Showing posts with label health matters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health matters. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

HEALTH MATTERS: Five Questions to Ask Yourself

HEALTH MATTERS


"Take care of your body.  It's the only place you have to live."
                                             ---Jim Rohn

Here are five questions to ask yourself:
  1. Am I getting enough sleep every night?
  2. Am I drinking enough water every day?
  3. Am I getting enough exercise every day?
  4. Am I eating too much added sugar, fat, and salt?
  5. Am I eating plenty of vegetables, fruits, wild fish, beans, and legumes (like lentils)?
A fresh salad we made recently with organic
treasures from a local farmer.


These questions address the elements of health.  

If you are not getting a good night�s sleep because you (or your kids) have a bedroom full of electronics, computers and digital clocks with red and blue lights on all night, it is time to change.  

If you go all morning on coffee and soda and don�t have a glass of water until the afternoon, it is time to change. 

If you routinely say, �I�ll take a walk this weekend� and always make an excuse why you can�t, it is time to change.  

If you have high blood pressure and think nothing of stopping by McDonald�s several times a week, it is time to change. 

If you eat steak and potatoes every night, it is time to change. 

To be a good role model for children starts with a look at our own habits.  With computers running our lives, we are getting away from the basics of good health.  Some people think they can download an app and it will take care of their need for exercise and do their vegetable shopping for them.  I grew up watching a TV show about the future called The Jetsons.  Well, people, we are not The Jetsons.  

If you value your health, and care about the health and future quality of life of your children, then please review the five questions above and stay tuned as we lead a meaningful discussion about HEALTH MATTERS. 

In gratitude,
Nancy L. Heinrich, MPH

Founder of the Growing Healthy Kids movement

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

HEALTH MATTERS: New Year's Resolutions

HEALTH MATTERS

"To keep the body in good health is a duty...otherwise we will not be able to keep our mind strong and clear."
                                                   ---Buddha

A new year is often filled with new resolutions for better health.   If we don�t have our health, everything else becomes less important; this is why my new year�s resolution for the Growing Healthy Kids� blog is to write about HEALTH MATTERS for adults.  We will expand our investigative journalism to bring you information that might otherwise be buried. 

Growing Healthy Kids is a movement dedicated to halting, reversing, and preventing childhood obesity.  We educate parents and children by raising awareness about facts, research, recipes, tips, and resources that help us make better choices about food, physical fitness, and ultimately, our health.  For our children to know how to get to, and stay at, a healthy weight will take a nation of educated adults.
 
On a recent tour of a new hydroponic farm in Vero Beach, Florida
with older adults as part of the Growing Healthy Kids' initiative.
That's me on the right.

Our goal is to reach adults in all 50 states this year and expand our programs and services to parts of the country where there is an unmet need to improve health literacy and health outcomes.   There is so much joy in sharing good foods, great recipes, and powerful tips that you can use every day and we are well positioned to travel where needed to educate adults and kids.  We have seen life and health miracles occur when people learn that when you know what to do, it�s easy to eat right, stay active, and get a good night�s sleep every night. 

Start this year by taking 15 minutes right now with your family to write down 3 health goals you want to achieve, either individually or as a family.  Use the SMART goal formula:  Specific-Measurable-Achievable-Realistic-Time-Specific.  Here is an example of a SMART goal:  My children and I will walk together after dinner at least 15 minutes two evenings a week. Post your health goals someplace where everyone can see them. 

Be well, dear friends!

In gratitude,
Nancy L. Heinrich, MPH
Founder of the Growing Healthy Kids movement


Wednesday, December 18, 2013

HEALTH MATTERS

WELLNESS WEDNESDAYS

"Education is the most powerful weapon you can use to change the world." 

                                                   --Nelson Mandela


When it comes to the health of our children, parents agree on one thing:  we will do whatever it takes. 

The Growing Healthy Kids movement is improving parents� knowledge about the foods to eat more of as well as the foods to eat less of, plus the importance adding regular, healthy doses of physical fun and fitness.  Our education programs teach kids and adults how simple it is to eat well.  We empower them with knowledge and skills to prevent high blood pressure, diabetes, high cholesterol, obesity-related cancers and other preventable diseases.  Learning to eat smart  helps children get to � and stay at � healthy weights.  The key to our children living lives longer than ours � not shorter - is teaching them how to make lifelong habits of eating foods that are good for us and planning fitness into each day to prevent obesity and obesity-related diseases. 

Lessons children learn in our kitchen classroom are what I fondly call THE RECIPE FOR GROWING HEALTHY KIDS.  Here is the list of 5 essential ingredients:

PROTEIN
FACT:  Kids will learn better when they start the day with a burst of protein. 
About � of what we eat should be protein.  Choose to eat fish at least 2 times a week.  Choose lean, low-fat proteins.  Avoid or limit meats loaded with fat. 
GHK TIP:  Include protein in your kids� breakfast every day.

FATS
FACT:  There are 3 kinds of fats: one is good and two are the bad kinds of fats.  Most of the fats we eat should be the good fats.
Good fats:  unsaturated fat
Sources of unsaturated fat:  nuts, fish, liquid vegetable oils, flax seeds, avocados
Bad fats:  saturated fat and trans fats
Sources of saturated fats:  any food that comes from an animal (meat, chicken, ice-cream, cheese, milk (except for skim milk), etc.)Sources of trans fats:  look on food labels for any ingredient that includes the words "partially hydrogenated�
GHK TIP:  Make most of your fats the �good� kind and eat fish at least twice a week.


   CARBOHYDRATES
FACT:  There are good carbohydrates and bad carbohydrates.  Most of the carbs we eat should be the good fats.

The good carbohydrate:  dietary fiber
Sources of dietary fiber:  vegetables, fruits, beans, whole grains, lentils, split peas
Why we need dietary fiber:  Fiber is only found in foods that come from plants.  Fiber is what fills us up.  Aim for 28-35 grams of dietary fiber a day.   Most children (and adults) eat far less dietary fiber than their bodies need. 

The bad carbohydrate:  sugar
Sources of sugar:  sodas, candy, processed foods, most breakfast cereals, energy drinks, fruit juices. 
GHK TIP:  Choose breads and pastas that have �4 or more� grams of dietary fiber per slice or per serving.  Check the Nutrition Facts label and limit foods that have more than 5 grams of sugar per serving.   Learn the difference between good and bad carbs and use this knowledge when you and your kids are grocery shopping.  

WATER
FACT:  Water is the fluid we need to drink the most of.  Most people drink far less water than they need.  Drink water, not soda.  Aim for 8 glasses of water a day.

SLEEP
Did you know that getting enough sleep is key to losing weight and staying at a healthy weight?   Provide guidance for your children so they have a regular bedtime to ensure they are getting plenty of sleep every night.  
GHK TIP:  Establish �sleep hygiene� habits such as turning off the TV, the computer, cell phones, and other electronics at least an hour before bedtime and not drinking caffeinated drinks in the evening to wake up feeling refreshed every morning.

From our expanding recipe collection from the Growing Healthy Kids' Test Kitchen, I am happy to share this amazing variation on a traditional pesto recipe.  It features walnuts, a great source of good fats and omega-3s, and parsley, which has incredible benefits as an anti-inflammatory. 

GROWING HEALTHY KIDS:  Our Recipe Collection
WALNUT PESTO

INGREDIENTS:
  •         1-1/2 cups walnuts
  •         2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
  •         Crushed red pepper
  •         Sea salt
  •         � cup minced flat-leaf parsley
  •         � cup EVOO*
  •         � cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese


DIRECTIONS:
Preheat oven to 350.  Spread walnuts on a baking sheet and toast for 12 minutes, or until golden.  Cool the walnuts and finely chop.

In a mortar, mash the garlic with a pinch each of crushed red pepper and salt until a paste forms.  Add the walnuts and parsley and pound to a coarse paste.  Slowly add the olive oil, pounding and stirring until blended.  Stir in the Parmesan and season with salt. Serve over roasted vegetables or whole grain pasta.

NOTE:  You can also make this in a food processor, quickly pulsing the ingredients.

*Extra virgin olive oil 

Education IS the most important weapon we can use to change the world.  Start with your own world and educate yourself family about the importance of reading food labels to identify foods containing the good carbs and good fats. Include some protein in your children's breakfasts every morning.  Every child deserves access to healthy foods and daily activity, beginning with YOUR children.  

In gratitude,

Nancy Heinrich


Growing Healthy Kids