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:: Nutrition for the Growing Athlete: the Good, the Bad and the Ugly

:: Relationship Between Vitamin D Deficiency And Increased Inflammation In Healthy Women

:: Fat Transforms Vitamin C from “Good Cop” into “Bad Cop”

:: Eating Curry Every Week ‘Could Prevent Dementia’

:: New Clue into How Diet, Exercise Enhance Longevity

:: Sugar, Sweeteners Have Similar Effects on Appetite

:: Independent Association with Hypertension and High Fructose Intake

:: Beyond Appearances

:: Vitamin D May Lessen Age-related Cognitive Decline

:: It Matters What You Eat After Exercise

:: Deliberate Not Desperate

:: Obesity or Child Abuse?

:: The Healthy Senior

:: Caffeine-induced Hallucinations

:: Pain Response to Heat Reduced by Comfort Food

:: Doubled Calorie Intake from Beverages May Contribute to Adult Obesity

:: Green Tea May Help Improve Bone Health

:: Salt Might Be ‘Nature’s Antidepressant’

:: Researchers Find Clues to Why Some Continue to Eat When Full

:: Re-Do Your Family Barbeque: Experts Offers Tips On Grilling To Reduce Cancer Risks

:: Pomegranate For Prostate Cancer

:: Stroke Risk Reduced By Green, Black Tea

:: Breastfeeding Nutrition Offset by Fast Food

:: The Presence Of Healthy Food Can Lead To Unhealthy Choices

:: You Are What You Drink

:: Anti-Oxidants Shown To Halt Vision-Destroying Conditions In Two Types Of Blindness

:: Rice Eaters Are Healthy Eaters

:: Dietary Supplements With Steroids Pose Health Danger: Case Studies

:: Hard Facts to Swallow

:: Going For the Grain

:: High Blood Pressure Reduced With Low-Fat Dairy

:: Weighing Benefits of Exercise, Diets

:: Dietitian Names Top Five Holiday Foods

:: Magnesium Sulphate Cuts Cerebral Palsy Risk In Preterm Birth

:: Most NYC Restaurants Have Cut out the Fat

:: Diet with Some Meat Uses Less Land than Vegetarian Diets

:: Chocolate Milk May Beat Sports Drinks

:: New Evidence That Dark Chocolate Helps Ease Emotional Stress

:: Most Americans Would Benefit from Lower Sodium Intake

:: Benefits Of Omega-3 Fatty Acids Affected by Method Of Cooking

:: White Tea Could Keep You Healthy And Looking Young

:: Low-Fat Labels, High Calorie Intake

:: Possible Medicinal Use for Kudzu

:: Shedding Light on the Secret Behind Probiotic Bacteria

:: Winter Sun Makes It Difficult to Get Vitamin D Naturally

:: Nanotechnology to Test Food Quality

:: Calorie Intake Linked to Cell Lifespan, Cancer Development

:: A New Breed of Stem Cells

:: Nutitionist Warns Against the ‘Freshman 15’

:: Nutrition Model Stresses Positive Eating Experience

:: DASH Diet May Cut Risk for Heart Disease, Stroke

:: How Nutrition Affects the Breakdown of Fats

:: The Healthy Senior

:: Four Steps to Reverse the Damage from a ‘Super-Size Me’ Diet

:: Whole Grain Cereals, Popcorn Rich In Antioxidants, Not Just Fiber, New Research Concludes

:: Cellular Effects of Vitamin A Overdose and Deficiency

:: Dietitians Urge Parents to Serve 'Milk With Meals'

:: Can Mobile Phones Help People Eat Well?

:: Consumers Misinterpret Meaning of Trans-Fat Information on Nutrition Facts Panel

:: A Weighty Issue

:: Parents Shape Whether Their Children Learn to Eat Fruits and Vegetables

:: Calorie Restriction’s Effects May Differ in People

:: Why Women Have An Edge On Salt-Sensitive Hypertension

:: Online Computer Games Could Encourage Children To Eat Healthy Foods

:: Fathers' Parenting Style Linked to Childhood Obesity

:: Misuse of Protein Supplements by Athletes

:: Low Carb Diets Disrupts Long-term Intestinal Health

:: New Program Cuts Diabetes Risk, Improves BMI

:: RDs Develop Sit-Down Meals for Families on the Go

:: Long-term Safety, Effectiveness of Functional Foods

:: Money Talks in Nutrition Research Results

:: Increased Dairy Intake Reduces Risk Of Uterine Fibroids In Black Women

:: Whole-Grain May Lower Risk of Heart Failure in Men

:: New Legislation to Improve Nutritional Status of Elderly

:: Birds of a Feather Eat More Together

:: Squeezing Out Diabetes with Substance in Grapes

:: Diets High in Sodium and Artificially Sweetened Soda Linked to Kidney Function Decline

:: New Online Pecan Resource

:: Battling the Bulge with Breakfast

:: Depressive Symptoms from Menopause Eased by Omega-3s

:: Dietary Calcium Has a Leg Up

:: Vitamin D Linked to Geriatric Physical Performance

:: Fresh Meats Often Contain Additives Harmful To Kidney Disease Patients

:: Soy Component May Be Key to Fighting Colon Cancer

:: Majority Of School Nutrition Programs Now Offer Vegetarian School Lunches

:: Alternate-Day Fasting

:: Heavy Duty

:: Children with Cancer Face Unique Nutritional Needs

:: Juice up That Diet

:: How Coconut Oil Could Help Reduce the Symptoms of Type 2 Diabetes

:: Men’s Health

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‘Healthy’ Restaurants Help Make Us Fat
10.22.07

Article available online at: http://www.therapytimes.com/103007Nutrition


If you’re like most people, you eat worst at healthy restaurants.

The “health halos” of healthy restaurants often prompt consumers to treat themselves to higher-calorie side dishes, drinks or desserts than when they eat at fast-food restaurants that make no health claims, according to a series of new studies from Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y..

The research, published in the October online version of the Journal of Consumer Research, found that many people also tend to underestimate by 35 percent just how many calories those so-called healthy restaurant foods contain.

“We found that when people go to restaurants claiming to be healthy, such as Subway, they choose additional side items containing up to 131 percent more calories than when they go to restaurants like McDonald’s, that don’t make this claim,” says Brian Wansink, PhD, author of “Mindless Eating: Why We Eat More Than We Think” (Bantam, 2006) and the John S. Dyson professor of marketing and of applied economics and director of the Cornell Food and Brand Lab.

Wansink and co-author Pierre Chandon, PhD, a marketing professor at INSEAD, an international business school in France, also report that by simply asking people to reconsider restaurants’ health claims prompts them to better estimate calories and not to order as many side dishes.

They recommend that public policy efforts help people to better estimate the number of calories in foods.

“In estimating a 1,000-calorie meal, I’ve found that people on average underestimate by 159 calories if the meal was bought at Subway than at McDonald’s,” says Wansink. Since it takes an energy imbalance of 3,500 calories to put on one pound, that extra 159 calories could lead to almost a 5-pound weight gain over a year for people eating at Subway twice a week, compared with choosing a comparable meal at McDonald’s with the same frequency, he says.

These studies, he says, help explain why lower-calorie menus at fast-food restaurants have not led to the expected reduction in total calorie intake and in obesity rates.

Source: Cornell University 


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OPTP at CSM 2010
Shari Schroeder discusses some of OPTP's new distribution offerings, including the SmartRoller, a patented, resilient, durable 'two-in-one' foam roller. While its rounder side increases roller movement, its flatter side decreases movement. With the flatter side down, it can be sat on and stood on for balance related movements, while placing the rounder side down provides a more challenging, dynamic workout.
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