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Archive for the ‘Adult Weight Loss’ Category

A Surprising Fast Food Dinner That Is Healthy To Serve Your Children

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

It’s Sunday evening and I am exhausted.  We have been running around with the children all day and neither my husband nor I feel like cooking.  The kids are too run-down to take them to a restaurant.  And most fast food is really unhealthy.  I can’t decide what to feed the kids for dinner.  I even debate playing the “Breakfast For Dinner” game and giving them a bowl of cereal.  And then a commercial for KFC’s New Grilled Chicken comes on TV.  Hmmm… My husband and I both look at each other.  Should we?

I run to the computer to do some research.  And I am pleasantly surprised with what I find.  KFC grilled chicken is healthy!

Let’s compare the options:

GRILLED CHICKEN      ORIGINAL RECIPE    EXTRA CRISPY

(calories/fat)

Wing              80/4                110/7                          150/10

Breast           180/4               370/21                       490/31

Drumstick      70/4                110/7                          150/9

Thigh           140/9                260/19                         370/27

But what does it taste like?  Solely in the name of research, I head out to KFC.  I order the 10 piece family meal which comes with three large sides.  I order green beans, corn on-the-cob and rice.

The grilled chicken was delicious.  Really delicious.  Of course, I peeled all the skin off before serving it to myself and my kids which lowered the calorie/fat count even more.  Even without the skin, it tasted great.  You could really taste the KFC spices.  I practically felt like I was eating real KFC.  My family will definitely be eating it again.

Interested in the calories counts on the side dishes?  There is no easier way to blow a healthy meal than by eating unhealthy sides.  Make sure you pick carefully!

Side Dish                 (Calories /Fat)

(per standard serving size which varies with each dish- imagine a small amount)

Green Beans (25/0)

Rice (140/0.5)

Mashed Potatoes (130/4.5)

Macaroni ‘n Cheese (180/9)

Potato Wedges (260/13)

Corn On-The-Cob (140/1)

Cole Slaw (180/10)

Biscuit (180/8)

Sweet Kernel Corn (110/0.5)

My recommendation for your child’s meal?  Either a breast or a thigh and either a drumstick or a wing.  Peel off as much of the skin and fat as possible.  Then serve green beans, half of a large piece of corn on-the-cob, and a very small serving of rice.  A nutritious, fast, and easy meal.

Enjoy!

And no- KFC did not pay me to write this post nor do they have any idea that I am writing it!

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The Devastating Psychological Effects of Child Obesity

Friday, April 17th, 2009

The psychological effects of being an overweight child are severe.  Overweight children tend to suffer from low self-esteem, depression and loneliness.  These children also face discrimination beginning at a very young age and are more likely to become suicidal.

Obesity and Self-Identity/Depression

Children get a sense of their own identity by monitoring how others perceive them.  A child’s self-esteem is greatly influenced by how others respond to them.  Since our culture looks down on the overweight, overweight kids tend to develop a low sense of self-esteem.

Depression is also common in overweight children.  These kids often feel insecure and inferior to others.  While some obese kids become ‘the life of the party’ to compensate, others become reclusive.  An overweight child’s social life may suffer if she is uncomfortable interacting with other kids.

Overweight children and teens who are depressed tend to remain depressed throughout adulthood.  Being overweight affects every aspect of one’s life.  Overweight adults tend to have fewer years of advanced education, lower family income, higher poverty rates and lower marriage rates compared to non-obese adults.

Obesity and Discrimination

Children understand that being overweight is socially undesirable from a very young age.  In studies, young children shown pictures of overweight kids describe the children in the pictures as ‘lazy’ and state that they would not want to be friends with them.  These children would rather be friends with somebody with a visible handicap (i.e. missing an extremity) than with somebody who is overweight.  Interestingly, even overweight children show the same bias in these studies!  They themselves state that they do not want to be friends with the kids in the overweight pictures.

The situation only gets worse as the child grows up.  Overweight teens are often teased, ridiculed and shunned, leading to social isolation and depression. In addition, chronic obesity often leads to an increase in high-risk behaviors and oppositional-defiant disorders, since the overweight youngster must work harder than others to fit in with the social crowd.

Even teachers tend to discriminate against overweight children.  These kids are more likely to be labeled as ‘immature’ or ‘disruptive’ when they are behaving normally for their age because they often look older and are therefore held to the standards set for older children.

The obese individual encounters discrimination all over.  It is not uncommon for an obese person to get disapproving stares from others.  Discrimination against the obese is so rampant that normal-weight individuals will often let an obese person know that he or she is taking up more space than he or she should.  In most cases, the effects of these incidents make an obese person feel more self-conscious and depressed than ever.

Studies show that overweight individuals are less likely to be hired for a job than normal-weight individuals.  Wages of the overweight, particularly overweight women, are much lower than wages of normal-weight workers.  Some overweight individuals are even denied health insurance due to their weight!

It is not just a child’s medical health that suffers from obesity.  The psychological effects of being overweight are just as devastating.  For all of these reasons, it is crucial to address a child’s weight issue as soon as possible!

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Top Ten Food Myths

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

Sometimes it seems that there is more nutrition misinformation floating around than actual truth.  It is hard to distinguish between what is fact- and what is mere fantasy.  Read on for the debunking of some of the more common food myths.

1. You will gain weight if you eat after 8 pm.

The bottom line for weight loss: calories in must be less than calories out.  It doesn’t matter when you eat the calories.  The problem with late night eating is that most people eat the appropriate number of calories during the day and then go overboard at night, especially when eating in front of the television.  So feel free to eat at night- just keep your total number of calories in check.

2. Fat-free foods are healthy.

Not all fat-free foods are healthy.  In fact, sugar is the quintessential fat-free food and nobody would dare say that sugar is healthy.  Many fat-free products actually contain more calories than the original.  To maintain flavor, anufacturers have to add something back when they take out the fat, and that something is usually sugar.  Be wary of fat-free snacks and always look at nutrition labels.

3.  You should not eat carbohydrates if you want to lose weight.

Carbohydrates are a part of a healthy diet!  However, some carbohydrates are healthier than others.  Whole grains, like brown rice, whole wheat pasta, and whole wheat bread, can help facilitate weight loss  by keeping you full.  Diets that don’t include any carbohydrates often fail because dieters get too hungry and feel deprived, increasing the likelihood of a binge!

4.  Some foods have ‘negative calories’.

It is a commonly-held belief that chewing and digesting certain foods burns more calories than the foods actually contain.  It is said that you can lose weight by eating these foods.  These purported miracle foods include cucumbers, celery and grapefruit.  Unfortunately, this is not true.  No food truly has ‘negative calories’.

5. Decaf coffee has no caffeine.

Decaffeinated coffee contains caffeine; it just contains less caffeine than regular coffee.  A cup of regular coffee has 100-150 mg of caffeine while a cup of decaf has 8-32 mg of caffeine.  You are better off drinking herbal tea with is truly caffeine-free.

6. Margarine is healthier than butter.

Neither margarine nor butter is healthy.  Butter has saturated fat that can increase LDL (bad cholesterol) levels, increasing the risk of heart disease.  Margarine, however, often contains trans fats which not only increase LDL but also lower HDL (good cholesterol) and can increase the risk of heart disease even more!  I recommend using a little bit of heart-healthy olive oil instead.  Olive oil contains monounsaturated fats which are proven to decrease the risk of heart disease.

7. Bananas are fattening.

One medium banana has only 105 calories and is full of fiber, magnesium and potassium which can help manage blood pressure.  Bananas also contain vitamin B6 which helps with immune function.  It is true that, per serving, bananas may have slightly more sugar, carbohydrates and calories than some other fruits.  But they are still a very healthy part of a balanced diet.

8. Cooking veggies destroys their vitamin content.

Cooking vegetables actually increases your body’s ability to absorb the nutrients in certain vegetables.  Tomatoes are a great example of this.  Lycopene, a phytonutrient that helps prevent cancer, is much stronger in cooked forms of tomatoes than in raw tomatoes.  It is true, however, that overcooking some vegetables in large amounts of water can decrease their vitamin levels by allowing the nutrients to slip out of the vegetables into the water.  To prevent this, do not overboil veggies.  Try to steam, roast, or microwave vegetables with as little water as possible and keep cooking time to a minimum.

9. High-fructose corn syrup is more fattening than regular sugar

High fructose corn syrup (HFCS) and table sugar (sucrose) contain similar amounts of fructose.  The two most commonly used types of HFCS are HFCS-42 and HFCS-55, which are 42 and 55 percent fructose, respectively. Sucrose is almost chemically identical, containing 50 percent fructose. The bottom line: there is no evidence to show any differences between these two types of sugar.  Both will cause weight gain when eaten in excess.

10. Salt causes high blood pressure and should be avoided

The truth is that restricting salt in people with high blood pressure can help lower blood pressure.  But that doesn’t mean that salt causes high blood pressure in normal individuals.  There is no reason for people with normal blood pressure to restrict their sodium intake.

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