Your Wellness Lifestyle Starts Here

What you eat has a profound impact on your health and your diet is one of the most controllable aspects of your health status. You can decide what you are going to eat every day. The average adult human consumes one ton of food every year – an astounding amount – and it is impossible to make the argument that this amount of food does not have an impact on your health. The effect can be either positive or negative depending on the choices you make.
New research from Johns Hopkins Children’s Center shows that a phytochemical in broccoli and other cruciferous vegetables called sulforaphane can have a powerful effect on fighting viruses like the common cold and COVID-19. 
Giving 30 mg of sulforaphane per kg of body weight to mice before infecting them with SARS-CoV-2 decreased the loss of body weight typically experienced by COVID-19 patients. Pre-treatment with sulforaphane also decreased viral load in the lungs and upper respiratory tract and resulted in a 29% decrease in injury to lung tissue as compared to mice who were not given the phytochemical. Additionally, sulforaphane decreased inflammation in the lungs and protected cells against the hyperactive immune response that has proven to be both common and fatal for many patients.
Sulforaphane has already been proven to have powerful anti-cancer properties, so these results are not surprising.
While you might be tempted to purchase a sulforaphane supplement, I’ve always advised that it’s best to eat the whole plant food because whole foods are more powerful. For example, cruciferous vegetables, which include not only broccoli but also arugula, Bok choy, cabbage, Brussel sprouts, and cauliflower, contain lots of powerful nutrients such as carotenoids, indoles, glucosinolates and isothiocyanates.
The same is true of all other plant foods – they are packed with protective nutrients that will not only reduce the risk of colds and flu – but also the risk of heart disease and cancer, which remain the leading killers.
You might have heard me say it before, but it is the whole of your diet and lifestyle, it is the breadth of what you eat and do on a daily basis. One note does not make a symphony.  The temptation is to take a multitude of supplements because you are not eating enough fruit and vegetables. Supplements have role, but on a needed basis, such as Elderberry syrup if you feel a cold coming on, or a good probiotic for gut health. "Nutrient supplements do not prevent disease because when isolated from their whole food context, their biological properties may be substantially different or even opposite than expected." (T. Colin Campbell, PhD.)  I will be having a class on supplement use in the future.

Diet quality is based on the foods you eat, not transient nutrient levels which usually have little to do with health status. 
During the holiday season, we all express gratitude for our blessings, family and friends. Let's also place value on and be grateful for our health and take care of our bodies. Remember – an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Eat your vegetables! 

If you are local, I hope to see you on Thursday, December 14 at the Epochary Inn. I will have Elderberry Syrup, probiotics, and the Wellness Forum Health smoothie mix available for purchase. 

New recipes have been added on the recipe blog, so check them out!



Liz Fattore
Nurture Your Health
Licensed Food Over Medicine Professional
Wellness Forum Health







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