Friday, 31 May 2013

Princess Health and Low-Carb, Sugar-Free - Let's Have a Closer Look!. Princessiccia

Do your mood and energy levels change all the time? You feel happy then you feel down? You have energy then you feel tired?
One of the very likely reasons is your inadequate carbohydrate intake.

This is the next in our 'back-to-basics' series, talking now about carbohydrates. Carbs, sugar, low-GI, these words might sound familiar, but would you actually be able to explain to someone what they are? As outlined before, if your health is important for you, it is vital that you educate yourself, so you can make informed decisions.

Let's go backwards, starting from the inside of our body:

-our cells need sugar, it is called glucose.
-glucose reaches the cells from the bloodstream, with the help of the insulin (the insulin is a carrier, it is like a small vehicle, used for transporting the glucose from the blood to the cells)
-the glucose found in the blood comes from what we eat - after eating carbohydrates, they get digested by our body and broken down to glucose, which is a simple sugar.

In the next article we will go through this process again, pointing out why it is not the same eating a wholegrain, a fruit, compared to eating a pack of biscuits. Why refined sugar found in most of the processed food is very dangerous - all these in the next article.

As for now, let's see why you should avoid weight-loss diets based on very low carbohydrate intake.

Why do we need carbohydrates?

As you've seen above, our cells need it. But what for?

- Carbs are essential for life. That is why they are one of the three macronutrients (together with protein and fat), which means we need higher amounts of it with our food.
- Carbs are the major source of energy.
- And one very important fact: the brain and the central nervous system needs continuous supply of glucose (coming from the carbohydrate we eat).

So what happens if you start a very low-carb diet and force yourself to cut out many important and healthy sources of carbohydrates?

You will start to have less energy, your mood will shift and soon you will be feeling down all the time, getting even to the point of depression. You might find yourself arguing with others with no reason, not having energy for your usual activities, and so forth.

Long term side effects can be anything related to the central nervous system...

What about the claim that eating less carbs will push your body to use the body fat?

Well, your body won't find what it needs in your body fat. There are glucose stores in your liver, your muscles, and of course, the excess glucose is stored in the form of fat.  But the process doesn't work the other way around unfortunately. You ate too much sugar, which forced your body to store the excess in the form of fat - that fat won't supply the glucose your brain needs. It is as simple as that. And all sort of problems will start to occur in your body when you cut out almost all carbs.

Yes, you might loose weight at the beginning following such a diet (and you most probably will), but is it really worth it? Not to even mention the fact that all weight lost during an unbalanced diet will come back at some stage.

Which carbs can you eat safely?

-Fresh fruit
-Whole grains
-Vegetables (all of them)

What about refined sugars, sugar-loaded food?

The big problem in people's diet is the processed, refined sugars found not only in sweets, but in many food nowadays, like canned food, salad dressings, wraps, and basically in almost everything what isn't  home made.

Before starting a weight loss diet, have a close look at your current diet. Think about it, or better write it down what you eat every day, what you have for mains, what you have for snacks etc.

If you find food with processed sugars in your diet, start with cutting them out, and without changing anything else, you will experience not just weight loss, but also increased and lasting energy, better looking skin, less cravings.

It is not easy though at the beginning, because sugar is very addictive. And we will talk about this in our next article.

In the next article we'll see:

-why eating refined sugar is not just dangerous, but highly addictive,
-how to quit eating sugar,
-why never use artificial sweeteners,
and more.

As always, whether you want to loose weight or not, regular exercise should be a vital part of your life. Exercise should be always on the top of your daily to-do-list. Come along to one of our ZUMBA classes and experience exercising the fun way. CLICK HERE
































































































































Wednesday, 29 May 2013

Princess Health and Judge orders Medicaid managed-care firm to pay for school health services, including $8 million in claims; appeal possible.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Judge orders Medicaid managed-care firm to pay for school health services, including $8 million in claims; appeal possible.Princessiccia

Medicaid managed care company Kentucky Spirit must cover preventive care services provided by local health departments in schools, a judge has ruled.

Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd of Frankfort said the company must pay $8 million for the services already provided by school nurses, which would be only .07 percent of its estimated profit for 2013, according to the updated earnings report of Centene Corp. of St. Louis, the parent company for Kentucky Spirit. The company is the only one of the five managed care organizations in Kentucky  that had disputed the coverage of school health services.

Kentucky Spirit stopped providing coverage for school health services last summer, saying its state contract didn't require payment for such services,but Shepherd noted that the state reimbursed health departments for school services before it transitioned to managed care, reports Tom Loftus of The Courier-Journal. �Kentucky Spirit is not free to disregard this longstanding interpretation of Medicaid eligibility and unilaterally re-interpret these to the detriment of local health departments,� Shepherd wrote.

Health departments and school districts will now find some relief because many school nurse programs were threatened by cutbacks and closings as a result of Kentucky Spirits failure to pay for services. �It�s great news because there have been dozens of districts that have had to either say they are going to cut back on nurses, or that they are going to close clinics, or that they are going to dip into their reserves to try to cover the additional costs,� Kentucky School Boards Association spokesman Brad Hughes told Loftus.

Gov. Steve Beshear said Kentucky Spirit had �sought a loophole� in its contract to avoid paying for school health services covered by Medicaid, writes Loftus. Centene released a statement later Tuesday saying that the company is reviewing options and considering an appeal.

This isn't the only payment Centene is trying to avoid. A ruling is expected soon in a lawsuit the company filed against the state last year seeking to end its contract a year early, saying the state rushed to privatize Medicaid in 2011 and provided incorrect cost information to the bidders, causing the firm to lose about $120 million.

Appalachian Regional Healthcare, the largest health-care system in Eastern Kentucky, filed suit in April of this year against Kentucky Spirit for $5.9 million in unpaid claims. This suit is still pending, and was filed just before Centene raised its full-year forecast for premium and service revenue to $10.1 billion to $10.4 billion, Reuters reports.

Tuesday, 28 May 2013

Princess Health and Sick of all the bad facts about Kentucky's health? Here's encouraging news about oral health and drug treatment.Princessiccia

Despite the plethora of bad news about Kentucky's poor health status, there are many positive initiatives for Kentucky's oral health and substance abuse treatment, which were stories buried under health news headlines about Medicaid expansion and low health rankings.

The Kentucky Board of Dentistry recently established the position of public heath dental hygienist, permitting hygienists to go into Kentucky schools to assess teeth on the front lines, which will provide basic preventive dental care to underserved kids with tooth problems through local health departments, Al Smith, left, reports in an opinion piece for the Lexington-Herald Leader.

"These hygienists will be able to do school fluoride varnish programs, place sealants, refer kids in pain, and promote dental health programs (like brushing and better nutrition) in the schools without being supervised by a dentist," Dr. Rankin Skinner, director of the Clark County Dental Health Initiative, told Smith. "I think this is a major step in developing dental health program like ours across the state and moving our kids towards better health in general."

The initiative, comprising 17 dentists and 127 volunteers, was selected as a national model by a national association of all the health departments. "It isn't often that a private volunteer program in Kentucky sets a national standard," Skinner told Smith.

Meanwhile, in Florence, Kentucky's first lady, Jane Beshear, a Democrat, joined her Republican co-chair of Recovery Kentucky, Lexington homebuilder Don Ball, to celebrate the Brighton Recovery Center's fifth birthday and nearly 800 graduates.

Brighton is one of the 10 new homes for Recovery Kentucky, a program that is also becoming a national model, Smith writes. Since its inception during the Fletcher administration, the program has provided supportive housing and addiction recovery programs to over 10,000 men and women, writes Smith.

Beshear said the next steps are for her and Ball to create more drug-free housing and jobs for graduates of the program, Smith reports. This goal creates hope for other successful initiatives and shines a ray of light at the end of a dark and dreary tunnel.

Princess Health and Pikeville Medical Center joins Mayo Clinic Care Network.Princessiccia

Pikeville Medical Center President Walter May and Dr. 
Stephen Lange, Mayo Clinic's Southeast medical director

Pikeville Medical Center joined the Mayo Clinic Care Network last week, extending the clinic's knowledge and expertise to PMC staff, which the hospital says will improve health care delivery for 420,000 Appalachians while allowing them to stay close to home.

Some of the resources that will now be available to PMC physicians and providers include its online point-of-care information system and electronic consulting that connects physicians with Mayo Clinic specialists about diagnosis, therapy or care management, says a PMC news release.

�Pikeville Medical Center is honored that we have been asked to become a member of Mayo Clinic Care Network,� says Walter E. May, president and chief executive officer of PMC. �I have admired Mayo Clinic for many years and tried to make Pikeville Medical Center more like the Mayo Clinic. This new agreement will take our hospital to the next level.�

The primary goal of the Mayo Clinic Care Network is to offer Mayo Clinic expertise close to home so that patients only travel when necessary, says the release. The network was launched in 2011 and has member organizations based in Arizona, Florida, Illinois, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Puerto Rico and Mexico. See details about specific hospitals in the map below.



�We are pleased to welcome Pikeville Medical Center and its more than 2,000 employees into our Mayo Clinic Care Network family,� says Stephen Lange, M.D., southeast medical director of the Mayo Clinic Care Network. �Our mission is to work collaboratively to improve the quality of health care and value for our patients. We are very excited to work together with Pikeville to find bold and innovative ways to enhance the quality of life for the patients in that region of the country.�

PMC serves 420,000 people and 15 counties in Kentucky, Virginia and West Virginia, and the hospital is currently undergoing a $150 million expansion.

Princess Health and Religious business owners and corporations have filed half the lawsuits over health reform mandate to cover contraception.Princessiccia

By Molly Burchett
Kentucky Health News

Some religious business owners are filing suit against the government, saying the health-reform law violates the constitutional freedom of religion by mandating employee contraceptive and abortion-inducing drug coverage; the lawsuits are expected to land in the U.S. Supreme Court, and a case filed by Hobby Lobby is the first of this kind to be heard by a federal appeals court.

Challenges to the mandate that will require businesses with more than 50 employees to provide no-cost coverage of all contraceptives, sterilization procedures, plus education and counseling, are not just coming from Catholic entities with a religious, moral objection to contraception. About half of the cases have been filed by corporations, reports Robert Barnes of The Washington Post.

There are now 60 cases involving 190 individuals representing hospitals, universities, businesses, schools and people opposed to the mandate, says the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. The Becket Fund maps the cases, as shown below; for the interactive version, click here.

Since the law mandates contraceptive coverage, groups such as Catholic bishops have accused the Obama administration of waging war on religious liberty, reports Barnes. In February, the administration announced an exemption for faith-based organizations from covering employees' contraception costs because the conceptions would be covered by a third party. Self-insured organizations like Catholic schools sued, arguing that the accommodation would not apply to them because there is no third-party insurer to cover contraception. But those cases have been dismissed in court because such organizations are given a one-year grace period to comply with the mandate, reports Laura Bassett of the Huffington Post.

Businesses don't qualify for faith-based exemption from mandates

Hobby Lobby's David and Barbara Green

Business do not meet the new exemption either, because they are not religious organizations. However, some businesses like Hobby Lobby, which was founded and is still owned by an evangelical Christian family that believes life begins at conception and already covers contraceptives through existing employee health coverage, are fighting the law's mandate to cover abortion-inducing drugs or devices, like morning-after and week-after pills.

"They ought to be able � just like a church, just like a charity � to have the right to opt out of a provision that infringes on their religious beliefs," said Kyle Duncan, who argued the case Thursday before the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals on behalf of the Green family, and a sister company, Christian booksellers Mardel Inc, reports The Associated Press.

Other suits have been filed by religious business owners of diverse enterprises, from a company that makes wooden cabinets to owners of Panera Bread restaurants, reports Barnes, but all the cases base their arguments on the First Amendment guarantee of free exercise of religion and on the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993. The Hobby Lobby case also specifies that the mandate violates freedom of speech and the Administrative Procedure Act because it was imposed without prior notice or sufficient time for public comment.

In the early stages of litigation, lower courts have split on the issue. Some have rejected Hobby Lobby's request for an exemption to the mandate, and requests by other businesses for a temporary injunction, saying for-profit businesses aren't covered by the faith-based exemption. However, courts in St. Louis and the Seventh Circuit have granted temporary injunctions. (Read more)

Princess Health and Website eases application process for SNAP, formerly food stamps, and promotes healthy food .Princessiccia

With a federal grant, the state Department for Community Based Services has launched a customer service website to promote healthy foods by assisting the families receiving food benefits through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly called food stamps.

The portal allows people to check their eligibility for SNAP and apply for benefits with a shorter application that will be followed by a DCBS interview. They can also check their benefit status, report changes and receive electronic notices.

The agency says an online application eliminates any transportation issues a family may have with visiting a DCBS office, and encourages applications. �Modern improvements like this make it easier for families to apply for benefits and ultimately increase access to healthy food,� said Audrey Haynes, secretary of the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, which houses DCBS.

�SNAP helps people of all ages afford healthy food,� said DCBS Commissioner Teresa James. �For some of our DCBS customers, it means the difference between having a family meal or nothing at all. This website makes applying for benefits, making updates or accessing information even easier since customers don�t have to make an office appointment or even pick up the phone to get help.�

Since the portal�s launch on March 11, DCBS has received more than 1,000 electronic applications. Click here to learn more about SNAP. 

Monday, 27 May 2013

Princess Health andH+P Racing: May 25-26th, 2013.Princessiccia

Another great couple days for the team- here are the results:

Ottawa Half Marathon
Brendan destroyed the 1/2 marathon- opening with a 34:22 10K, and finishing in 1:15:15- good enough for 4th overall out of almost 12 000 runners, and 1st in hisAG


Sulphur Springs 25K

Val had an amazing race- despite multiple injuries, placed 3rd overall for females!


Helen also had an awesome race, placing 22nd overall for females!

Dave destroyed the 25K, placing 8th overall and 2nd in his AG with a time of 1:47!

Mike proved all his hard work is paying off- he placed 14th overall in 1:52!

Val, Helen, Dave and Mike post-race

Woodstock Triathlon

Luke had a great return to triathlons, winning his AG at the Woodstock Tri!

 Wahiawa Pineapple Run

 Jordan PB'ed in the 10K, running 37:31 and placing 3rd overall at the Wahiawa Pineapple Run

Here are some additional pics from the race weekend: