Sentences with phrase «treat than obesity»

Not exact matches

Have there been any documented cases of children with ill effects due to chemically treated processed foods (other than obesity because that's our own fault for letting gluttony and sloth get to us)?
«Tackling obesity is a top priority for the government, and this change is part of our commitment to make the NHS a service that prevents ill health, as well as treating it - a wellbeing service, rather than a sickness service.»
Tweaking these bugs — rather than the genes themselves — may be a way to treat inherited diseases and perhaps even protect against obesity.
«The current guidelines for treating obesity recommend a 5 to 10 percent weight loss, but losing 5 percent of your body weight is much easier than losing 10 percent.
With the management of type 2 diabetes and its risk factors (such as obesity and physical inactivity) being simpler and cheaper than treating complications of later stage disease, the researchers note that prevention of disease onset and complications will be crucial to improve health and avoid further economic burden.
5/20/2008 UC San Diego Medical Center Performs New Incision - free Procedure to Treat Weight Regain After Gastric Bypass Every year more than 100,000 U.S. patients undergo gastric bypass surgery for the treatment of obesity.
Center for Metabolic Origins of Disease With more than one - third of adults in the U.S. considered obese, scientists are searching for new ways to treat obesity...
His groundbreaking research is leading to new philosophies on how to treat conditions like irritable bowel syndrome, autism, obesity, PTSD, and anorexia by looking at a system of two brains rather than a separate gut and brain.
More than 150 juicing recipes, as well as information on how to use raw juice to treat various health conditions, from cancer and obesity to ulcers and eczema, are in my forthcoming book, The Complete Book of Juicing, Revised and Updated: Your Delicious Guide to Youthful Vitality.
But what's even more frightening than this is the fact that people have started treating obesity as a disease even in cases when it's simply an effect of an unhealthy diet and a sedentary lifestyle.
What the rat experiment convincing shows, however, is that the standard model for treating obesity, that 99.9999 % of humanity believes — «just burn off more calories than you consume» — is, AT BEST, an oversimplification.
The Wahls protocol is effective for more than just treating MS — it's also effective in the treatment of traumatic brain injury, diabetes, high blood pressure, obesity, and other medical and neurological problems.
Functional medicine does more than simply treat obesity.
It's 300 times sweeter than sugar and has been used in traditional Chinese medicine to treat obesity and diabetes.
«Prevention of obesity is much easier than treating it.
Felitti and colleagues1 first described ACEs and defined it as exposure to psychological, physical or sexual abuse, and household dysfunction including substance abuse (problem drinking / alcoholic and / or street drugs), mental illness, a mother treated violently and criminal behaviour in the household.1 Along with the initial ACE study, other studies have characterised ACEs as neglect, parental separation, loss of family members or friends, long - term financial adversity and witness to violence.2 3 From the original cohort of 9508 American adults, more than half of respondents (52 %) experienced at least one adverse childhood event.1 Since the original cohort, ACE exposures have been investigated globally revealing comparable prevalence to the original cohort.4 5 More recently in 2014, a survey of 4000 American children found that 60.8 % of children had at least one form of direct experience of violence, crime or abuse.6 The ACE study precipitated interest in the health conditions of adults maltreated as children as it revealed links to chronic diseases such as obesity, autoimmune diseases, heart, lung and liver diseases, and cancer in adulthood.1 Since then, further evidence has revealed relationships between ACEs and physical and mental health outcomes, such as increased risk of substance abuse, suicide and premature mortality.4 7
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