Essayer OR - Gratuit

Adopt New Habits To Move Toward A Therapeutic Way Of Eating

Better Nutrition

|

June 2019

When health crises prompt major diet changes, focus on the positive and patiently and persistently adopt new habits to move toward a therapeutic way of eating.

- Melissa Diane Smith

Adopt New Habits To Move Toward A Therapeutic Way Of Eating

Q: My son has just been diagnosed with the gluten-related autoimmune skin condition dermatitis herpetiformis, and we recently found out that my daughter is severely allergic to milk products and experiences digestive distress from all grains. My husband has irritable bowel syndrome, allergies, and asthma; I have digestive bloating; and all of us are overweight and don’t eat enough vegetables. Going on a grain-free, sugar-free, dairy-free diet seems like it would be best for us, but I’m overwhelmed about how to go about that. Can you offer some pointers?

—Tanya W., Madison, Wis.

a: It’s common for health crises to compel transformation in diet, and summer is the perfect time to make the switch so your family can become accustomed to this therapeutic way of eating before your kids go back to school. And, really, it’s a good idea for everyone to adopt at least a few of these healthier dietary practices.

“Changing your diet now can save you time, heartache, and money in the future,” says Leah Webb, MPH, author of the new book, The Grain-Free, Sugar- Free, Dairy-Free Family Cookbook (Chelsea Green Publishing). Families who are not in crisis mode might favor a more moderate approach to their diet, but getting grain- sugar-, and dairy-based junk foods out of the diet can benefit everyone. “Don’t settle for mediocrity when it comes to diet when the alternative feels so much better,” says Webb.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Better Nutrition

Better Nutrition

Better Nutrition

Strike A Healing Chord

Soothe your mind, body, and spirit with three simple sound therapy techniques for self-care.

time to read

7 mins

January 2022

Better Nutrition

Better Nutrition

Laura's Gourmet Granola

If you’re tired of granola that’s more candy than health food, chef and entrepreneur Laura Briscoe’s offerings are just what you’ve been looking for.

time to read

4 mins

January 2022

Better Nutrition

Better Nutrition

News Bites

Caffeine, Peanuts, CoQ10, and Iron Deficiency.

time to read

4 mins

January 2022

Better Nutrition

Better Nutrition

The Overlooked Keys to a Healthy Gallbladder

Keep your bile thin and free-flowing by focusing on supportive foods, supplements, and physical activity.

time to read

6 mins

January 2022

Better Nutrition

Better Nutrition

Go Nutty This Year

This über-healthy alternative to traditional lattes features homemadewalnut “mylk,” along with antioxidant-rich green tea and berries.

time to read

5 mins

January 2022

Better Nutrition

Better Nutrition

The Three Stages of Infection

What you need before, during and after an illness, and why you need different fixes for each stage.

time to read

6 mins

January 2022

Better Nutrition

Taming the Flames

How to beat back chronic inflammation and protect yourself from related disease.

time to read

6 mins

January 2022

Better Nutrition

Better Nutrition

Deconstructing the Flexitarian Diet

How being a part-time vegan can make you healthier.

time to read

4 mins

January 2022

Better Nutrition

Better Nutrition

Brain Regain

How one senior used a leptin-focused diet (high-fat, no carbs) to recover from a cognitive injury, reconnect with his family, and reclaim his health.

time to read

4 mins

January 2022

Better Nutrition

Better Nutrition

Healthy Aging— Head To Toe

Science-backed supplements to protect all your parts.

time to read

5 mins

December 2021

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size