Addressing High Blood Pressure: Diet and Lifestyle Tips
For many American adults, hypertension (high blood pressure) is a fact of life. Many adults don't realize, however, that dietary and lifestyle changes can actually delay the onset of hypertension, or even prevent it altogether. According to Dietary Guidelines for Americans: 2005, a publication by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), there are five basic lifestyle interventions for addressing hypertension:
Previously on the D.C. Metro Area Medical Malpractice Law Blog, we have posted articles related to:
- "Reduce salt intake
- Increase potassium intake
- Lose excess body weight
- Increase physical activity
- Eat an overall healthful diet"
- "If you now eat one or two vegetables a day, add a serving at lunch and another at dinner.
- If you don't eat fruit now or have only juice at breakfast, add a serving to your meals or have it as a snack.
- Use only half the butter, margarine, or salad dressing you do now.
- Try lowfat or fat free condiments, such as fat free salad dressings.
- Gradually increase dairy products to three servings per day. For example, drink milk with lunch or dinner, instead of soda, alcohol, or sugar-sweetened tea. Choose low fat (1percent) or fat free (skim) dairy products to reduce total fat intake."
- "Buy less meat. If it's not there, you won't eat it.
- Limit meat to 6 ounces a day (two servings)--all that's needed. Three to four ounces is about the size of a deck of cards.
- If you now eat large portions of meat, cut them back gradually--by a half or a third at each meal.
- Include two or more vegetarian-style (meatless) meals each week.
- Increase servings of vegetables, rice, pasta, and dry beans in meals.
- Try casseroles and pasta, and stir-fry dishes, having less meat and more vegetables, grains, and dry beans."
Previously on the D.C. Metro Area Medical Malpractice Law Blog, we have posted articles related to:
- Reducing risk factors cuts heart risk
- Top-10 men's health threats
- Patient behavior affects blood pressure
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