Posts Tagged ‘heart health’

Go Red for Women Declaration

Thursday, January 3rd, 2013

This Feb 1st will be the 10th National Wear Red Day. To celebrate and confirm the American Heart Association’s commitment to the cause they created the Go Red For Women Declaration.

Go Red for Women Declaration

Water Wisdom

Tuesday, July 17th, 2012

You’ve heard all the advice: Drink eight glasses of water a day. Stay properly hydrated while exercising. Sports drinks aren’t just for professional athletes.

Yet you’re still unsure whether you’re drinking the right amount for good health.
How much fluid should you really be taking in daily? Do you need to add extra when you’re physically active? And is too much water dangerous?

Everyone’s body needs water. We lose it by sweating, excretion, or simply not taking in enough through foods—like fruits and vegetables—and drinks. Mild dehydration (losing less than two percent of your body weight due to inadequate fluids) can cause health problems, including dizziness and headache.

To keep your body supplied with the fluid it needs, especially when exercising, follow these tips:

  • Get the basics. Most women need eight to nine cups of total fluids a day, including all beverages and the water in foods.
  • Increase according to the weather. High temperatures or humidity outside, heated indoor air and high altitudes all cause you to need more fluids.
  • Add when exercising. Drink one cup of fluids every 15 minutes during physical activity, advises Werner W.K. Hoeger, Ed.D., FACSM, professor of kinesiology and director of the Human Performance Laboratory at Boise State University. He recommends sports drinks over water when exercising because they contain electrolytes—important to provide the minerals necessary for proper cellular metabolism—which is disrupted during physical exertion. Electrolyte replacement also helps maintain proper muscle contraction and cardiac function.
  • Add more for big events. If you’re going to be in a race or charity walk, make sure you drink enough to be well-hydrated the day before, Hoeger adds. Also, drink a glass of fluids an hour before the event.
  • Drinking for two? Pregnant and nursing women need additional fluids. Talk with your health care professional about what’s best for you.
  • Still thirsty? If drinking fluids doesn’t relieve your thirst, you may have a health condition such as diabetes. See your health care professional right away.
  • Too much of a good thing. In very rare cases—chiefly among marathon runners—drinking too much fluid leads to a life-threatening illness, hyponatremia. This occurs when sodium levels in the blood fall too low. It happens chiefly to athletes who have run for more than four hours and gained a lot of weight during the race from drinking.

For more information on the health topics mentioned in this article visit

the HealthyWomen.org areas below.

 

Fitness: www.healthywomen.org/condition/fitness

 

Healthy Living: www.healthywomen.org/ages-and-stages/healthy-living/diet-and-nutrition

 

Diet and Fitness Health Center: www.healthywomen.org/healthcenter/diet-and-fitness

 

 

 

 

© 2011 HealthyWomen.  All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission from HealthyWomen. 1-877-986-9472 (toll free). On the Web at: www.HealthyWomen.org.

Chrysalis in the News

Tuesday, May 15th, 2012

 

Chrysalis has been in the news recently, regarding our thoughts about women’s health and our planned activities for National Women’s Health Week, which kicks off annually on Mother’s Day.

 

Click here to view the National Women’s Health Week Proclamation

Building a Healthier Community: Conference to address health, well-being of women, girls

“At our National Women’s Health Week lunch-and-learn last year, attendees said they wanted to hear about a variety of real-life strategies that girls and women can use to improve their health,” said Marcia Davis Taylor, Chrysalis Services’ president and chief executive officer. “We decided that a conference would be able to provide that as well as bring together individuals, community-based organizations and health care practitioners to share and learn together.”

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Mothers Shape the World: Opinion-Editorial

Generally speaking, women have continued to outlive men at later ages, and self-reported health status has been gradually declining among women since the mid-1990s. According to “Women in America: Indicators of Social and Economic Well-Being,” increasing numbers of women live with chronic health conditions. More than one third of all women over 20 are obese and less than half of all women meet the Federal physical activity guidelines for aerobic activity.

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Young Women’s Health Leadership Institute

The institute will be open to girls in grades seven through 12. The purpose is to cultivate leadership skills in young women, resulting in improved health outcomes in the community. Modeled after the curriculum for Project SHARE — Student Health Advocates Redefining Empowerment — the ultimate goal is to prepare young women who will become community leaders, peer educators, and advocates around the health issues that affect girls and women.

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