Orange is the New Pink this Breast Cancer Awareness Month | Physicians Committee

Women across the country should swap their pink ribbons for orange vegetables this Breast Cancer Awareness Month if they really want to improve their odds of fighting the disease that kills tens of thousands of women each year.

The latest research shows that women who consume the most carotenoid-rich fruits and vegetables reduce their risk for breast cancer by about 19 percent, according to Susan Levin, M.S., R.D., director of nutrition education for the Physicians Committee and author of Applying the Precautionary Principle to Nutrition and Cancer guidelines, which was published in the Journal of American College of Nutrition. Carotenoids are colorful pigments found in plants that provide an ample supply of cancer-fighting antioxidants.

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Orange is the New Pink this Breast Cancer Awareness Month | PhysiciansCommittee.

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My 30-Day Burger Experiment: Real vs. Fake Foods – YouTube

My 30 Day Burger Experiment! Are you eating REAL FOOD or FAKE FOOD? What is the difference between FullyRaw foods and processed foods? See these shocking results after I kept a burger in my garage for 30 days.

 

Dean Ornish, MD: Discussed the Struggle to Get the Message Out | Dr. McDougall’s Health & Medical Center

Dean Ornish, MD, is the founder and president of the non-profit Preventive Medicine Research Institute and Clinical Professor of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.

via Dean Ornish, MD: Discussed the Struggle to Get the Message Out | Dr. McDougall’s Health & Medical Center.

21-Day Vegan Challenge | Yoga Journal

A plant-based diet may be the secret to increased energy, better health, saving our planet, and becoming a more enlightened yogi. Here’s your roadmap for taking veganism for a test drive.

Ask the most well-respected nutrition researchers what the healthiest way to eat is, and they’ll give you a simple answer: unprocessed food, mostly plants. “All the research points to a plant-based diet—for your health and for the planet,” says David Katz, MD, director of Yale University’s Prevention Research Center and a leading expert on nutrition and health. Numerous studies show eating zero animal protein or significantly cutting back to only a few times a week, for example can help lower your risk for diabetes, heart disease, obesity, and cancer. “DNA does not determine your medical destiny—dinner does,” he says.

If that dinner includes meat and dairy, it may not be inherently unhealthy—a growing body of evidence suggests their saturated fat might not be as harmful as once thought. Nonetheless, plants are exponentially healthier, says Philip Tuso, MD, a plant-based nutrition expert with Kaiser Permanente Care Management Institute. “All the extra fiber, vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, and other phytonutrients you take in by swapping meat for plants have a healing and protective effect,” he says. In fact, eating a mostly vegan diet may even change the way your body reacts to meat if and when you do eat it: Studies suggest that when people who usually follow plant-based diets consume meat, their bodies don’t produce the same amounts of a chemical associated with heart disease, called TMAO, as omnivores’ bodies do.

The cost of the typical American diet goes beyond increased illness and subsequent health care dollars, however. It requires more than 1o times the energy, plus about 1oo times more water, to produce the same amount of meat protein as plant protein, according to studies on the true cost of farming. Mounting evidence suggests that every step of meat production, from feeding animals to processing meat, depletes resources, stressing an already- fragile environment. “Even if you could be healthy on an animal-based diet, it would be hard on a planet without enough water,” Katz says.

Here’s the thing: You don’t have to go hardcore vegan to reap a large helping of the environmental or health benefits, experts say. The key is to simply eat less beef, poultry, pork, fish, eggs, and dairy, and make the majority of your food plants, including plant-based proteins, such as beans and nuts, says Sharon Palmer, RD, author of Plant-Powered for Life and creator of our vegan meal plan. How you do that is up to you. Perhaps you have vegan days or weeks, eat vegan before 6 p.m. an idea promoted by The New York Times food columnist and cookbook author Mark Bittman, or follow a true Mediterranean diet, in which meat plays a small role. Whatever you choose, you’ll feel the difference almost immediately. “People who eat unprocessed, whole food and mostly plants have more energy. They feel better, they’re healthier, so they’re happier,” Katz says.

Why not see for yourself? Take our three-week vegan challenge, starting with the tasty and healthy recipes and tips on the following pages, then register online for more free recipes and support. For the full 21-day menu, sign up for our newsletters here. Whether you do it for a day, a week, 21 days, or forever, the proof will be in the dairy-free pudding.

See also 3 Ways Going Vegan Reduces Your Carbon Foot Print

via 21-Day Vegan Challenge | Yoga Journal.

No Bitter Pill: Doctors Prescribe Fruits And Veggies : The Salt : NPR

Ron Samascott with his local apples at the Union Square Greenmarket in New York. The city is teaming up with Wholesome Wave, hospitals and farm markets to pilot a fruit and vegetable prescription program.

Ron Samascott with his local apples at the Union Square Greenmarket in New York.

The city is teaming up with Wholesome Wave, hospitals and farm markets to pilot a fruit and vegetable prescription program .Mark Lennihan/AP

It was the Greeks who first counseled to let food be thy medicine. And, it seems, some doctors are taking this age-old advice to heart.

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via No Bitter Pill: Doctors Prescribe Fruits And Veggies : The Salt : NPR.

John Mackey: Discusses the Whole Foods Health Care System | Dr. McDougall’s Health & Medical Center

John Mackey, co-Founder & co-CEO of Whole Foods Market recently spoke at Dr. John & Mary McDougall’s Advanced Study Weekend in Santa Rosa, CA.

via John Mackey: Discusses the Whole Foods Health Care System | Dr. McDougall’s Health & Medical Center.

▶ The Science of Climate Change – A Conversation with Dr. Patrick Moore – YouTube

Published on Sep 26, 2014

Why has there been an emphasis on the last hundred years when people speak about climate change? What are the untold benefits of increased CO2 levels? Is it true that there is a near scientific consensus on Climate Change? What are some examples of Climate Change advocate hypocrisy? Why did Dr. Patrick Moore leave Greenpeace? What does the science say about genetically modified organism GMO such as golden rice?

Stefan Molyneux speaks with one of the founding members of Greenpeace, Dr. Patrick Moore. For more information on Dr. Moore, please go to: http://www.ecosense.me

To buy “Confessions of a Greenpeace Dropout: The Making of a Sensible Environmentalist” please go to: http://www.fdrurl.com/PatrickMoore

Ditch the Dairy: No Milk Mustache for the Quaker Oats Man! – Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine

Tell Quaker Oats to Ditch the Dairy!

Oatmeal with Green Apple

Bad news for the Quaker Oats man: He’s getting a milk mustache this October. Quaker is launching a campaign urging you to douse oatmeal’s disease-fighting benefits with dairy milk, which is loaded with cholesterol, saturated fat, and sugar. MilkPEP, a milk promotion program funded by the dairy industry, is behind the promotion. But you can urge Quaker to save face—and its customers’ health—by ditching the dairy. Dairy is the top source of saturated fat in the American diet and exacerbates America’s No. 1 killer: heart disease. Milk also increases the risk of prostate, ovarian, and other cancers. And it causes cramping, diarrhea, and bloating for the 65 percent of the population who are lactose intolerant. Swapping whole milk for 2% won’t lessen the nutritional impact either. Skim and nonfat milks are not much better than the full fat variety. Most of their calories come from sugar—lactose—which is why they pack about as many calories as a typical soda. But Quaker Oats recipes can be easily made with plant-based milks that—unlike dairy products—are cholesterol-free and don’t contribute to heart disease, cancer, or digestive issues. Please take a minute to sign our petition below. Let Quaker Oats know that dairy-free is the healthiest way to be!

via Ditch the Dairy: No Milk Mustache for the Quaker Oats Man! – Physicians Committee.

More from Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine and Dr. Neal Barnard:

http://pcrm.org/health/

 

 

Dr. John McDougall’s Advanced Study Weekend speakers

I bought the package to view these sessions online and as I continue to work my way through them, I am so impressed and encouraged. I can’t share the videos, but did want to provide a list of the speakers, their topics, and links to their sites:

http://www.mcdougallmedia.com/products.php?catid=1&category=Advanced%20Study

Some Dr. Neal Barnard YouTube videos: https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=neal+barnard