User:Conservative/Sports, exercise and diet
Contents
- 1 Prevention
- 2 Healthy diet
- 3 Cholesterol levels and food/exercise
- 3.1 Spaghetti squash vs. pasta
- 3.2 CDC recommendations
- 3.3 Management of caloric intake and hunger
- 3.4 Mediterranean diet - Fish/lean meat, fruits, vegetables, Nuts, olive oil and red wine
- 3.5 Benefits and risks of green smoothies
- 3.6 Green thickies
- 3.7 Adiponectin levels and weight management
- 3.8 Mixing protein with carbs and blood sugar levels
- 3.9 Healthy snacks vs. unhealthy snacks
- 3.10 Avocados
- 3.11 Healthiest foods
- 3.12 Homemade healthy dressings
- 3.13 Natural sweets
- 3.14 Anti- cancer foods
- 3.15 Eating healthy books
- 3.16 Diet - healthy foods
- 3.17 Anti-inflammatory foods
- 3.18 Organic food
- 3.19 Heavy metals mitigation
- 3.20 Mercury levels of fish
- 3.21 Juices
- 3.22 Questionable food practices
- 3.23 Refined sugar controversy
- 4 Blood sugar levels
- 5 Maintaining health cholesterol levels
- 6 Boosting your immune system
- 7 Fasting
- 8 Exercise
- 9 Overall health
- 10 Motivation and mental toughness training
- 11 Cross training
- 12 Exercise machines
- 13 Free APPS
- 14 Decreasing post workout muscle and other pain and preventing overtraining
- 14.1 Warming up and stretching before exercise - Articles
- 14.2 Stretching
- 14.3 Basic stretching routines
- 14.4 Warmup before strength training exercise
- 14.5 Warmups before swimming
- 14.6 Runner warmups
- 14.7 Post workout soreness
- 14.8 Elbow soreness/pain and weight lifting
- 14.9 Workout recovery times
- 14.10 Quick healing to injuries and related conditions
- 14.11 Various Exercises
- 14.12 Hamstring exercises
- 14.13 Core exercises
- 14.14 Cardio
- 14.15 Strength training
- 14.16 Stretching exercises
- 14.17 Workouts
- 15 Area jogging paths
- 16 Working out - humorous
- 17 Foods to avoid
- 18 Heart health
- 19 Heart health and avoiding stiff heart (maintaining a "younger heart")
- 20 Increasing lung capacity
- 21 Exercise and preventive medicine
- 22 Longevity and general health
- 23 Health statistics
- 24 Personal trainers blog
- 25 Sauna
- 26 Sports figures
- 27 Importance of daily exercise routine on energy, mood and mental function
- 28 Health scores
- 29 Healthy living
- 30 Sleep
- 31 Mind/body material for friend's sick spouse
- 32 Divergent and convergent thinking, creativity and IQ
- 33 Healthful spices
- 34 Supplements and sugar documentary
- 35 Outdoor and camping gear
- 36 Allergies
- 37 Colds/flu
- 38 Coronavirus tracking and forecasts
- 39 Coronavirus prevention, info and treatments
- 39.1 Amount of Covid-19 virus exposed during infection and severity of Covid-19
- 39.2 Masks and face shields
- 39.3 Covid vaccines
- 39.4 Pescatarian diet and significantly lower coronavirus infections
- 39.5 Exercise and Covid-19 prevention/mitigation
- 39.6 Long-haul Covid
- 39.7 Covid-19 booster strategy possibly losing effectiveness over time
- 39.8 Coronavirus treatment
- 39.9 Vitamin D, Vitamin C, Zinc and hydration
- 39.10 Coronavirus and the outdoors
- 39.11 Death and hospitalization rates by age
- 39.12 Lockdowns
- 39.13 Coronavirus may not be conquered anytime soon
- 39.14 Psychological profile of Covid-19 anti-vaxxers
- 39.15 When will the pandemic end in the USA and other countries
- 39.16 Covid-19 and Fox News misinformation
- 39.17 AMERICA IS SLIDING INTO THE LONG PANDEMIC DEFEAT
- 39.18 Covid mitigation in the G7 countries: Per capita Covid-19 deaths
- 40 Coronavirus vaccine adverse events and excess deaths
- 41 References
Prevention
"A substantial proportion of poor health in populations is preventable. Previous work from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study1 suggests that nearly half of all health burden in the USA is attributable to a list of 84 modifiable risk factors." - Lancet, 2020 [1]
See also: Benefits of exercise
Healthy diet
Protein
Lentils
- Lentils. "If you are looking for a balanced carb-protein food to replenish after your workout, lentils are the perfect option. They are easy to make, high in fiber, and adds tons of nutritional punch to any high-carb dish."[2]
- "Surprising as it may be, lentils contain 18 grams of protein per cup. Cited by Men's Fitness as a top muscle-building food, lentils are also an easy way to get your carb fix with nearly 40 grams of protein per cup."
Combining lentils with other foods to create a complete protein: "Grains, such as rice, oats, wheat, rye and corn, can act as complementary proteins for legumes such as lentils. Complementary proteins only need to be eaten in the same day, not necessarily at the same meal, in order to get their benefits."[3] 0.4 cup of lentils (76g) and 1.9 tablespoons of sesame seeds (18g) make a complete amino acids profile.[4] A ratio of 0.4 cup of lentils (73g) and 0.5 ounce of chia seeds (15g) creates a complete protein profile.[5] A ratio of 0.3 cup of lentils (66g) and 7.5 teaspoons of poppy seeds (21g) creates a complete protein profile.[6] A ratio of 0.5 cup of lentils (99g) and 0.9 tablespoon of brazil nut (8g) creates a complete protein profile.[7] 0.3 cup of lentils (51g) and 0.4 cup of cornmeal (47g) make a complete amino acids profile.[8]
Cooking lentils
Cooking complete protein of quinoa
Some recipes call for as high as a 2:1 water to grain ratio, while others go as low as 1 1/2:1. In my experience, the sweet spot for light, fluffy quinoa is right in the middle. I use 1 3/4 cups water for every cup of quinoa.[9] Bring to a boil, then lower heat and simmer, uncovered, until quinoa is tender and a white "tail" appears around each grain, about 15 minutes.[10]
Chickpeas
Chickpeas aren't a complete protein because they don't provide adequate amounts of the nine essential amino acids. To make them a complete protein, eat them with wheat, oats or rice. Chickpeas are also a source of folate, fiber, iron and phosphorus. See: Chickpeas for year-round healthy eating, Mayo Clinic. A weight-loss study shows that people who consumed chickpeas regularly were 53% more likely to fit within a lower body mass index. Compared to those who didn't consume chickpeas, they also had a lower waist circumference. Another research study found that consuming chickpeas every day increased weight loss by 25% (See: Chickpeas Benefits – Nutrition, Weight Loss & Recipes).
Other post workout foods
- quinoa
- brown rice
- basmati rice in its whole-grain form
- nuts
- Whole wheat bread
- Sweet potatoes[11]
- beans
- Fish
Pescatarian diet
Getting enough B12 vitamin
B12: Sardines, salmon, eggs, fortified cereal, fortified nondairy milk
Getting enough iron
Iron: Sardines, mackerel, haddock, spinach, legumes (lentils, beans, chick peas, peas), pumpkin seeds, and quinoa.
- Iron rich foods, WebMD
- Iron rich foods, American Red Cross
Getting enough protein
- The National Academy of Medicine recommends that adults get a minimum of 0.8 grams of protein for every kilogram of body weight per day, or just over 7 grams for every 20 pounds of body weight.[12]
- HOW DO I GET ENOUGH PROTEIN IN MY DIET WITHOUT MEAT?, Pescatarian Kitchen website
- Protein, Harvard School of Medicine
- How much protein do you need every day?, Harvard Medical School
Sedentary:
The DRI (Dietary Reference Intake) is 0.36 grams of protein per pound (0.8 grams per kg) of body weight.
This amounts to:
56 grams per day for the average sedentary man 46 grams per day for the average sedentary woman.
Gaining muscle mass: It’s important to eat enough protein if you want to gain and/or maintain muscle. Most studies suggest that 0.7–1 gram per pound (1.6–2.2 grams per kg) of lean mass are sufficient.[13]
National and international dietary guidelines have traditionally recommend that adults need no more than 0.8-0.9 grams per kilogram body weight per day of protein. That’s equivalent to about 56 grams for men and 46 grams for women daily. However, a number of recent reviews, including a position stand by the American College of Sports Medicine, scrutinize the use of current dietary recommendations for protein among active individuals, such as athletes. There is general consensus that protein needs of active individuals are higher than those of sedentary persons. Intake of 1.2-1.4 grams per kilogram of body weight for endurance athletes (e.g. runners) and 1.2-1.7 grams per kilogram of body weight for power athletes (i.e. weight lifters) has been suggested as an appropriate requirement for active individuals. That’s equivalent to approximately 84-119 grams for men and 66-94 grams for women daily.[14]
14.1g per 1 uncooked cup of quinoa.[15]
6g per ounce of cooked Atlantic salmon.
Boosting immune system and immune system boosting foods
Vegetarian diet
Raw food diet
Vegetarian diet issues
Eating diet to get you complete proteins
- Quinoa, Harvard School of Public Health, "Unlike some plant proteins, quinoa is a complete protein, meaning that it contains all nine essential amino acids that our bodies cannot make on their own."
- Easy Ways to Get Protein - Complete proteins, Rice/beans and couscous/lentils
- What Foods Mixed With Lentils Provide a Complete Source of Amino Acids?, Grains, such as rice, oats, wheat, rye and corn, can act as complementary proteins for legumes such as lentils. Another option for complementary proteins for legumes such as lentils is nuts or seeds.
- Do I Need to Worry About Eating ‘Complete’ Proteins?, Cleveland Clinic
Nutrient dense foods
- Defining Powerhouse Fruits and Vegetables: A Nutrient Density Approach by Jennifer Di Noia, PhD, CDC website
- Top 7 Nutrient-Dense Foods That Make Calorie Counting Obsolete (kale, watercress, sprouted seeeds like sunflower seeds, Wild-caught Alaskan salmon, garlic, Organic pastured egg yolks)
- 15 Nutrient Dense Foods to Eat More Often (almonds, avocados, Quinoa, chia seeds, broccoli, berries, cabbage, kiwis)
Dr. Fuhrman:
Unhealthy foods
Processed sugar
Cholesterol levels and food/exercise
- Stanford - A better dietary method for lowering HDL than merely a low fat diet
- Finding the Ideal Cholesterol Ratio
- 8 Foods that lower cholestrol
- 11 Tips to Cut Your Cholesterol Fast
- 4 Nuts That Cut Your Heart Disease Risk
Exercise:
- Differential Effects of Aerobic Exercise, Resistance Training and Combined Exercise Modalities on Cholesterol and the Lipid Profile: Review, Synthesis and Recommendations, Sports Medicine, 2014
- Weight Training and Cholesterol, WebMD
- Low and moderate, rather than high intensity strength exercise induces benefit regarding plasma lipid profile, Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome, 2010 (small study)
HDL (Optimal HDL = 55 - 70 mg/dL)[16] :
"HDL-to-total cholesterol ratio, according to a study published in the American Diabetes Association's peer-reviewed journal, Diabetes Care. This ratio is used by physicians to assess overall cardiovascular risk and can provide more information than just one value alone. A desirable ratio is anything below 5:1, but a ratio of 3.5:1 indicates very minimal cardiovascular risk."[17]
- 9 ways to increase your HDL cholesterol levels
- HDL cholesterol: How to boost your 'good' cholesterol
- Foods to increase HDL
- 5 Foods That Raise Your HDL
- Long-term calorie restriction is highly effective in reducing the risk for atherosclerosis in humans
Diet:
- 20 Foods That Raise Your 'Good' Cholesterol: walnuts; blueberries/rasberries; avocados; ground flaxseed, whole wheat pasta; artichokes; chickpeas; oatmeal; nato; and Greek yogurt.
- 11 Foods to Increase Your HDL: Olive oil; Fruits with a lot of fiber, such as prunes, apples, and pears, can lower your LDL level, and raise your HDL level; Nuts, including Brazil nuts, almonds, pistachios, peanuts, and others, are filled with heart-healthy fats; fatty fish (sardines, salmon and mackerel); and Chia seeds
- Nuts for the Heart, Harvard School of Public Health
Nuts:
"Go nuts. Eating a small serving of almonds (about eight kernels) daily is enough to raise HDL levels by as much as 16 percent after 12 weeks, according to research published in the Journal of Nutrition. Researchers believe the nutrients in almonds help limit the amount of LDL cholesterol that the body absorbs from foods while increasing the amount expelled by the body."[18]
- Cashew Nut Consumption Increases HDL Cholesterol and Reduces Systolic Blood Pressure in Asian Indians with Type 2 Diabetes: A 12-Week Randomized Controlled Trial.[19]
- Dietary Almonds Increase Serum HDL Cholesterol in Coronary Artery Disease Patients in a Randomized Controlled Trial.[20]
LDL (Some controversy in the field about optimal level. Less controversy for range):
- "In a Japanese study of 347,971 subjects, researchers tested the association between low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and cardiovascular disease (CVD), cancer, and all-cause mortality in non-statin users. Five groups were defined according to baseline LDL-C concentration (<70, 70-99, 100-129, 130-159, ≥160 mg/dL). The lowest LDL-C group (LDL < 70 mg/dL) had a higher risk of all-cause mortality, CVD mortality, and cancer mortality compared to the reference group."[21]
- "In a Danish study published in 2019, researchers set out to determine the association between levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and all-cause mortality, and the concentration of LDL-C associated with the lowest risk of all-cause mortality in the general population. Among 108,243 individuals aged 20-100, 11,376 (10.5%) died during the study, at a median age of 81. The association between levels of LDL-C and the risk of all-cause mortality was U shaped, with low and high levels associated with an increased risk of all-cause mortality. Compared with individuals with concentrations of LDL-C of 132-154 mg/dL, the multivariable adjusted hazard ratio for all-cause mortality was 1.25 for individuals with LDL-C concentrations of less than 70 mg/dL and 1.15 for LDL-C concentrations of more than 189 mg/dL."[22]
Optimal Triglyceride range is 70 - 80 mg/dL.[23]
American Heart Association: "They say that though the cutoff for elevated triglycerides is still 150 milligrams per deciliter, a new optimal level of 100 milligrams per deciliter has been set to acknowledge the protective effects of a healthier lifestyle."[24]
"Generally accepted levels: under 100 is optimal; up to 150 is normal; 150-200 is borderline high; above that is high. We disagree and think that over 100 is too high."[25]
Triglyceride to HDL ratio (Lower is better):
- Triglycerides & Heart Health, Cleveland Clinic
- The Truth About Triglycerides, University of Rochester Medical Center
Diet and Triglyceride Reduction:
- A compound called alpha-lipoic acid — found in spinach, broccoli, peas, Brussels sprouts, collard greens and chard — lowers triglycerides by up to 60 per cent in lab studies. Adding plenty of fresh tomatoes to meals (why not scramble them up with your morning eggs, have tomato salad at lunch, sauté with those greens for dinner) could cut levels in just six weeks thanks to disease-fighting phenols that seem to keep unhealthy blood fats in line. Aim for at least two meals of fish a week and pop 900 milligrams of DHA omega-3s from algal-oil capsules daily. If your triglycerides are really high, talk with your doctor about getting 4 grams of omega-3s a day for a short while; this can slash levels by 33 per cent. Then you can return to the 900 mg maintenance dose. Snack on walnuts, add avocados to your salad, drizzle olive oil on your salad greens and cook with canola oil."[26]
"Cold water fish, which are rich in omega-3 fatty acids, help lower triglycerides. Examples of omega-3 rich fish include salmon, sardines, mackerel, herring, tuna, and halibut. Other foods that help lower triglycerides include fiber-rich foods such as oats, flax meal, and beans. Olive oil, especially when substituted for animal fats like butter or lard, is another food that can help lower triglycerides."[27]
"The AHA recommend that people focus on eating certain foods to help manage triglycerides levels. Foods that may help lower triglycerides include:
- Lower fructose vegetables: These include leafy greens, zucchini, butternut squash, green beans, and eggplant.
- Lower fructose fruits: Examples include berries, kiwi, and citrus fruits.
- Fiber-rich whole grains: Brown rice, wholemeal bread, quinoa, oats, barley, and buckwheat belong to this food category.
- Oily fish: Some oily fish are salmon, herring, and sardines."[28]
"Tree nuts provide a concentrated dose of fiber, omega-3 fatty acids, and unsaturated fats, all of which work together to lower blood triglycerides.
One analysis of 61 studies showed that each daily serving of tree nuts decreased triglycerides by an average of 2.2 mg/dL (0.02 mmol/L).
Another review of 49 studies had similar findings, showing that eating tree nuts is associated with a modest decrease in blood triglycerides.
Tree nuts include:
- almonds
- pecans
- walnuts
- cashews
- pistachios
- Brazil nuts
- macadamia nuts
However, keep in mind that nuts are high in calories. A single serving of almonds, or about 23 almonds, contains 164 calories, so moderation is key.
Most studies have found the greatest health benefits in individuals who consumed between 3–7 servings of nuts per week."[29]
Avoid starchy vegetables: "Beans (kidney, navy, pinto, black, cannellini); Butternut squash; Chickpeas; Corn; Lentils; Parsnips; Peas; Potatoes; Sweet potatoes; Taro and Yams.[30][31]
Exercise and Triglycerides Reduction:
- Differential Effects of Aerobic Exercise, Resistance Training and Combined Exercise Modalities on Cholesterol and the Lipid Profile: Review, Synthesis and Recommendations, Sports Medicine, 2014
- Aerobic exercise reduces triglycerides by targeting apolipoprotein C3 in patients with coronary heart disease, CLINICAL INVESTIGATIONS, 2018 (small study)
"Optimal range < 2
Otherwise known as the atherogenic index of plasma, a high triglyceride-to-HDL ratio is also one of the best indicators of your risk for heart disease and suggests cardiovascular inflammation.
One study in elderly women, the triglyceride-to-HDL ratio predicted all-cause mortality, meaning it predicted the risk of not only cardiovascular mortality but also the overall risk of dying from anything. There is, of course, a host of additional studies on this ratio, including a study that shows that the triglyceride-to-HDL ratio predicts coronary heart disease and cardiovascular disease mortality risk as well as or better than a full-blown metabolic syndrome. A ratio of 2 or under is good for a triglyceride-to-HDL ratio, and most of my healthiest individuals strive for under 1, which demonstrates very little inflammation. Above 4 is typically a very unfavorable scenario."[32]
Optimal Triglyceride to HDL ratio ratio for men in terms of the lowest mortality, (Longitudinal study with 40,000+ men): Ratio of 1 with high fitness[33]
Spaghetti squash vs. pasta
Cooking spaghetti squash
CDC recommendations
60 minutes of exercise a day: 2cups of fruit and 3 cups of vegetables.
More than 60 minutes of exercise a day: 2.5 cups of fruit and 3.5 cups of vegetables
What counts as a cup of fruits/vegetables
Breakfast
Management of caloric intake and hunger
- 10 foods for caloric/weight management - Fitness magazine
- 20 foods for caloric/weight management - Stylelist
- 29 foods for caloric/weight management - Health.com
Management of caloric intake, hunger, weight management, etc.
Fruits:
Apples, grapefruit, oranges, pears, watermelon, blueberries, bananas (not overly ripe), plantains, goji berries
Vegetables:
Broccoli, hummus, lentils, black beans, kidney beans, white beans, garbanzo beans, salsa, kale, steel cut oats, chia seeds, quinoa, buckwheat pasta instead of regular pasta, avocado, brown rice, basmati rice, beans, pearl barley, sweet potatoes
Nuts:
Almonds (especially), pine nuts
Protein:
Eggs. sardines, wild salmon
Others:
Soup (including pureed vegetable soups), green tea, pomegranate seeds, red wine
Dairy:
Greek Yogurt
Spices:
Tarragon and maybe cinnamon
Tips:
Start day off with 35g of protein
Mediterranean diet - Fish/lean meat, fruits, vegetables, Nuts, olive oil and red wine
People who eat a handful of nuts each day (43 grams a day, or about 1.5 ounces) are 29% less likely to die of heart disease and 11 percent less likely to die of cancer according to a NEJM study.[34]
Red wine:
"Researchers at the University of California, at Davis tested a variety of wines to determine which types have the highest concentrations of flavonoids. Their results concluded that the flavonoid favorite is Cabernet Sauvignon, followed closely by Petit Syrah and Pinot Noir. Both Merlots and red zinfandels have fewer flavonoids than their more potent predecessors. White wine had significantly smaller amounts than the red wine varieties. The bottom line is the sweeter the wine, the fewer the flavonoids. Dryer red wines are your best bet for a flavonoid boost...
A four-ounce glass of wine is equivalent to one serving. Men will benefit from consuming one to two servings per day. Women should consume only one serving per day to reap the maximum benefits."[35]
Benefits and risks of green smoothies
Health risks of overdoing green smoothies
Green thickies
Adiponectin levels and weight management
Blood adiponectin regulate blood sugar levels. Blood adiponectin levels higher in people who adhere to a Mediterranean diet (rich in whole grains, nuts, fruits and vegetables and low in saturated fats and simple sugars). Recommended diet to improved adiponectrin levels: Monounsaturated fats, including olive oil, tree nuts and peanuts; dietary fibre.[36]
Mixing protein with carbs and blood sugar levels
Healthy snacks vs. unhealthy snacks
Avocados
Healthiest foods
- 5 foods to boost your health - WebMD
- 10 healthiest foods on the planet, Fitness magazine
Homemade healthy dressings
Natural sweets
Various natural sweets:
Dried figs:
Studies:
Anti- cancer foods
- 20 New Anticancer Rules By Dr. David Servan-Schreiber, M.D., Ph.D.
Eating healthy books
Michael Brown
Cheryl Reid
Diet - healthy foods
Nutrient rich foods:
Plant and fish sources of protein:
- Good amount of sardines to each each week - two 3.5-ounce servings of oily fish, like sardines, each week - American Heart Association
Documentaries:
Healthy foods:
Lentils:
Mung beans:
Beans:
Chickpeas:
Nuts:
Fish:
- Steamed fish
- Broiled fish
- Eat 3-4 cans of sardines a week to get enough essential fatty acids (Chicken Of The Sea skinless and boneless smoked sardines. These have up to 50% less mercury in them. Mercury concentrates in the brain and spinal cord of the fish. The spinal cord and bones are removed to make boneless sardines)
Mercury and fish:
Rice:
White Basmati rice vs. brown basmati rice vs. brown rice:
- Cooking white basmati rice the traditional Indian way
- White Basmati rice vs. brown basmati rice
- Benefits of white basmati rice over brown basmati rice - Nutrition, fibre, arsenic, etc
Brown rice:
Steel cut oats:
Eggplant:
Zucchini:
Stuffed grapes leaves:
Pineapple:
Oil:
Glycemic index, various foods:
- Some factors affecting glycemic index of foods
- Glycemic index table various foods
- Glycemic index - world's healthiest foods
- Glycemic index, various foods
- Glycemic index, various foods
- Glycemic index, list
- Glycemic index list
Glycemic index, Specific foods:
Vitamix and glycemic index:
Regulating blood sugar levels and apple cider vinegar, cinnamon and other foods:
- Apple cider vinegar and health
- Cinnamon, Fenugreek, garlic, nuts, avocados, blueberries, cherries, lemons.[37]
- Benefits of apple cider vinegar
- Teaspoon of cinnamon or less a day
Anti-inflammatory foods
The fats in your diet affects prostaglandin production (prostaglandins are a group of hormones that regulate inflammation). Some prostaglandins increase the inflammatory response while others diminish it. To reduce inflammation eliminate: polyunsaturated vegetable oils (soybean oil, corn oil, sunflower oil), margarine, vegetable shortening, all partially hydrogenated oils and all foods that contain trans-fatty acids (read food labels to check for the presence of these oils). Good oils: Eat extra-virgin olive oil as your main fat and increase your intake of omega-3 fatty acids found in sardines (salmon, mackerel, etc.), flaxseeds/flaxseed oil, and walnuts/almonds.
Organic food
Benefits of organic
Organic/non-organic
- EWG - list of vegetables/fruits pesticides - Executive summary
- Most/least pesticide vegetables/fruit
- EWG - pesticide
- Least and most pesticide food
- Study Finds Far Less Pesticide Residue on Organic Produce
- Organic food - European Union $25-million study
- Organics - Walter J. Crinnion N.D.
- Mayo clinic - organic food
Buying organic tips
Heavy metals mitigation
Mercury levels of fish
Juices
Pomegranate juice:
Questionable food practices
- Arsenic in American chicken, turkey and pork
- Bleached American flour
- American baked goods
- Some synthetic food dyes
Refined sugar controversy
Against:
- Is sugar toxic? - NY Times 4/17/2011
- Starving Cancer to Death by Removing one Food: Refined Sugar Posted on 11/23/2014
Pro:
- Does cancer love sugar? University of Texas - MD Anderson Cancer Center
Balancing/maintaining blood sugar and avoiding sugar cravings:
- Balancing/maintaining blood sugar and avoiding sugar cravings - Water in morning, leafy green, eat good fats (nuts, etc.), fiber rich foods, protein
Blood sugar levels
Based on the data of healthy individuals wearing CGM (Continuous glucose monitering), it appears that it is safe and healthy to strive for a fasting glucose between 72-85 mg/dL, a post-meal glucose level 110 mg/dL or lower, and an average glucose of 100 mg/dL or lower.[38]
CDC: Normal blood sugar levels: A1C Test Below 5.7%; Fasting Blood Sugar Test 99 mg/dL or below; Glucose Tolerance Test 140 mg/dL or below.
Maintaining health cholesterol levels
- "According to Michos, an ideal LDL cholesterol level should be less than 70 mg/dl.. Triglycerides should be less than 150 mg/dl. As Michos notes, total cholesterol levels well below 200 mg/dl are best."[39], Johns Hopkins Medicine
- Cholesterol Numbers: What Do They Mean, Cleveland Clinic
Lowering cholesterol levels
Methods:
- 11 foods that lower cholesterol, Harvard Health
- Top 5 lifestyle changes to improve your cholesterol, Mayo Clinic
Time:
Boosting your immune system
Fasting
Water Fasting:
Juice fasts:
Exercise
General workout tips
Optimal amount of workouts a week:
- workout an hour a day (with one day of rest)
Day of rest:
Medical historian, Karl Sudhoff, said: “Had Judaism given nothing more to mankind than the establishment of a weekly day of rest, we should still be forced to proclaim her one of the greatest benefactors of humanity."
- Workout tips and giving your body one day of rest a week
- Exercise and recovery time
- Rest and exercise program
- Advice from Olympic trainer
- Exercise and sore muscle
Strength training and recovery times:
Other recommendations:
Benefits of working out twice a day:
- The Surprising Truth About Working Out Twice a Day
- Benefits of working out twice a day
- Working out twice a day - Dave Wavey
- Working out twice a day - Livestrong articles
Working out 2 hours a day:
- 2 Hours of Cardio a Day - Cross-training and do two one hour sessions
Workout tips:
Body weight workouts:
Soccer specific routine:
Working out 3 times a day:
- Working out 3 times a day
- Workouts - times 2 or 3 - New York Times
- Working out 3 days a week TV star puts on 20 pounds of muscle in about 90 days
Vince Lombardi:
Pre and post workout foods
Pre-workout
- Oatmeal
- brown rice
- Bit of protein if weight training
- Hard workout and weight lifting: protein, broccoli and sweet potato[43]
Post workout: Complex carbohydrates and protein
Exercise - benefits
A Netherland study of 120,000 men/women found that men who average 90 minutes exercising a day, had nearly a 40 percent higher chance of living to 90 than those who spent 30 minutes or less on exercise a day. In addition, every additional 30 minutes spent exercising a day increased the men’s chances of living to 90 by five percent.[44]
- I need to go faster, Tribute to Usain Bolt
- I've got the power
- workout songs 1
- Workout songs 2
- Workout songs 3
- Gym beat videos - playlist
- Workout and motivational videos - playlist
- Workout and motivational music playlist 2
- Bigger Better Stronger - Trump Remix. See also: The United States will be the leading power in the world for the foreseeable future
Stretching routines:
Exercise tips:
Knee related exercises:
Back related stretches/exercises:
Ankle stretches:
Swimming stretches:
Core exercises:
Neck and shoulder exercises:
Physical fitness benchmarks
Pulse rate/Resting heart rate
Martial arts, exercise and benefits
Martial arts
- Shotokan Karate
- Brazilian jiu-jitsu
- Going to the Ground: Lessons from Law Enforcement - Journal of Non-lethal Combatives, Jan 2007
Stretches:
Warmup routines:
Martial arts workouts:
Shotokan karate routines:
Health benefits of martial arts:
Calories burned:
Black belt:
Overall health
Motivation and mental toughness training
See also: Mental toughness - MTQ48 model and Resiliency, tough experiences and overcoming obstacles
- Jack LaLanne: The first fitness superhero
- Liberalism breeds soft/fat, weak "men"
- Navy SEAL Mental Toughness: Swimming and Running
- How to Make Yourself Immune to Pain | David Goggins on Impact Theory
- US Navy SEAL Paul Tharp on Mental Toughness
- US Navy SEAL David Goggins on Mental Toughness
- David Goggins no limitations
- Never give up
- Aerobics with Jesse the Jack Russell Terrier
- Micky "pep talk" in Rocky movie
Cross training
Exercise machines
Free APPS
Decreasing post workout muscle and other pain and preventing overtraining
Warming up and stretching before exercise - Articles
Stretching
Dynamic stretching
Basic stretching routines
"For a general fitness program, the American College of Sports Medicine1 recommends static stretching for most individuals that is preceded by an active warm-up, at least 2 to 3 days per week. Each stretch should be held 15-30 seconds and repeated 2 to 4 times."[45]
Warmup before strength training exercise
Warmups before swimming
Runner warmups
Post workout soreness
- Local application of turmeric on delayed onset muscle soreness - British Journal of Sports Medicine
Elbow soreness/pain and weight lifting
- 5 Tips To Manage Elbow Soreness/Pain From Weight Lifting
- Self-treatment for tennis elbow - physical therapists
- Soft tissue treatment around tennis elbow
- Elbow Tendonitis - Forearm Supination Exercise
- Tennis Elbow Exercise - Strengthen Your Forearm Muscles And Prevent Tennis Elbow
- Fix Elbow Tendonitis - Physical therapist
- Arm Muscle Exercises : The Barbell Forearm Flexion Arm Exercise
DMSO and muscle and joint pain:
- DMSO and joint and muscle pain
- The use of DMSO in tennis elbow and rotator cuff tendonitis: a double-blind study - PubMed
- DMSO: Many Uses, Much Controversy
MSM and muscle workout pain:
- Blast muscle pain with MSM
- Miracle of MSM - Nature's pain reliever
- MSM - WebMD
- MSM and pain reduction
- MSM and pain reduction - PubMed
MSM and racehorses:
- MSM, 30 thoroughbred racehorses and hard training - Veterinarian Journal Study
- MSM and racehorse study
- MSM - Racehorse study
Workout recovery times
Various Exercises
- Mix of both cardio and strength strengthening and schedule
- Weightlifting: Before or after an aerobic workout?
Hamstring exercises
Core exercises
- Core fitness: why you need it and how to get it
- Mayo Clinic - Slide show: Exercises to improve your core strength
- Among The Best Core Exercises For Men & Women To Tone Their Midsection Is “The Plank Exercise”
- Core exercises for Men
- Top 10 Core Exercises
- The Core: The Ultimate workout
- 10 most effective abdomen exercises
- Core exercises for women
Frequency of abdominal and core exercises:
- Can your work out your abdominal muscles everyday? The truth about working out your abs everyday - Fitnessblender.com
- Can you exercise your abs everyday - Livestrong.com
- Can your work out your abs everyday? - Builtlean.com
- How often should I be doing abdominal exercises?
- Frequency of core exercises
Designing a core program:
- Creating core exercise program
- Designing a core exercise program as part of an entire exercise/nutrition program
Cardio
- Mix up intensity levels
- Mix up intensity levels
- Increasing intensity levels
- Swimming cardio workouts
Swimming
- 10 health benefits of swimming
- Reasons to combine weight training with swimming
- Swimming and building muscle
- Swimming and combined with resistance training
- 50 Swimming workouts
- Benefits of swimming
- Benefits of various strokes
- Calories burned via various strokes
Calorie burned via various strokes compared to other exercises
Butterfly stroke:
Strength training
Benefits of weight training:
- Benefits of strength training - Mayo Clinic
- 6 benefits of strength training by Chris Iliades, MD
- Increased resting metabolism burns over 15% more calories a day by Deborah L. Mullen, CSCS
General tips:
Nutrition and adding muscle:
- Tempah, Egg whites, quinoa, legumes, fish, chicken/turkey breast, lean beef.[46]
Muscle you can add to your body naturally in a year
Dumbbell exercises
Dumbbell exercises for legs
Dumbbell exercises for upper body
Calisthenics
Benefits:
Calisthenic technique/form:
Calisthenic routines:
Free weights vs. machines
- Machines vs. Free Weights: More Research is Needed - Bret Contreras - CSCS
Nautilus machines
Beginner Nautilus training:
Basic and Intermediate Nautilus training:
Total Gym
- Total Gym workouts
- Total Gym exercises- Total Gym website
- Total Gym arm exercise - Total Gym website
- Total Gym exercises - YouTube
- Total Gym playlist - YouTube
General:
- Strength training basics
- Strength Training and Specialty Workouts
- Strength training - Mayo clinic
- Travel - no weights
Ankle strengthening:
Stretching exercises
Workouts
High intensity interval training:
High intensity interval training videos:
Tabata interval training:
P90x workouts:
Insanity workout program - high intensity:
- Insanity workout program - high intensity
- Review - Insanity workout program - high intensity - WebMD
U.S Navy Seal workout:
Stew Smith workout program:
Area jogging paths
Working out - humorous
Foods to avoid
Heart health
Aerobic exercise and heart health
A better way to prevent heart disease
- A better way to prevent heart disease by Dr. Aseem Molhatra
Besides not smoking, there are four main factors to address. One – “poor diet, full of ultra-processed foods – junk foods, packaged foods high in starch, sugar, unhealthy oils. Going back to more traditional ways of eating is a very powerful step in preventing or managing heart disease. The foods we should eat? A combination of oily fish, nuts, whole fruit and vegetables, extra virgin olive oil – and whatever else as long as you’re minimising the sugar and low quality carbohydrate, the breads and the pastas.
Heart health and avoiding stiff heart (maintaining a "younger heart")
Amount of exercise and hearth health
- How much exercise is optimal for heart health?, Harvard health, 2016
Pycnogenol and heart/circulatory health
Increasing lung capacity
The chess champion Bobby Fischer believed that physical conditioning affected mental performance too as can be seen here: "Bobby thought of himself as an athlete, and he trained with single-minded persistence. He was determined that Spassky would not wear him down at the table. He followed a strict regimen each day to prepare for the demands of the grueling upcoming match in Iceland. After a daily workout in the gym followed by a sauna and rubdown, Bobby would swim laps and stay underwater for as long as he could (as shown in the photograph here). Bobby repeatedly said to me, “Spassky, I am going to crush him.”[47]
- Jumping continuously increases your heart rate and hence improves your lung capacity. This is because your body requires more oxygen and blood to be pumped to the working muscles for the period that you do the exercise."
- "Skipping ropes improves blood circulation and breathing which ultimately enhances your lung capacity." - 10 Amazing Health Benefits of Skipping Rope
Exercise and preventive medicine
- Fit at Any Age: Is Exercise the Real Fountain of Youth? Our Experts Think So
- Ageless heroics
- Can exercise keep you young?
- How to maximize the anti-aging effects of exercise
Longevity and general health
Exercise
Long term weight management
- Weight training for weight management by Ellington Darden, Ph.D.
- Long-term weight management or Am J Clin Nutr. 2005 Jul;82(1 Suppl):222S-225S, about 20% achieve permanent weight loss after becoming overweight
- Long term weight management - WebMD
- Generation Z and skyrocketing obesity rates (born mid to late 90s to the present)
Sardinia has the highest rate of 100 year-old living residents.
Sardinia and longevity
This category is a little different: death before age 100. On the Italian island of Sardinia the approximately 1.6 million inhabitants have the world’s highest documented percentage of people who have lived longer than 100 years. The secret is likely a combination of diet (they eat mostly fruits and vegetables, olive oil, garlic, fresh dairy, and tiny amounts of meat only once or twice a week), lifestyle (people typically work into their 90s), and genetics. In fact, a research team discovered a gene in the Y chromosome that can significantly reduce the risk of stroke and heart attack in men in Sardinia.
Longevity: Plant based diet and a Sabbath Day to reduce stress
In an attempt to “reverse engineer longevity,” Dan Buettner has spent years researching the parts of the world where people live much longer than average. Most of those locations are outside the United States — including Sardinia, Italy, and Okinawa, Japan — but there is one long-living group stateside. It’s the Seventh-day Adventists, who live an average of 10 years longer than the American life expectancy of about 79 years.
Buettner, whose work is part of the Blue Zones Project, joined HuffPost Live’s Caitlyn Becker on Wednesday to explain what Seventh-day Adventists do right. That includes eating a plant-based diet and having “a social network that reinforces the right behavior.” Their religious beliefs are also a big help, he said.
“They take this idea of Sabbath very seriously, so they’re decompressing the stress,” Buettner said. “About 84 percent of health care dollars are spent because of bad food choices, inactivity and unmanaged stress, and they have these cultural ways of managing stress through their Sabbath.”[48]
Longevity and biomarkers
- 9 Biomarkers to Track If You Want to Live Well and Prosper, Centralathlete.com
- Vitamin D, Optimal range = 50 - 100 ng/dl[49]
"Other biomarkers of longevity include growth hormone (GH) and the insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1). These somatotropic hormones regulate cellular homeostasis and play significant roles in cell differentiation, function, and survival. In mammals, these hormones peak during puberty and decline gradually during adulthood and aging. GH and IGF-1 regulate mitochondrial mass and function and contribute to specific processes of cellular aging, including mitochondrial biogenesis, respiration and ATP production, oxidative stress, senescence, and apoptosis. The way these pathways intersect during aging is of particular interest to researchers. Of note is that lower levels of IGF-1 does not mean that IGF-1 is systemically lower. It may really reflect GH/IGF-1 hormone resistance, meaning the hormone isn’t getting into the cell because of some dysfunction involving the signaling, transportation, and/or receptor."[50]
Health statistics
Obesity:
Obesity and health risks:
Documentaries:
Personal trainers blog
- All out effort by Sam Y.
Sauna
- Sauna Health Benefits : Are saunas healthy or harmful? - Harvard Medical school
Sports figures
Franz Klammer:
- Franz Klammer -The Kaiser - Hahnenkamm Kitzbuehel.m4v Franz Klammer - 1976 Olympic Gold Medal Run
- Franz Klammer - 1976 Olympic Gold Medal Run - Interview
Greg LeMonde:
Pele:
Michael Jordon:
Tim Tebow:
Motorcycle:
Importance of daily exercise routine on energy, mood and mental function
Health scores
BMI:
Healthy living
Sleep
Sunrise/sunset times for your region
Evening internet use
Don't use computer/internet an hour before bed, may hamper sleep:
- Bright Screens Could Delay Bedtime - Scientific American, Dec 19, 2012
Devices/software:
Charles A. Czeisler
Ways to fall asleep
Ways to fall back asleep:
Foods that help sleep:
Sleep and insight
Sleep aids
Bedding:
Sleep and exercise correlation
Mind/body material for friend's sick spouse
Divergent and convergent thinking, creativity and IQ
Healthful spices
- 3 reasons to eat turmeric
- 11 health benefits of cinnamon
- Chemists Shed Light On Health Benefits Of Garlic
- Surprising Health Benefits Of Garlic And Onions
Supplements and sugar documentary
Outdoor and camping gear
Flashlights:
Allergies
Dust mites
Ozone/negative ionizers and dust mites:
- Killing Effect of Ozone on House Dust Mites, the Major Indoor Allergen of Allergic Disease
- Killing Effect of Ozone on House Dust Mites, the Major Indoor Allergen of Allergic Disease
Negative ionizers and dust mites:
Colds/flu
Prevention
- Penn State Hershey Medical Center - Probiotics/vitamins/minerals/echinacea/garlic/ginseng prevent colds/flu - Take November to February
Diagnosis
- Diagnosis: Cold vs. flu - University of MD medical center
Reducing a cold's duration
Sore throat remedies
Apple cider vinegar and sore/strep throat:
- "Follow up with a gargle of 1 tsp Bragg Apple Cider Vinegar in half a glass of distilled water to rinse away remaining toxins and bacteria. This gargle also soothes and relieves sore throats." - Bragg Apple Cider website[[51]]
Bronchitus recommendations
- Here’s What the Next Six Months of the Pandemic Will Bring, Bloomberg News, 9/2021
- A recent study by the University of Chicago last week showed people with vitamin D deficiency were almost twice as likely to test positive for the virus¹⁶ as those with healthy levels.[52]
- Ozone's Effectiveness in Killing SARS Coronavirus Leads to Theory on COVID-19 (30 seconds exposure to ozone)
Tumeric as a coronavirus treatment:
Vaccine for immunity against the latest variant(s):
Vaccine for immunity against all variants showing promising results:
- Vaccine for immunity against all variants showing promising results
- NEW Amazing COVID-19 Vaccine From EnGENEIC Australia
Covid-19 vaccination and health stats:
Effectiveness of Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine:
Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is 39 to 96 percent effective against Delta. Even though vaccines offer different ranges of protection, real-world evaluations show they still provide robust protection against hospitalization at 60 to 95 percent. However, according to the latest studyTrusted Source released by the CDC, unvaccinated people are over 10 times more likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19 than vaccinated people. Unvaccinated people are also 11 times more likely to die of COVID-19 than vaccinated people, the study found. Israeli data has also suggested that the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine’s effectiveness against infection dipped to as low as 39 percent between June and July, down from the previous 64 percent. These findings conflicted with U.K. data that found it to be 88 percent effective against symptomatic infection caused by Delta.[53]
"For the study, which was published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Wednesday, researchers looked at data on more than one million individuals in Israel between July 30 and August 22—shortly after the country began offering booster doses to those over the age of 60.
How much worse will the 'delta surge' get? Watch these 7 factors. They found that, among people who had received a booster dose at least 12 days earlier, the rates of new infection were 11 times lower than among people who hadn't received a booster. The rate of severe Covid-19 was almost 20 times lower.
However, the researchers acknowledged the data showed only a short-term benefit to booster doses. "We cannot tell at this point what will happen in the long run," Micha Mandel, a professor of statistics and data science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, said.
Additionally, FDA on Wednesday released data that Pfizer had submitted to the agency, also collected in Israel.
It showed that, in absence of booster shots, the efficacy of Pfizer-BioNTech's vaccine drops by about 6% every two months after the second dose is administered. According to Pfizer, that drop is "due to waning of vaccine immune responses" rather than the delta variant. A booster dose, however, restored protection against infection to 95%. The data was collected from July 1 to Aug. 30, when the delta variant was prevalent in Israel.[54]
Covid-19 hospital admissions and maintaining proper weight/BMI:
Studies of overweight/obesity on covid-19 hospital and ICU admissions suggest a 2- to 5-fold increased risk for the obese. That makes a normal BMI about a 65-85% effective “vaccine” against severe infection - one that keeps people out of the hospital from a variety of diseases, including the flu, and probably the next pandemic virus.[55]
Amount of Covid-19 virus exposed during infection and severity of Covid-19
"A recent Lancet study¹⁰ found that the amount of virus present when a patient was tested did predict how likely patients were to die. Some research shows that wearing masks and keeping away from other people reduces the amount of virus they are exposed to. There may indeed be a link between physical distancing and the amount of virulum one is subjected to as, not unlike radiation – another invisible enemy – Dose, Distance, and Duration affect the amount of inoculation.
Some even suggest, speculatively, that frequent small inoculations generate low-level immunisation and that this could be the reason why some people are less sick, even asymptomatic. Whether this confers a lesser quality immunity still remains to be proven."[56]
Masks and face shields
- SARS-CoV-2: eye protection might be the missing key, The Lancet, May 1, 2021
Infection Control Today: "Wearing a surgical mask along with a face shield affords health care professionals only statistically insignificant better protection against aerosolized particles than wearing a surgical mask alone, according a study in the American Journal of Infection Control (AJIC)"[2]
Wayne State University, School of Medicine News: Template:Cquote
SONOVIA WASHABLE, ANTIBACTERIAL, ANTIVIRAL REUSABLE FACE MASK
Covid vaccines
- Increases in COVID-19 are unrelated to levels of vaccination across 68 countries and 2947 counties in the United States (Israel outlier)
Should I Take the Bivalent COVID-19 Booster?
- Should I Take the Bivalent COVID-19 Booster? - 30 minutes
Strokes After Pfizer Bivalent Vaccine - CDC Identifies Possible Safety Concern:
Post vaccination:
Concerns about Pfizer coronavirus vaccine, but lacking in replicated results:
- Heart risk after vaccines by Dr. John Campbell
- Increasing claims of vaccine-related deaths raise concerns, September 2021, Korea Times (31,000,000 vaccinated on October 18, 2021)
- Let's Stop Pretending About the Covid-19 Vaccines, Real Clear Science
- Ultra-Vaxxed Israel’s Crisis Is a Dire Warning to America, Daily Beast, 8-2021
- A grim warning from Israel: Vaccination blunts, but does not defeat Delta, Science, August 16, 2021
- Highly Vaccinated Israel Is Seeing A Dramatic Surge In New COVID Cases. Here's Why, NPR
Booster shot availability for Pfizer vaccine
Pfizer booster shot efficacy
"Add this to the long list of reasons to adopt a plant-based or pescatarian diet: New research has found that what you eat — and what you don’t — may lower your odds of developing moderate to severe COVID-19 infection. The study, which was published June 7 in the online journal BMJ Nutrition, Prevention & Health, is the first to report an association between dietary patterns and the severity of COVID-19."[57] (BMJ is the British Medical Journal).
After analyzing the survey data, researchers found that respondents who followed a plant-based diet had a 73 percent lower risk of developing moderate to severe COVID-19; for those who followed a pescatarian diet, the risk was 59 percent lower. “We also found that those who followed low carbohydrate/high protein diets had greater odds of moderate to severe COVID-19 compared with those who followed a plant-based diet,” says Sara Seidelmann, MD, an internal medicine doctor at Stamford Health in Stamford, Connecticut, and a coauthor of the study.[58]
Exercise and Covid-19 prevention/mitigation
"People in the least-active group, who almost never exercised, wound up hospitalized because of Covid at twice the rate of people in the most-active group, and were subsequently about two-and-a-half times more likely to die. Even compared to people in the somewhat-active group, they were hospitalized about 20 percent more often and were about 30 percent more likely to die."[59]
Long-haul Covid
While older people and those with compromised immune systems are more likely to become long-haulers, the condition has also been seen in people who had mild cases and those who had never gone to the hospital for COVID-19 treatment.
Covid-19 booster strategy possibly losing effectiveness over time
- If You Think Covid is Over, Think Again - Unknown reliability of article
Long-haul Covid-19 prevention through healthy lifestyle
- Lifestyle influences long COVID risk, 2023 - Risk of long Covid-19 cut by 49%. Healthy body weight and adequate sleep top the list. Women who followed most aspects of a healthy lifestyle, including healthy body weight, not smoking, regular exercise, adequate sleep, high quality diet, and moderate alcohol consumption, had about half the risk of long COVID compared with women without any healthy lifestyle factors, according to a study led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
- Physical activity and long COVID: findings from the Prospective Study About Mental and Physical Health in Adults cohort, 2023, PubMed article
Long-haul Covid prevention and vaccination
- Does vaccination reduce long COVID risk?, January 2023
Omicron, vaccination and long Covid prevention: What Have We Learned about Long COVID? - Columbia University, September 13, 2022
Dr. Ziyad Al-Aly, a clinical epidemiologist, also at Washington University, is studying the effects of Covid-19 vaccination on the risk of long Covid-19. His research, which is not yet finished, looks at information on more than 5 million veterans within a Department of Veterans Affairs database, including 200,000 who were diagnosed with Covid-19. "Of the people who get vaccinated and end up with a breakthrough infection, their risk of coming back to the clinic with some long Covid manifestation is very, very small," Al-Aly said.[60]
A small study from Israel published recently found apparent long COVID-19 in several health workers with breakthrough infections. They developed mild symptoms including cough, fatigue and weakness that persisted for at least six weeks.[61]
Studies have emerged in recent weeks indicating that vaccinated individuals are at risk of “long COVID” — a series of conditions associated with infection such as fatigue, shortness of breath and loss of smell that can last for weeks or months — even if they are largely protected from severe illness and death, Fauci said. “We already know that people who get breakthrough infections and don’t go on to get advanced disease requiring hospitalization, they too are susceptible to long COVID,” Fauci said. “You’re not exempt from long COVID if you get a breakthrough infection.” -McClatchy[62]
Case for waiting for a booster shot that was designed with ADE in mind
- "Antibody dependent enhancement (ADE) of infection is a safety concern for vaccine strategies... However, in the case of the Delta variant, neutralizing antibodies have a decreased affinity for the spike protein, whereas facilitating antibodies display a strikingly increased affinity. Thus, ADE may be a concern for people receiving vaccines based on the original Wuhan strain spike sequence (either mRNA or viral vectors). Under these circumstances, second generation vaccines with spike protein formulations lacking structurally-conserved ADE-related epitopes should be considered."
See also: Vladimir Zelenko's coronavirus treatment
- How does coronavirus kill? Clinicians trace a ferocious rampage through the body, from brain to toes, Science
Vitamin D, Vitamin C, Zinc and hydration
- Study suggests high vitamin D levels may protect against COVID-19, especially for Black people - Univ. of Chicago, Medicine
- Taking too much zinc, Vitamin C.[65]
"With such large crowds, by now, you could possibly expect to see an increase in the number of registered coronavirus infections - but that has not been the case so far.
According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), COVID-19 symptoms may appear two to 14 days after exposure to the virus.
"The evidence suggests that although still significant, the risk of transmission of the virus in open spaces is much less than in indoor areas", said Amir Khan, a doctor and senior lecturer at the University of Leeds and the University of Bradford in the United Kingdom.
Khan added that "fresh air dilutes the virus to a degree that transmission is much less". Furthermore, "there is also some evidence, albeit small, that direct exposure to sunlight kills the virus quickly".
"Furthermore, she notes, "being outdoors certainly reduces the risk of transmission, by 20- to 500-fold according to some estimates."[66]
Death and hospitalization rates by age
- Death and hospitalization rates by age.[67]
Lockdowns
- "Even if 100% of people got vaccinated, that would not bring the effective reproductive number under 1. Hence, other mitigation measures are needed, such as masking."[68]
Psychological profile of Covid-19 anti-vaxxers
Intelligence: "A Daily News analysis of vaccination data and IQ averages in each state reveals that five of the 10 states with the lowest IQs are also among the 10 states with the lowest rates of fully vaccinated adults. And half of the 10 smartest states rank among the 10 most vaccinated ones."[69]
Inability to perform risk/benefit analysis: A 2020 study by Texas Tech University concluded that some people find vaccines risky because “they overestimate the likelihood of negative events, particularly those that are rare.”[70]
When will the pandemic end in the USA and other countries
- When will the COVID-19 pandemic end?
- What We Can Learn from the 1918 Flu Pandemic as the Omicron Variant Spreads
Covid-19 and Fox News misinformation
- We’ll never know how many people are dead because of Rupert Murdoch’s propaganda
- CNN rolls the tape on Fox News hosts' anti-vaccine rhetoric
- Ex-Fox reporter reveals why Tucker Carlson is lying about vaccines
- Tucker Carlson's Vaccine Misinformation
AMERICA IS SLIDING INTO THE LONG PANDEMIC DEFEAT
Covid mitigation in the G7 countries: Per capita Covid-19 deaths
Joseph Fraiman
- Serious adverse events of special interest following mRNA COVID-19 vaccination in randomized trials in adults, PubMed, 2022
- Serious adverse events - Dr. Joseph Fraiman and John Campbell
- International excess deaths - Dr. John Campbell (Retired Nurse Teacher and A and E nurse based in England. I also do some teaching in Asia and Africa when time permits. These videos are to help students to learn the background to all forms of health care. My PhD focused on the development of open learning resources for nurses nationally and internationally.).
- Serious adverse events - Dr. John Campbell
Criticism of Dr. John Campbell
Criticism of Dr. John Campbell
References
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