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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Food Desert Week 2

After last week’s findings about food deserts in Chicago, we thought we’d investigate our own backyard and see if Seattle has anything up its sleeve…and we’ve discovered some incredible information! 

Meet Stockbox: a miniature grocer tucked inside a reclaimed shipping container!  Just outside of South Seattle, Stockbox Grocers  - a new startup funded by Kickstarter - is bringing fresh and healthy food options to the Delridge neighborhood where the nearest grocery is over 45 minutes away. 

Stockbox just started in early September; their goal is to expand with two permanent sites by early 2012, and at least two more later in the year.  They offer a spectrum of fresh food, meat and dairy for communities that would otherwise likely go without these nutritional necessities.   

Seattleite, Carrie Ferrence, Stockbox’s cofounder, noted their goal is to “bring food back into community, and that is something that resonates in all kinds of places.” 

In visiting many of our clients' struggles with food and the fact that most of us readily have access to fresh options, it’s a sobering reality to imagine a place where access is utterly limited.    

An idea is to practice gratitude for the fresh food you have in your home; the fresh food you’re going to buy from your local grocer; or the fresh food which you will consume from a restaurant or cafĂ© today.  Not everyone is so fortunate, but with the ingenious ideas like Stockbox, the path to fresh food access for all is being paved.  No matter what struggle we’re going through food related or not, access to food, is one thing many of us have on our side! 

In the coming weeks, we hope to visit Stockbox and get an inside look at what they’re offering to the community.  For more information about Stockbox or if you’d like to help promote their cause please see their website. If you know of other efforts to help solve food desert dilemmas in Seattle, post us a comment!

Friday, October 28, 2011

Life Problem? Got a Great Pathway for you.

This picture is courtesy of my friend Kristen Reaves Bell. Just something fun to ponder.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Food Deserts

Have you ever heard of this term before, "food desert?"  A food desert is an area (primarily low income neigborhoods) where it is difficult to access nutritious and healthful food items. These areas are usually littered with fast food restaurants and convenient stores yet very little to no actual grocery stores.

Food deserts are truly a disservice to it's communities as the people living there are just like the rest of us, over worked, underpaid and busy with regular life and school activities. And when it's meal time and the closest grocery store is a 20-45 minutes drive away compared to a fast food joint on every corner, which option would you choose? Now consider that you did not meal plan, nor go make it to the grocery store the previous weekend and only have $10 to feed your entire family. That is an even bigger motivator to drive through.

In Chicago, they are FINALLY addressing this issue. Now, to just get Seattle on the bandwagon.


Emanuel steps up battle against city's 'food deserts'

Monday, October 17, 2011

Media DOES Influence- how does media influence YOU?


Last week we examined the confusion that media headlines and stories can create. Specifically, we referred to headlines regarding a recent study published in the Lancet at the end of August: Quantification of the effect of energy imbalance on bodyweight.

This week, we want you to take a personal look into how media influences you and your path of behavior change. Why are we doing this? We are all inundated with information. Whether it is true or false material, it surrounds us daily. What we desire, is for you to recognize how to be amidst all the input around you without it negatively impacting your progress of cultivating lasting behavior change.

What do we mean by negative impact? Let’s revisit from last week some of the story headlines about the study above:

Wow! Fail? How much will you really lose? This is unfair? We don’t know about you, but while we’re trying to make lasting change, these are the last headlines we want to be influenced by. Here are some of the thoughts we see infiltrate people’s minds from headlines like these:

-          “It’s unfair. I just got the short end of the stick... Oh well, there is nothing I can do about it...”
-          “I feel like I am failing at this; I fail at everything.”
-          “I am never going to lose this weight!”
-          “Is this really worth all the effort?”
-          “If I haven’t seen the scale budge now, it never will.”

Hmmm…all these thoughts have a common thread: fear, lies, more fear, and feeling defeated. The interesting part is- what changed? We can go from enjoying the progress we have made to suddenly feeling fear and defeat from seeing one headline! There you have it: nothing has changed except our feelings (which are completely valid but do not need to fuel thoughts and actions). No action has been taken and yet all the sudden we are on the verge of giving up, retracting our progress, and not believing in ourselves?! This is a prime example of how our underlying thoughts can be so powerful and we don’t even realize it!

In becoming more aware of how media influences you, be discerning of hoopla headlines, seek credible guidance from dietitians who are the nutrition experts, and continue on your current path of progress.

We hope you find our next few blogs helpful as we continue sifting through the content of this current study. At the same time, keep the big picture in focus; remember, your foundations are paving the way to your future and creating peace with food.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Is that really true? Media Influence and Mis-Information

An exciting new study came out at the end of August this year in the Lancet Journal. It was the 3rd part in a series on Obesity. What makes this particular study intriguing is how the media has shaped some of its results into “sexy” headlines and is a wonderful illustration of how we, as consumers, can get ROYALLY confused by that type of stuff.  

We will be spending the next few weeks sharing different highlights on this topic as there are so many great things to discuss on this article and the media influence from it.

The title of the actual study is: Quantification of the effect of energy imbalance on bodyweight. It was written by Hall et al. (et al. means that he wrote it with a bunch of other people and I don’t have the space to write it all down) and was published in the Lancet Journal on August 27th, 2011.  As you can tell, the title is quite catchy all on its own, right? No, not really, I’m being sarcastic. And this is true for most research articles. The titles are over the layperson’s head and the journalists charged with reporting on these studies are forced to get “creative” all on their own.  Here is where the misinterpretations begin.

To illustrate my point I will dissect the New York Times' (NYT) take on this study with its interpretive title: Why Even Resolute Dieters Often Fail.

The writer starts off great with, “If you’ve been trying for years to lose unwanted pounds and keep them off, unrealistic goals may be the reason you’ve failed.” I full-heartedly agree. Unrealistic expectations are usually the culprit behind many intense negative emotional reactions such as feelings of failure & disappointment.
Then the bomb hits, “It turns out that a long-used rule of weight loss — reduce 3,500 calories (or burn an extra 3,500) to lose one pound of body fat — is incorrect and can ultimately doom determined dieters.”  This has also been seen in other headlines such as, “When 3,500 calories do not equal a pound: new study.”

Here is the scoop on this: Many medical professionals have known this for YEARS. It is NOT a secret.  Technically, yes, 3500 calories does equal 1 pound.  Does this fact tell us everything about how to calculate out weight loss calories? No. Human metabolism is very complex and several factors play on how our body functions.  This is why there has been more research focused on how hormones, sleep and stress influence hunger levels.

Unfortunately, this particular study did not assess those important factors and therefore, did not include them into the development of their simulation model that they tout will predict a more accurate view of weight loss and gain over time. We will talk more about that later though.

Now think back to the New York Times article titled: Why Even Resolute Dieters Often Fail, and consider how many people (even teenagers and kids) may have read this title or one similar. How do you think they will interpret this study based on that title alone?

Do you think they will infer that this is an article written for everyone or only overweight or obese individuals (which was the only population of people whom the researchers collected data on)? Nope, probably not.  I personally hope that they get a sense that dieting is not a “cool” thing to do and it is not a healthy mind-frame.

When you see these types of articles, BE SKEPTICAL of what you are reading. Discernment is okay. Ask your dietitian about the validity of the articles you read, especially the ones that really speak to you. Sometimes the message hits close to home ONLY because the journalist knows how to attract his/her target audience, NOT because he or she is representing the information correctly.

The NYT article over dramatized much of the actual study and stated a couple of things that were never mentioned. For example the author writes, “Their work, spelled out in a new study published in The Lancet, explains how body weight can slowly rise even when people have not changed their eating and exercise habits.”

The study actually states (from the study itself), “In other words, weight loss continues for many months at the same time that the average energy intake is slowly increasing. The dieter might then incorrectly infer that adherence is not essential for continuing weight loss when, in fact, impending weight regain has already been set in motion. The slow timescale for weight change is responsible for the gradual weight regain over many years despite the fact that the original lifestyle was resumed within the first year.”

What are your first impressions? Feeling a little dooped by the mis-information? The journalist tells us that this reputable study in a really prestigious journal says that no matter what we do, we will gain weight. I’d feel hopeless and kind of depressed.

Emotionally and logically speaking here, I feel like the journalist did an injustice and falsely represented the study and this valuable message to its readership.  And guess what, THIS HAPPENS ALL THE TIME!!!!!!!!!!!

And not just in online newspaper articles but also on television, books, the radio, and from our friends and family.

When it comes to weight management seek out the help of a Registered Dietitian, not just your medical doctor or naturopathic doctor or personal trainer.

If you needed a heart transplant, would you go see a Gastroenterologist? Probably not.  RD’s are trained specifically to use all the multi-faceted parts of your lifestyle to help you realize those weight and health goals. We have the skills, the know-how, and the TIME, to invest in you and your well-being.  

Registered Dietitians work with your doctors and other health care providers to consolidate the information you receive and help you to interpret and apply that information to your real life situation.