follow along with the workout in real-time using Diet.com's Workout Builder tool, which allows users to combine video clips of different exercises into a custom-designed, full-length workout video.
Challenge participants will check in with their own Diet.com member blogs each week, reporting on how the week's workout is going, noting any weight loss and sharing their own successes and struggles with the Challenge.
At the conclusions of the 8-week Challenge, a winner will be chosen randomly from those who complete the Challenge and submit a short narrative about their own Challenge experience. The final prize package will include a 1-year Diet.com Premium Membership, which grants access to the site's brand new Diet Plan, including meal plans, exercise plans and access to personal consultations with a registered dietitian.
The Spring Fitness Challenge is open to all Diet.com site members. Create a free account here to participate in the Spring Fitness Challenge as well as gain access to Diet.com's fitness and diet tools, including expert blogs, instructional fitness videos, healthy recipes and more.
Read the full rules about the Challenge here.
About Diet.com: Diet.com is a multifaceted health and wellness organization that provides quality information and cutting edge tools and services to consumers and businesses alike. Since its founding, Diet.com has been a valuable online resource for dieters and those seeking information on living a healthy lifestyle. As one of the web's leading resources for diet, nutrition, and fitness content and tools, Diet.com has created a platform where consumers are able to set and track diet and fitness goals, browse over 1,000 healthy recipes, learn new exercises, and interact with others in the thriving Diet.com online community. The diethealth YouTube channel (http://www.youtube.com/diethealth) has a library of over 500 videos, over 116,000 subscribers, and has received upwards of 94 million views. For any inquiries, please contact Lauren Alford, Director of Business Development, at LaurenA@diet.com or 919-616-7532.
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Complicated link between diet soda, health: US study
Posted: March 29, 2012 at 10:25 am
Some studies have suggested that diet soda lovers could face higher risks of diabetes and heart disease, but one recent US study of several diet drink consumers found that overall eating habits may be what matters most in the end.
Researchers, whose findings were published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, used data on more than 4,000 people taking part in a long-term study of heart health and followed them for the next 20 years.
Of the study participants between the ages of 18 and 30 when it began in the mid-1980s, 827 subsequently developed metabolic syndromea cluster of risk factors for heart problems and diabetes including extra weight around the waist, unhealthy cholesterol levels, high blood pressure and elevated blood sugar.
The researchers, led by Kiyah Duffey of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, found that young adults who drank diet beverages were more likely than those who didn't to develop metabolic syndrome over the next 20 years. But the picture became more complex when Duffey's team considered the role of diet as well.
"Our results suggest that both overall dietary pattern and diet beverage consumption are important, to various degrees, for different metabolic outcomes," they wrote.
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Lifescript Launches New Diet And Fitness Section
Posted: March 29, 2012 at 10:25 am
MISSION VIEJO, Calif., March 28, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Lifescript.com, a women's health and wellness website headquartered in Mission Viejo, Calif., has just released a new Diet and Fitness section to help women eat right, exercise, and get to their healthiest weight. The section features exclusive celebrity workout videos, profiles of today's most popular diet and exercise plans, tips from nutrition experts and more.
"For women who want to lose weight and improve their health, we have a huge amount of information," says Laurie Berger, Lifescript Editor-in-Chief. "Our Diet and Fitness section is encouraging, informative, and has several fun, interactive tools that readers can depend on throughout their weight-loss journeys."
The new section includes step-by-step instructions for numerous exercise plans, searchable by body part, fitness goal, fitness level, equipment and health condition. The Diet and Fitness channel also features free fitness videos from celebrity trainer Adam Ernster who trains dozens of Hollywood stars such as Pussycat Doll Nicole Scherzinger, actress Jamie Lee Curtis, actor Ben Affleck and more. He invited Lifescript to his Beverly Hills "Bunker" to film tips on how he trains the stars, and all his videos are available on the site.
The new section also features news and descriptions of today's most popular diet plans to lose weight, with complete guidance from top nutritionists; as well as specialized exercise and nutrition advice for women with arthritis, diabetes, fibromyalgia, osteoporosis and other common conditions. There's even health and fitness advice from celebrities and famous chefs.
"Diet and Fitness" is one of five sections on Lifescript's rapidly growing health website, including "Health" (conditions), "Healthy Food" (a recipe collection) "Life" and "Soul." A Parenting section is scheduled for later in 2012.
ABOUT LIFESCRIPT: One of the fastest-growing online healthy living publishers, Lifescript.com (http://www.lifescript.com/) attracts 6.3 million unique visitors monthly and is the only site focusing exclusively on women's health. More than 7 million readers also subscribe to its six daily email newsletters. The company is headquartered in Mission Viejo, Calif., with additional offices in Beverly Hills and New York City.
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Study unravels health impact, interplay of diet soft drinks and overall diet
Posted: March 29, 2012 at 10:25 am
Public release date: 28-Mar-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]
Contact: Patric Lane patric_lane@unc.edu 919-962-8596 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Are diet sodas good or bad for you? The jury is still out, but a new study sheds light on the impact that zero-calorie beverages may have on health, especially in the context of a person's overall dietary habits.
For the average person, the scientific evidence can seem confusing. A number of studies have implicated diet beverage consumption as a cause of cardiovascular disease. However, others have suggested such drinks may be a viable tactic for people who are trying to lose or control their weight.
Either way, most previous research has tended to focus either on people's drinking patterns and preferences, or their overall dietary habits in other words, most studies have failed to tease apart how those two aspects interact to affect people's health.
To address this problem, a new study from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill examined not only people's beverage consumption patterns but also the diets of those who consume diet and sugar-sweetened beverages. The findings appear in the April issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Kiyah Duffey, Ph.D., study author and research assistant professor of nutrition at the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health, said that similar to previous studies, the new analysis found that people who consumed diet beverages tended to be less healthy than people who did not consume them.
"However, there was an important interplay between overall diet and what people drink," Duffey said. "It is important that people consider the entirety of their diet before they consider switching to or adding diet beverages, because without doing so they may not realize the health benefits they were hoping to see."
Researchers studied data collected over 20 years from more than 4,000 young adults who participated in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study.
In terms of eating habits, participants fell into two groups: people who ate what researchers dubbed a "prudent" diet (one with more fruit, fish, whole grains, nuts and milk) and individuals who consumed a "western" diet (which had higher amounts of fast food, meat and poultry, pizza and snacks).
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Health impact, interplay of diet soft drinks and overall diet unravelled
Posted: March 29, 2012 at 10:25 am
ScienceDaily (Mar. 28, 2012) Are diet sodas good or bad for you? The jury is still out, but a new study sheds light on the impact that zero-calorie beverages may have on health, especially in the context of a person's overall dietary habits.
For the average person, the scientific evidence can seem confusing. A number of studies have implicated diet beverage consumption as a cause of cardiovascular disease. However, others have suggested such drinks may be a viable tactic for people who are trying to lose or control their weight.
Either way, most previous research has tended to focus either on people's drinking patterns and preferences, or their overall dietary habits -- in other words, most studies have failed to tease apart how those two aspects interact to affect people's health.
To address this problem, a new study from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill examined not only people's beverage consumption patterns but also the diets of those who consume diet and sugar-sweetened beverages. The findings appear in the April issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Kiyah Duffey, Ph.D., study author and research assistant professor of nutrition at the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health, said that similar to previous studies, the new analysis found that people who consumed diet beverages tended to be less healthy than people who did not consume them.
"However, there was an important interplay between overall diet and what people drink," Duffey said. "It is important that people consider the entirety of their diet before they consider switching to or adding diet beverages, because without doing so they may not realize the health benefits they were hoping to see."
Researchers studied data collected over 20 years from more than 4,000 young adults who participated in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study.
In terms of eating habits, participants fell into two groups: people who ate what researchers dubbed a "prudent" diet (one with more fruit, fish, whole grains, nuts and milk) and individuals who consumed a "western" diet (which had higher amounts of fast food, meat and poultry, pizza and snacks).
People who were healthiest tended to be those who ate a prudent diet and did not consume diet beverages. They had a lower risk of high waist circumference, high triglyceride levels and metabolic syndrome (22 percent, 28 percent and 36 percent lower, respectively, than people who ate a western diet and did not drink diet beverages). But the second healthiest group was individuals with a prudent diet who also consumed diet beverages.
In contrast, individuals who consumed the western diet had increased risk of heart disease, regardless of whether or not they drank diet beverages.
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Health impact, interplay of diet soft drinks and overall diet unravelled
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Book Review: App Empire – Make Money, Have a Life, and Let Technology Work For You by Chad Mureta
Posted: March 28, 2012 at 12:48 pm
App Empire - Make Money, Have a Life, and Let Technology Work For You by Chad Mureta shows readers how to create, develop, test and market apps that will sell in the marketplace. It's worth noting that the app industry grew even during the most recent recession.
The technology is moving at a ludicrous speed. Apple, Google and RIM are the biggest players. Top app trends include location-based services, social networks, mobile commerce, mobile e-mail and video. Apps literally live on smartphones.
The author explains that apps are designed for entertainment or productivity. Examples of productivity apps including those tracking diets, creating grocery lists, currency conversions, turning an iPhone into a flashlight and many other applications limited only by your imagination.
Apps are so popular because consumers can get what they want instantly and at a low cost. More than 21 billion apps have been downloaded for Apple and Android devices alone. That's just the beginning of the learning curve.
Top grossing apps include DragonVale, Poker by Zynga, Tap Pet Hotel, Smurf's Village, Tijno Zoo Friends and many others outlined in the book. The traits of successful apps include fun/entertainment , intuitiveness, engaging users, value, cross-cultural dynamics and graphics. Apps are created based upon insight as to what people want and will download. Paid apps cost a dollar or more for each download.
The author explains that the successful apps designer will understand why people want an app and then find one to satisfy that need. Implementation staff can be outsourced from providers; such as, oDesk, Freelancer or Guru/Elance. An Apple iOS platform may be used to launch the app. The Apple's Developer Portal shows the number of downloads, revenue and AdBanner for ads. An ambitious entrepreneur can pay for traffic to grow the network of apps.
App Empire - Make Money, Have a Life, and Let Technology Work For You is a wonderful book that explains how to make lots of money formulating, building and promoting popular apps from the basic idea through to implementation in the marketplace of smartphone users and other interested parties.
View the original article on blogcritics.org
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Nutritionist to present food theory at MSU
Posted: March 28, 2012 at 12:48 pm
There's a world of diets out there, and one particular strain of eating smart and healthy based on a two-decade study in China has caught a lot of attention during the past 10 years.
Lee Fulkerson's 2011 documentary "Forks Over Knives" has popularized nutritional research and writings, which favor a plant-based diet over one of animal-based and processed foods to avoid or even reverse diseases such as cancer and diabetes.
Dr. T. Colin Campbell, one of the world's premiere nutritionists, and one of the men whose work was focused on in Fulkerson's documentary, will talk about "The Health Care Crisis and Its Missing Link" at 7 p.m. Thursday at Akin Auditorium in Midwestern State University's Hardin Building.
The lecture is part of the 11th annual Speakers and Issues Series, and admission is free. Claudia Montoya, MSU Spanish professor and director of Speakers and Issues, saw the documentary in Dallas in 2011 and it made a very strong impression on her.
MSU screened Fulkerson's documentary Thursday in the Clark Student Center to a very good crowd, Montoya said.
"It shows his (Campbell's) life and the life of another doctor, a heart surgeon, (Caldwell Esselstyn) and how they were doing different studies in their own fields about how your diet affects you. They began to share their research and realized how much nutrition has to do with heart disease."
It is very important to be aware of things like this, Montoya said.
"Dr. Campbell proposes to have a plant-based diet, and that is an excellent idea. But, to follow the program the way he suggests it takes a lot of discipline."
There also is more to the plant-based diet that Campbell suggests than just going to the store and buying vegetables and eating them, she said. "He is very concerned about the production of those vegetables, and he is very much in favor of organic farms."
The idea is to avoid chemical pesticides and fertilizers. "Different studies have shown that those types of chemicals have a very bad impact on your health, long-term," she said.
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Dukan Diet Founder to Face Ethics Hearing
Posted: March 28, 2012 at 12:48 pm
Loic Venance / AFP / Getty Images
Dr. Pierre Dukan
Should teens get extra points for being thin? Dr. Pierre Dukan, theFrench founder of the controversial Dukan Diet, thinks so. The diet guru is now facing an ethics hearing for suggesting that high school students in France be rewarded for not being overweight.
In January, Dukan whose high-protein, low-carb diet is said to be followed by celebrities like Kate Middleton suggestedthat Frances baccalaureate exam, a test that 17-year-olds have to take to finish high school and go onto college, include an anti-obesity option that students may pass by staying within a recommended weight range, the BBC reports.
Health professionals were outraged by the comment, and now the French College of Physicians says Dukan has violated the countrys medical ethics code, which states that a doctor must be aware of the repercussions his views can have on the public. According to the College, Dukans statements could be harmful to girls who are already overweight or are struggling with eating disorders like anorexia.
MORE:The Diet-Pill Dilemma
Everything about this is wrong, Dr. David Katz, director of the Yale University Prevention Research Center, told ABC News. Its wrong because it invites eating disorders. Its wrong because weight has nothing to do with academic performance and the notion that weight is a behavior that should incentivized is just wrong. Weight is an outcome. We should incentivize things people can control.
In a second complaint, the College of Physicans accuses Dukan of prioritizing moneymaking over medicine, breaching another part of its ethics code, which states that medicine cannot be practiced like a business. Dukan has sold more than seven million copies of his diet books, which have been translated into several languages and have spawned a website providing paid-for weight-loss programs.
This isnt the first time Dukan has met with controversy or fallen under suspicion. Last year, Dukan lost a libel case against fellow nutritionist Dr.Jean-Michel Cohen, who described the Dukan Diet as dangerous, saying that only theslimming industry, doctors, pill salesmen, publishers and newspapers benefited from it, the Guardian reports.
If found guilty, the BBC reports that Dr. Dukan could be removed from the French medical registry. The hearing will occur in the next six months.
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Dukan Diet Founder to Face Ethics Hearing
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Dr. Mark Liponis, MD, Canyon Ranch Medical Director Reveals the Key to Losing and Keeping the Weight Off Forever in …
Posted: March 27, 2012 at 11:23 pm
The Solution to Losing Weight Forever is Not What You Eat, It's What Not to Eat for Your Body Type
Are You a Hunter or a Farmer?
LENOX, Mass., March 27, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- At last, a diet book that provides a unique solution to help shed those unwanted pounds that never seem to go away. For those who haven't had success with other diet books, even with total commitment, it wasn't your fault. You just didn't have access to the right diet....until now.
In his groundbreaking book, The Hunter/Farmer Diet Solution (Hay House/April 2012), Canyon Ranch Medical Director, Dr. Liponis, M.D., identifies people as either a Hunter or a Farmer. Accordingly, he prescribes the corresponding diet to follow citing scientific research that proves what many women and men have learned through trial and error: some do better on a low-carb diet, others do better on a low-fat diet. This is because some people have the metabolism of a Hunter, while others have the metabolism of a Farmer.
Referring to a pivotal diet study - the Stanford "A to Z Weight Loss Study" (http://nutrition.stanford.edu/projects/az.html) - Dr. Liponis notes the striking findings that show a huge variation in the amount of weight gained or lost by different people on the same diets. Matching the right diet with the right person produced more than double the weight loss on average. Put simply, some of us are genetically programmed for low-carb diets (Hunters) and others low-fat diets (Farmers).
Farmers need a low-fat, grain-based diet while Hunters need a low-carb diet based on protein and veggies. Farmers need to eat frequent small meals and snacks while Hunters are better suited to eating less often, maybe once or twice a day. Dr. Liponis, a leading expert in preventive and integrative medicine, shares a simple quiz to determine whether you are a Hunter or a Farmer. Once you know your type, you will be on the road to successful and sustained weight loss, greater health, and improved well-being.
Dr. Liponis also discusses diseases and their implications for Hunters and Farmers. While it is impossible to precisely predict future disease, knowing a person's Hunter/Farmer type can help forecast the likelihood of certain diseases. By eating the right diet, Hunters can help avoid cardiovascular diseases and diabetes, and Farmers can help avoid cancer, autoimmune diseases and Alzheimer's.
As Medical Director of Canyon Ranch Health Resorts, the internationally respected and admired destination resort spa for health, wellness and holistic care, Dr. Liponis has plenty of firsthand experience and stories about people and their weight loss struggles. His book gives the necessary strategies to adhere to a Hunter or Farmer diet and specifies which foods to eat or avoid. It includes delicious recipes created and tested by Canyon Ranch specifically for Hunters and Farmers.
Dr. Mark Liponis is co-author of the New York Times bestseller UltraPrevention and the author of UltraLongevity. He has been a practicing physician for more than twenty years, including extensive experience in emergency departments and critical care units. He has continued to expand his understanding and expertise in integrative medicine through his work at Canyon Ranch.
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Hot Peppers May Boost Heart Health
Posted: March 27, 2012 at 11:23 pm
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Hot Peppers May Boost Heart Health
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