The Health eZine

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Welcome to the Health eZine!

Here we archive articles about healthcare, fitness and dieting. You will notice that we have devoted a lot of our attention to obesity and fitness. Why? Because obesity is now the #1 factor leading to early death in North America.

In other words if people in North America simply exercised more (as little as 10 minutes per day) and practiced more healthy eating a lot less people will die of obesity-related causes (heart failure, strokes and more).

If you have an article about a health issue you're concerned about and want other people to read it, please contact us and we will review it and post it.

Ageing

The Babyboomer's Tab

Canadian Healthcare

Lose Weight Canada, Get Lower Taxes

Canadian Obesity Statistics

Smoking Bans working in Toronto

Two Tier Healthcare

Toronto's Breastfeeding Policy

Privatized Healthcare in Canada

Obesity in Canada

Smokeless Cigarettes

Dieting & Obesity

Calories: Food Vs. Exercise

No more coddling the obese

Anorexia out of Control

Bulimia and Depression

Obesity in China Skyrocketing

i'm fat and lovin' it

Anorexia on the Internet

The MacNevin Diet

Lose Weight by Working

Obesity Descrimination

Boosting your Metabolism

The Female Fear of Fat

Diet Grrl

Anorexia Info

Bony Fashion Models Banned

Eating Disorders

Body Image

Anorexia Vs Obesity in North America

Carre Otis

Fashion Models & Standardized Sizes

Fashion Waifs Disappearing

The Beauty Myth

Obesity in Canada

One Woman's Struggle to Shed the Fat

Thinspiration Sickspiration

Hellbent on Anorexia in Asia

Tips on Healthy Eating Out

Detox Diets: A Guide to Detoxing Your Body

Diet Duds and Flops

Drugs & Medication

Ontario's Mary Jane

Viagra Destroys Sex Drive

Exercise & Fitness

The Ultimate Guide to the Perfect Abdomen

Calories: Food Vs. Exercise

Dance, Fitness & Health

Sport in a Masculine World

Lose Weight by Working

Suzy's Guide to Weightlifting for Women

You throw like a girl!

Marcus Schenkenberg's Workout

Yoga and Exercise Fashion

Shock Absorbing Sports Bras

Women's Fitness

General Info & Opinion

Smoking Bans working in Toronto

Health News of 2007

Smokeless Cigarettes

Godless Obsolete Doctors

Meditative Silence

Sex Rights in Africa

How America Aids and Abets AIDS/HIV Worldwide

Homo Erectus Extinctus?

Olympics Profits & Profiteerism in China

Plastic & Cosmetic Surgery

Breast Implants for Dummies

Under the Knife

Silicon Goes The Way Of The Dodo

Safe Water

Canadian Water & E-coli

Walkerton's E-coli Massacre

Sleep & Sexuality

Siesta Fever

Viagra Destroys Sex Drive

Women's Health & Baby Care

A Woman's Choice

Women's Fitness

The History of Breastfeeding

Criminalizing Women's Bodies

The New Pill

Sex Discrimination against Female Patients

Breastfeeding Babies on Cue

Breastfeeding in Public

Birth Control Vs. Overpopulation

How America Aids and Abets AIDS/HIV Worldwide

Wombs for Rent

Inuit Birthing Practices

Cigarettes Get A Technological Facelift

There is a new cigarette available in Ontario and its going to dramatically change the industry. It may even spell the end to traditional cancer-causing cigarettes.

Imagine smoking without the smoke? Or the cancer? Or the horrible stench?

Three Ontario entrepreneurs have created a smokeless and tobacco-free cigarette and are hoping to capitalize on the province wide smoking ban.

The Revelle Prestige looks and acts like a cigarette, but without the harmful side effects... Read more...

10 Ways to Exercise as a Family

1. Go for pre- or post-dinner walks
Whether you head into town or just cruise the neighborhood, building a walk into your daily schedule ensures that it won't get put off. Brookline, Massachusetts, master Pilate's instructor Lisa Johnson and her husband take evening walks with 3-year-old Alex, who alternates time in and out of the stroller. To make walking more enticing, Johnson makes a sport of it. "At one house we look for a cat sitting in the window, at another we run up and down a short flight of stairs," she says.

2. Crank up the music and boogie down
Betsy Murphy of Coral Gables, Florida, holds disco nights with her four kids and several neighbors. She moves the furniture aside, fills the CD player with dance tunes, and lets the kids take turns using a flashlight as a strobe light. "They dance for three hours straight," Murphy says. "The older ones know all the words to the songs and really dance; it's hilarious to see the younger ones try to mimic them. Their favorite song is 'Brick House!'"

3. Make a game out of household chores
Pretend that dust creatures are invading earth and it's up to Captain [insert child's name] to save the day by capturing them with his broom, suggests registered dietitian Juliet Zuercher of Wickenburg, Arizona. "Make believe he's one of the Rescue Heroes, and have him save his teddy bears from the slimy pit of the floor by putting them safely in his toy chest," she says. Jodi Arlen of Bethesda, Maryland, turns folding laundry into a guessing game. "It started when my daughter would ask, 'Is that mine?' and it grew into 'Guess whose this is!'" she says. After her daughters, 3 years old and 20 months old, correctly identify the clothing, they help fold them.

4. Sneak workouts into other activities
Have your toddler walk instead of riding in the cart at the supermarket, and take the stairs or walk up the escalator whenever possible. Nancy Twigg of Knoxville, Tennessee, drives partway to her daughter Lydia's preschool, parks the car, and walks the rest of the way.

5. Turn TV commercials into fitness breaks
Invent silly names for simple exercises like squats, push-ups, and sit-ups, and then do them together till the show comes back on. "Call them princess sit-ups or Bob the Builder muscle builders," says physical therapist Peter Kofitsas, of New York City, who does the moves with his 4-year-old and 20-month-old daughters. You can also play "coach," in which you take turns "ordering" each other to "drop and give me five," or "follow the leader," in which one person leads the others in fun, simple moves like clapping, wiggling, and marching.

6. Have a weekly sports night
Every Wednesday, for example, get everyone up and moving. One game to play is the fit-deck shuffle. Create a series of playing cards featuring family-friendly exercises, such as bear-crawling or ape-walking. Each family member picks a card and performs the exercise pictured until all the cards have been dealt. You can also buy a ready-made set of exercise cards from FitDeck (fitdeck.com).

7. Walk or run for charity
Model the value of exercise-and of giving back to society-by teaming up with your children for a fund-raising race. When her husband and father-in-law participated in the Father's Day Race for Prostate Cancer, Jodi Zielinski, of Upper Montclair, New Jersey, took her 3-year-old daughter, Noa, to watch them run. When the race was over, she entered Noa in the kids' race that followed. "She didn't win but she had a great time," says Zielinski, who hopes to make it an annual family tradition.

8. Put kids to work in the yard
If autumn brings down leaves in your area, make a game out of catching them on a windy day-see who can catch the most yellow, orange, or red ones, suggests Zuercher. Then rake them into piles-give the kids child-sized rakes so they can help-and have fun jumping in them, or take turns completely covering one another in leaves. After a snowfall, let kids help clear the porch or walkway, then see who can make the most snow angels. Older kids can help build a snowman-and even toss a few snowballs.

9. Team up for gardening
Kids are great at digging up dirt, so let them turn over the soil and help you plant new bulbs. Research shows that gardening is as good as weight training when it comes to preventing osteoporosis, and if you're planting vegetables, it can make them more appetizing to kids. Dawn Schwartz, of Livingston, New Jersey, has her 3-year-old daughter, Samantha, help water the plants. "She loves to mush her hands in the soil," she says. In the summer, set up a sprinkler to water the lawn and challenge kids to duck the droplets.

10. Walk the dog
New research from North American Association on the Study of Obesity shows that dog-owners had more fun losing weight and were able to keep it off longer than non-pup-owners. Don't have a pooch? Go look for some. Somers, New York, mom Mary Rose Almasi gets her two kids, ages 5 and 3, to go for a walk after dinner by suggesting they go "looking for dogs." "Luckily, there are a few at the end of my long street. That's the carrot I dangle," she says. "It works like a charm."


Tone up memory with exercise

Exercise, researchers have found over the years, appears to help people fight the memory loss that comes with aging.

A new study suggests a possible explanation for why this is so. The report, which appears online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, says working out may stimulate the growth of neurons in a part of the brain associated with memory loss.

Researchers at the Columbia University Medical Center, using 11 volunteers, an MRI machine and equipment like treadmills, were able to see that blood flow increased to the hippocampus part of the brain as the volunteers exercise, suggesting that working out may help produce neurons in a part of the hippocampus that loses them disproportionately as people age.

The researchers also found that as the volunteers went through a three-month exercise period, their scores on memory tests went up.


Young people can stop deadly diseases with diet, exercise

Young adults in mid-Michigan have been given a gift that could save their lives -- the chance to prevent one of the nation's leading killers. Heart disease kills more people in Midland, Bay, Saginaw, Isabella and Gladwin counties than it does on a national average, according to a 1999-2003 study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Young adults, don't stop reading, because doctors say prevention must begin in youth, since arteries of people in their teenage years can contain the plaques that cause heart disease and eventually heart attacks.

"With the way that our culture is, with our genetics, the things that we eat, consume, smoke and whatever else, we're definitely starting this process at a young age," said Dr. Susan Sallach, a cardiologist at St. Mary's of Michigan. "We see people with chest pains younger and younger all the time, so it's definitely important."

In mid-Michigan, the increased death rate could be from a sedentary lifestyle, a greater rate of smoking and even the state's poor economy, which can cause more people to turn to the less expensive foods that tend to be worse for the body.

No matter the cause, local doctors are taking note of the deadly trend and want area residents to turn it around.

Why stop heart disease?

It's better to prevent heart disease than deal with damage later on.

Just ask Ray Fryar, the 59-year-old principal of Jefferson Middle School in Midland. It was the fall of 2003 when he began progressively losing energy, and then felt a pain grow in his stomach.

The pain got so bad he had to leave a meeting at work, thinking he might be able to sleep it off. The next morning he discovered you can't sleep off a heart attack, and was rushed to the hospital for emergency treatment.

"Once you've had the heart attack you can have irreparable damage that you can avoid," he said. "If you can avoid that attack in the first place you're so much further ahead of the game."

Sallach, who works with new cardiac MRI imaging technology at St. Mary's, agreed.

"To have the choice to do things that can potentially prevent problems down the road -- what a huge advantage; what a gift," she said.

Sallach said it comes down to knowing personal risk factors and family history, as well as beginning to take better care of the body.

Risk factors for heart disease include high blood pressure, diabetes and high cholesterol levels. Keeping those in check could go a long way in preventing major problems later.

Knowing each parent's heart health also matters. If either parent had a heart attack early in life, it ups a person's chance of having one, too.

Taking care of the body is another key factor, but it's also a tough one. Sallach said everyone falls victim to being a couch potato or grabbing convenient fast foods, but it's important to get back on the path to good nutrition and exercise.

Take it one step at a time

Improving heart health begins with finding fun ways to get moving, along with eating meals with better nutritional value.

"Finding novel and innovative ways of exercise is an important part of keeping doing it," Sallach said. "If you don't like it, or you pick something you hate doing, you're not going to stick to it."

She's even heard of people making workouts a social event, where people focus on the interaction with friends and happen to be getting their exercise in at the same time. The recommendation is 30 minutes of brisk exercise most days of the week.

Then there is eating right, with the most important point being moderation, Sallach said. It also includes avoiding foods high in fat or containing trans fatty acids and saturated fats.

"I think you can probably eat healthy for a reasonable price if you're willing to take the time to do it," she said. "That's the major thing, because most people want pre-prepared meals, frozen meals, canned foods. They want quick meals, and that's where you lose the quality of food and quality of nutrition."

Staying healthy also means giving up smoking.

"Even a little bit of smoking is bad. It still increases your risk for stroke and heart attack, as well as cancer," Sallach said. "There's no amount of smoking that's acceptable, and secondhand smoke counts, too."

Staying away from recreational drugs also is vital, since they can speed up the blockage of arteries and damage the heart muscle itself.

"Those are things that are important for a younger age group to think about," Sallach said. "Everything that you do will have a consequence at some point. It may be mild and go unnoticed, or it may be severe and life changing."


Fight Cancer with Exercise

Someone with a family history, who smokes, has a high-fat diet and doesn't exercise, says oncologist Dr. David Nanus, who has been treating cancer patients for more than 20 years.

"If you're obese or overweight, you have an increased incidence in a number of cancers — colon cancer, prostate cancer, breast cancer," Nanus says.

According to the American Cancer Institute, about one-third of cancer deaths in 2006 were related to nutrition, physical inactivity and being overweight or obese — and therefore, could have been prevented.

So what can you do to reduce your risk?

Start by eating a diet that contains lots of fruit and vegetables. For example, studies show broccoli, especially broccoli sprouts, may help prevent colon and rectal cancer.

You can control your lifestyle, but not your family history. Five to 10 percent of all cancers are strongly hereditary. There are genetic tests for some kinds of cancers including breast, colon, and ovarian.

"It's important if you know you're from a cancer family, then you need to get screening," Nanus says.

Nanus believes those mammograms after age 40, and colonoscopies after age 50, may be the most powerful weapon in the battle against cancer.

"The biggest problem is the fear factor," he says. "People are so afraid of being diagnosed with cancer they wait." Nanus says waiting even three months can mean the difference between life and death.

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