Vegetarian Organic Blog

August 2005 Archives

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August 31, 2005 News

Researchers at MIT are working on the development of a robot dog that watches what you eat and how much you exercise, and that motivates you to stay on track with your heath program. The robot is a modified Sony Aibo dog that monitors your pedometer and food diary wirelessly, so it knows if you're walking enough and eating right. The system is being designed by Cynthia Breazeal and Cory Kidd at the MIT Media Lab, who have also written a brief paper on the idea. When you ask the robot, "how am I doing," it responds by acting happy, sad or somewhere in between based on, well, how well you're doing with your weight management program. If you have met your exercise and nutritional goals, the robot will wag his tail, play music and jump up and down. The concept will be rolled out September 11 at the UbiComp conference on 11 September in Tokyo, Japan, and will begin a study on 30 overweight Boston residents in the spring.


August 31, 2005 Research

Paul A. S. Breslin from the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia and colleagues report in the journal Nature this week that freshly pressed extra-virgin olive oil contains a compound that mimics the pain-relieving action of ibuprofen. They're also speculating what we have already known to be true: Olive oil, consumed regularly, has long-term health benefits.

August 29, 2005 News

Surfing the Internet and playing video games are just two more sedentary activities in modern life that contribute to ill health, muscle weakness and even obesity -- but not for people who buy a new exercise bicycle. A company called NeXfit Technologies Inc. introduced recently a home fitness bike that connects to computers and gaming systems like Xbox and Playstation. Controls on the handlebars move your PC's mouse pointer or control the action on video games. (via MedGadget)


August 28, 2005 Research

A new study has found that the number one source of antioxidants in the American diet is coffee. Tea is number two. Some might be tempted to glean from this story that coffee is good for you, which it isn't. It merely reveals that Americans eat way too little fresh fruits and vegetables and drink way too much coffee.

August 27, 2005 News

California Attorney General Bill Lockyer has asked for a court order that would force McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's, Frito Lay and other companies to warn consumers that their french fries and chips may contain acrylamide, a chemical the state says causes cancer. Junk-food chain french fries and mass-produced chips are extremely damaging to health, and acrylamide is just one of the reasons. I'm in favor of the warning label. It's a good start to educating the public on what's causing our rapidly growing epidemics of cancer, diabetes and heart disease.

August 22, 2005 News

Insurance companies are jumping on the healthier-kids bandwagon, with programs specifically targeted at dumping junk food, eating fruits and vegetables and getting kids to exercise more.


August 18, 2005 News

In the past few years, newspaper articles and news reports have pointed to research that shows the health benefits of chocolate. However, a new report today shows that, although cocoa beans are loaded with health-promoting flavanols, many candy makers remove them to reduce the natural bitterness of chocolate. So "regular" chocolate is just a lot of sugar and fat, and without any health benefit. The lesson here, as always, is that you can't expect health from mass-market food producers. They will always find ways to add toxins and remove healthy ingredients for reasons that benefit their profit margins and that leave the general population riddled with disease. My recommendation: Buy pure organic cocoa powder and make your own hot chocolate (make it strong, with soy milk and a little sugar and cinnamon). It will taste far better than any chocolate you can buy, and will be extremely good for you. You can also buy organic dark chocolate bars at the health food stores.

August 18, 2005 Research

A new study has found that just one serving of french fries per week between the ages of 3 and 5 increases the rate of adulthood breast cancer by 27 percent. Here's why.


August 17, 2005 News

A funny new Starbucks ad, designed to sell coffee beans for roasting at home, pokes fun at how "grumpy" customers are before they get their coffee. In reality, it's an admission that caffeine is a drug much like any other form of "speed," and its users are crazed, desperate addicts.

August 17, 2005 Research

The University of Manchester in the UK has discovered yet another "health benefit" to eating fruits and vegetables. A study found that carotenoids, found in some fruits and vegetables -- mostly orange and yellow ones -- appear to "help stave off arthritis." Once again, the health research industry is coming at the problem of disease backwards, assuming that the diseases are "normal" and that healthy foods are some kind of drug that cures or mitigates them. Our view is that nature assumes your body will have huge quantities of fruits and vegetables daily, and the unnatural absense of these foods in our diets CAUSES diseases like arthritis, heart disease, cancer and others.

August 17, 2005 News

The American Beverage Association's "solution" to the obvious problem of soda machines in schools is to recommend the addition of other unhealthy drinks in middle school and high school vending machines, including "sports drinks, no-calorie soft drinks and low-calorie juice drinks," according to an AP story today. They also advocate that elementary school vending machines should contain only bottled water and 100 percent fruit juice, which should be the recommendation for all schools.

August 5, 2005 Research

The slow stretches and meditations of yoga don't burn calories like a run on the treadmill. But a new study suggests it might help people keep weight off in middle age. Researchers found that overweight people in their 50s who regularly practiced yoga lost about five pounds over 10 years, while a group in the same age range gained about 13 1/2 pounds over the same period. Middle-aged people of normal weight generally put on pounds over 10 years, but those who did yoga gained less weight than those who didn't practice yoga.