Healthy Diet

What research shows is important in creating a healthy eating pattern

Answering Your Questions on Diet for Cancer Prevention & Survivorship

When you have over 470 people gathered, it’s hard to answer everyone’s questions.  That’s how many people tuned in this week for the American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR) webinar, Diet & Physical Activity in Cancer Prevention & Survivorship: The Science and Practice. 

We shouldn’t be surprised that program time ran out before we could get to anywhere near all the questions from such a large group on an exciting and ever-evolving topic like this. We’ll be looking at how we can address these questions in a variety of formats in the future.  Meanwhile, today I’ll get a start and answer a few of the many excellent questions posed….

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Video Interview with Dan Buettner: Is community vital to a Blue Zones lifestyle?

What makes a lifestyle that supports a long, healthy life? In the first part of my interview with Dan Buettner, he discussed the components of a healthy lifestyle that he discovered in the Blue Zones of the world, where people live long and healthfully. Now the big questions: what does it take to live this lifestyle? Can we do it on our own? What kind of support matters?  Can we create communities that make healthy choices easier than unhealthy ones?  That certainly does not describe life in most U.S. communities today.  Here’s what Dan Buettner says in the second half of our interview.  Please check it out and then join in for discussion.

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Video Interview: The Blue Zones Recipe for a Long Life

If you were writing a recipe for a healthy lifestyle, what do you think the key ingredients would be?  Dan Buettner traveled the world for National Geographic, exploring the people and places where healthy longevity is most common.  Dan’s best-selling book, The Blue Zones, gives you his recipe for a healthy lifestyle based on what he found.  When he was presenting the keynote address at a recent professional conference I was attending, Dan graciously agreed to an interview for me to share with all my blog readers.  Here’s Part One of our conversation…

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Broccoli: Something Special or Just Another Green Vegetable?

broccoli

Not-So-Boring-Broccoli from the American Institute for Cancer Research http://www.aicr.org/health-features/test-kitchen/six-on-the-side-dishes.html

Exotic tropical fruits come and go as “super foods” in the spotlight, but for years broccoli has maintained a place on the A-list of healthy vegetables.  Is it really justified, or just another example of nutrition hype?  Do some of us benefit more than others? Continue reading

Does Smoking Cessation Mean Weight Gain?

What one change has prevented more than 795,000 cancer deaths in the U.S. between 1975 and 2000?

The National Cancer Institute has declared April as Cancer Control Month, so it’s a good time to remind ourselves of the obvious: tobacco avoidance saves lives.  That good news about cancer deaths prevented compared to expectations based on prior statistics is due to a decline in smoking. The researchers’ calculations that quantified the cumulative impact of changes in smoking produced a bittersweet note: if all tobacco smoking had ceased, 1.7 million American lung cancer deaths that did occur during this time would have been avoided.smoking cessation can lead to modest weight gain

One obstacle: some people don’t quit because they’re afraid of gaining weight. That’s a valid concern, since modest weight gain is not unusual when someone quits smoking.  However, weight gain is not universal.  Reaching and maintaining a healthy weight is a key step in reducing risk of cancer. First things first, however: the multiple health benefits of getting away from tobacco outweigh the small gain that may occur, and researchers are studying what people might do to avoid or limit weight gain related to smoking cessation.

Here’s what research has uncovered so far.  Please pass this along to smokers you know. Continue reading

Chocolate and Health: Looking past the headlines

A person could have whiplash following nutrition in the news recently. In less than one week’s time, hundreds of news stories and Twitter posts have been careening back and forth between discussion of a study linking chocolate with a healthier weight and a television broadcast linking sweets with a wide array of health problems.

Chocolate, weight, heart disease, health
Chocolate: Forbidden fruit? Weight loss wonder?

Coupled with reports from presentations at a major cancer research conference reminding us that weight control is one of the most important steps we can take to reduce our cancer risk, you may be wondering what on earth to make of all this.

Is chocolate a help or a hindrance to health? Does it really pose no barrier to a healthy weight? For me, the answers lie in the study details that you don’t get from looking only at the headlines. Continue reading

The Diabetes-Cancer Connection: What does it mean?

OK, call me a Pollyanna, but some good can come from realizing the increase in cancer risk linked to type 2 diabetes.  By supplying evidence of an important pathway in cancer’s development, we have more clarity on steps that can have double impact, decreasing risk of diabetes and all its complications AND decreasing cancer risk at the same time.changing to healthy habits now can reduce risk of type 2 diabetes and cancer risk

Last week I was fortunate to speak on this topic as part of a webinar for the American Association of Diabetes Educators (AADE).  My co-presenter was the distinguished Canadian researcher in this field, Michael Pollak, M.D.  Don’t get me wrong – the diabetes-cancer link is worrisome, since the skyrocketing rates of type 2 diabetes in the U.S. suggest that in years to come, rates of diabetes-related cancers could soar as well. Today, though, let’s focus on the silver lining: if we act now to create a few basic changes in lifestyle and eating patterns, we might still turn this Titanic around in time. Continue reading

Nutrition Distraction Disorder: Fight it with Sloppy Success

Nutrition Distraction Disorder:  If it were a real diagnosable condition, a lot of people would have it.  Do you?  Whether I’m at a speaking engagement or simply watching the headlines, I’ve noticed lately how many people are dipping a toe in the pool of a healthier lifestyle, and then jumping out and running to something else.  They never stick with a change long enough to feel the benefits, and are frazzled from trying to keep up with the latest “sure-fire” nutrition strategy.Aim for Sloppy Success to beat Nutrition Distraction Disorder

On a conference call recently, my valued colleague Bridget Swinney, MS, RD shared one of the take-home messages from a writers’ conference she recently attended: “Sloppy Success is better than Perfect Procrastination.”  That may have been said regarding writing, but I think it’s relevant to much more. Let’s look at how some imperfect changes to your eating habits and lifestyle might be the answer to replace “Nutrition Distraction Disorder”. Continue reading

Video interview: Protein & Your Bones. An expert weighs in

It’s easy to feel confused with all the conflicting news of how the protein in our diet affects bone health. Should we be more concerned about getting enough protein? Or is the greater risk from too much protein increasing calcium loss in the urine and bone loss?

While I was speaking in New York City recently, I was delighted to get some time with my long-time friend from graduate school at Cornell University, Jeri Nieves, PhD.  Dr Nieves is Associate Professor of Nutrition and Epidemiology at Columbia University and Helen Hayes Hospital, where she is known for research on bone health and osteoporosis.

Here is video from the third and final section of my interview with Dr. Nieves about nutrition for healthy bones. Continue reading

Video with Scoop from a Bone Expert: Magnesium for bone health??

Have you heard people say they need extra magnesium or potassium for their bones?  People have asked me about that, but I never saw research clearly supporting the idea.

While I was speaking in New York City recently, I was delighted to get some time with my long-time friend from graduate school at Cornell University, Jeri Nieves, PhD.  Dr Nieves is Associate Professor of Nutrition and Epidemiology at Columbia University and Helen Hayes Hospital, where she is known for research on bone health and osteoporosis.

Here is video from Part 2 of my interview with her about nutrition for healthy bones. Continue reading