If cancer and heart disease are so frightening, then why is 1 in 3 Americans obese, and why does only 1 in 10 eat the recommended number of servings of fruits and vegetables? The American Cancer Society and the American Heart Association, here in their first jointly written book, think it may be because of the onslaught of conflicting health information announced by the media. It's also a byproduct of managed care, because you're likely to be told you have high blood pressure and have a prescription swiftly given to you, whether or not you know how dangerous this may be, what your exact reading was, or what "blood pressure" really means.
Living Well, Staying Well aims to remedy these problems with its practical, easy-to-follow guidelines to help you reduce your risk of developing cancer and heart disease by teaching you how to cut high cholesterol levels, lower blood pressure, lose weight, and eat right.
These are daunting, even overwhelming tasks, to be sure, and that's why the authors have smartly broken each health "project" into simple steps. From 23 sneaky ways to work physical fitness into your day to proven tips for quitting smoking, Living Well, Staying Well's main aim is to help you take better care of yourself, one day at a time. The ACS and the AHA don't want you to become a statistic (and they're scary: each year, 1.5 million Americans have a heart attack and 1.2 million are diagnosed with cancer). Living Well, Staying Well can help you help yourself prevent health problems, all in a friendly, accessible format. Highly recommended.
In Living Well, Staying Well, you'll learn dozens of ways to achieve maximum health by making small changes that can add up to big health rewards. Here are a few examples:
-- Fill out the "What Happens When I Quit Smoking" questionnaire to pinpoint the best strategy for you to use to break the nicotine habit. Then follow "The Five Ds" to help you stick with it. After your last smoke, it will take only twenty minutes for your blood pressure to return to normal. After forty-eight hours, your damaged nerve endings will start to regrow. And by one year after you quit, your heart attack risk will decrease by half.
-- Try switching from whole milk to 1 percent or nonfat milk for your cereal, coffee, and baking. A cup of whole milk has about twice as many calories as a cup of nonfat/skim milk -- twenty times as much fat! Make the switch and see how quickly those calorie savings add up.
-- Take the salt shaker off your table, and put a pepper mill, lemon slices, and a shaker with well-seasoned vinegar there instead -- and see how easy it is to keep your sodium level down!
-- To fit fitness into a hectic lifestyle, use the walk-up instead of the drive-in lane at the bank, park your car several blocks from your destination and walk the rest of the way, or go to a museum instead of a movie. Even standing up instead of sitting while you talk on the phone or watching TV sitting up instead of lying down can help.
-- Put sunscreen on your children, thereby helping them avoid up to 80 percent of skin damage.