One third of cancers are from what we eat & do

Diet and Physical Activity: What’s the cancer connection?

By The American Cancer Society

How much do daily habits like diet and exercise affect our risk for cancer? Much more than you might think. Increasingly, researchers agree that poor diets and sedentary lifestyles are among the most important contributors to cancer risk.

Fortunately, these are things we can control.

Control Your Weight

Except for quitting smoking, the best way to cut your risk of cancer is to achieve and maintain a healthy weight, to be physically active on a regular basis, and to make healthy food choices. The evidence for this is strong: Each year, about 550,000 Americans die of cancer; fully one-third of these deaths are linked to poor diet, physical inactivity, and carrying excess weight.

What’s a Healthy Weight?

One of the best ways to find out if you are at a healthy weight is to check your Body Mass Index (BMI), a score based on the relationship between your height and weight. Use our easy online BMI calculator to find out your score. To reduce your cancer risk, try to keep your BMI less than 25.

If you are trying to control your weight, a good first step is to watch portion sizes, especially of foods high in calories, fat, and added sugars. Try writing down what and how much you eat and drink for a week and see where you can cut down on portion sizes, cut back on some not-so-healthy foods and drinks, or both!

Be More Active

Watching how much you eat will help you control your weight. The other key is to increase the amount of physical activity you do. Being active helps reduce your cancer risk by helping with weight control, and can also reduce your risk by influencing hormone levels and your immune system.

More good news – physical activity helps you reduce your risk of heart disease and diabetes, too! So grab your tennis shoes and head out the door!

The latest recommendations for adults call for at least 30 minutes of intentional moderate to vigorous activity a day — this is over and above usual daily activities like using the stairs instead of the elevator at your office or doing housework — on 5 or more days per week. Even better, shoot for 45 to 60 minutes. For kids, the recommendation is 60 minutes or more a day.

Activities considered moderate are those that make you breathe as hard as you would during a brisk walk. This includes things like walking, biking, even housework and gardening. Vigorous activities generally engage large muscle groups and cause a noticeable increase in heart rate, breathing depth and frequency, and sweating.

Eat a Healthy Diet

Eating well is also important to improve your health and reduce your cancer risk. Take a good hard look at what you typically eat each day and incorporate the following suggestions to build a healthy diet plan for yourself:

Vegetables: You need to eat at least 5 servings of vegetables (including legumes) and fruits each day, especially those with the most color (a sign of high nutrient content). These foods are packed with vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, and many other substances that work together to lower risk of several cancers, including cancers of the lung, mouth, esophagus, stomach, and colon. Not only that, if prepared properly, vegetables and fruits are usually low in calories, so eating them in place of higher-calorie foods can help you control your weight.

Whole Grains: Aim for at least 3 servings of whole grains each day. There are easy ways to add whole grains to your diet — eat oatmeal at breakfast, choose whole-wheat bread or wraps for your lunchtime sandwich, whip up brown rice at dinner instead of white.

(*Ruth: Grains in their whole form are best for our bodies, like brown rice, steel-cut oatmeal, millet, barley, and quinoa.)

Processed Red Meats: Cutting back on processed meats like hot dogs, bologna, and luncheon meat, and red meats like beef, pork and lamb may help reduce the risk of colon and prostate cancers. These foods are also high in saturated fat, so eating less of them and eating them less often will also help you lower your risk of heart disease.

Cancer Risk Reduction in Our Communities

Adopting a healthier lifestyle is easier for people who live, work, play, or go to school in an environment that supports healthy behaviors. Working together, communities can create the type of environment where healthy choices become easy choices.

We all can contribute to those changes: Let’s ask for healthier food choices at our workplaces and schools. For every junk food item in the vending machine, ask for a healthy alternative. Support restaurants that support your desire to eat well by offering options such as smaller portion sizes, lower-calorie items, and whole-grain products. And let’s help make our communities safer and more appealing places to walk, bike, and be active.

The Bottom Line

One third of all cancer deaths are related to diet and activity factors. Let’s challenge ourselves to lose some extra pounds, to increase our physical activity, to make healthy food choices, and to look for ways to make our environments healthier places to live, work, and play.

Last Medical Review: 10/22/2009
Last Revised: 10/22/2009

www.cancer.org

Drinks + Bone Health

By Madeline Behrendt, D.C.

Back in the kitchen, some quick comments on what we reach for and how they affect bones:

COFFEE – Chemically can create a negative calcium balance. Coffee is also one of the crops most heavily sprayed with pesticides and questions are raised how those hormones can affect bone health. People actually do live without coffee, if that sounds unbearable, many also try organic, drink less or boost up other bone builder factors.

MILK – Innate has designed us to become lactose intolerant (3 of 4 adults), let’s listen. Milk is NOT a preferred calcium source, in fact after 3 generations of milk promotion, osteoporosis has reached epidemic proportions in the West, while in countries where it is not consumed, it hardly exists. Calcium can be found in many user-friendly sources, try there.

SODA – Bubbles and bones don’t mix, studies show it leeches calcium and children consuming soda had low blood calcium levels. Another study reported DOUBLE the urinary calcium loss in teens 13-19 (remember those are the years spent building towards peak bone density.)

JUICE – Natural is best, when calcium is artificially encouraged (as in fortified) reports indicate calcium can be deposited in the wrong place (cardiovascular, kidneys, female organs.)

SHAKE – can be a great start to the day, depending upon what is put in it. Good stuff: organic fruits, almond or other nut butters, rice milk. Have fun experimenting.

WATER – One of the best ways to start the day is with a glass of clean (filtered from chemicals/hormones) water, hot or cold, with lemon. Then on to a good breakfast.

Our Lady Bones

Estrogen, Hormones, Osteoporosis and Bones: The Herstory of Bones

We demand and assume our bones will last our lifetime, yet may take them for granted or treat them like a rental car. Care or carelessness – the results are ours to choose. 

July 25, 2000

By Madeline Behrendt, D.C.

It’s 6:30 a.m. Eyes open to the sun painting a new canvas over the foothills. Ears alert to the sound of morning feet padding through the hallway, destination locked in. The body moves, sleep is surrendered as the commitment from horizontal to vertical is made. Feeling anticipation, the stomach shifts all focus towards the kitchen. Arms extend, fingers grasp, mouth waits… Coffee? Milk? Soda? Juice? Shake? Water? So starts a new day in the ‘Herstory’ of bones.

Bones are undercover dutiful workers, silhouettes barely visible; yet home to ceaseless invisible activity. They are a part of a passive subsystem, not able to move us nor themselves, yet our entire physical being depends on them for strength, support and protection. They are also home to part of our precious immune system.

Women and bones are linked in our culture, although men can also experience changes in bone health. During the different stages of a woman’s lifecycle, Innate changes the ratio of (new bone being built)/(old bone being broken down) and choices made within the normal rhythm of the day can support or interfere with the potential Innate offers.

In addition to daily choices, because our body is designed to achieve peak bone density during our 30’s, timing is also a factor, and paying attention during the early years can influence whether or not our peak is achieved.

Nutrition. Beverages. Exercise. Elective Prescription Drugs. Hormones. BONE CHOICES. And choosing to remain subluxated offers potential consequences we can never neglect.

We demand and assume our bones will last our lifetime, yet may take them for granted or treat them like a rental car. Care or carelessness – the results are ours to choose.

In Womanculture as described by the Symptom/Disease/Prevention model, osteoporosis (or the fear of) receives a lot of attention, especially in regards to its suggested relationship to menopause, estrogen deficiency and bone density.

Looking at the view from Inside, rather than Outside, are reports that offer clarity: – Poor bone health during menopause is not automatically attributed to this lifecycle as studies show that osteoporosis can start many years prior to menopause (early care is important!.)

We are told we lose estrogen (creating the image of estrogen deficiency), but what loss? Innate resets our hormone levels – making what is appropriate for this lifecycle, and protects us from the effects of having too much of a hormone, who’s excess can lead to cancer.

Estrogen is NOT the bone builder hormone; reports indicate that progesterone (not progestin) is responsible for this function.

Low bone density does not define osteoporosis; they are not interchangeable terms, LBD is a factor that can contribute, but not guarantee OP, as additional factors weigh in.

As hormones are involved in bone health, hormonal drugs are heavily promoted, but their sales are vulnerable to self-sabotage as inevitable side effects surface. Like revolutionary soldiers, new drugs stand poised to replace them, ready for their 15 minutes of fame, spinning promises and information often culled from self-funded studies before they too are shot down. The Public is questioning the credibility of endless cycles of “miracle” drugs that can deliver “miracle” side effects. Miracles? Real miracles can come from above, down, inside, out.

Interference in bone health can seem silent, but the effects are very loud, as the most common first site of fracture due to osteoporosis is the thoracic spine, which protects and houses our nervous system. In my practice, women speak of watching their mom’s quality of life decline as her spine crumbled, they want to be educated and informed as to how to help their spine be healthy for the long run. I am committed to helping them and their daughters through subluxation-based care and teaching the benefits of the chiropractic lifestyle.

It’s 6:30 a.m. A new day is waiting. Start off AWEsome and subluxation-free.

——————–
Dr. Madeline Behrendt is the author of A Woman’s Experience/A.W.E.(TM) Reports On Women’s Health Topics.

A Passionate Advocate for Chiropractic Care

America Has Finally Discovered the Difference Between Health Care and Sick Care 

April 24, 2000

By Dr. George E. Logothetis, D.C. 

Life Enhancement Family Chiropractic

The past decade has marked an incredible increase in how our country has utilized alternative health care. In 1990 researchers estimated that over 425 million visits were made to alternative health care providers. These numbers far exceed the amount of visits to traditional medical doctors and are increasing every year. In fact a survey conducted in 1994 indicated that over 60% of physicians recommended alternative therapies to their patients. Of these doctors 47% used it themselves and 23% incorporated them into their practice. Another amazing fact is that medical schools across the country are taking notice of the increasing interest in alternative therapies. Medical schools including Harvard, Yale, Georgetown, Johns Hopkins, and Mount Sinai (and the list goes on) offer courses and seminars on alternative practices that just a few years ago were considered outlandish. The number one alternative to medicine is chiropractic. While we don’t consider chiropractic an alternative to any other form of care these numbers are certainly indicators that Americans are finally realizing the difference between health care and disease care. The growing trend is for people to maintain their health instead of treating the disease. People are joining gyms, eating healthier, drinking bottled water, taking nutritional supplements and visiting chiropractors on a regular basis.

Why the change? Perhaps it’s because traditional medicine has become the third leading cause of preventable death. The preventable causes of death being:

1. Cigarettes
2. Alcohol
3. Medicine
4. Traffic accidents
5. Handguns

Maybe it’s because people are realizing that the only purpose medication serves is to mask the symptoms while the disease process continues. Maybe its because they know that 1.5 million people a year are injured and hospitalized from the side effects of prescription medicines. Some of these injuries are so severe that 100,000 of them die. Maybe it’s because even though a drug is FDA approved it doesn’t make it safe. It is estimated that 51% of approved drugs have serious side effects that were not detected prior to approval (death, cardiac arrest, and cancer.) Maybe it’s because of statistics printed in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) indicating that medicine is responsible for over 180,000 deaths per year (the equivalen of 3 jumbo jet crashes every 2 days). Now let me ask you all a question. If three jumbo jets crashed every two days would you fly?

Perhaps all these reasons are why pharmaceutical companies are spending 2.5 billion a year to market over the counter drugs and 12.5 billion to market prescription drugs. That equates to over 41 million dollars a day. If drugs were so good why does it take 15 billion dollars a year to sell them? Because people are realizing that taking them does not make one healthy and with this whole evolution going on in health care it takes a lot of money to perpetuate the old myths. If drugs made people healthy then the person who takes the most amounts of drugs would be the healthiest, but we all know that is not the case. People are taking responsibility for their own health. They are asking questions and are no longer allowing doctors to have primary control over their health.

People are realizing that symptoms should never be a judge of health. For example, a heart attack is the first sign of heart disease for a lot of people, and cancer can go on for years before its presence is known. A decrease in body function usually exists for quite some time before symptoms arise and a disease can be named. People are also realizing that when symptoms appear they indicate a problem. It is like a built in alarm system telling us that our body is not functioning at 100%. With this knowledge people make one of three decisions. They can ignore it and hope it goes away. They can take medication to eliminate the symptom, or they can do something to correct the cause. This is why more and more people are choosing chiropractic. The logical thing is to take responsibility for ones health and play an active role in becoming healthy. If an alarm when off in your home indicating a fire would you want the fire put out, or would you simply want the alarm turned off? Taking medication when symptoms appear is like turning off the siren and allowing your house to burn down.

It wasn’t that long ago when the American Medical Association set out to eliminate the chiropractic profession. They initiated so much slander that the chiropodist had to relabel themselves as podiatrists. “Chiropodist” looked too much like chiropractor on the sign and people avoided them. In 1991, the Supreme Court found the AMA and other medical associations guilty of conspiring to destroy chiropractic. But like the old saying goes “time will always perpetuate those things that are better for mankind.” The chiropractic principles are being recognized and society, the scientific community and even traditional medicine are accepting the validity of the chiropractic profession.

Chiropractic is based on the scientific knowledge that the nervous system controls all body functions. It controls and coordinates literally every organ, tissue and cell of the body. Nerve impulses flow from the brain, down the spinal cord, and to every organ. Impulses sent back to the brain confirm that the body is working properly. If there is interference to these impulses the overall function of the body is decreased. This is what chiropractors label a SUBLUXATION. Whether or not symptoms are present, the body cannot function properly. A chiropractor is trained to recognize and eliminate these subluxations. It allows the intelligence of the body and the nervous system to maintain harmony and health. Chiropractic focuses on the person with the disease not the disease or the symptom. While traditional health care focuses on sickness, disease and what makes people die, chiropractic is based on health, wellness and what makes people live. A recent study published in JAMA noted that users of alternative health care were generally more educated and that these alternatives were more congruent with their own values, beliefs and philosophical orientations toward health and life. The Journal of Pediatrics stated that chiropractic was the number one alternative to conventional medicine. It also stated that the mothers who chose alternatives (like chiropractic) were again more educated than those who chose conventional medicine. The medical reasons for seeking care were respiratory (like asthma), ENT (like ear infections), musculoskeletal, skin, gastrointestinal (like colic), allergies, and prevention. Factors influencing the choice of alternative medicine are word of mouth, fear of drug side effects, chronic medical problems, dissatisfaction with conventional medicine and more personalized attention.

People are sick and tired of being sick and tired. They are tired of prescriptions, side effects and unnecessary surgery. The world market for anti-depressants totals 6 billion dollars and 5.5 billion of that is consumed in the United States. Are we a nation that needs to depend on Prozac? Alarming rates of children are on Ritalin and other psychotropic (mind altering) drugs. (The long-term effects of Ritalin are just being recognized. One of them is Parkinson’s and a prime example is Michael J. Fox.) Our society is waking up and shifting gears when it comes to health care.

While medicine is making advances in the field of trauma and special surgeries they are losing ground when it comes to health and wellness. Their solution is a pill or a potion. Pills and potions only make the pharmaceutical companies rich. The sad thing is that pharmaceutical companies have literally taken over medical schools for their own benefit. Doctors are taught that the only ways to solve problems are with drugs and surgery. Dr. M.F. McCarthy says in the journal Medical Hypotheses, “If this situation does not point out the moral bankruptcy of American medicine, I don’t know what could.” Providing free equipment, computers, supplies, seminars and large grants (money) to professors does have a price. That price is public health. The pill popping approach explains (according to the World Health Organization) why U.S. citizens pay more for health. The sad thing is that our health status ranks fairly low when compared to other nations. Our infant mortality rate is below 20 other nations, and people live longer, on average, in 16 others.

Recent studies done in the U.S. and Canada concluded that only 8% of people under chiropractic care needed the services of an M.D. as opposed to 46% of those who did not. It also stated that people who used the services of a chiropractor were healthier overall, had less incapacitating conditions and required fewer health needs.

Studies done by Ronald Pero, Ph.D., chief of cancer prevention research at New York’s Preventive Medicine Institute and professor of medicine in Environmental Health at New York University, showed that people under chiropractic care had a 200% stronger immune system than the people who were not. These people had a 400% stronger immune system than with cancer or other serious disease. He further went on to conclude that chiropractic care may optimize ones ability to fully resist serious disease.

Studies prove subluxations cause neurological stresses that impair immune response, and can be a factor in aging. Our immune system determines whether or not we get sick or stay healthy. Chiropractic keeps the immune response high. In fact when tested on HIV patients a 48% increase in their CD4 (immune system) cells was demonstrated over the six-month duration of the study. There is not a drug out there that can increase immune function like this.

Research shows that 80% of all infants suffer from nerve interference cause by a subluxation. This study states that out of 1250 babies chosen at random, 211 suffered from nervousness, vomiting, muscular abnormalities, tremors and insomnia. 95% (200) of those children had abnormal cervical (neck) muscle strain indicating vertebral subluxation. When the subluxation was removed it frequently resulted in immediate quieting, cessation of crying, muscular relaxation and sleepiness.

To be healthy, every organ, tissue and cell in the body needs a healthy nerve supply. To give our families and ourselves the chance for a better quality of life, we need to allow our body to function at its fullest potential with maximum nerve supply.

The purpose of our office is to bring chiropractic care to the people in our community. Our goal is to help the sick people get well and to keep the well people healthy. We want to educate as many people as possible on the importance of a healthy nervous system and thus a healthy body. We want our community to make educated choices, get to know what a subluxation is, and how it affects their health.

planetc1.com-news email to the editor

Chiropractic Care…For Better Health…Better Life…For All People…All Ages…All Reasons!

Dr. George Logothetis practices in Hackensack, NJ

Research Reminder #5: Hormones

Which foods have hormones (testosterone, estrogen) in them?

So far I’ve heard: Almonds and soy have estrogen, Walnuts have testosterone, Dairy, Meat, have hormones. And i just had a friend say she thinks sweet potatoes have hormones, but I looked up a quick bit on it and it’s not true unless we have labcoats in the kitchen… here’s what I found

This article also came up while looking for an image and looks interesting!