Advertisement
Home Page 5127

How are your water works?

Getty Images

Getty Images

July 19-25 is Wee Week (www.kidney.org.au), and — seeing as one in five women will suffer at least one urinary tract infection (UTI), or cystitis, every year — it’s a good time to learn how to prevent or at least shorten the infection, and ease the awful pain (not for nothing do sufferers describe it as being like “weeing razor blades”).

Drink up. Drinking water helps to flush out organisms in and around the bladder before they can cause an infection. Aim to drink at least two litres of water daily. Also, the more water you drink, the more you dilute your urine, so it’s less irritating.

Try a bicarb boost. At the first sign of an infection, mix ½ teaspoon of bicarbonate of soda in 125ml water. Drink a glass of water, then the bicarb drink. The bicarb makes urine less acidic, which reduces the stinging sensation when you urinate.

Pick a herb. Try drinking nettle tea; it is a diuretic which will make you urinate more, flushing bacteria out of your system. Marshmallow, lovage and parsley are also diuretic, plus they have anti-inflammatory properties. The antiseptic herb uva ursi, or bearberry, is particularly recommended, while antibacterial goldenseal is a natural weapon against the E. coli bacteria which causes so many UTIs. Buchu, a traditional South African herb, has also been shown in lab studies to be effective against E. coli.

Pucker up. Cranberry juice is perhaps the best-researched remedy for UTIs. Its action is due to condensed tannins (proanthocyanadins) which prevent harmful bacteria from sticking to cells lining the urinary tract. Two glasses a day should be ideal, and it should be sugar-free, for optimal results.

Consider alternatives. Homoeopathy may be effective for interstitial cystitis, a condition which can be triggered by trauma, but where no actual bacteria is present. An English study showed that the homoeopathic medicine Staphysagria (which comes from a flower) helped a constant urge to urinate associated with suppressed anger and abuse. Cantharis is also prescribed for acute cystitis. A qualified homoeopath would be able to make up an individual treatment for you — visit www.homeopathy.org.au. Some small studies indicate that injury to nerves of the lower back can cause cystitis-like symptoms, and that chiropractic adjustment can help.

Help yourself. If you’re prone to recurrent UTIs, you should:

  • urinate regularly, at least every 3-4 hours;

  • empty the bladder each time (women should stand up, count to 10, then sit down and try a second time);

  • pass urine before and shortly after intercourse; avoid alcohol, caffeinated drinks, citrus fruits, strawberries, and asparagus, which may all irritate the bladder;

  • eat probiotic yoghurt and/or take probiotic supplements, which have been shown to reduce cystitis recurrence;

  • avoid spermicides and a diaphragm for birth control, as they can trigger UTIs by altering the bacteria in the vagina;

  • always wipe your bottom from front to back after using the toilet;

  • don’t sit for long periods in a wet, tight swimsuit after you go swimming;

  • and wear loose-fitting cotton underwear rather than tight synthetics.

Know when to get help. See a doctor if the burning sensation is accompanied by a discharge, back pain, shivering or a temperature, or if there is blood in your urine.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5127

Magda: five dress sizes down

Ask Magda Szubanski her greatest accomplishment of the past year and the answer won’t be losing 25 kilos and five dress sizes, a feat which has arguably saved her life.

Not that she isn’t thrilled with her weight loss – she is, and rightfully so. It’s just that Magda knows that her real success isn’t dropping that excess, but keeping it off.

Having remained at her goal weight for 12 long months, the soon-to-be 50-year-old has realised she’s managed what she thought was once impossible – to silence the voice that urged her to eat.

Get this week’s Woman’s Day to read Magda’s inspiring story including:

  • Her advice for achieving weight loss.

  • Her letter to her old self.

Magda Szubanski as Sharon and Dannii Minogue in 2006

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5127

Cricket legend Dean Jones’ secret family revealed

Dean Jones' secret family revealed

Dean Jones was named Father of the Year at the same time he had a secret lover in Sydney. Now he’s rejected their baby, she tells Woman’s Day about his double life.

It was a total shock when Dean Jones told Kerri-Anne Hamilton on their third date that he was married and had a family in Melbourne. That was in February, 1999, and the impressionable young woman from small-town Camden, outside Sydney, was furious.

“I’ll never forget it. It was at Nick’s seafood cafe on the beachfront at Bondi … I said, ‘Are you happily married?’ His answer was, ‘I’m never there’.”

Kerri-Anne decided she would not see the champion cricketer again. “I was disappointed and angry as hell,” she says. “I was going to drop him at the airport and never see him again. But he is very persuasive and he started dangling carrots, inviting me on trips away and taking me out to dinner. We’d go to Brisbane a lot and the Gold Coast and Hobart – but never Melbourne.”

The attractive flight attendant had first met Dean by chance during a corporate event at a Sydney golf course in 1998. He wooed her with relentless phone calls over several months before she agreed to go on a date with him.

And it was some first date, with “Deano” taking her to an exclusive Sydney nightclub and introducing her to former England captain Ian Botham and other sports stars.

It may not have been love at first sight – Kerri-Anne thought Dean was too old for her and she wasn’t a cricket fan – but she was soon smitten. “Within a month it was lock, stock and barrel and I was madly in love.”

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5127

Angelina’s backflip: I’m ready to marry Brad

Angelina Jolie

Angelina Jolie reveals she’s changed her mind about love, kids and her partner.

The enigma that is Angelina Jolie has taken a turn for the ordinary, with the one-time wild child admitting she’s now a homebody who lives in her pyjamas and would happily marry her partner Brad Pitt and “grow old” with him.

In a series of revealing interviews to promote her new spy thriller Salt, Angelina has made it clear her days of drugs, lesbian romps, playing with knives and self- mutilation are long gone. Her main thrill in life comes with being a mum and partner.

The actress spoke of her love for Brad and their children, Maddox, 8, Zahara, 5, Pax, 6, Shiloh, 4, and twins Knox and Vivienne, 2.

Like millions of women the world over who struggle to get their children up, fed and dressed each morning, Angelina describes her days as organised chaos.

“We just try to corral them,” she says. “We put new gates up because the twins were going everywhere.

“We have drawers in the kitchen full of toys, we’ve got shoes going on, someone is brushing their teeth, it’s ‘put down this, stop screaming, no you have to wear that jacket, I can’t find the pink one, please just go out the door!’

“But we’re able to do it because we have a great laugh and we find fun in it. It doesn’t matter if you don’t get sleep. It’s an honour to take care of them.”

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5127

Masterchef finals fever

Masterchef finals fever

Things are heating up in and out of the kitchen. Is Claire engaged? Are the chefs feeling the pressure? Plus Marion’s mega deal. Jonica Bray gets all the goss.

Making a rare public appearance outside the MasterChef kitchen, contestant Claire Winton Burn showed off more than just a first look at her lawyer beau Trevor Thomas – she also flaunted a new sparkler on her engagement finger.

Stopping by the market for groceries in suburban Melbourne, Claire caused quite a stir, when – even after efforts to disguise herself – her trademark red curls were spotted by locals.

Shoppers soon realised the man accompanying Claire was her boyfriend Trevor, who has been accused of leaving his wife for the MasterChef hopeful.

“Claire kept pulling her cap down, it was like she didn’t want to be recognised,” said one eyewitness. “They seemed really happy but kept looking around to see who was watching.”

While Claire has refused to discuss allegations that she was a factor in the break-up of Trevor’s marriage to ex-wife Narelle, it seems her relationship is heating up as quickly as the cooking competition.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5127

Country music’s ‘It’ girl

Catherine Britt

Like an undiscovered lottery winner, there’s a record store employee out there who’s unaware that country music darling Catherine Britt wants to reward him.

“Bless him!” laughs the Aussie singer. “Elton John was browsing and looking for new talent and the guy said, ‘Listen to this girl. She’s only 16 and she sings and writes her own songs.’” Elton loved her debut album, Dusty Smiles And Heartbreak Cures.

“Within 24 hours I had every record label in Nashville calling and saying, ‘Elton has given us your album and can we sign you.’”

She’s now released her fourth, self-titled album ‘Catherine Britt’. But it hasn’t all been a fairytale. The 25-year-old from Newcastle, NSW, was just 17 when she went to Nashville by herself, and admits she’d party too hard, and cry herself to sleep from loneliness.

But experiences good and bad have produced the accomplished Golden Guitar winner she is today.

“It’s important to be honest when it comes to song writing … I think that’s what my fans enjoy about me.”

  • Return flights for them and a friend to Maroochydore Airport from their nearest capital city (if required) and car hire.

  • Luxury tent accommodation for two people for four nights.

  • Four-day pass to the Muster for two people – this pass is valid for Friday, August 27 to Sunday, August 29.

  • PLUS! A meet-and-greet opportunity with Catherine Britt, Lee Kernaghan, McAlister Kemp, Sara Storer and Jasmine Rae, and a signed copy of each of their albums.

For more information please visit www.muster.com.au.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5127

Katie Price accuses Peter Andre of ‘milking’ their divorce

Getty

Katie Price, the former British glamour model, has ripped into ex hubby Peter Andre, accusing him of “milking” their divorce and not defending her parenting.

The 32-year-old told The Sun that her divorce from Peter and the subsequent bad press she’s received has been hard to deal with.

“I’m not going to lie and say it’s been easy,” Katie said.

“If I’m pictured with the kids out it’s, ‘She’s using the kids’, if I’m not pictured with the kids it’s, ‘She’s never with the kids’,” she said.

“There is one person who should have defended me and hasn’t and has milked it all the way — Pete. All he had to say was, ‘She’s the mother of my kids, leave her alone, she doesn’t deserve this’. Instead he’s milked it and that’s really hurtful.”

The notoriously brash celebrity also confided that her new husband, cage-fighter Alex Reid, has been encouraging her to open up and reveal her “softer side” to the public.

“[Alex] encourages me to show that, but I can’t let my guard down because I’m used to having to defend myself,” she confessed.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5127

Realistic expectations for weight loss

Getty Images

Getty Images

With a new celebrity diet on the front of every second magazine and a seemingly endless line of new weight loss supplements promising unbelievable results, it’s hard to escape stories of amazing weight loss.

There are many parts that play a role in successful, long-term weight loss and finetuning these components in our lives is the key to maintaining a healthy weight. Both diet and exercise are key to successful, healthy weight loss, but what is also vital is motivation and putting knowledge into action. The following are some tips to help with healthy weight loss:

Set realistic goals

Setting realistic goals helps keep motivation up, as you can see your progress as you go along. Goals can take a number of forms, it could be a monthly weight loss, a fitness goal, such as being able to jog a certain distance or even a diet or lifestyle goal such as such as making three different meals using legumes in a week.

Make goals specific and able to be evaluated so you can clearly see whether or not you have achieved your goal. There are many factors that play a part in weight gain, so set out diet and exercise goals, reaching and setting new goals regularly is great motivation to keep going. Also, set goals that can be maintained long term, healthy weight loss is about positive lifestyle changes, not quick fixes.

Know what to expect

Now that you’ve set goals and started addressing the factors involved in weight gain, it’s important to know what to expect from healthy weight loss. You’re not going to lose 5kg a week. Expecting this and then it not arriving can be disheartening, which is why it’s important to have realistic expectations.

Healthy weight loss is about steady weight loss which is achieved through a way that is maintainable. For healthy, sustained weight loss, aim to lose about 0.5kg to 1.0kg per week. For the average person, losing more than this in a week could mean simply an extra loss of fluid or worse, a significant loss of muscle, which can make it harder to maintain a healthy body weight.

See barriers and challenges as opportunities

This is real life, so not everything is going to go to plan all the time and you may find some things hard to achieve or difficult to incorporate into your day-to-day routine.

When this happens, it’s important to see these as part of the learning process, as each time this happens you gain more and more information on how you can be successful. Look at the things which have sent you off track.

Did the seasons change and outdoor activities become too difficult? Did your working hours change and motivation to prepare food become lower? Did you become bored with the foods you were eating?

Every obstacle tells you more about what you need to do to be successful and can be incorporated into your short-term goals. If you get bored with your meals, maybe your goal can be to invest in some good cook books, a short cooking course or to investigate some online recipe sites.

If you’re finding it difficult to exercise outside, your goal could be to investigate local gyms, exercise equipment for the home or indoor exercise that don’t require any equipment.

Losing weight is something that is different for everyone, individual needs and capabilities can differ greatly so it’s important to gather as much information as possible. An accredited practicing dietitian can provide advice on diet and an exercise physiologist or personal trainer can be give guidance on physical activity.

Before starting a new exercise plan or making big changes to your diet it is important to discuss these with your doctor to ensure that they are suitable and safe for you.

Your say: Do you find it difficult to lose weight? What barriers do you find hinder your weight loss? Share with us below.

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5127

Salma Hayek: I eat bugs!

Getty

We have heard some weird celebrity diets in our time, but Salma Hayek’s takes the cake!

The curvy star recently revealed to David Letterman on his late-night TV show of her love of eating grasshoppers.

“Look, I’m salivating,” she said on The Late Show last month. “They’re delicious.”

“These little ants fried are amazing — with a little guacamole,” she said.

“And the worms … there are many different recipes for those. The little grasshoppers have a smoky flavour to them. It’s the way they cook them, and it’s really good.”

Salma, who is married to French businessman Francois-Henri Pinault, went on to tell Letterman “They’re not that easy to find. They’re delicatessen,” before quickly correcting herself.

“Yeah, sorry. My French is getting a little better. — my English is getting a lot worse.”

Related stories


Advertisement
Home Page 5127

Pinch the salt from your diet

Pinch the salt from your diet

Australian adults eat an average of 8g to 10g of salt each day, which is equivalent to more than one-and-a-half teaspoons!

The body only needs about 1g of salt to function — anything extra is simply increasing our risk of high blood pressure and other adverse health outcomes. Research shows that reducing our salt intake by just 3g per day would positively impact on our health, especially heart health.

You may be surprised to learn that more than three-quarters of salt consumed by Australians is eaten without even realising there is salt in the food. This is the “hidden salt” found mostly in processed foods. The food industry, including Sanitarium, with the help of Australian Division of World Action on Salt & Health (AWASH) has set out to reduce the salt content in common food products.

Here are some ways you can pinch the salt from your diet:

  • Check food labels for salt to compare products, brands and varieties and choose the lower salt options.

  • Choose low salt foods (less than 120mg/100g) where possible and avoid high salt (more than 500mg/100g) foods.

  • Keep takeaways and fast foods such as pizza, burgers, fried chicken and chips to an occasional treat.

  • Use lemon juice, garlic, vinegar, fresh or dried herbs and spices as an alternative to salt when cooking. This way you won’t lose any flavour!

  • Avoid pickles, mayonnaise, stock cubes, soy sauce and mustard, where possible.

  • Eating fresh whole foods instead of processed will help you avoid the hidden salt found in some processed food.

Your say: What are some of your favourite ways to reduce salt in recipes? Share with us below.

Related stories


Advertisement