Even with the progression of understanding heart disease, it's still the number-one killer among men and women.
According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), about 610,000 people die of heart disease in the United States every year. That's one in every four deaths.
The good news is, heart disease can be prevented. Depending on whether your doctor has encouraged new and healthy behaviors, or if you have a known history of heart disease in your family, you might be able to turn your life around in just eight weeks.
How can you improve your heart health in such little time?
You can make a HUGE difference in just a short period of time, and it all starts with getting just a little more active. Recently, studies have shown the dangers of sitting too long and how it can damage your health as much as smoking.
However, by getting up and walking frequently, you can reduce your blood pressure and cholesterol, boost weight loss, reduce your risk of cancer, and optimize your mental health.
Another way you can improve your heart health is through dietary changes. For years, doctors plagued cholesterol as the number one contributor to heart disease. Now, doctors are suggesting cholesterol isn't so bad after all. Staying away from processed foods that are high in sugar and fat, however, is a must for reducing your risk of heart disease.
What else can you do to improve your health and live longer?
James Beckerman, MD, joins host Melanie Cole, MS, to discuss the dangerous risks associated with heart disease, as well as how you can improve your heart health in just eight weeks.
Selected Podcast
Eat Better & Live Longer: Improve Your Heart Health in Just 8 Weeks
Featured Speaker:
Dr. Beckerman is the former chair of the Oregon Governor's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports and is the team cardiologist for the Portland Timbers Major League Soccer team.
In 2011, he published his first book, The Flex Diet, which gives readers 200 tools to design their own approach to wellness, weight loss, and heart health, and he just released his second book, Heart to Start, an "exercise prescription in a book," designed to motivate patients and physicians alike to be more active.
James Beckerman, MD
Dr. James Beckerman is a cardiologist and medical director of the Center for Prevention and Wellness with the Providence Heart and Vascular Institute in Portland, Oregon. He graduated from Harvard College and Harvard Medical School and completed his medical training at the Massachusetts General Hospital and Stanford University.Dr. Beckerman is the former chair of the Oregon Governor's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports and is the team cardiologist for the Portland Timbers Major League Soccer team.
In 2011, he published his first book, The Flex Diet, which gives readers 200 tools to design their own approach to wellness, weight loss, and heart health, and he just released his second book, Heart to Start, an "exercise prescription in a book," designed to motivate patients and physicians alike to be more active.