Friday, December 18, 2009

a letter to President Obama regarding health care

This may only demonstrate my ignorance, but my argument is that if you know what you need, then you can't be ignorant about it, just confused by people who are deliberately trying to be confusing.

Here is a letter I wrote to President Obama about health care, followed by his response:




Dear President Obama,


As more and more criticisms are made of your proposed health care policy, I would like to make a request. Please consider those of us who support alternative health care methods. We are your allies in reducing health care costs. We seek out preventative treatments such as chiropractic, massage, and acupuncture; we go to doctors who prescribe supplements, herbs, and dietary changes instead of prescription medications and surgery. While I understand that the mainstream medical industry has a lot vested in making sure Americans need its services, and that you must take their contributions into account, you also have a responsibility to the health of each individual in the United States. Those of us who want to practice preventive health care will relieve some of the burden of care for the many Americans who still rely on hospitals, pharmaceuticals, and mainstream medical care.


Please offer a health care option for us. The HSA has been that option.


You have easily the most difficult job in existence, and I commend you and thank you.


Emily Avent




Dear Friend:



Thank you for sharing your thoughts with me.  I have heard
from countless Americans struggling to afford health insurance and
health professionals striving to provide care.  I appreciate your
perspective.

There is broad consensus among the American people on
the need for affordable, high-quality health care.  The rising cost of
health care is the most pressing financial challenge for families and
for our Nation, and controlling this cost is essential to bringing
down the Federal deficits we inherited.  We must also end unfair
insurance practices that leave millions of Americans without
coverage, deny them access to coverage, and expose them to
extraordinary burdens.  And we should ensure that small
businesses have access to affordable, high-quality health plans for
their employees so that we can make our economy - and our small
businesses - more competitive.  Now is the time to move forward,
and I am working to get health insurance reform done this year.

Since I took office, we have done more to improve health
care than we have in the previous decade.  In February, I signed
H.R. 2 to provide coverage for millions of children through the
Children's Health Insurance Program, and I signed the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act to make key investments in
computerized medical records and preventive services.

Still, more must be done to lower costs, expand coverage,
and improve the quality of health care.  Health insurance reform
must provide more security and stability to those who have health
insurance; make sure those who do not have insurance can find
affordable options; and lower the cost of health care for our
families, our businesses, and our government.  Reform will benefit
seniors by protecting and strengthening Medicare, closing the
"donut-hole" gap in coverage for prescription drugs, and providing
free preventive care.  To help fulfill the debt we owe to our service
men and women, I am committed to ensuring that we provide the
highest-quality health care possible to America's veterans.  My
2010 budget requests the largest single-year increase in funding for
the Department of Veterans Affairs in three decades and
significantly expands health care coverage to an additional 500,000
veterans by 2013.

Ultimately, there are tough choices to be made, and I am
working to bring employers and workers, health care providers and
patients together to create a system that delivers high-quality
health care and puts the Nation on a sustainable, long-term fiscal
path.  To learn more about my Health Insurance Reform Plan or to
share a personal story, please join me online at:
www.HealthReform.gov.  For further information on health care
and assistance that may be available to you, you may call 1-800-
FED-INFO or visit:  www.USA.gov.

I share the sense of urgency that millions of Americans
have voiced.  I watched as my ailing mother struggled with stacks
of insurance forms in the last moments of her life.  This is not who
we are as a Nation; together, we will fix it.

Sincerely,

Barack Obama

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Health Care Reform

I still find it amazing that human lives andmoney rate the same (or if anything, human lives rate less) when it comes to health care, but at least Dr. Jon LaPook has the right idea about preventive medicine and health coaching or counseling.

The Institute for Integrative Nutrition now offers iPod learning for those interested in becoming health counselors. They have also just been officially licensed by the state of New York.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Swine Flu Vaccine

According to this article, the swine flu vaccine is more dangerous than the swine flu itself. I happen to agree. As we are on the brink of a health care change, now is the time to demand freedom in our choice of health care.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Updates!

Responding to a post that asked when I would be updating my blog, the answer is soon! I have been very busy with my editing business, Pressque, but have some great new material that will be up soon!

In the meantime, if you're in the Charleston area, next Tuesday, July 14, Dr. Patrick Lovegrove of Lovegrove Health Solutions will speak on "Anti-againg: Which Supplements and Foods Slow the Aging Process."

Tuesday, July 14, 6-8 p.m.
Whole Foods, Mt. Pleasant

Monday, June 8, 2009

tomorrow night! Prevent Aging with Lovegrove Health Solutions

Dr. Patrick Lovegrove is a preventive aging doctor in the area. He will be presenting on "Living Younger" at Earth Fare in the wine section tomorrow, Tuesday June 9, from 6-7 p.m. I'll be there!

For more information on the event, visit the Preview article or Lovegrove Health Solutions.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Eat2Prevent has moved!

You can now read updates to this blog at www.eat2prevent.com. Come check out our new look!

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Spring Eating

During my last weekend in New York at the Institute for Integrative Nutrition, we heard John Douillard of LifeSpa Ayurveda speak about the Ayurvedic diet, which bases eating recommendations on three seasons: winter, spring, and fall. His site offers a spring grocery list to guide shopping and cooking. Or check out the fun body type quiz that will help determine specific eating guidelines for your body type.

So as we move into spring--oh so slowly, I think I'm already ready for summer--it's a good idea to start changing eating habits from heavier, cooked winter foods to lighter seasonal fruits and vegetables. I found these great recomendations on Rejuvenating Foods for Springtime.

To go along with those recommendations, here's a great recommendation for Green Pea Guacamole to get started. I recommend using fresh peas since they are in season.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Liver Support during Cold Season

I'm always amazed by what I don't know. Apparently your liver doesn't just exist to filter out vodka. According to my dad, it also filters nasty viruses, along with the lymph system. As almost my whole family has been hit with the most recent cold going around, I thought a look into liver support was in order.

The results weren't really surprising: the usual "eat more vegetables"—a high fiber, high antioxidant diet, etc. Vitamins B, E, & C are also important. This article from womensfitness.net gives ten tips for liver support including:
  • avoid caffeine, alcohol, and smoking
  • add echinacea and/or milk thistle
  • avoid antacids
  • perform light exercise (like yoga or walking) to sweat out toxins
  • cut back on salt and sugar
The Diet Channel online has adds specifics:
  • Eat a high-fiber diet to eliminate fat-soluble toxins.
  • Eat a variety of antioxidant-rich fruits and veggies like beets, broccoli.
  • Increase foods rich in B-vitamins, including brown rice, nuts, and seeds.
Garlic and onions, cruciferous veggies, and hot lemon water are great for detoxification. Also, it's important to reduce fat and salt intake as much as possible.

I think the best way to get hydrated and eat vegetables, especially in cold weather, is soup. I recently came up with these two recipes to make myself feel better.

Garlic Ginger Broth
1 box organic, low sodium vegetable broth
1-2 cups water
4-5 cloves garlic, chopped in thick slices
1 ginger root, peeled
2-3 leeks, chopped
1 bunch kale (if desired)
2 tsp dried marjoram (a natural decongestant)
dash cayenne pepper
sea salt and pepper to taste

Bring vegetable broth to a boil with garlic, ginger, and leeks. Boil for 3-5 minutes; add water, kale, marjoram, cayenne, and s&p, and reduce to low heat. Remove ginger root and serve.

Poor Man's Minestrone (or Clean out the Refrigerator in Winter Soup)
1 box organic, low sodium vegetable broth
1 16-oz can organic diced tomatoes, no salt added
1 can pinto (or other beans), no salt added
3-4 small organic zucchini, sliced
1/2 head organic green cabbage, chopped
1/2 organic onion, chopped
curly pasta (try quinoa pasta for something new)
any other leftover veggies, like carrots, squash, green beans, peas, etc., chopped
1 tsp paprika
1 tsp cumin
1/2 tsp cayenne papper
pinch saffron
sea salt and pepper to taste

Cook onion in a little veggie broth until tender; add the rest of the broth, pasta, and tomatoes. Bring to a boil and add all veggies. Reduce heat and add spices. Simmer 5 min, add beans, stir, and remove from heat for a few minutes before serving.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Cheap and Healthy

I found two articles recently that make recommendations for eating healthy on a budget. This seems to be a huge issue in general, and especially during the economic downturn.

This article from the UC Daily News in Tennessee, makes some good points, like eating beans instead of meat. In January I ate meat only once a week for three weeks, and not only did my clothes get looser but I saved a lot of money. It recommends drinking more water instead of soda and alcohol, and eating whole grain versions of pasta, bread, etc., which fill you up more. However, I have to point out that dairy is not the best source of calcium (try kale, collards, broccoli, spinach, etc.).

This article from The New York Times is a little savvier. Recommending the book Mindless Eating by Brian Wansink, It turns the whole equation around to point out that "if you eat right, you’ll have more energy. That makes you more likely to succeed at work and earn more money. Then, you’ll be able to afford better food, stay healthy and spend less on medical costs. And the virtuous circle continues."

I really can't think of a better way to put it.

Monday, February 2, 2009

FatHead

My mom asked about the health benefits (or not) of fats, and my business partner asked about brain health, and I thought, Hey, these are linked! Thus the inspiration for this week’s blog.

First of all, let me say that the research I found was very confusing. Most everyone condemns saturated fat while lumping monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fat into one "good" category. I found it simplest to break it down by specific ingredient.

The basics of fats are these:


Good Fat: olive, flax, sesame, and canola oils; avocados; nuts and seeds; cold water fish

Apparently, "oils high in monounsaturates are better oils for cooking. Olive oil is the best as it has the highest oxidation threshold: i.e. it remains stable at higher temperatures and does not easily become hydrogenated or saturated."


Confusing Fat: animal products (meat, butter, etc.); coconut and palm oil (saturated); corn, soy, safflower, and sunflower oil (polyunsaturated)

Saturated fat can increase the risk of colon cancer, chronic heart disease, and other health issues like high cholesterol. The body can produce saturated fat on its own; therefore it's not necessary in the diet. That said, it's pretty clear that we need saturated fat if our bodies make it. Also, there is a percentage of saturated fat in most other sources of unsaturated fats, including avocados, nuts, and polyunsaturated oils. And some sources of saturated fat, like eggs, have been proven to increase HDL, good cholesterol, which is actually healthy.

While these polyunsaturated vegetable oils are often touted as healthy, they are the fats that are used to make trans fats. Also, the extraction of these polyunsaturated vegetable oils usually involves heat pressing, which can create free radicals. And I found general agreement that
"polyunsaturated oils should never be heated or used in cooking." Best to stick with extra virgin olive oil when cooking, which remains most stable at a high temperature.


Very Bad Fat:
margarine, Crisco and other shortenings, hydrogenated and partially hydrogenated oils—all also known as trans fats

We’ve all heard of trans fat and probably all eaten it; I think the only surprising thing is that it’s still legal. Trans fats were created largely for packaged foods because natural fatty acids tend to spoil; they are simply natural fatty acids that have been chemically scrambled by adding hydrogen, which completely destroys the good omega acids. Trans fat lowers good cholesterol (HDL) and increases bad cholesterol (LDL), and is liquid at 450 degrees, which means it's pretty solid in our bodies. Clogged arteries, anyone?

Many restaurants use trans fats in cooking. New York banned trans fats in the city in 2006, largely as a result of Joshua Rosenthal’s campaign through the Institute for Integrative Nutrition. Philadelphia banned them as well, and California was the first state to ban trans fats in July of 2008.

I’ve looked for information about how to get them banned in South Carolina, but this informative site is all I could come up with. I'd like to start a petition, so I'll keep you posted.


Fat and the Brain

The brain is 70% fat and requires essential fatty acids like omega-3 and omega-6 to function, both of which are found in polyunsaturated fats. It’s pretty much accepted that we get plenty of Omega-6 fatty acids—which are found in red meat, butter, cheese, seeds, nuts, and refined vegetable oils like soy—and not enough Omega-3 fatty acids, which are found in walnuts, cold water fish, flax seeds, and even sea vegetables and green leafy vegetables. These Omega-3s are most beneficial for brain function.

In fact, “fatty acids from fats are what your brain uses to create the specialized cells that allow you to think and feel.” Two thirds of the brain is composed of fats, which perhaps is why fish has the nickname “brain food.” Myelin sheaths, the degeneration of which is a direct cause of dementia and Alzheimer’s, are 70% fat. And omega-3s have been proven to reduce depression.

So apparently “fathead” is an accurate term for just about anybody. Sadly, I’m not the first person to make this joke.

However, too much abdominal fat has been linked to a number of diseases including Alzheimer’s. And exercise has been proven to stimulate the brain, which goes hand in hand with weight loss.


Still Confused?

So are a lot of people, myself included. To play it safe:
  • eat fats that occur naturally, i.e., "real" food
  • stay away from anything that includes trans fat or partially-hydrogenated oil in the ingredient list (most packaged foods)
  • enjoy red meat less frequently or in leaner versions--buffalo and venison are some fun alternatives
  • ask restaurants if they use trans fats, and avoid fast food restaurants (this includes Starbucks! although they are making strides to eliminate it) Here are some restuarants and food manufacturers that have made a serious effort to eliminate trans fats.
  • don't eat a whole box of Krispy Kreme donuts just because they don't have trans fat in them. They still have calories (and probably chemicals).

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Soy-lent Green?

Be warned, it’s another long one… (At the bottom I have listed links to specific health concerns to do with soy.)

When soy came in vogue, it was the new miracle food, a perfect substitute for everything. There are still people who swear by it, but I've been hearing a lot of serious-sounding warnings. Once again, Mom spurred me to action by suggesting I do a blog about it.

In her book The 24-Hour Turnaround, Jay Williams, PhD, argues that PR firms have been hired to discredit soy benefits to protect other industries. It's pretty much fact, in my mind, that Big Dairy, Beef, and Sugar have government food regulations wrapped around their fingers, not to mention Big Pharma. So it's not a stretch to imagine that they and parties with similar interests would stoop to this level.

The benefits of soy, she says, are great and varied:
  • lower cholesterol
  • strengthen bones
  • protect the heart
  • reduce symptoms of menopause
  • aid digestion as a source of high fiber
  • provide a good protein source
Much of this evidence is taken from studying the health of Eastern Asia, where they don't suffer from osteoporosis or, apparently, hot flashes.

However, the Weston A. Price foundation, which does not accept funding from the meat or dairy industries, lists some pretty serious concerns regarding the soybean and derived products, like increased risk of cancer, Alzheimer’s, osteoporosis, and hypothyroidism. (see more on their Web site). According to their research, average consumption of soy foods is only 10-60 grams per day (2-12 teaspoons), and that they only consume fermented soy foods (in the form of tempeh, tamari, etc.), which neutralize naturally-occurring carcinogens.

I find this very frustrating. How can soy be supposed to prevent osteoporisis and cause it, protect against cancer and cause it, increase and decrease mental function, all at once? I mean, if all these studies were true, there wouldn’t be any point to eating soy at all because it would just cancel itself out.

An article by Dr. Virginia Messina and Dr. Mark Messina, "Is It Safe to Eat Soy?" puts this dilemma into perspective:

"But it is a rare situation where every single study on a subject is in agreement. ... By picking and choosing individual studies carefully enough, you can prove just about anything you would like about nutrition. Many of the studies that have concluded that soy is unhealthful have used animals as subjects. Drawing conclusions about human health from animal research can be very misleading. For example, broccoli and other cruciferous vegetables contain a compound (called indole-3 carbinol) that is an anticarcinogen in humans. But in some other species, it causes cancer."

This seems to underline the likelihood of soy being villainized for profit. However, we also can't look to it as a "food savior." Soy is fast becoming a product as important as wheat and corn, which compromises the industry’s motivations. We’ve all heard horror stories about non-food thickeners being added to soymilk. Check this out:

“Soy formula and soy milk is [sic] often made with soy protein isolate, an extremely refined product lacking virtually all minerals and vitamins. Many soy formulas sold for infants are rich in trypsin-inhibitors which can stunt growth. And all contain staggering amounts of mineral-depleting phytates. The aluminum content of soy formula is 100 times greater than unprocessed milk. Aluminum has a toxic effects on infants kidneys and may be a cause of Alzheimer's in adults. Soy formula lack [sic] three important nutrients found in all milk: cholesterol, which is essential for brain development, and lactose and galactose, which play vital roles in the development and functioning of the nerves.”
--taken from “How Safe Is Soy” by Susun S. Weed, condensation of an article in NewLife Mag, May '96, by Sally Fallon, M.A. and Mary Enig, Ph.D.

I’m not sure how much credit I’d give someone who doesn’t even know how to spell her own first name—Susun?—but the aluminum does shed some light on suspicions of links to dementia (see below).

However, she does “condense” what seems like a sound conclusion:

“To summarize: traditional fermented soy products, especially when made with organic beans, are beneficial in the diet when combined with rice, sea foods, and fermented vegetables. The value of other soy products is questionable at best, disease causing at worst. The use of soy as a primary protein source is misguided.”

Dr. Janet Starr Hull of Alternative Health and Nutrition online makes the same point:

Soy itself isn't the bad guy here; it's modern humans' adulteration and misuse of the soybean we need to focus on as an issue of concern. … Do you want to know how to keep your soy healthy? Well, here's the key - purchase soy products that have been properly fermented and organically grown, and like everything else you eat, consume soy in moderation. (Many Americans tend to "over-do" a good-thing.)


But, she insists, “the wild soybean is a different species from the soy we eat in modern America.”

I highly recommend her article. The conclusion seems to be moderation and intent. If you love soy, in whatever form, don’t overdo it. And consider the form in which soy is consumed in Asia: miso, tempeh, tamari. They aren’t main courses. Trying to make soy the solution to all our health woes is missing the point. There is no quick fix—for anything. The sooner Americans figure that out, the better.

Again, compare soy to wheat and corn. There’s nothing inherently wrong with either one of them; they were meant to be a small part of a varied diet. Both contain fiber in the right form (whole grains and whole kernels, not pretzels and high fructose corn syrup). But because we’ve OD’d on them, so to speak, people are developing gluten allergies and corn is ending up in places it never should have been.

So if you can’t drink cow milk and you can’t drink soymilk, what are you supposed to put on your cereal? I’m beginning to think my grandmother’s idea was right on: orange juice. She said it kept the milk from curdling in her stomach when she mixed it with the orange juice she drank in the morning.

MORE
If you love procrastination as much as I do, and reading this is truly preferable to work, laundry, or showering, here’s some further information about various soy claims:

Soy and Thyroid Function
Goitrogens, the compounds that interfere with thyroid function, are also found in cruciferious vegetables. Also, adequate iodine is crucial to the effects of soy on the thyroid. Once again, amounts of soy consumed are key.

Soy and Dementia
Studies are inconclusive. Some seem to show higher rates of dementia in Asian men who consumed more soy, but overall incidence of dementia are drastically lower in Asia than in other parts of the world, seeming to offset any relationship. Causes for dementia are so varied, and still so mysterious, that it’s hard to pin this one on soy.

Soy and Protein
It is generally accepted in Asia that soy is not consumed as a substitute for meat but rather an occasional alternative or even accompaniment. Other sources of information seem to support this.

Soy and Cancer
This seems to be a classic example of using one study (and a study done on animals at that) to create hype and panic. People freak out when you mention cancer, and for good reason. All it takes to hurt soy is a cancer reputation.

Soy and Menopause
“The sterol diosgenin is naturally abundant in plants such as the tropical wild yam and the soybean, and can be converted by the body into the exact molecule as human progesterone.”
But when used in commercial manufacturing of drugs for the purpose of replacing progesterone in the body, “biologically speaking, there are no biochemical pathways in the body for breaking down synthetic diosgenin into progesterone, DHEA, estrogen, testosterone, or the cortisones. The process is miraculously done in the plant itself during fermentation.”

"How to Eat Soy So It Helps"
“The lay press and the soy industry have widely promoted the message that soy phytoestrogens act, in effect, as surrogate estrogens. Such a message gives women the impression that they can use soy to naturally relieve symptoms of falling estrogen levels at menopause. While the research does show that isoflavones behave like estrogens in the body the conclusion that they are all the medicine a woman needs to help her through menopause is not borne out by recent clinical studies on soy and menopausal symptoms.”

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Diet Therapy

The concept of natural healing isn’t new. I read in the newspaper this morning that getting enough sleep can ward off winter colds. A recent newsletter from The Holistic Chick states,

“Eating unhealthy, not being active and abusing our bodies with such things as smoking causes our bodies to deteriorate. Obesity, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, sleep apnea, stroke, heart disease, premature aging, cancer are all effects of unhealthy lifestyle....”

I also went to a Juice Plus seminar this weekend where I learned that doctors and scientists spent millions on researching a cure for heart disease only to learn that it is easier to prevent—with diet and exercise—than cure. I mean, if you think about it, what did people do for thousands of years before modern medicine when they caught a cold? They sure didn’t take Nyquil. What they probably did was something more like this cough remedy a friend forwarded to me:

Add three tablespoons of dried thyme to one pint of boiling water. Let cool, then add one cup of honey. Take one teaspoon every hour as needed. Stores in fridge up to three months.

More and more, healing through prevention and natural methods like dietary changes are becoming mainstream. Several months ago People magazine and CNN featured Jenny McCarthy’s son’s recovery from symptoms of autism—improvement to the point that doctors now think he was misdiagnosed altogether—largely based on diet change. She is now the founder of Generation Rescue, an organization which claims that “autism is reversible.”

Dr. Peter D’Adamo expounds upon this idea in his Eat Right 4 Your Type eating lifestyles. He explains in remarkably coherent terms results of his scientific research into why different blood types thrive on or are weakened by certain types of food. While his research can be limitingly specific, the takeaway is that via dietary change many people have found relief from a multitude of symptoms—from digestive issues to arthritis and beyond.

This idea is so prevalent that it has a name: “Diet Therapy,” defined as “treating an illness with the food you eat instead of traditional medicine.” This is applied to everything from MS (!) to ADHD to cancer. Just think of all the health conditions described as “incurable” by the medical community that can be cured with dietary methods. Think of all the symptoms that, instead of being numbed while they continue to wreak havoc with the body, can be reduced or removed completely—chronic pain, fatigue, sleeplessness—not to mention weight loss, lowered cholesterol and blood pressure, and increased life span!

So why isn’t the medical community embracing this more? One reason is insurance demands (see the quote in last week’s blog); another is pharmaceutical sales; another is ignorance, the result of education in a culture that knows nothing else but to trust what it has been taught for decades.

I’m not bashing mainstream medicine (well, not much). Ideally there will be a unification of these two schools of thought—holistic practitioners won’t be labeled as quacks and conspiracy theorists, and medical doctors won’t be branded as immoral and irresponsible.

In the meantime, it’s clear that there is more to our health—or maybe I should say there’s less to it. It might seem hard to give up fast food or cut out wheat or stop drinking soda, or to start taking supplements, buying organic, and getting more fruits and vegetables in our diets, but when compared to a (shortened) lifetime of drug dependency, the repercussions of a painful surgery, or simply a lesser quality of life and physical and mental comfort and acuity, these simple lifestyle changes, implemented gradually and realistically, can mean the difference between a normal life or an extremely handicapped one, if you take Evan McCarthy’s case.

*deep breath*

Now that I’ve got that out of my system, some exciting news: I have my first weekend of classes at the Institute for Integrative Nutrition this Friday through Monday! I’ll be back with lots to write about.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Mixing Medical Treatments

So I am still doing some research on diet therapy, which is essentially examples of healing through food. In the mean time, some food for thought:

“According to a recent study by the National Council on Compensation Insurance, the factor driving medical severity is the growth in the number and mix of medical treatments. The study compared 2001-2002 to 1996-1997 and found that the number of treatments for all diagnosis increased 45 percent, while the increase for injuries such as knee and leg sprains was as high as 80 percent. Through negotiations doctors have been cajoled into lower fees, and to counteract these lower fees medical treatments have increased. Think of it like squeezing a balloon. When you pinch one end, it expands on the other. Doctors are, for the most part, not following evidence-based treatment protocol as set forth by the American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, and by not doing so, we are witnessing medical treatment plans that are misdirected and unnecessary, coupled with increased levels of treatment, additional testing, and the high cost of doctors to run these tests.” --Frank Pennachio, cofounder and Director of Learning at the Institute of Work Comp Professionals.

Kind of scary. I'm not at all insinuating that doctors are incompetent. However, there are other interests at stake than OUR HEALTH. It's the same agenda as the pharmaceutical industry has, and once again by an entity created to assist our health--insurance.

Makes me want to take the AARP a little more seriously.
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Charleston, SC, United States
As a food therapist and certified holistic practitioner, I help people develop a healthy relationship with food.