Posts Tagged ‘diet’

The latest diet fad- weight loss patches

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

The patches look like a 2in square sticking plaster and can be attached to any part of the body.

The sticky pads are claimed to suppress hunger pangs and help the body burn off fat.

Makers SlimWeight claim their new patches are a better option to lose weight because the ingredients are absorbed through the skin and straight into the blood.

“Every week there’s a new fad diet out. Thousands of Britons struggle to lose weight and these complex diets add unnecessary hassle to the process,” the Daily Express quoted a spokesman as saying.

“By simply applying one weight loss patch a day you can go about your routine safe in the knowledge that you’re burning fat and reducing your cravings.

“The patches work by increasing the body’s ability to burn the fat it receives through food, while at the same time reducing cravings to binge eat. You consume less fat and the fat you do consume is metabolised quicker,” he added. From indiatimes.

Diet To Control Diabetes

Friday, August 6th, 2010


Can I control Diabetes with Diet only?
Diet is a very important aspect in the treatment of Diabetes particularly the timing of it. At the beginning you may be successful in controlling Diabetes with diet only, but unfortunately a time will come when only diet won’t be enough, you will require medicine. This time is different for different people, for somebody this can be a few months while for others it may be a few years. It is very important to try with diet first; this will help you to understand the principles of diet and will convince you the need for tablet/Insulin for good control of Diabetes.

Can I follow a strict diet chart?

A strict diet chart is something we are not advocating these days. A diet chart is not only monotonous but also difficult to follow day in and out. A strict chart restrains your freedom to eat and also impossible to follow when you are out for social or professional reasons. Rather than a diet chart you should have meal plan.

What are the principles of diabetic diet?
Healthy eating is the key to success for which you need to know what to eat, how much to eat and what not to eat.

To eat or not to eat is not the question, how to make the right decision about eating is the question.

We recommend three meals (breakfast, lunch and dinner) and three snacks. You can space the snacks in between your meals according to your profession and life-style. There are six components in diet: Carbohydrate, fat, protein, mineral, vitamin and water. Restriction and distribution of carbohydrate throughout the day is important. The amount of calories in rice and wheat are the same, but protein content is high in wheat. Wheat has more fiber in comparison to rice.

Dietary fibers are very important for people with Diabetes (food with high fibers such as bran, cereals, vegetables, fruits, brown bread, pulses like lentils, rajma, whole meal flour, etc), they make the absorption smoother and keep the bowel habit healthy. A mixed diet containing both rice and wheat is preferable.

Regular eating of salad and vegetables is good for nutritional balance. They are natural source of vitamins, minerals and fibers. If your weight is more than what it should be, you need to loose weight. Taking low caloric food and increasing food with high fibers can achieve this.

There is no bar to eat non-vegetarian food unless in special situation like kidney problem. Remember chicken and fish are better than red meat as the amount of saturated fat is less in them. If your cholesterol is high you better avoid yellow of egg and red meat.
From oneindia.

Childhood allergy risk ‘could be due to diet’

Friday, August 6th, 2010

Western diets could be responsible for the high levels of allergies experienced by people in the UK.

Recent research from Mintel revealed that around 44 per cent of British adults suffer from at least one allergy.

Proceedings from the National Academy of Sciences have suggested that this could be because the guts of western children harbour different bacteria due to the low-fibre, high-sugar diet that has become commonplace.

Children in a rural village in Burkina Faso were found to have very different gut bacteria and a greater abundance of fatty acids, which are known to protect against inflammation.

Lindsey McManus, head of information and training at Allergy UK, commented: “Eczema and hay fever are – I wouldn’t say a western phenomenon, but [they do occur less] in developing countries.

“In places like [the subject of this study in rural] Africa, where the body’s immune system is still fighting off the enemy it was intended to, [such as] parasitic infections, you don’t see allergies anywhere near as much.” From privatehealth.