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Tag: Physical exercise

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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Rising Obesity and Rising Costs

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Do you want to hear something really scary?  In 10 years, a full 75 percent of Americans will be overweight, making it the fattest country in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. 

Citizens of the world’s richest countries are getting fatter and fatter and the United States is leading the charge, an organization of leading economies said Thursday in its first ever obesity forecast.

“Food is much cheaper than in the past, in particular food that is not particularly healthy, and people are changing their lifestyles, they have less time to prepare meals and are eating out more in restaurants,” said Sassi, a former London School of Economics lecturer who worked on the report for three years.

That plus the fact that people are much less physically active than in the past means that the ranks of the overweight  have swelled to 67 percent in the U.S. this year from well under 50 percent in 1980, according to the OECD.

 This means that disease rates and health care spending will balloon, unless governments, individuals and industry cooperate on a comprehensive strategy to combat the epidemic. 

So, what are the costs associated with obesity?  Higher medical bills are the most obvious cost, but that’s only a portion of the real-life costs.

George Washington University researchers added in things like employee sick days, lost productivity, even the need for extra gasoline, and found the annual cost of being obese is $4,879 for a woman and $2,646 for a man.

That’s far more than the cost of being merely overweight, $524 for women and $432 for men, concluded the report being released Tuesday, which analyzed previously published studies to come up with a total.

Why the difference between the sexes? Studies suggest larger women earn less than skinnier women, while wages don’t differ when men pack on the pounds. That was a big surprise, said study co-author and health policy professor Christine Ferguson.

Researchers had expected everybody’s wages to suffer with obesity, but “this indicates you’re not that disadvantaged as a guy, from a wage perspective,” said Ferguson, who plans to study why.

Then consider that obesity is linked to earlier death. While that’s not something people usually consider a pocketbook issue, the report did average in the economic value of lost life. That brought women’s annual obesity costs up to $8,365, and men’s to $6,518.

A major study published last year found medical spending averages $1,400 more a year for the obese than normal-weight people. Tuesday’s report added mostly work-related costs, things like sick days and disability claims, related to those health problems.

It also included an unusual finding, a study that calculated nearly 1 billion additional gallons of gasoline are used every year because of increases in car passengers’ weight since 1960.

And the thing is, nobody is doing anything to stop this trend.  Americans have a lazy, herd of sheep mentality and will continue to eat unhealthily, will continue to sit in front of the television or computer or video game rather than exercise, and will continue to think it is acceptable to take pill to counteract their poor choices.

I’ve said it before and I will say it again …  we don’t have a healthcare crisis in America, we have a culture crisis. It is time to change the way we think, act and behave. Taking a pill isn’t going to make everything all better. There are ways to get healthy and lose weight, and we can help, but you have to make a decision… and the decision that needs to be made is to be an active participant in your health.  When you have made that decision, call us at Remmel Wellness Center and find out just how healthy you can be when you take responsibility for your health.

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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Family Fitness is Fun

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With obesity rates in kids on the rise, it isn’t surprising that health clubs are now creating family friendly fitness classes where children can work out with their mom or dad.    Tampa Bay Online (tbo.com) reports:

Kids across the country grow up going to the gym with Mom and Dad.

Ironically, as their parents head to spin class or the weight machines, most kids end up watching TV, playing video games or just hanging out in a designated, supervised kids-only zone.

That’s because fitness centers historically are adult-only playgrounds. Moms don’t get nagged or distracted by the rugrats, and trainers don’t have to watch out for 10-year-olds unable to fully navigate a treadmill’s speed control.

Facilities such as the YMCA and Lifestyle Family Fitness are passionate about exercise for children, but offerings usually segregate kids, teens and adults from one another. The generations simply don’t interact.

Megan Kullman and Audrey Engelberger don’t much like that idea. The St. Petersburg girls, ages 8 and 6, both have pleaded to join their mothers in classes at the St. Petersburg Lifestyle Family Fitness center they frequent. They hear the loud, rhythmic dance music and see a frenzied blur of activity, and ask why they can’t play, too.

A few months ago, Lifestyle decided it wanted to deviate from the old school of thought and launched family-friendly group exercise classes for adults and their children. Five of the 18 Tampa Bay-area Lifestyle locations offer at least one hour long Family Fit class each week.

Audrey, Megan and Megan’s younger brother, Adam, 5, are among the first kids attempting the “Body Attack” class. Megan and Adam’s mom, Katie Kullman, says it shows the kids how seriously she takes her exercise.

“It’s nice for them to see how hard it is. It’s not just bouncing around,” she says.

Body Attack instructor Susan Lyens says she doesn’t modify the high-intensity cardio workout because kids are there. Instead, she treats all students the same, pushing them all to keep stretching, squatting, jumping and leaping around the large studio. She does use the fact that kids are in the room to make sure adults – including about a dozen non-parents – keep going.

Most of the children in the class (usually about 10) remain for the entire hour. Older tweens and teens have a harder time staying focused. Audrey’s mom holds her 6-year-old’s hand whenever she struggles to keep the fast pace.

“I was impressed she made it all the way through the class,” Judy Engelberger says.

Younger children, up to age 10, need more water breaks than the adults, but they seem fascinated by the music and exercises with names such as Superman. Instructor Lyens, the mother of a 2-year-old, says Family Fit really works best with kids ages 4 and older.

Lifestyle traditionally requires kids to be 12 to sign up for a group fitness class, the most popular part of the national chain’s fitness programming. And it has had a lot of success with an annual teen fitness pass that gives youths 13 and older free access to the gym during the summer.

Carlene Childress, the center’s group fitness manager, says the fitness industry forgot how important it is to catch a child’s interest early, especially at a time when obesity is so prevalent. And like having a play place where parents can safely leave the kids, the family fitness idea is also good business.

“It takes care of us in the future,” she says. “If they love it as a kid, they will be our customer in the future.

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

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Never, Ever Eat These Two Foods After a Workout!

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Because we are a wellness center, we help people get and remain healthy.  We have a lot of tools in our arsenal, including weight loss and diet and exercise counseling.  You’d be surprised at how many people think they are doing something good for themselves, but unintentionally undermine their positive efforts with things that aren’t so good for them.  Here is a great example of the types of foods you should avoid after exercise so that you don’t negate all the hard work you put into your workout (courtesy of foodconsumer.org).

Don’t Eat This After Your Workout:  Did you know that what you eat directly after exercising – typically within two hours – can have a significant impact on the health benefits you reap from your exercise?

Consuming sugar within this post-exercise window, will negatively affect both your insulin sensitivity and your human growth hormone (HGH) production.

A recent study in the Journal of Applied Physiology found that eating a low-carbohydrate meal after aerobic exercise enhances your insulin sensitivity. This is highly beneficial, since impaired insulin sensitivity, or insulin resistance, is the underlying cause of type 2 diabetes and a significant risk factor for other chronic diseases, such as heart disease.

In addition, as HGH Magazine explains, consuming fructose, including that from fruit juices, within this two-hour window will decimate your natural HGH production:

“A high sugar meal after working out, or even a recovery drink (containing high sugar) after working out, will stop the benefits of exercise induced HGH. You can work out for hours, then eat a high sugar candy bar or have a high sugar energy drink, and this will shut down the synergistic benefits of HGH.

And If You Want to Increase The Effectiveness of Your Workout, do This:  … If you miss reaching HGH release during working out, you will still receive the calorie burning benefit from the workout.  However, you’ll miss the HGH “synergy bonus” of enhanced fat burning for two hours after working out.

This is an extremely important fact to remember if you want to cut body fat and shed a few pounds.

The University of Virginia research team demonstrated that carbohydrates are burned during exercise in direct proportion to the intensity of training.  Fat burning is also correlated with intensity.  However, the actual fat burning takes place after the workout, during the recovery.

This makes the “Synergy Window,” the 2 hour period after a workout, very important in maximizing HGH, once it’s released during exercise.

… If you are middle-age and want all the benefits from exercise induced HGH, then apply this strategy.”

Fitness expert Phil Campbell, author of Ready, Set, Go! further explains how you can maximize your HGH production by limiting sugar intake for two hours post exercise, in this article on HowToBeFit.com.

Exercising one hour a week and getting the same results as traditional strength training might sound impossible. However, University of Florida orthopedics researchers have developed a system that may do just that, and the kind of exercise you perform can dramatically reduce the time you spend in the gym while still getting better results than you did before.

The system created by University of Florida researchers uses eccentric (negative) resistance training, which capitalizes on the fact that the human body can support and lower weights that are too heavy to lift.

According to UF Health Science Center:

“Through a system of motors, pulleys, cams and sensors it adds weight when a person is performing a lowering motion, and removes that weight when the person is lifting. As a result, the body starts seeing loads, resistance, and forces that it doesn’t normally see”.

Other scientists have found additional clues that explain how exercise reshapes and strengthens more than just your muscles.

It changes your brain too.

Exercise Helps the Muscle Between Your Ears, Too:  In the late 1990s, researchers proved that human and animal brains produce new brain cells, and that exercise increases the process. But precisely how exercise affects the intricate workings of your brain at a cellular level remained a mystery.

However, a number of new studies have begun to identify the specific mechanisms, and have raised new questions about just how exercise reshapes your brain.

In some studies, scientists have been manipulating the levels of bone-morphogenetic protein (BMP) in the brains of mice. The more active BMP becomes, the more inactive your brain stem cells become and the fewer new brain cells you produce. Exercise reverses some of the effects of BMP.

According to the New York Times:

“BMP signaling was found to be playing a surprising, protective role for the brain’s stem cells … Without BMP signals to inhibit them, the stem cells began dividing rapidly, producing hordes of new neurons.”

Sources:

  UF Health Science Center February 23, 2010

  New York Times July 7, 2010

  PloS One October 20, 2009; 4(10):e7506

  Cell Stem Cell July 2, 2010; 7(1):78-89

  Journal of Applied Physiology December 31, 2009

  HGH Magazine

  HowToBeFit.com

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

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The Power of Gentle Reminder

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I hear excuses all the time as to why people don’t exercise.  It all boils down to this:  a lack of motivation.  Getting started in any new routine can be difficult.  Maintaining that routine so that it becomes habit is just as hard.  What just about every person on the face of the planet needs is some external accountability and motivation… a gentle nudge or reminder.  This article from the Wall Street Journal details the results of a study done by Stanford University on the effectiveness of that reminder.  Read the following and then decide if the woman in the story sounds like you.

Unable to push herself to exercise, Ruthanne Lowe joined a research study aimed at motivating the sedentary with a surprisingly simple technique—an occasional telephone reminder.

“It really did work,” says Ms. Lowe, a 66-year-old housewife in San Jose, Calif. Three years after the study ended, she says, “I’m doing more exercise than I ever did in my life.”

The study, conducted by Stanford University, belongs to a growing body of research showing that small amounts of social support, ranging from friends who encourage each other by email to occasional meetings with a fitness counselor, can produce large and lasting gains against one of America’s biggest health problems—physical inactivity. Only 48% of Americans say they meet the federal recommendation for exercising half an hour most days of the week, and the actual percentage is believed to be much lower. Exercise researchers estimate that nearly all sedentary people at one time or another have resolved and failed to maintain exercise programs.

In the Stanford study, 218 people were divided into three groups. After an introductory session, during which Ms. Lowe established a goal of walking half an hour most days of the week, a Stanford health educator called her and other members of her group every three weeks, on average, for a year to ask about their compliance and to cheer them on. A second group of participants received calls not from humans but from a computer programmed to make similar inquiries.

The caller, whether human or computer, asked the participants to recite the amount of exercise they performed during the past week. Participants were then congratulated on any exercise performed, and asked how the level might be increased in the week ahead. When lapses occurred, as they invariably did because of illness, travel or unforeseeable events, the goal was to impress upon participants the importance of resuming the workout as soon as possible. All questions were designed to encourage rather than to scold.

After 12 months, participants receiving calls from a live person were exercising, as a mean, about 178 minutes a week, above government recommendations for 150 minutes a week. That represented a 78% jump from about 100 minutes a week at the start of the study. Exercise levels for the group receiving computerized calls doubled to 157 minutes a week. A control group of participants, who received no phone calls, exercised 118 minutes a week, up 28% from the study’s start. “When you knew you were going to have to report back on what you had done, it motivated you,” says Ms. Lowe.

The researchers checked in with participants after 18 months and found that their exercise patterns had changed little from the 12-month level. But the study didn’t monitor participants’ beyond that.

Some studies by other researchers have suggested that after eight weeks of regular exercising many people can settle into a long-term habit of working out.

Abby King, a Stanford professor of medicine and health research and policy who conducted this study, published in 2007 in the journal Health Psychology, and other similar studies, says people trying to change unhealthy behaviors generally need something more than willpower. “Whether it’s smoking or alcohol use or physical inactivity, social support helps prevent against relapse,” says Dr. King. But the support doesn’t have to be constant. “A light touch can have a lasting effect,” she says.

Even many of the nation’s most committed exercisers have trouble doing it on their own. At 73, for instance, Marty Mennan is an elite age-group swimmer who strokes across the pool several miles a week, a habit dating back to his years as a competitive college swimmer. But his regimen depends on him belonging to a master’s swim group that provides social support. “From age 55 to 65, I really didn’t exercise at all, because my master’s group had disbanded,” says Mr. Mennan, a retired school teacher in Columbus, Ind., who now drives 40 miles to Indianapolis several times a week to swim with a group.

Mr. Mennan belongs to the 35% to 40% of Americans who prefer to work out in groups. Like alcoholics who can stay sober only with the help of 12-step meetings, these athletes owe their high levels of fitness to running, cycling or swimming clubs.

But surveys show that about 60% of Americans prefer working out alone, especially people who have reached middle age and older who may socialize less frequently in groups. Many lone runners say they come up with solutions to personal and professional problems while exercising. And they often resent the constraints of working out according to somebody else’s schedule. “I’m very gregarious and extroverted, yet I don’t want my exercise schedule hooked into somebody else’s,” says Rita Horiguchi, a 64-year-old self-described former couch potato who with the help of Stanford University learned to work out on her own.

The research coming out of Stanford and other universities essentially calls for such people to join a group or program while continuing to exercise on their own. A study due to be published soon in the International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology, found that two group-counseling sessions, conducted over a three-month period, produced after three months a quadrupling of exercise levels and an even greater jump at nine months, long after the intervention had ended. By contrast, the exercise level of a control group rose during the study period but at nine months had returned to near-baseline levels. The study involved 119 participants with an average age in the mid 50s.

“This study demonstrated that group dynamics strategies can be [effective] when participants are away from the group or even once the group ceases to exist,” writes lead author Paul A. Estabrooks, a professor of exercise science at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.

Dr. King, of Stanford, says that in setting up her studies she advertises for people who are physically inactive. By contrast, she says, ads for health clubs and personal trainers tend to feature photographs of young and buff clients, a marketing tactic that can make the sedentary feel marginalized. “The sedentary are a silent majority who are bombarded by images of active people,” says Dr. King. She says her advertisements for “couch potatoes” alleviate participant concerns about feeling inadequate.

Dr. King’s studies have found that telephone interventions of nearly every kind increase the exercise levels of previously sedentary people. One limitation is that the studies by definition attract people who are eager to change. Even so, participants who receive phone calls as infrequently as once a month have consistently boosted their exercise levels above control groups receiving no such calls, she says.

Despite the popular notion that Americans divide cleanly into the active and the sedentary, most people spend time in both camps. For weeks at a time, Dr. King says she sometimes joins the ranks of the sedentary. By nature a solitary exerciser, she says that when the going gets tough, “I join a small class.”

Some gyms have begun to incorporate the lessons of exercise-adherence research. The YMCA in Chicago recently conducted a study in which in it called members to monitor their success at reaching workout goals. If a member falls short one week, the caller would ask why, then gently prod the member to think of a way that a missed session of exercise could have been made up. “The idea is not to give them the answers, but to encourage them to solve their own exercise problems,” says Mary Ganzel, a YMCA exercise expert who led the study.

In a growing number of states, health officials are sponsoring exercise programs that enable residents to join teams while working out on their own. An annual program called Walk Kansas, for instance, divides tens of thousands of participants into teams of six, with each team expected to walk the width of Kansas, about 430 miles, in eight weeks. Team members walk on their own but report their weekly mileage to each other. An academic study of the Kansas program, which just concluded its ninth year, has found that participants continue exercising far above their original levels long past the end of the contest.

“You don’t want to let your team members down,” says Angel Patterson-Tetuan, a registered nurse who recently completed Walk Kansas for her second consecutive year. She credits the program with helping her lose 40 pounds and develop a year-round exercise regime.

“I used to be able to tell you what was on television every night,” says Mrs. Patterson-Tetuan, a 42-year-old mother of three. “Now I have no idea. I’m up and moving, and so are my children.”

If you need a little motivation, partner up with a friend, neighbor or family member with similar goals to partner up with you.  You don’t need to actually exercise together if you prefer to exercise along (like I do), but it is nice to have that accountability.  If you don’t have anyone you trust to keep you going in a positive, supportive manner, Remmel Wellness Center offers motivational exercise coaching through individual weekly phone calls for only $15 a month.  Having a professional help you through the inevitable ups and downs can make all the difference in establishing a habit that will last a lifetime.

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

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New Dietary Guidelines Published

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The new Dietary Guidelines really are just a codification of common sense and things that we have been told for years …

In an effort to put a dent in the obesity epidemic in the United States, the new 2010 Dietary Guidelines contain some significant changes from those published in prior years.

According to the report accompanying the guidelines, the obesity problem in the US is the country’s biggest health threat this century.

One major change in the new guidelines is the sodium recommendation for adults, which decreased from 2,300 milligrams to 1,500 milligrams.  The 13 member board of scientists and nutritionists that proposed the new guidelines maintains that changes in the formulation of certain products will have to change, citing the high sodium content in canned and prepared foods.

Other dietary recommendations for every adult:  cut back on sugary foods and drinks, and consume only moderate amounts of meat and poultry, try to implement a plant based diet with an emphasis on dried beans and peas, whole grains, fruits and vegetables, as well as some nuts and seeds.

And the new guidelines aren’t just dietary; the board suggested 2.5 hours of moderate physical activity or 1.25 hours of vigorous activity per week for adults.  As for teens and children, the recommendation is for an hour or more of moderate exercise per day.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has, per the agency’s website, a list of recommendations for families who are serious about incorporating healthy habits:

-Spend less time watching television and other sedentary activities

-Build physical activity into regular routines

-Provide food options that are low in fat and sugar

 The CDC also recommends that schools incorporate physical education programs into each and every school day, as well as to make sure on site breakfast and lunch menus follow healthy guidelines.

Citing a 1998 study, the agency also stresses that behavior changes are largely responsible for the sharp increase in the obesity epidemic, which means that although genes may contribute to one’s propensity towards obesity, they do not definitively determine whether a person will become obese or not.

Make small changes in your lifestyle can put you on the path to health and weight loss.  If you’d like to discuss your eating habits, health and weight loss goal with a professional, the doctors and weight loss coaches at Remmel Wellness Center are available to help you.

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

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Instant Recess: The Best Part of the Work Day

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My youngest daughter just graduated from the 8th grade, which means that both my kids are in high school now.  So I was looking at pictures of them when they were young and reminiscing about kindergarten, and that got me thinking about my childhood.  What was your favorite part of school when you were a kid?  I bet you said recess.  I know I did!!!  (Well, actually recess and show-and-tell come in at a tie for me.)  Ever wonder why you don’t get recess any more?  Well, you should and you can! 

Recess is being added into corporate culture as a way to improve productivity, improve health and fitness and develop comraderie.  I really want to go out in the parking lot and play kickball!!!  Who’s in? … And I don’t want to hear anyone complain about how hot it is outside! :-)  

Read this article from the Washington Post to see how one office has incorporated recess into their work day:

At precisely 1:05 p.m., Stacey Thompson announced, “Okay. It’s time!” Within seconds, a dozen co-workers in her downtown Washington office had gathered by the reception desk to march in place, roll their shoulders and prepare to dance.

The employees of Summit Health Institute for Research and Education (SHIRE), a nonprofit organization that fights obesity, are fittingly among the first in the city to embrace Instant Recess, a nationwide push to establish a daily 10-minute exercise break. Think coffee break or cigarette break, but good for you.

“This is hard for folks to ignore. You can’t say, ‘I didn’t know it was happening.’ And if your boss has time to do it, so do you,” said SHIRE’s executive director, Ruth Perot, who removed her purple blazer to participate (but kept her pearls on).

Vigorous moves such as lifting your arms and kicking your legs back elevate the heart rate, but the routines are accessible to everyone, from the 20-something interns to 79-year-old senior project associate Canary Girardeau. Even a woman who wandered into the office to ask a question joined in for a minute.

There’s no doubt this ritual looks weird — just ask the delivery guy who stood outside the office window snickering. But it shouldn’t. And it won’t, predicts UCLA professor Toni Yancey, who created Instant Recess and has a forthcoming book on the topic. “In five years, Instant Recess will be in Congress, churches, waiting rooms,” she says. “Once the opportunity is available, people will take it.”

It’s about to become more available, as Instant Recess is the calling card for the new National Physical Activity Plan. Announced this month by a coalition of 20 partners from the public and private sectors, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, YMCA and AARP, the plan aims to change our national culture to make exercise part of everyone’s lives. The strategies include encouraging programs at workplaces and schools, making physical activity a “vital sign” that doctors discuss with patients, and integrating activity into transportation plans by prioritizing sidewalks, bike lanes and trails.

“There’s no single action that can solve this problem,” says the University of South Carolina’s Russell Pate, chairman of the plan. For too long, experts have clung to the idea that if you tell people they need to exercise, they will. But when many of them hear recommendations that they should be active for an hour a day or walk 10,000 steps, they get overwhelmed. “We’ve learned the hard way that giving people advice and encouragement isn’t getting it done,” he says.

So instead of targeting individuals, the plan is going after society. As Shellie Pfohl, the newly named executive director of the President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports, puts it: “We’ve engineered exercise out of our daily lives. Now we have to engineer it back in.”

That means little changes, such as keeping stairwells well lit — and maybe having some inspiring music pumped in — to make climbing more attractive than riding the elevator. It also means bigger changes, such as making neighborhoods safer so people don’t feel as though they’re in danger if they take a stroll outside.

Ensuring that the wonders of the outdoors are readily available to everyone is particularly important to National Recreation and Park Association chief executive Barbara Tulipane, who’s also on board with the plan.

“I’m excited to get people to understand that it’s not that hard. You don’t have to wear a heart rate monitor,” she says. “It’s as simple as taking a walk in the park.” (And getting more funding for park and recreation programs.)

What also makes the plan stand out is that it’s not just kids’ stuff. Most of the attention these days has been focused on childhood obesity, and while that’s a critical concern, people of all ages have grown too sedentary. So it’s vital to let adults know that they’re not a lost cause, especially because they’re the ones who can shape society — and a whole lot of bodies while they’re at it.

I suggest they start with an Instant Recess.  Yes, I do!  And I am going to push to incorporate it into our office as well.  Patients can join us if they happen to walk in while we are engaged in Instant Recess.  Why not?  After all, they walk in and join our staff meetings!  And if you see an impromptu kickball game taking place in our parking lot, now you know why!

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

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The DIY Guide to Taking 12 Years Off Your Life

How-To Guide:  How to age yourself 12 years … 

All you have to do is combine these four common bad habits — smoking, drinking too much, inactivity and poor diet — and you too can age an additional 12 years!

This was discovered by tracking almost 5,000 Brits.  I bet they could have found more than 5,000, and I’m positive they could do this study in the US — no problem!  These findings highlight one more reason to adopt a healthier lifestyle ~ unless you are 9 and trying to get a fake ID.

Not everyone partook in all 4 bad habits, but for those who did, 29% of them died during the study. The most common causes of death included heart disease and cancer, both related to unhealthy lifestyles.

 The study also include people who had no “bad habits” (you know; boring people – lol) and only 8% of them died during the course of the study. 

You might think that you don’t really have any “bad” habits, but the way the study defined them might make you stop and think.  The aging behaviors were: smoking tobacco; indulging in more than three alcoholic drinks per day for men and more than two daily for women; getting less than two hours of physical activity per week; and eating fruits and vegetables fewer than three times daily.

When you combine all these risky behaviors, the risk of death increased substantially and made people who engaged in them seem 12 years older than people in the healthiest group. 

The good news is that you don’t need to be fanatical to be in the healthy category.  These behaviors add up and are cummulative, so it should be possible for most people to manage to do it.

For example, a side salad, one apple and a glass of  juice (not fruit punch) would suffice for the fruit and vegetable cutoffs in the study.  The amounts are pretty modest and less strict than many guidelines.  Compare this to the USDA recommendations of at least 4 cups of fruits or vegetables daily for adults, depending on age and activity level; and about 2½ hours of exercise weekly.

Eating healthfuly, exercising, drinking in moderation and no smoking combine to create an Anti-aging lifestyle, and isn’t that what we all want? 

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

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The Importance of Strengthening Your Core

A complete weight training workout can be perf...
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It should come as no surprise that we whole-heartedly endorse core strength training.  After all, a strong core will help keep your spine in alignment, thereby keeping aches and pains and other ailments at bay.  Read more on core strength training with these excerpts from the Wall Street Journal, Health Journal (March 16, 2010):

The regimen is called “core strength,” and it’s all the rage in fitness. Elite athletes from marathon runners to baseball pitchers are adopting core-strength workouts—that is, bolstering the muscles encasing their torsos from shoulder to thigh—in pursuit of improved performance and fewer injuries. Fitness trainers are preaching it to the masses. Books like “Core Performance,” by NFL Players Association chief fitness trainer Mark Verstegen, hawk its benefits.

Of course, I knew about crunches—what we used to call sit-ups—and how they could toughen your abdomen. But it turns out that the abdomen is only as strong as the back, thighs, buttocks and shoulders, the other parts of the pillar. Too many crunches, in combination with running, bench pressing and sitting at a computer, can make a body so front-heavy that it pulls forward into a slouch.

 .Core-strengthening exercises seek to bolster all the muscles of the torso from top to bottom and front to back, creating a balance that enables athletes to stand tall, limbs in alignment down to their feet and hands. The particular exercises that strengthen core muscles involve stretching and balance routines that also enhance flexibility.

The benefits of core exercises, which are found in predominantly female disciplines like dance, cheerleading, yoga and Pilates, may be particularly unfamiliar to men. In the U.S., about three-quarters of yoga participants are women, as are 90% of Pilates participants.

Men tend to prefer activities that are easily measured and thus turned into competitions. How fast did you run that mile? How much did you bench? You don’t hear them talking much about how well they held their form while balancing on a bosu—a half-ball/half disc contraption—doing lightweight bicep curls.

“Guys in particular have tended to be into quantity, and strengthening your core is about quality of exercise,” says Mr. Verstegen, the pro-football trainer.

So far, only limited scientific support exists for the highly touted benefits of core-strengthening exercise. “Core stability programs in prevention of athletic injuries have not been well studied [and] core programs have not been proven to enhance athletic performance,” University of Colorado School of Medicine researchers wrote in the February 2008 Current Sports Medicine Report.

But, of course, running was good for the heart before scientific research ever proved it so, and research on core strength is relatively new.

Many sports-medicine specialists expect core-strength exercises to become the third leg of public-health recommendations in regard to workouts. Just as cardiovascular exercise is promoted for heart health and resistance training for strong bones, experts expect core-strengthening movements to gain public-health favor for avoiding muscular-skeletal pain and injury, particularly of the neck, back and hips. “In the sports and fitness worlds, the benefits of core strength exercise are accepted facts,” says Bill Sonnemaker, a personal trainer and spokesman for IDEA Health & Fitness Association, an educational association for fitness professionals.

Core training doesn’t require the big equipment that dominates most gyms, such as treadmills and squat racks. It can be done mostly on a mat, often using dumbbells, exercise balls and a bosu. But while I never needed anybody to teach me how to run on a treadmill or slap plates on a bench press, I had no idea how to go about using those aids to help me strengthen my core. So I took the sales manager’s advice and hired a personal trainer, at no small price: $2,490 for 32 sessions, or $78 each.

A trainer isn’t necessary. There is plenty of do-it-yourself literature available on how to strengthen your core, including Mr. Verstegen’s tome. But even if you know which exercises to perform and how, it can help to have a trained eye watching you and correcting your form. Bad form not only diminishes the value of the exercise but can cause injury.

The first time she met me, my trainer, Bridget Curran, said I had bad posture, and after interviewing me said it was probably because of my exercise regimen. Obsessed with running, bench-pressing and crunches, I had front-loaded myself with muscle. She said I needed to strengthen my backside muscles all the way from shoulders to the buttocks.

Also during that first session she noticed that my right foot veered to the right whenever I walked, ran or stood still, as if it wanted to go off by itself. Kicking my foot straight, she said, “We’re going to correct that.”

“It’s been doing that all my life,” I said. “No way that’s going to change.”

My training sessions with Bridget take place twice a week for an hour. A typical session involves about 10 exercises that I do three times apiece. The exercises typically involve lifting weights—and sometimes my own body—from a position that imposes a need for balance.

For instance, I rest the back of my head and shoulders on a large physio-ball, knees bent so that my torso becomes a table top, each hand holding a 30-pound dumbbell. Then I rip off 30 chest presses. On a bench, the burn from a chest press is concentrated in the arms and upper body. But without a bench, that burn extends down the abdomen into the thighs, which start shaking with effort to stay balanced.

The need for balance gives these workouts a mental benefit. A treadmill doesn’t always get my mind off duties and obligations. But if I start thinking about the office during a core-strengthening exercise, I’ll lose my balance and fall on the mat. “You have to be present in the moment to do these workouts,” says Mr. Verstegen. “You can’t be thinking about work.”

After three months of two core-training sessions a week, my body-fat percentage is down five points. My cruising speed on the treadmill has risen a full mile per hour, even though my weekly mileage plummeted to make time for the core exercises.

For the first time since the invention of the Internet, my shoulders are free of the knots that come from crouching at a keyboard, and my neck is free of stiffness. Whenever a mirror surprises me these days, what I notice about that dude in the glass is that he has decent posture.

Most surprising to me, my right foot is no longer splaying to the right, a bad habit that probably explains why I’ve had trouble with that leg, including knee surgery. Down the road, an inefficient gait could pose a risk for hip trouble, experts say.

All it took was about 24 sessions with Bridget, who continually kicked that foot straight.

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center, a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.   If you are local, call us and we will hook you up with the best deal in town for a gym membership with personal training.

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Teens: The “Fatso” Gene Doesn’t Mean You Must Be Fat

Techo-Teenagers
Image by Leonard John Matthews via Flickr

Yes, you’ve heard it over and over again.  Your diet and exercise are critical components to good health.  A segment of the population blames being overweight on genetics, and it is true that genetics may play a role in a person’s weight.  But simply having the “fatso” gene doesn’t mean you are automatically sentenced to a life of obesity.  Take charge of your life and your health.  Read this story published on Bay News 9 recently:

One hour of moderate to vigorous exercise a day can help teens beat the effects of a common obesity-related gene with the nickname “fatso,” according to a new European study.

The message for adolescents is to get moving, said lead author Jonatan Ruiz of the Karolinska Institute in Sweden.

“Be active in your way,” Ruiz said. “Activities such as playing sports are just fine and enough.”

The study, released Monday, appears in the April edition of Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine.

The research supports U.S. guidelines that tell children and teenagers to get an hour or more of physical activity daily, most of it aerobic activity such as running, jumping rope, swimming, dancing and bicycling.

Scientists are finding evidence that both lifestyle and genes cause obesity and they’re just learning how much diet and exercise can offset the inherited risk.

One gene involved with obesity, the FTO gene, packs on the pounds when it shows up in a variant form. Adults who carry two copies of the gene variant _ about 1 in 6 people _ weigh on average 7 pounds more than people who don’t.

In the new study, 752 teenagers, who had their blood tested for the gene variant, wore monitoring devices for a week during waking hours to measure their physical activity.

Exercising an hour or more daily made a big difference for the teens who were genetically predisposed to obesity. Their waist measurements, body mass index scores and body fat were the same, on average, as the other teenagers with regular genes.

But the teens with the gene variant had more body fat, bigger waists and higher BMI if they got less than an hour of exercise daily. The results were similar for boys and girls.

The teens lived in Greece, Germany, Belgium, France, Hungary, Italy, Sweden, Austria and Spain. The study was funded by the Spanish and Swedish governments and the European Union.

The new study found that most of the teenagers had at least one copy of the variant gene. Only 37 percent had regular genes. The rest had either one of two copies of the pesky fatso gene.

An earlier study in Amish adults in Lancaster County, Pa., found they needed three to four hours of moderate activity daily to beat the gene. The adults in that study did things like brisk walking, housecleaning and gardening.

The teens in the new study may have exercised more vigorously than the Amish adults, Ruiz said. The new analysis was designed to see whether the current U.S. guidelines _ which specify a moderate to vigorous level of exercise for an hour a day _ made a difference for kids.

The lead author of the Amish study, Evadnie Rampersaud of the University of Miami, said the new findings are “very interesting” because they suggest one hour daily spent exercising can be enough for teenagers at risk.

University of Miami researchers now are studying adults in an employee wellness program to see what it takes for them to overcome the fatso gene, Rampersaud said.

“The message is clear: genes are not destiny,” said Dr. Alan Shuldiner of the University of Maryland, a co-author of the Amish study. “Those with obesity susceptibility genes should be especially motivated to engage in a physically active lifestyle.”

To help you on your weight loss and journey back to health, the health team at Remmel Wellness Center utilizes a number of tools, including Ideal Protein foods, nutrition counseling and education, hypnosis and food issue counseling and exercise.  Call us for more information at 727-525-1141.

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

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