Healthy; what does that word really mean? Yes, you hit the
gym a few times a week, you eat salads and you get a solid 7 hours of sleep
almost every night, but do these things make you healthy? Doctors usually
answer the “Am I healthy?” question by using several different gauges. Here are some of the most important measures
you can adopt for a healthy lifestyle.
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Personal
Protection
Great health is all encompassing and if you’re looking to
achieve the highest levels of health, personal protection is key. When it comes
to a life threatening emergency, it doesn’t matter how many salads you eat or
how many times you hit the gym, what matters is getting help fast; if you’re
living independently, that could be a challenge. During an emergency, permanent damage or
disability can be minimized, and even death may be prevented the sooner help
arrives. So how can you get help fast if
you’re having a heart attack or stroke, or if you have fallen and can’t get
up? That’s where Life Alert steps in. Life Alert provides you with a lightweight,
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response fast with just one touch of a button. No matter if you experience a home invasion, a
home fire or even a serious fall, Life Alert’s dispatch team is available 24/7
to send you the proper authorities fast. Health and safety go hand-in-hand, so
get the best helping hand you can by getting Life Alert Protection.
In 2008, The Martha Stewart Show featured Life Alert and
recommended its service. The popular national television program featured Life
Alert during a segment on health-technology devices. When
discussing Life Alert, Dr. Brent Ridge (who co-hosted the segment with Martha
and is V.P. of Healthy Living at Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia) said that “we
recommend this to all of the patients at the Martha Stewart Center for Living,”
pointing out that Life Alert is "so inexpensive yet so vital for
people."
According to MarthaStewart.com[1]
here are five other health areas you should know more about to get healthy.
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Body
Mass Index
Doctors don’t just look at your basic BMI to evaluate your
well-being; there are several factors to take into consideration.
BMI measures body fat based on height and weight. It’s been
used to define a healthy weight for decades, and it’s still one of the first
numbers your doctor will record as a solid starting point each time you are
seen. The normal range is 19 to 25. If your BMI is lower or higher, your doc
will talk with you about your diet and exercise habits.
The Caveat
A normal BMI doesn’t necessarily put you in the clear, since
its meaning varies depending on body type, lifestyle, and factors like family
history. “If you have a poor diet and never exercise, you may not be healthier
than someone who is five pounds overweight but has more muscle mass and follows
a clean diet,” says Amber Tully, M.D., assistant professor of family medicine
at the Cleveland Clinic.
Fine-Tune It
Wrap a tape measure around your waist. “If someone has a
high BMI, but her waist circumference is in a normal range and her weight is
evenly distributed, she’s likely to be healthier than a person who has a
disproportionate amount of fat around her waist,” Tully says. Research shows
that a large midsection greatly increases the risk of diabetes and
hypertension. In fact, a 2016 review of 12 studies revealed that every
10-centimeter increase was associated with a nearly 30 percent higher chance of
heart failure. Women should aim to keep their waist circumference stable, below
35 inches.
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Blood
Pressure
Healthy blood pressure clocks in at or under 120/80
milligrams of mercury (mmHg). Systolic blood pressure, the top number, measures
how much force your blood exerts against your arterial walls each time your
heart beats; diastolic blood pressure, the bottom one, measures how much it
exerts in between. “I look at an elevated blood pressure very strongly, because
it’s a risk factor for heart attack and stroke,” says Tully.
The Caveat
For a young person with few indications of cardiac trouble,
there may be other culprits behind high blood pressure. Anxiety or stress can
falsely inflate it, as can taking certain stimulant medications, like those for
ADHD, or even drinking a few cups of coffee before you head to your
appointment.
Fine-Tune It
Monitor your BP over time. One elevated reading is
concerning, but it isn’t necessarily a reason to panic, says Lori Tishler,
M.D., primary care physician with Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “If someone has
high or borderline blood pressure, I want more than one measure,” she says.
“Before you make a hypertension diagnosis, you want to have three elevated
blood pressures over a short period of time, up to a few months.”
Ø
Cholesterol
We need these fatty lipoproteins to help produce hormones,
build tissue, and aid the liver. But too many do more harm than good: Research
has shown that when your total cholesterol score -- which is made up of LDL (the
so-called “bad” cholesterol), HDL (the “good,” artery-scrubbing kind), and 20
percent of your level of triglycerides (common body fats, stored for energy in
the bloodstream) -- passes the 200 mg/dL mark, you increase your chances of
heart attack or stroke. Ideally, you want HDL between 40 and 60, and LDL below
100 -- the lower, the better.
The Caveat
It’s not quite so simple anymore. Doctors are much more
concerned with how your HDL and LDL stack up individually. “There’s a lot more
emphasis on HDL,” says Tully. “HDL is cardio-protective, and we want that to be
as high as possible. We look closely at the breakdown of numbers, not so much
the total. You could have a high total cholesterol with good individual
numbers, so that can be deceiving.”
Fine-Tune It
A total cholesterol score under 200 is still optimal -- and
you want to stay under that mark while keeping your HDL and LDL levels where
they should be. Need to slash your total and raise your HDL? Cardiovascular
exercise and omega-3 fatty acids (via eating oily fish like salmon at least
twice a week, or taking supplements) are the best ways to bump up that number.
Keep in mind that high HDL alone isn’t enough to cut cardiovascular risk,
according to new research: One recent study, published in Circulation, found
that for HDL to have a protective effect, LDL and triglyceride levels must be
low (100 mg/dL or less); it didn’t have that impact when they were high. For
the best protection against heart disease, balance all your numbers.
Ø
Fitness
Two and a half hours of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise
per week is the minimum amount the U.S. Department of Health & Human
Services prescribes for adults between 18 and 64. The goal isn’t just to
maintain a healthy weight; lack of physical activity can increase your risk of
cardiovascular disease and shorten your life span.
The Caveat
Your doctor can’t hack into your Fitbit to find out how
winded you were on that last hill (at least, not yet).
Fine-Tune It
The American Heart Association (AHA) now recommends that cardiorespiratory
fitness, which measures how well your body circulates oxygen to tissues, be
tracked like other key vital signs. “Evidence suggests that it’s just as
important as -- if not more so than -- traditional cardiovascular risk factors”
such as high The Stress Test blood pressure, says Leonard Kaminsky, Ph.D.,
coauthor of the AHA’s statement and director of Ball State University’s Fisher
Institute of Health and Well-Being. There isn’t an in-office test yet, so ask
for a referral to a clinic that offers treadmill tests to quantify maximum
oxygen consumption. If your numbers fall below the normal range, amp up your
exercise. Any heart-rate booster, even a brisk 15-minute walk, counts.
Ø
The
Stress Test
Doctors don’t always ask direct questions about your stress
level at a checkup, but this may soon be a common practice. Isolated instances
of anxiety, like when you’re battling bad traffic or giving a high-stakes
presentation, are normal: They trigger the body’s fight-or-flight instincts and
temporarily flood your system with the stress hormone cortisol. Problems start
when your cortisol levels get stuck on high. Chronically elevated cortisol can
lead to inflammation in the body, which, over time, ups your chances of heart
disease and stroke. But your doc doesn’t have a way to measure that kind of
sustained stress -- just its effects on your body. What she can do is ask
whether you’ve felt down or depressed in the past week. “That’s one of two new
questions our doctors are now required to ask at all outpatient primary-care
offices, regardless of the reason a patient has come in,” says the Cleveland
Clinic’s Amber Tully; the other is whether you’ve been having trouble
concentrating. If the answer to either is yes, doctors follow with detailed
questions about sleep and focus, in order to gather objective data on whether
you may have undiagnosed anxiety or depression. If you have symptoms,
counseling is offered and recommended. “Even if all your other numbers are
normal, you may be worried all the time, so your body is in overdrive,” says
Tully. “Your heart rate might be a little bit elevated. Your blood pressure
might still be in the normal range, but higher than average for your age. All
of this can lead to an increase in dangerous stress hormones. Asking this question
helps us reach people who probably have not been as healthy as they could be.”
So if you’re stressed, speak up. Even though it can’t quite be measured, it
matters.
Use the information above to help yourself reach your
highest health goals. Together, you and your doctor can keep your body on the
road to longevity. But, while you focus on keeping the inside of your body
healthy, let Life Alert focus on keeping you personally safe. Simply slip on
their lightweight, waterproof emergency pendant and in the event of a life
threatening emergency, push the button on your pendant and summon an emergency
medical response fast. Whether you are in the kitchen, in the shower or even in
your yard, when you push the button on your pendant, Life Alert’s 24/7 dispatch
team will send the proper authorities fast. So don’t just talk about living a
healthy lifestyle, do it! Get started by getting Life Alert today! To know more
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Works Cited:
1.
Thompson, Jihan. “How Healthy Are You?” MarthaStewart.com. 7 March 2017.
<http://www.marthastewart.com/1512417/how-healthy-are-you
>.
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