Ecuador News

By Karen Collins Questions about carbohydrates – total amounts and particular food choices — seemed to be top-of-mind for many people when I was speaking about a heart-healthy diet at recent conferences. Studies suggesting new approaches to weight management and heart disease prevention are making headlines. And patients are asking challenging questions to health professionals...
Editor’s note: This is the third in Michelle Bakeman’s s three-part series about maize — click here for Part 1, and click here for Part II. By Michelle Bakeman Maize moved into the agricultural landscape of Europe with ease at the start of the sixteenth century, but it occurred to few people to cultivate it for...
Has the scientific world been turned on its head? Health experts have long linked high-sodium diets to a significant risk for heart disease, hypertension, and stroke, but has a single study uncovered the “truth about salt?” Let’s read beyond the headlines. The World Health Organization, based on peer-reviewed research and in concert with health experts...
By Andrew Zaleski Roughly 10 million people in the United States suffer from some sort of tremor disorder, whether that’s essential tremor — the most common movement disorder — or the tremors resulting from Parkinson’s disease. The current treatment regimens are wide-ranging: medication and therapy are typically prescribed, with mixed results and their own side...
Caveat Emptor! As reported in Ars Technica, in the U.S. alone there more than 90,000 vitamin and dietary supplements available as pills, powders, tinctures, drinks, and bars. These products carry a myriad of claims including stronger bones, quick weight loss, “effortless” muscle building, improved digestion, more energy, and of course, better sex. In February 2015,...
Editor’s note: This is Part II of Michelle Bakeman’s three-part series about maize, or corn. In Part 1 we trace the genetic and cultural evolution of maize in Mesoamerica. Today we trace the evolution of maize all the way back to the Old World. We learn how maize developed into a staple food ingredient for Natives...
By Susan Burke March, MEd, RDN, CDE  Is saturated fat good for you? Are burgers and butter better for you than polyunsaturated seed oils or monounsaturated fats like olive oil? As reported in the New York Times, a study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine suggested that saturated fats have been wrongly demonized as...
Editor’s note: Michelle Bakeman’s series on Foods of the Americas continues with three columns about maize (corn), which, like the potato, is forever entwined in the Americas’ history and culture. Maize A light wind swept over the corn, and all nature laughed in the sunshine. — Anne Bronte (1820-1849) By Michelle Bakeman  Maize, or corn,...
By Susan Burke March Why is Dietitian spelled with a two t’s and not a c? Today’s column is about Registered Dietitian Nutritionists. I am a member of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, (AND) formerly known as the American Dietetic Association. Sylvia Escott-Stump, the Academy President in 2012, noted that a decision to change...
Editor’s note: This is the third in a series on notable ingredients native to the Americas. In Part 1 we learned that archaeologists have discovered potato remains that date back to 500 B.C.E. in the ancient ruins of Ecuador, Peru and Chile. Part 2 traced the journey of the potato to Europe, where in 1771 French scientist...
By Susan Burke March November 6, 2018 — CNN reports that 17 children in the Orthodox Jewish community in the Williamsburg and Borough Park neighborhoods in Brooklyn, New York have been diagnosed with measles. Infected children range from just seven months to four years — many hospitalized with complications. As of Sunday, November 11, Israel’s Ministry...
By Ted Kyle, RPh, MBA What’s good for each of us isn’t automatically good for the planet. So says a new study of diet, food waste, and environmental sustainability. “Eat more fruits and veggies” lies at the heart of a lot of advice for healthy eating. But Zach Conrad and colleagues found that more fruits...

Dani News

Google ad

Hogar Esperanza News

The Cuenca Dispatch

Week of April 28

General Motors Auto Parts Manufacturer Laments: “Today Marks a Dark Day for the National Industry”.

Read more

Minister Requests Resignations in Termogás Machala, Dubbed ‘Epicenter of Energy Inefficiency’.

Read more

Chevrolet to Cease Car Assembly in Ecuador by August, Production to Halt in Colombia.

Read more

Google ad

Country Ranch Living News

Country living News

Fund Grace News

Discounts at Gran Colombia News