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del.icio.us Friday

17

November

Fitness Mantra del.icio.us pageHere is your del.icio.us Friday, the weekly health news update. You can also stay updated with this news as it happens by subscribing separately to the Fitness Mantra del.icio.us feed.

With World Diabetes Day falling on November 14th, I have seen many news sources this week focus on this serious and often preventable disease. Diabetes is of particular concern in a country like India which is unfortunately genetically inclined to get it and so more care needs to be taken to not just increase physical activity but also ensure a wholesome diet.

The highlighted story of this diabetes-focussed week is the WebMD article (#8 below) that describes how dangerous high blood-sugar is to people even before it can convert to diabetes.

Now onto the week’s top stories:

  1. Europeans OK Anti-Obesity Charter: European health ministers from 53 countries approved the world’s first charter to fight obesity on Thursday, vowing greater action against the epidemic of expanding waistlines across the continent.
  2. Don’t Pop the Cork Just Yet: If the recent news that a substance in red wine may help fight obesity and lengthen life has you popping more corks, better take a closer look at the facts in today’s Lean Plate Club column.
  3. Trans Fats Up Heart Disease Risk: Trans fats have jumped out of the deep fryer into a public grilling once again, with new research suggesting even small amounts can harm the heart.
  4. Vegetarian Diet Chews Up Excess Flab: Researchers have found that people who stuck to a vegetarian diet for at least one year lost more weight than those on a standard low-fat diet. And they shed considerably more excess flab than those who didn’t stick with the meatless plan.
  5. Fat in Fish May Help Prevent Dementia: Eating fish three times a week may cut your odds of getting dementia almost in half.
  6. Mom’s Diet May Affect Generations: A mother’s diet during pregnancy may affect the genes of her future generations, according to lab tests on mice.
  7. Counseling Can Help Prevent Diabetes: People at high risk for type 2 diabetes may reap long-lasting benefits from lifestyle counseling – benefits that continue years after the counseling ends.
  8. High Blood Sugar a Global Killer: High blood sugar is among the world’s top five killers, a Harvard study shows. High blood sugar is one sign that a person is on the road to diabetes. But it kills many people long before they ever get diabetes, note Goodarz Danaei, MD, of Harvard School of Public Health, and colleagues.
  9. Too embarrassed to exercise - Smart Fitness: “My big old tree-trunk legs are [an] embarrassment,” says Holman, 28, of Lockport, Ill.
  10. Any exercise can improve diabetes control: Combining resistance training, such as weight lifting, with aerobic workouts appears to be the most beneficial for type for long-term control of blood sugar control than either form of exercise alone, New Zealand researchers report. However, the outcomes according to type of exercise weren’t very significant.
  11. Chocoholics rejoice! More benefits found in heart study: It turns out chocolate, like aspirin, affects the platelets that cause blood to clot, Diane Becker of the Johns Hopkins University’s School of Medicine and her colleagues discovered.
  12. Junk food makers pledge to go easy on kids; plan criticized: U.S. food manufacturers and advertisers outlined new guidelines Tuesday designed to rein in the promotion of junk food to children, but the effort was immediately derided by some critics as inadequate.
  13. TV’s Naked Chef urges action on fat U.S. kids: British celebrity chef Jamie Oliver wants the United States to take up his campaign against fatty snacks and school lunches to combat the country’s burgeoning child obesity problem.
  14. Energy zapped? Try these tips to help you pick up the pace: Want to fight the funk and fatigue? We’ve gathered some twists on those tried-and-true ways to put pep back in your step (like exercising, eating right, and stressing less) along with some tips that might surprise you (like taking a shower or bath before bedtime for a deeper, healthier sleep).
  15. Prescription: Dance for heart’s sake: Italian researchers have come up with a novel way for cardiac rehabilitation patients to exercise their damaged hearts without having to squeeze into spandex or gyrate in a gym: waltzing.
  16. Average European ‘is overweight’: The Maltese and the Greeks are the heavyweights of Europe, figures from the European Commission reveal.
  17. Red meat link to breast cancers: Eating large amounts of red meat may double young women’s breast cancer risk, a study suggests.
  18. Diabetes ‘threat’ to indigenous: Diabetes could threaten the existence of indigenous peoples around the world, experts have warned.

Enjoy your weekend!

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del.icio.us Friday

10

November

Fitness Mantra del.icio.us pageFriday! Time for del.icio.us Friday, the weekly health news update. You can also stay updated with this news as it happens by subscribing separately to the Fitness Mantra del.icio.us feed. As a new feature, every week I’ll highlight one “must-read” article of the week in bold (see item #15 below). This week it’s the New York Times’ feature on the Hannaford Grocery chain’s efforts to guide consumers towards healthful foods using a unique star system. Don’t miss it!
Here are the week’s top stories:

  1. Is a low-calorie diet the secret to longevity?: We all know that cutting back on calories promotes weight loss, but does it also promote longevity? Several thousand Americans seem to think so.
  2. Two fizzy drinks a day increase risk of pancreatic cancer by 90 per cent: Consuming two cans of fizzy drinks a day can double your risk of developing one of the most fatal types of cancer, say researchers. People who add sugar to cups of tea or coffee are also at higher risk of pancreatic cancer, according to a new study.
  3. Low-Carb Diet Doesn’t Up Heart Risk: Critics of low-carbohydrate diets claim that they promote heart disease, but one of the first studies to examine the long-term effects of low-carb eating suggests otherwise.
  4. Canadian adults gaining weight but at slower pace: Canadian adults are gaining weight but the pace at which they’re doing so is slowing down, says a new study by Statistics Canada.
  5. Control the Cravings: Whether it’s a hot fudge sundae or a steaming order of crispy French fries that call your name, food cravings can fuel a lot of overeating. In a Lean Plate Club column, discover what food cravings mean and how they can differ for men and women; then learn how you can help control them.
  6. Women Pack On More Calories When Eating Out: Study: A new study by researchers from the University of Texas at Austin School of Nursing reveals women prone to binge-eating often eat more calories and fats when dining out. Moreover, restaurants present a high-risk environment for them by causing them to lose control and overeat.
  7. Health drive puts pupils off school meals: The drive to make school dinners healthier has been followed by a widespread dip in the numbers of pupils taking them, a survey indicated today.
  8. Abdominal obesity in children up 65 % over four years: Five-year-olds are developing middle-age paunches — a bleak sign that children are not only getting heavier, they’re packing on the worst kind of fat.
  9. Europe Faces Obesity Epidemic by 2010: Europe will face an obesity epidemic by 2010, which will increase health costs and hamper economic development, health experts said.
  10. One In Six Americans Have Pre-Diabetes And Most Don’t Know It: Fifty-four million Americans - that’s one in six of us - have pre-diabetes and most don’t even realize it.
  11. Exercise Fights Fatigue, Boosts Energy: New research suggests regular exercise can increase energy levels even among people suffering from chronic medical conditions associated with fatigue, like cancer and heart disease.
  12. Overweight have more to gain: Just a little bit of exercise will shrink the waistlines of the couch-bound far quicker than it will benefit active people, Australian research proves.
  13. Pregnant? Stock Up on Whole Wheat: A study on rodents has shown that offspring’s of rats that feasted on whole wheat were less likely to develop breast cancer.
  14. 60m Chinese overweight while 24m are hungry: While 24 million people in China live in abject poverty and suffer malnutrition, 60 million Chinese are obese, a nutritional health expert has said.
  15. The Package May Say Healthy, but This Grocer Begs to Differ: The chain, Hannaford Brothers, developed a system called Guiding Stars that rated the nutritional value of nearly all the food and drinks at its stores from zero to three stars.

Enjoy your weekend!

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