Title: Optimal Wellness
1Optimal Wellness
- Create a Personal Plan for Wellness
- Katherine Haldeman, M.Ed.
- Health Promotion Consultant
- Adjunct Faculty, American University
- haldeman_at_american.edu
2What is Optimal Health Wellness?
- Health refers to the overall condition of a
persons body or mind and to the presence or
absence of illness or injury - Wellness refers to optimal health and vitality
- Health differs based on factors beyond your
control, such as genes, age, and family history - Many factors within our control, effect our
optimal wellness. Which is determined by
decisions we make about how we live.
3Dimensions of Wellness
- Experts have determined SIX interrelated
Dimensions of Wellness - Physical wellness
- Emotional wellness
- Intellectual wellness
- Spiritual wellness
- Social or Interpersonal wellness
- Environmental wellness
4Interrelated Dimensions of Wellness
5Benefits of Physical Activity
- Increased
- Energy, vitality and mental functioning
- Endurance, strength and flexibility
- Increased metabolism for weight control
- Immune function fewer illnesses
- Reduced
- Risk of heart disease, diabetes, high blood
pressure and many forms of cancer - Slows aging process extends longevity
6Benefits of Physical Activity
- Other Benefits
- Stress reduction stress buffer reducer
- Psychological wellbeing improves self esteem
sense of wellbeing - Reduced anxiety, tension and depression
- Improved sleep
- Reduces risk of osteoporosis builds peak bone
mass - Improved posture reduced back pain
7Components of Health-Related Fitness
- There are 5 areas of fitness which help establish
health benefits - The 5 components are
- Cardiorespiratory Fitness
- Muscular Strength
- Muscular Endurance
- Flexibility
- Body Composition ( body fat)
8Cardiorespiratory Fitness
- Ability to perform prolonged, large muscle,
dynamic exercise at moderate to high levels of
intensity - Benefits include
- Improved extraction of oxygen from blood to
muscles - Improved cardiac functioning
- Decreased resting heart rate
- Decreased blood pressure
9How to Develop Cardiorespiratory Endurance?
- Participate in activities which are continuous,
rhythmic, and include large muscle groups, such
as the legs - Activities such as
- Walking
- Jogging
- Cycling
- Aerobic dancing
- Swimming
- In-line skating
10Muscle Strength and Endurance
- Muscular Strength is the capacity of the muscle
to exert force with a single maximum effort - Muscular Endurance is the capacity of the muscle
to exert force repeatedly over a period of time,
while resisting fatigue - Benefits include
- Increased lean body mass
- Increased bone density
- Improved metabolism
- Improved posture and reduction of low back pain
- Being able to perform your daily routines with
greater ease, allows you to look and feel better,
as well as manage stress
11Weight training for Muscle Strength and Muscle
Endurance
- Weight train 2-3 nonconsecutive days/week
- Target large muscle groups (8-10 exercises),
including opposing muscles - Heavier weights with fewer repetitions (1-5)
improves strength - Lighter weights with many repetitions (15-20)
improves endurance - For a combination of both strength and endurance
(8-12 repetitions)
12Flexibility
- Ability of joints to move through the full range
of motion - Flexibility is needed for our everyday routines
- Benefits include
- Lowers the risk of back injuries other joint
injuries - Maintains posture
- Reduces stiffness as one ages
- Increases fluidity of movement
13How do I Improve Flexibility?
- Static Stretching
- Slow, smooth, controlled stretch
- Do Not bounce
- Stretch to the point of tension, NOT Pain
- Hold each stretch for 30 to 60 seconds
- Stretch 2-3 times
- Yoga
14Body Composition
- The proportion or percent of fat and fat-free
mass (muscle, bone, water) in the body - The relative amount of body fat a person has
impacts overall health and wellness - By becoming more physically active, the reduction
of body fat can be achieved, resulting in health
improvements
15Physical Activity Pyramid
16Are you ready to make a change?
- It is important to realize where you are in your
readiness for making a behavior or lifestyle
change. - The Stages of Change or Transtheoretical Model
for Behavior Change, created by James Prochaska
and Carlo DiClemente, provides categories for
readiness.
17Transtheoretical Model for Behavior Change
- Precontemplationno intention of changing
behavior - Contemplationintending to take action within 6
months - Preparationplanning to take action within a
month - Actionbehavior change takes place
- Maintenancesuccessful behavior change for 6
months or longer - Termination-end of stage process
18The Positive Why?
- Identify positive reasons why you want to make
the change. - Behavior change supported, by negative reasons,
often results in noncompliance. - Examples of positive reasons
- I want to commit to exercising in order to
improve my overall health status and improve my
quality of life - Exercise and a healthy diet will help me to
maintain my ideal body weight and improve my
confidence.
19How Do I Create a Plan for Change?
- 1. Monitor your behavior and gather data
- 2. Analyze the data and identify patterns
- 3. Set realistic, specific, and measurable goals
and objectives - 4. Devise a strategy or plan of action
- 5. Make a personal contract
- 6. Record your activity
- 7. Reward yourself through incentives
20Monitor your behavior and gather data
- What is your current behavior physical
condition? Where are you right now? - How much physical activity do you get each week?
What are you eating? What foods are in your diet?
- This baseline info or data is used in setting
goals and tracking progress. - Record your daily behavior for 2 weeks.
21Baseline Data for Physical Fitness
- If physical fitness is your target behavior,
measure your baseline physical condition - Health-related physical capabilities (level
of cardiovascular fitness, flexibility, muscular
endurance) - Physical characteristics
( body fat, circumference measurements,
clothes size)
22Baseline Physical Condition
- When you know where you are, you can develop
realistic goals and objectives. - Once you start a physical activity program, you
will be able to measure improvement based upon
the baseline data. - Tracking your improvement, helps you maintain
your new behaviors.
23Baseline Data for a Nutritional Diet
- If diet is your target behavior, record what you
eat type of food, serving size, calorie intake
each day, for two weeks. - Record when you eat, what you are doing while
eating (talking, watching TV, etc) how you are
feeling when you eat (anxious, tired, sad). - Are you really hungry? Are you eating because
everyone else is eating or are you bored?
24Analyze the data and identify patterns
- After observing your behavior, you can see if
certain behavior patterns need to change. - For example, if you discover that you eat junk
food when you are anxious, you can plan for other
ways to relieve your stress and keep nutritious
snacks on hand.
25Set realistic, specific, measurable
flexiblegoals and objectives
- Realistic - Setting goals that are too high can
be discouraging, cause frustration and lapses in
behavior change. - Specific Goals should state precisely what you
expect to accomplish. - Flexible Goals should allow alternate plans for
unexpected or disruptive events. - Measurable Can you measure your progress?
26Examples of Goal Statements
- Specific, measurable goals
- I will engage in 30 minutes of cardiovascular
exercise 4 times a week for the next month. - I will do ten strength training exercises 3 days
a week for the next month. - Are these realistic?
27Is this a realistic goal?
- I will loose 15 pounds over the next month before
summer begins. - THE FACTS - Healthy weight loss is about one
pound per week. By cutting out 250 calories from
your diet every day AND expending 250 calories
every day through exercise you can loose one
pound per week (3500 calories is one pound).
28Goal Setting
- Determine long-term goals first
- What do you want to accomplish in six months or
by one year? - Establish short-term goals that will lead to
long-term goals. - Define daily behavioral goals
- Determine weekly or biweekly and monthly outcome
goals. (Example loose one pound in a month)
29Barriers to Behavior Change
- We all have certain barriers that interfere with
our attempts to change behavior. - The key is to identify your personal barriers.
Then strategize how to combat them. - The two most common barriers related to fitness
and diet are motivation time.
30Motivational Methods
- Plan Schedule New Behavior
- Monitor Environmental Stimuli
- Record Behavior Completed
- Reward Success with Incentives
- Never Compare Yourself to Others
31Plan and Record Behavior
- Create a plan for Weekly Exercise Schedule It
put it on your calendar - Its an appointment! - Record your activity daily keep a chart of the
physical activity you completed. - Measure your improvement monthly.
- Record changes from baseline data.
32Monitor Environmental Stimuli
- Post your wellness plan so you can see it.
- Post notes to remind you of daily commitments.
- Keep your refrigerator full of healthy foods
- Prepare the night before place your gym bag by
the front door prepare healthy snacks to take
with you. - Hang your progress chart in a visible place.
Celebrate even small achievements.
33Reward Success with Incentives
- Sometimes a little incentives can go a long way.
Make short-term long-term contracts with
yourself. Decide to treat yourself every day you
stick to your plan, if that helps. - Certainly, it makes sense to reward yourself
every week every month that you stick to your
planned behavior change. ANY SUGGESTIONS? - WHAT WORKS FOR YOU?
34Types of Incentives
- Incentives can be rewards, such as buying a new
pair of shoes, a new CD or DVD or video game. - Treat yourself get a massage, have your nails
done. - Plan a fun activity with friends.
- Go to a play or a movie.
- Incentives can also be something to work towards,
such as, entering a race or the Avon Walk for
Breast Cancer (walk 3 days and 39 miles).
35I wish I had more time in a day.
- The other most commonly reported barrier to
physical activity is lack of time.
36Barriers Time
- Each week make a list of things you want to
accomplish. - Use Calendars and To Do Lists
- Designate a specific time for each task or
activity, each day - Make use of smaller chunks of time. Walk for 10
minutes or do abdominal crunches as a study
break.
37Key Factors in Choosing Exercise Activities
- Choose something you enjoy. Keep it fun.
- Begin with the appropriate intensity level.
- Convenience Can the activity be performed near
by or at a facility 20 miles away? - Expense running walking are free other
activities require facilities or equipment. - Is the activity seasonal (softball,
rollerblading)? - Can the activity be performed while on vacation
or a business trip? - Is the activity dependent on another person
(as with tennis or handball)?
38Nutrition and Your Wellness
- Make a Plan
- for
- Healthy Eating Habits
39Are Carbohydrate Foods BAD?
- NO. Carbohydrates are essential.
- Provide energy to cells for activity body
functions, such as breathing, brain activity and
digestion. - Primary fuel for muscles
- Excess ? stored as glycogen
- stored as fat
40Carbs Simple or Complex
- Sources include
- Simple Carbohydrates sugar, honey, molasses,
fruit - Complex Carbohydrates grains, rice, pasta,
cereals, potatoes and vegetables
41Bars show percent change needed in consumption to
meet recommendations
Increases Current Consumption Decreases
Increases Current Consumption Decreases
Fruits Vegetables Grains Meat
Beans Milk
42Grain Recommendations Compared to Consumption
Consumed
Recommended
43Complex Carbohydrates
- Health Benefits of whole grains
- -- ? fullness
- -- ? fiber
- -- ? satiety
- -- ? nutrition
- (nutrient
- density)
44Calories - Make them count
- Choose for all meals
- Whole grain breads
- Whole grain pasta
- Cereals
- Baked / roasted potatoes
- Beans
- Brown rice
- Fruits / vegetables
- Eat Less
- Refined grains
- Processed foods
- Sugar
- Sugary beverages
- Hidden sugars
- Salt
45Calorie Balance
- The balance of calories in vs. calories out is
important in weight management - 1 pound 3500 calories
- Important to be aware of calorie needs but
success comes from understanding a higher
conceptual application
46Small Changes Add Up in Weight Loss
- Work to create a 250-500 calorie deficit per day
- Make slight changes in food
- Take smaller portions, leave a bite, skip a
condiment - Maximize your activity within your fitness level.
- Increase activity of daily living
- Do resistance exercise to maintain muscle
- Challenge yourself to your capacity!
47Protein
- Proteins are needed for our bodys growth,
maintenance repair. - The body contains 30,000 or more different kinds
of protein (composing our bodily organs, enzymes,
antibodies and hormones) - Protein can be used for energy when other fuel is
not available. - Protein Sources Include
- Choose more lean skinless poultry, fish,
shellfish, lean red meat/pork/veal, skim milk
dairy - Limit High fat marbled meats, poultry with skin,
whole dairy products, eggs, bacon, sausage
48Should I Eliminate All Fats?
- NO! Choose Healthy Fats
- Limit saturated fats
- Choose Olive and canola oil, nuts, low fat
condiments, low fat salad dressings - Use small amounts at most meals
- Healthy fats help with satiety and flavor
- Healthy fats help meet high energy needs
- Decrease fat intake before exercise or feel ?
sluggish, slow, bloated, full experience ? -
cramping, GI distress
49A Healthy Diet Includes
- Balance/Proportionality
- Making choices from all food groups
- Variety
- Including different foods within food groups
- Moderation
- Making choices that allow flexible, not rigid,
dietary rules
50Balance
- The Food Pyramid depicts proportionality
- Balance 3-6 meals or snacks each day
- Try to eat within 2 hours of getting out of bed
- Eat every 3-5 hours while awake
- Eat from all food groups with focus on fruits and
vegetables - Go easy on high-fat, high-sugar foods, which
equal high-calories - Adhere to the 80 / 20 Rule rather than all or
none thinking
51Variety
- Choose from all the food groups.
- Mix up choicesapple at lunch, banana at dinner
- Choose the rainbow of colors when it comes to
fruits and vegetables - Mix in plenty of high fiber grains, beans,
cerealsetc - Choose a mix of chicken, fish, seafood, lean beef
and even vegetarian protein options - Eat from different ethnic mixes
- Include healthy fats
52Moderation
- Increases satisfaction and sustainability of
dietary patterns - Involves thinking differently
- Often harder than strict diets
- How much and how often
- What can I live with?
- Guidelines consider individual needs
- When the plan doesnt work...make adjustments
53Applying Nutrition Knowledge to Food ChoicesBig
Picture Strategies
- Consider preparation methods
- Choose more baked, broiled, grilled, steamed
- Occasional friedbut not daily
- Consider portions
- Smaller portions of richer foods
- Choose fruits vegetables at all meals
54Focus on your Dietary Patterns
- Increase focus on whole foods
- Increase intake of fresh fruits and vegetables
- (Provides ? volume for lower calories)
- Choose lean protein
- Build balanced plates
55Visualize Balance on Your Plate
- Healthy Balance
- Carbohydrate 50-60
- Whole grain
- Fruits
- Vegetables
- Protein 15-20
- Plant proteins
- Lean poultry, fish
- Fat
- Focus on type of fat
Lean protein
Whole grains
56For more specific dietary patterns
- Activity
- Proportionality
- Moderation
- Variety
- Personalization
- Gradual
Improvement
57Your Relationship With Food
- Examine Your Attitudes and Beliefs
- There are no bad foods.
- Carbohydrate, protein and fat all provide
essential fuel and nutrients. - Whole foods provide the best nutrients
- The best diet is not perfect but rather
moderate and balanced. - Rigid thinking regarding nutrition can have
serious consequences
58Embrace principles of intuitive eatingResource
Intuitive Eating by Tribole
- Reject the diet mentality
- Make peace with food
- Challenge the food police (internal and external)
- Choose non-food solutions to emotional hunger
- Respect your genetic blueprint for body size
- Exercise---for the feeling
- Discover your satisfaction factor
- Honor your hungerdont ignore it
- Feel your hungerare you really hungry?
- Honor your health with balanced nutrition
59Reject
- Obsessive focus on calorie / fat gram counting
- Meticulous diet rules or Allowing only safe
foods - Punishment for bad foods or Limiting whole
categories of foods - Pacifying physical hunger with low / no energy
foods or beverages (junk food) - Weight loss competition put too much focus on
what the scales say - Changing eating behaviors in public vs. private
- Dietary patterns solely for weight loss purposes
60Make PEACE with Food
- Make a list of foods that appeal to you.
- Mark the ones you eat and circle those you dont
eat. - Give yourself permission to eat forbidden
foods, when taken in moderation. - Assess and savor tasteis it as good as you
thought it would be? - Plan for how you will have those foods. How will
they fit into your overall diet calorie intake?
61Honor Hunger - Recognize Fullness
- Retraining your body to recognize
- Hunger
- Fullness
- Satiety takes time
62Supplementation
- Why is Folic Acid or Folate So Important?
- Folic acid is a B vitamin. It is used in our
bodies to make new cells. If a woman has enough
folic acid in her body before she is pregnant, it
can help prevent major birth defects of her
babys brain and spine. These birth defects are
called neural tube defects or NTDs. - Women need to take folic acid every day starting
before they are pregnant to help prevent NTDs.
63Folic Acid for all Women
- As a woman, you need folic acid every day,
whether youre planning to get pregnant or not,
for the healthy new cells your body makes daily.
Your skin, hair, nails and other parts of your
body make new cells each day. - Folic Acid or Folate helps synthesize DNA for new
cell growth
64Why take a Folic Acid Supplement?
- Its hard to eat a diet that provides enough
folic acid from the food you eat. - Folic Acid is Vulnerable to Drug Interaction
- Alcohol impairs Folate absorption
- Smoking, Oral Contraceptives, aspirin and other
drugs impair Folate status.
65B Vitamins
- Vitamin B12 Folate share a special relationship
- Vitamin B12 assists Folate in cell division and
helps prevent nerve damage - Vitamin B6 aids in
- Synthesis of Hemoglobin
- Immune Response (antibody production)
- Cognitive Functioning (Synthesis of
Neurotransmitters) - Cardiovascular Health (B6, B12 Folate reduce
homocysteine levels)
66Calcium
- Calcium supplementation with Vitamin D and weight
bearing exercise help develop a high peak bone
mass to protect against osteoporosis - Vitamin D aides Calcium absorption
- Weight-bearing physical activities cause muscles
and bones to work against gravity increasing bone
mass. - Calcium may help maintain a healthy body weight
67Calcium Requirements
- 1000 milligrams/day for ages 19 50
- 1 cup of Milk 300 mg of calcium
- Supplement to make sure you achieve the calcium
requirements, while you eat foods containing
calcium as well. - Sources of Calcium
- Sardines 3 oz 324 mg
- Tofu (calcium set) 12 c 275
- Turnip Greens (cooked) 1 c 197 mg
- Broccoli (cooked) 1 ½ c 93 mg
68Iron Supplementation
- Women are prone to iron deficiency during
- the reproductive years, due to menstruation
- Pregnancy, due to added blood volume, growth of
the fetus and childbirth - Doctors may recommend supplementation to meet
iron requirements of 18 mg/day for women ages 18
50.
69Health Effects of Social Support
- Health Benefits of Social Support
- Stronger Immune System higher levels of killer
T-cells which destroy invading germs. - Less likely to become depressed or suicidal.
- Longer life those with low levels of social
support died at a rate three times higher than
those with higher levels of support.
70The Benefits of Relationship
- Confiding, Sharing Confessing
- Reduces blood pressure
- Reduces heart rate
- Boosts Immune System
- Improves Physical Wellbeing