Archive for February, 2010
Preventative Medicine
Posted by: | CommentsSo much of today’s focus is finding the cure after you have already gotten sick, but why not focus on staying healthy in the first place. EcoHealth & Wellness focuses on preventative medicine and what you can do daily to be the healthiest possible you. Dr. Tiffany Jackson, owner of EcoHealth and Wellness, specializes in private consults, offering you sage advice about possible options of achieving better overall wellness with small, but high impact life changes.
To learn more about her services visit her website at www.ecohealthwellness.com and click on the services tab. Many people have already discovered what it truly means to feel good thanks to her services and would recommend it to others.
One idea for helping yourself is to incorporate more fruits and vegetables into your diet to receive their beneficial antioxidant properties. while we often here this statement it is not always easy to implement this change into your diet based on taste preferences, but here are two tasty recipes from the preventative medicine center, which taste great.
Sautéed Vegetables with Sweet & Sour Sauce
Ingredients:
- Chinese cabbage, cut into thin diagonals
- Carrots, cut into thin flowers
- Lotus root, sliced matchsticks
- Kale, cut thin
- Yellow squash, sliced matchsticks
- Mushrooms, sliced thin
Directions:
- Place a small amount of water into a hot skillet.
- Add vegetables and sauté on high heat until they are tender yet crisp and still remaining their bright colors.
Sweet & Sour Sauce
Ingredients: *What are these foods?
- 1/2 cup apple juice
- 1 tablespoons shoyu soy sauce*
- 2 tablespoons rice vinegar*
- 1-2 tablespoons kuzu*, diluted in cold water
- Sprouts, as a garnish
Directions:
- Mix apple juice, shoyu and rice vinegar together in a pot.
- Dilute kuzu with a small amount of water and add to the pot.
- Simmer juice until it thickens slightly into a sauce and becomes clear.
- Pour hot sauce over sautéed vegetables and mix to coat all vegetables.
- Add sprouts as a garnish.
Amasake Fruit Smoothies
Ingredients:
- 1 quart amasake
- Strawberries, blueberries or fresh fruit of your choice
Directions:
- Place amasake into a blender with fresh fruit to taste. Blend as is or you can add a few ice cubes and then blend.
- Garnish with a mint sprig and serve cool with a straw. Enjoy the refreshing all natural, dairyless milkshake.
Warmer Weather
Posted by: | CommentsEcoHealth & Wellness reminds you that as the weather gets warmer with spring approaching, it is great to take your workout outside. Jogging through your neighborhood or doing yoga on the beach are great stress relievers besides giving you the benefits of exercise.
If you are looking to update your workout wardrobe consider cropped yoga pants from blue canoe, which are not only comfortable but allow you to move easily and with comfort.
Old Tires being Sold as New
Posted by: | CommentsEcoHealth & Wellness believes in prevention and the numerous benefits it can provide to your overall well-being. Besides treating your body with the utmost care and respect, it is important that you take care of other aspects in your life. ABC News posted this video http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/video/aged-tires-driving-hazard-4826897 which tells the story of old tires being sold as brand new. Old tires are very dangerous and can lead to future accidents.
Watch this video carefully to determine the age of your tires and if they are safe to be driven on.
Why do you really get sick?
Posted by: | CommentsEcoHealth & Wellness believes in giving your body the best nutrients possible and that is why we continually read up on current dietic research. The data from many studies points conclusively to eating foods in their most pure, raw form. Today’s diets filled with high processed foods are actually causing addictions for your body. Sugar receptors on the tongue cause people to continually crave sugar, which leads to overconsumption and weight gain. Also, these high sugar diets include so many artificial ingredients that the body does not currently know how to process.
By switching to a diet filled with mostly raw foods, the body starts to heal itself and filter out the artificial chemicals. By eating locally as well as organically you can get the best products that are currently in season. By making the switch from high-processed to raw slowly you are more likely to stick with these foods plus experience health benefits instantly.
For more information on the raw foods diet and the benefits it can provide visit Dr. Mercola’s site at http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2010/02/13/david-wolfe-interview.aspx.
Green Medicine
Posted by: | CommentsEcoHealth & Wellness advocates the use of green medicine for healing the body’s ailments. Through the use of proper nutrition the body is able to adapt and correct many of its existing problems.
Green medicine
Imagine restructuring health care in a framework that has your best interests at heart — not those of the medical and industrial food stakeholders. The truth is, our medical system rates an A for emergency medicine, but suffers attention-deficit when it comes to chronic diseases. “Breakthrough” drugs and “cutting edge” surgery are the focus, yet chronic diseases still are causing most of the misery, death and expenses. Meanwhile, basic, proven prevention and treatment options involving nutrition are all but ignored.
By shopping at PCC and buying local, organic food, you’re practicing Green Medicine — scientifically verified therapies that address the nutritional causes of disease. In fact, nutrition outperforms drug treatments both for prevention and treatment of chronic disease. Why? Because the genesis of most chronic diseases can be linked directly to nutritional imbalances.
Let food be your medicine
When you eat whole, organic foods, you’re addressing core issues — preventing and treating disease by nurturing vital systems with the vitamins, minerals and other nutrients they require. You are warding off — or directly treating — a long list of chronic diseases that hardly existed before the introduction of artificial fertilizer, pesticides, and industrial food processing over the past 100 years.
Heart disease rates were around 4 percent 100 years ago; now they’re approaching 50 percent. Adult onset diabetes at the turn of the 20th century was a rare, rich-man’s disease. Now it’s considered an epidemic among baby boomers and a growing problem with children. All the diseases that are costing us the most money — diabetes, heart disease, stroke, obesity, asthma, arthritis, cancer, depression, allergies and irritable bowel disease — are linked directly to what we eat.
It’s not a coincidence that during this time of rising chronic disease rates over the past 50 years, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) reports a 30 to 50 percent decline in nutrients in our fruits and vegetables.
Think of it this way: humans evolved eating whole, fresh, organic food over millions of years and then, suddenly, in the course of a mere 100 years, had to adjust to a diet that had half the nutritional value — and was laden with pesticides. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out the connection, but policymakers ignore these fundamental problems, instead pushing for universal drug prescriptions.
As destructive to health as poor diets are, the curative power of good food is even more remarkable. In one study published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, women treated for cancer had a 50 percent reduction in relapse risk if they ate five vegetables and fruits per day. Several studies have found that eating such nutritious foods as flax seeds, fatty fish, and fresh fruits and vegetables prevent and reduce the growth of prostate and other cancers.
Peer-reviewed research in Holland has found that children raised on organic dairy products in the first two years of life are more than a third less likely to suffer from allergies, asthma and eczema. Other research shows that consuming too little dietary potassium is linked to high blood pressure. You get potassium by eating (in order) sweet potatoes, beet greens, yogurt, halibut, lima beans, winter squash and (less so) bananas. Many blood pressure medications actually cause the loss of potassium!
What does nutrition have to do with depression, anxiety and insomnia? We know that blood sugar fluctuations, caused by eating sweets, disrupts brain function. Serotonin, the neurotransmitter that antidepressant drugs are designed to increase, is made from protein with the aid of B vitamins. Fish oil helps move the serotonin into the brain cells.
What about chronic diseases caused by genetic and developmental abnormalities? While not all of these are nutritional in genesis, we now understand that genetics is a code that can be rewritten by nutrition. Spina bifida, a condition in which vertebrae do not fuse, is now known to be caused by a folic acid deficiency in the mother. More often than suffering from the consequences of inheriting “bad genes,” we inherit unhealthy eating habits.
When you pick out a big bunch of chard or cook with any organic, whole foods, you’re a practitioner of Green Medicine.
For more information follow this link, http://www.pccnaturalmarkets.com/sc/1002/sc1002-greenmedicine.html







