Get This: Doing THIS Slashes Your Heart Disease Risk By Half

Check out the list of links that should be on your radar today:

Keeping your cholesterol and blood pressure in check could cut your risk of heart disease by more than 50 percent, according to a new study. [EurekAlert]

Word on the street is that Jeff Bridges plans to make the epic children’s novel The Giver into a movie—and he’s even cast a Jonas! [Vulture]

You need to see this lazy panda pic. You’re welcome. [People]

Women are way more likely to overdose on pain killers than men are, finds new research. [Jezebel]

Get migraines? If you don’t treat them the right way, you might start getting more. [MedPage Today]

Women who work the graveyard shift are more likely to get breast cancer, according to a new study. [Science World Report]

Yesterday, interest rates on student loans doubled from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent. Womp womp. [ABC News]

The top dogs in the media industry? They’re mostly men. (But not at Women’s Health!) [Pew Research Center]

photo: iStockphoto/Thinkstock

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The Food That Slashes Your Diabetes Risk

Next to peanut butter and almond milk, walnuts don’t get much love—but there’s a new reason to stock your nut bowl with them: Eating walnuts could reduce your risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, according to a new study published in the Journal of Nutrition.

Researchers analyzed data collected by the Nurses’ Health Study (NHS) and NHS II, two separate decade-long studies that tracked the diets and health records of 138,000 women. While all of the participants were disease-free at the beginning of the study, 5,930 of them developed Type 2 diabetes during the 10-year span. Women who ate at least eight ounces of walnuts a month (that’s a little more than two cups of walnut halves) had a 24 percent lower risk of developing Type 2 diabetes than the women who rarely ate walnuts. Better yet: Walnut-eaters were also leaner than the women who ate the nuts only on occasion.

While researchers didn’t examine exactly how walnuts fight diabetes, they suspect it has to do with polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs). Walnuts are full of them—and that’s a good thing. After all, past research has shown that PUFAs may reduce insulin sensitivity, which helps reduce the risk of Type 2 diabetes, says lead study author An Pan, PhD, research associate in the department of nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health. And like other tree nuts, walnuts contain protein, plant sterols, fiber, and antioxidants, which may also play a role in fighting Type 2 diabetes, he says.

A healthy lifestyle may also be what’s helping nut-eaters fend off disease, says Pan. People who consume nuts tend to eat better in general, exercise more, weigh less, and have lower body mass indexes (BMI), he says. Worried about the calorie content of nuts? Don’t be: Previous studies suggest that eating nuts doesn’t lead to weight gain—especially when you choose them over meats or unhealthy foods, says Pan.

So go ahead: Hit up the nut bowl for walnuts a few times a week. Or try one of these tasty recipes, all of which call for the diabetes-fighting food:

Whole-Wheat Walnut-Raisin Rolls

Photo: Thomas MacDonald

 

Low-Carb Chocolate Globs

Photo: Mitch Mandel


Chicken With Walnuts and Spinach

Photo: Jonny Valiant

 Roast Cod With Pomegranate Walnut Sauce

Photo: Con Poulos


Whole Wheat Pasta With Walnuts, Spinach, and Mozzarella

Photo: Mitch Mandel


Stir-Fry Walnut Shrimp

Photo: iStockphoto/Thinkstock

Beet, Apple, and Walnut Salad

Photo: Kate Mathis

Main photo: Hemera/Thinkstock

More from WH:
Diabetes: Do You Know Your Risk?
Nutritional All-Stars of the Nut World
Young, Slim, and Diabetic? Why Fit Women Are At Risk

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The Checklist That Slashes Your Cancer Risk

Checklists can help you tackle everything from grocery shopping to party planning to packing for your vacation—and now there’s one to help you seriously slash your cancer risk, too: People who follow six or more items on the American Heart Association’s list of seven heart-healthy guidelines lower their cancer risk by 51 percent, according to a new study.

So what’s on the checklist exactly? The American Heart Association calls these recommendations “The Simple 7”:

  • -Being physically active
  • -Keeping a healthy weight
  • -Eating a healthy diet
  • -Maintaining healthy cholesterol levels
  • -Keeping blood pressure down
  • -Regulating blood sugar levels
  • -Not smoking

Researchers looked at the health records of 13,253 men and women who took part in the Atherosclerosis Risk In Communities (ARIC) study, which was conducted from 1987 to 2006. They also reviewed participants’ cancer registries and hospital records from those years and found that the more items from the checklist that the participants stuck to, the lower their risk for cancer. Compared to those who followed none of the recommendations, people who met three of the guidelines still had a 25 percent lower risk of cancer. Those who met six or seven had a 51 percent lower risk.

If you have to choose one item to check off first, Neica Goldberg, MD, director of Women’s Heart Program at New York University’s Langone Medical Center, recommends you make it smoking. “That has a huge impact on decreasing cancer risk,” she says. That said, you’ll see the best results if you work toward checking off all of the items on the list. “They’re really pieces that work together,” says Goldberg.

Getting started
While the steps you can take to follow some of the items on the checklist are pretty straightforward (you know how to stay active, keep your weight healthy, and eat well), others aren’t as obvious (how do you even check your blood sugar levels?!).

To ensure you’re keeping your cholesterol in check, you have to know what it is: You should get your first cholesterol test in your 20s, says Goldberg. Your total cholesterol should be less than 200, your HDL, or “good” cholesterol, should be greater than 50, and your LDL, or “bad” cholesterol, should be less than 130, she says. After your initial test, you can wait another five years before your next one if you’re an otherwise healthy person and have good lifestyle habits, she says.

As for your blood pressure, be sure to get it checked out every time you see your primary care doctor. It should be less than or equal to 120 over 80.

A blood glucose test checks the level of sugar in your body and is used to screen for diabetes, according to the Cleveland Clinic. If you’re eating healthy and working out, you probably don’t need one—but your doctor can let you know if you have any warning signs that make it a good idea to get tested. Here’s what’s involved: You won’t eat for eight hours, and then a doctor will take a blood sample to determine your fasting blood glucose level. The number should be below 100. Any higher, and you’re in the pre-diabetes or diabetes range, in which case your doctor may prescribe you medications or insulin.

Possible saboteurs
Certain habits can undermine your efforts to check off every item on the list. Two big issues common among young women, says Goldberg: drinking too much and popping certain pills like Accutane. Boozing can actually weaken your heart muscle and enlarge it. Alcohol is also toxic to your ticker, says Goldberg. Her recommendation: Stick to one drink a day at most. As for the pills you’re taking, ask your doctor if a drug will raise your triglycerides or cholesterol level before he writes you a prescription (since this can put you at risk for heart disease).

photo: iStockphoto/Thinkstock

More from WH:
18 Self-Checks Every Woman Should Do
Decoding Your Blood Test
Drink THIS to Cut Your Cancer Risk
15 Min Belly, Butt & Thigh Workout
What’s the 15-Minute Fat Loss Secret? Find out here!

 

 

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