PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Three secrets to healthier eating

The CAN approach

Three secrets to healthier eating
2015-04-29
(Press-News.org) If you want to know the secrets of healthier eating, think of the kitchen fruit bowl. A fruit bowl makes fruit more convenient, attractive, and normal to eat than if the same fruit were in the bottom of the refrigerator.

A new Cornell study analyzed 112 studies that collected information about healthy eating behaviors and found that most healthy eaters did so because a restaurant, grocery store, school cafeteria, or spouse made foods like fruits and vegetables visible and easy to reach (convenient), enticingly displayed (attractive), and appear like an obvious choice (normal). "A healthy diet can be as easy as making the healthiest choice the most convenient, attractive, and normal," said Brian Wansink, Ph.D. author of Slim by Design and Director of the Cornell Food and Brand Lab.

The study, published in Psychology and Marketing, shows that when fruit is put in a nice bowl next to your car keys -- or when a cafeteria puts it next to a well-lit cash register -- it becomes more convenient, attractive, and normal to grab a banana than the chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream in the far back of the freezer. When restaurants give the high-profit shrimp salad appetizer an enticing name, highlight it on the menu, and have the waitress point it out as a special, it becomes more convenient, attractive, and normal to order that than the deep-fried onion rings on the back of the menu.

"With these three principles, there are endless changes that can be made to lead people -- including ourselves -- to eat healthier," said Wansink. For instance, if a school wants children to drink more white milk than chocolate milk, they can make white milk more convenient (put it in the front of the cooler), more attractive (sell it in a shapely bottle), or more normal (give it half of the cooler space instead of a small corner of the cooler). In previous studies conducted by Dr. Wansink each of these changes increased white milk consumption by 30-60% in schools.

INFORMATION:

http://foodpsychology.cornell.edu/OP/CAN_Approach


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Three secrets to healthier eating

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Parents describe arduous journey from diagnosis to pediatric epileptic surgery

2015-04-29
Having a child diagnosed with epilepsy can be a frightening and confusing time. Now, parents share their arduous and "circuitous" journey to get referrals for pediatric epilepsy surgery once their child's disease stops responding to anti-seizure medications. The UCLA study sheds light on the difficulties parents face obtaining specialty and sub-specialty care for their children during an already stressful time. The study points to the need to develop interventions that target and remediate these barriers to comprehensive epilepsy care for children, said study first ...

Prevent type 2 diabetes blood-sugar spikes by eating more protein for breakfast

2015-04-29
COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Individuals with Type 2 Diabetes have difficulty regulating their glucose -- or blood sugar -- levels, particularly after meals. Now, University of Missouri researchers have found that Type 2 diabetics can eat more protein at breakfast to help reduce glucose spikes at both breakfast and lunch. "People often assume that their glucose response at one meal will be identical to their responses at other meals, but that really isn't the case," said Jill Kanaley, professor and associate chair in the MU Department of Nutrition and Exercise Physiology. "For instance, ...

Uncovering new functions of a gene implicated in cancer growth opens new therapeutic possibilities

2015-04-29
Weill Cornell Medical College researchers have shown for the first time that a gene previously implicated in blood vessel formation during embryonic development and tumor growth also induces immune suppression during tumor development. This finding, published April 29 in Nature Communications, opens the door for new therapeutic approaches and vaccine development in treating patients with melanoma and other advanced-staged cancers. Two decades ago, researchers discovered that a gene called Inhibitor of Differentiation 1 (Id1), which is normally found in the embryo, was ...

Combined chemotherapy and immunotherapy shows promise for advanced prostate cancers

2015-04-29
Chemotherapy can be very effective against small prostate tumors. Larger prostate tumors, however, accumulate cells that suppress the body's immune response, allowing the cancer to grow despite treatment. Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine now find that blocking or removing these immune-suppressing cells allows a special type of chemotherapy -- and the immune cells it activates -- to destroy prostate tumors. This novel combination therapy, termed chemoimmunotherapy, achieved near complete remission in mouse models of advanced prostate ...

Researchers find 200-year lag between climate events in Greenland, Antarctica

Researchers find 200-year lag between climate events in Greenland, Antarctica
2015-04-29
CORVALLIS, Ore. - A new study using evidence from a highly detailed ice core from West Antarctica shows a consistent link between abrupt temperature changes on Greenland and Antarctica during the last ice age, giving scientists a clearer picture of the link between climate in the northern and southern hemispheres. Greenland climate during the last ice age was very unstable, the researchers say, characterized by a number of large, abrupt changes in mean annual temperature that each occurred within several decades. These so-called "Dansgaard-Oeschger events" took place ...

In online movie marketing, less is more

2015-04-29
Video didn't killed the radio star, as the eponymous 1978 pop song predicted, and now, researchers have found, cross-channel discounts for online movie sales don't cannibalize online rentals of the same movie. Analyzing data from a major movie studio that distributes its catalog of titles online, Jing Gong, a doctoral candidate in information systems and management at Carnegie Mellon University, and her co-authors measured the impact of price discounts on own- and cross-channel sales of digital movies. They confirmed their expectation that digital movie consumers are ...

Five-year survivors of esophageal cancer still face low but constant risks

2015-04-29
Seattle, WA, April 29, 2015 - Patients with esophageal cancer who survive 5 years after undergoing surgery might breathe a sigh of relief and become complacent about continued monitoring. In fact, there is little published information on the outcome of patients with locally advanced esophageal cancer (LAEC) who survive beyond the 5-year mark. A study that will be presented by Brendon Stiles, MD, Associate Professor of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York-Presbyterian Hospital, at the 95th AATS Annual Meeting finds that these survivors still face ...

Danish discovery may change cancer treatment

2015-04-29
Danish researchers from the University of Copenhagen and Herlev Hospital have made a discovery that may change the principles for treating certain types of cancer. The discovery relates to the so-called telomeres that constitute the ends of human chromosomes. Short telomeres are related to unhealthy lifestyles, old age and the male gender - all of which are risk factors in terms of high mortality. Up until now, the assumption has been that short telomeres are related to ill health. The challenge for researchers worldwide has therefore been to find out whether or not the ...

Bone marrow cell transplants used to treat fractures, lung injury, and renal obstruction

2015-04-29
Putnam Valley, NY. (April 28, 2015) - Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have been transplanted to successfully treat a variety of diseases and conditions. The benefit of using MSCs is their ability to self-renew and differentiate into a variety of specialized cell types, such as osteoblasts (cells contributing to bone formation), chondrocytes (cartilage cells), adipocytes (fat cells), myocardiocytes (the muscle cells that make up the cardiac muscle), and neurons (nervous system cells). MSCs have shown the ability to modulate the immune response and therefore reduce local ...

Why do obese men get bariatric surgery far less than women?

2015-04-29
A new study by researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine has identified demographic, socioeconomic and cultural factors that contribute to a major gender disparity among U.S. men and women undergoing weight loss surgeries. Men undergo the surgeries in far lower numbers than women. The study is published in the March issue of the Journal of Laparoendoscopic & Advanced Surgical Techniques. Eighty percent of patients who undergo bariatric surgery, which involve procedures that either limit the amount of food that can be consumed or reduce ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Mitochondrial DNA mutation accumulation may not be a determining factor in aging

Researchers unveil epigenetic mechanism of cold adaptation in rice

Hitting the right notes to play music by ear

ASH and ISTH publish revised clinical practice guidelines for pediatric venous thromboembolism

Space-to-ground infrared camouflage with radiative heat dissipation

High-speed binary phase-engraved superpixels improve complex light modulation

Herbal medicine for the mind: Traditionally used medicinal plants for memory loss from the Indian subcontinent

Study finds significant declines in maternal mental health across US

Characterizing long COVID symptoms during early childhood

Weight loss in midlife, chronic disease incidence, and all-cause mortality during extended follow-up

Patient-delivered continuous care for weight loss maintenance

HIV drug can improve vision in patients with common diabetes complication, clinical trial suggests

New fuel cell could enable electric aviation

New clinical practice guideline for the surgical management of chronic rhinosinusitis in adults

Newly discovered ‘molecular fingerprints’ could transform diabetes treatment and diagnosis

MicroRNA-124-3p and brain-derived neurotrophic factor in rat spinal cord injury: Inverse expression pattern

Oldest whale bone tools discovered

Germinated flours in breadmaking: Striking a balance between nutrition and quality

Timely initiation of statin therapy for diabetes shown to dramatically reduce risk of heart attack and stroke

University of Houston awarded $3M to launch cancer biomarker facility for immunotherapy research

Record-breaking performance in data security achieved with quantum mechanics

ASCO: MD Anderson’s Christopher Flowers honored for teaching and mentorship

Study: Emotional responses crucial to attitudes about self-driving cars

NCSA shapes students’ computing dreams

Can AI analogize?

AI aversion in social interactions

In dry conditions, locust babies are born with their first lunch

Feedback loops between disease and human behavior can produce epidemic waves

How Japan’s older adults adapted to healthcare challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic

Chronic renal failure: Discovery of a crucial biomarker

[Press-News.org] Three secrets to healthier eating
The CAN approach