Healthy Lifestyle Trends
- Health Facts and Figures Part 2
How much do we
care about our health? Do we make an effort
to lead a healthy lifestyle? How well are we
doing? These facts and figures give us a few
insights.
Holistic Health Outranks Wealth
Emotional and physical well-being are more
important to Americans than money and
career, according to a survey by a national
trade association of health clubs. When
1,400 people were asked to rank various
aspects of life as essential or important,
97 percent chose emotional well-being and 96
percent selected physical health, but only
78 percent and 75 percent, respectively,
selected career and money.
Source: International Health, Racquet and
Sportsclub Association
Healthy Lifestyle: A Rare Commodity
Only three percent of American adults follow
a healthy lifestyle -- not smoking,
maintaining a healthy weight, eating five or
more fruits and vegetables daily, and being
active. That's what researchers at Michigan
State University in East Lansing concluded
after examining the lifestyle habits of
153,000 people.
Source: Archives of Internal Medicine
Strange Park Habits
Last year, more than 276 million people
visited North America's National Parks but
only 10 percent ventured more than a mile
from their cars, according to statistics
compiled by Austin-Lehman Adventures, a
company that organizes guided adventure
vacations. Perhaps we're confusing parks
with parking lots.
Source: Austin Lehman Adventures
Eating for Health
Eating a nutrient-dense diet with 10 to 25
percent fewer calories than the American
average can dramatically reduce the risk for
diseases associated with aging. A six-year
study showed that middle-aged people eating
1,100 to 1,950 calories daily, containing 26
percent protein, 28 percent fat and 46
percent complex carbohydrates, had
blood-pressure levels comparable to
10-year-olds and triglyceride levels of
20-year-olds.
Source: Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences
The Organic Plant Advantage
You can get up to 60 percent more
antioxidants from some fruits and vegetables
by eating organically grown varieties.
University of California, Davis researchers
found that organic corn, strawberries and
Marion berries produce significantly higher
levels of antioxidant compounds when they
have to fend for themselves against insects.
Pesticides diminish the plants'
antioxidant-producing abilities.
Source: Journal of Agricultural and Food
Chemistry
RVs Encourage Healthy Vacations
Ninety-four percent of people who vacation
in an RV say they lead a healthier lifestyle
on the road, according to a survey by the
Recreation Vehicle Industry Association in
Reston, VA. While traveling, 40 percent of
RV enthusiasts walk three to ten miles
daily, 85 percent experience less stress,
and 75 percent cook their own meals rather
than relying on fast food.
Source: Recreation Vehicle Industry
Association
Walk or Run?
"Studies indicate that if you can walk a
mile in 12 minutes you get exactly the same
energy expenditure as running a mile in nine
minutes," says Kenneth Cooper, M.D., at the
Cooper Clinic in Dallas, TX. Cooper
originally coined the term "aerobics" as we
know it today, and pioneered the use of
exercise to prevent heart disease. Injury
strikes 65 percent of runners but only 21
percent of walkers.
Source: Kenneth Cooper, M.D., and Sports
Injury Bulletin
Living for a Century
If you're in your 40s or 50s, you have a
one-in-twenty chance of living to age 100 in
good health, according to Tom Perls, M.D.,
who heads an ongoing study of centenarians
at Boston University School of Medicine.
Most likely, you will at least reach your
mid 80s. The Census Bureau expects 757,000
Americans to be a century old by 2045. A
diet that keeps you lean, regular exercise
and not smoking will improve your odds of
celebrating your 100th birthday.
Source: Tom Perls, M.D., and United States
Census Bureau
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