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HealthSmart Nutrition's MBT Advisors:
This is where
additional training information will be found
about HealthSmart Nutrition's Life Style Coaching Programs.
Highly toxic compound found in foods fried in unsaturated
vegetable oils Source: Health Central: May 2005 To read more
Hydrogenated Oils Does
Cause Diabetes Type II
by David
Lawrence Dewey
"Reading
provides knowledge...
knowledge leads to answers."
In 1998, I wrote my column, Hydrogenated
Oils-Silent Killers" and showed how hydrogenated oils cause
diabetes type II. Well, the proof is in the pudding finally. A recent study
Researchers from Harvard School of Health examined the long-term relationship
between different types of dietary fat and the risk of type 2 diabetes.
More than 84,0000 women aged
34 through 59 were involved in the study. All were free of diabetes, cancer,
and cardiovascular disease at the start of the study. After 14 years,
slightly more than 2,500 cases of type 2 diabetes were documented.
This is 3% out of the test subjects that developed diabetes type II.
As they looked at the
detailed dietary information that had been gathered periodically over the course
of the study, the researchers concluded that trans fatty acids increased the
risk of type 2 diabetes in women. Polyunsaturated fatty acids (Omega-3 essential
fatty acids found in fish and flaxseed, pumpkin seed, olive oil and walnuts)
does indeed to appear to reduce the risk.
The researchers concluded,
"Substituting non-hydrogenated polyunsaturated fatty acids for trans fatty
acids would likely reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes substantially."
In the Harvard report,
eating saturated fats (found in animal-based foods such as butter or hamburger)
or mono unsaturated fats (found in nuts, fruits, vegetables, and some oils such
as flaxseed, olive, peanut, and almond) had no association on the
incidence of type 2 diabetes. Other studies indicate that mono
unsaturated fats increase insulin sensitivity, as well as decrease glucose and
insulin levels. Added
Feb 7/2006
Diverticulitis - What
is it and What can be done about
it?
David
Crawford
is a UK nutritionist who specialises in using natural
foods to treat such problems. He says it is correct that
you need a high fibre diet (this is what most sufferers
are told) but stresses that there is an even greater
risk to your health if you eat the wrong type of fibre.
You need, for example, to avoid all the mucous-forming
grains, including wheat, rye, and dairy, since these
will exacerbate the problem. Instead, look for fibre
from chickpea or soya flours, from fruit and vegetables
and from oatbran and sprouted grains.
Diverticular
disease is the usually the result of a long, slow
build-up of dietary mucous against the walls of the
intestine. Over time, these deposits solidify, narrowing
the passage through which the faeces must pass. The
intestine responds by trying to expand to maintain
normal functioning and it is in the weakened areas of
the intestinal walls that the first diverticular pouches
appear. A clever nutritionist will know how you can
dissolve this build-up of waste matter without resorting
to more invasive techniques such as colonic irrigation,
where, if the intestinal wall has been damaged, there
could be further risks.
Interested in learning more? To read more
Added July 8/2006
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