Showing posts with label nutrition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nutrition. Show all posts

April 7 - World Health Day

 Posted on April 7, 2021

This is an update of my post published on April 7, 2010:


Every year the World Health Organization (part of the United Nations) has a different focus for their special day. When I first wrote this post, in 2010, the theme focused on making cities healthier places to live. After all, more than half of the world population lives in a city, and where I live, in North America, more than 80% of the population lives in a city! Wow!




The WHO called on cities to open up streets and public spaces for health activities (like cycling in the streets and car-free day, clean-up campaigns, or fitness festivals in the park). 



Before I checked this year's theme, I knew that it would have something to do with COVID-19. And it did: for 2021, the WHO chose "Building a fairer, healthier world." Which doesn't sound like it is about the pandemic, but I read on:

"COVID-19 has hit all countries hard, but its impact has been harshest on those communities which were already vulnerable, who are more exposed to the disease, less likely to have access to quality health care services and more likely to experience adverse consequences as a result of measures implemented to contain the pandemic."

The WHO is calling on all nations to make sure that everybody has living and working conditions that help keep them healthy. AND it's urging all nations to make sure that everyone has equal access to quality health care. I want to add: that includes equitable access to COVID testing, treatment, and vaccinations!



Those are great goals, and we should all urge our governments to address them. Agitate, call, e-mail, protest, and (if / when you are old enough) VOTE!

Back to cities...

If you live in a city, you don't have to wait for your city government to make changes to help you stay healthy. You can start working on your own health and on small-scale projects in your community. So let's talk about how cities can add to their residents' collective health.

One big thing is having a lot of opportunity for exercise. If people can safely and easily walk places as part of their daily life, that helps them keep fit. When people are not staying at home because of the pandemic, having parks and playgrounds and fitness and recreation centers available also helps. Having bike paths and urban trails helps. Having dance and gymnastics classes and soccer and baseball and basketball leagues helps (again, when those things are possible because COVID numbers go down). Cities can offer 5- and 10-K runs and other exercise-oriented events.


My city has trails that connect one park or open
area to another. I lived here several years before
I ever knew about them!


Bike trails that are separated from
auto traffic (as opposed to bike
lanes that are right there vying for
space with cars!) are much safer ways
to enjoy cycling!


You can look for bike paths, urban trails, classes, and special events that already exist. If there are none, try calling every one of your city council members and ask that they create them! Or you can work with an environmental club, a Scout troop, a school or church to host a fitness-oriented event. Plan now, via Zoom, for next year!

 

Speaking of Zoom, you can Zoom some fitness and dance classes!

 

Another help to healthful cities is having a culture of good food rather than sweet-and-fatty fast food. Are the schools in your city serving nutritious meals? Are there plenty of restaurants that offer healthy food choices? Do grocery stores provide lots of fresh produce and nutrition information? How can you encourage more healthful eating in your family, your school, and your city?



Again, don't wait for everyone else to start eating right! You can start right now. A little bit of junk food once in a while is fine for most of us, as long as most of the time we're doing the fresh fruits and veggies, plenty of water, lots of good protein, and whole grains.


Also on this date:

February 10 - World Pulses Day

Posted on February 10, 2020


When I hear the word pulse, I think of a blood pulse - the rhythm you can feel in your wrist as your heart beats out blood and the blood beats that rhythm all through your body.

On second thought, I also think of music pulsing - music with a good, strong beat, that is!


But! - I didn't know that the word pulse also means the edible seeds of various plants: chickpeas, lentils, beans, peas, etc.

It is that completely separate meaning of the word pulse that we are celebrating today in this United Nations event. Pulses are important foods, globally, especially nowadays. 

Beef farming is so inefficient, it
represents a 96% loss of food production!
Raising and eating meat is a problem for several reasons: religious reasons, health reasons, and especially environmental reasons. It takes less a lot less energy, land, and water to produce plant-based foods than to grow livestock we use as meat. And some livestock (ahem, cows, looking at you!) add global-warming-causing greenhouse gases to the atmosphere.

If a country didn't add any acres of land dedicated to agriculture, not even one acre, but only grew plants, they could grow 2 to 20 TIMES more food. (Read more about this here.)

Since there are A LOT of people in the world, including a lot of hungry people who regularly don't get enough to eat, it's important to get as much food from ever acre of agricultural land as possible. And pulses are especially wonderful foods among all the other great plant-based foods, because they are high protein and high fiber, with lots of vitamins and minerals (including iron!). Pulses are also low fat. 

(People on low carb diets often limit how many beans, lentils, etc., they eat, because these nutritious foods do have carbs, but again, much of the carbohydrates are dietary fiber, which is a necessary part of a healthy diet.)

Check out this website as you plan your World Pulses Day celebration. Eat pulse-based meals and photograph them for social media, using #LovePulses and #WorldPulsesDay hashtags.
Black bean salad
Chickpea curry
Potato lentil soup

Maybe next year you can plan a community event promoting pulses and eating low on the food chain!?!







January 31 - National Pre-School Fitness Day

(Last Friday of January)

Posted on January 31, 2020

The thing is, we don't want little kids, including kids who attend day care / nursery school / pre-school, to worry about their bodies being attractive or unattractive, chubby or skinny, too this or too that. That's definitely not what this holiday is all about.

But we DO want to start kids off on the right foot as far as nutrition, exercise, hygiene, and other physical-body-related habits and attitudes go! 



The last Friday of January has been set aside to focus on the fitness "fitness" of day cares and pre-schools, nursery schools and play schools and pre-K classes. Are the snacks being served are nutritious? 




Does each day include a lot of active play? Can kids use the bathroom facilities whenever they need to? Are the outdoor as well as indoor areas safe and fun? 


The BEST thing for little kids is lots of supervised free time, but of course there are going to be some adult-led activities. Hopefully some of these are active as well - hoop play, parachute play, scarf play, ball play! How fun!