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[C562]Chicken Good For Health
by Roland Jefferson III, Rol

It is very important that every person be able to make good health care decisions. There are several areas in health care that will require knowledgeable decisions including insurance, living wills, and basic treatment options. Every person should take the time to learn about these different areas so they can be confident in making health care decisions.
Whenever decisions need to be made and especially during any crisis that should arise some basic knowledge in these areas will help a person to decide well.

Making Medical Care Choices Regarding Insurance

There are many insurance companies which offer health plans. Understanding what these plans are offering and what the benefits are opposed to other insurance plans can seem very confusing to the average person. It is very important that people spend the time looking at some insurance basics in the making a medical care decision. A person choosing insurance needs to look at the cost of the insurance, the maximum benefits provided and the maximum out of pocket expense the patient will pay.

Some insurance companies may seem to pay a lot by paying 90% of the total bill but do not have a cap on the patients amount to pay. In this case, if there is an unexpected hospitalization a patient can be expected to pay thousands of dollars. Even if the insurance does not offer paying as much for simple doctors visits or lab work the hospitalization and maximum out of pocket benefits are the most important considerations in making a health care choice regarding insurance.

Living Wills And Making Health Care Decisions

Making health decisions should include preparing advance directives at any stage in life. Advance directives and living wills work to advise health professionals and the courts of patient's wishes if they become incapable of making or voicing their own decisions. It is very simple to make a living will and forms are readily available from many medical facilities, online or from legal resources. A person can consult an attorney or may use a simple form and have it notarized to provide validation. These documents can then be kept on file with a patient's doctor and at local hospitals.

A Basic To Making Health Care Decisions

The most basic step to making medical care choices is to be knowledgeable about basics of the body, diagnosis and options. People like to think that they can trust their doctor to make the best decisions regarding their care. Most doctors will offer all the options available to a patient and will give good advice regarding these decisions but patients have no one to blame but themselves if they are not informed about the medical choices. The patient is their own best advocate when it comes to making health decisions. A person should start before any medical problem arises to learn all they can about health and the human body. Watching health programs, reading articles on health and asking questions of various health professionals will all give knowledge that can aid in making good medical decisions in the future.


This week the media claimed, "A calorie is a calorie". They were citing a new study, which found that burning a calorie through exercise or removing it from your diet is equal for losing fat. The study was somewhat controversial because it has long been accepted that combining exercise with dieting makes it easier to lose weight.

Exercise increases your body's sensitivity to its own insulin and that makes it easier to lose fat, especially around the mid-section. However, the new study said it didn't make any difference. They concluded that it is not possible to lose weight from ?target' areas and that your genes dictate where your weight loss comes from. I see several problems with their arguments.

Is a calorie a calorie?

First, the new study only looked at a small number of people and that makes it difficult to make general assumptions. Second, the study only used a very strict diet, making it difficult to generalize for many types of foods. Third, the study only employed cardiovascular exercise and not weight training, which has been shown to increase insulin sensitivity. So, although the experiment told us something about how exercise burns calories, the conclusions went a little too far.

Finally, the media's interpretation of the study was misleading as well. In stating that ?a calorie is a calorie' the media suggests that it doesn't matter what kinds of food you eat, but that it is really the total calorie content that matters. This is not what the study concluded at all. The researchers were simply comparing reducing calories in the diet to burning them through exercise. They made no conclusions about which sources of calories were better than others.

This is just another example of the media exaggerating the results. No wonder people are so confused about health advice. The media's constant misinterpretation of the data makes people think that researchers are always changing their minds on health issues.

It's all about Balance

Maintaining health is really not that hard. Many of us over-think the problem. Using a common sense, maintaining a diet balanced in fats, carbohydrates and proteins, taking a quality multivitamin and getting some exercise goes a long way.

Balance is a critical issue in any dietary change. Fad diets that tout low-carb or low-fat are very short sited. Most people are surprised to hear that the brain is 60% fat! And several types of fat needed for brain function must come from the diet ? meaning the body can't make them. What this means is that trying to remove too much fat, especially polyunsaturated fat, from the diet can actually starve the brain.

When is fat good?

In fact, a report that came out of Sweden this week showed that some kids were overweight because they didn't get enough of the right kind of fat. The Swedish researchers found that kids who didn't eat enough poly-unsaturated fat, mostly omega-3 fats, actually had a higher chance of being overweight.

The brain is also an energy hog. It uses about 10% of the energy you eat even though it only accounts for about 2% of total body mass. Where does most of our energy come from? - carbohydrates and fat. A balanced diet is about 15% fat, 60% carbohydrate and 25% protein. Athletes may need a little more carbohydrate for endurance or protein for strength.

So please don't subscribe to fad diets that tell you to cut out all the fat or carbohydrates from your diet. They're not good for your body and they're not good for your brain.

Copyright (c) 2007 The Brain Code LLC
Article Source : Pg. 224

About Author
Both Roland Jefferson III & Simon Evans are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Roland Jefferson III has sinced written about articles on various topics from Science, Health and Health Insurance. Roland Jefferson is an online researcher based out of Los Angeles, Calfornia. For free resources covering United Healthcare Insurance, please visit our. Roland Jefferson III's top article generates over 135000 views. to your Favourites.

Simon Evans has sinced written about articles on various topics from Brain, Fishing and Fitness. Boost your Family's Brain Fitness in 30 days with Natural Strategies used by an Expert Brain Scientist and Sports Coach. Learn how at
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