Most people, including many health professionals, are unaware that following health and nutrition advice appropriate for someone of 30 or 40 can be harmful to those aged 65 and over.
Health and independence to the very end of our days is certainly achievable. But that takes an understanding of how unique our nutrition needs are in our later years.
The distinction lies largely with body muscle.
You see, muscles do much more than move you around – they also form an essential protein reserve: vital to an effective immune system that combats illness from a sniffle to a life threatening post surgical infection; that keeps every body organ functioning; that supports the healing of wounds from cuts and scratches to the trauma of a major accident; that helps keep diabetes under control and provides critical backup brain fuel supplies.
Your body’s ability to keep all those systems going so you get to keep doing the things you want to do, depends on how well you maintain your muscle reserve.
The first is pretty obvious – use it or lose it. You know that one!
Eat protein – it has to be at every meal.
I suggest putting a protein food at the centre of your meals and surrounding that with as many different food colours as you can.
Protein to supports muscles, colours to supply protective antioxidants.
And what about the ‘don’t lose weight’ bit?
That’s because weight loss by dieting, or any loss that doesn’t also involve very good resistance exercise, will cause loss of body muscle.
It’s not a problem for someone of 30 or 40, but it is at 70.
Because that might just mean you don’t have the resources to fight off next season’s flu or recover from an accident and that can trigger ongoing health decline that you absolutely want to avoid.
August 24, 2022
This review of research on iron supplementation and gut health suggests caution is warranted: taking a supplement prescribed to correct a diagnosed deficiency is often medically necessary, but without diagnosed deficiency, iron supplements might instead harm our vital beneficial gut bacteria.
Read this postApril 22, 2022
Delirium is very common during hospital admissions for older people - it greatly increases the challenges faced in caring for people and reduces their chances of going home promptly
Read this postApril 11, 2022
April is Parkinson's Disease (PD) Awareness Month, and if you live with PD and are in your late 60s or beyond, combining what's best for you as you age with what you need to manage PD is vital to living the best life possible into later age.
Read this post