Word: diets
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...controlled studies that have been done offer cause for hope. A 1990 study of patients who had coronary heart disease indicated that a regimen of aerobic exercise and stress reduction, including yoga, combined with a low-fat vegetarian diet, stabilized and in some cases reversed arterial blockage. The author Dr. Dean Ornish is in the midst of a study involving men with prostate cancer. Can diet, yoga and meditation affect the progress of this disease? So far, Ornish will say only that the data are encouraging...
...most cited study around - Ornish's in 1990 - tested 94 patients with angiographically documented coronary heart disease, of whom 53 were prescribed yoga, group support and a vegetarian diet extremely low in fat - only 10% of total daily calories (most Americans consume 35% in fat; the American Heart Association recommends 30%). Cholesterol changes among the experimental group were about the same as if they had taken cholesterol-lowering drugs. After a year in the program, patients in this group showed "significant overall regression of coronary atherosclerosis as measured by quantitative coronary arteriography." Those in the control group "showed significant overall...
Turning elsewhere, we can watch one of the most embarrassing ex-presidencies ever unfold before our eyes. Bill cannot get a Diet Coke without screwing up, and Hillary can’t watch him do it without somehow aiding and abetting and then trying to make up for it with such phoniness that only Barney Frank is fooled. Her latest endeavor was to support a bill that sets limits on lobbying for presidential pardon. This is absurdity in such a pure state that nobody except the New York Post has even bothered to touch it, instead choosing to marvel...
...changing George W. Bush's bid-high-and-fight-the-rear-guard strategy on matters budgetary. Bush opened Round Two of this year's budget battle Monday by delivering the fleshed-out version of his $1.96 trillion budget for 2002 exactly as promised: as an uncompromising crash diet for pork, federal subsidies and Clinton-holdover programs that would limit future spending increases to 4 percent...
...Washington is known for its pork. This budget funds our needs without the fat," Bush said in a message accompanying his budget. But Bush's low-fat diet doesn't just hit Congress at home in Washington (i.e., appropriations, which lawmakers have always considered their most sacred right); for the next two weeks it'll be hitting them where they actually live, right as they stand among the very people (and their lobbyists) who sent them to the District in the first place...