Disease Prevention
November 5, 2009 Filed Under: Diseases
Maintaining a healthy diet and lifestyle is important for several reasons. Maintaining health through diet and exercise can help to prevent loss of bone mass and vitamin deficiency. A healthy diet also helps to prevent diseases such as heart attacks, strokes, osteoporosis, some cancers and obesity. A healthy diet can also help to treat and control diseases like lupus, high blood pressure, diabetes, celiac disease and mellitus.
The body runs on a cocktail of fats, carbohydrates, proteins, vitamins and minerals to sustain healthy organ function. Vitamins and minerals are essential to the body and are necessary for proper growth and proper functioning of systems inside the body.
With obesity and heart disease on the rise, they are a major public health concern for the United States and other countries. Many of the dietary recommendations nowadays are aimed at the preventing these two diseases. Obesity occurs when a person eats more calories than the body is able to burn off. When obesity becomes constant, then other diseases start to develop such as heart disease, diabetes, liver disease, arthritis, high blood pressure, just to name a few.
Losing weight requires that people take in more low energy-dense foods. These foods include vegetables and fruits. Foods like this contain few calories per unit so a person can consume large volumes without taking in many calories. High energy-dense foods like sweets, fried foods and foods containing trans fats. These foods have high cholesterol and saturated fat content which has been linked to heart disease. Avoiding processed foods is also recommended.
In 2005, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) published a new guideline detailing changes in the dietary recommendations for Americans. The new guidelines emphasize more fruit, vegetable, whole grains and lean meats. There also should be close attention paid to saturated fats and added sugars.
Eating healthy nowadays is more complicated than ever. We are often victims of our own convenient society that we’ve forgotten how to listen to our bodies and our own instincts for health. In our highly industrialized and technical world we’ve gotten away from knowing where food comes from. These guidelines are one voice in the din of many. I hope that we may all choose to listen more carefully. Frank Abbott is a freelance writer and is passionate about health and fitness. If you’d like more information on how insurance companies are able reduce premiums in conjunction with healthy lifestyle changes, go to http://www.webhealthinsuranceweb.org/
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