Will You Be a Hunk or a Chunk?
- At June 13, 2020
- By Katherine
- In Articles, News
- 0
A client who works at the State Department told me about an inside joke between him and his colleagues… After their years-long assignments, who will come back as “hunks, chunks or drunks?!” I liken this to our experiences in isolation. So, what will you come out of isolation as?
Joking aside, I believe it’s time we answer this question. Because it has tremendous consequences for you and your family’s health, even your survival if you contract COVID-19, but also your energy, self-confidence and happiness, all of which you hold dear.
No doubt about it, it’s a tough time. Motivation can be hard to come by. Even if you love your home, your family, your neighbors, even if you consider yourself a homebody, as I do, isolation has been stifling for most of us.
In early March, I believed we would be in this for the long haul. Understanding human behavior as I hope I do, I had a feeling it might be challenging keeping to our healthy self-care routines. At that time, I talked to you about home exercise, how music reduces stress, creating a mediterranean diet pantry, delicious and easy microwave meals, scheduling your days, and my “guide for thriving,” 1,500 years-old wisdom that is still relevant today. It was created during the fall of the roman empire – also a very traumatic time!
If you haven’t read these articles, perhaps you might take a look? You could get some – or even just one – simple ideas that might make a difference for you now.
Set up an appointment to check in. Get some personalized ideas for you and your family for coming out of this ordeal a “hunk,” not a “chunk!”
Expert Tips on Figuring Out if a Health Claim Will Work for You
- At June 04, 2020
- By Katherine
- In Articles, News
- 1
Living healthfully can be harder than you think, thanks to enterprising and sensationalized internet and media claims, blogs, articles, videos and websites.
How should you decide what health claims work? How would they work for you? How do you evaluate the science to ensure you are getting the most reliable and effective recommendations – ones that you and your doctor can trust, based on state-of-the-art scientific data?
First, Consider the Source! Your Own Doctor(s)? A Qualified Medical Professional Who Specializes in the Field You Have a Question About?
As a medically certified Registered Dietitian/Nutritionist, I personalize my recommendations for you based on a number of factors, as your doctor does. 1) I listen to what your goals are, 2) what you’d like to achieve, 3) I learn your medical conditions, 4) your medical history, 5) I gather your food or nutrition- related history, 6) biochemical data, 7) medical tests and procedures, 8) anthropometric measurements, 9) nutrition-focused physical findings, 10) your personal history and situation, 11) your family history, 12) your social history, 13) your habits, 14) your habits’ history, 15) your work life, 16) your family life, 17) what your doctor recommends, and more relevant information about your life. Then you and I, along with any of your doctor’s recommendations, decide on the best program for you, while continually monitoring, updating and supporting you along the way.
I was trained, as are all medical professionals, using the “scientific method.” The scientific method starts with a question. Then continues with systematic observation and experimentation, inductive and deductive reasoning, and the formation and testing of hypotheses and theories. It attempts to minimize the influence of bias or prejudice in the experimenter to discern how success is achieved.
My obligation for the past 30+ years has been to stay informed of all scientific studies and findings relating to my field and to my clients’ specific needs. To achieve this, I never stop studying research in every medical field possible, but particularly nutrition, food, weight loss research and behavioral science. In fact, I’m required to have 75 continuing education credits every five years to maintain my “Registered Dietitian/Nutritionist” (RD/N) credentials. Continuing my studies is a life-long endeavor in my field because science is constantly evolving.
Second: From What Media Source Did The Health Claim Originate? My clients regularly send me claims they would like me to help them figure out. The first thing I need to find out is, what is the source of the claim? A newspaper article? A magazine or blog? A scientific journal? To continue my investigation, I’ll research the topic myself and ask:
- What have the past years or decades of research shown regarding this issue?
- What is the consensus from a variety of study types, populations, researchers and institutions?
- What are the quality of the studies, the researchers and the institutions?
- Are there any conflicts of interest related to the research?
Third: Was it a Legitimate Scientific Source? If I don’t already have the answer or want to research something myself, I’ll only go to scientific sources, ie, peer-reviewed, scientific journals.
Fourth: What Kind of Study Was Used and How Reliable Were the Study and the Researchers? There are five basic kinds of studies…
1. Randomized Controlled Trials: If you want to know how effective a treatment or diet is, randomized trials provide the most reliable answers. “Randomized” means divided into groups by chance. In RCTs participants are randomly assigned to one of two or more groups. Then one group receives the new diet or food being experimented with, while the other group receives something different, conventional, or a placebo. If the RCT is “double-blind,” (the gold standard), neither the researchers nor the subjects know who is receiving the treatment or the placebo so that the findings are as unbiased as possible. Examples: The 1. DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) Diet Study, the first study establishing that fruits, vegetables and low fat dairy products lower blood pressure, a study of how 2. Gut Health Influences Insulin Resistance, a precursor to diabetes, and how 3. Drinking Tea and Tai Chi Exercise Prevent Bone and Muscle Loss in Post-Menopausal Women.
2. Cohort Studies observe a group of people frequently over a period of many years – for instance, to determine how often a certain disease occurs. In a cohort study, two (or more) groups that are exposed to different things are compared with each other: For example, one group might drink alcohol while the other doesn’t. Or one group may eat a high fiber diet and the other doesn’t. The researchers then observe how the health of the people in both groups develops over the course of several years, whether they become ill, and how many of them pass away. Some prominent examples are 1.Harvard’s Women’s Health Study, 2. The Framingham Heart Study, 3. The National Weight Control Registry Study.
3. Case-Control Studies compare people who have a certain medical condition with people who do not, but who are as similar as possible, for example, the same sex and age. Then the two groups are interviewed, or their medical files are analyzed, to find anything that might be risk factors for the disease. They are not as expensive or time-consuming as RCTs or cohort studies. But their limitations are that it is often difficult to tell which people are the most similar to each other and because the researchers usually ask about past events, they are dependent on the participants’ memories. For instance, this study looking at Dietary Patterns, Nutrition, and Risk of Breast Cancer.
4. Cross-Sectional Studies: The classic type of cross-sectional study is the survey: A representative group of people – usually a random sample – are interviewed or examined in order to find out their opinions or facts. Because this data is collected only once, cross-sectional studies are relatively quick and inexpensive. They can provide information on things like the prevalence of a particular disease. But they can’t tell us anything about the cause of a disease or what the best treatment might be. For instance, this Analysis of Unhealthy Foods, Race/Ethnicity, Sex, and Cardiometabolic Risk Factors in U.S. Adults.
5. Qualitative Studies help us understand, for instance, what it is like for people to live with a certain disease. Unlike other kinds of research, qualitative research does not rely on numbers and data. Instead, it is based on information collected by talking to people who have a particular medical condition and people close to them. Written documents and observations are used too. The information that is obtained is then analyzed and interpreted using a number of methods. For instance, this study exploring Influences on Food Choices of University Students.
The final but most important question: What is the best way to translate this science to recommendations that my clients and doctors trust and that they can use in their everyday lives? Well, you could say that’s where art mixes with science!
Katherine’s Silver Lining Approach: Your Mediterranean Diet Pantry & Featured Recipe
What science has discovered as the ideal diet hasn’t changed for more than half a century. What we’ve learned since then, though, are why and how the diet is so perfect. It’s worth making the switch, for many reasons! For one, it boosts your body’s immune system dramatically, thus, its ability to fight diseases from colds to flu, cancer, heart disease, diabetes, arthritis, Alzheimer’s, even today’s scourge: COVID.
The Mediterranean Diet is a complex diet containing many foods that contribute to its health benefits. It’s plant-based, high in vegetables, fruits, legumes, whole grains, nuts, seeds, fish, low-to-moderate in high fat dairy and red meat (very low in saturated – animal – fat) and the occasional glass of wine. Olive oil is the diet’s principal source of fat.
It was first observed in the 1950s by nutrition scientist, Ancel Keys, that people in Greece, southern Italy, southern France and other countries bordering on the Mediterranean, eating their local food, experienced few nutritional problems and rarely suffered from heart disease. Since then, many studies have confirmed that this mixture of foods we now call the Mediterranean diet has significant properties which may help prevent not only heart disease, cancer, diabetes, Alzheimer’s, dementia, arthritis, many of the diseases of aging, and even weight gain.
While every element in the Mediterranean diet is important, eating fresh, extra-virgin olive oil may trump everything. The type of fat you eat is critical to your health. This is because fat ends up in all of your body’s cells. It acts as a cell lubricant, improves flexibility and communication between cells, and is important for cell metabolism and gene expression. If the fat you eat is saturated – solid at room temperature – as in butter or animal fat – this decreases cellular flexibility and functioning. So, following the Mediterranean diet, but eating the wrong kind of fat, could reduce your health benefits.
Olive oil, the staple of the Mediterranean diet, is unique in many ways. First, it’s made from a fruit which is exposed to the elements. This exposure forces olives to synthesize antioxidants and anti-inflammatory nutrients to protect themselves and concentrates the valuable nutrients in the oil, which is high in compounds called polyphenols, Vitamin E and carotenoids, like beta-carotene. New research shows high polyphenol olive oil turns OFF genes that cause the metabolic syndrome, the constellation of high blood pressure, blood sugar and cholesterol.
Polyphenols are also found in wine, tea and cocoa and are known for protecting the heart in many ways – reducing blood clotting, lowering bad (LDL) cholesterol, raising good (HDL) cholesterol and lowering blood pressure. Vitamin E is a well-known antioxidant which helps prevent oxidation and cellular aging and may help prevent diseases such as cancer. Caretenoids are plant compounds giving the olive its color. They’re important for your immune system, your skin, your vision, bones, reproduction, and may reduce cancer risk. Olive oil is also high in heart-healthy monounsaturated fatty acid called Oleic acid.
Eating the Mediterranean diet is the most economical way to eat. In fact, it is a diet borne of poverty. The original Mediterraneans, who ate the purest form of the diet in the 1950s and 60s, ate mostly fruits, vegetables, whole grains, nuts, seeds, legumes, fish, and olives, all of which were local. This is all they could afford and it happened to be the healthiest diet on the planet. They were also quite thin and naturally very active in their regular routines. All of these factors contribute to its health benefits
Olive oil’s beneficial health properties, its polyphenol content and acidic pH, degrade over time, as days, weeks, and months go by after harvest. Other factors play a role, too: the harvesting method, the age of the trees, the ripeness of the olives, the processing, and the storage. Since time, heat, and light affect polyphenol content, choose olive oil that:
- Is no more than one year old (look for the harvest date – not a sell-by date – on the label),
- Is in an air-tight, dark glass, or tin container,
- Is stored in a cool environment, and
- Smells and tastes like olives, which could be fruity, grassy, or peppery.
The Mediterranean Diet pantry
This is the perfect way of eating during our collective isolation. It’s inexpensive and most foods can be dry, frozen or canned, when fresh aren’t available, which is the case this time of year. Some examples:
- Canned chopped tomatoes, or any frozen fruits and vegetables
- Dry or canned beans, peas, whole grains such as bulgur, barley, oats, canellini beans, black beans, lentils, chick peas,
- Nuts and seeds
- Fresh lemons, and citrus fruit or vinegar, and olive oil for salad dressings, canola oil for cooking with high heat,
- Fresh onions, garlic, and root vegetables when available,
- Canned wild Alaskan Salmon, herring, anchovies, sardines,
- Whole wheat breads, pasta, crackers and cereals
- Dry or fresh herbs and spices such as basil, rosemary, marjoram, thyme, oregano,
- Yogurt, enough to eat daily for its natural probiotic benefits,
- Cheeses such as Mozzarella, Ricotta, with small amounts of Parmesan and Reggiano.
- Eggs
Katherine’s White Beans with Garlic and Basil
Excerpted from Diet Simple by Katherine Tallmadge, MA, RDN, LD
This is the perfect Mediterranean recipe. My friends love these beans. I love these beans. They’re always a hit. Every time I serve them, I’m asked (begged) for the recipe. They taste deceptively rich and are easy to make. The abundance of fresh basil added at the end fills the house with irresistible aromas. This is a warm and satisfying dish which can be eaten in many ways. My friend David uses them as a dip (what can I say, he`s a shrink and a priest!). My (very healthy) friend Alan loves them so much he eats them for breakfast! I bring them to potlucks.
I love to fill a large plastic container with them in the frig, ladle a heap into a microwave-safe bowl, and heat them up for lunch along with a slice of hearty whole grain bread topped with smoked turkey, salmon, light cheese (or all of the above) – and some crunchy lettuce. One of our favorite ways to eat these beans is with spicy chicken sausage. Just slice a spicy chicken sausage of your choice into a microwave-safe bowl, smother with the beans and pop in the microwave. Together with a greens salad and a tart dressing, you’ve got a winning combination.
I usually double the recipe so I have plenty of servings during the week. Without any meat, it’ll last more than a week in the frig.
4 servings
Ingredients:
1/2 pound dried small white (cannellini) beans, or 24 oz. canned rinsed bean
1 Tbsp Olive Oil
1-1/2 Onion, Chopped
4 Garlic Cloves (more or less to taste)
1 Quart defatted Chicken or Vegetable Stock (only 2 Cups if using canned beans)
Salt and pepper to taste
12 Oz. (3 medium) fresh or canned Tomatoes, drained, peeled and chopped
1 Large Handful of Fresh Basil
Juice from 2 to 4 Lemon (1/4 to ½ cup)
Freshly Ground Pepper, to taste
Directions:
If you’re using dried white beans:
Soak the beans in one quart of water overnight or up to 24 hours. Drain and rinse. Add one quart Chicken Stock (or more if you like the dish more soupy) to the beans along with one clove of garlic and 1/2 onion. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, cover, and simmer 1-1/2 hours or until the beans are almost tender. Add more water or stock to keep moist. Add salt to taste and finish cooking until beans are tender.
Continue with your cooked dried beans or start here if you’re using canned white beans:
Heat the oil in a large, heavy soup pot or casserole and sauté the remaining one onion and garlic over low to medium heat for 10 or 15 minutes or until soft and caramelized. Add the tomatoes, and more salt to taste and bring to a simmer. Simmer about ten minutes then add the beans with their cooking liquid and simmer 15 – 20 minutes. If you used canned beans, use enough stock to keep the beans moist while cooking. At the end of the cooking time, add the fresh basil (it will get bitter if overcooked), fresh lemon juice, and freshly ground pepper. Mix together.
You can also add greens to this dish for more authentic Mediterranean flavors and nutrition.
Isolation Part 3: Katherine’s Silver Lining Approach – Use This Time to Get Healthy & Fit!
- At March 23, 2020
- By Katherine
- In Articles, News
- 0
Yesterday morning I was so tempted to skip exercise. It was hard tearing myself away from reaching out to you. Are you happy with your health and weight? Can I help? Would you like to join me? Since I don’t want to go to pot, I exercised! What about you?
There is light – or clouds – at the end of the tunnel. You could come out of today’s situation with new, great habits, in better shape, even happier, healthier, and feeling proud of yourself. Or you could end up feeling miserable, with higher blood sugar, blood pressure, cholesterol and body fat. What’s it going to be?
I’m trying to take the “silver lining” approach and consider this moment as an opportunity to improve my habits.
Would you like to join me? Organizing your routine, day by day – even hour by hour – is important for introducing calm, relief, improved productivity, health, and even happiness into your life during this stressful time.
The first step to transforming this isolation into a happier, healthier time is creating a schedule with which everyone agrees. Ask yourself and your family members the following questions:
- What has the normal schedule for everyone been, before isolation began?
- Which activities does everyone want to include every day?
- What goals do you want to achieve now, and at the end of isolation?
- How can you design a schedule at home that includes 1.Exercise/recreation, 2.Work/learning, 3.Socializing, 4.Relaxation/meditation/prayer, and 5.Renewal/sleep
Here is an example of what your schedule may look like. This is a template. You could make yours with more – or less – detail and different activities.
Some ideas:
7 am Coffee
7:30 am Exercise: at least 4,000 steps with Family
8:30 am Shower
9:00 am Breakfast with Family
10:00 am Work / Study
11:00 am Short Walk or Play
11:15 am Work / Study
12:30 pm Lunch with Family
1:30 pm Recess for All!
2:30 pm Back to Work / Study
3:30 pm Short Walk or Play
3:45 Back to Work
5:00 Dinner with Family
6:00 Exercise: at least 4,000 steps with Family
7:00 Recreation / Relaxation / Homework
8:00 Recreation / Relaxation / Homework
? Renewal / Bed Time / Sleep
Make up your own schedule. But have one! I’d be happy to help.
Isolated? Part 2: Ideas & Products for Home Exercise
- At March 14, 2020
- By Katherine
- In Articles, News
- 0
As I was (virtually) meeting my many isolated clients this week, I realized that chaos could reign if we didn’t think fast and do something NOW. One of my biggest worries is that inactivity can take over. Stir crazy anyone?
Children aren’t playing their daily school sports, college students aren’t walking to and from their classrooms, adults aren’t moving around their offices, businesses are closing down, and virtually no one is going to the gym. What’s a quarantined human to do besides finding comfort in a padded cell or imprisoning your family?
I had a Eureka moment the other day. Over the past several years, I have invested in some inexpensive exercise gadgets that take up hardly any space, and I’m recommending them to my clients. You can get excellent instruction on how to use these from a certified trainer (I’ll bet your trainer or physical therapist would be willing to work with you via FaceTime or Skype), or online. You may want to consider these easy-to-use exercise aids:
HealthySport 10″ Resistance Band Loops
TheraBands Professional Non-Latex Elastic Bands Set
Sunny Health and Fitness Adjustable Twist Stepper
Phoenix 98107 Duel Action Mini Stepper
Mini treadmills that can go under your desk: “Opps Decor,” “Goplus,” “Ancheer,”
Isolated? The Power of Music
- At March 14, 2020
- By Katherine
- In Articles, News
- 2
As I was (virtually) meeting my clients this week, I realized that, by now, home life could be pretty chaotic if we haven’t come up with solutions so we can all stay healthy – and sane.
First, the psychological: Our frame of mind forms the foundation of our responses and our ability to cope. For instance, taking the high road by helping each other as much as possible (instead of playing the blame game). Understanding: We’re all in this together! Not just our families, our communities, our schools, sports, businesses, but the world.
Italians really know how to make the best of any situation: I just enjoyed some video clips of quarantined Italians singing joyfully together from their apartment balconies (picture a scene in the classic Hitchcock movie, “Rear Window”). Even an opera singer was serenading her neighbors with an aria. What spirit! I have a vision of my neighbors and I singing from our windows and front stoops. Hmmm… What aria will we bellow out to each other?
I’m serious. Soprano Renée Fleming and the National Institutes of Health teamed up to research the effects of music on the brain. Does music soothe the savage beast? The initiative is called “Sound Health: An NIH-Kennedy Center Partnership.” Some initial scientific findings:
- Music helps brain networks mediate emotion, relieve stress and help treat depression,
- Musical training can foster the development of a variety of nonmusical
skills in children,
- Music therapy can help childhood cancer patients cope with the stress of treatment,
- Music may help relieve pain, including its impact on several brain circuits and pathways, and
- Musical activities benefit the aging brain, including promising applications in people with Parkinson’s disease, stroke, or dementia.
I don’t know about you, but I’m CALLING ALL NEIGHBORS!
Rev-Up Your Immune System Through Nutrition
- At March 11, 2020
- By Katherine
- In Articles, News
- 0
Check out CNN’s video featuring Katherine’s immune-boosting tips:
What you eat profoundly affects your ability to fight disease. With all the nasty bugs going around this cold and flu season, it’s especially important to pay attention to boosting your immune system through nutrition. While every nutrient is important for your body’s ability to prevent and fight disease – from colds to cancer – certain nutrients play key roles:
Found naturally in yogurt and kefir, probiotics nourish your gastrointestinal tract’s microbiome, that is, its microscopic ecosystem of cells called “microbes.” The health of your microbiome can make – or break – your health in every way. Eating foods high in probiotics (and prebiotics) is the best, if not the only, way to make sure your microbiome is filled with those healthy microbes.
But probiotics can’t work alone. To be effective, you also need foods containing prebiotics, certain high fiber plant foods, to create the good health you desire. Prebiotics nourish probiotics. Together they form the critical prebiotic/probiotic duo creating a microbiome teeming with healthy microbes that achieve the superior level of beneficial microbes that fight off chronic and acute diseases.
While not always, microbes usually live in harmony with their human hosts. They inhabit just about every part of the human body, living on the skin, in the gut, and up the nose. The healthy ones, increased with probiotics, are essential for good health and survival.
But there are dangerous ones, too, that cause disease and death. The typical American diet and lifestyle produce more of the disease-causing microbes. Your health and quality of life suffer dramatically when the unhealthy microbes outnumber the healthy ones. The only way to keep that from happening is to consistently nourish your body the right way so you can be as healthy, happy and energetic as possible.
Your prescription:
DAILY eat yogurt or kefir, in whatever form you like best
Protein
Protein is one of the most important nutrients in the human body, second only to water. Bone health, muscle function, muscle strength, muscle mass and immune function — all are impaired with a low protein intake. In fact, the antibodies which are essential to protecting your body against pathogens, are made of protein, so without enough protein, your body has no chance. Certain vulnerable populations, such as the elderly, children, and those who already have compromised immune systems, should be particularly careful to eat enough protein – in fact, even more than the recommended dietary allowance – for maximized protection.
Protein can be found in a wide range of foods. Animal protein is in seafood, dairy, meat, poultry and eggs. Vegetarian protein can be found in legumes, soy, vegetables and whole grains. And while it’s true that high-protein foods often bring fat and calories along as uninvited guests, it doesn’t have to be that way. The lowest-calorie animal protein sources are the leanest. Go for eggs, seafood, poultry with no skin, skim milk, nonfat or low fat yogurt, and low fat cheeses are also great options. Soy products also provide great low-calorie options and are high quality proteins similar to animal protein.
Protein foods have other benefits. Fish, legumes, seeds, nuts contain immune-boosters zinc and iron (but in too high quantities, for instance in megadose vitamin pills, can backfire and suppress the immune system). Dairy products (keep them fat-free or low fat) are naturally loaded with magnesium, potassium and calcium – all important for immune function. Beans and soy beans are high in iron, zinc and magnesium.
Fats and Oils
The type of fat you eat can improve the effectiveness of your body’s immune response because fat ends up in all of your body’s cell walls. It acts as a cell lubricant, improves flexibility and communication between cells, and is important for cell metabolism and gene expression. If the fat you eat is saturated – solid at room temperature – as in butter or animal fat – this decreases cellular flexibility and functioning. So, to maximize your immune response, use oils in your cooking, such as olive oil (for drizzling), peanut/nut oils (for high heat cooking), and canola oil (for high heat cooking), and stick with foods high in heart-healthy fats, such as nuts, avocados and fatty fish, which is high in omega-3-fatty acids. Minimize animal fats in dairy products, red meats, butter, cream, or too many foods or desserts containing said ingredients. They increase the incidence of cardiovascular disease. Red meats (pork, beef, lamb) also increase the risk of many cancers, particularly when they’re cured.
Vitamins and Minerals
Studies show all nutrients are involved in your immune response but taking high doses of certain nutrients can cause imbalances, backfire, and actually suppress your immune response. So it’s ideal to get your vitamins and minerals from a nutrient-rich, balanced diet. Though you may benefit from taking a basic multi-vitamin and mineral supplement to cover your bases. And there may be some exceptions depending on your own nutritional status (best to get personalized advice from your dietitian and doctor)…
Vitamin D
New research has found Vitamin D augments the body’s ability to eliminate disease-infecting microbes, and most of us are deficient in Vitamin D, which we get from the sun and very few foods. Your doctor should check your vitamin D status at your next visit to make sure your blood values are adequate to fight infection, among other things. That said, most of us need a vitamin supplement with vitamin D, usually somewhere between 1,000 and 4,000 IU/day. But check your blood values first. They should be somewhere between 50 and 75 for most people. Check out my “Vitamin D” article for more details…
For Those Over 50
Vitamin E
Studies from Tufts University found that vitamin E supplementation may help fight the common cold and other upper respiratory tract infections. The recommendation is about 400 IU/day
Zinc
Zinc helps fuel the production of infection-fighting white blood cells so a lack of zinc reduces immune response and illness recovery time is prolonged. The elderly are particularly vulnerable to deficiencies and may even need more than normal. So here’s another case where a supplement may be useful. When zinc supplements were given in a nursing home, residents reduced their risk of contracting pneumonia, according to researchers from the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University.
Vitamin B 12
Vitamin B 12, another nutrient important for immune function, is poorly absorbed in many elderly patients (and is missing from the diet of vegans) which is why your vitamin B 12 status should be checked by your doctor and you may need a supplement – in the form of an injection. For most of us, though, B 12 is easily obtained and absorbed by eating any animal products.
The following is a list of foods containing key immune-boosting nutrients.
Include them in your diet every day:
High Beta Carotene Foods
Orange and deep green veggies and fruits, particularly…Carrot juice, carrots, butternut squash, pumpkin (or any orange-colored winter squash), sweet potato, greens such as spinach, collards, kale, turnip greens, beet greens, orange melons such as cantaloupe, red peppers, apricots, broccoli, plums, mangos papayas, plantains, Brussels sprouts, watermelon, asparagus
High Vitamin C Foods
Citrus fruits such as orange, lemons and grapefruit, peaches, sweet and hot peppers, papayas, pineapple, strawberries, broccoli,kiwi fruit, sweet potatoes, Brussels sprouts, kohlrabi,
High Zinc Foods
Oysters, lobster, crab, clams, fortified whole grain cereals, beans (legumes such as lentils, chick peas, black-eyed peas, soy beans, kidney beans, limas, pintos), turkey, whole grains such as buckwheat, whole wheat, cracked wheat (bulgur), oats, whole grain cornmeal, wild rice, yogurt, pine nuts, sunflower seeds, mixed nuts, peanuts
High Magnesium Foods
Whole grains such as buckwheat, wheat, oats, cornmeal, barley, brown rice, Also soybeans, pumpkin seeds, brazil nuts, cashews, greens such as spinach, beet greens, fish such as halibut, haddock and flounder and sole species, beans (legumes such as black beans, white beans, soy beans, navy beans, limas, black-eyed, great northern, kidney, chick peas,. lentils)
High Vitamin E Foods
Sunflower seeds, almonds, sunflower oil, safflower oil, canola oil, hazelnuts, pine nuts, spinach, turnip greens, beet greens, dandelion greens, canned pumpkin, carrot juice, broccoli, sweet potato, sweet red peppers, mangos, papayas
Cranberries
Have antibacterial qualities. Eat them dried for the highest levels of nutritious compounds
Have a myriad of beneficial health effects. They’ve been shown to boost the immune system, especially in relation to cancer. Called a “drug-botanical interaction,” mushrooms appear to increase the effects of chemotherapy, and lengthen survival.
Mushrooms also reduce fatigue.They act on the muscular system, body antioxidant system, cardiovascular system, hormone system, and immune system, all of which improve liver function, blood circulation, and blood glucose regulation, among other benefits.
Immune-Boosting Eating Strategies
* Eat a lean protein source at every meal – including breakfast, lunch and dinner. 20 grams for women and 30 grams for men is the amount most bio-available per sitting.
* Eat 5 cups of fruits and veggies per day – especially colorful varieties, eat at every meal and snack
* Eat a vegetarian meal every day using beans or soy beans for protein,
* Eat fish high in omega-3-fatty acids, such as salmon, herring, anchovies and sardines, at least two to four times per week, and vegetarian sources such as walnuts, ground flax seeds and canola oil,
* Use canola oil in your cooking and a fresh, newly harvested olive oil for drizzling,
* Eat whole grains at breakfast (such as cereal with skim milk or soy milk) and with sandwiches or wraps at lunch,
* Snacks: Try fat-free yogurt and fruit, fat-free yogurt dip or hummus with veggies,
* Toss nuts/seeds/dried cranberries in your whole grain cereal, your salad or your afternoon yogurt snack
* Skim milk or Soy lattes or teas are great snacks, too…
* Take a multivitamin-mineral supplement daily.
* Take a Vitamin D Supplement so that you are getting 1,000 to 2,000 IU/day
* If you are over 50, but particularly 65, look into supplementing your diet with Vitamin E, Vitamin B12, Zinc and probiotics such as lactobacillus in yogurt.
Of course, don’t forget to keep your blood moving by being moderately physically active with plenty of walking, yoga, etc. Get plenty of rest, wash your hands frequently, drink fluids (especially warm fluids which will send light steam into your nasal passages) and spend time with friends and loved ones. Studies have shown these habits increase your ability to conquer diseases – from colds to cancer.