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Lower Cholesterol and Blood Pressure Now with Take Action Guide – American Heart Month

Heart Health Made EasyEvery February marks American Heart Month. Heart disease is the number on killer of Americans with cardiovascular disease and stroke taking nearly 1 million lives every year. Heart disease is strongly affected by your diet and lifestyle choices. By making some simple, but necessary changes you can drastically decrease your risk by lowering cholesterol and blood pressure.

Heart Health Made Easy: Master the Basics to Lower Blood Pressure and Cholesterol for a Longer, Healthier Life – American Heart Month Savings

Purchase Heart Health Made Easy before February 28th and you’ll receive a 25% savings

The program takes you step-by-step to a lower cholesterol and blood pressure with a practical, easy to understand take action guide.

THIS PROGRAM IS RIGHT FOR YOU IF. . .

  • You are newly diagnosed with high cholesterol and/or blood pressure and don’t know the next step.
  • You want to promote heart health, prevent high cholesterol, high blood pressure, and heart disease.
  • You want all the information they need to know in one location.
  • You don’t want to search for the answers yourself, but want the information you need easily and quickly accessible.

Learn more at http://hearthealthmadeeasy.com

All the best,
Lisa Nelson RD

Heart Health – How hard do you need to workout?

To achieve health benefits, it is recommended that we include 30 minutes of moderate intensity activity 5 days each week. Well, what exactly is considered moderate intensity?

San Diego State University recently studied the effect of different exercise intensity levels to determine how fast someone needs to walk to be exercising at a moderate intensity level. Researchers monitored cardiac exertion of walking at different rates in 97 healthy adults on a treadmill. It was determined that a moderate intensity level is equal to 3 METs, which is a measurement of the bodies oxygen needs. This converted to 92-102 steps per minute for men and 91-115 steps per minute for women.

By grabbing a pedometer and watch on your next walk, you can check to see if you are hitting the goal of ~100 steps per minute to reap the health benefits. And if not, you’ll know you need to increase your speed!

All the best,
Lisa Nelson RD
Be Heart Healthy and Lose Weight

Wear a pedometer for heart health and weight loss!

Wearing a pedometer is a simple way to track your activity.  

First, wear a pedometer everyday for a week and write your daily steps on a calendar.  By the weeks end, you’ll have a idea of how much you move each day. 

Next, find ways to increase your steps, such as an extra walk, taking the stairs versus the elevator, parking further from the store, etc.  

Make your final goal 10,000 steps (~5 miles) each day!

Lisa Nelson, RD, LN
The Heart of Health