7 Dimensions of Wellness

7 Dimensions of Wellness
7 Dimensions of Wellness
Showing posts with label urban health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label urban health. Show all posts

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Going Vegan is more than a "diet challenge".

Is Beyonce really about that vegan life? The answer to this question continues to be debated after she recently teamed up with Marco Borges to "announce" her support for taking the 22-day vegan challenge on Good Morning America.  She credits the plant-based diet for her flawless skin and after baby figure.
" I am not naturally the thinnest woman... I have curves, I'm proud of my curves. I have struggled since a young age with diets. Finding something that actually keeps the weight off...has been difficult for me."  ~ Beyonce

The public response to her announcement ranges from apathy to anger to awe, all for valid reasons. While many continue to call her out on what they perceive as hypocrisy, revisiting recent images of her scarfing down hamburgers, the Hollywood elite and many loyal fans believe that Beyonce's presence and platform will allow her to reach new audiences with her message of plant-based eating. That's a good thing right?

Choosing a dietary lifestyle is a personal choice that should be made after considering your heath needs and risk factors.


What scares me most about this "diet challenge" is the over-simplistic fad-like nature of the message. Eat nothing but plants for 22 days, lose 8 pounds and your life will change forever! But forever turns out to be a few weeks and then we are back to our natural habits.

After struggling with my own weight along with other health issues, my doctor insisted that I get off the standard American diet (which she calls SAD) if I wanted to feel better and avoid a hysterectomy. Blood test results showed food allergies to wheat, gluten, dairy and other foods. I was also advised to avoid meat with hormones and soy based foods since soy is an artificial estrogen that can cause or aggravate hormonal imbalances and lead to weigh gain along with reproductive issues in men and women.

That was hard news for a foodie like me who was raised by a southern mother who flavored our green beans with bacon grease. But I was tired of the pain and non-stop weight gain so I made the commitment to not only change my dietary habits, but the habits I taught my children (who all have the same food allergies). As the primary cook in our home, I understood that making long lasting dietary changes meant changing how I shopped and prepared food for everyone. It's been over 3 years since I made that commitment to change and I'd call my progress to date a success. Am I perfect? No. I still have my piece of cake and I will enjoy and nice steak every now and then. But the changes I made were enough to stop the weight gain and avoid surgery.
Choosing a dietary lifestyle is a personal choice that should be made after considering your health needs and risk factors, family life, food access, financial ability and level of commitment. Those who choose to go vegan and forgo not only the consumption of meat but the use of all animal based products, usually do so for reasons that reach beyond the issue of weight-loss.

Producing and consuming meat and animal products is an ethical and environmental issue for many vegans and non-vegans. We often hear of animal rights activists who see meat as murder. But we don't hear enough about other equally valid environmental concerns.

Farms use a great deal of water raising animals while water shortages for humans continue to grow around the globe. Farming also requires a lot of grain to feed the animals. Forests in developing parts of the world continue to be cut down to make room for growing corn, soybeans and other animal feed instead of crops for human consumption. Long story short, animals eat and drink 16 times more than their own weight in meat causing water and food shortages around the globe that primarily impact the poor. I'd like to see Beyonce use her platform to address that. We can not honestly begin to promote healthier plant-based diets without at least mentioning the systematic barriers like food deserts, particularly in urban communities, that keep people from being able to successfully add more fruits and vegetables to their normal diets.

Starting Down the Vegan Path

People from all cultures and socioeconomic backgrounds can successfully adopt a vegan lifestyle if they wish, but it does require some initial thinking and planning. I've not read Marco Borges book, but there are plenty of similar (and less expensive) resources. There are also online resources and an abundance of Pinterest boards dedicated exclusively to plant-based recipes and alternatives to animal products.

Meatless Mondays, a national non-profit initiative seeking to reduce the consumption of meat and increase the consumption of plant-based foods is a wonderful place to start for those interested in trying vegan recipes without the 22 day commitment. The Center of Wellness for Urban Women supports this initiative and is an official blogger for Meatless Mondays.


Monday, January 21, 2013

THE HEALTH BENEFITS OF ALOE VERA

HAPPY NEW YEAR LIVE LIFE WELL READERS/CWUW COMMUNITY!!!

     ON YOUR NEW YEAR'S JOURNEY TO BE A HEALTHIER YOU...I WANTED TO WRITE A BLOG ABOUT THE HEALTH BENEFITS OF THE ALOE VERA PLANT.  NOW, THIS HAS BEEN A PLANT THAT I HAVE BEEN VERY FAMILIAR WITH SINCE A LITTLE GIRL.  I WAS A TOMBOY; I WAS ALWAYS RUNNING BEHIND MY OLDER BROTHER AND HIS FRIENDS.  I GOT A LOT OF SCRAPES, BURNS, CUTS, ETC. THROUGH OUT MY CHILDHOOD YEARS AND THE ONE THING MY MOM SWORE BY TO HEAL MY WOUNDS WAS...THE ALOE VERA PLANT.  MY MOM ALWAYS KEPT ONE OF THESE PLANTS IN OUR HOME...JUST FOR ME, LOL.  NEOSPORIN HAS NOTHING ON THE HEALING BENEFITS OF SOME ALOE VERA.   I BARELY SEE A BLEMISH FROM THE WOUNDS BECAUSE OF THE HEALING POWER OF THIS ALOE VERA PLANT.  

     JUST GO GET A PLANT FROM THE STORE, TREAT IT AS ANY OTHER PLANT.  WHEN NEEDED, BREAK OFF A PIECE OF THE PLANT, SQUEEZE THE PIECE TO MAKE SOME OF THE ALOE VERA GEL OOZE OUT, CLEANSE THE WOUND WITH SOAP AND WATER, AND THEN APPLY THE ALOE VERA GEL STRAIGHT TO THE WOUND.  DO THIS AT LEAST TWICE A DAY UNTIL THE WOUND IS HEALED.  NOW, UPON GETTING OLDER AND THROUGH RESEARCH, I FOUND THAT THIS PLANT JUST DOES NOT HEAL WOUNDS....BUT OUR BODY, INSIDE AND OUTSIDE.  I FOUND SOME GREAT INFO TO SHARE WITH YOU ON ONE OF MY FAVORITE INFO SITE, NATURALNEWS.COM.  SOME OF THE HEALTH BENEFITS OF THE PLANT ARE:  STOPS TUMORS FROM GROWING, HELPS WITH CONSTIPATION, HYDRATES SKIN, HELPS WITH HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE, STABILIZES BLOOD GLUCOSE, AND MANY, MANY MORE.  SOME OF THE WAYS YOU CAN TAKE ALOE VERA IS BY BUYING THE ALOE VERA DRINK (WHICH IS PRETTY TASTY), TAKING THE PILLS, OR JUST SCRAPING OUT THE INSIDE OF THE LEAF AND PUTTING IT IN A SMOOTHIE!!  THERE ARE MANY WAYS YOU CAN ENJOY THE BENEFITS OF AN ALOE VERA PLANT.  OH, IT IS GREAT FOR HAIR TOO!!  ALOE VERA SHOULD BE A STAPLE PLANT IN EVERY HOUSEHOLD.  MY PERSONAL SUGGESTION IS TO GO OUT A GET YOU AN ALOE VERA PLANT TODAY!!


DANICA J.


CHECK OUT THE LINK AT THE FOLLOWING WEBSITE: http://www.naturalnews.com/021858_aloe_vera_gel.html

Monday, April 4, 2011

Healthy Community Design

Center of Wellness for Urban Women understands that how your community is designed can directly effect health outcomes. This is why we are a neighborhood based organization working with communities to be as healthy as possible. This is an article from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on the topic.

http://cdc.gov/Features/HealthyCommunities/

The way we design and build our communities can affect our physical and mental health.

Photo: An aerial view of a subdivision.In the last fifty or sixty years, a new design for communities has become typical in many parts of our country. It's a pattern called "urban sprawl" and is based on the ready supply of automobiles. Some features of urban sprawl include:

  • Low density land use where people live on large tracts of land
  • Low land use mix so that homes are spread apart from workplaces, recreation or schools, making the distances that people have to travel longer than ever before
  • Homes are far away from where people work, worship, learn, and play
  • More dependence on the automobile
  • Fewer sidewalks and bike paths

These features of urban sprawl present us with some advantages but also many challenges to our health and well-being. They include:

  • More driving and less physical activity
  • More air pollutants from automobiles
  • More injuries from car crashes and pedestrian accidents
  • Less sense of community
  • Less contact with nature
  • More greenhouse gases contributing to climate change

Photo: A mother and son walkingAll of these features of community design can affect our health in many ways. They can even increase the risk of some of the most common and stubborn disease that we face: heart disease, respiratory disease, cancer and others. That calls on us to design the healthiest and most wholesome communities we can as a way of protecting public health. A set of principles known as "smart growth," "traditional neighborhood design," or "new urbanism" promotes not only livability, but also healthy places to live. These principles include:

  • Mixed land use and more land density to shorten distances between homes, workplaces, schools and recreation
  • Transportation alternatives including bicycle trails, sidewalks and mass transit
  • Affordable housing so that people of all income levels can afford to live in healthy communities
  • Town centers close to where people live so they can walk or bike to shopping, everyday errands, places of worship and social activities
  • Greenspace, trails and parks to provide more opportunities for contact with nature.

If we understand that community design directly affects our health, then we need to take steps to make our communities as healthy as possible. The very same changes that make communities more livable are also environmentally sound and healthy and make good economic sense. We are seeing change around the country. In more and more cities, people who want to live healthy lifestyles or who are simply fed up with commutes are choosing instead to live in compact walkable communities.

Designing and building healthy communities can improve the quality of life for all people who live, work, worship, learn, and play within their borders—where every person is free to make choices amid a variety of healthy, available, accessible and affordable options.

Friday, January 7, 2011

CWUW: The importance of addressing Urban Health issues

The health of those who live in the more densely populated areas of the world is of interest and concern for two reasons: (1) the large numbers of persons involved, and (2) the fact that the population density of an urban area changes the potential for both public health problems and public health solutions. The potential for problems includes increased exposure to large a number of individuals who can spread infectious conditions, larger volumes of waste products at risk of poor handling, the presence of pollutants, an apparent increase in stress, and a concentration of more serious mental health problems. Solutions are influenced by economies of scale in providing services, a more varied array of resources, and the potential for closer proximity to others with similar interests and needs. Opportunities to work with others who share a concern increases the likelihood of identifying appropriate actions and generating political support for solutions.

"Urban Health." Encyclopedia of Public Health. Ed. Lester Breslow. Gale Cengage, 2002. eNotes.com. 2006. 7 Jan, 2011 <http://www.enotes.com/public-health-encyclopedia/
urban-health>

The needs of women living is urban settings are vast.  The Center of Wellness for Urban Women has as its mission to empower women and their families living in urban areas to become proactive in their health.  We recognize that some issues may disproportionately effect some groups more than others.  We are here to provide services to any woman needing support.   Learn more on how CWUW plans to address the ongoing urban health issues women face while living in more populated areas.

http://www.cwuwonline.org/