Showing posts with label physical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label physical. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

If your doctor is unhealthy, fire them!



A headline like this is not meant to be harsh or provocative but rather thought-provoking. Do not misunderstand the headline. It is not meant to suggest that you should fire your healthcare providers if they happen to be sick or unhealthy due to circumstances beyond their control. This may include an accident, genetic defect etc. However, if they are sick or unhealthy due to their own ignorance or willful neglect, it may be time to give them the pink slip! Let me ask you this: if you were struggling to quit an alcoholic addition would you want to waste your time and money being counseled by a healthcare professional who also struggled to overcome it? Would you keep listening to a pastor who was not living what he was preaching? The obvious answer to these questions is no. So why do we pay doctors and nurses to check our health and help us either recover or maintain our good health if those same doctors and nurses are not healthy themselves?

Healthy healthcare providers?

It can be difficult to determine the health of your healthcare provider just by looking at them especially if there are no obvious signs of obesity among other things. It is true that not every person who appears to be “big-boned” is unhealthy. It also true that not every slim person is healthy because of how their body may appear. This is where communication between you as the patient and your healthcare provider is imperative. They expect you to be open and honest about the lifestyle choices you make that contribute to your health or lack thereof; it should be reciprocal. Your relationship with your healthcare provider regarding your health should be a two-way street. If they recommend you to become and stay as healthy as possible, is it too much to see the same from them, since after all, you are paying them, they aren’t paying you? Healthcare professionals should be setting a good example for their patients. When you go for a check-up, they are essentially interviewing you, so to hold them accountable to you (their customer) it would be helpful if you also conducted your own interview.

It is important for patients to know their healthcare provider’s state of health. An online Times of Malta article entitled Doctors and Nurses Don’t Always Have Healthy Habits referring to a US study reported in Mayo Clinic Proceedings explained that, along with the general public, many medical professionals in the U.S. lead unhealthy diets and lifestyles which in turn can induce illnesses. A report on Time.com entitled What to do about Docs who Smoke, Drink, and Tan said “It’s unrealistic to expect that knowledge should prompt physicians to avoid unhealthy behaviors… Just like everybody else, they have a low-risk perception with regard to their health”. To reinforce the idea that it would be good to hold our doctors, nurses and other healthcare professionals accountable to us as their patients the article also stated that, “physicians and nurses have the same level of obesity as the general population. Our caregivers are human too and can succumb to same behaviors that everyone else can.” Be assured that this article is not meant to tear down our healthcare providers by any means, but rather to build them up because a healthy society needs healthy healthcare providers. This information is a resource to encourage those in the healthcare profession to reach a higher standard of health excellence. Not only for their own lives but for the lives of their patients as well.

An article on Amednews.com, entitled Overweight Doctors Lose Credibility on Health Advice states, “To help strengthen physician-patient relationships, overweight or obese physicians should discuss their weight during office visits with new patients or when discussing health behaviors such as diet and exercise, said Phyllis A. Guze, MD, a Los Angeles internist and infectious diseases specialist. This same article also stated, “Dr. Guze urges overweight physicians to heed the diet and exercise advice they often give their patients, including eating more fruits and vegetables and fewer processed foods.” The unfortunate fact of the matter is that the healthcare providers are not entirely to blame. It is the broken education and medical establishment that is the greatest concern. When we factor in the long and stressful work environment and abundance of fast food/processed foods (low in nutritional value) at many hospitals, is it that hard to see why healthcare providers could fail to be the examples of health they should be?

Hippocrates, known as the “father of western medicine”, inspired the creation of the “Hippocratic Oath”. This is still invoked by physicians swearing to practice medicine where the patient’s health needs come first. However, as the phrase, “charity begins at home” goes, in this case refers to the notion that healthcare providers should be able to properly manage their own health before they can consistently advise it to their patients. As Dr. George Malkmus’ Health News Tip put it, “Today’s medical schools do not train doctors to treat patients’ symptoms with food as Hippocrates so wisely advised. Rather they are trained that for every disease there is a symptom and for every symptom there is a drug. It’s not surprising when one considers that the drug industry invests huge sums of money into the schools that train doctors. Thus these drug companies are able to exert great influence on the curriculum.” Physicians, nurses etc are trained in a medical environment that puts the bottom line before the health of the healthcare providers or their patients.

The American Medical Association has reported that, “health professionals face many of the same challenges as the public in maintaining a healthy weight. Among the key factors that contribute to overweight and obesity among doctors is a lack of work-life balance, insufficient time to eat and exercise properly, stress and too little sleep”. According to the Atlantic Magazine online, students from John Hopkins University (JPU) started the Patient Promise project in order help get patients healthier by first getting clinicians healthier. The website thepatientpromise.org defines this project, “as a unique commitment between healthcare professionals and patients that aims to instill a deep sense of partnership into their relationship and, in the process, change the culture of healthcare. Practitioners and students of medicine, nursing, and related fields can “lead by example” by practicing similar healthy lifestyle behaviors - physical activity, balanced nutrition, stress management - that they ask of their patients”. Nobel Peace Prize-winning physician Albert Schweitzer is quoted by the Atlantic as stating that, "Example is not the main thing in influencing others. It is the only thing." Following this advice the medical students at JPU that are behind the Patient Promise are looking to promote what their website calls a “Hippocrates not hypocrisy” culture with the healthcare provider community.

Ways you can give them a check up

To reiterate, making an assumption based on physical appearance alone is not the best way to determine the status of someone’s health. It is helpful to ask your healthcare providers good questions. Asking minimal yes or no questions might seem sufficient, but it would be wise to avoid asking too many of these type of questions as they do not provoke thoughtful responses. You need to know some open-ended questions to ask them (either over the phone or in person) to help you know if they too are living what they would prescribe for you. However, when you approach your healthcare provider with your questions it is always good to approach them with humility and respect and not as if you have a chip on your shoulder.
Now here are suggested questions to ask your health care providers. This list is not meant to be exhaustive.

  • How much time do you devote to aerobic exercise per week?

  • What is your favorite snack food and how often do you eat that?

  • Do you own a juicer? If so, how often in a week do you make and consume freshly squeezed (raw/unpasteurized) fruit or vegetable juices?

  • Do you believe in fasting? If so, for how long would you fast for? When was the last time you fasted? What kind of fast was it (all water, all juice, or a combination)?

  • How much fast food/take-out food do you consume in week?

  • How much processed/packaged food do you eat on a daily basis?

  • How many hours of sleep do you get per day?

  • How many servings of raw/uncooked fruits and vegetables do you typically consume per day?

  • How many animal products do you typically consume in a day?

  • How often in a day do you consume white (processed) table salt and white (processed) sugar or products that contain them?

  • What factors do you consider when you buy a packaged/processed food item?

  • How many servings of organic/non-GMO produce do you consume in a week?

  • Do you smoke cigars or cigarettes? If one or the other, how often do you smoke in a typical day? How long have you smoked?

  • What area of your health would you like to see improved? What are active steps are you consistently taking to meet that goal?

Hopefully, these questions will give you ideas for questions you can come up with on your own. Let’s remember that no health care professional is perfect, so we shouldn’t put them on a pedestal. They are not gods, so it is reasonable that patients should hold the feet of their health-care providers to the fire and expect that what they are preaching in the office, hospital rooms and clinics should be being lived out in their private lives.


Sources:

Friday, December 25, 2015

WHOLE Health Note 7 - Christmas edition


WHOLE HEALTH NOTE

(Christmas edition)
By: Jay Ricci




Jesus was born to die for everyone’s sins (including yours and mine) and neither the manger nor the cross is where He ultimately desired to stay. Just as Jesus was physically conceived in Mary, He wants to be spiritually conceived in you, He wants to be born in you and then live in you to do the Father’s will for the rest of your life. This is how you too can be a mother for Him, like Mary (see Matthew 12:50).


In their day, the Magi gave expensive gifts to Jesus (Matt 2:11) but the reason they were considered “wise men” was because they gave Him what mattered most. Today, you can also give gifts to Jesus, but what He really wants more than your “stuff” is a trust relationship with you. Is there room in your “inn” for Him? For you to “present” or gift yourself to Christ, completely and sincerely not just today but on a daily basis, would truly be more precious to Him than any gold, frankincense and myrrh would ever be. So as you celebrate His birthday, give Him what He really wants: YOU.



Happy Birthday to Jesus and Merry Christmas to you and your family!

Thursday, December 24, 2015

WHOLE Health Note - 6


WHOLE HEALTH NOTE

By: Jay Ricci




In this passage, the Apostle Paul was reminding the leaders of the church in Ephesus that he left no stone unturned in his goal to bless them in any way he could and in doing so the blessing became mutual. Just as fragrance from flowers remain on the hands that give them, when we seek the enrichment of another person’s life our lives likewise will automatically be more enriched in ways that really matter. So to whom can you go be blessed and a blessing to today?




*Whole Health Note is my blog's weekly version of  the daily version Christ Note Today. If you are interested in subscribing to the daily version and receiving spiritual encouragement from other writers, sign up for free here: 

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

WHOLE Health Note - 5

WHOLE HEALTH NOTE

By: Jay Ricci



The context of this passage deals with the Apostle Paul’s love and concern for the church at Corinth he was writing to, and because this is God’s Word, it is ultimately relevant for us today as well. God wants you to know that He is pursuing YOU not “yours” (i.e. your stuff, your performance). His love for you is priceless, so rest your head on that pillow of truth.







*Whole Health Note is my blog's weekly version of  the daily version Christ Note Today. If you are interested in subscribing to the daily version and receiving spiritual encouragement from other writers, sign up for free here: 

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Studies show that houses of worship promote ill health...does yours?

A familiar cliché to people in some religious communities is, “You’re so heavenly minded you’re no earthly good.” Perhaps for this article that cliché could be restated as, “you’re so spiritually firm for heaven, you’re not physically fit for earth.” Many religions, regardless of their beliefs surrounding the after-life would, if pressed, stress the importance of living a healthy, peaceful, and charity-filled life here and now. Faith groups may be doing well in the spiritual areas; however, the statistics show that they’re getting failing grades in the health department.


The Diagnosis

Research shows a direct correlation between religion and poor health, specifically concerning obesity. According to a Purdue University study, “Sociology Professor Kenneth Ferraro a  found the correlation between being overweight and being religious was statistically significant regardless of a person's choice of faith…The religious lifestyle has long been considered a healthy one, with its constraints on sexual promiscuity, alcohol and tobacco use," Ferraro says. "However, overeating may be one sin that pastors and priests regularly overlook. And as such, many firm believers may have not-so-firm bodies….In state-by-state comparisons, Ferraro found the percentage of obesity highest in states where religious affiliation was more prevalent.” The level of obesity varied among different religious groups, though conservative evangelical Christian churches generally had higher rates of obesity in their ranks. Nonetheless the study showed that “Being overweight was a tendency across all religious beliefs [including Jewish, Muslim, Catholic, Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist and many religious immigrants as well].”

The Purdue study was conducted several years ago, however a more recent study was done by the Center for Disease Control (CDC) which yielded similar results. In their research they found that in a nation-wide sample of the U.S. population, the prevalence of obesity is greater in those involved in religion of some sort than those who that did not report a religion of any kind.
In addition, a nine year Utah-specific health study compiled by health science professor Ray Merrill of Brigham Young University (BYU), a Mormon school, found that active Mormons are 14 percent more likely to be obese than non-Mormons.

To be clear, the research mentioned in this article is not implying that religion itself causes obesity; rather the inclusion of unhealthy food in religious activities does. Though some may downplay the above research perhaps under the impression that it only involves obesity and not other major diseases like cancer etc., obesity is nothing to ignore. Dr. Donald Lloyd-Jones, chair of preventative medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine observed, “Obesity is the major epidemic that is facing the U.S. population right now. We know that people with obesity have substantial risks for developing diabetes, heart disease, and certain types of cancer, and of dying much younger.”


Possible cures

Responding to the dismal health picture painted by the research, Matthew Feistein, lead investigator for the BYU study previously mentioned said, "Here's an opportunity for religious organizations to initiate programs to help their congregations live even longer." Former Pastor and founder of the Hallelujah Diet Dr. George Malkmus, ignorantly promoted ill health in his church. However since 1989 he has been passionate about training clergy to promote health rather than sickness. One need not be overweight; even if a thin person eats enough GMO laden junk “food” long enough he/she will put themselves on the path to illness just as any obese person would. 

Dr. Malkmus admonishes ministers, “Why are some 90% of the prayer requests in our churches for the healing of those in our churches who are sick? Do you not see a relationship between how we nourish these physical bodies and the physical problems the people in our churches experience and pray to be healed from? …In our church socials, the tables [are] heaped with sugar desserts, and animal flesh …are you aware that these items — that are being offered and served in our churches to this very day — contribute to ill health? Sugar destroys the immune system and makes us susceptible to colds, viruses, and bacteria and yes…cancer!  The fat in the animal products clog up the arteries and cause high blood pressure, need for stents and bypasses along with heart attacks, strokes, and diabetes. These animal products also cause cancer, arthritis, asthma, acid stomach, heartburn, gout, liver problems and more. Rather than giving the children in our churches cheap junk food, we should provide them with health promoting foods like apples, oranges, date-nut balls and ice water rather than sugar-laden soda or “fruit” drinks. And for our socials, let’s provide our church people with such items as salads of all kinds – vegetable salads, bean salads, corn salads, whole grain pasta salads, etc., along with baked white and sweet potatoes, and a variety of cooked and raw vegetables and fresh fruits. There are so many delicious dishes that tantalize the taste buds and fill the stomach that are healthy and health promoting. Why do we have to serve our church people at the various church functions unhealthy fare that promotes ill health? Does this make any sense?”

Dr. Malkmus and others like him encourage clergy of all stripes to set the example by adopting a healthier lifestyle and promoting health rather than sickness. It is high time that we begin preaching from our pulpits …how to properly nourish and maintain these physical bodies we have on loan from God.”

In addition to our religious traditions, due to the way certain eating habits have been ingrained in us through society, our families and holiday get-togethers - it can be challenging to make healthy changes. With the right educational tools and desire for health and healing - not only for ourselves but for our neighbors - we can see start to bring our houses of worship back to the health experienced in the Garden of Eden.



Sources:

http://www.myhdiet.com/healthnews/how-churches-promote-ill-health/
 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16431132
http://www.purdue.edu/uns/html4ever/1998/9803.Ferraro.fat.html
 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3358928/
http://www.nature.com/ijo/journal/v27/n4/full/0802220a.html
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/700124603/Study-finds-link-between-religion-obesity.html?pg=all
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/635184267/A-weighty-religious-issue-LDS-heavier.html
http://www.christianpost.com/news/firm-faith-fat-body-study-finds-high-rate-of-obesity-among-religious-49568/
http://halls.md/religsity/
http://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/among-asian-indians-religiosity-247359

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0091743513001953





PERSONAL TESTIMONIES OF HEALING

Mother and daughter reclaim optimal health: Since following the Hallelujah diet and lifestyle, after I was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2004, my mother and I have collectively lost over 100 pounds and I have conquered cancer! Hallelujah! We are healthier, stronger and more vibrant than we've ever been.
Anne's health recovery: I benefited greatly on the [Hallelujah] diet also, getting rid of arthritis and 20 extra pounds in just the first six weeks after adopting the hallelujah diet.


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(FEATURED RECIPE)

"Vegetable Curry"
 

Submitted by: Lorraine, MA

Ingredients:

4 potatoes, peeled and diced
1 onion, chopped
1 red pepper, chopped
2 carrots, diced
2 largee tomatoes, chopped
1 60z can of tomato paste
¾ cup of filtered water
2 tbs curry powder
2 tsp cumin seeds
½ tsp garlic powder
½ tsp sea salt or Himalayan salt
3 cups cauliflower florets
1 10oz package of frozen peas, thawed

Directions:

Place the potatoes, onion, pepper, carrots, and tomatoes in a crock pot. Stir in the tomato paste, water, curry powder, cumin seeds, garlic powder and salt. Mix well and add the cauliflower florets. Cover; cook on Low for 8-9 hours or on Low for 4-5 hours. Stir in peas just before serving.
Recommended Unit Size: 4-7 Quarts


-------------------***FOR SPIRITUAL HEALTH***------------------
"Man shall not live by bread alone...." 
(Matt 4:4)


Feel free to listen to my sermon below and may it help you become or stay spiritually healthy:
Sermon title: "In the Garden"

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