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Maximize Your Health Savings Account by Eating the
Right Foods
The people who will have the most money in their Health
Savings Account are those who fully fund it, put the
money in well-performing mutual funds, and stay healthy
so they can avoid making premature withdrawals. Diet
is the foundation of good health, and the healthiest
diet you can eat is the one we evolved to eat, commonly
known as The Paleo Diet.
Choose Not To Get Sick
One thing that most Health Savings Account owners
have in common is a belief in personal responsibility.
They know that if they depend on the government to pay
their medical bills in their old age, they'll be at
the mercy of a government bureaucrat, and their choices
will be limited. So instead they choose to put money
aside each year to cover future expenses. As a thank
you, the government provides a nice tax write-off, tax-deferred
growth, and tax-free medical spending.
The other area where most people can take more personal
responsibility is with their health. People tend to
have the attitude that "stuff happens", and
there's not much you can do to prevent the degenerative
diseases that come with aging. This is hogwash.
Longevity has advanced dramatically in the past
century. Some of this is due to new drugs and advances
in surgical techniques. But most of it is simply
lifestyle - people are bathing more frequently, they
are working under less dangerous conditions, they are
smoking less, and some are eating better food. (Fresh
fruits and vegetables were rare and expensive during
winter months when my grandfather was a child).
Other than not smoking cigarettes, the most powerful
thing you can do to ensure good health is to eat the
right foods. Most people get it wrong, but if you
follow this advice you will lower your risk of almost
all the diseases and disorders that disrupt the lifestyle
and drain the bank accounts of so many people when they
reach their 50's, 60's, and 70's.
Why Is Nutrition So Confusing?
In 1988, Surgeon General, C. Everett Koop announced
that high-fat foods in the American diet had a health
risk that was comparable to cigarette smoking. So people
began eating no-fat and low-fat foods like bagels and
Snackwell cookies. Despite this change, the rate of
heart disease, diabetes, and obesity continued to grow.
Then the pendulum swung the other direction, with people
adopting the Atkins diet and eating nothing but meat,
cheese, and eggs. And then Atkins himself had a heart
attack.
Part of the problem is that food is big money. So
the Food Pyramid put out by the USDA is the product
of very heavy lobbying efforts. Another part of the
problem is that until now there has been no overriding
paradigm about what good nutrition really is.
And so the low-fat vegetarian proponents eat their
whole grains and soy burgers, thinking they are eating
the right way, while others avoid carbs like the plaque.
Who is right? Is the answer "moderation?"
And what is that?
Eating the Foods We Evolved To Eat
Imagine that you were a zoo keeper, and it was your
job to keep the animals healthy. In one cage you've
got a giraffe, in another you've got a lion, and in
the third you have an anteater. What do you feed them?
Most people would answer that you try to feed them
what they would eat in the wild. If you do so, you're
most likely to have healthy animals. If you get things
mixed up and feed the lion leaves, the giraffe ants,
and the anteater meat, you'll have some sick animals
very quickly.
So using the same thinking, what do you feed a human
in order to keep him or her optimally healthy? The foods
that they evolved to eat, of course.
For 2.5 million years humans lived as hunter gatherers.
We ate whatever we could pick, find, or catch. So our
diet consisted of fruits, vegetables, tubers, meat,
and seafood. (And the occasional bug).
It was only 10,000 years ago (500 generations) that
humans began eating grains (wheat, rice, corn, etc.)
as a regular part of their diet. Dairy consumption (other
than mother's milk) first began approximately 6000 years
ago. The regular use of vegetable oils, refined sugar,
and salt is even more recent. As I mentioned last
month, two-thirds of the foods we now eat are foods
that are new to our system, for which we are not genetically
adapted.
Evolution moves quite slowly, and the simple fact is
that we are not adapted to eating these foods, and they
are making us sick.
The Problems With Grains
Grains are the seeds of grasses. The grass seed
itself doesn't want to be eaten, because its purpose
is to grow a new blade of grass. So it has various "anti-nutrients"
to protect it from pests and predators.
Protease inhibitors in wheat bind trypsin, preventing
this digestive enzyme from digesting protein. A protein
called wheat germ agglutin (WGA) happens to bind to
a hormone receptor in the gut, entering circulation
and causing an immediate immune reaction every time
you eat a piece of bread.
WGA also increases gut permeability, increasing the
likelihood that other undigested dietary components
may enter circulation.
Another component found in cereals such as rye, oats,
barley, and corn are "alkylresorcinols." These
are thought to provide the seed resistance from pathogenic
organisms, but they are also toxic to humans, and have
been shown to cause red blood cell destruction and DNA
damage.
Grains also raise blood sugar very rapidly, causing
a high secretion of insulin from the pancreas. High
circulating insulin is characteristic of "metabolic
syndrome", which a vast number of Americans currently
suffer from.
What About Milk?
Cow milk contains a hormone called betacellulin,
which binds to a receptor in the gut called the EGF
receptor. Just one glass of milk has the capacity to
stimulate the receptor 10 times as much would normally
occur in 24 hours from EGF in the saliva.
When the EGF receptor is stimulated it causes the body
to "upregulate" EGF receptors, basically causing
more of them to appear. This in turn let's even more
betacellulin enter the body the next time you have some
dairy. Upregulation of the EGF receptor is characteristic
of many cancers, including breast, prostate, lung, ovarian,
and bladder.
No animals other than humans consume milk past the
age of weaning.
Prevent Autoimmune Disease
The incidence of autoimmune diseases increases as
people age. It occurs when the body loses the ability
to distinguish its own proteins from foreign proteins,
and starts attacking itself.
Grains and beans contain substances called "lectins",
which are known to increase gut permeability, possibly
allowing in gut bacteria substances that can trigger
an autoimmune reaction.
Cereal grains and beans also contain proteins with
amino acid sequences that are very similar to those
found in human collagen and other tissues of the body.
If the immune system gets confused, it can start attacking
itself (such as with rheumatoid arthritis when joints
become swollen and painful).
Get Rid Of Acne
Yes, even something as seemingly minor as acne can
be prevented by eating a Paleo diet. Saving just
$2000 in doctor visits over the next couple years could
result in an extra $25,000 in your HSA by the time you
finally decide to take the money out.
If these ideas intrigue you, check out: www.ThePaleoDiet.com
Author: Wiley Long
By Wiley Long - President, HSA for America (http://www.health--savings--accounts.com
) - The nation's leading independent health insurance
firm specializing in individual and family coverage
that work with Health Savings Accounts.
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