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What? Eat Seasonal Food Only? by Janet Lynas, Ph.D., N.H.D.

Who came up with the idea to eat only what’s in season in your area? Where is the scientific evidence to support this idea? There are many articles on eating a seasonal diet. However, I have not found any information on who came up with this philosophy or any real scientific evidence to support this idea.

What is seasonal eating?

Seasonal eating is eating the food that grows naturally in your climate and for the current season. The belief is that as you eat what is growing in your area, you obtain the optimal nutritional benefits. The food will have higher levels of vitamins and minerals.

Eating seasonal will be different for each area of the country you live in. In the United States, the northern states do not grow citrus foods. The temperature in those areas will not sustain citrus fruit trees. Yet, one needs to eat citrus foods to prevent certain health problems such as scurvy.

By eating seasonal, you are supporting the environment. (Not sure I entirely agree with that.) What about the tropical areas where food can be grown year around? What about the desert where no food can be grown?

Your body doesn’t know what season it is other than how the outside temperature affects it.

Where’s the Proof in this thinking?

I find no studies or scientific papers to support this line of thinking. The articles I find are based on a belief.

I agree that growing your own food or buying locally is a good idea. Buying from your local farmers helps the local economy and when you purchase fresh produce, you have food that is higher in vitamins and minerals. But, is that really true? Has the local farmer added the right minerals to the fields to ensure that the plants will have the proper nutrients? Was artificial fertilizer used? What chemicals were used on the fields? See where I’m going with this? There are a lot of variables.

In my area, there’s a lot of produce that’s been trucked in from other areas. It happens more often than you think. Another consideration is when the fruit was picked from the vine. How long has it been setting before being taken to the local farmer’s market?

Back to the question; who came up with this?

I have not found any proof that this thinking has any scientific bases. The philosophy behind the idea of seasonal thinking is good to a point.

Let’s go back to where people live. If you live in a desert area, your food is going to be trucked in all year long. In the northern cold climates, are you only eating meat all winter? That is the only produce during the winter months.

It seems the only people who come out ahead are those who live in tropical climates. But, if you go back to the eating only seasonally, tropical climates are only one season.

Then there are the gardeners who can and freeze vegetables and fruits so they will have food when the growing season is over. Is their canning and freezing methods much different than the canned and frozen foods you buy in the grocery store?

Did you jump on the band wagon?

The internet overwhelms us with information. Most of which turns out to be opinion with no scientific bases. Consumers often take things at face value. We often don’t use our critical thinking skills.

I challenge you to think about a few things.

  1. Where is the science behind eating seasonal foods only?
  2. While fresh produce does lose nutritional value the longer it is off the vine and not consumed, it doesn’t mean that food trucked in has no nutritional benefits.
  3. Canned and frozen foods do lose a little health value, but not enough to make them non-beneficial. They actually have more nutrients than fresh picked foods that have been sitting around in your home for a few days. Cooking and food preparation affects the vitamin and mineral levels.
  4. We need a variety of foods to maintain a healthy body. The only way to receive this nutrition is by eating different foods.

So, in my humble opinion, eating in season only, has no merit. Eat the fruits and vegetables you enjoy when you want. Your taste buds will thank you.

And, DON’T believe everything you are told on nutrition. Do your own thinking and research. You’re much smarter than you give yourself credit for.

The Future in Medical Advancements in the Next Decade by Janet Lynas, Ph.D, N.H.D.

The next decade in medical advancements will be exciting as we see progress in robotic surgeries. Expansions in new procedures and genetic testing for medications to identify which drugs are more effective in the treatment of individual illnesses.

 

Medical Advances to Watch in the next Decade
  1. Robotic procedures will make scares a thing of the past.  Keep your eyes open for the “snakelike robots” that will punch through the skin and advance into the body to preform surgical task.  These “snakelike robots” will be controlled by a computer and a joystick.  Surgery will be less invasive and recovery time will be faster and easier.
  2. Medications specific for individual genome is already here. The scope in drugs tested will continue to grow.  Currently a provider swabs the inside of the patient’s mouth on the cheek.  The DNA sample is sent to a lab for testing to see which medications are more effective in the management in patient care.  This technology is helpful in the mental health arena in managing psychiatric illness such as bipolar disorder and schizophrenia.  The drug is tested on the individual’s DNA sample.  The testing shows which drugs are more effective for that person and which drugs should never be used on that patient.  Testing in this way will eliminate the guesswork that providers use in medical treatment.  The patient is given the drug most effective and safe for them. This eliminates harmful side effects and possible life-threatening drug reactions.  Imagine the time and money saved on getting the patient started on the right treatment for them from the start.
  3. Destroying cancer cells with particle light accelerator and frequency waves.  Frequency waves were proven effective on cancer cells in 1973 using 434 MHz.  The cancer cells were destroyed leaving healthy cells unharmed. Physicist Robert Wilson, the founding director of Fermilab, proposed a different cancer treatment method when he published the article “Radiological Use of Fast Protons” in 1946. In the 1990s, Fermilab built the first proton accelerator dedicated to cancer treatment at a medical center.The physical properties of high-energy protons allow for a more targeted deposition of radiation than with x-rays.
  4. Smaller diagnostic tools for practitioners to use in the doctor’s office.  Development of hand held scanners will be part of the health care providers tools used in diagnosing patient illnesses.  These hand held scanners are in the developmental stage now.  StarTrek diagnostic tools are no longer fiction.
  5. Growing organs in the lab is not fiction.  Science has been growing ears on the backs of mice for years.  Using human genes to grow organs is being advanced in laboratories around the world.  The hope is that in the near future a human heart can be grown from the individuals genes.
  6. Stem cell technology will be used more in repairing the heart after a heart attack.  It will become more of a common treatment than one to be used in the future.  Stem cell treatment is now being used in the repair of the human heart after a heart attack, but it’s most effective in patients who have had heart damage in less than two years.
  7. Overall stem cell therapy will advance rapidly in the near future.  It’s being used in cancer treatment as well as regeneration of human tissue.  Stem cell therapy will be common treatment in anti-aging modalities. Given their unique regenerative abilities, stem cells offer new potential for treating diseases such as diabetes and heart disease.
  8. Nutritional advances will take center stage as science is able to see in real time how certain foods affect an individual’s body.  Food metabolism is not the same for every person.  Each person’s metabolism is unique to that individual and by being able to monitor how foods are metabolized, we will be able to tailor our diets for optimal health.
  9. Cures for neurological diseases are on the horizon.  Stem cells offer the hope that they can be used to treat neurological conditions like Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s. Stem cells can be designed to repair and regrow the damaged neurons in an individual’s brain.
  10. Nanotechnology is being perfected rapidly. Nanotechnology is being used for a variety age-reversing applications that could be literally a “new lease on life”.  Because the rate of cellular reconstruction slows down and the body isn’t able to keep up the maintenance, we age. “Subatomic robots” will go into our bloodstream and repair cellular damage. Nanotechnology treatments for other age-related disorders, such as macular degeneration, osteoporosis, arteriosclerosis, and cirrhosis are closer to being current treatment than we think.

The next decade in medical advancements indeed will be exciting to watch as it unfolds. In many cases, the future is here now. How we chose to maintain our health, will in effect determine the quality of life we will have.