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Who says we have to suffer...to live a healthy happy vibrant life?
Red wine and dark chocolate... might seem decadent...but these guilty pleasures also might help us live longer...and healthier lives. Red wine and dark chocolate definitely improve an evening..but they also contain resveratrol..which lowers blood sugar. Red wine is a great source of catechins..which boost protective HDL cholesterol. Green tea? Protects your brain..helps you live longer..and soothes your spirit.
Food for Thought, the blog, is about living the good life...a life we create with our thoughts and our choices...and having fun the whole while!
I say lets make the thoughts good ones..and let the choices be healthy...exciting...and delicious! Bon Appetit!
Showing posts with label Food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food. Show all posts
Saturday, May 16, 2015
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Can diet help fight prostate cancer? The Men’s Eating and Living (MEAL) study.
Few
things can make a man feel less in control of his life than being told he has
cancer. Making healthier choices — including what food you eat — can help
regain some control, and make you feel better in the process. Can adopting a
healthier diet help fight prostate cancer? That’s a question men newly
diagnosed with prostate cancer often ask their doctors.
Several
studies have shown that in countries where men eat a “Western” diet containing
a large amount of meat, the incidence of prostate cancer, especially aggressive
prostate cancer, is higher than in countries where plant foods are a primary
part of the diet. Unfortunately, these studies weren’t designed to prove cause
and effect. So for now, definitive answers about prostate cancer and diet
aren’t yet in — although researchers are actively studying this topic.
Investigators
have launched a federally funded national study to see whether a diet that’s
higher in plant foods and lower in animal foods than the typical Western diet
will help control tumor growth in men with early-stage prostate cancer.
Participants
in the Men’s Eating and Living (MEAL) study will try to eat nine servings of
fruits and vegetables daily — significantly more than the three to four
servings consumed each day by the typical American man — as well as two
servings of whole grains and one serving of beans or other legumes.
This
clinical trial will include men ages 50-80 years who have small, low-grade
tumors and who have opted to have their condition followed (active
surveillance) rather than undergoing immediate treatment. Researchers will
randomly assign participants to telephone counseling about how to achieve the
dietary MEAL goals or to a control group that receives standard dietary advice
for Americans.
During the two-year study, the investigators
will collect blood samples to assess levels of antioxidants and nutrients, and
then monitor the men with PSA tests and prostate biopsies to determine whether
the cancer is progressing. A pilot study showed the approach is workable, and
that with enough telephone prompting men can increase their intake of
vegetables and other
healthy foods. To learn more about the larger phase III MEAL study, or to
enroll, visit HERE and search for Trial
NCT 01238172.Thursday, April 18, 2013
Take Back the Tap Guide to Safe Tap Water

Do you drink bottled water? Do you think it is safer than tap water? So did I until I began to do some investigating.
Turns out I was wrong...and I was paying a lot of money for water that is tested less often and less extensively than my own tap water.
Tap water is tested more frequently for safety concerns than bottled water, but the water quality reports issued by local utilities can be confusing to read. Use this guide, the Take Back the Tap Guide to Safe Tap Water to help understand these reports and why they are important. Then get tips on finding the right filter for your household tap water based on the water quality in your area.
Get the Facts. Bottled water is not safer than tap water. Despite the marketing, bottled water is not safer than tap water. In fact, tap water is subject to more stringent regulation that bottled water. Tap water is regulated by the EPA, while bottled water is regulated by the Food and Drug Administration. Perpetually under-funded and short-staffed, FDA has a poor record of protecting consumer health and safety. FDA sends inspectors to bottling plants once every two to three years. Read this: Bottled Water: Illusions of Purity and then resolve to reduce your bottled water consumption.
You can download a nifty app for your smartphone called Tap Buddy to find water fountains in your area, and you can visit Food & Water Watch's website to see what you can do to support access to safe food and water.
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