All posts by Jerry Casados

Dr. Stancic’s Health Journey From MS Patient to Wellness

Dr. Stancic’s Health Journey From MS Patient to Wellness

Dr. Stancic is a board-certified lifestyle medicine physician and the founder and owner of Stancic Health and Wellness, where she treats patients using lifestyle modification, including a plant-based diet.

As a third-year medical resident, Saray Stancic, MD, went from doctor to patient. After a brief nap during an overnight shift at the hospital, she woke up to find both her legs numb and heavy. An emergency MRI confirmed a diagnosis of multiple sclerosis, a degenerative disease of the nervous system that’s often considered incurable. But recent studies show that following a diet low in saturated fat may play a key role in managing the disease.

In this video from our 2019 Plant-Based Health and Wellness Summit, Dr. Stancic talks about her personal experience tackling MS with a plant-based diet.

Dr. Stancic produced the documentary film Code Blue: Redefining the Practice of Medicine, in which she highlights the practice of Lifestyle Medicine to prevent, treat, and manage chronic illnesses. Code Blue follows a passionate physician, Dr. Saray Stancic, as she reflects upon her journey from a multiple sclerosis diagnosis to wellness through her own adoption of lifestyle medicine. Dr. Stancic introduces us to expert physicians and scientists who are paving the way to make meaningful and necessary changes in our healthcare environment and, in turn, empowering audiences to stand up and reclaim control of their health.  

Dr. Stancic’s Website: https://drstancic.flywheelsites.com/

Why Plant-Based Nutrition Heals the Whole Body

Why Plant-Based Nutrition Heals the Whole Body

A whole-food, plant-based diet is holistic in the sense of its basic nutritional composition of macronutrients (carbohydrates, protein, and fat) and vitamins and minerals (micronutrients), which include antioxidants and phytonutrients. The whole is much greater than the sum of its parts.

Plant foods provide all nutrients the human body requires — carbohydrates, protein, fat, vitamins, minerals, fiber, — and sufficient calories. All these nutrients act like a symphony in the body with each nutrient doing its specific job and working in concert together. So, consuming a diet of whole plant-based food is truly a holistic approach that nourishes the whole body with the vital balance of nutrients.

Eating a whole food plant-based diet supports and promotes, what is called, ‘Spontaneous Healing’ which is where the body starts to heal and repair the damage done by damaging quantities of fat, protein, cholesterol, and chemicals ingested from the beef, chicken, cheese, refined flours, and sugars which are sources of present-day malnutrition—excesses and deficiencies of vital nutrients plague these foods.

Eating the right food is more effective for your health than any supplement or pill!
The only two vitamins that are not produced by plants are vitamins D and B12. You can get vitamin D in some fortified cereals or from sunlight, and B12 you can get from a supplement.

For vegan or plant-based diets, it is recommended that pregnant and nursing women, and people following a plant-based diet strictly for more than 3 years, take five micrograms of vitamin B12 each day to ensure that they are getting an adequate supply of the vitamin. (Both vitamins are stored in your tissues for long periods of time.)

Boost Healthy Gut Bacteria with Plant-Based Foods

Boost Healthy Gut Bacteria with Plant-Based Foods

Our gut bacteria influence our health in profound ways. They help digest food, make key nutrients, fight harmful organisms, protect our gut lining, train our immune systems, turn genes on and off, regulate gut hormones, and possibly even affect mood and cravings. Gut bacterial changes are closely linked to autoimmunity, inflammation, body weight, diabetes, cancer, and heart disease.

Various factors shape our gut bacterial patterns, but likely the most important factor is food. Our bacteria mirror what we eat and respond quickly when we change our diet.

Diets high in animal fat and low in fiber causes a rise in bile-tolerant bacteria, which are linked to inflammatory bowel disease. By contrast, switching to a diet high in fiber and complex carbs produces a greater diversity of gut bacteria (a good thing), more fiber-loving bacteria, lower markers of colon inflammation, and a 70 percent drop in secondary bile acids in only two weeks.

How do we maximize our gut bacteria and nutrients? It all comes down to fiber and other plant nutrients. But getting enough fiber in your diet is a must. It’s been shown to lower inflammation, rev up your metabolism, and keep your heart healthy.

The Starch Solution

The Starch Solution

starch_solution_front1What are Starches? And Why it is an Important Food to Have in Your Diet!

Today, a misunderstood food and often maligned are starches or carbohydrates. Carbohydrates are our primary source of energy (your body prefers glucose (sugars), from carbohydrate digestion). They’re the main source of calories in virtually every diet worldwide.

Starch is valuable to us because we can break it down into simple sugars that provide us with sustained energy and keep us feeling full and satisfied. Starchy foods are plants that are high in long-chain digestible carbohydrates—commonly referred to as complex-carbohydrates. Think of endurance athletes who “carb load” before an event. Examples of starch include grains like wheat, barley, rye, corn, and oats; starchy vegetables like winter squash, potatoes, and sweet potatoes; and legumes like brown lentils, green peas, and red kidney beans. Nonstarchy green, yellow, and orange vegetables are good for you to eat, but on their own do not give you enough calories to sustain your daily activities and keep you feeling satisfied.

The science shows after eating, the complex carbohydrates found in starches, such as rice or beans, are digested into simple sugars in the intestine and then absorbed into the bloodstream where they are transported to the cells in the body in order to provide for energy. These long chains of glucose or sugar must be broken down inside your intestine before they can be used as fuel. The process of digesting these complex sugars is slow and methodical, providing a steady stream of fuel pumped into your bloodstream as long-lasting energy. This is what keeps your energy levels high through-out the day.

Two Types of Carbohydrate:

Complex-Carbohydrates (starches) – Don’t Make You Fat!

Carbohydrates (sugars) consumed in excess of the body’s daily needs can be stored as glycogen in the muscles and liver. The total storage capacity for glycogen is about two pounds. Carbohydrates consumed in excess of our need and beyond our limited storage capacity are not readily stored as body fat. Instead, these excess carbohydrate calories are burned off as heat (a process known as facultative dietary thermogenesis) or used in physical movements not associated with exercise. It does not turn into fat like some low-carb diet people claim because starch often travels in bad company. By that I mean, people slather sour cream or butter their baked potato or oils on their pasta. I don’t’ think 1.7 billion Asians who eat high-carbohydrate (starch-based) diet of mostly rice and vegetables (that are trim and healthy) are aware of that myth.

Simple-Carbohydrates = Empty Calories

Simple carbs are refined, processed carbohydrate foods that have had all or most of their natural nutrients and fiber removed in order to make them easier to transport and more ‘consumer friendly’. Pure sugars have been stripped of many of their nutrients, except for the simple carbohydrate—thus they are called “empty calories.” Most baked goods, white breads, snack foods, candies, soft drinks and non-diet soft drinks fit into this category. Bleached, enriched wheat flour and white sugar – along with an array of artificial flavorings, colorings, and preservatives are the most common ingredients used to make ‘bad carb’ foods.

Starch: The Traditional Diet of People

All large populations of trim, healthy people, throughout verifiable human history, have obtained the bulk of their calories from starch. Here are some examples:

Caloric Engines of Human Civilization

Barley – Middle East for 11,000 years
Corn (maize) – North, Central, and South America for 7,000 years
Legumes – Americas, Asia, and Europe for 6,000 years
Millet – Africa for 6,000 years
Oats – Middle East for 11,000 years
Potatoes – South America (Andes) for 13,000 years
Sweet Potatoes – South America and Caribbean for 5,000 years
Rice – Asia for more than 10,000 years
Rye – Asia for 5,000 years
Wheat – Near East for 10,000 years

Starches are Comfort Food

Just think of starches as comfort food, and everyone usually has a favorite comfort food. With a starched-based diet you can have these same comfort foods you like but made without the meat or dairy and still have the same great flavors. Such foods as: a spinach lasagna, minestrone soup, bean and rice burrito, a pot roast without the roast, mashed potatoes and gravy with roasted vegetables and corn, and homemade three bean chili and much, much more…

Starch is Clean Fuel
• Starches are very low in fat (1% to 8% of their calories)
• Contains no cholesterol
• Do no grow human pathogens (salmonella, E. Coli, etc. – come from animal sources)
• Do not store poisonous chemicals like DDT, methyl mercury

Starch is Complete Nutrition
• Starches are plentiful in protein ( 6% to 28% of their calories)
• Contains a proper array of vitamins and minerals
• Full of dietary fiber and high energy carbohydrates
• Very energy satisfying “comfort food”

Starch Solution Diet

References:
1. The Starch Solution. John A. McDougall, MD and Mary McDougall. 2012;5,7,8

Meet Chef Kelley Williamson and Nutritionist Jerry Casados

Meet Chef Kelley Williamson and Nutritionist Jerry Casados

Meet Chef Kelley
A Whole Food, Plant-Based (WFPB) Chef based in Denver, Colorado, Kelley Williamson offers personal chef services and cooking classes. To date, she has taught over 1,000 students how to heal through plant-based nutrition. A certified Food for Life Instructor through the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM), Kelley has shared recipes and nutritional information under the business name Plant-Based Kitchen.

After a loved one experienced significant health issues, Kelley turned to a plant-based diet to support both his and her health. “The first week of stringent plant-based meals was tough, but after the first week, the food started tasting better and I learned how to adjust the recipes to make them wholesome and ‘kick butt’ tasty.”

Coming from an unhealthy Midwestern cooking style had her body craving fat, salt, and sugar, but switching to a whole-food, plant-based diet proved effective in reversing many of the diseases and illnesses she was facing in her home. She is now passionate about teaching others this lifestyle choice that leads to optimal health. Join Chef Kelley and other experts to learn more recipes, nutritional information and to enjoy chef-prepared cuisine.

Learn more about Chef Kelley on her website: https://plantbasedkitchen.com

About Nutritionist Jerry Casados, NTP
Jerry Casados is a Nutrition Therapy Practitioner (NTP) specializing in whole food, plant-based nutrition as an approach in preventing and even reversing most chronic diseases we have today based on decades of peer-reviewed scientific evidence. He provides nutrition counseling and programs to guide and educate clients to achieve their health objectives with a balanced and nutrient-dense, health-promoting diet.

As part of the nutrition counseling he develops meal plans, provides diet analyses, provides grocery shopping services (food label reading and choosing healthy options/alternatives), and he also provides customized nutrition programs for maximum weight loss, for chronic diseases such as Heart Disease, Diabetes, Autoimmune Disorders, Cancer, Obesity, Food Allergies, and Digestive Disorders. In addition to nutrition counseling, Jerry provides public nutrition education classes and seminars for people who want to transition to a healthy lifestyle with a health-promoting diet.

About the Plant-Based Health and Wellness Summit
The Plant-Based Health and Wellness Summit is an annual event that offers a transformational outlook on health, leaving you feeling empowered and in control of your vibrant life through a complete 2-day wellness education from world-renowned speakers, culinary chef demos, gourmet plant-based meals, and nutritional education. Discover long-lasting wellness, including weight loss, lowered cholesterol, diabetes prevention, and overcoming food addiction.

It is about the food and the healing power it provides when you eat nutrient-dense plant-based whole foods.

The theme of the Summit is about living a healthy lifestyle with the emphasis on the four major components of a healthy lifestyle: Diet/Nutrition, Stress Relieve, Love/Support, and Movement. The Summit is dedicated to broadening the understanding and knowledge about all four of these components.

Learn more and register at: https://www.pbsummit.com/

Soy and Health

Soy and Health

Soy is a staple in many diets that has recently become popular across the globe. Young soybeans, also called edamame, can be steamed and eaten right from their pods. Soybeans are also used to make other foods such as soy milk, tofu, tempeh, and miso, as well as soy meats and cheeses. Like most other plant foods, the healthiest soy foods are the least processed.
Yet while soy products have many health benefits, some people question their safety. Let’s look at what medical studies show.

Lower Risk of Breast Cancer
Research shows that women who consume soy are less likely to get breast cancer. One study found that women averaging one cup of soy milk or about one half cup of tofu daily have a 30% lower risk of developing breast cancer compared with women who eat little or no soy. This may be due in part to protective substances called isoflavones found in soy foods.

Read entire article…Soy-and-Health