Tuesday, March 24, 2009

21st Annual American Diabetes Alert Day

Today, March 24, is American Diabetes Alert Day. According to the website www.diabetes.org, 1 in 5 Americans are at risk for developing diabetes. This is what they had to say:
Everyone should be aware of the risk factors for type 2 diabetes. People who are overweight, under active (living a sedentary lifestyle), and over the age of 45 should consider themselves at risk for the diseasee. African Americans, Latinos, Native Americans, and people who have a family history of the disease are at an increased risk for type 2 diabetes.
That is a pretty broad umbrella of people who are at risk!

To help bring awareness to our readers, we are urging you to go through the simple Diabetes Risk Calculator to the right. This calculator was created by the American Diabetes Association and is available to share on your website, blog or social marketing site. Get it here now!


Next, we have some advice from our nutritional expert Dr. Will Clower. Dr. Clower shares with us the benefits of eating healthy food for life, not just going through diet after diet to get thin.
You can visit Dr. Clower's website and blog here: www.willclower.com




The Mediterranean Makeover: Their diet; our culture; preventing diabetes anyway

The logic is straightforward. We know that preventing diabetes is better than fighting the disease after it has developed. We also know that the Mediterranean diet can prevent the development of diabetes in the first place. Thus, in theory, we should be able to apply this approach to prevent the development of the disease.

It sounds easy enough, but the solution is not so simple. How, for example, does one become Greek, or French, or Spanish, or Italian, if you live on this side of the Atlantic? Yes, they are healthy. And, yes, the closer you adhere to their diet, the less likely you are to develop diabetes. But we are not them, nor do we have their food, their relaxed lifestyle, or their cultural predisposition toward daily life activity.

So how do we take the Mediterranean diet out of the Mediterranean, and still make it work for us? The key is, just as they do in their region, to relax a bit. Don’t try to force fit every iota of their food choices and behavioral habits into our lives. More specifically, don’t try to rigidly mirror the fats, carbs, and proteins of their diets. They aren’t micromanaging molecules, and you shouldn’t either.

The alternative is to try a bit softer. Emulate the principles of the Mediterranean diet rather than the exhaustive details. So what are those general rules?

Eat food. If it ain’t food, don’t eat it. All healthy cultures eat food, and avoid synthetics. Whether they’re eating brie on baguettes, pasta al pomodoro, or a standard Greek salad, everything they do eat is a real food – no synthetics, no hydrogenated oils, and no dyes. Just food.

Love your food … really. To love your food, you need to eat small by the bite. Have you ever watched Italians eat? No one is gobbling their burrito in the car at the red light, no one orders massive quantities of food, or feels that 39 cents justifies an extra pound of French fries. As importantly, if you love your food, you need to take your time. You have to take 2 hours to eat your lunch, but at least take 30 minutes to enjoy it.

When you eat small and take your time, not only do you enjoy it more, but you give your brain a chance to register that you are full before you overeat. Thus, you control portions; thus you control calories; thus you control your weight. And all you have done is learned to love your food again.

The Mediterranean diet clearly helps prevent the onset of diabetes for those living in the Mediterranean region. To get those results on our continent, we can’t teleport to and from the Portofino piazza, but we can apply the general rules that make their successful lifestyle work.

Relax. Eat food. Love your food again. These basic elements can be plugged into our lifestyle, so that we can reverse the trends, eat healthfully, and prevent diabetes before it ever starts.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Act 48 Credits for attending conference

Our annual Farm to Table conference has been cleared to give ACT 48 credits for teachers. You can receive up to 7 credit hours for attending both days.

Attendance at the event on Friday can earn you 4 credit hours and Saturday attendance will earn you 3 credit hours.

Remember to mention you would like to receive credit hours at the registration desk and we will record your information. We will need to record your name, school district and PPID number or Social Security number.

If you have any questions, please call Erin Hart: 412-563-7807.

For more information about the Farm to Table conference Click Here.

Monday, March 9, 2009

March is National Kidney Month

The National Kidney Foundation is urging "Americans to get to know two humble, hardworking organs: the kidneys."

It is easy to take our health for granted, especially when there are so many other things to worry about these days. But just imagine how much worse it would be if you got a diagnosis of a long term health condition that you could of prevented or reversed!

World Kidney day is this Thursday, March 12. Visit the National Kidney Foundation website to find free screenings in your area, learn about their KEEP program, and learn about your local kidney walk coming up this year.

Spring is a great time to start thinking about getting up and out into some fresh air! I hope everyone is taking advantage of these opportunities to be active.