Simple lifestyle changes can protect against non-communicable diseases

By Our Correspondent
March 16, 2019

Islamabad : Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) now account for 58 per cent of total deaths in Pakistan before the age of 70. One out of two Pakistanis are at risk of dying from NCDs like diabetes, cardiovascular ailments or cancer. These deaths can easily be prevented through lifestyle modification which involves altering long-term habits, typically related to eating or physical activity, and maintaining the new behaviour for months or years. It empowers individuals with the knowledge and life skills to make effective behavioral changes that address the underlying causes of disease.

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“Over my 40-year career, I have advocated the ‘food as medicine’ approach to lifestyle modification as the platform for all effective nutrition intervention therapies. While we don't have control over genetic factors, gender, age, and race, we have control over what we eat, if and how much we exercise, whether we smoke, our sleep habits, and how we handle stress. Helping patients with these controllable factors empowers them to take ownership of their health. Treatment of NCDs requires adoption and maintenance of lifestyle behaviours,” states Dr. Rezzan Khan, consultant nutritionist at Shifa International Hospital (SIH). The message coincides with National Nutrition Month which is observed every year in March.

Dr. Rezzan believes that a patient should have a one-on-one counseling session with a dietitian nutritionist and learn about possible lifestyle changes and ways on how to incorporate them into everyday life with appropriate meal planning.

“One key method that we advocate is that you maintain a nutritional diary with information on food intake, sleeping record, travelling, hormonal changes, craving etc., recorded. You should also continuously write down the weight, glucose, lipid profile monitoring or whatever is necessary to follow up according to your health condition. This practice will help you notice which meals, ingredients or lifestyle choices results in unfavourable weight change, glucose excursion, or lipid profile. This practice will help you to have particularly damaging meals less often, change some of the ingredients or change the amount of some foods that you consume. You should also be able to notice sleeping, exercise, salt intake, and hormonal effects on weight and heath condition,” Dr. Rezzan advised.

While one can very well carry out the exercise described, it may be worth it to consult a dietitian in order to have a chart tailored according to individual requirements and scientific standards.

A nutrition education and information campaign is held annually in March, focusing attention on the importance of making informed food choices and developing sound eating and physical activity habits. The Dietitian Nutritionist Day is also celebrated during National Nutrition Month, on the second Wednesday in March. This year, March 13 marks the World Dietitians Day in Pakistan.

Dietitians help patients correct their cognitive errors. By effectively using cognitive behavioural therapy, the dietitian creates logical lifestyle changes that are helpful in preventing and treating NCDs and in maintaining good health.

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