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         Chronic Illness & Diet:     more books (78)
  1. The Purification Plan: Clear Your Body of the Toxins That Contribute to Weight Gain, Fatigue, and Chronic Illness by Prevention Health Books, 2005-01
  2. When Muscle Pain Won't Go Away: The Relief Handbook for Fibromyalgia and Chronic Muscle Pain by Gayle Backstrom, Bernard R. Rubin, 1995-06
  3. Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: Practical, Medical, and Spiritual Guidelines for Daily Living With Emphysema, Chronic Bronchitis, and Combination Diagnosis (Hazelden Pocket Health Guide) by Mark Jenkins, 1999-10-01
  4. The Canary and Chronic Fatigue by Majid Ali, 1994-02-01
  5. Alternative Medicine Guide to Chronic Fatigue, Fibromyalgia and Environmental Illness (Alternative Medicine Guide) by Burton Goldberg, 1998-01-01
  6. Hope and Help for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: The Official Guide of the Cfs/Cfids Network by Karyn Feiden, 1992-01
  7. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Comprehensive Guide to Effective Treatment ("the Natural Way" Series) by Gill Jacobs, 1998-04
  8. Chronic Fatigue Self-Help Book by Susan M. Lark, 1995-11
  9. 50 Things You Should Know About the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Epidemic by Neenyah Ostrom, 1993-02-15
  10. M.E. (Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and the Healer Within) by Nick Bamforth, 1993-05
  11. The Book of Pain Relief/a Comprehensive Self-Help Guide to Easing and Treating Both Chronic and Short-Term Pain by Leon Chaitow, 1994-01
  12. Mayo Clinic on Chronic Pain
  13. Prolo Your Back Pain Away! Curing Chronic Back Pain with Prolotherapy by Ross A. Hauser, Marion A. Hauser, 2000-01-01
  14. Prolo Your Pain Away! Curing Chronic Pain with Prolotherapy by Ross A. Hauser, Rosa A. Hauser, et all 1998-04-01

61. A Vicious Cycle: Chronic Illness And Depression
However, chronic illnesses often can be controlled through diet, exercise, andcertain medicines. Examples of chronic illnesses include diabetes,
http://www.cchs.net/health/health-info/docs/2200/2282.asp?index=9288

62. Article: Policy On The Chronically Ill - Netherlands Embassy - Washington DC
lead to chronic illness, such as smoking, poor diet and lack of exercise. As a result of their illness, the chronically ill can encounter problems
http://www.netherlands-embassy.org/article.asp?articleref=AR00000247EN

63. Article - Printer-Friendly: Policy On The Chronically Ill - Netherlands Embassy
Older people often suffer from more than one chronic illness simultaneously. lead to chronic illness, such as smoking, poor diet and lack of exercise.
http://www.netherlands-embassy.org/printerfriendly.asp?articleref=AR00000247EN

64. Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook That Challenges Politically Correct Nutritio
chronic illness in industrialized nations has reached epic proportions because we Children born to primitives who had adopted the white man s diet had
http://www.karlloren.com/diet/p3.htm
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Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats
Technology is a generous benefactor. To those who have wisely used his gifts he has bestowed freedom from drudgery, freedom to travel, freedom from the discomforts of cold, heat and dirt, and freedom from ignorance, boredom and oppression. But father technology has not brought us freedom from disease. Chronic illness in industrialized nations has reached epic proportions because we have been dazzled by his stepchildren fast foods, fractionated foods, convenience foods, packaged foods, fake foods, embalmed foods, ersatz foods all the bright baubles that fill up the shelves at our grocery stores, convenience markets, vending machines and even health food stores. The premise of this book is that modern food choices and preparation techniques constitute a radical change from the way man has nourished himself for thousands of years and, from the perspective of history, represent a fad that not only has severely compromised his health and vitality, but may well destroy him; and that the culinary traditions of our ancestors, and the food choices and preparation techniques of healthy nonindustrialized peoples, should serve as the model for contemporary eating habits, even and especially during this modern technological age. The first modern researcher to take a careful look at the health and eating habits of isolated traditional societies was a dentist, Dr. Weston Price. Fifty years ago, Dr. Price traveled the world over to observe population groups untouched by civilization, living entirely on local foods. While the diets of these peoples differed in many particulars, they contained several factors in common. Almost without exception, the groups he studied ate liberally of seafood or other animal proteins and fats in the form of organ meats and dairy products; they valued animal fats as absolutely necessary to good health; and they ate fats, meats, fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts, seeds and whole grains in their natural, unrefined state. A high portion of these primitive diets consisted of raw foods, of both animal and vegetable origin.

65. Research Findings Register: Summary Number 1148
Communication, Knowledge and chronic illness in Pakistani Communities (RCET177) In relation to diet, however, family and community dynamics could work
http://www.refer.nhs.uk/ViewRecord.asp?ID=1148

66. Looking The Monster In The Eye … Living With Chronic Illness
People living with chronic illness must educate themselves about the disease Proper diet and nutrition are extremely important in longterm good health,
http://www.hepc-connection.org/newsletter/05-06_03/monster.shtml
Daniel N. Reilly, Hep C Connection Co-infection Program Manager and Help Line Counselor It is very important that you find the physician that is right for you and meets your healthcare needs. Make sure they specialize in your illness and have extensive experience in treating it. Find out how many other patients with the same illness your doctor is treating, or has treated. Your healthcare provider should have extensive knowledge about treatment options as well as side effect management. You should interview potential physicians as if you were hiring a new employee for a company. Make sure they are willing and able to meet your needs. Ask them questions about office hours and location, as well as accessibility to doctor and nurses when the office is closed. And of course, find out if your doctor accepts your insurance or provides treatment for indigent patients if you are not insured. Other ways that you can work with your doctor in a co-management relationship include: Be actively involved in your health care decisions. Ask questions until you get them all answered. Take a list of questions if you need help remembering them.

67. Computer Programs Help Children Cope With Chronic Illness
Computer programs help children cope with chronic illness CDROM game thatchallenges children with diabetes to score points by watching their diet,
http://www.apa.org/monitor/mar99/chronic.html
VOLUME 30 , NUMBER 3 -March 1999
Computer programs help children cope with chronic illness
Psychologists help a nonprofit group develop and test interactive tools that are fun and educational. By Scott Sleek
Monitor staff
A group headed by the man who created such classic family films as "E.T." and "Jurassic Park" has secured APA's help in building another screen attractioninteractive computer programs that help children cope with a serious or chronic illness. Starbright produces computer games and videos that teach children about their illnesses and offer suggestions on coping with such stressors as repeated hospitalizations, chronic pain or rigid treatment regimens. It also offers "Starbright World," a private online hospital-based network, including videoconferencing, chat and other interactive services that allow children to converse with and support their peers who are struggling with similar illnesses. Starbright staff say psychologists can help enhance the foundation's already active product research-and-development efforts. Starbright conducts extensive studies, ranging from assessing the psychological needs of children with specific diseases to measuring the behavioral outcomes of patients who use Starbright programs. But the foundation wants to expand the network of researchers it regularly recruits for those studies, says Jordana Huchital, director of the foundation's health-care initiatives. "By going to APA as an organization, rather than looking for experts on our own, we can more easily find someone who is regarded by his or her colleagues as one of the top people in the field," Huchital says.

68. Marion Bowles: New Patient Information Leaflet
All of these can be helped by an appropriate diet, by counselling around would promise miracles in treating the range of chronic illness I see.
http://www.purr.demon.co.uk/marion/leaflet.html
Marion Bowles S.R.D., Consultant Dietitian
11 Third Street
Newtongrange
Midlothian EH22 4PU
Scotland
Phone 0131 660 4760 Email: m e b @ p u r r . d e m o n . c o . u k http://www.purr.demon.co.uk/marion/
Conditions I treat
My patients come to me for varied, individual reasons, most often for chronic problems:
  • food allergy or intolerance
  • eating disorders (anorexia, bulimia)
  • convalescence from severe illness, such as tropical disease or food poisoning
  • infertility
  • failure to thrive in infancy
  • genetically-caused errors of metabolism
  • failure to absorb nutrients
  • ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis), CFS (chronic fatigue syndrome) or postviral syndrome
  • obesity
  • chronic yeast or parasite infections
  • psychiatric illness: autism, hyperactivity, depression, schizophrenia, dementia...
  • environmental illness.
All of these can be helped by an appropriate diet, by counselling around food-related issues, or by taking suitable care about the environment you live and work in.
Referrals
I work with doctors and test laboratories specializing in nutritional and environmental medicine. Diagnosis is mainly the doctor's job, though I may talk to you or visit you at the start of treatment to help identify foods in your diet or factors in your environment that might be making you ill. The doctor may decide that you need more of certain nutrients in your diet, or that you need to avoid some kinds of foods, or that you need to change your lifestyle to avoid some chemicals that you presently come in regular contact with, or (as in the case of eating disorders) that you need a combination of detailed feedback on your diet and counselling on basic attitudes to food.

69. Chronic Illness, Food Allergies And Low Body Temperature
chronic illness, Food Allergies and Low Body Temperature Also, my seven monthson a natural food diet, such diets having a long history of successful
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Chronic Illness, Food Allergies and Low Body Temperature
Source Chronic Illness, Food Allergies and Low Body Temperature by Alan Hunter An intriguing hypothesis which awaits clinical verification About the Author
Alan Hunter was one of the first people in Britain to be tested for ‘food allergy’, in Rome, in 1972, and is an award-winning writer and researcher on the subject.
A practitioner specializing in the disorder since 1985, Alan studied nutritional medicine at the Plaskett Nutritional Medicine College, and has a library of over 1,000 books on the subject of natural health, including many rare books on fasting. He can be reached on Tel: 0131 4479440. An intriguing observation led me on a search for the solution to my chronic illness, which started in the late 1960s. Initially considered simple fatigue, it took me several years to make a dietary link. Thereafter I relabelled my condition ‘food allergy’.
I observed that whenever I had a fever, my symptoms entirely vanished. I still had the malaise that accompanies fever, but my ‘food allergy’ symptoms entirely disappeared, only to return when the fever left!

70. More Coping Tips And Information
For those of us living with a chronic illness, there can be many ups and a chronic illness, including heredity, lifestyle (stress, diet, exercise, etc.
http://aces_autoimmune.tripod.com/copingb.htm
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LIVING WITH CHRONIC ILLNESS Redefining "normal" For those of us living with a chronic illness, there can be many ups and downs. Nothing is as it once was, and "normal" no longer exists in our vocabulary. Maybe this presentation will help you to redefine the term "normal" and learn to live with your illness as best as you can.
If you've ever been on a walk in the woods, you know how varied the path can be — level areas covered with soft pine needles can give way to rocky descents or short climbs that require careful footing. In some ways, living with chronic illness is very much like going on a walk in the woods. You're never quite certain what lies ahead of you. If you live with a chronic condition, how you view the path you're on and decide to manage your day-to-day situations can greatly affect your quality of
life. Acute vs. Chronic Most people are familiar with acute illness. An acute illness comes on suddenly and often has an identifiable cause. Generally, it's treatable —often with a return to normal health. And usually you're not sick very long. Some examples of acute illness are appendicitis, ear infection and pneumonia.
On the other hand, a chronic illness often begins gradually and may have several causes. Rarely is a chronic illness cured. Usually it persists for an indefinite time. Diabetes, heart disease and arthritis are examples of chronic illness.

71. National Diabetes Month
Here are some things you can do to improve your diet Eat less fat. YOUNG PEOPLEAND chronic illness True Stories, Help, and Hope by Kelly Huegel
http://www.girlpower.gov/girlarea/11nov/diabetes.htm
National Diabetes Month
What is Diabetes? Diabetes is a disease that impairs the body's ability to use food properly. Normally, your small intestine takes out the sugar, or glucose, and puts it in your blood. The glucose is burned as fuel to give your cells energy to do their jobs. To get into the cells, the glucose needs insulin. Insulin is a hormone produced by the pancreas, a gland located just beneath your stomach. Insulin acts like a key to open the cells and let glucose in. Trying to burn glucose without insulin is like trying to set fire to a pile of logs without a match. It can't be done. In people with diabetes, the pancreas does not make enough insulin to burn glucose or the insulin they have doesn't work right. The cells that make insulin have been destroyed. Doctors don't know for sure, but they believe this happens when the body's immune system attacks the insulin-making cells in the pancreas. When your body is trying to fight a virus, the insulin-making cells look like the virus, so your body fights them too. Type I Diabetes (insulin-dependent or juvenile diabetes) often runs in families. Although it can occur at any age, it usually develops before the age of 30. About 12,000 children in the United States get diabetes every year. People with Type I diabetes usually don't produce insulin because cells have been destroyed. Treatment of Type I diabetes requires a strict daily regimen that includes a carefully monitored diet, insulin injections, and monitoring of blood glucose.

72. Health Education & Behavior -- Sign In Page
Key Words social support • chronic illness • selfmanagement • social network.References Maclean HM Patterns of diet related self-care in diabetes.
http://heb.sagepub.com/cgi/content/refs/30/2/170

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73. Strategies For Chronic Illness
the value of other disciplines in the treatment of chronic illnesses. He was treated for these factors with nutritional supplements, a diet low in
http://www.healthmedicineinstitute.com/body.cfm?id=23

74. Omega-3 Fatty Acids For Treating Chronic Illness
published reports on the benefits of omega3 fatty acids for treating chronicillness. Omega-3 fats are harder to obtain in the average American diet,
http://bestbodyever.com/1-weight-loss-omega-3-fatty-acids.html
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Yet Another Success Story! Free Articles! Great Stuff Here! Contact Us Phone - Address - Email Order Here Secure Online Ordering Omega-3 Fatty Acids For Treating Chronic Illness Dr. Earl Mindell's Wellness Update Can you get the same benefit from taking fish oil supplements as actually eating fish? Virtually every prestigious medical journal has published reports on the benefits of omega-3 fatty acids for treating chronic illness. Omega-3 fats are harder to obtain in the average American diet, and extensive research has shown that raising omega-3 levels in the body can be helpful for those with heart disease, allergies, eczema, asthma, rheumatoid arthritis, cancer, and irregular heartbeat. I recommend that you eat oily fish (salmon, bluefish, swordfish, and mackerel) a minimum of twice a week, or if you don't like the taste of fish, you can reap the same benefits by taking daily supplements containing a fish-oil extract.

75. Men's Health - Preventing Cardiovascular Diseases
all tobacco products are included as risk factors for chronic illness, notjust cigarettes. Maintaining a hearthealthy, balanced diet will help to
http://www.holyname.org/health_information_resources/health_manuals/Men/lifestyl
Preventing Cardiovascular Diseases Primary risk factors for chronic disease:
At the top of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention list of primary risk factors for all chronic diseases are: smoking, poor nutrition, and sedentary lifestyle. Living a healthier lifestyle can help to prevent heart disease. This includes:
  • eliminating all tobacco products adhering to a heart-healthy diet following an appropriate exercise program
Eliminate all tobacco products: You should be aware that all tobacco products are included as risk factors for chronic illness, not just cigarettes. And, although there may be medical uses from derivatives of some social drugs, such as alcohol, there is no therapeutic use for nicotine. As soon as you stop smoking, your body begins to heal itself from the devastating effects of tobacco. Adhere to a heart-healthy diet: One aspect of managing your heart attack risk factors includes eating a heart-healthy diet, that includes appropriate levels of the following:
  • calories cholesterol fat fiber sodium
To try and eliminate any confusion, the federal government has established a food pyramid and food labeling laws.

76. L.I.F.E. Center: Frequently Asked Questions About Health And Wellness
Is it possible to live a healthy life even with a chronic illness or disability? What role does exercise and diet play in maintaining wellness?
http://lifecenter.ric.org/content/2468/?topic=3&subtopic=159

77. Arch Fam Med -- Improvement Of Outcomes In Chronic Illness, August 2000, Katon 9
changing diet, increasing exercise) and disease outcomes between Wagner E.Managed care and chronic illness health services research needs.
http://archfami.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/9/8/709
Select Journal or Resource JAMA Archives of Dermatology Facial Plastic Surgery Family Medicine (1992-2000) General Psychiatry Internal Medicine Neurology Ophthalmology Surgery Student JAMA (1998-2004) JAMA CareerNet For The Media Meetings Peer Review Congress
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Improvement of Outcomes in Chronic Illness Arch Fam Med.
MODERN MEDICINE has made tremendous advances in developing efficacious pharmacological treatments for patients with chronic medical illness. Most randomized trials of these new medications are tested in highly selected patients who are monitored very intensively, with results compared with placebo. In the "real world" of primary

78. Political Reality Check On Chronic Illness
Political Reality Check on chronic illness. 13 January 2005 all Members ofParliament to consider the implications of having to rearrange their diet,
http://www.kidney.org.au/assets/documents/KHAJan2005PoliticalRealityCheck.htm
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Media Release
Political Reality Check on Chronic Illness 13 January 2005 All politicians throughout Australia have been asked to place themselves in the shoes of the 14,200 Australians being kept alive on dialysis and transplantation programs nationally. Of these 1,488 are waiting for a telephone call to notify them of the availability of a kidney for transplant, which will free them from a life reliant on dialysis whilst suffering chronic illness. The request comes ahead of a national workshop to be held in Sydney next month which will look at forming a national strategy to fight chronic kidney disease in Australia. Kidney Health Australia has today asked all Members of Parliament to consider the implications of having to rearrange their diet, lifestyle and schedule to stay alive whilst waiting for a telephone call for a kidney organ transplant. Anne Wilson, Chief Executive of Kidney Health Australia said, "The reality check on what Members of Parliament would have do to stay alive if they were on dialysis, was aimed at alerting them to the issues their constituents and colleagues can face."

79. PPI: Healthy Aging V. Chronic Illness: Preparing Medicare For The New Health Car
can be managed with diet and drugs, as can coronary artery disease. This report explains the challenge of chronic illness, its implications for
http://www.ppionline.org/ppi_ci.cfm?knlgAreaID=111&subsecID=139&contentID=251295

80. Diet And Health
Natural Therapies for chronic illness diet and Health. A Simple Preventiveand Cure for Heart Disease Is the New England Journal of Medicine biased?
http://www.cqs.com/hdiet.htm
Jonathan Campbell, Health Consultant
Let thy food be thy medicine, and thy medicine be thy food.
Hippocrates, Father of Medicine, 400 B.C. HealthAlert Helping people take charge of their health If you or a loved one or friend is afflicted with cancer, heart disease, AIDS, or other chronic illness, click here. If you use Lipitor, Zocor, or another statin drug to control cholesterol, click here Introduction Order Manuals ... Home Page
Diet and Health
(Some of these links are still under construction. Please pardon the inconvenience.) Back to CQS Home Page Jonathan Campbell, Natural Health Consultant

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