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One Easy Way To Improve Your Overall Health: Eat Less Salt – WBUR

Posted: May 15, 2020 at 6:45 pm

Most Americans eat far more salt than they should, exceeding the dietary guidelines for sodium.

Doctors say too much sodium leads to high blood pressure and increases the risk of heart disease and stroke. But how much salt is too much?

After almost a decade of controversy over this question, the National Academies of Science released new recommendations last year, says Dr. Dariush Mozaffarian, a cardiologist, professor of medicine at Tufts University and dean of the Tufts Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy.

According to the new guidelines, adults shouldnt eat more than 2,300 milligrams of salt per day. But in reality, Americans are eating much more than that close to 3,500 milligrams on average, Mozaffarian says.

Globally, we're kind of right about average. There are some countries that are actually around [2,200 to 2,300] milligrams a day on average where they should be, mostly countries in Africa, he says. There's countries that are around 5,500, especially in Asia and China, where there's huge amounts of soy sauce.

There arent any clear benefits to having a lot of salt in your diet, Mozaffarian says. Sodium actually causes more harm than good. For one, it raises blood pressure, which increases the risk of heart attack and stroke.

Sodium gets into our bloodstream and it expands the volume, the amount of fluid in your bloodstream, he explains, and it makes the kidneys work harder to pump it out, and it makes the heart work harder to pump that extra fluid.

Over the long term, high blood pressure can lead to scarring in blood vessels, the heart and kidneys, which can lead to problems such as heart or kidney failure, he says.

Mozaffarian says its pretty simple for individuals to gradually reduce salt intake because the human tongue receptors for salt are very adaptable.

Within a few weeks, if you changed your salt intake and you increased it or decreased it dramatically, the tongue receptors adjust, so the food tastes the same again, he says. So that means if as a population, as a whole, we slowly reduce salt in this country over a few years, nobody would notice. All of our tongues would adapt and we'd be healthier.

On an individual basis, reducing salt intake is easy. But in order to reduce salt levels on a mass scale, restaurants and the food industry need to get on board, Mozaffarian says.

In countries such as the United Kingdom and Turkey, governments have partnered with industry to establish voluntary sodium reduction targets, he says. But in the U.S., Congress has blocked similar efforts after pushback from parts of the food industry.

How foods are packaged and preserved needs to fundamentally change, Mozaffarian says.

Salt plays a key role in keeping foods fresh, he says. About 80% of salt in the U.S. food supply is from packaged and processed foods. In fact, a single slice of bread on average has more sodium than a serving of potato chips, he says.

A serving of potato chips might have 80 or 100 milligrams of sodium on average. A single slice of bread, just one slice, can have 300 milligrams of sodium, he says. Bread shouldn't last for weeks in the grocery store and on your shelf without going bad, but it does. Much of that is the high sodium.

Its important to be more conscious of the amount of sodium in processed foods, especially now as more people are cooking at home during the coronavirus pandemic, Mozaffarian says.

I think that nutrition is as important as ever, he says. I think, for those that are able to do it, [with] restaurants being closed, this is a great time to learn how to cook and get reacquainted with cooking. That's the simplest way to lower salt.

Julia Corcoran produced and edited this interview for broadcast with Tinku Ray. Samantha Raphelson adapted it for the web.

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One Easy Way To Improve Your Overall Health: Eat Less Salt - WBUR

Fasting plus vitamin C proves effective for hard-to-treat cancers – USC News

Posted: May 15, 2020 at 6:45 pm

Scientists from USC and the IFOM Cancer Institute in Milan have found that a fasting-mimicking diet could be more effective at treating some types of cancer when combined with vitamin C.

In multiple studies on mice, researchers found that the combination delayed tumor progression in multiple mouse models of colorectal cancer; in some mice, it caused disease regression. The results were published in the journal Nature Communications.

For the first time, we have demonstrated how a completely nontoxic intervention can effectively treat an aggressive cancer, said Valter Longo, the studys senior author and the director of the USC Longevity Institute at the USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology and a professor of biological sciences at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences. We have taken two treatments that are studied extensively as interventions to delay aging a fasting-mimicking diet and vitamin C and combined them as a powerful treatment for cancer.

The researchers said that, while fasting remains a challenging option for cancer patients, a safer, more feasible option is a low-calorie, plant-based diet that causes cells to respond as if the body were fasting. Their findings suggest that a low-toxicity treatment of fasting-mimicking diet plus vitamin C has the potential to replace more toxic treatments.

For the first time, we have demonstrated how a completely nontoxic intervention can effectively treat an aggressive cancer.

Valter Longo

Results of prior research on the cancer-fighting potential of vitamin C have been mixed. Recent studies, though, are beginning to show some efficacy, especially in combination with chemotherapy. In this new study, the research team wanted to find out whether a fasting-mimicking diet could enhance the high-dose vitamin C tumor-fighting action by creating an environment that would be unsustainable for cancer cells but still safe for normal cells.

Our first in vitro experiment showed remarkable effects, Longo said. When used alone, fasting-mimicking diet or vitamin C alone reduced cancer cell growth and caused a minor increase in cancer cell death. But when used together, they had a dramatic effect, killing almost all cancerous cells.

Longo and his colleagues detected this strong effect only in cancer cells that had a mutation regarded as one of the most challenging targets in cancer research. These mutations in the KRAS gene signal that the body is resisting most cancer-fighting treatments, and they reduce a patients survival rate. KRAS mutations occur in approximately a quarter of all human cancers and are estimated to occur in up to half of all colorectal cancers.

The study also provided clues about why previous studies of vitamin C as a potential anticancer therapy showed limited efficacy. By itself, a vitamin C treatment appears to trigger the KRAS-mutated cells to protect cancer cells by increasing levels of ferritin, a protein that binds iron. But by reducing levels of ferritin, the scientists managed to increase vitamin Cs toxicity for the cancer cells. Amid this finding, the scientists also discovered that colorectal cancer patients with high levels of the iron-binding protein have a lower chance of survival.

In this study, we observed how fasting-mimicking diet cycles are able to increase the effect of pharmacological doses of vitamin C against KRAS-mutated cancers, said Maira Di Tano, a study co-author at the IFOM, FIRC Institute of Molecular Oncology in Milan. This occurs through the regulation of the levels of iron and of the molecular mechanisms involved in oxidative stress. The results particularly pointed to a gene that regulates iron levels: heme-oxygenase-1.

The research teams prior studies showed that fasting and a fasting-mimicking diet slow cancers progression and make chemotherapy more effective in tumor cells while protecting normal cells from chemotherapy-associated side effects. The combination enhances the immune systems anti-tumor response in breast cancer and melanoma mouse models.

The scientists believe cancer will eventually be treated with low-toxicity drugs in a manner similar to how antibiotics are used to treat infections that kill particular bacteria but can be replaced by other drugs if they prove ineffective.

To move toward that goal, they needed to first test two hypotheses: that their nontoxic combination interventions would work in mice, and that results would look promising for human clinical trials. In this new study, they said theyve demonstrated both.

At least five clinical trials including one at USC on breast cancer and prostate patients are now investigating the effects of fasting-mimicking diets in combination with different cancer-fighting drugs.

Additional authors include Franca Raucci and Claudio Vernieri of IFOM, FIRC Institute of Molecular Oncology, Milan; Irene Caffa and Alessio Nencioni of the Department of Internal Medicine, University of Genoa and IRCCS Ospedale Policlinico San Martino, Genoa, Italy; Roberta Buono, Maura Fanti and Sebastian Brandhorst of the Longevity Institute, USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology and Department of Biological Sciences; Giuseppe Curigliano of the University of Milan, Department of Oncology and Hemato-Oncology and Division of Early Drug Development, European Institute of Oncology, IRCCS, Milan; Filippo De Braud of the University of Milan, Department of Oncology and Hemato-Oncology, and Medical Oncology Department, Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale Tumori, Milan.

The study was funded by Associazione Italiana Ricerca sul Cancro grant number 21820 and by NIA/NIH Grant # PO1 AG055369.

Longo is the founder of and has an ownership interest in L-Nutra; the companys food products are used in studies of the fasting-mimicking diet. Longos interest in L-Nutra was disclosed and managed per USCs conflicts-of-interest policies. USC has an ownership interest in L-Nutra and the potential to receive royalty payments from L-Nutra. USCs financial interest in the company has been disclosed and managed under USCs institutional conflict of interest policies.

More stories about: Cancer, Diet

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Fasting plus vitamin C proves effective for hard-to-treat cancers - USC News

Healthy Living: Myths vs. Facts on ‘Boosting’ The Immune System – 9 & 10 News – 9&10 News

Posted: May 15, 2020 at 6:45 pm

Its popular to take dietary supplements without a prescription, but does this heath trend work?

Health experts say no.

For example, Vitamin C is found in many foods and is good to have in your diet. Thats why Vitamin C supplements are touted as a great way to boost your immune system and fight off infection.

But they dont actually work, and high doses can cause a number of side effects including nausea, cramps, and an increased risk of kidney stones

Why? Our bodies can only absorb a few hundred milligrams of Vitamin C at a time.

So how can you boost your immune system?Superfoods like chia seeds and coconut oil? Nope again.

Todays Healthy Living separates fact from fiction on how some at-home habits can help you keep your health in tip-top shape. Watch the video above to learn more.

Excerpt from:
Healthy Living: Myths vs. Facts on 'Boosting' The Immune System - 9 & 10 News - 9&10 News

How Mike Tyson is in such incredible shape at 53 thanks to new diet, cardio and weird stem cell tre – The Sun

Posted: May 15, 2020 at 6:45 pm

MIKE TYSON has been doing the rounds to physically prepare for his sensational boxing comeback aged 53.

Tyson, who retired in 2005, has a whole new diet and cardio regime as well as going through a "weird" stem cell treatment.

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It comes after the former heavyweight king announced plans to make a return to the ring to compete in exhibition bouts for charity, and has been training for the last month to do so.

Speaking to rapper LL Cool J on the Rock the Bells Radio show on SiriusXM, Tyson explained the methods he is using to get back into fighting shape, as he revealed: "Really I would just change my diet and just do cardio work.

"Cardio has to start, you have to have your endurance to go and do the process of training.

"So something to do is get in cardio, I would try and get two hours of cardio a day, make sure you get that stuff in. Youre gonna make sure youre eating the right food.

"For me its almost like slave food. Doing what you hate to do but doing it like its nothing. Getting up when you dont want to get up.

"Thats what it is. Its becoming a slave to life.

"Being a slave to life means being the best person you can be, being the best you can possibly be, and when you are at the best you can possibly be is when you no longer exist and nobody talks about you. Thats when youre at your best."

Tyson's return to training for the first time in 15 years has been aided by stem-cell research therapy, that has left him feeling like a "different person".

Stem-cell therapy is the use of stem cells to treat or prevent a disease or condition that usually takes the form of a bone marrow transplantation.

Tyson was asked whether that meant if his white blood had been spun and then put back in, to which he replied: "Yes. As they took the blood it was red and when it came back it was almost transfluid (sic).

"I could almost see through the blood, and then they injected it in me.

"And Ive been weird ever since, Ive got to get balanced now."

Having previously claimed he feels in the best shape of his life, Tyson revealed he will be ready to fight again in just six weeks.

He said: "My mind would belong to somebody that disliked me enough to break my soul, and I would give them my mind for that period of time.

"Six weeks of this and Id be in the best shape Ive ever dreamed of being in. As a matter of fact, Im going through that process right now. And you know what else I did, I did stem-cell research."

WHAT IS STEM CELL TREATMENT USED FOR?

Stem cell transplants are carried out when bone marrow is damaged or isnt able to produce healthy blood cells.

It can also be used to replace damaged blood cells as the result of intensive cancer treatment.

Here are conditions that stem cell transplants can be used to treat:

Revealed

MONEY MIKEMike Tyson's earnings from all his major fights revealed as he raked in 557m

BLOOD SPORTMike Tyson injected by docs with translucent blood that made him feel 'weird'

WEATHER THE STORMMayweather demands 500MILLION to make stunning boxing return

NO W-HAYEHaye snubs Mike Tyson in top 5 heavyweights of all time and details sad decline

TONE IT DOWNTyson Fury is No1 in world but Anthony Joshua would beat him says Bellew

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SON OF A GUNTeddy Atlas lost 30m after holding gun to Mike Tyson's head when he was 15

GARDEN PARTYEddie Hearn reveals plan to bring boxing back by hosting fights in his GARDEN

LIGHT READINGFury releases new diet and training book after incredible 10st weight loss

KNUCKLE UPTyson in talks over Bare Knuckle bout after first rejecting 16m offer

GYPSY SWINGFury names his next THREE fights as he refuses to pay Wilder to step aside

During his reign as champion, Tyson would wake up at 4.30am to run before later heading to the gym where he would do 10-12 rounds of boxing mixed in with an array of muscles exercises.

His diet consisted of 3000-4000 calories of carbohydrates and proteins which helped fuel his training sessions.

Tyson, still the youngest heavyweight champion of all time at 20, retired with a record of 50-6-2 and remains one of the most celebrated punchers of all time.

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Excerpt from:
How Mike Tyson is in such incredible shape at 53 thanks to new diet, cardio and weird stem cell tre - The Sun

What has COVID-19 changed for the EU’s Farm to Fork Strategy? – EURACTIV

Posted: May 15, 2020 at 6:45 pm

What has COVID-19 changed for the EUs Farm to Fork Strategy? Nothing apart from underlining the urgency of transforming our food systems, write Nick Jacobs, Celia Nyssens and Nikolai Pushkarev.

Nick Jacobs is the Director of the International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food (IPES-Food), Celia Nyssens is Policy Officer for Agriculture at the European Environmental Bureau (EEB), and Nikolai Pushkarev is Policy Coordinator for Food Systems & NCD Prevention at the European Public Health Alliance (EPHA)

Is COVID-19 proving the resilience of our food systems, or revealing them to be broken? With the EUs Farm to Fork Strategy only days away, and key aspects still undecided, this is proving to be one of the major battlegrounds of the post-COVID landscape.

But the question of whether food systems are broken or not is missing the point. A house with a leaking roof and a rapidly eroding foundation is not broken, and may look fine, but it is not a safe place to live. While lockdowns and changes in demand have (briefly) disrupted supply chains, food has, by and large, continued to flow. This has allowed some to proclaim the system resilient the house is still standing. But is that a proof of the sustainability of the food system?

Probably not. The more fundamental question is: are food systems able to deliver healthy and sustainable diets for all, and decent livelihoods for food system workers, now and in a future context of increasing volatility and climate shocks?

On these counts, COVID-19 exposes major cracks below the surface. Food systems are not working for farmers with perennially low incomes who are now unable to sell their produce. They are not working for seasonal agricultural workers forced to live and work in unsanitary conditions in the middle of a pandemic, or for delivery drivers on zero hour contracts with no sick pay. Nor are they meeting the needs of low-income populations with little access to healthy food who are disproportionately suffering from diet-related health conditions. And food systems are certainly not working for the worlds poorest people, with the UN predicting a doubling of extreme hunger in the wake of the pandemic.

Furthermore, as noted by the Commissions scientific advisors, food systems are fundamentally unsustainable on all counts: environmental, economic and social. Continuing with business as usual will significantly endanger natural resources, our health, the climate, and the economy.

What has proven resilient, therefore, is the ability of the industrial, inequitable food system model to stay in place despite growing evidence of its shortcomings. The current crisis has been seized as an opportunity to roll back progress, i.e. to put the brake on the Farm to Fork Strategy, to shield the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) from real reform, and, under the guise of promoting food security, to refocus attention on calorie production rather than nutrition.

The Farm to Fork Strategy, and the broader European Green Deal, offer a chance to show that sustainability and food security are inextricably linked, to identify the transition to sustainable food systems as the route to resilience and food security, and to kick-start the long-term transformation of our food system that scientists, civil society and farming groups are calling for.

As we prepare for the post-coronavirus world, we need transformative policies to fix the cracks and scale up and sustain the new social innovations that have sprung up during the crisis. The Farm to Fork Strategy must therefore deliver in the following areas:

Secure livelihoods based on safe conditions and decent incomes. The Strategy offers a unique opportunity to break the cycles of low farmgate prices, insecure farming livelihoods, and reliance on CAP subsidies. COVID-19 has shown that farmers and food-workers face disproportionate risks and reap too little value, making this situation increasingly untenable.

Support social innovation and short supply chains. Like shock absorbers, citizens groups and producers have found innovative ways to sell, transport, and distribute food through the crisis. Across the EU (e.g. in France and Poland), demand has soared for community-supported agriculture (CSA) schemes and other forms of direct sales. These short supply chains are generally performing well under the strains of the crisis, and must now be scaled up.

Accelerate the shift to agroecology. Building a sustainable and resilient food system requires diversity at all levels, from the field, to the farm and regional levels, through a paradigm shift to agroecology, as recognised by the FAO, IPCC, and IPBES. This shift can build resilience by slowing the habitat destruction that drives disease outbreaks and providing secure jobs through the year, thereby reducing the reliance on temporary labour forces.

Create food environments that enable healthy and sustainable diets. A sustainable food systems transition requires a collective shift in eating patterns towards healthy, more plant-rich diets. This is not about telling people what to eat, or imposing a global diet. It means creating enabling food environments where the healthy and sustainable food options become the default, most attractive and affordable ones.

To catalyse these changes, the EU will need to set ambitious targets underpinned by action and resources, for example on reducing pesticides and fertiliser use, but also related to nutrition, jobs, or soil protection to name but a few.

The fact that food supply chains have not collapsed does not mean that they are sustainable or fair. As we start planning for the post-coronavirus world, we must continue to be guided by scientists and experts. And their advice is unequivocal: radical system-wide change is required, with business as usual no longer a viable option.

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What has COVID-19 changed for the EU's Farm to Fork Strategy? - EURACTIV

Meet the women still wearing jeans and makeup in lockdown – Metro.co.uk

Posted: May 15, 2020 at 6:45 pm

Have you abandoned your bras? Or are you still getting dressed up in lockdown? (Pictures: supplied/Metro.co.uk)

We are about to enter week eight of lockdown. Which means, for those of us with the privilege of being able to work from home, real clothes are a distant memory.

Most of us are slobbing through our days in an odd mixture of pyjamas and fitness gear, slippers with socks, bird nest hair, and absolutely, unequivocally, no bra.

But, not everyone has let their standards slide off a cliff in lockdown. Some women are still wearing real clothes including bras, jeans, even full make-up despite not seeing another human being in the flesh for weeks.

And they say it is making a world of difference to their mental health, attitude and overall well-being. They say there is power in wearing real clothes and making an effort particularly when it is only for yourself.

We spoke to some of these denim-clad heroes to find out how theyre doing it, and why they are refusing to succumb to the loungewear life.

Wearing normal clothes like jeans and makeup helps give me some routine and regularity to the situation were all in.

Plus, Im still working full-time from home, so I dont really want to go bare-faced on a video call with my colleagues. I want to maintain some professional decorum, even if it is only from the waist, up!

My eating habits have changed since lockdown, and Im only just settling back into my usual healthy diet that would take me from Monday-Friday. Something simple like wearing mom jeans helps me to normalise the situation. It keeps me motivated as a work outfit, and I dont feel so stressed about weight gain because Ive allowed myself to wear something with a bit of give in them.

I made sure not to give myself any added pressure and things to worry about from the moment we started WFH.

I put on clothes that make me feel happy to go to the Post Office in my local Tesco Metro.

I live alone and dont see anyone, so I treat it as an opportunity to remember what freedom feels like.

I tend to wear floaty dresses, bright flat shoes, maybe some earrings.

Im still wearing things that are super comfortable but they make me feel good and have turned something that I dreaded (leaving the house) in to a little adventure.

The sales of my art prints are whats keeping me afloat so I have to go to the Post Office most days at the moment.

I think there are a couple of different reasons Im still wearing real clothes.

Lockdown has given me a chance to reconnect with different parts of my creativity because I am unable to work in the same way.

I am channeling more of a festival vibe, whereas work normally means I need to dress very practically. It is kind of nice to get up in the morning and put on something from my wardrobe that might have lacked a bit of love.

I have a shed load of vintage stuff which is fun to wear but rarely gets an outing because of what I have to do in a day I often look after young nieces and nephews.

I guess it is a self care thing too, taking the time to make yourself feel good. When it is just me and my screen why not mix it up.

Not only am I keeping up my nails and glam at home, I got rid of 80% of my clothes to welcome in my upgraded wardrobe.

Paying attention to beauty has helped me feel like Im prioritising myself and looking after myself. Wearing my favourite colours cheers me up.

I also feel like Ive been dressing and staying beautiful for me which reflects my values rather than trying to dress to be appropriate for others.

I threw out the other clothes because they were drab and thats not who I am!

I refuse to dress like a slob during lockdown. Ive been working from home for a few years now so been dressing up to stay in, but I feel so much better if Im showered and looking nice.

My friend who runs the village store told me I was the most stylish customer in Lockdown (not sure about that) and my husband said he can see why I bother dressing up because you get in a better mindset.

My days currently consist of home schooling and looking after my three boys and trying to run my business in the moments around that.

I work full-time as an ops manager and I feel that its important to present myself well, even though we are all working remotely, as it sets a good example to the team.

In general, it makes me feel 100% more productive and in the work frame of mind, other than being in loungewear/no makeup as I maybe would on a lazy Sunday.

I am often having video calls with people external from the business and the impression I wish to make is the same as if we were meeting in person, that I am a smart person who looks after myself.

For me wearing real clothes, especially jeans makes me feel ready for the day and most like myself.

When I try to work in pjs for example, I struggle to differentiate between my work day and home life, which is never good, especially at a time like this.

I personally find jeans super comfy and have no plans to stop wearing them no matter how long lockdown goes on for!

During lockdown, I have been dressing up and wearing a little bit of makeup every day. I enjoy wearing clothes I love and I do so for myself.

Picking an outfit I like and wearing mascara and lipstick brightens up my day, even though I only leave the house to go to the supermarket and to walk my dog and nobody sees my lipstick under a facemask.

I even wore heels in the park a couple of times!

The reason I do this is because it makes me feel good and it gives me a sense of normality and routine during not very normal times.

The only thing I let go a bit wild is my hair.

Its partly for a morning routine; if I do the same things as I did on a morning travelling in to work, I find it wakes me up and my mind focuses a lot more easily on the tasks I need to tackle.

Since I work in IT/digital, my days are still very busy and I need that focus.

Dressing for the office also helps me tap into my work face now we are all online, the boundaries between professional and personal have become a lot more blurred, and it helps me retain a layer of between who I am at home and who I am at work.

Like moving my desk to its own corner of my flat so when I leave it, I know I am finished with the day.

I use makeup, perfume and different styles of outfit to draw lines between work, socialising and pure relaxation and help me be wholly in the moment of whatever I am doing.

It just makes me feel more like my self.

Its a form of self-care, I think. Much needed in these times where emotions go up and down in an instant.

And given that I work full-time and parent and study too, it helps get into the active business as usual mindset.

I love my activewear, but I reserve that for evenings, mornings and weekends when I exercise.

Getting dressed in the morning and putting together a great outfit for the rest of the day motivates me to get up and start the day as does having my morning tea.

I use clothing as a means of comfort, distraction and fun. I feel making a effort helps me to feel a little better and lifts my mood, which I think is great for your mental health and self-esteem.

One of my favourite things before lockdown was buying nice pieces in charity shops, buying these pieces always cheered me up if Id had a bad day.

Now, putting together a cool outfit in the morning instead of staying in my pjs all day makes me feel great and motivates me at the same time.

To get dressed in a nice outfit is a form of taking control and it helps structure your day, giving you a routine, which is hugely important.

Wearing real clothes to WFH really helps give me a sense of purpose and helps me get into a routine.

I found that wearing pjss and sportswear doesnt get me in the right frame of mind for work plus it doesnt look so professional when we as a company are part of webinars.

I even use my handbag to help keep me organised and file away my work stuff so when the working day is done I can put it all away, keep organised, change into my loungewear and switch off.

I find this routine really empowers me to make sure that I know when my work time is and when my work time isnt.

What do you think about abandoning bras in lockdown? We want to hear from you.

Get in touch: metrolifestyleteam@metro.co.uk.

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Meet the women still wearing jeans and makeup in lockdown - Metro.co.uk

Long-term weight loss maintenance | The American Journal …

Posted: May 15, 2020 at 6:44 pm

ABSTRACT

There is a general perception that almost no one succeeds in long-term maintenance of weight loss. However, research has shown that 20% of overweight individuals are successful at long-term weight loss when defined as losing at least 10% of initial body weight and maintaining the loss for at least 1 y. The National Weight Control Registry provides information about the strategies used by successful weight loss maintainers to achieve and maintain long-term weight loss. National Weight Control Registry members have lost an average of 33 kg and maintained the loss for more than 5 y. To maintain their weight loss, members report engaging in high levels of physical activity (1 h/d), eating a low-calorie, low-fat diet, eating breakfast regularly, self-monitoring weight, and maintaining a consistent eating pattern across weekdays and weekends. Moreover, weight loss maintenance may get easier over time; after individuals have successfully maintained their weight loss for 25 y, the chance of longer-term success greatly increases. Continued adherence to diet and exercise strategies, low levels of depression and disinhibition, and medical triggers for weight loss are also associated with long-term success. National Weight Control Registry members provide evidence that long-term weight loss maintenance is possible and help identify the specific approaches associated with long-term success.

The perception of the general public is that no one ever succeeds at long-term weight loss. This belief stems from Stunkard and McLaren-Humes 1959 study of 100 obese individuals, which indicated that, 2 y after treatment, only 2% maintained a weight loss of 9.1 kg (20 lb) or more (1). More recently, a New England Journal of Medicine editorial titled Losing Weight: An Ill-Fated New Years Resolution (2) echoed the same pessimistic message.

The purpose of this paper is to review the data on the prevalence of successful weight loss maintenance and then present some of the major findings from the National Weight Control Registry (NWCR), a database of more than 4000 individuals who have indeed been successful at long-term weight loss maintenance.

Wing and Hill (3) proposed that successful weight loss maintainers be defined as individuals who have intentionally lost at least 10% of their body weight and kept it off at least one year. Several aspects of this definition should be noted. First, the definition requires that the weight loss be intentional. Several recent studies indicate that unintentional weight loss occurs quite frequently and may have different causes and consequences than intentional weight loss (4,5). Thus, it is important to include intentionality in the definition. The 10% criterion was suggested because weight losses of this magnitude can produce substantial improvements in risk factors for diabetes and heart disease. Although a 10% weight loss may not return an obese to a non-obese state, the health impact of a 10% weight loss is well documented (6). Finally, the 1-y duration criterion was proposed in keeping with the Institute of Medicine criteria (7). Clearly, the most successful individuals have maintained their weight loss longer than 1 y, but selecting this criterion may stimulate research on the factors that enable individuals who have maintained their weight loss for 1 y to maintain it through longer intervals.

There are very few studies that have used this definition to estimate the prevalence of successful weight loss maintenance. McGuire et al (8) reported results of a random digit dialing survey of 500 adults, 228 of whom were overweight or obese [body mass index (BMI) 27 kg/m2] at their maximum nonpregnant weight. Of these 228, 47 (20.6%) met the criteria for successful weight loss maintenance: they had intentionally lost at least 10% of their body weight and maintained it for at least 1 y. On average, these 47 individuals had lost 20.7 14.4 kg (45.5 lb; 19.5 10.6% from maximum weight) and kept it off for 7.2 8.5 y; 28 of the 47 had reduced to normal weight (BMI <27 kg/m2).

Survey data such as these have the perspective of a persons entire lifetime and thus may include many weight loss attempts, some which were successful and some unsuccessful. It is more typical to assess success during one specific weight loss bout. In standard behavioral weight loss programs, participants lose an average of 710% (710 kg) of their body weight at the end of the initial 6-mo treatment program and then maintain a weight loss of 56 kg (56%) at 1-y follow-up. Only a few studies have followed participants for longer intervals; in these studies, 1320% maintain a weight loss of 5 kg or more at 5 y. In the Diabetes Prevention Program (9), 1000 overweight individuals with impaired glucose tolerance were randomly assigned to an intensive lifestyle intervention. The average weight loss of these participants was 7 kg (7%) at 6 mo; after 1 y, participants maintained a weight loss of 6 kg (6%), and, at 3 y, they maintained a weight loss of 4 kg (4%). At the end of the study (follow-up ranging from 1.8 to 4.6 y; mean, 2.8 y), 37% maintained a weight loss of 7% or more.

Thus, although the data are limited and the definitions varied across studies, it appears that 20% of overweight individuals are successful weight losers.

Although it is often stated that no one ever succeeds in weight loss, we all know some people who have achieved this feat. In an effort to learn more about those individuals who have been successful at long-term weight loss, Wing and Hill (10) established the National Weight Control Registry in 1994. This registry is a self-selected population of more than 4000 individuals who are age 18 or older and have lost at least 13.6 kg (30 lb) and kept it off at least 1 y. Registry members are recruited primarily through newspaper and magazine articles. When individuals enroll in the registry, they are asked to complete a battery of questionnaires detailing how they originally lost the weight and how they now maintain this weight loss. They are subsequently followed annually to determine changes in their weight and their weight-related behaviors.

The demographic characteristics of registry members are as follows: 77% are women, 82% are college educated, 95% are Caucasian, and 64% are married. The average age at entry to the registry is 46.8 y. About one-half of registry members report having been overweight as a child, and almost 75% have one or two parents who are obese.

Participants self-report their current weight and their maximum weight. Previous studies suggest that such self-reported weights are fairly accurate (slightly underestimating actual weight) (11,12). In the NWCR, participants are asked to identify a physician or weight loss counselor who can provide verification of the weight data. When, in a subgroup of participants, the information provided by participants was compared with that given by the professional, the self-report information was found to be very accurate.

Participants in the registry report having lost an average of 33 kg and have maintained the minimum weight loss (13.6 kg) for an average of 5.7 y. Thirteen percent have maintained this minimum weight loss for more than 10 y. The participants have reduced from a BMI of 36.7 kg/m2 at their maximum to 25.1 kg/m2 currently. Thus, by any criterion, these individuals are clearly extremely successful.

Previously, we reported information about the way in which registry participants lost their weight (10); interestingly, about one-half (55.4%) reported receiving some type of help with weight loss (commercial program, physician, nutritionist), whereas the others (44.6%) reported losing the weight entirely on their own. Eighty-nine percent reported using both diet and physical activity for weight loss; only 10% reported using diet only, and 1% reported using exercise only for their weight loss. The most common dietary strategies for weight loss were to restrict certain foods (87.6%), limit quantities (44%), and count calories (43%). Approximately 25% counted fat grams, 20% used liquid formula, and 22% used an exchange system diet. Thus, there is variability in how the weight loss was achieved (except that it is almost always by diet plus physical activity).

The earliest publication regarding the registry documented the behaviors that the members (n = 784) were using to maintain their weight loss (10). Three strategies were reported very consistently: consuming a low-calorie, low-fat diet, doing high levels of physical activity, and weighing themselves frequently. Recently, a fourth behavior was identified: consuming breakfast daily (13). Each of these behaviors is described below. Registry members reported eating 1381 kcal/d, with 24% of calories from fat. In interpreting their data, it is important to recognize that 55% of registry members report that they are still trying to lose weight and to consider that dietary intake is typically underestimated by 2030%. Thus, registry members are probably eating closer to 1800 kcal/d. However, even with this adjustment, it is apparent that registry members maintain their weight loss by continuing to eat a low-calorie, low-fat diet.

More recently, we have examined other aspects of their diet. Of particular interest is the fact that 78% of registry members report eating breakfast every day of the week (13). Only 4% report never eating breakfast. The typical breakfast is cereal and fruit. Registry members also report consuming 2.5 meals/wk in restaurants and 0.74 meals/wk in fast food establishments.

Another characteristic of NWCR members is high levels of physical activity. Women in the registry reported expending an average of 2545 kcal/wk in physical activity, and men report an average of 3293 kcal/wk (10). These levels of activity would represent 1 h/d of moderate-intensity activity, such as brisk walking. The most common activity is walking, reported by 76% of the participants. Approximately 20% report weight lifting, 20% report cycling, and 18% report aerobics.

Registry members also reported frequent monitoring of their weight (10). More than 44% report weighing themselves at least once a day, and 31% report weighing themselves at least once a week. This frequent monitoring of weight would allow these individuals to catch small weight gains and hopefully initiate corrective behavior changes.

The vigilance regarding body weight can be seen as one aspect of the more general construct of cognitive restraint (ie, the degree of conscious control exerted over eating behaviors). Registry members are asked to complete the Three Factor Eating Inventory (14), which includes a measure of cognitive restraint. Registry members scored high on this measure (mean of 7.1), with levels similar to those seen in patients who have recently completed a treatment program for obesity, although not as high as eating-disordered patients. These findings suggest that successful weight loss maintainers continue to act like recently successful weight losers for many years after their weight loss.

Registry participants are followed over time to identify variables related to continued success at weight loss and maintenance. Findings from the initial follow-up study (15) indicated that, after 1 y, 35% gained 2.3 kg (5 lbs) or more (7 kg on average), 59% continued to maintain their body weight, and 6% continued to lose weight.

Participants who regained weight (>2.3 kg) were compared with those who continued to maintain their body weight to examine whether there were any baseline characteristics that could distinguish the two groups. The single best predictor of risk of regain was how long participants had successfully maintained their weight loss (Table 1). Individuals who had kept their weight off for 2 y or more had markedly increased odds of continuing to maintain their weight over the following year. This finding is encouraging because it suggests that, if individuals can succeed at maintaining their weight loss for 2 y, they can reduce their risk of subsequent regain by nearly 50%.

Duration of weight loss maintenance and 1-y risk of weight regain among successful weight losers1

Duration of weight loss maintenance and 1-y risk of weight regain among successful weight losers1

Another predictor of successful weight loss maintenance was a lower level of dietary disinhibition, which is a measure of periodic loss of control of eating. Participants who had fewer problems with disinhibition [ie, scores <6 on the Eating Inventory subscale (14)] were 60% more likely to maintain their weight over 1 y. Similar findings were found for depression, with lower levels of depression related to greater odds of success. These findings point to the importance of both emotional regulation skills and control over eating in long-term successful weight loss.

Several key behavior changes that occurred over the year of follow-up also distinguished maintainers from regainers. Not surprisingly, those who regained weight reported significant decreases in their physical activity, increases in their percentage of calories from fat, and decreases in their dietary restraint. Thus, a large part of weight regain may be attributable to an inability to maintain healthy eating and exercise behaviors over time. The findings also underscore the importance of maintaining behavior changes in the long-term maintenance of weight loss.

Another variable that has been examined in the registry is the presence of a triggering event leading to participant successful weight loss. Most registry participants reported a trigger for their weight loss (83%). Medical triggers were the most common (23%), followed by reaching an all time high in weight (21.3%), and seeing a picture or reflection of themselves in the mirror (12.7%).

Because medical triggers have been shown to promote long-term behavior change in other areas of behavioral medicine (16), we examined whether individuals who reported medical triggers were more successful than those who reported nonmedical triggers or no triggers. A medical trigger was defined broadly and included, for example, a doctor telling the participant to lose weight and/or a family member having a heart attack. Findings indicated that people who had medical reasons for weight loss also had better initial weight losses and maintenance (17). Specifically, those who said they had a medical trigger lost 36 kg, whereas those who had no trigger (17.1%) or a nonmedical trigger (59.9%) lost 32 kg. Medical triggers were also associated with less regain over 2 y of follow-up. Those with medical triggers gained 4 kg (2 kg/y), whereas those with other or no medical triggers gained at a significantly faster rate, averaging 6 kg in both groups.

These findings are intriguing because they suggest that the period following a medical trigger may be an opportune time to initiate weight loss to optimize both initial and long-term weight loss outcomes.

The topic of dieting consistency was also recently examined in the registry. Participants were asked whether they maintained the same diet regimen across the week and year, or if they tended to diet more strictly on weekdays and/or nonholidays (18). Few people said they dieted more strictly on the weekend compared with the rest of the week (2%) or during holidays compared with the rest of the year (3%). Most participants reported that their eating was the same on weekends and weekdays (59%) and on holidays/vacations and the rest of the year (45%). The remaining groups reported that they were stricter during the week than on weekends (39%) and during nonholiday times compared with holidays (52%).

We evaluated whether maintaining a consistent diet was related to subsequent weight regain after 2 y. Interestingly, results indicated that participants who reported a consistent diet across the week were 1.5 times more likely to maintain their weight within 5 lb over the subsequent year than participants who dieted more strictly on weekdays. A similar relationship emerged between dieting consistency across the year and subsequent weight regain; individuals who allowed themselves more flexibility on holidays had greater risk of weight regain. Allowing for flexibility in the diet may increase exposure to high-risk situations, creating more opportunity for loss of control. In contrast, individuals who maintain a consistent diet regimen across the week and year appear more likely to maintain their weight loss over time.

We also examined different patterns of weight change among registry participants followed over time. We were particularly interested in evaluating whether participants who gained weight between baseline and year 1 were able to recover over the subsequent year. We found that few people (11%) recovered from even minor lapses of 12 kg. Similarly, magnitude of weight regain at year 1 was the strongest predictor of outcome from year 0 to 2. Participants who gained the most weight at year 1 were the least likely to re-lose weight the following year, both when recovery was defined as a return to baseline weight or as re-losing at least 50% of the year 1 gain.

Although participants gained weight and recovery was uncommon, the regains were modest (average of 4 kg at 2 y), and the vast majority of participants (96%) remained >10% below their maximum lifetime weight, which is considered successful by current obesity treatment standards.

These findings, nonetheless, suggest that reversing weight regain appears most likely among individuals who have gained the least amount of weight. Preventing small regains from turning into larger relapses appears critical to recovery among successful weight losers.

Results of random digit dial surveys indicate that 20% of people in the general population are successful at long-term weight loss maintenance. These data, along with findings from the National Weight Control Registry, underscore the fact that it is possible to achieve and maintain significant amounts of weight loss.

Findings from the registry suggest six key strategies for long-term success at weight loss: 1) engaging in high levels of physical activity; 2) eating a diet that is low in calories and fat; 3) eating breakfast; 4) self-monitoring weight on a regular basis; 5) maintaining a consistent eating pattern; and 6) catching slips before they turn into larger regains. Initiating weight loss after a medical event may also help facilitate long-term weight control.

Additional studies are needed to determine the factors responsible for registry participant apparent ability to adhere to these strategies for a long period of time in the context of a toxic environment that strongly encourages passive overeating and sedentary lifestyles.

RRW is the cofounder of the National Weight Control Registry (with James O Hill). RRW coauthored the manuscript with SP, who is a coinvestigator of the National Weight Control Registry. RRW and SP have no financial or personal interest in the organizations sponsoring this research.

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Long-term weight loss maintenance | The American Journal ...

Couples may help or hinder each other’s weight loss goals …

Posted: May 15, 2020 at 6:44 pm

Eating healthy can feel like torture in the country that's home to the Crunchwrap Supreme.

Dieting is expensive. Working out is time consuming. On top of all that, weight loss can be somewhat of an uphill battle for people with genetic predispositions to obesity.

Yet if your social media feed is anything like mine, it's replete with inspirational images of couples teaming up to lose weight together and killing it.

Enlisting a significant other in your weight loss plans could be a great way to help ensure your success, but only if your partner is just as committed as you are, recent research suggests. Conversely, if they struggle to lose weight, your performance may take a similar dive.

Amy Gorin, a professor of behavioral psychology at the University of Connecticut and the lead author of a new study on these impacts, calls this the "ripple effect."

Lisa Creech Bledsoe / Flickr "When one person changes their behavior, the people around them change,"Gorinsaid in a statement.

The study was funded by Weight Watchers, which merits some skepticism. Still, it's one of the first of its kind to use a randomized, controlled design in its study approach, which lends some heft to its findings.

It is also not the first study to come to these types of conclusions.

A 2008 study Gorin published in the International Journal of Obesity (which did not receive Weight Watchers money) reached a similar finding. That paper was actually the first to use the term "ripple effect" to describe how social networks could impact weight loss.

For her most recent study, which involved 130 overweight or obese couples age 25 or older, Gorin and her team found that when one member of a couple lost weight, it significantly raised the chances that the other partner would too even if that partner wasn't actively participating in any weight loss program. Similarly, when one partner struggled to slim down, it made it more likely for the other person to have problems as well.

To come to these conclusions, Gorin split the couples into two groups. In one group, one partner joined Weight Watchers. For six months, they got in-person counseling and a host of online tools to help them lose weight. In the other group, one partner got only a printed handout on healthy eating, exercise, and weight-control strategies.

After six months, a third of the untreated partners in the study lost 3% or more of their initial body weight, a figure that dietitians consider a sizeable benefit. These people participated in no weight loss program at all; only their significant others did. Half of them used Weight Watchers, the other half used an approach of their own.

In other words, it didn't matter if the partner who was trying to lose weight participated in Weight Watchers or not. All that mattered was that they were trying to lose weight.

"Whether the patient works with their healthcare provider, joins a community-based, lifestyle approach like Weight Watchers, or tries to lose weight on their own, their new healthy behaviors can benefit others in their lives," Gorin said.

Originally posted here:
Couples may help or hinder each other's weight loss goals ...

Printable Weight Loss Log – Vertex42.com

Posted: May 15, 2020 at 6:44 pm

There are a lot of mobile apps and other tools for tracking your weight loss, but do you always have your phone with you at the time that you typically check your weight each day? I don't. That is one of the reasons I created this printable weight loss log. You can print it out and keep it in a bathroom drawer (along with a pen or pencil).

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If you do not have Excel, or do not need to customize the weight loss log, you can download one of the 2 printable weight loss logs below in PDF format.

The logs include columns for recording your weight, the amount of time you've exercised (the 'Exe' column), and the number of calories consumed during the day (the 'Cal' column). The difference between the male and female version is only what measurements are listed.

For: Excel 2007 or later & Excel for iPad/iPhone

For: Word 2007 or later

"No installation, no macros - just a simple spreadsheet" - by Jon Wittwer

This weight loss log worksheet provides a simple way to record your weight each day. It is designed to be printed and folded along the center and middle so that you can keep it in a cabinet in your bathroom or wherever it is that you weigh yourself.

Disclaimer: The worksheet and information on this page should not be treated as medical advice. You should seek the advice of qualified professionals regarding medical, fitness, and health decisions.

Follow this link:
Printable Weight Loss Log - Vertex42.com

Weight Loss Clinic Houston TX – Medical Weight Loss by Z …

Posted: May 15, 2020 at 6:44 pm

Z Med Clinic is your trusted healthcare clinic in Texas

At Z Med Medical Weight Loss, we know just how seriously you take your health and weight loss, and we do too. With four centers spread across Texas two in Houston and one each in Corpus Christi, and The Woodlands, we serve a large part of the state with our expert healthcare services. We have been serving the community with our world-class medical care and exceptional health support services for a long time, and we intend to continue doing the same, and even upgrade our medical care solutions in the time to come.

The long list of our specialized services includesweight management,cosmetic procedures,laser hair removal,skin rejuvenation,bioidentical hormone therapy,Chemical Peels,B12 injections,Lipo injections,family healthcare services,Vanquish treatment (permanent fat reduction),immigration physical examination and vaccination, andIV infusion therapyamong others. We have been founded on the principles of serving the humanity with the expertise we have got, and have been able to develop over the years. All of our healthcare professionals and other staff members are qualified professionals who have educational specialty and years of experience behind them. We only employ medical professionals who work on similar principles as we do.

We also boast of progressive and advanced medical equipment in each facility. Our healthcare plans are optimized to offer you convenience. We take every patient very seriously and ensure that we do our best to help them get back to normal condition without having to face too much trouble or spend too much money.

Looking to lose weight, boost your metabolism and finally put an end to emotional eating? If so, then it is time for you to join the #1 weight loss clinic in Houston. At our medical weight loss clinics, we know that everyone is unique and so are the tools they need to lose the weight. We use a comprehensive system, personalized by your weight loss doctor. Our team of medical professionals and nutritionist will work with you to create a custom, easy to follow weight loss program that makes losing weight as efficient and effective as possible. All you need to do is take the first step and come in for a consultation. Our weight loss clinics in Houston, Cyfair, The Woodlands, Corpus Christi have helped hundreds of people lose weight and keep it off. Our weight loss clinics offer affordable weight loss programs to help you lose weight fast!

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Weight Loss Clinic Houston TX - Medical Weight Loss by Z ...


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