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Use of Alternative Medicine and Chiropractic Treatment Rising

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Use of Alternative Medicine, Chiropractic Rising in Both the United States and Canada

Two recent surveys point to widespread and growing use of alternative forms of medical treatment in both the United States and in Canada. In the US, more that 37% of households regularly turn to alterative treatments over those provided only by a medical doctor and drugs. In Canada, the figure is over 50%.

The US survey involved 23,000 adults and was conducted by Thompson Medstat in 2006. Findings included 37% of US households seeking out alternative treatments, including Chiropractic, for everything from headaches to control of diabetes. Herbal supplements, Chiropractic and massage were the highest ranked items used among respondents.

“Alternative medicine use has become so widespread that it is now critical for traditional Western physicians to factor a whole new set of potential interactions into treatment decisions,” said Dr. David Schutt, associate medical director at Thompson Medstat. “Knowing the statistics behind alternative medicine use is a good start, but further study of this area is necessary.”

To the North, over one half of all Canadians are using some form of alternative medicine according to a survey conducted in 2006 by The Fraser Institute which has, just now been released. Interestingly, in the last 6 months of the survey over 3.6 million Canadians visited a chiropractor. That converts to 13% of all Canadians!

“This increased use of alternative therapies is another indicator of Canadians’ desire to have more choice and control over their healthcare options,” said Nadeem Esmail, the director of Health System Performance at The Frasier Institute and the author of the report.

A note of interest pointed out in the findings was that most alternative treatment options are not covered by the government health insurance plans in Canada. “When it comes to health and well-being, a significant number of Canadians are willing to spend their own money,” said Dr. Esmail.

Watermelon may reduce the risk of Cardiovascular Disease

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Volume 14 Issue 120

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death in the U.S. If you or someone you know has CVD, or has high cholesterol, high blood pressure, obesity, or any of the other factors that could lead to CVD, you have probably been told to exercise, reduce stress levels and avoid certain foods like sugar, white flours and junk food. Or you may have been prescribed drugs like statins. However, there are certain foods — known as ‘functional foods’ — that, in addition to the nutrients they supply, also specifically promote health or prevent disease in a certain part of the body. In the case of CVD, you still want to exercise and eat well, but there are also functional foods that may help prevent it, and may even help you avoid drugs.

Let’s just take one of the CVD risk factors: hypertension, high blood pressure.

Normal blood pressure is considered 120/80 or below. High blood pressure starts at 140/90. Between those you have a rating called prehypertension, which basically means that if you don’t do something to lower your blood pressure you could end up with full-blown hypertension — something you really want to avoid.

The risk level is much higher with hypertension than prehypertension, so getting your blood pressure under control now is a smart health move.

What functional foods help prehypertension? According to a recent study conducted at Florida State University, watermelon might be just what you need.

The study, though small, is very promising and is the first on human subjects. While the participants didn’t actually eat watermelon, they were given six grams daily of the amino acid L-citrulline/L-arginine from watermelon extract for six weeks. There were four men and five women, ages 51 to 57, and each were prehypertensive. All participants had positive results: improved arterial function and lowered blood pressure.

The real ‘active” ingredient, the one that’s making the difference, is the amino acid L-arginine. However, L-arginine taken on its own can be hard on the gastrointestinal system. The better option is another amino acid, L-citrulline, which converts to L-arginine once in the body.

Watermelon is loaded with L-citrulline, is well tolerated, has no side effects, and provides the added benefits of Vitamins A, B6 and C along with fiber, potassium and lycopene, a powerful antioxidant.

If you’re looking for natural solutions to protect your heart, give watermelon extract a try. It is available at local health food stores and online!

CHIROPRACTIC CARE ENHANCES TREATMENT AT MAJOR CANCER CARE HOSPITAL

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CHIROPRACTIC CARE ENHANCES TREATMENT AT MAJOR CANCER CARE HOSPITAL

Volume 14 Issue 111

Chiropractic care has become a valued asset for patients at Cancer Treatment Centers of America (CTCA).

The hospital’s whole-patient approach to cancer treatment involves integrated medical teams that include not only the usual medical oncologists, surgeons and oncology radiologists, but also naturopaths, acupuncturists, nutritionists and chiropractors.

The holistic approach is intended to help cancer patients achieve the most benefit from their cancer treatments, while reducing any negative effects. And Chiropractic is playing an important role in that approach.

Chiropractic is used to treat pre-existing musculoskeletal problems that are adding to a patient’s stress. But Chiropractic is also a valuable adjunctive therapy frequently called on to relieve the pain and discomfort associated with cancer and with the cancer treatments themselves.

In a recent article in Dynamic Chiropractic magazine, Dr. Jeff Sklar, DC, discusses the exciting and incredibly gratifying experience of working with cancer patients alongside a full gamut of integrated care practitioners at CTCA’s Eastern Regional Medical Center in Philadelphia.

The Palmer College graduate recently accepted a position with the hospital, and now is Director of Chiropractic Services at the facility.

Dr. Sklar explained that there are a number of side effects to cancer treatments. Chemotherapy, radiation, and the stress and worry of being a cancer patient, each present a list of side effects for which Chiropractic can be extremely helpful.

For example, chemotherapy can lead to what is called “chemo-induced neuropathy”, which can be a tingling or numbness and other sensory nerve sensations. Gait imbalance and muscular weakness are also side effects of chemo treatments that can be treated with Chiropractic.

Radiation treatments can lead to tissue fibrosis, the formation of scar-like structures that cause tissues to harden and reduce fluid flow. Chiropractic is called upon to help alleviate the effects of fibrosis.

“The stress and anxiety that goes along with a diagnosis of cancer and its treatment,” Dr. Sklar said, “can create severe musculoskeletal tension and pain. Many patients have a combination of all the above and are very grateful that CTCA makes Chiropractic services available,” he added.

Having a team of naturopaths and acupuncturists to consult about different cases enhances the level and quality of care and treatment that patients receive, the doctor said. The different departments do the best they can to communicate with each other and to the patient so the patient will receive everything they can to improve their current situation. Whether it be a different supplement, an herb, Acupuncture or a Chiropractic adjustment, patients have an opportunity to receive any and all services that are indicated for their condition.

Those of us who look favorably on alternative and holistic treatment modalities can only hope that the example provided at CTCA will be followed by healthcare centers everywhere.

SOURCE: Dynamic Chiropractic, Vol. 28, No. 21, Oct. 2010,

Aspartame is it good or bad for you?

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Aspartame pronounced /ˈæspərteɪm/ or /əˈspɑrteɪm/) is the technical name for many of the artificial sweeteners (NutraSweet®, Equal® etc.). It was first approved by the FDA in 1981, over the objections of neuroscience researcher, Dr. John W. Olney and Consumer Attorney James Turner.

Aspartame consists of:

• 50% Phenylalanine

• 40% Aspartic Acid

• 10% Methyl Alcohol (Methyl alcohol is a toxic, colorless, flammable liquid.)

Excess aspartic acid in our food supply has been proven to cause serious chronic neurological disorders. Phenylalanine is an amino acid normally found in the brain. It has been shown that ingesting aspartame, especially along with carbohydrates, can lead to excess levels of phenylalanine in the brain, leading to emotional disorders, including schizophrenia, and can also lead to seizures.

Methanol is wood alcohol and is a deadly poison. It breaks down in the body into formic acid and formaldehyde, another deadly neurotoxin.

Aspartame is by far the most dangerous food additive on the market and accounts for over 75% of the adverse reactions to food additives reported to the FDA. The Food and Drug Administration reported 5,064 Aspartame related health complaints. There are 90 documented symptoms associated with the consumption of this product. Among them are headaches, dizziness, seizures, irritability, heart palpitations, breathing difficulties, vision problems, memory loss and hyperactivity.

According to researchers and physicians, the following illnesses can be worsened or triggered by using this product: Brain tumors, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy, chronic fatigue syndrome, mental retardation and diabetes, to name but a few.

A new movie entitled “Sweet Misery” chronicles the medical horrors of Aspartame. The film makes claims that aspartame may produce an MS-like syndrome as well as Parkinson’s symptoms (shaking, etc.)

Aspartame and MSG are amongst the excitotoxins that are responsible for damaging nerve fibers. Research has shown that excessive exposure to excitotoxins damages nerve fibers by killing the cells that are responsible for producing the sheath-like covering that protects the nerves.

When aspartame is consumed it causes the excitotoxin level in the blood to elevate significantly.
When Aspartame is consumed alongside MSG, excitotoxin levels soar and result in significant damage to the nerve fibers, which contribute to producing MS and Parkinson’s symptoms.

When people with benign MS consume Aspartame, it can convert the syndrome into full-blown MS, as Aspartame contains the toxin Methanol. If these persons consume additional excitotoxins, the risk of further disability and even death is greatly magnified.

Recent studies have also shown that even a SINGLE EXPOSURE to these food-based excitotoxins can produce prolonged worsening of neurological lesions; liquid forms of excitotoxins were found to be significantly more toxic due to the rapid absorption and higher blood levels.

If it is so dangerous, why is aspartame approved as an edible substance by the FDA? The answer is actually very simple. All of these symptoms are slow in development and they all could be due to many other causes. In other words, it is extremely hard and almost clinically impossible to diagnose any of these symptoms as being caused by aspartame. This is especially true since there is no immediate reaction after its consumption.

And, more than likely, the negative effects of aspartame occur after long term consumption of up to many years making it even more difficult to pin it as the culprit.

The reality, though, is that our society is taking daily doses of this substance over long periods of time. Unfortunately, there are no long term studies on the use of aspartame to help clarify the matter. It makes sense to err on the side of caution when it comes to using aspartame. Real or not, the potential consequences for the long-term use of this sweetener are scary.

The decision you need to make is not whether aspartame is good or bad for you. The decision is whether you will continue to subject you body to what could be called a toxin. Since you do not experience symptoms immediately from the consumption of this product, a good number of you will continue to use aspartame. This falls under the same reasoning as to why people continue to smoke. These are some very interesting facts to consider when deciding whether you feel that aspartame does or does not pose a health risk.

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Did McDonald’s Force-Feed This Guy??

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Americans have exported our particular breed of insanity.  Now, not only can you find America’s fast food restaraunts on every single continent, with the exception of Antartica, but the obesity caused by the unhealthy foods that make up the bulk of their menu items is also spreading.  Even worse, people in other parts of the world no longer seem to be able to think for themselves when it comes to the foods they choose to eat.  So I ask you, is it really McDonald’s fault that this guy ate at McDonald’s every single day for 12 or so years?  And did they MAKE him chose the Big Mac and supersize his fries???

This is a real story:  A Brazilian court ruled this week that McDonald’s must pay a former franchise manager $17,500 because he gained 65 pounds while working there for a dozen years.

The 32-year-old man said he felt forced to sample the food each day to ensure quality standards remained high, because McDonald’s hired “mystery clients” to randomly visit restaurants and report on the food, service and cleanliness.  I’m sorry, but in my book, “sampling” means a taste, not eating the entire thing (although, admittedly, it is all but impossible to eat just one french fry)!!

The man also said the company offered free lunches to employees, adding to his caloric intake while on the job. His identity was not released.  I’d keep my identity a secret too if I were so weak-willed as to offer the excuse “it was free, so I HAD to eat it!”

The ruling was signed Tuesday by Judge Joao Ghisleni Filho in Porto Alegre.

Ghisleni said McDonald’s could appeal the case, and the Brazilian headquarters of the chain said in an e-mailed statement Thursday it was weighing its legal options.

McDonald’s also noted that it offers healthier food choices.

“The chain offers a large variety of options and balanced menus to cater (to) the daily dietary needs of its employees,” the company said in the statement.

I have long advocated for Americans accepting responsibility for their actions … which includes taking responsibility for the food you choose to eat, the beverages you choose to drink and the level of activity you choose to engage in.  If you are obese, you have no one but yourself to blame.  No where in this story did it say McDonald’s put a gun to this guy’s head and made him eat the food! 

If you are tired of being overweight or obese and are ready to become responsible for your actions, Remmel Wellness Center can help you with a medically supervised weight loss program, fun and effective exercise programs and counseling to deal with your food choice issues.  Now is YOUR time to take conrol!

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic facilty located in beautiful St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Do Cortisone Shots Help or Hurt?

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So much of what the medical community does is satisfy the public’s demand for the “quick fix.”  You eat fatty foods and lead a sedentary lifestyle so you have high blood pressure and high cholesterol.  Rather than change your lifestyle, you opt for the pill.  Same thing for sports injuries.  Rather than take the time to rest and heal, patients opt for the cortisone shot because it makes the pain go away.  However, when the pain goes away, you are more likely to use the area that has been injured, delaying the healing process.  How did this come to be?  Read this October 27th article from the New York Times:

In the late 1940s, the steroid cortisone, an anti-inflammatory drug, was first synthesized and hailed as a landmark. It soon became a safe, reliable means to treat the pain and inflammation associated with sports injuries (as well as other conditions). Cortisone shots became one of the preferred treatments for overuse injuries of tendons, like tennis elbow or an aching Achilles, which had been notoriously resistant to treatment. The shots were quite effective, providing rapid relief of pain.

Then came the earliest clinical trials, including one, published in 1954, that raised incipient doubts about cortisone’s powers. In that early experiment, more than half the patients who received a cortisone shot for tennis elbow or other tendon pain suffered a relapse of the injury within six months.

But that cautionary experiment and others didn’t slow the ascent of cortisone (also known as corticosteroids). It had such a magical, immediate effect against  pain. Today cortisone shots remain a standard, much-requested treatment for tennis elbow and other tendon problems.

But a major new review article, published last Friday in The Lancet, should revive and intensify the doubts about cortisone’s efficacy. The review examined the results of nearly four dozen randomized trials, which enrolled thousands of people with tendon injuries, particularly tennis elbow, but also shoulder and Achilles-tendon pain. The reviewers determined that, for most of those who suffered from tennis elbow, cortisone injections did, as promised, bring fast and significant pain relief, compared with doing nothing or following a regimen of physical therapy. The pain relief could last for weeks.

But when the patients were re-examined at 6 and 12 months, the results were substantially different. Over all, people who received cortisone shots had a much lower rate of full recovery than those who did nothing or who underwent physical therapy. They also had a 63 percent higher risk of relapse than people who adopted the time-honored wait-and-see approach. The evidence for cortisone as a treatment for other aching tendons, like sore shoulders and Achilles-tendon pain, was slight and conflicting, the review found. But in terms of tennis elbow, the shots seemed to actually be counterproductive. As Bill Vicenzino, the chairman of sports physiotherapy at the University of Queensland in Australia and senior author of the review, said in an e-mail response to questions, “There is a tendency” among tennis-elbow sufferers “for the majority (70-90 percent) of those following a wait-and-see policy to get better” after six months to a year. But this is not the case for those getting cortisone shots, he wrote; they “tend to lag behind significantly at those time frames.” In other words, in some way, the cortisone shots impede full recovery, and compared with those adopting a wait-and-see policy, those getting the shots “are worse off.” Those people receiving multiple injections may be at particularly high risk for continuing damage. In one study that the researchers reviewed, “an average of four injections resulted in a 57 percent worse outcome when compared to one injection,” Dr. Vicenzino said.

Why cortisone shots should slow the healing of tennis elbow is a good question. An even better one, though, is why they help in the first place. For many years it was widely believed that tendon-overuse injuries were caused by inflammation, said Dr. Karim Khan, a professor at the School of Human Kinetics at the University of British Columbia and the co-author of a commentary in The Lancet accompanying the new review article. The injuries were, as a group, given the name tendinitis, since the suffix “-itis” means inflammation. Cortisone is an anti-inflammatory medication. Using it against an inflammation injury was logical.

But in the decades since, numerous studies have shown, persuasively, that these overuse injuries do not involve inflammation. When animal or human tissues from these types of injuries are examined, they do not contain the usual biochemical markers of inflammation. Instead, the injury seems to be degenerative. The fibers within the tendons fray. Today the injuries usually are referred to as tendinopathies, or diseased tendons.

Why then does a cortisone shot, an anti-inflammatory, work in the short term in noninflammatory injuries, providing undeniable if ephemeral pain relief?  The injections seem to have “an effect on the neural receptors” involved in creating the pain in the sore tendon, Dr. Khan said. “They change the pain biology in the short term.” But, he said, cortisone shots do “not heal the structural damage” underlying the pain. Instead, they actually “impede the structural healing.”

Still, relief of pain might be a sufficient reason to champion the injections, if the pain “were severe,” Dr. Khan said. “But it’s not.” The pain associated with tendinopathies tends to fall somewhere around a 7 or so on a 10-point scale of pain. “It’s not insignificant, but it’s not kidney stones.”

So the question of whether cortisone shots still make sense as a treatment for tendinopathies, especially tennis elbow, depends, Dr. Khan said, on how you choose “to balance short-term pain relief versus the likelihood” of longer-term negative outcomes. In other words, is reducing soreness now worth an increased risk of delayed healing and possible relapse within the year?

Some people, including physicians, may decide that the answer remains yes. There will always be a longing for a magical pill, the quick fix, especially when the other widely accepted and studied alternatives for treating sore tendons are to do nothing or, more onerous to some people, to rigorously exercise the sore joint during physical therapy. But if he were to dispense advice based on his findings and that of his colleagues’ systematic review, Dr. Vicenzino said, he would suggest that athletes with tennis elbow (and possibly other tendinopathies) think not just once or twice about the wisdom of cortisone shots but  “three or four times.”

What these reports are saying is that avoiding the cortisone shot for a tendon injury is beneficial.  Rest and physical therapy will do more for you in the long run, which the quick fix of pain relief obtained from the injection will hurt you on down the road.  Remmel Wellness Center provides natural therapies such as cold laser treatments, massage therapy and physical therapy to help rehabilitate these types of injuries. 

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic facility located in beautiful St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Do This Now to Feel Good When You’re 100!

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Although our current generation is the first in many generations to have a shorter life expectancy than the previous generation, it doesn’t have to be that way.  If you take control of your life, your diet and your exercise levels so that you become healthy … and it’s never too late to do so, then you to can live a long, healthy life and even feel good in your 80s, 90s and when you are 100!  Check out this article from the October 25th edition of the New York Times:

“Many changes take place in physical abilities as we age. Try as I may, I simply can’t swim as fast at 69 as I did at 39, 49 or even 59. Nor am I as steady on my feet. I can only assume my strength has waned as well — I’m finding bottles and jars harder to open and heavy packages harder to lift and carry.

But in August, I hiked in the Grand Canyon, prompting my 10-year-old grandson Stefan to ask, “Grandma, how many 69-year-olds do you think could do this?”

The answer, of course, is “a lot.” And the reason is that we work at it. For my part, I exercise daily, walking three miles or biking 10, then swimming three-quarters of a mile. In spring and summer, heavy-duty gardening strengthens my entire body.

But now that my physically stronger spouse is gone, I see that I need to make some improvements. With no one handy to open those jars or lift those heavy objects, I’ve begun strength training so I can remain as independent as possible as long as possible.

In a newly published book, “Treat Me, Not My Age”(Viking), Dr. Mark Lachs, director of geriatrics at the NewYork-Presbyterian Healthcare System, discusses two major influences (among others) on how well older people are able to function.

Delaying Bodily Decline

The first, called physiologic reserve, refers to excess capacity in organs and biological systems; we’re given this reserve at birth, and it tends to decrease over time. In an interview, Dr. Lachs said that as cells deteriorate or die with advancing age, that excess is lost at different rates in different systems.

The effects can sneak up on a person, he said, because even when most of the excess capacity is gone, we may experience little or no decline in function. A secret of successful aging is to slow down the loss of physiologic reserve.

“You can lose up to 90 percent of the kidney function you had as a child and never experience any symptoms whatsoever related to kidney function failure,” Dr. Lachs said. Likewise, we are born with billions of brain cells we’ll never use, and many if not most of them can be lost or diseased before a person experiences undeniable cognitive deficits.

Muscle strength also declines with age, even in the absence of a muscular disease. Most people (bodybuilders excluded) achieve peak muscle strength between 20 and 30, with variations depending on the muscle group. After that, strength slowly declines, eventually resulting in telling symptoms of muscle weakness, like falling, and difficulty with essential daily tasks, like getting up from a chair or in and out of the tub.

Most otherwise healthy people do not become incapacitated by lost muscle strength until they are 80 or 90. But thanks to advances in medicine and overall living conditions, many more people are reaching those ages, Dr. Lachs writes: “Today millions of people have survived long enough to keep a date with immobility.”

The good news is that the age of immobility can be modified. As life expectancy rises and more people live to celebrate their 100th birthday, postponing the time when physical independence can no longer be maintained is a goal worth striving for.

Gerontologists have shown that the rate of decline “can be tweaked to your advantage by a variety of interventions, and it often doesn’t matter whether you’re 50 or 90 when you start tweaking,” Dr. Lachs said. “You just need to get started. The embers of disability begin smoldering long before you’re handed a walker.”

Lifestyle choices made in midlife can have a major impact on your functional ability late in life, he emphasized. If you begin a daily walking program at age 45, he said, you could delay immobility to 90 and beyond. If you become a couch potato at 45 and remain so, immobility can encroach as early as 60.

“It’s not like we’re prescribing chemotherapy — it’s walking,” Dr. Lachs said. “Even the smallest interventions can produce substantial benefits” and “significantly delay your date with disability.”

“It’s never too late for a course correction,” he said.

In a study published in The Journal of the American Medical Association in 2004, elderly men and women who began strengthening exercises after a hip fracture increased their walking speed, balance and muscle strength and reduced their risk of falls and repeat fractures.

“Minor interventions that may seem trivial — like lifting small weights with multiple repetitions — can lead to dramatic improvements in quality of life,” Dr. Lachs said.

Supportive Environment

As with your body, your environment can be tweaked to enhance life in the upper decades. You can make adjustments at home to anticipate medical problems you are likely to face as you get older — allowing you to keep your independence, remain in familiar surroundings and minimize the risk of injury.

As Dr. Lachs put it, “It’s not just mold and radon that can make homes sick.” His colleague Rosemary Bakker says that most dwellings and equipment today were designed for 21-year-olds, and she has listed a set of issues that can jeopardize older people’s ability to function safely on their own:

* Windows or doors that are hard to open.

* Poor lighting, especially in crucial areas like the bathroom and kitchen.

* Rugs, irregular floors and other tripping hazards.

* Tubs and showers that are hard to use if you have arthritis.

* Stair widths or heights that are difficult to negotiate if you have neurological troubles.

* Appliances and utensils that are challenging to handle if you have limited manual dexterity.”

* Poor layout of rooms, like a bathroom far from the bedroom, that can be a problem when you walk slowly.

Ms. Bakker, a certified interior designer with a master’s degree in gerontology, is the author of “AARP Guide to Revitalizing Your Home: Beautiful Living for the Second Half of Life” (Lark, 2010). The book shows how homes can be modified to promote lifelong safety and independence and still remain stylish. Many ideas can be found on her Web site, environmentalgeriatrics.com.

“These things are underpublicized, underappreciated and underutilized,” Dr. Lachs writes. Most fixes are simple and unobtrusive and “many are dirt-cheap,” he said, adding that if money is tight, it is best spent on improvements in the bathroom.

 ***

As this article points out, it is never too late to take steps to a healthier, happier you.  If you haven’t done any exercise in years, start by walking to the end of the street, and then around the block if you get to the end of the street, then take it a little bit further!  If the weather is bad, go to the mall and walk a couple of laps.  If you want a little more of a challenge, set an appointment with a personal trainer to help you put together a routine to do at home, in a park or where ever you are. 

You can also get the help you need to stop smoking, and make little changes to your diet to incorporate more fruits and vegetables, lean meats and cut out the processed foods, sugars and high fat foods.  Remember … take baby steps.  When one things becomes second nature, add a second thing, and so on.  Next thing you know, you are on your way to living well to 100 years old!!

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic facility located in beautiful St. Petersburg, Florida. 

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Quit making Excuses for Being Fat!!

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This type of reporting really makes me mad.  I am sick and tired of people to make excuses for everything.  Nothing is ever their fault.  They are completely blameless for what ever has gone wrong in their life.  WAKE UP PEOPLE!!!!  You are killing yourself … but of course it is not YOUR fault, it is?

This is the article posted on the Bay News 9 website.  I didn’t find the story picked up in any other media outlet, so the story itself seems to be a little suspect.:

“Does it seem like you just can’t lose weight, no matter what you do?

New research shows that obesity may have nothing to do with your lifestyle.

Exercise and eating healthier has always been recommended for weight loss, and obesity is no light matter.

In fact, it’s one of the largest medical problems in America.

But now, scientists at Yale University say your waistline could be just as easy to control as your eye color or nose shape.

In their study, rats were bred to actually be predisposed to obesity.

According to researchers, in those animals, neurons that are supposed to raise the flag that they were full after eating functioned much more slowly.

They also found those more prone to diet-caused obesity developed brain inflammation.

The resistant rats did not.

That could explain why two different people with the same unhealthy eating habits end up with different results, but researchers say genetics alone is not the primary source of obesity development.”  http://www.baynews9.com/article/news/2010/october/166512/Are-we-born-to-be-fat-or-skinny–Research-says-yes?cid=rss
News reports like this encourage people to not accept responsibility for their own actions – in this case the food they choose to eat and their level of inactivity.  I work in a wellness facility that has a medical weight loss program, and EVERYBODY who has stayed with the program has lost weight.  Furthermore, EVERYBODY who successfully lost weight has kept it off by taking the necessary steps to CHANGE their lifestyle. 

This reports discourages people from actually making the changes they need to make to lose weight and become healthy.  It’s just one more excuse in a long line of excuses people offer for their weight problems.  Wake up America and accept responsibility for the fact that your actions and inactions are the reason you are overweight, and stop blaming it on genetics and anything else that is convenient and easy.

To get the help you need to lose weight, call Remmel Wellness Center at 727-525-1141 to schedule your consultation today.  Remmel Wellness Center incorporates a doctor supervised high protein meal replacement plan with excercise and counseling to help you lose weight and keep it off.  It is not impossible … you CAN do it!!!

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic facility located in beautiful St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Binge Drinking: Do You Do It?

Halloween is just 6 days away, and the Halloween parties are multiplying faster than hordes of spiders, ghosts, ghouls and goblins!  Further, we are approaching the holiday season where parties are plentiful, as are the opportunities to tip back a few too many drinks.  With parties, festivities and open bars, the risk of binge drinking presents itself.  But binge drinking doesn’t just happen during the holidays, it is a year long problem that the CDC has recently reported on.  Consider this:

Binge drinking means men drinking 5 or more alcoholic drinks within a short period of time or women drinking 4 or more drinks during a short period of time. 

Binge drinking is a dangerous behavior for all ages. Drinking too much, including binge drinking, causes more than 79,000 deaths in the US each year and is a leading preventable cause of death. Binge drinking has not been well-recognized as a public health problem. More than 15% of US adults report binge drinking. It is most common in men, adults in the 18–34 age range, and people with household incomes of $75,000 or more. This is a community issue, not just an individual issue. This CDC report points out how common binge drinking is and what can be done about it.

Binge drinking is common and dangerous but is not a well-recognized public health problem.

Binge drinking is common across all ages.
•Binge drinking happens more than 4 million times a day in the US among adults.
•Binge drinking is most common among men, adults in the 18-34 age range, and people with household incomes of $75,000 or more.
•About 2 in 3 high school students who drink alcohol report binge drinking during the past month.
•The drinking behavior of adults affects the drinking behavior of youth by the example it sets.
•Binge drinking can harm the individual, family, and community in many ways.

Binge drinking is more common in certain parts of the country than others, so if you live in a state that has a high incidence of binge drinking, you should really pay attention to your drinking habits and how many drinks you have in a single sitting, and then make a commitment to yourself not to binge drink.

Binge drinking is a major public health problem.
•The percentage of adults who binge drink has not declined for more than 15 years.
•Sales information on alcohol suggests people may be drinking even more than they report.
•Binge drinkers usually become impaired.
•Binge drinking increases the chances of car crashes, violence against others, spread of HIV and sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), unplanned pregnancy, sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), and babies born with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders.
•Most people who binge drink are not alcohol-dependent or alcoholics.

Binge Drinking can lead to:

Motor Vehicle Crashes

Violence Against Others

Spread of HIV and Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs)

Unplanned Pregnancy

Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)

Alcohol Dependence

With health problems such as these, binge drinking should be avoided.  If you think you have a problem with alcohol, whether it is binge drinking, alcohol abuse or alcoholism there are resources available to you.  Remmel Wellness Center offers confidential mental health counseling for dependancy and co-dependency issues.  You can call us at 727.525.1141 for an appointment.  If you live outside our area, go to www.aa.org for resources in your area.

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic center located in beautiful St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Automobile Safety for Children

Kindersitz BxHxT 47x61x52cm / Child Car Seat
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Over the years we have treated thousand of people who have been injured in automobile accidents, and some of those people have been children.  As adults, we all know to wear our seat belt and to not deactivate our airbags, but the rules to keeping kids safe in the a little more complicated.

In order to help you keep your kids safe in the car – and we all know how bad people drive around here – we are sharing some advice from the CDC:

Reduce Their Risk

In 2008, about 4 children ages 14 or younger were killed in motor vehicle crashes every day, and many more were injured. But parents and caregivers can make a lifesaving difference.

Whenever you’re on the road, make sure your child passengers are buckled into appropriate safety seats. The safest place for children of any age to ride is properly restrained in the back seat. Data show that:

•In 2008, restraint use saved the lives of 244 children ages 4 and younger. Child safety seats reduce the risk of death in car crashes by 71% for infants and 54% for toddlers ages one to four.

•For children ages 4 to 7, booster seats reduce injury risk by 59% compared to safety belts alone.
Children ages 12 and younger should always be buckled up and seated in the rear seat of vehicles. Infants in rear-facing car seats should never ride in the front seat of vehicles with airbags.

Know the Stages

Follow these guidelines for child passenger safety:
•UNTIL AGE 1/20 LBS – For the best possible protection keep infants in the back seat, in rear-facing child safety seats, as long as possible up to the height or weight limit of their particular seat. At a minimum, keep infants rear-facing until at least age 1 year and at least 20 pounds.

•UNTIL AGE 4/40 LBS – When children outgrow their rear-facing seats (at least age 1 year and at least 20 pounds) they should ride in forward-facing child safety seats, in the back seat, until they reach the upper weight or height limit of the particular seat (usually around age 4 and 40 pounds).

•UNTIL AGE 8 OR 4’9″ TALL – Once children outgrow their forward-facing seats (usually around age 4 and 40 pounds), they should ride in booster seats, in the back seat, until the vehicle seat belts fit properly. Seat belts fit properly when the lap belt lays across the upper thighs and the shoulder belt fits across the chest (usually at age 8 or when the children are 4’9″ tall).

•AFTER AGE 8 OR 4’9″ TALL – When children outgrow their booster seats (usually at age 8 or when they are 4’9″ tall), they can use the adult seat belts in the back seat, if they fit properly (lap belt lays across the upper thighs and the shoulder belt fits across the chest).

Remember: All children younger than 13 years should ride in the back seat. Never place a child in the front seat facing an airbag

Hopefully this information will help to keep you and your children safe.  If, however, you do get in an automobile accident, please seek the care of a caring and competent doctor.  If you don’t live or work near Remmel Wellness Center, we will be more than happy to refer you to a great doctor in your area.  Don’t call a referral hotline – they are in it for the money, not for the patient care.

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic facility located in beautiful St. Petersburg, Florida.

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