Better Health in 30 Minutes

 

Are you constantly confused about what to eat?

Still can’t seem to lose weight no matter what you do?

Do you want some simple solutions that you can do daily to prevent diabetes or heart disease?

 

Head to Toe Fitness Studio is teaming up with ChiroKatie as we join together for a Happier & Healthier YOU!

Better Health in 30 Minutes

30 simple lifestyle habits and tips you can actually use

(and No! you don’t have to clean your plate!)


Please join us for this wellness talk at the details below
Where: Head to Toe Fitness Studio, Downsville, NY
When: March 25th, 2013 (Monday)
Time: 7:00 PM
Cost: Free

A Q&A session will follow after the talk, so please bring your questions for us to answer!!! All ages are welcome. Light refreshments will be served. We look forward to having you!

Where You Can Find Me

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Head to Toe Fitness Studio

I am currently accepting and treating patients at the Head to Toe Fitness studio in Downsville, NY on Mondays. Appointment times can be arranged from 9am to 6:30pm. Other times are available if necessary. Additional visits may be scheduled as needed for the rest of the week based on your complaint. Adjustments at other times and days (besides Monday) may be held at Dr. Mattson’s home on back river road. Please call at 607-267-7263 or schedule online by clicking on the button to the right!

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The home office

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The home office…do you love our moose?!

Simple Self-Massage Techniques

Last week I held a class teaching some lucky ladies how to do some self-massage techniques involving a foam roller and a lacrosse ball (or tennis ball). I’ve uploaded the free hand-out here as well as posted some quality YouTube videos for further demonstration.

5 Tips to follow:

1. Never roll on your low back (below the ribs to the top of your hip bones) as it could injure the area rather than help it.

2. Roll slow and steady.

3. When you find a very sore spot (also known as a knot or trigger point), stay on that spot for 30 seconds or until the pain starts to diminish.

4. Remember to breathe! Inhale through your nose (deeply) and exhale through your nose. When holding a spot on a sore area (trigger point), stay there for a few breathes till the pain starts to diminish.

5. Start with a low density foam if you are doing this for the first time or have not done self-massage in the past.

Foam Roller Handout

Wellness Event Tomorrow

11.25.12: Head to Toe Fitness Anniversary Celebration 1-3 pm, Downsville, NY

Chirokatie will be at Head to Toe Fitness studio answering questions about chiropractic, myofascial release techniques, giving free postural exams and is raffling off a complimentary back scan, foam roller, and balance disc!

Head to Toe Anniversary Event on Facebook

     

Pickin’ Chickens

A hen chicken (Gallus gallus)

(Photo credit: Wikipedia)

If you’ve read my last post on grass-fed meat than you already will understand why pastured meat birds are no different. All pastured chickens are supplemented with grain but they are superior as they receive added nutritional value from having unlimited access to grass and bugs. Organic chickens you buy at the supermarket quite possibly have never seen a blade of grass. When you purchase organic chicken you are buying the guaranty of no antibiotics and non-genetically modified feed (although this is nearly impossible as 70-90% of all soy and corn crops are GMO). In large-scale organic farming it is impossible to produce quality pastured birds like those found on a smaller farm when you are focusing on quantity. Buying from your local farmer ensures you are supporting humane animal welfare practices, getting a nutritionally superior product, supporting your local economy and helping promote environmentally-friendly farming.

Americans don’t think about the impact that their daily choices will have on their life down the road. We need to eat to live and not live to eat. You are better off not eating meat at all if factory-raised animals are your only option. Factory farms buy 80% of all antibiotics sold in the United States to use on our meat supply. This practice of feeding literally tons of antibiotics is only producing sicker animas and antibiotic-resistant superbugs. As much as two-thirds of the grocery store supply of chicken is tainted with antibiotic-resistant bacteria who are making their way into our guts. E. Coli strains were matched from women with urinary tract infections to 71% of the grocery store chickens samplings and matched over 80% of the time with strains from factory chicken slaughterhouses. This study helps demonstrate why it is no surprise infections are getting harder to successfully treat. We must eat consciously, E. Coli O157:H7, the deadliest strain of E.Coli, has the potential to make it into our food products more consistently if we keep supporting the conventional factory farming practices in which it thrives.

Nutritionally, pastured birds have better fat profiles (high omega 3′s and CLA, lower saturated and Omega 6′s), increased vitamin and mineral densities and are able to support their own weight. If that’s not enough reason, the FDA only just recently in 2011 halted the use of arsenic in feed for factory farmed chickens. This chemical found in poisons has been used for years in poultry farming to help control parasites, promote faster chicken growth and to improve the appearance of the meat so it looks more edible. Another practice you won’t see small farmers doing is adding sodium water to ‘plump-up’ the the bird. This extra sodium additionally negates any health benefit from eating the lean protein. 

A few labeling misnomers for those still buying from grocery stores. It’s best to just ignore any product that advertises ‘all natural’. This label has little meaning in regulatory bodies and can still be put on processed foods. Pork and poultry by FDA regulations cannot use growth hormones in feed or inject them into the animals directly (only beef is approved). This seems to be a common falsehood further supported by food companies placing ‘Hormone-Free’ or ‘No-Added Hormone’ labels onto their packages (which has to be followed by the phrase ‘the FDA does not approve hormone use in these products’ if they use this label). It is just food industry marketing propaganda to make it seem like they are ‘healthy choices’.

If you are unaware of the animal welfare reasons alone that support buying from local farmers then I will just say this; whether or not you care about how a chicken, pig or cow ‘feels’ it will affect the taste of your meat. There are numerous studies on the effects of high stress and poor flavor. For the rest of us, all it takes is looking at pictures of battery-caged birds or dark, filthy, over-crowded industrial-sized chicken houses to choose.

Giant chicken

Meat birds are bred to be so large they are unable to support themselves on their own 2 legs. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

If buying locally raised birds is not in your budget then save your money and don’t bother to buy conventionally raised meat either. You can get high quality protein from less expensive plant sources and it will save yourself countless of dollars in possible future health bills. Every purchase you make at the supermarket drives the industry to produce more of what you just bought. Factory-farms and cheap processed foods will never go away until people stop buying their products. It is simple economics, if a business isn’t selling its not going to survive. Remember, you vote every day about where our food comes from by what you eat.

Become interested in where (and who) your food comes from. Search localharvest.org to find nearby farmers or markets. Take an active role in educating yourself on the food supply and its practices. We can’t expect change to come to things that matter when we ourselves keep doing the same things.

Click on this delicious chicken below to see how 1 local farmer raises their meat birds.

Sources:


http://livingmaxwell.com/arsenic-in-chicken


http://www.fda.gov/AnimalVeterinary/SafetyHealth/ProductSafetyInformation/ucm055436.htm


http://www.eatwild.com/healthbenefits.htm


http://www.fda.gov/AnimalVeterinary/SafetyHealth/ProductSafetyInformation/ucm257540.htm


http://www.rodale.com/e-coli-urinary-tract-infections
?


http://www.rodale.com/cargill-meat-recall


http://www.foodpoisonjournal.com/foodborne-illness-outbreaks/e-coli-ground-beef-recalls-2011/


http://www.fsis.usda.gov/Factsheets/Meat_&_Poultry_Labeling_Terms/index.asp


http://www.morningharvestfarm.com/ProductsPractices.html 

Don’t Be Afraid of (100% Grass-Fed) Red Meat

Eye fillet of grass-fed beef.

Eye fillet of grass-fed beef. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

In my latest information newsletter to a local CSA I wrote about the stark differences between beef finished on corn or grain versus those only finished on pasture. A shortened version of this post below appeared in the newsletter which you can see here.

 

 

Grass-fed or pasture-raised beef (look for grass-finished or 100% grass-fed label in grocery store) is practically a different animal in comparison with conventional-raised beef. Nutritionally, grass-fed beef has more in common with elk, buffalo, or venison than a corn-fed steer. A steak of grass-finished beef is not only lower in total fat and calories (less than skinless chicken thigh) but also has 2-6 times the amount of Omega 3′s, 3-5 times the amount of CLA, low saturated fat and higher vitamin and minerals in comparison with grain-fed beef.

Data from J. Animal Sci 80(5):1202-11 @ http://www.eatwild.com

CLA or Conjugated Linoleic Acid is a healthy fat that is found most abundantly in meat and dairy. Just 0.1% of CLA out of total calories was found to be a potent inhibitor in tumor growth. Therefore just 1 serving of pasture-raised meat, dairy or cheese would give you an adequate daily amount versus 5 servings of conventional dairy and meat products. Grass-fed beef is also higher Vitamin E, B-vitamins, calcium, magnesium, potassium, beta-carotene and Vitamin C. Even though feedlot cattle are supplemented with Vitamin E, grass-fed beef still has 4 times the amount of Vitamin E in comparison with their grain-fed cousins. All cattle are grazed on grass for a good part of their lives but when the steers are shipped to the feedlots and start eating corn diets (which gives them increased fat marbling) they instantly start to lose their healthy proportions of Omega 3′s. Steers are usually fattened up for 90 days or longer in the feedlots before they are slaughtered. This is just enough time to cut the Omega 3′s to only about 0.5% or less of the fat content. Grass-fed meat also has a healthy ratio of Omega 3′s to Omega 6′s. This helps reduce chronic inflammation that can lead to diseases such as diabetes, cardiovascular disease, autoimmune disorders and cancer. Omega 6 is an essential fatty acid but it is inflammatory in high amounts. A healthy ratio is typically 1 part Omega 3 to every 1-4 parts Omega 6 or 1:1-1:4. The average American consumes a ratio closer towards 1:25. Depending how long the steer was kept at the feedlot, those who eat grain-fed beef will be consuming an Omega 3 to 6 ratio of 1:11 or 1:20! Poor lipid profiles are promoted on a grain-fed beef diet and many will have high LDL’s (bad cholesterol), total dietary cholesterol and low HDL’s (good cholesterol) which leads to heart disease, which kills the most Americans per year. A recent study just came out declaring all red and processed meats should be avoided as they shave years off of your life. This is no surprise as they only studied conventionally raised beef! The nutritional content of grass-fed beef is so high quality it can be used interchangeably with skinless chicken and fish in the diets of those trying to lower their dietary cholesterol levels and improve their lipid profiles.

Some may be concerned about the taste of the grass-finished versus corn-finished beef. A rule of thumb for grass-finished beef is to cook it ‘low and slow’ as the lower fat content can cause it to overcook quickly. Studies have shown that regardless of how the steer was raised, tenderness and juiciness were indistinguishable.

If you haven’t heard of E. Coli O157:H7 then I regret to inform you that this is another antibiotic-resistant bacteria that is found most commonly in feedlot beef. It is responsible for many cases of severe food poisoning leading to hemorrhagic colitis and most deaths revolving around E.Coli. Feedlots are notoriously known for the propagation of this superbug. Even though the cattle most likely didn’t have it in their intestinal track before they arrived at the feedlot, within their time there it will eventually take over their intestinal track. This is no surprise as the steers experience high stress, close-quartered lots with thousands of others, standing in feces and eating an inflammatory diet to boot. Not only has E.Coli O157:H7 been found to survive better in a feedlot cattle feces versus a grass-fed steer’s feces, but they have a higher ability to adhere to our own intestinal epithelium as well. There is no risk of Mad Cow Disease either with grass-fed beef since pastured cattle only eat grass.

If you are a vegan or vegetarian for humane reasons, but you still are craving meat, then you should look no further than your local farmer. Most of them use small, nearby processing facilities to accomodate their needs and are more than happy to let you question them about the process and visit the facility itself if you want. Make sure to ask them how they try to keep the stress minimal to the steer when they are going through the process. Pastured steers in general have longer lives as it takes more days to finish them on top of avoiding the high stress of being in a feedlot.

The value of your money is quadrupled when you feed your family 100% grass-fed beef. Not only can you actually obtain health benefits from eating this nutritionally superior product but in addition, you are supporting your local community, eco-friendly farming practices and humane animal treatment.

Sources


http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/1475-2891-9-10.pdf


http://www.nytimes.com/2002/03/31/magazine/power-steer.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm


http://www.texasjbardranch.com/Grass-fedBeefProductsNutrients.pdf


http://aem.asm.org/content/75/18/5927.short


http://jas.fass.org/content/57/4/791.short


http://www.eatwild.com/healthbenefits.htm#2


http://aem.asm.org/content/75/18/5927.short


http://www.weightymatters.ca/2012/03/what-reading-that-red-meat-and-die.html