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Half of Australia’s fat population think they’re healthy

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More than half of the nation is not healthy, with 54 percent weighing in at an overweight or obese level, but one in six obese Australians believe their weight is in the healthy weight range, a new study had found.

Researchers commissioned by the Heart Foundation and insurer Zurich interviewed 1200 respondents aged 20 and over on the telephone, using self-reported data.

The Heart Foundation says one of the most worrying outcomes of the study was that “obesity is somewhat normalising”.

CEO of the Heart Foundation, Dr Lyn Roberts, said that Australians are putting themselves at risk of heart disease because they are unaware of what to do to meet healthy guidelines, particularly when it comes to maintaining a healthy weight.

“As our waistlines expand, it appears that our perception of what is a healthy weight has also expanded so many people who are overweight or obese do not actually see themselves in this way,” Dr Roberts said.

Heart disease remains the most common cause of mortality among Australians. There are steps everyone can take to improve heart health including maintaining a healthy weight, eating healthy food, exercising and knowing your blood-cholesterol and blood-pressure levels.

The study also found:

  • 21.3 percent of the population is obese compared to 18 percent last year.

  • Men are more likely to think they meet weight guidelines though they are overweight or obese with 22 percent of obese men believing they meet the guidelines compared with 12 percent of women.

  • Overall, 54 percent of the population is either overweight or obese, compared to 50 percent last year.

Your say: Do you think these findings are in line with what you see? How healthy do you think you are? Share your thoughts below…

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Spring clean your kitchen

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What a great feeling after a long winter to be able to throw open the windows, discard a few layers of clothing and catch a few rays of warm spring sunshine. Spring is a time that inspires most of us to wash the windows, clean the car, repaint the fence and give every room in the house a spring clean.

This year don’t forget to take the time to turn your kitchen into a healthy one, re-stock your pantry with nutritious ingredients including spring foods, and make room in the cupboards for healthy cooking equipment.

Spring foods:

Fruits and vegetables that come into season in spring such as grapefruit, Valencia oranges, mandarin, cumquat, melons, pineapple, paw paw, tangelos, strawberries, mango, cherries, asparagus, artichokes, eggplant, peas and cabbage are fabulous to help you spring into shape.

These seasonal foods are a great addition to the basics — breads, cereals, rice, pasta, lean meats, fish, legumes, low-fat dairy products, nuts and just a few drops of healthy oils. They lighten up the kitchen and add variety to your family meals.

Equip a healthy kitchen:

Due to the increasing pace of our ever-changing lifestyles, the demand for quick, nutritious meals and snacks is greater than ever. More stir-fries, pasta and rice dishes, heaps of salads and more healthy snacks are forcing much of the old favourites, in terms of cooking equipment, to the back of the cupboard. Today we need equipment that not only helps us cook in a healthy way, but also ensures that all members of the family can enjoy it no matter what time they come home for dinner.

Equipment checklist:

1. Microwave or electric steamer

2. Rice cooker

3. Non-stick frying pans

4. Food processor/blender

5. Muffin tins

6. Freeze and storage containers

7. Salad spinners

8. Juicer

9. Char-grill

10. Wok and bamboo steamer

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She’s still got it!

Whitney Houston

The pulling power of Whitney Houston is still as high as ever. Her exclusive interview, her first in seven years, helped the rating of Oprah’s Winfrey’s 24th season premiere soar.

Rather than calling it a comeback, Oprah referred to Whitney’s re-emergence as a “coming-through” when talking on American television showEntertainment Tonight. And it seems Oprah is right on the money.

I Look to Youis Houston’s first studio album in seven years, and a highly anticipated one too. The album has a delightful mixture of hearty soul songs and heavy ballads that will take you back to the ’90s reign of divas while still having an up-to-date soul feel.

Singing with her heart on her sleeve, Whitney belts out the ballad ‘I Didn’t Know My Own Strength’, with the conviction that will make your hairs stand on end (the way only amazing talent can). The song is the album’s autobiographical centrepiece, with lyrics like “And I crashed down and I tumbled/But I did not, crumble … I was not built to break” we get an insight into the strength of Houston’s character; her determination and strength.

Whitney spends relatively little time on the album looking back, preferring to talk about the future and those she has “nothin’ but love” for.

Other tracks to look out for are ‘For the Lovers’, ‘Million Dollar Bill’ and the title track ‘I Look to You’.

The album entered ARIA charts at number 16, her highest-ranked album in Australia in almost 20 years. The album has gone to number one in a number of countries including the US and Canada.

After years of being tabloid fodder, it’s exciting to see the former chart topper back and enjoying life again and sharing her talent with a new generation of listeners.

Your say: Have you got yourself a copy of I Look to You? Which are your favourite tracks? Share with us below…

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Film review: *Blessed*

Blessed

Blessed is based on the award-winning Australian play, Who’s Afraid of the Working Class?, which is a collection of four short, loosely overlapping plays, written by award-winning writers.

The short plays in Who’s Afraid of the Working Class? were Trash, written by Andrew Bovell (who also wrote the screenplay for Lantana, and the play on which it was based), Suit by Chris Tsiolkas (author of The Slap), Money by Patricia Cornelius (playwright of Love) and Dreamtown by Melissa Reeves (playwright of The Spook).

Anna Kokkinos’ third feature film (one she will be proud of) invites the audience into the lives of four working-class mothers and their children. The movie is structured to review a day from each of their different perspectives, firstly the children and then their mothers.

The children include Roo (Eamon Farren), a young son who runs away from home and ends up making a film of a different nature; Daniel (Harrison Gilbertson), who’s accused of stealing from his mother; Trisha (Anastasia Baboussouras) and Katrina (Sophie Lowe) go shoplifting and end up being interviewed for a greater crime; while Orton (Reef Ireland) is found by sister Stacey (Eva Lazzaro), who joins him on the streets, escaping lives of abuse.

Then we see the mothers: Bianca (Miranda Otto), the single, unemployed mother with a gambling addiction; Rhonda (Frances O’Conner), the welfare mother, pregnant and drunk again; Gina (Victoria Haralabidou), the hard-working Greek mother with a gay son and rebellious daughter; and Tanya (Deborra-Lee Furness), the tireless nurse who takes on extra work on the side.

When firmly entrenched on the fringes of Australian society, it is easy to fall into caricature. But we’re saved by some powerful acting and direction which add depth. Frances O’Conner is amazing as Rhonda, and it would have been intriguing to see what she could do with the play’s monologues. The story of her children is the strongest. Miranda Otto seems too luminous and carefree to be convincing as the gambling mother, but she brings a delicate frailty to the character and really complements her daughter, played by Sophie Lowe — who is making a name for herself and in Beautiful Kate.

You can see the virtue of having talented writers dedicated to each storyline. The story of Daniel and Laurel (Monica Maughan), the old lady he robs, surrounded by books by Lenin and Dostoevsky, works beautifully as a scene on its own. And there are so many more scenes that delve into the depths and hearts of these characters. Deborra-Lee Furness gives a sterling performance as does Victoria Haralibidou (who also starred in Brides) although she seems too young to act in such a traditionally migrant way. Anastasia Baboussouras as her daughter Trisha, gives a spirited performance as her feisty daughter.

There isn’t a bad performance in the film. Reef Ireland and Eva Lazzaro are taught and true as the runaway children. William McInnes does well in his few scenes, as does Wayne Blair, although his Aboriginal character has been truncated. There is more understatement than explanation in this film, and the lack of meaningful adult male roles will make men feel uncomfortable, but this is a movie about mothers and their children, and there are no angels here.

Blessed carries a great deal of emotional wallop and is more coherent and cogent than these type of multi-story films usually are. These are stories from the street, tales of urban struggle and decay, with touches of redemption and sparks of hope. These are people we often walk by — and avoid. After seeing this movie, when you reach the sanctity of your own home, you will feel blessed, as you will have been hit by a movie with a powerful heart — one of the finest Australian movies of the year.

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How dieting gave me an eating disorder

A girl with an eating disorder

In my teens, I was slightly overweight, so my mother offered to send me to a well-known weight loss centre in an attempt to lose approximately 5-10kg.

I was placed on a strict diet, and had to visit the centre regularly to use their exercise equipment.

I was losing weight steadily, until one week my weight had increased. That particular week I strayed from the diet plan, eating three cubes of chocolate.

Ten years on, I can still remember the humiliation I felt when the consultant told me it was because I ate chocolate that my weight had increased, and how terrible she made me feel for “breaking the rules”, just by eating a measly few pieces of chocolate.

I was unsure how I was supposed to maintain a diet of salad sandwiches and powdered drinks, yet I knew I did not want to feel the humiliation of putting on more weight either. So I became bulimic.

I quit my program with the centre, and lost a lot of money in the process as they did not provide refunds. I also lost a lot of weight, as I suffered silently with bulimia for the following five years.

It seemed like an easy solution, until the effects of the bingeing and purging took its toll on my health and I felt too exhausted both physically and emotionally to function.

I still sometimes struggle today to not place my fingers down my throat, particularly when presented with images of skeletal celebrities like Nicole Ritchie, who continually make the best-dressed lists. But every time I feel the urge, I remember how sick it made me, and so I stop myself.

I feel like I now have a much healthier attitude to food and to my body. I’ve found that I can be within the normal weight range, while not depriving myself.

Women spend so much time and money on achieving a number on the scales. Whatever happened to just being healthy?

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The return of the family dinner

There’s no doubt the current global financial crisis has been tough – but it’s also proved to have a silver lining for families. One in six families report spending more time together as a result of the downturn.

And when it comes to the dinner table, more time together is good news for your health. According to several studies conducted by two leading US universities, families who eat together are far less likely to be plagued by eating disorders, drug use, smoking, and alcohol abuse.

Australians are returning to the table with gusto. Much has been made of the MasterChef effect, with the hit show reportedly inspiring many Aussies – especially kids – to get into the kitchen.

The proof is at the supermarket checkout. Despite the general downturn, grocery sales are up and retailers reckon they know why. “What we have seen in the last three-quarters to a year has been that generally there’s been a upsurge in cooking at home by the relative sales of food and food ingredients and cooking ingredients,” says Woolworths CEO Michael Luscombe.

Clearly eating-in equals good news for the hip pocket but it’s also a bonanza for your health. “The first benefit is you can control every ingredient that goes into your food,” says accredited practising dietitian Kate Di Prima. This means more vegetables and less sugar and fat, as well the ability to control portion size.

But the benefits of meals in the home extend far beyond good nutrition. “Dinner as a family at the table can be a forum for discussing the day. Around the table you can talk about what’s happened – you can start actual conversations,” Di Prima says. It also presents parents with the opportunity to lead by example, to model good table manners and to educate about healthy eating.

Di Prima is thrilled about the return to home cooking. “The message is getting through that eating at home is healthier, cheaper and more family friendly. Shows like MasterChef are getting people excited about cooking from fresh ingredients, not just from bottles or jars or sachets,” she enthuses.

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Danielle Vico’s gastric banding diary

Danielle Vico is a 29-year-old mother of two young children. She’s funny, smart, pretty and happily married to the man she’s been with for 13 years. But for years Danielle has battled with her weight to the point she recently tipped the scales at 156.3 kgs.

With Woman’s Day by her side, Danielle recently became one of thousands of Australians who are opting to have gastric banding surgery. Here’s Danielle’s weekly diary of her lapband journey.

Today is the day I begin my new life. I had gastric banding surgery very early this morning and here I am in my lovely hospital room at the Sydney Institute For Obesity Surgery (SIOS).

The surgery was good from what I hear. I have pain and discomfort around my upper abdomen but this is normal with keyhole surgery. It’s just a little hard to get out of bed or a chair without support from the frame over the bed or the arms on the chair.

I have 5 wounds, the biggest is 4cm long and the rest are around 1-1.5cm long. My belly looks very swollen as a result of the gas used in surgery and swelling of my stomach. I feel happy though and can’t wait to start working on losing the weight.

I don’t feel hungry at all but I was served some clear beef broth for dinner and was only able to have four spoonfuls before I felt full and nauseous. An hour later I tried some drinking yoghurt but it has taken me a long time to drink.

It was strange this morning not to have my children with me. They would normally be racing into my bedroom demanding “weet-bix with honey”. But it was also a beautiful moment last night when my daughter stood at my feet hugging my belly and saying, “I love you Mummy, the doctor will make you less fat in the morning”. My children are so full of life and this enthusiasm that I somehow lost while I gained weight.

I’m still on a liquid diet and am supposed to drink 1.6 litres of fluids a day but my daily average is just two to three cups of watery soup or yoghurt. I need to drink more water. I’ve found the vanilla-flavoured drinking yoghurt is best because it doesn’t have lumps in.

I feel so privileged to have had this surgery. I know it is not a cure in itself but I think it will be like a good friend who is always on your shouldeer reminding you that perhaps that extra slice of cheese is not necessary.

I need to commit myself 100% to a lifestyle of reduced meal sizes and reduced fats and sugars. I need to ditch the soda drinks and replace these with healthy foods and a good fitness regime. If I don’t stick to these changes then the band won’t work.

My aim ultimately is to live a long, healthy life and have my obituary read, “She achieved so much and did so many adventurous things.”

I went back to SIOS this week for my first appointment with the dietician. I was a little disheartened to see that my scales at home don’t measure the same as the ones at SIOS.

At home my scales suggested I was 145kg – a loss of 11kg but at SIOS I was 149kg, a loss of just 7kg. I was heartbroken but the dietician was very encouraging.

I can now begin the puree phase of my eating plan where I blend or mash all food. It can’t be too lumpy or chunky because it could get stuck due to my stomach still being swollen.

I should only eat half a cup of food per meal and I can’t have fluids 10 minutes before or 20 minutes after I eat as this can push food through and reduce my feeling of satisfaction which, of course, would make me eat more.

On the way home from my appointment I stopped to buy a new outfit for a special family dinner. Most of my wardrobe is either too big or too small now as the sizes are either 20 or 26 and I’m in between.

I bought a gorgeous knit dress. It’s a bit clingy which I am not used to but when my husband Milan saw me his eyes lit up and he whistled. He is so supportive and it made me so happy that evening to receive lots of compliments from family and friends.

I had my first appointment today with my surgeon Dr Talbot. He asked me to show him my scars and he was happy with them except the biggest one which is infected so now I am on antibiotics.

I told him that my hunger levels had gone up a fair bit since being on the pureed food so he suggested I try adding more foods to my diet.

I can’t wait for my first band adjustment where they insert more fluid into the band which will make me feel fuller and reduce the amount I can eat. I had gained a little bit of weight back but Dr Talbot was reassuring and told me this is a long rollercoaster-type journey.

I’m realising all the things I have missed out on as a result of my weight. These are things so many people take for granted and some are so trivial but I thought I’d note them down. Here they are….

I’ve missed:

• Riding my bicycle without the tyres bulging under my weight

• Putting an Aeroplane seat belt on without the aid of an extender

• Going to the Easter show and theme parks, and being able to go on the rides

• Being able to drive my husband’s car without having to push the seat back

• Being able to go bushwalking and hiking like I used to when I was a kid

• Being able to ride a horse

• Being able to shop in the “normal” size clothing stores

• Not having to buy men’s jumpers and shirts

• Having the energy to be fast and keep motivated

• Being able to wear calf-high boots in winter

• Being light enough that my husband can lift me (I can currently lift him – it’s a great party trick)

• Being able to go on the trampoline with the kids

• Being able to walk through my mum’s house and not have every piece of furniture or floorboard complain

• Be able to go to the cinema and not have the cupholders dig into my sides

• Be able to sit in the backseat of my car and know that the seatbelt will fit

• Be able to rollerblade again

• Be able to use my treadmill again (it currently only gets pulled out to dust it)

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Patrick Swayze dies

Actor Patrick Swayze today lost his two-year battle with pancreatic cancer. He was 57.

Swayze, who trained with the Joffrey Ballet School in his twenties, had his major breakthrough aged 35 as Johnny Castle, the dancing instructor from the wrong side of the tracks in the coming-of-age classic Dirty Dancing.

His celebrity rose further with roles in the Oscar-winning movie Ghost and cult favourite Point Break. In 1991 Swayze was named People magazine’s Sexiest Man Alive.

In recent years he starred in the TV series The Beast, continuing to film his role even after his cancer diagnosis.

His last major interview was with veteran reporter Barbara Walters, where Swayze indicated he had come to terms with his prognosis. “I’d say five years is pretty wishful thinking. Two years seems likely if you’re going to believe statistics,” he told Walters.

Reports say Swayze returned home in recent days and passed away yesterday peacefully with his family by his side.

Patrick Swayze is survived by his wife of 34 years, Lisa Niemi, the couple didn’t have any children.

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Patrick Swayze’s life in pictures

Patrick Swayze has lost his battle with pancreatic cancer. The actor announced he was suffering from the disease in March 2008. Persistent reports, which Swayze described as “shoddy and reckless”, had the actor close to death on many occasions. But he finally passed away at home and surrounded by family on September 14, 2009.

Swayze’s last major TV interview was with veteran journalist Barbara Walters, at his Californian ranch in January this year. Of his cancer battle he told Walters, “You can bet I’m going through hell. And I’ve only seen the beginning of it.”

His wife of 34 years was actress and dancer Lisa Niemi. The couple first met in 1970 when she was just 14 years old and taking dance lessons from his mother (he was 18). Niemi was the inspiration behind Swayze’s hit song “She’s Like The Wind”, which featured on the Dirty Dancing soundtrack.

Swayze’s mother Patsy was a dancer and the naturally athletic Patrick soon excelled at it, too (he’s pictured here in costume aged 15 in 1967). He trained as a ballet dancer but found his feet in film after scoring his first role in 1979, a minor part in the roller disco film Skatetown U.S.A.

Famous for launching the careers of Hollywood heavyweights Tom Cruise, Matt Dillon and Ralph Macchio, 1983’s The Outsiders also proved to be Swayze’s big break. His character Darrel Curtis was 20 years old — in real-life Swayze had seen his 30th birthday.

“Nobody puts Baby in the corner”. Swayze said it and we continue love it. The Romeo & Juliet-style love story between bad-boy dancer Johnny Castle and rich kid Baby Houseman (Jennifer Grey) was a surprise hit for the studio. But in 2009 it’s safe to say Dirty Dancing is a cult classic. The film even scored an Oscar for its popular soundtrack.

It was the movie that put ditto’ into popular usage. In the 1990 film Ghost Swayze played Sam, the late husband of Demi Moore’s Molly, who communicates with her through a medium (Whoopi Goldberg). Pictured here is THE famous pottery scene.

Swayze cemented his sex-symbol status with his turn as Bodhi, the surfer-cum-bank robber in Point Break. The film ends when Swayze’s character paddles out into an un-surfable storm at Bells Beach, declaring “It’s time to dance with the universe.”

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I can’t lose my kids a second time

In 1992, Jacqueline Pascarl’s two eldest kids were kidnapped by their dad, a Malaysian prince. Now she tells Angela Mollard of her terror at learning she could be parted from her youngest children forever.

ForJacqueline Pascarl, it seemed like the sickest of jokes. As she looked at the images of two ominous looking growths on her ovaries, she couldn’t believe that fate seemed poised to tear her from her children for a second time.

Motherhood had already been cruelly stolen from her once, when her two eldest children were kidnapped by their father and taken to Malaysia 17 years ago. So, as she listened to the doctors gently telling her that the tumours were more than likely cancerous, it seemed desperately unfair that her two youngest children would also be robbed of a mother.

“I know what happened to Shahirah and Iddin when they were kidnapped and didn’t have me as a mum,” says Jacqueline, whose surname was then Gillespie. “My younger children are just six and eight ? they need me, yet it felt like I was being given a death sentence. I was so scared about leaving them that my heart was breaking.”

Earlier this year, it seemed the dynamic author and campaigner had finally found some peace. She was happily married to her third husband, Bill Crocaris, and they lived a quiet life with their two youngest children Verity, 8, and Lysander, 6.

In March she had watched with pride as her 24-year-old daughter Shahirah, with whom she was reunited three years ago, married in Melbourne. Life couldn’t have been sweeter.

Initially Jacqueline, 46, dismissed her tiredness as the sign of impending menopause. But when the exhaustion was joined by weight gain and breathlessness, she went to see her doctor. She was told she was too busy, maybe even depressed, and was duly prescribed antidepressants, which she didn’t fill.

For the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale September 14, 2009.

Would you like to give Jacqueline some words of encouragement? Leave your comments below.

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