If all the butter and fat doesn't kill her, the flying hams will!
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KFC's Double Down Sandwich: Who Needs Bread?
08-27-2009
by cdnuzzo
If the staggering obesity epidemic wasn't enough, KFC (formerly known as Kentucky Fried Chicken) has added another high-calorie food for all of "fat" America to try.
The sandwich consists of two fried pieces of chicken instead of bread for the buns. It also possesses two types of cheeses and bacon.
According to Fox News, the "sandwich" is being test-marketed in only two areas so far, Rhode Island and Nebraska.
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Pass the salt please
07-01-2009
by FlunkYou
Beth Gilbert
Miami Women's Health Examiner
With the high rate of cardiovascular disease among men and women in the United States, you would think that food service providers would be offering more low sodium options. However, walk the aisles of your local Publix, Winn Dixie or Walmart and tell me how many low sodium options you find available? I can tell you, close to zero, if you are looking for items lower than 50 mg of sodium. I can see why the average American consumes approximately 10,000 mg of sodium per day, even though the National Institute of Health recommends 2,400 mg or less per day.
Most practicing clinicians tell patients with high cardiovascular disease risk, congestive heart failure or who have experienced a heart attack to look for items with a sodium content lower than 50 mg, as sodium should be restricted to 1,500 mg or lower per day in cardiovascular risk patients. However, that is nearly impossible and many individuals who already have developed cardiovascular disease are elderly and may have a difficult time cooking for themselves. Additionally, cost is an issue for this patient population.
I was utterly shocked walking through the frozen food aisle of my local Publix to find ZERO items with sodium levels less than 100 mg, aside from some frozen vegetables or fruits but that was it. Lean Cuisine, Marie Callender, Healthy Choice Meals and even organic options were loaded with sodium. I am not just talking a little over 100 mg but many with a total of 500 mg or more, reaching as high as 1,200 mg. Even in the prepared foods section, Perdue GRILLED chicken strips, thinking they would be a lower sodium option, were loaded with close to 500 mg of sodium. How are those incapacitated by cardiovascular disease able to prepare a healthy meal option without having to cook everything fresh?
Bernice Appelbaum of Deerfield Beach, FL said, “I had a heart attack several years ago and always look for lower sodium items. I am somewhat ignorant in that I look for items that state ‘low sodium’ on the front of the box but if I look at the back of the box the sodium content is quite high. How many of us actually read the back of box, especially having a hard enough time moving around and getting our reading glasses out.” She went on to say, “I see the label, it says low sodium or heart healthy. So, I think it is healthy enough for elderly people with heart conditions to eat it. I need to be more educated now.”
Bernice is lucky, she is a highly active and mobile 85 year old woman who can drive and cook but her friends are not so capable, which makes them reliant on high sodium frozen dinners and prepared food items. There is just so much oatmeal, no-salt chips and peanut butter one can eat; it is almost like the food service industry is trying to kill us all.
Whole foods, Epicure Market and the Fresh Market do offer lower sodium items but then again they come at a higher price tag. Additionally, food delivery services offer low fat and sodium options but they are also very expensive. However, local farmer’s markets are a good option but they usually occur weekly and are not always all year round.
So the question still remains, how is an elderly person living on social security suppose to afford to maintain a healthy heart when they have a hard time paying co-pays on multi-prescription drug regimens and have few low cost, low sodium prepared food options? Additionally, why are these food service providers making it so difficult for the general population to remain heart healthy? At the present time, the question remains unanswered.
For more info: American Heart Association Dietary Recommendations to Prevent Cardiovascular Disease: http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=851; Mayo Clinic Seven Steps to Prevent Heart Disease: http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/heart-healthy-diet/nu00196
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The Great Communicator Speaks
06-11-2009
by FlunkYou

In 1961, The AMA organized a campaign to block Medicare. Titled "Operation Coffeecup," the effort insisted that the government-sponsored system would lead to a varying form of totalitarianism. For a spokesman, the group turned to Ronald Reagan, who lent his famous actor's voice to a 10-minute plus recording.
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A Scout is skinny
05-12-2009
by FlunkYou

Be Prepared.
That's the motto of the Boy Scouts.
"Be prepared for what?" someone once asked Baden-Powell, the founder of Scouting,
"Why, for any old thing." said Baden-Powell.
The training you receive in your troop will help you live up to the Scout motto. When someone has an accident, you are prepared because of your first aid instruction. Because of lifesaving practice, you might be able to save a nonswimmer who has fallen into deep water.
But Baden-Powell wasn't thinking just of being ready for emergencies. His idea was that all Scouts should prepare themselves to become productive citizens and to give happiness to other people. He wanted each Scout to be ready in mind and body for any struggles, and to meet with a strong heart whatever challenges might lie ahead.
Be prepared for life - to live happily and without regret, knowing that you have done your best. That's what the Scout motto means.
Are the Boy Scouts prepared for this?
Too fat for the Boy Scouts?
Julie Deardorff
May 11, 2009 The Chicago Tribune
The Boy Scouts of America has been criticized for not openly embracing gays, atheists and agnostics. But now the Scouts may rankle another group: The obese.
Under new requirements set to take effect next January, children and adults must meet height and weight standards for certain "high-adventure" or extreme events, such as a 15-mile trek, for which medical care might be more than 30 minutes away. That means a 6-foot-tall Scout or volunteer, for example, must weigh 239 pounds or less.
Some say the guidelines, which are designed to protect the health and safety of participants, are long overdue. It's an effort to "watch out for the health and safety" of the Scouts and volunteers, not to restrict participation, said BSA spokesman Deron Smith. Moreover, the policy won't affect most regular activities.
But some self-described obese volunteers feel betrayed by the standards, according to comments on scouting Web sites.
And at least one weight-loss expert questions the logic. "Why not insist on ... something that would actually measure cardiovascular fitness?" wondered Dr. Daniel Kirschenbaum, clinical director of Wellspring in Chicago, which runs weight-loss camps, after-school programs and academies throughout the country. "Studies on obese adults show about 9 percent are in pretty good shape from a cardiovascular standpoint." Scott Tollefson, who said his 6-foot, 3-inch son weighs 265 pounds (5 pounds over the limit) with 5 percent body fat, has a better idea: Hold the national leaders to the same standard. "There would be a lot fewer pudgy SUV riders in attendance [at the National Jamboree] if we did," he posted on boyandgirlscouts.com.
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Hannity relishes in Obama's mustard
05-11-2009
by FlunkYou
06-14-2009
by muckraker
Sean Hannity, shut the fuck up!
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