Posts Tagged “Salt Lake City”
This is about a month old study but I thought that it would be a good idea to give out this info on a study that had to conclude that fasting seems to lower the chance of heart attacks in people that fast one day a month. The anti-fasting people will not like this and I can not seem to fast for any length of time but this study was not looking for this result as some studies seem to do but instead just concluded that this was the only possible result to their study.
Mormons and heart disease
Mormons have less heart disease — something doctors have long chalked up to their religion’s ban on smoking. New research suggests that another of their “clean living” habits also may be helping their hearts: fasting for one day each month.
A study in Utah, where the Mormons are is based, found that people who skipped meals once a month were about 40 percent less likely to be diagnosed with clogged arteries than those who did not regularly fast.
Fasting and improved health
People did not have to “get religion” to benefit: non-Mormons who regularly took breaks from food also were less likely to have clogged arteries, scientists found. Read the rest of this entry »
Looking to make a change and lose some weight? I have reviewed the top diet on the internet and you can go and read over 200 comments people have made about why this diet has worked well for them, as well as some of the problems. Tags: Benjamin Horne, Chapel Hill, eating habits, fasting, food, heart attacks, heart disease, heart disease researcher, Intermountain Medical Center, mormon, North Carolina, president, Salt Lake City, Sidney Smith, University of North Carolina, University of Utah in Salt Lake City, Utah
1 Comment »
I have two kids and my wife and I love our kids but they can wreak havoc on a workout schedule.
Men who hit the couch instead of the gym lose about seven pounds of muscle a decade. In other words, if you don’t stay active you may soon look like that guy at work who hasn’t seen his toes in 20 years.But with work and raising a family, finding time to log those miles and rack up those reps can seem impossible. Here are some tips on how you can fit an excellent workout into your hectic lifestyle:
Remember: Less Is More…. Or At Least Enough.
It used to be that you’d have to spend hours a week at the gym to get a buff bod. The good news is studies show you can get nearly the same results with a third of the work.
“If you’re training to increase your health and to optimize your fitness, you certainly can have a very focused workout that makes the most of your time,” said Richard Cotton, chief exercise physiologist with First Fitness Inc. in Salt Lake City.
So say goodbye to those multiple sets of arduous pumping, and instead choose just ten exercises, and do one set of ten reps each. Devote a full minute to each set, concentrating on the major muscle groups, and in ten minutes you’re pumped.
Gain With Less Pain.
Not only can you reduce your number of sets, you can cut your weekly workouts from three to two, said Wayne Westcott, Ph.D., fitness research director at the South Shore YMCA in Quincy, Mass. Men who workout twice a week using the above regimen get 85 percent of the benefit as men who hit the iron three times weekly, shedding fat and packing on the muscle as they do it, he said.
Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: Avon, chief exercise physiologist, coach, David Goodwin, director at the South Shore YMCA, First Fitness Inc., fitness research director, football, Glenn Gaesser, home fitness equipment, Less Is More, Massachusetts, owner, pain, Phoenix Academy, professor of exercise physiology, Quincy, Richard Cotton, Salt Lake City, stair climber, University of Virginia, USD, Virginia, Wayne Westcott, www.trazer.com
No Comments »
Here is an article from The Salt Lake City Daily Herald. I am including it as it does show the way that METs which are a calculation of workout based on oxygen consumption.
Disheartened by a failed marriage and years of weight gain, Ellen Bowden decided to turn to a personal trainer to help reshape her body and lifestyle.
Since January, the 47-year-old Salt Lake City court mediator has lost 11 percent body fat, shed about 25 pounds, improved her diet, quit smoking and toned up under the guidance of Michael Streeter at the 24 Hour Fitness center in Sugar House.
Streeter designed an exercise program for Bowden using the Karvonen formula, which calculates a person’s target heart rate by a person’s age and pulse. Three or four days a week, Bowden hits her rate of 144 on the elliptical machine.
Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: aerobics instructor and personal trainer, Ashley Jensen, Cardiologist, Carey Hamilton, Chicago, Chicago's Rush University Medical Center, diabetes, Ellen Bowden, fitness, Fitness Institute, Fitness Institute at LDS Hospital, Frank Yanowitz, high blood pressure, LDS Hospital, manager of Ladies Workout Express, Marci King, Martha Gulati, mediator, medical director, Melissa Walred, Michael Streeter, Mike Young, personal trainer, personal training director, reporter, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake City court, sports science, Stephanie Christian, The New England Journal, The New England Journal of Medicine, The Salt Lake City Daily Herald, the Salt Lake Tribune, University of Utah, Utah, XCel Spa
1 Comment »
|