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October 1, 2009

Heart Risk Factors on the Rise Again

Filed under: Health News — Tags: — (author unknown) @ 8:00 AM

The per­cent­age of Amer­i­cans with­out major heart dis­ease risk fac­tors rose dur­ing the 1980s and 1990s, but our health is declin­ing again, a study shows.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

This Blog is moderated. It is created to be informative, inspiring and uplifting. Our positive philosophy at Bragg is to communicate with love and respect. As Paul and Patricia Bragg teach, in expressing your thoughts and opinions to others, ask yourself: "Is it good, is it kind, is it necessary?" All comments that do not fit this philosophy will not be posted.

September 30, 2009

Heart Risk Factors Cut Life Span by 10 Years

Filed under: Health News — Tags: , , , — (author unknown) @ 6:00 PM

A 50-year-old smoker who has a his­tory of high blood pres­sure and high cho­les­terol can expect to die a decade ear­lier than some­one of the same age with none of these heart dis­ease risk fac­tors, a study shows.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

This Blog is moderated. It is created to be informative, inspiring and uplifting. Our positive philosophy at Bragg is to communicate with love and respect. As Paul and Patricia Bragg teach, in expressing your thoughts and opinions to others, ask yourself: "Is it good, is it kind, is it necessary?" All comments that do not fit this philosophy will not be posted.

August 1, 2009

Bragg Feature Article: Vegetarian Nutrition and Diet

Filed under: Health Articles — Tags: , , , , , , — admin @ 3:00 AM

By John Wes­t­er­dahl, Ph.D., M.P.H., R.D., C.N.S.

Today sci­en­tific research has estab­lished that a healthy veg­e­tar­ian diet can play a major role in pre­vent­ing dis­ease and achiev­ing opti­mal health and longevity. There are great health ben­e­fits for those who choose to fol­low a veg­e­tar­ian lifestyle.

HEART DISEASE – Most health experts agree that veg­e­tar­i­ans have the advan­tage when it comes to heart dis­ease pre­ven­tion. For the most part, plant-based diets reduce the intake of cholesterol-raising sat­u­rated fat and artery-clogging cho­les­terol. Both sat­u­rated fat and cho­les­terol are two dietary con­stituents strongly linked to increased coro­nary heart dis­ease risk. The less we eat of them, the bet­ter it is for our heart. Eat­ing a diet with lots of fruits, veg­eta­bles, whole grains, and beans can reduce our risk of heart dis­ease in other ways as well. Foods such as beans, oats, and apples are rich sources of sol­u­ble fiber. Sol­u­ble fiber is effec­tive in help­ing to lower blood cholesterol.

There is evi­dence that the B-vitamin, folic acid, helps reduce the risk of heart dis­ease by low­er­ing blood lev­els of a harm­ful homo­cys­teine. Fruits and veg­eta­bles are a major source of folic acid, a heart-healthy vit­a­min, another rea­son why veg­e­tar­ian diets help pre­vent heart disease.

Veg­e­tar­ian diets have lower lev­els of iron. Iron, which is con­cen­trated in red meat, pro­motes cell-destroying free rad­i­cal activ­ity. Free rad­i­cals pro­mote age­ing and also oxi­dize LDL (“bad”) cho­les­terol thereby mak­ing it a more harm­ful sub­stance to the arter­ies which pro­motes ath­er­o­scle­ro­sis. Fruits and veg­eta­bles are rich in vital phy­to­chem­i­cals (plant nutri­ents) that are anti­age­ing antiox­i­dants or scav­engers of harm­ful free rad­i­cals. Veg­e­tar­i­ans have much higher lev­els of plant antiox­i­dants cir­cu­lat­ing in their blood­streams com­pared to meat eaters. The antiox­i­dants found nat­u­rally occur­ring in plant foods such as vit­a­mins C and E, polyphe­nols and flavonoids, may help pre­vent or even reverse free rad­i­cal dam­age that leads to heart disease.

Stud­ies have proven that healthy, very low-fat veg­e­tar­ian diets not only pre­vent heart dis­ease, but also reverse it! Research con­firm­ing this has been con­ducted by Dean Ornish, M.D., of the Pre­ven­tive Med­i­cine Research Insti­tute located in Sausal­ito, Cal­i­for­nia. Dr. Ornish demon­strated that blocked arter­ies can actu­ally become clearer after a year on a healthy veg­e­tar­ian diet alone – with­out the use of cholesterol-lowering drugs! (see web: www.ornish.com)

CANCER – There is strong sci­en­tific evi­dence that a diet rich in fruits and veg­eta­bles pro­tect us against many forms of can­cer. This includes can­cers of the lung, colon, stom­ach, mouth, lar­ynx, esoph­a­gus, blad­der and prostate. Many sci­en­tist believe that nat­ural phy­to­chem­i­cals found in plant foods like carotenoids, vit­a­min C and E, sele­nium, indoles, isoth­io­cyanates, flavonoids, phe­nols, limonene and oth­ers are the pro­tec­tive compounds.

In addi­tion to phy­to­chem­i­cals, plant foods are rich in healthy fiber. Fiber is ben­e­fi­cial in pre­vent­ing colon can­cer. Stud­ies also show that men who are heavy red-meat eaters have increased risk of get­ting colon and prostate can­cers. This may be related not only to ani­mal fats, but car­cino­gens cre­ated when meat is cooked. The high iron (a pro-oxidant) con­tent of red meat may also be a con­tribut­ing fac­tor to increas­ing can­cer risk.

STROKE – More and more sci­en­tific research is estab­lish­ing the fact that a diet rich in fruits and veg­eta­bles is ben­e­fi­cial in reduc­ing the risk of stroke. Stud­ies show eat­ing more fruits and veg­eta­bles are con­tribut­ing pro­tec­tive fac­tors for the arter­ies in the brain.

CONSTIPATION AND DIVERTICULOSIS – Veg­e­tar­i­ans eat sig­nif­i­cantly more dietary fiber, which helps pre­vent these colon prob­lems. Fiber adds bulk to the waste mate­r­ial in the colon, which pro­motes more rapid elim­i­na­tion that helps pre­vent con­sti­pa­tion and also reduces intesti­nal pres­sure pre­vent­ing diver­tic­u­lo­sis. The veg­e­tar­ian diet is the opti­mal diet for the pre­ven­tion, treat­ment and even rever­sal of dis­ease. Physi­cians and Health Sci­ence Researchers have demon­strated this. Well-balanced veg­e­tar­ian diets also make the opti­mal anti-ageing diet. Veg­e­tar­ian and plant-based diet pop­u­la­tion groups, like the Seventh-Day Adven­tists, the peo­ple of Hunza, and the cen­te­nar­i­ans of Oki­nawa, have shown by exam­ple that eat­ing a diet based mostly on plant foods, con­tributes to good health and a long active life. See web­site: http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0511/feature1/

John Wes­t­er­dahl, Ph.D., M.P.H., R.D., C.N.S., is the Direc­tor of the Bragg Health Foun­da­tion and the Direc­tor of Health Sci­ence for Bragg Live Food Prod­ucts, Inc. Dr. Wes­t­er­dahl is a nutri­tion­ist and reg­is­tered dietit­ian and is rec­og­nized as one of the nation’s lead­ing author­i­ties on veg­e­tar­ian and vegan nutri­tion and diets. He is the for­mer nutri­tion edi­tor for Veg­gie Life mag­a­zine. Dr. Wes­t­er­dahl is an active mem­ber of the Veg­e­tar­ian Nutri­tion Dietetic Prac­tice Group (www.vegetariannutrition.net) of the Amer­i­can Dietetic Asso­ci­a­tion (www.eatright.org) and has received national awards for his con­tri­bu­tions to the field of veg­e­tar­ian nutrition.

Patricia Bragg and Dr. John Westerdahl

Patri­cia Bragg and Dr. John Westerdahl

This Blog is moderated. It is created to be informative, inspiring and uplifting. Our positive philosophy at Bragg is to communicate with love and respect. As Paul and Patricia Bragg teach, in expressing your thoughts and opinions to others, ask yourself: "Is it good, is it kind, is it necessary?" All comments that do not fit this philosophy will not be posted.

September 27, 2008

Don’t Clog the Pipes of Your Body

Filed under: Bragg Book Excerpts — Tags: , — admin @ 5:00 AM

Excerpt from Bragg Healthy Lifestyle Book — Chap­ter 1
Click book title for more information

Our body is really a great plumb­ing sys­tem. We are made up of small pipes, medium-sized pipes and large pipes like the gas­troin­testi­nal tract, which is 30 feet long. Through the gas­troin­testi­nal pipe, from the mouth to the rec­tum, flow the food and drink we consume.

There is a great mir­a­cle mus­cu­lar sys­tem within the gas­troin­testi­nal tract that pro­pels the food slowly down and out­ward. To keep this mus­cu­lar action effi­cient, the food we eat must con­tain bulk, mois­ture and lubri­ca­tion. This is sup­plied by coarse raw veg­eta­bles such as cab­bage (red & green), car­rots, beets, cel­ery, turnips and radishes, etc. All raw veg­eta­bles con­tribute to strengthen the mus­cu­lar action along the gas­troin­testi­nal tract. We call raw veg­eta­bles and raw fruits “Nature’s Broom.” They are absolutely nec­es­sary if you want to enjoy higher health and longevity! Even the Amer­i­can Can­cer Soci­ety and the United States Sur­geon Gen­eral agree: eat­ing fruits and veg­eta­bles is impor­tant for the pre­ven­tion of cancer.

In our opin­ion, every dis­ease — no mat­ter what its sci­en­tific name — is basi­cally caused by the clog­ging of the human pipe sys­tem! Any local­ized symp­tom is there­fore merely the result of a local clog­ging by the buildup of toxic waste poi­sons at that par­tic­u­lar point. Any part of the pipe sys­tem can become clogged. The #1 killer of them all in Amer­ica is “Heart Dis­ease,” the accu­mu­la­tion of mat­ter (cho­les­terol, fats, tox­ins) that clogs the car­dio­vas­cu­lar sys­tem and the heart! Yes, this is the world’s most deadly dis­ease — hard­en­ing of the arter­ies. The vicious toxic mate­r­ial that hard­ens the arter­ies can com­pletely block them so that your vital life-giving oxy­genated blood can­not pass through. Hard­en­ing of the arter­ies does not hap­pen overnight; it takes a long time to develop this fatal con­di­tion! Yet, recent stud­ies show that some peo­ple start to get hard­en­ing of the arter­ies at a very early age. The cause is their unhealthy lifestyle!

This Blog is moderated. It is created to be informative, inspiring and uplifting. Our positive philosophy at Bragg is to communicate with love and respect. As Paul and Patricia Bragg teach, in expressing your thoughts and opinions to others, ask yourself: "Is it good, is it kind, is it necessary?" All comments that do not fit this philosophy will not be posted.

Don’T Clog the Pipes of Your Body

Filed under: Bragg Book Excerpts — Tags: , — admin @ 5:00 AM

Excerpt from Bragg Healthy Lifestyle Book — Chap­ter 1
Click book title for more information

Our body is really a great plumb­ing sys­tem. We are made up of small pipes, medium-sized pipes and large pipes like the gas­troin­testi­nal tract, which is 30 feet long. Through the gas­troin­testi­nal pipe, from the mouth to the rec­tum, flow the food and drink we consume.

There is a great mir­a­cle mus­cu­lar sys­tem within the gas­troin­testi­nal tract that pro­pels the food slowly down and out­ward. To keep this mus­cu­lar action effi­cient, the food we eat must con­tain bulk, mois­ture and lubri­ca­tion. This is sup­plied by coarse raw veg­eta­bles such as cab­bage (red & green), car­rots, beets, cel­ery, turnips and radishes, etc. All raw veg­eta­bles con­tribute to strengthen the mus­cu­lar action along the gas­troin­testi­nal tract. We call raw veg­eta­bles and raw fruits “Nature’s Broom.” They are absolutely nec­es­sary if you want to enjoy higher health and longevity! Even the Amer­i­can Can­cer Soci­ety and the United States Sur­geon Gen­eral agree: eat­ing fruits and veg­eta­bles is impor­tant for the pre­ven­tion of cancer.

In our opin­ion, every dis­ease — no mat­ter what its sci­en­tific name — is basi­cally caused by the clog­ging of the human pipe sys­tem! Any local­ized symp­tom is there­fore merely the result of a local clog­ging by the buildup of toxic waste poi­sons at that par­tic­u­lar point. Any part of the pipe sys­tem can become clogged. The #1 killer of them all in Amer­ica is “Heart Dis­ease,” the accu­mu­la­tion of mat­ter (cho­les­terol, fats, tox­ins) that clogs the car­dio­vas­cu­lar sys­tem and the heart! Yes, this is the world’s most deadly dis­ease — hard­en­ing of the arter­ies. The vicious toxic mate­r­ial that hard­ens the arter­ies can com­pletely block them so that your vital life-giving oxy­genated blood can­not pass through. Hard­en­ing of the arter­ies does not hap­pen overnight; it takes a long time to develop this fatal con­di­tion! Yet, recent stud­ies show that some peo­ple start to get hard­en­ing of the arter­ies at a very early age. The cause is their unhealthy lifestyle!

This Blog is moderated. It is created to be informative, inspiring and uplifting. Our positive philosophy at Bragg is to communicate with love and respect. As Paul and Patricia Bragg teach, in expressing your thoughts and opinions to others, ask yourself: "Is it good, is it kind, is it necessary?" All comments that do not fit this philosophy will not be posted.

August 3, 2008

Walk 2 to 3 Miles Daily — It Does Miracles!

Filed under: Bragg Book Excerpts — Tags: , , — admin @ 5:00 AM

Excerpt from Bragg’s Healthy Heart Book — Chap­ter 9
Click book title for more information

You should try to walk 2 to 3 miles daily, and some times try dou­bling it. Don’t give your­self excuses. Make a daily walk a per­ma­nent part of your Bragg Healthy Heart Fit­ness Pro­gram — all year and in all cli­mates. Con­rad Hilton walked in the sun and rain and loved it. Regard­less of what other exer­cise you do, your daily walk is a must! Of course, you may take it in the form of golf if you enjoy this social sport. But it’s best not to ride around the golf course in an elec­tric cart! This makes a farce of the whole thing.

Walk­ing is what your heart needs. We are inclined to agree with Mark Twain, who said, golf is a good way to spoil a good walk. But, if it takes the game to make you walk, do so. The result is almost the same — health­ily func­tion­ing mus­cles and quick­ened blood cir­cu­la­tion, plus a sense of har­mony and hap­pi­ness. Although the out­doors is prefer­able — where you can get the most fresh air — indoor walk­ing is far bet­ter than none at all. In win­ter, you can try hall­ways, porches or shop­ping malls. When on health cru­sades around the world, we take an evening brisk walk through the cor­ri­dors, and up and down the stairs of our hotel. If a roof ter­race is avail­able, we pre­fer this open-air space.

To Enjoy Your Daily Walk Is Impor­tant
Your walk­ing should never be done self-consciously, no heel and toe rou­tine and no time lim­it­ing. Let it be the most func­tional and enjoy­able of exer­cises. Walk nat­u­rally, with head high, spine stretched up, chest out and tummy in. Swing your hips, arms and body into action. Walk as though your legs began at the mid­dle of your torso. Breathe deeply! You will feel phys­i­cal ela­tion and will carry your­self proudly with body erect and arms swing­ing eas­ily from your shoulders.

Move at your own pace, with a free spirit and a light heart. If you want, lis­ten to moti­va­tional tapes or music. As you walk, your body ceases to mat­ter, you become as near a poet and nature philoso­pher as you will ever be. Walk your wor­ries away! As blood courses through your arter­ies, cleans­ing and nour­ish­ing your body, you are filled with a sense of well-being that clears your mind of trou­bles and nour­ishes it with pos­i­tive thoughts. As we stride along on our hike, we say to our­selves and some­times aloud with each step — Health! Strength! Youth! Vital­ity! Love! for Eternity!

It’s ben­e­fi­cial to also take a hik­ing tour once a year. Select inter­est­ing areas which you, your fam­ily and friends would like to see, and hike about 15 miles daily. You will broaden your knowl­edge of our beau­ti­ful planet and of Mother Nature, as well as help to build a more pow­er­ful, health­ier and long-lasting heart.

This Blog is moderated. It is created to be informative, inspiring and uplifting. Our positive philosophy at Bragg is to communicate with love and respect. As Paul and Patricia Bragg teach, in expressing your thoughts and opinions to others, ask yourself: "Is it good, is it kind, is it necessary?" All comments that do not fit this philosophy will not be posted.

April 14, 2008

Cleansing the Heart Pump and Pipes

Filed under: Bragg Book Excerpts — Tags: , , , — admin @ 5:00 AM

Excerpt from Bragg’s Healthy Heart Book - Chap­ter 14
Click book title for more information

If our pipes and great pump are clogged and cor­roded with debris and toxic poi­son we can­not be phys­i­cally fit! There­fore, it is nec­es­sary from time to time to give the pipes and the pump of the body a thor­ough cleans­ing. This should be done by fast­ing once every week, for this 1 day will have ben­e­fi­cial effects. It will shake the tox­ins loose from the tis­sues, stim­u­late cir­cu­la­tion and get rid of for­eign mat­ter that has become encrusted in the heart and blood vessels.

You should fol­low this cleans­ing pro­gram at least 1 day a week. Then in time you will have enough for­ti­tude to fast for 3 days straight — you will be amazed at the results! If you have any reac­tions dur­ing this cleans­ing pro­gram — such as headaches, exces­sive gas or feel­ing of weak­ness — just remem­ber that this is what we call a heal­ing cri­sis. These symp­toms will fade away as the tox­ins pass through your elim­i­na­tion system.

Flush­ing Poi­sons from your Body’s “Pipes”

While on this Cleans­ing Pro­gram, drink at least a half a gal­lon of dis­tilled (puri­fied) water daily — that is free of toxic chem­i­cals. The night before you start this regime take 1 to 2 quarts of dis­tilled water and add to it 2 whole car­rots cut into pieces, 3 diced stalks of cel­ery (leaves and all), 1 hand­ful of chopped pars­ley and 1 beet cut up fine. Soak this mix­ture overnight. After it has soaked 10 hours or more, strain the vegetable-distilled water and dis­card the veg­eta­bles (great for com­post). Use this water, in which the veg­eta­bles have been soaked, as part of your drink­ing water dur­ing the first day for cleans­ing. On aris­ing have the Bragg Vine­gar Cock­tail and an hour later eat an apple and a few dried figs or dates, 1 glass of prune juice (add 1 tsp mixed oat bran and psyl­lium seed powder).

At 10 a.m. eat some fresh fruit (oranges, grape­fruit, green tea or greens drink of choice or veg­etable broth. If you cus­tom­ar­ily take sup­ple­ments, do so at this time. At 12 noon have a lun­cheon of a tossed green salad of sliced cab­bage with grated car­rots and beets, chopped green onion, cel­ery, sweet bell pep­per, pars­ley, raw spinach, water­cress, tomato and a clove of finely chopped gar­lic. Eat this salad with a dress­ing made of 1 tea­spoon each of Bragg Organic Extra Vir­gin Olive Oil and Bragg Organic Apple Cider Vine­gar or dress­ing. You may also have a lightly cooked veg­etable (low in nat­ural sugar) such as string­beans, squash or any of the green leafy vegetables.

At 3 p.m. eat fresh fruit, such as apples, grapes, pears, bananas or a few dried fruits as dates, figs, prunes, etc. and a cup of hot dis­tilled water with 1 tea­spoon of Bragg Aminos. Have a sup­per of a tossed vegetable/green salad sim­i­lar as lunch and a dish of lightly steamed greens (kale, mus­tard or turnip greens, beet tops, spinach, etc.) cooked with chopped onions, 2 cloves of gar­lic and 1–2 table­spoons of Bragg Organic Olive Oil. After the meal you may take your evening sup­ple­ments and drink a cup of herbal tea.

At 6 p.m. Flaxseed Cleanse — optional — may take once daily: Before din­ner soak 1 table­spoon flaxseed in glass of water, apple or pineap­ple juice. Drink or spoon eat this mix­ture 2 hours after meal.

This Blog is moderated. It is created to be informative, inspiring and uplifting. Our positive philosophy at Bragg is to communicate with love and respect. As Paul and Patricia Bragg teach, in expressing your thoughts and opinions to others, ask yourself: "Is it good, is it kind, is it necessary?" All comments that do not fit this philosophy will not be posted.

February 5, 2008

Your Body Constantly Works for You — and You Must Work for Your Body!

Filed under: Bragg Book Excerpts — Tags: , — admin @ 6:00 AM

Excerpt from Bragg’s Healthy Heart Book — Chap­ter 11
Click book title for more information

The body is con­stantly break­ing down old bone and tis­sue cells and replac­ing them with new ones. As the body casts off old min­er­als and broken-down cells, it must obtain fresh food sup­plies of essen­tial ele­ments for new cells. Sci­en­tists are only now begin­ning to under­stand that var­i­ous kinds of den­tal prob­lems, dif­fer­ent types of arthri­tis and even some forms of artery hard­en­ing are due to body imbal­ances of cal­cium, phos­pho­rus and mag­ne­sium. Many dis­or­ders can be caused by imbal­ances in the ratios of min­er­als to each other.

Each individual’s healthy body requires a proper bal­ance within itself of all the nutri­tive ele­ments. It is just as bad for any indi­vid­ual to have too much of one item as it is to have too lit­tle of another one. For instance, it takes appro­pri­ate lev­els of phos­pho­rus and mag­ne­sium to keep cal­cium in solu­tion so it can be formed into new cells of bone and teeth. Yet there must not be too much mag­ne­sium nor too lit­tle cal­cium in the diet or old bone will be taken away and new bone will not be formed. We know that diets that are unbal­anced can deplete the body of essen­tial min­er­als and elements.

Diets high in meats, fish, eggs, grains and nuts or their prod­ucts may pro­vide unbal­anced excesses of phos­pho­rus which will leech cal­cium and mag­ne­sium from the bones, caus­ing them to be lost in the urine. A diet high in fats will tend to increase the intake of phos­pho­rus from the intestines rel­a­tive to cal­cium and other basic min­er­als. Such diets can also pro­duce a loss of the body’s basic min­er­als in the same way a high phos­pho­rus diet does. Diets exces­sively high in fruits or their juices may pro­vide unbal­anced excesses of fruit sug­ars and of potas­sium in the body, which also can leech cal­cium and mag­ne­sium from the body.

This Blog is moderated. It is created to be informative, inspiring and uplifting. Our positive philosophy at Bragg is to communicate with love and respect. As Paul and Patricia Bragg teach, in expressing your thoughts and opinions to others, ask yourself: "Is it good, is it kind, is it necessary?" All comments that do not fit this philosophy will not be posted.

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