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Showing posts from August, 2008

From The New York Times

More on the fascinating topic of why we are gaining weight and what we can really do about it. I get the feeling that we are being protected from the hard news that we'll have to eat less and exercise vigorously after all. Why do we avoid looking straight at this reality? Cultural denial? http://health.nytimes.com/ref/health/healthguide/esn-obesity-ess.html?partner=permalink&exprod=permalink

Engaging Multiple Arenas, Public and Personal, Will More Effectively Fight Obesity

For the first time in human history in the year 2000 more of us became overweight or obese than were underweight (Caballero, 2007). Today if any one of us in the developed world lives the life served up by the dominant culture we will sooner or later become overweight and inexorably creep, over time, to obesity. This is because the teetering balance between the food energy we ingest and the physical energy we use up has in the last forty years come crashing down on the side of excess food energy. We evolved to eat primarily edible leaves, tubers, scarce fruits and grains, and even scarcer meats and fishes while our lifestyle traditionally required so much walking, carrying, and hand labor that all but the most wealthy and gluttonous of us were perpetually lean. Those who observe our world’s food supply note that we produce enough calories worldwide to feed us more than two times over. And these calories are not evenly distributed among the world’s peoples. The majority of these excess

Beginnings

This blog is born as from a clinical project undertaken in my final year of Nurse Practitioner school. Here are some articles, quotes, ideas, pertinent studies, whatever, the work of others. What these far-flung works have in common, is a particular relevance to health issues today. Our times demand educated minds, collaborative methods, and cultivating the practice of awareness. Our country's collective health problems are grave. The answers to these problems are being born in diverse disciplines right now. Unfortunately, conversations rarely occur across disciplines. The purpose of this blog is to start a multi-disciplinary health conversation, to inform those who need to know, and ultimately, to create change. I invite your comments and contributions to this effort.