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Tag: Wellness

Did McDonald’s Force-Feed This Guy??

A Big Mac combo meal with French fries and Coc...
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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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Instant Recess: The Best Part of the Work Day

Sports and games
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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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