Soup’s On!

01/05/12

Several studies show that soup eaters end up weighing less than those who don’t eat much soup, according to Penn State nutrition professor Barbara Rolls, co-author of “Volumetrics: Feel Full on Fewer Calories.”
“Incorporating soups into a weight-management plan can really help save calories,” she notes. She also likes it as a snack: “When you get the munchies, it’s much better to have some soup than to go to the candy machine.”

Soup Studies
The soup effect has been demonstrated again and again over the past 30 years:
• In a 1980s University of Pennsylvania study, 500 people in a weight-loss program noted each meal they ate for 10 weeks. Some were told to eat soup at least four times a week. The soup eaters ate fewer calories — on average, 100 less per day — and lost the most weight.
• In a Baylor University College of Medicine study, Dr. John Foreyt asked a group of overweight men and women on a low-calorie diet to eat soup every day. They liked it — and were better able to maintain their weight loss than non-soup-eaters.
• At Penn State, Dr. Rolls’ group gave women a 270-calorie first course before lunch. Some got chicken-rice casserole, others got the casserole plus 10 ounces of water. A third group received chicken-rice soup made from the casserole ingredients plus the water. Soup eaters took in about 100 calories fewer at the meal — and they didn’t eat more at dinner.
• In her latest studies, Rolls and colleagues found that the hunger-suppressing benefits of soup last a full two hours.
• In Paris, researchers at the Laboratory of the Neurobiology of Nutrition confirmed that water with a meal doesn’t affect how full people feel — but having the same ingredients as soup does.

Is Soup Unique? Not At All
Eat any filling, low-calorie food as an appetizer or first course, and you’ll likely make it easier to consume fewer calories at that meal. It’s a kind of preemptive eating strategy. Make substitutions you like, ones that can become part of your life.
• Eat an apple or an orange before you go to lunch.
• Order melon as a first course.
• Start with a simple salad of baby spinach leaves and grapefruit segments.
• When you go to the salad bar, fill up your plate with “big” foods like dark leafy greens and vegetables, before going back for more calorically dense choices.

Find Creative Ways to Add More Veggies
• When making pasta sauce, limit the meat and add another onion and a chopped bell pepper or two. Or stir a couple handfuls of baby spinach in at the end of cooking.
• Add diced cooked sweet potato or green peas to pilafs or noodle dishes.
• When cooking a favorite stir-fry, double the vegetable quantity and cut the meat by half.
• Add corn kernels to chili or burrito fillings.

Soup + Walking = 20 Fewer Pounds

“Small changes make a big difference,” says John Foreyt, Ph.D., director of the nutrition research clinic at Baylor University’s College of Medicine in Houston. “For many people, small changes over time are more sensible and more   effective than big changes. I like the 100/100 rule,” he says. “Eat 100 calories less tomorrow, and expend an extra 100 calories in physical activity, such as 20 minutes of walking.” In the course of a year, he notes, such a change may make a difference of 20 pounds.

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Before You Go: Healthy Travel Tips

12/04/11

Need a Flu Shot?

With all that’s going on at this time of year, getting vaccinated against seasonal flu may be the last thing on your mind. But you don’t want to come down with the flu when you’re away from home. And you certainly don’t want to spread the flu to more vulnerable family members. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that everyone six months and older get a flu vaccine. Many pharmacies offer flu shots on a walk-in basis.

Bring Your Insurance I.D. Card

Check your wallet now to prevent anxiety later. If you can’t find your card, try to print one out from your insurer’s website. Make sure you’re also carrying information about your prescription drug plan.

Make a List of Your Current Medications

Ideally, you should bring all your bottles with you. That way, if you end up in the emergency room and are unable to speak, a doctor can make sure he’s not giving you a medication that would adversely interact with something you are already taking. But at the very least, bring along a written list of your medications and keep it in your wallet. Remember to include any non-prescription or alternative medicines in this list. Also, if you have a heart ailment, consider bringing a copy of your latest EKG report.

A Tip for Air Travelers

Stow any medications you use in your carry-on bag, not in your checked luggage. You never know when your checked bag will be delayed or lost. During the busy holiday season… click here to read more.

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Cancer Prevention on Your Plate – Quick Takes For Cancer Prevention

11/04/11

Screening tests are one important element of cancer prevention.  Healthy lifestyle choices are another.  Your cancer prevention strategy should include these positive choices:

Don’t neglect cancer screenings:  Early detection saves lives.

Avoid tobacco:  Cutting out tobacco will immediately reduce your risk for cancer of the lung, throat, bladder, kidney, pancreas and mouth

Get moving:  Regular physical activity – about 30 minutes on most days – decreases the risk of breast, colon, prostate and uterine cancers.

Limit alcohol:  Moderate to heavy alcohol use is linked to breast cancer in women and to cancers of the liver, mouth and throat in both sexes.

Protect your skin:  Nine of every ten skin cancers could be prevented by proper use of sun protection.

Maintain a healthy weight:  Obesity is estimated to cause 14 percent of cancer deaths in men and 20 percent of cancer deaths in women.  Obesity also can make tumors more difficult to detect and treat.

To read the full article please click on this link:   Click Here

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