With so many people falling ill from the coronavirus, unhealthy diets are contributing to pre-existing conditions that put us more at risk. How does nutrition can protect your health during COVID-19?
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With so many people falling ill from the coronavirus, unhealthy diets are contributing to pre-existing conditions that put us more at risk. How does nutrition can protect your health during COVID-19?
Nutrition (along with regular exercise) plays a major role in health regardless of COVID-19.
Just to name a few:
- Weight management
- Reduced risk of disease - stroke/heart/cancer/diabetes/digestive issues, etc.
- Bone and teeth health
- Mood
- Sleep
It plays the same role it does in terms of general health... there’s no specific diet for prevention or treatment of it...
Covid is covid man. Even if you take perfect care of yourself and wear a mask, it's going to get you sooner or later. Though a diet and exercise might help fight it off quicker or ease the symptoms (which I doubt)... its coming for us all. REPENT REPENT! Haha. Sorry. In my opinion, Covid is just like the flu except you cant taste or smell. Unhealthy diets contribute to worse things like Heart Attackes, Diabetes, etc.. Covid is the least of many people's worries I think. Good topic!
Diet can reduce weight and also the likelihood of diabetes and heart disease - all of which are strong factors in determining the health impact of having Covid. However, if you already have those problems, it might be a little too late, I personally wouldn't want to do anything more than a mild calorie controlled diet right now since dieting can also lower your immune effectiveness...
[QUOTE=SuffolkPunch;1619599341]I personally wouldn't want to do anything more than a mild calorie controlled diet right now since dieting can also lower your immune effectiveness...[/QUOTE]
While I agree with the first part of your post, I’m not sure whether I agree or disagree with this sentiment in regards to COVID. The dangerous inflammatory response is in some ways an immune “overreaction“, which is possibly why young kids don’t get it nearly as bad. They actually have slightly weaker immune systems. It’s also theorized that a recent cold may offer protective benefits: [url]https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/does-the-common-cold-protect-you-from-covid-19--67792/amp[/url].
All that being said, I would still worry about a steep caloric deficit because of the way it could deplete LBM or dampen the initial immune response, especially in people who aren’t significantly overweight.
[QUOTE=Strawng;1619622741]While I agree with the first part of your post, I’m not sure whether I agree or disagree with this sentiment in regards to COVID. The dangerous inflammatory response is in some ways an immune “overreaction“, which is possibly why young kids don’t get it nearly as bad. They actually have slightly weaker immune systems. It’s also theorized that a recent cold may offer protective benefits: [url]https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/does-the-common-cold-protect-you-from-covid-19--67792/amp[/url].
All that being said, I would still worry about a steep caloric deficit because of the way it could deplete LBM or dampen the initial immune response, especially in people who aren’t significantly overweight.[/QUOTE]
That's in interesting point, I wonder if children are less prone to autoimmune disease...
[QUOTE=SuffolkPunch;1619635131]That's in interesting point, I wonder if children are less prone to autoimmune disease...[/QUOTE]
Children can get some autoimmune diseases like Celiac or Type 1 diabetes, but they're very rare: [url]https://www.lifeworkswellnesscenter.com/autoimmune-disease/auto-immune-diseases-in-children.html[/url].
Autoimmune diseases and even allergies are also far lower in Africans because their immune systems are exposed to far more pathogens than people in developed nations. Other than the younger age demographics and lack of overweight or obese people, this might be one of the reasons as to why the continent's actually kicking Covid's ass compared to all the developed nations who can't contain it.
[QUOTE=Strawng;1619643091]Children can get some autoimmune diseases like Celiac or Type 1 diabetes, but they're very rare: [url]https://www.lifeworkswellnesscenter.com/autoimmune-disease/auto-immune-diseases-in-children.html[/url].
Autoimmune diseases and even allergies are also far lower in Africans because their immune systems are exposed to far more pathogens than people in developed nations. Other than the younger age demographics and lack of overweight or obese people, this might be one of the reasons as to why the continent's actually kicking Covid's ass compared to all the developed nations who can't contain it.[/QUOTE]
Anecdotally I've noticed this as well... most AI diseases tend to develop over time/later in life: lupus, MS, RA, Grave's Disease....
Look into fermented foods. Great for a strong immune system. Especially if you've had antibiotics. Kefir, Kombucha, sauerkraut are good examples.
[QUOTE=happy06maker;1619388901]With so many people falling ill from the coronavirus, unhealthy diets are contributing to pre-existing conditions that put us more at risk. How does nutrition can protect your health during COVID-19?[/QUOTE]
The standard advice on healthy eating applies: make sure to eat plenty of vegetables, fruit, fiber etc. Make sure to hit your micronutrients, ideally from mostly whole and minimally processed foods.
Ps. I'd personally prefer not eating a deficit right now.
[QUOTE=Zschnack87;1619551961]Covid is covid man. Even if you take perfect care of yourself and wear a mask, it's going to get you sooner or later. Though a diet and exercise might help fight it off quicker or ease the symptoms (which I doubt)... its coming for us all. REPENT REPENT! Haha. Sorry. In my opinion, Covid is just like the flu except you cant taste or smell. Unhealthy diets contribute to worse things like Heart Attackes, Diabetes, etc.. Covid is the least of many people's worries I think. Good topic![/QUOTE]
Eh, we're seeing a lot more "long-haulers" with COVID-19 than we ever have with flu. Obviously hard to predict how long their symptoms will last but many are having symptoms for months. We'll see how bad things get this winter.
I actually would eat at a deficit now if obese. Obesity is a pro-inflammatory state and while in the act of losing weight that will improve some even if one is early in their weight loss course. I can't say this with confidence but having a slightly worse immune response due to being in a deficit may not be a bad thing here... many of the people who are having particularly bad outcomes are having overactive immune responses. Of all the various medications we have tried, one that has been shown pretty conclusively to be beneficial is steroids, and those decrease the immune response. Many doctors who are obese are trying to lose weight now.
If one is not obese I would not eat at a deficit though. I don't have any reason to think that would be helpful otherwise.
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The first RCT showing benefits of vitamin D for Corona patients has been published.
So load up on fatty fish: salmon, herring, sardines, mackerel etc.
Supplement makes sense too, especially in the winter.
[QUOTE=happy06maker;1619388901]With so many people falling ill from the coronavirus, unhealthy diets are contributing to pre-existing conditions that put us more at risk. How does nutrition can protect your health during [b]COVID-19?[/b][/QUOTE]
The same way people did before MSM hyped up the severity of this nonsense.
Balanced diets with ample veggies, fruits, fiber
Exercise
Rest and stress reduction, etc
[QUOTE=Zschnack87;1619551961]In my opinion, Covid is just like the flu except you cant taste or smell. Unhealthy diets contribute to worse things like Heart Attackes, Diabetes, etc.. Covid is the least of many people's worries I think. Good topic![/QUOTE]
Might be interesting:
COVID-19 Is Now the Third Leading Cause of Death in the U.S.
It kills more people than the flu, contrary to Trump’s claims, and also surpasses stroke, Alzheimer’s and diabetes
[url]https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/covid-19-is-now-the-third-leading-cause-of-death-in-the-u-s1/[/url]
Of course if you're younger, lean, physically active and have a good diet it's very unlikely it will kill you. But it can do a lot of other nasty stuff, also when you're healthy.
[QUOTE=Mrpb;1621135181]Might be interesting:
COVID-19 Is Now the Third Leading Cause of Death in the U.S.
It kills more people than the flu, contrary to Trump’s claims, and also surpasses stroke, Alzheimer’s and diabetes
[url]https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/covid-19-is-now-the-third-leading-cause-of-death-in-the-u-s1/[/url]
Of course if you're younger, lean, physically active and have a good diet it's very unlikely it will kill you. But it can do a lot of other nasty stuff, also when you're healthy.[/QUOTE]
Sadly in the US, it’s impossible to discuss COVID without it immediately becoming political, especially with tomorrow being Election Day.
[QUOTE=AdamWW;1621139811]Sadly in the US, it’s impossible to discuss COVID without it immediately becoming political, especially with tomorrow being Election Day.[/QUOTE]
Same problem in Canada and its usually American politics that come up. Or its a liberal/Trudeau hoax. My town had an anti-mask protest and there were several MAGA signs and trump flags...we are in central Ontario.
My name is antony am 16 years old and just 4 months ago i went through a terrible situation of not eating food doing intense cardio 1 hour a day and losing weight from day to day at an alarming rete. Prior to that i had been a pretty fat kid weighting in at 76 kilograms but i had just started the gym for 4 months and had seen drastic changes in muscle. while i was haply with the results i wanted more and thats when i stopped eating left the weights and moved to cardio. Could this eating disorder have damaged my ability to build muscle for life i havent found anything online but i wondered? And will bodyweight training like pull ups and push ups assisted with good nutrition(protein calories ect) help me put some miscle onmy frame.
[QUOTE=antoniowo13;1621151521]My name is antony am 16 years old and just 4 months ago i went through a terrible situation of not eating food doing intense cardio 1 hour a day and losing weight from day to day at an alarming rete. Prior to that i had been a pretty fat kid weighting in at 76 kilograms but i had just started the gym for 4 months and had seen drastic changes in muscle. while i was haply with the results i wanted more and thats when i stopped eating left the weights and moved to cardio. Could this eating disorder have damaged my ability to build muscle for life i havent found anything online but i wondered? And will bodyweight training like pull ups and push ups assisted with good nutrition(protein calories ect) help me put some miscle onmy frame.[/QUOTE]
I recommend speaking with your parents and professional counseling so you can get on a good long term path.
You may need to avoid exercise for a while so you can fix your mental relationship with food and your body.
[QUOTE=Mrpb;1621135181]Might be interesting:
[b]COVID-19 Is Now the Third Leading Cause of Death in the U.S.[/b]
It kills more people than the flu, contrary to Trump’s claims, and also surpasses stroke, Alzheimer’s and diabetes
[url]https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/covid-19-is-now-the-third-leading-cause-of-death-in-the-u-s1/[/url]
Of course if you're younger, lean, physically active and have a good diet it's very unlikely it will kill you. But it can do a lot of other nasty stuff, also when you're healthy.[/QUOTE]
That is based on assumptions. Not facts.
There is absolutely NO gold standard for testing so no one can state anyone died from the the so called virus.
Positive cases are based on a meaningless PCR test used as diagnosis.
It picks up COLDS someone had in the past and who hasn’t had a cold?
MDs have stated they put covid on the death certificate without any accurate diagnosis of this flu based on ASSUMPTIONS from the symptoms.
[QUOTE=boo99;1621155451] flu [/QUOTE]
Serious question: do people use the word 'flu' colloquially when they're talking about COVID on purpose?
I ask because it is genuinely not a 'flu' (influenza) virus... so I'm curious if it's being stated literally to suggest COVID = influenza...
[QUOTE=boo99;1621155451]That is based on assumptions. Not facts.
There is absolutely NO gold standard for testing so no one can state anyone died from the the so called virus.
Positive cases are based on a meaningless PCR test used as diagnosis.
It picks up COLDS someone had in the past and who hasn’t had a cold?
MDs have stated they put covid on the death certificate without any accurate diagnosis of this flu based on ASSUMPTIONS from the symptoms.[/QUOTE]
While PCR tests aren't perfect, they're not meaningless. Suggested reading: [url]https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanres/article/PIIS2213-2600(20)30453-7/fulltext[/url]
and don't believe everything an MD says. Some MDs become bestseller authors by claiming that eating wheat makes you fat, that sugar is as addictive as *******, or that insulin is the reason people get fat.
[QUOTE=Mrpb;1621157071]While PCR tests aren't perfect, they're not meaningless. Suggested reading: [url]https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanres/article/PIIS2213-2600(20)30453-7/fulltext[/url]
and don't believe everything an MD says. Some MDs become bestseller authors by claiming that eating wheat makes you fat, that sugar is as addictive as *******, or that insulin is the reason people get fat.[/QUOTE]
I read that but this gets into the science why the test is BS.
[url]https://off-guardian.org/2020/06/27/covid19-pcr-tests-are-scientifically-meaningless/[/url]
True. Can’t believe MDs every word.
But the CDCs own admission was to put that on the death certificate if the death was [b][i]presumed[/i][/b] to be from the Chinese Flu.
Either way closing down the World over some flu is not based on health and safety.
It’s about control.
[QUOTE=boo99;1621165101]I read that but this gets into the science why the test is BS.
[url]https://off-guardian.org/2020/06/27/covid19-pcr-tests-are-scientifically-meaningless/[/url]
True. Can’t believe MDs every word.
But the CDCs own admission was to put that on the death certificate if the death was [b][i]presumed[/i][/b] to be from the Chinese Flu.
Either way closing down the World over some flu is not based on health and safety.
It’s about control.[/QUOTE]
I’m still trying to figure out why it’s being called a ‘flu’ :)
[QUOTE=boo99;1621165101]I read that but this gets into the science why the test is BS.
[/quote]
The paper I linked to is published on September 29 in one of the top peer reviewed medical journals.
The info you linked to is from June, from a random website and written by 2 journalists without relevant education.
[QUOTE=Mrpb;1621166241]The paper I linked to is published on September 29 in one of the top peer reviewed medical journals.
The info you linked to is from June, from a random website and written by 2 journalists without relevant education.[/QUOTE]
That article is fine. I read their logic and science and it’s spot on.
[QUOTE=boo99;1621169351]That article is fine. I read their logic and science and it’s spot on.[/QUOTE]
I prefer higher quality sources. Anyway, with PCR tests the likelihood of false negatives is higher than false positives. It's in the paper I linked to. The implication is that the actual COVID death toll is likely [i]higher[/i] than the death toll determined with PCR tests.
If you prefer an easier read: [url]https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/which-test-is-best-for-covid-19-2020081020734[/url]
PS. I'd be interested to see your answer to Adam's question. It's a good question.
[QUOTE=AdamWW;1621156091]Serious question: do people use the word 'flu' colloquially when they're talking about COVID on purpose?
I ask because it is genuinely not a 'flu' (influenza) virus... so I'm curious if it's being stated literally to suggest COVID = influenza...[/QUOTE]
Probably the same reason people say they have a stomach flu.
[QUOTE=desslok;1621174131]Probably the same reason people say they have a stomach flu.[/QUOTE]
Right that's why i'm asking... another example would be people referring to things that aren't 'true' allergies as allergies...etc...
The difference here though is that COVID is often compared to the traditional flu symptom-wise, whereas 'stomach flu' seems like an obvious catch-phrase for any kind of viral gastroenteritis. So it makes me wonder if the term 'flu' in relationship to COVID is used to try and lump it literally into the same category of virus, which it isn't.
Like I wouldn't say "I have the flu" if I had a common cold, even if the symptoms were the same.... and many common colds ARE caused by coronaviruses.