Kickstart your New Year’s health resolutions this month with these top nutrition tips from our Senior Dietitians at Blackrock Health Hermitage Clinic.

Blackrock Health

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Kickstart your New Year’s health resolutions this month with these top nutrition tips from our Senior Dietitians at Blackrock Health Hermitage Clinic. Prioritise your health this year by following some simple guidelines:

– Prioritise whole foods: Swap processed snacks for nourishing, nutrient-dense snacks such as nuts and dried fruits, fruit and yogurt, cheese and crackers, nutty flapjacks, oat snacks. When opting for convenience snacks be aware of the ingredient list, some snacks which may label themselves as ‘healthy’ alternatives may have a long list of ingredients, generally the more whole ingredients and the shorter the list the better!

– Stay hydrated: Start each day with a glass of water and aim for 8 glasses throughout the day. Proper hydration is key for energy and overall well-being.

– Limit alcohol: Alcohol dehydrates and can cause fatigue which leads to poorer food choices as well as negatively impacting overall health. Swap alcoholic drinks for non-alcoholic alternatives where possible and aiming for at least three alcohol free days per week.

– Stay active: Incorporating some daily movement (outside if possible) will support overall mood, energy levels and health.

– Plan ahead: Try not let busy schedules derail your healthy eating goals. Meal prepping, batch cooking and planning snacks will help you stay on track.

At Blackrock Health, our Dietetics and Clinical Nutrition department is made up of Registered Dietitians who help manage and support a variety of nutritional and medical concerns to patients across our clinics.

If you are interested in outpatient dietetic support please visit our Dietetics & Nutrition pages (https://www.blackrockhealth.com/treat…/dietetics-nutrition) where you will find the many options available.

Kickstart your New Year’s health resolutions this month with these top nutrition tips from our Senior Dietitians at Blackrock Health Hermitage Clinic.

Blackrock Health

tospndeoSrmrtcy89u1hn08m6a:3h390u9210J10t a a0730m9fl 2aa86u  ยท 

Kickstart your New Year’s health resolutions this month with these top nutrition tips from our Senior Dietitians at Blackrock Health Hermitage Clinic. Prioritise your health this year by following some simple guidelines:

– Prioritise whole foods: Swap processed snacks for nourishing, nutrient-dense snacks such as nuts and dried fruits, fruit and yogurt, cheese and crackers, nutty flapjacks, oat snacks. When opting for convenience snacks be aware of the ingredient list, some snacks which may label themselves as ‘healthy’ alternatives may have a long list of ingredients, generally the more whole ingredients and the shorter the list the better!

– Stay hydrated: Start each day with a glass of water and aim for 8 glasses throughout the day. Proper hydration is key for energy and overall well-being.

– Limit alcohol: Alcohol dehydrates and can cause fatigue which leads to poorer food choices as well as negatively impacting overall health. Swap alcoholic drinks for non-alcoholic alternatives where possible and aiming for at least three alcohol free days per week.

– Stay active: Incorporating some daily movement (outside if possible) will support overall mood, energy levels and health.

– Plan ahead: Try not let busy schedules derail your healthy eating goals. Meal prepping, batch cooking and planning snacks will help you stay on track.

At Blackrock Health, our Dietetics and Clinical Nutrition department is made up of Registered Dietitians who help manage and support a variety of nutritional and medical concerns to patients across our clinics.

If you are interested in outpatient dietetic support please visit our Dietetics & Nutrition pages (https://www.blackrockhealth.com/treat…/dietetics-nutrition) where you will find the many options available.

Make 2025 the year your health resolution sticks. Small, sustainable changes are the key to success. Health is more than just weight. Prioritize quality food, movement, and healthy habits. @MayoClinic

Making your weight-loss resolution stick

12/19/2024 by Luke Hafdahl, M.D.

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As the Earth completes another trip around the sun, many people reflect on the previous year’s weight-loss resolutions that didn’t work out as planned. You have undoubtedly seen an explosion of weight-loss medication advertisements over the last year. While these medicines can potentially be helpful, they need to be used in conjunction with healthy lifestyle changes. Here are some tips to make 2025 the year your weight-loss resolutions stick!

Start with a diet to lose weight. Weight loss is 20% in exercise and 80% in the kitchen. You will get far more weight loss by focusing on diet to start.

Think small! Aim to lose about three to five pounds per month. Rapid weight loss is usually a sign that you’re doing something that will be hard to keep up. Don’t go on a “diet,” instead make a “lifestyle change” by focusing on small things you can sustain for the rest of your life. Remember: Small changes over a long period yield big results.

Rethink your drink. Calories are experts at sneaking into your diet without you even noticing, especially in beverages. Reducing or eliminating sugary drinks and alcohol can make a HUGE difference. Consider these simple substitutions: diet soda instead of regular soda, skim milk instead of whole milk for your coffee, flavored water instead of fruit juice, etc.

Avoid portion pitfalls. Oversized portions derail the best weight-loss plans. Give these quick fixes a try:

  • At restaurants, put half of your meal in a to-go box as soon as it comes to the table.
  • At home, keep serving dishes away from the dining table to discourage seconds and thirds.
  • With snacking, put your snack in a bowl or container rather than sit and munch with the whole package at hand.
  • Spoil your dinner! A healthy snack before dinner that leads to eating less at your meal is A-OK!

Ease into exercise. Exercise is key to a healthy life, but if you’re not doing much exercise to start, going from zero to 60 is a recipe for crash and burn. Start low and go slow. Start with 10 minutes of exercise per week. Add 10 minutes weekly and slowly build up to 30 minutes five days a week. How do you know if you’re exercising right? If you’re breathing hard enough that it would be challenging to have a conversation with someone, then you’re doing it right!

Put a dietitian in your pocket. Have a smartphone or tablet device? Use it to work for you! Knowing which foods are good and bad is only part of the struggle. MyFitnessPal is a fantastic, free app that helps you set weight-loss goals and track your calories.

Most important: Don’t focus on weight too much! Weight is only one piece of the health puzzle! We tend to focus on weight as it is the easiest to see and measure, but being healthy is much more than your weight. The quality of the food you eat, the exercise you get and the unhealthy choices you avoid are just as important!

Remember that your healthcare clinician is there for you. Don’t hesitate to ask for guidance and talk about available tools to lose weight and be healthy. Make 2025 the year your weight-loss resolutions stick so you have many more trips around the sun.

Luke Hafdahl, M.D.,โ€ฏis a Community Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Palliative Care physician. He has a particular interest in medical education.

Why Your Face Gets Beet Red When You Drink @ClevelandClinic #inflammation

It may come on in those first few sips of alcohol. Or maybe youโ€™re hit with a hot flash whenever youโ€™re a few drinks in. But whenever you drink, you seem to experience a sudden sensation of warmth, and your face, neck and upper chest become covered in red patches and blotchy skin.

Is facial flushing a sign that you canโ€™t handle your alcohol? Or is this a symptom of something more severe? Dermatologist Alok Vij, MD, explains just what causes facial flushing, along with some truth behind some common misconceptions.

What causes your face to turn red when you drink alcohol?

There are a couple of different root causes for facial flushing. More technically termed the โ€œalcohol flush reaction,โ€ this occurs because your body either canโ€™t fully digest the alcohol youโ€™re consuming or because your body is having an inflammatory response to drinking alcohol.

โ€œYour face may flush from alcohol for two reasons: Because of an enzyme deficiency or because of rosacea,โ€ says Dr. Vij. โ€œBoth are tied to your ethnicity.โ€

Enzyme deficiency

Many Asian populations, specifically 35% to 45% of East Asians, have a deficiency in alcohol dehydrogenase, the enzyme that breaks down a specific substance in alcohol called acetaldehyde.

โ€œAlcohol is toxic to cells, and when it gets into the cells of your blood vessels, it makes them dilate,โ€ explains Dr. Vij. โ€œThis reddens the skin and can make you feel warm.โ€

But without enough of this enzyme, you can end up having too much acetaldehyde in your body, and this makes alcohol reach toxic levels much earlier in your cells. This results in your skin becoming flushed.

Rosacea

Fair-skinned people of Northern European backgrounds who flush when they drink may have some degree of rosacea.

โ€œThis very common skin condition is marked by vasomotor instability or hyperactivity,โ€ Dr. Vij explains further. โ€œThat means lots of things can dilate your blood vessels: alcohol, chocolate, hot beverages and spicy foods โ€” basically, all the good things in life.โ€

Should I be worried?

You may be asking yourself this question if youโ€™ve ever experienced facial flushing. On the surface, facial flushing might feel cosmetically embarrassing at most and may not come with any other dangerous symptoms. For those with an enzyme deficiency, facial flushing can occasionally be experienced with increased onset of nausea or vomiting because of your bodyโ€™s inability to fully digest the alcohol youโ€™re consuming.

For the most part, these factors are mostly harmless. But because alcohol is a cellular toxin, anyone who drinks excessively increases their risk for oral cancer and esophageal cancer.

โ€œAlcohol most frequently passes through these sites,โ€ states Dr. Vij. โ€œToxicity and DNA damage can build up in cells and, eventually, a cancer can form.โ€

But recent studies report that those who get an alcohol flush because of an enzyme deficiency are also at heightened risk of digestive, liver and respiratory cancers. These populations are more vulnerable to alcoholโ€™s toxicity, as itโ€™s processed and later eliminated in:

  • Your gastrointestinal (GI) tract, especially your stomach, where alcohol is absorbed.
  • Your liver, where alcohol is sent after itโ€™s absorbed by your stomach.
  • Your lungs, where alcohol in your blood is released in your breath.

Is rosacea linked to cancer?

โ€œWe donโ€™t think of rosacea as a precancerous disease,โ€ Dr. Vij clarifies. โ€œThe biggest problems rosacea causes are a bulbous nose, like W.C. Fields had, and eye inflammation.โ€

(It was rosacea โ€” not alcoholism โ€” that made the storied comedianโ€™s nose look large, red and bumpy, because of an overgrowth of the sebaceous glands, Dr. Vij adds.)

In addition, rosacea can make your eyes feel itchy, dry and chronically irritated. These eye symptoms can be managed with anti-inflammatory medication.

โ€œWe typically prescribe oral antibiotics like doxycycline or minocycline, often at lower doses than are required to kill bacteria,โ€ he continues.

How to prevent facial flushing when drinking

If an alcohol flush makes you feel self-conscious when you drink, certain treatments can help:

  • Topical medications:ย Medicines likeย brimonidineย (Mirvasoยฎ) can block blood vessels in your skin from dilating.
  • Laser treatments:ย A series of laser treatments canย shrink the superficial blood vesselsย in your skin. โ€œYou usually need three to 10 treatments to get the full effect, but it can last for years, and prevent broken blood vessels in the later stages of rosacea,โ€ notes Dr. Vij.

But because these medications and laser treatments are considered cosmetic, they arenโ€™t typically covered by insurance.

Are some types of alcohol more likely to cause flushing?

So, if your face flushes, are specific kinds of alcohol to blame? And can you avoid some but not others as an at-home treatment approach to facial flushing?

โ€œItโ€™s really patient-specific. Some people with rosacea flush more with red wine; others flush more with hard liquor,โ€ says Dr. Vij.

If you have rosacea and keep track of what happens when you drink, you may be able to find your triggers. But if facial flushing is an issue for you at all, avoiding alcohol in all its forms might be the next best and most equitable solution.

โ€œIf flushing bothers you, and you know alcohol is a trigger, the easiest and most cost-effective solution is to avoid it,โ€ suggests Dr. Vij.

Each body is different. Therefore each rehabilitation must be different. #horizonptflint #physiotherapy


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๐˜๐จ๐ฎ๐ซ ๐›๐จ๐๐ฒ ๐ข๐ฌ ๐š ๐ญ๐ž๐ฆ๐ฉ๐ฅ๐ž ๐จ๐Ÿ ๐จ๐ง๐ž.
๐’๐จ, ๐ฌ๐ก๐จ๐ฎ๐ฅ๐๐ง’๐ญ ๐ฒ๐จ๐ฎ๐ซ ๐ซ๐ž๐ก๐š๐›๐ข๐ฅ๐ข๐ญ๐š๐ญ๐ข๐จ๐ง ๐›๐ž ๐š๐ฌ ๐ฎ๐ง๐ข๐ช๐ฎ๐ž ๐š๐ฌ ๐ฒ๐จ๐ฎ ๐š๐ซ๐ž?
At Horizon Physical Therapy, we understand that no two bodies are the same, and therefore, no two rehabilitation programs should be the same either.
That’s why we put ๐ฒ๐จ๐ฎ first by creating a personalized treatment plan tailored to meet your unique needs.
We believe in the power of individualized therapy, and we know it can make a difference in your recovery journey.
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