2009 June 23 | Healthcare, Health Insurance, Vitamins, Nutrition

Healthcare, Health Insurance, Vitamins, Nutrition

June 23, 2009

Say NO to fad diets because….

How many fad diet’s have you been on so far? Low-carb diet, low-fat diet, liquid diet (using low-calorie, high-fiber shakes), grapefruit diet, detox diet, cabbage soup diet, macrobiotic diet, the juice diet: any one of these or more than one. Has anyone been able to stay on these deprivation diets for a long period of time? And if they did lose weight, did the pounds stay off once they went back to a more normal eating style?

Fad diets as the name suggests, refers to idiosyncratic diets and eating patterns. The virtue of a particular food or food group is exaggerated and purported to cure specific diseases, and is therefore incorporated as a primary constituent of an individual’s diet.And emphasis is placed on eating certain foods to express a particular lifestyle.

The reality is however that fad diets don’t work to help you lose weight and keep it off. What does work is eating fewer calories than you can possibly burn off. The fact is Calories really do count — no matter what. If you really want to trim down, the most effective way is to eat a variety of healthful foods, exercise 60 minutes every day, and stop super-sizing your meals.

Our body needs a healthy diet with the right balance of proteins, carbohydrates, and fat, as well as a host of other nutrients. Each vitamin or mineral regulates a bodily process. For instance, the mineral calcium keeps bones strong and helps to prevent low bone density and fractures. Vitamin A is important to keep your skin smooth and healthy. Vitamin C helps protect your body against infection. Vitamin E stimulates the function of T‑cells, which are important fighters in your immune system. When you go on a fad diet and exclude any of the necessary nutrients, you’re putting yourself at risk for illness. Getting too little of a specific nutrient may not cause a problem immediately. But if it’s depleted for a long period of time, you may suffer health consequences.

Father’s Day Gift

Filed under: General,Health Insurance — Tags: , — blogadmin @ 10:10 pm

The word ‘dad’ dates back to the 16th century. It may have originated with the Welsh word ‘tad’ (father), which later mutated to dad. The word ‘father’ is derived from the Old English ‘foeder’. It’s believed that 4,000 years ago in Babylon, a small boy called Elmesu etched a Father’s Day message on a clay card wishing his father a healthy life.

Father’s Day originated in America. The idea was conceived a century ago, by Sonora Dodd of Spokane, Washington, while listening to a Mother’s Day sermon in 1909. Dodd wanted a special day to honor her father, William Smart, a widowed Civil War veteran who was left to raise his six children on a farm. A day in June was chosen for the first Father’s Day celebration — June 19, 1910, proclaimed by Spokane’s mayor as it was the month of Smart’s birth.

Though Father’s Day was celebrated in the US since 1910, it was first made an official celebration in 1966 when US President Lyndon Johnson designated the third Sunday in June as Father’s Day. In 1972, President Richard Nixon signed a public law making it permanent. Dr Robert Webb of West Virginia is believed to have conducted the first Father’s Day service in 1908 at the Central Church of Fairmont.

One of the most common gifts associated with Father’s Day comprises of a necktie, followed by flowers. But would flowers alone express the love and care that our parents gave us? The times that we live in now need more medical care than any other time before. The mental, physical and environmental factors have taken quite a toll on our bodies. This Father’s day lets gift our parents a health insurance plan.

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