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04-10-2017 03:15 PM - edited 04-10-2017 03:23 PM
I don't let any "industry" show me how to live a healthy life. I've spent a good part of my adult life learning what is good for me. For me it all comes back to believing that food is the best medicine and learning what food to eat makes all the difference to me.
My answer to the op question is I neither agree or disagree.
04-10-2017 07:52 PM
I do, unfortunately you, agree with the quote. And that is precisely why I, not my doctor, am in charge of my health. I view him as a consultant only--I do my own research and make my decisions. 😊
04-10-2017 08:21 PM
I think it's about 120 or so years out of date. It got its roots in the Victorian era and early 20th C when there were few to no laws regarding food preparation production and the medical profession was in many ways still medieval in its knowledge of sanitation, germs and diseases - not to mention vitamins and minerals, or public health.
04-11-2017 12:04 AM
I think it's not true.....
04-11-2017 02:41 AM
@Trinity11 wrote:
@sophiamarie wrote:I don't remember ever being served breakfast after my heart attack. I was in ICU for four days. I was there for 9 days in total. There was absolutely NO bacon and eggs.
I didn't even get bacon and eggs when I had the titanium screws put it my hip because it was my Cardiologist who admitted me. I was in the Ortho wing, but still no bacon and eggs. He is my PCP and called the Ortho surgeon, who did the procedure. But, my diet was a cardio diet. Little does he know, what I eat at home.
I was transferred to a hospital with a Cath lab the day after a major heart attack. No room just partitions between the patients. We were all monitored from a front desk. Both days, I was served horrible, caloric, fatty foods. Both hospitals paid no interest in what I ate and I had to keep asking for insulin. It was a nightmare.
@Trinity11, after my niece's DH's surgery in January, they kept insisting on giving him insulin he didn't want or need. He's Type 2 and takes only pills or lives by diet. They would bring him a full dinner plate, assume he was going to eat everything they brought (how often does that happen in ICU?) and give him that insulin (over)dose. It was creepy!
04-11-2017 10:01 AM
@sidsmom wrote:
This. Definitely this.
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