barre

Evening Snacking Might Raise Odds for Breast Cancer’s Return

By Kathleen Doheny
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, March 31, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Breast cancer patients fond of midnight snacking may be at a higher risk of a breast cancer recurrence, according to new research.

“Women whose usual nightly fast was less than 13 hours had a 36 percent increased risk of having a recurrence of the breast cancer over about seven years [of follow-up],” said study co-author Ruth Patterson, of the University of California, San Diego.

“We considered recurrence either [cancer] at the same site or a new primary [cancer],” said Patterson, associate director of population sciences at the university’s Moores Cancer Center.

Previous research done on rats found that prolonged nighttime fasting can be protective against high blood sugar (glucose) levels, inflammation and weight gain, all of which are linked with poor outcomes for cancer, the researchers said.

So Patterson’s team looked at data from more than 2,400 women enrolled in the Women’s Healthy Eating and Living study, between 1995 and 2007. The women, aged 27 to 70, had been diagnosed with early stage breast cancer. The aim of the study was to look at whether a diet very high in fruits and vegetables could reduce the risk of cancer recurrence, Patterson said. No differences were found, but researchers continue to draw data from the study to look at other outcomes and associations.

Using self-reported dietary data, the researchers found that, overall, the women had an average fasting duration of 12.5 hours nightly. An eating episode was termed as consuming anything totaling at least 25 calories after 8 p.m.

The researchers found only a link, or association, to the lower fasting time and cancer recurrence, Patterson said, so it’s too early to make a recommendation. She can only speculate as to why the link was there. The association does not prove a cause-and-effect relationship.

“Circulating sugar levels can be fuel for tumors,” Patterson said. “We have a lot of data suggesting that when people have bad sleep or shorter sleep duration, they may have a higher cancer risk.”

In addition, the investigators found that those who fasted longer had lower hemoglobin A1C levels — a measure of blood glucose levels over the past three months — and also had a longer sleep duration.

The length of nighttime fasting, however, did not affect the risk of death from breast cancer or any cause during the follow-up period, according to the study, published online March 31 in JAMA Oncology.

“Evolutionary-wise, we developed to eat when it is light, when we were out hunting and gathering,” Patterson said. “You should be eating when you are moving. When we go against these natural rhythms, it appears that your body clock is out of sync, and this can lead to poor metabolic health.”

That poor health, in turn, could raise the risk of cancer returning, experts believe.

The study finding is “provocative,” said Dr. Joanne Mortimer, director of the Women’s Cancer Program at City of Hope in Duarte, Calif. She reviewed the study and agreed that it’s too early to make a broad recommendation for cancer patients. “It’s an interesting observation and it needs to be studied more,” she said.

“I think sleep, diet and weight control are all kind of related,” Mortimer added. Many of her breast cancer patients report sleep problems, she said. Those who fast and get better sleep may be less likely to develop metabolic syndrome, a clustering of conditions (such as high blood pressure, high blood glucose, low “good” cholesterol) that raise risks for heart disease and other problems, she suggested.

More information

To learn more about sleep and cancer risk, visit the National Sleep Foundation.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1X09Wp5

Experimental Drug for Rheumatoid Arthritis Shows Promise

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, March 31, 2016 (HealthDay News) — An experimental drug to treat rheumatoid arthritis showed promise in a new six-month trial.

Baricitinib substantially reduced symptoms and improved daily physical functioning among people who failed other treatments for the autoimmune disease, researchers found.

“If you have active disease and you’ve failed existing treatment options, you should have hope,” said lead researcher Dr. Mark Genovese. He is a professor of immunology and rheumatology at Stanford University School of Medicine in California. “There is another therapy, which will hopefully become available, that has demonstrated it can work in that situation.”

The report was published March 31 in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The trial was sponsored by Eli Lilly and Co., the manufacturer of baricitinib. Lilly is currently seeking approval of the drug from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

For the phase 3 trial, Genovese, who is a consultant to Lilly, and colleagues randomly assigned more than 500 patients at 178 centers in 24 countries to one of three groups. One group received 4 milligrams of baricitinib a day, the second group got 2 milligrams, and the third group received a placebo for 24 weeks.

The researchers found that about 55 percent of the patients taking the higher dose of baricitinib experienced a reduction of at least 20 percent in the number of affected joints at week 12 of the study.

For patients on the lower dose, 49 percent experienced a similar reduction. Among patients on placebo, only 27 percent saw this effect, the researchers said.

In addition, patients taking either dose of baricitinib had improved physical function and reductions in inflammation. These benefits remained after 24 weeks, according to the report.

The most common side effect of baricitinib was mild upper-respiratory infections among as many as 77 percent of patients taking the drug, compared with 64 percent of those taking the placebo, the investigators found.

Also, after 12 weeks, about 2 percent of patients in the high-dose group, versus 1 percent and 0.5 percent in the low-dose and placebo groups, respectively, developed shingles. Shingles is a painful skin rash caused by a dormant chickenpox virus.

Baricitinib also raised both high-density (“good”) and low-density (“bad”) cholesterol, the findings showed.

Rheumatoid arthritis is a progressive, inflammatory, autoimmune disease affecting about 1.5 percent of the worldwide population. It causes pain, stiffness, swelling and eventual destruction of joints, typically in the hands and feet. About three of every four people with the disease are women, the researchers said.

Baricitinib is in a new category of small-molecule drugs, available in pill form, called Janus-kinase inhibitors. These drugs work by interfering with enzymes necessary for various inflammatory substances in the body to function, Genovese explained.

Although many new drugs have been developed to treat rheumatoid arthritis, long-term use makes these drugs less effective for some patients, researchers have found.

As a result, 15 percent to 20 percent of rheumatoid arthritis patients find themselves having used up the available drugs, Genovese said.

Dr. Waseem Mir is a rheumatologist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City. He said that “a new drug to treat rheumatoid arthritis patients is always welcome, because when you get to treat many patients, you see that most of the drugs stop being effective.”

The study shows that baricitinib can help rheumatoid patients who have failed other drugs, he added.

“However, I do not want the rheumatoid arthritis patients to get too excited, as the study shows only a 20 percent improvement. But in combination with other rheumatoid drugs, it could be effective in helping patients,” Mir said.

More information

For more on rheumatoid arthritis, visit the American College of Rheumatology.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1X09W8E

Right Brain Scan Could Aid in Stroke Recovery: Study

THURSDAY, March 31, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Examining the right side of the brain might help predict speech and language recovery in people who suffer a stroke on the left side of the brain, researchers say.

The left side of the brain is dominant in language and speech. And, stroke damage on that side often results in difficulty speaking, naming, repeating and understanding language — a condition called aphasia, explained the authors of the study, published March 30 in the journal Neurology.

“Aphasia is a common and devastating symptom for people who have strokes on the left side of the brain,” said study author Dr. Gottfried Schlaug of Harvard Medical School, in Boston. “Although many people recover to some degree, many people never make a full recovery, even after intense speech therapy,” he said in a journal news release.

Schlaug and his colleagues used MRI brain scans and speech-fluency tests to assess 33 people, average age 58, who had suffered a stroke on the left side of the brain and still had different levels of aphasia despite receiving speech therapy. On average, the patients’ strokes occurred 2.5 years before the tests.

The researchers found that patients who did better on the speech-fluency tests were more likely to have higher structural integrity on the right side of the brain. Higher structural integrity may mean better connections among areas of the brain.

The findings suggest that the right side of the brain may reorganize itself to assist language/speech recovery in people who suffer a stroke on the left side of the brain. But it’s also possible that the patients with greater speech/language recovery already had higher structural integrity and more connectivity on the right side of the brain before their stroke, the researchers said.

Dr. A.M. Barrett, a neurologist from the Kessler Foundation, in West Orange, N.J., wrote an accompanying editorial in the journal. “This study suggests that a well-wired right brain actively supports recovery from aphasia,” she said in the release.

“More research is needed to determine if the differences in structural integrity in the right brain are there before a stroke, develop after a stroke or are influenced by some other factor. Eventually, it may be possible to develop new targets in the right brain for people with aphasia to be treated with new therapies, such as brain stimulation,” Barrett noted.

More information

The U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke has more on stroke rehabilitation.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1X09W8w

Smoking During Pregnancy Seems to Alter Fetal DNA, Study Finds

THURSDAY, March 31, 2016 (HealthDay News) — When a pregnant woman smokes, the fetus’ DNA is altered in ways also seen in adult smokers, researchers say.

The researchers were also able to pinpoint new development-related genes that were affected by a mother-to-be’s smoking.

The findings may help improve understanding about the connection between smoking during pregnancy and children’s health problems, the study authors said.

For the study, researchers collected blood samples from newborns, mainly from the umbilical cord. Compared to babies of nonsmokers, those born to regular smokers had over 6,000 spots where DNA was chemically modified.

About half of those locations could be linked to specific genes, including those involved in lung and nervous system development, birth defects such as cleft lip and palate, and smoking-related cancers.

The investigators also found that many of these DNA changes were still present in older children whose mothers had smoked during pregnancy.

The study was published March 31 in the American Journal of Human Genetics.

Smaller studies have found links between smoking during pregnancy and chemical changes in fetal DNA, the authors of the new study noted. But this large study, which included over 6,000 mothers and their children, improved the researchers’ ability to detect patterns.

“I find it kind of amazing when we see these epigenetic signals in newborns, from in utero exposure, lighting up the same genes as an adult’s own cigarette smoking. There’s a lot of overlap,” study co-senior author Stephanie London said in a journal news release. She is an epidemiologist and physician at the U.S. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.

“This is a blood-borne exposure to smoking — the fetus isn’t breathing it, but many of the same things are going to be passing through the placenta,” London explained.

More information

The March of Dimes has more about smoking during pregnancy.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1Y2cRh7

Gene May Explain Higher Rates of Some Cancers in Black People

THURSDAY, March 31, 2016 (HealthDay News) — A single gene variant may explain why black Americans with common cancers have shorter survival times and higher death rates than other races, a new study suggests.

While some researchers have examined possible socioeconomic factors to explain these differences, others have focused on genetics.

“We may finally have a truly genetic explanation for why African-Americans are more prone to a variety of cancers,” said study senior author Maureen Murphy. She is a professor and program leader in the Molecular and Cellular Oncogenesis program at the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia.

“This is a variant that has never been observed in Caucasian populations, so identifying people who have this variant may be crucial for providing improved prognosis and personalized treatment that will lead to better outcomes,” she said in an institute news release.

In this study, researchers zeroed in on a specific variant in a tumor suppressor gene that is mutated and activated in most cancers. This variant occurs only in people of African descent. It’s present in about 2 percent of African-Americans and up to 8 percent of Africans, the study authors said.

The researchers then created a mouse model to study the effects of this particular variant. In mice, 80 percent of those with the variant developed cancer. The most common types of cancers in mice with the variant were liver cancer, colon cancer and lymphoma, the study found.

It’s important to note that findings in mice don’t always translate to humans.

However, liver cancer is more common in African-Americans than in other racial/ethnic groups, the researchers said. And colon cancer accounts for about 9 percent of all newly diagnosed cancer cases among African-Americans, the researchers noted.

The study’s findings need to be validated in humans, Murphy said. To do that, researchers said they would need a large population of people to see this gene variant’s effects.

“However, we now have some of the strongest evidence ever obtained for a genetic basis for this disparity and a larger, population-based study is warranted,” Murphy said.

Results of the study were published in the journal Genes and Development.

More information

The American Cancer Society has more about cancer.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1Y2cOly

Great American Smokeout Stands Out Among ‘Awareness Days’

THURSDAY, March 31, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Health-focused awareness days dot the calendar each year. There’s World Health Day, World Dolphin Day, World Lupus Day and hundreds more.

Whether they actually boost action on specific health issues isn’t clear, however.

But a new study reports that one event — the Great American Smokeout — does have a significant impact. This is held each year on the third Thursday of November in an effort to get more people to quit smoking.

Researchers analyzed news reports and tweets since 2009 to determine whether the Great American Smokeout’s message was being heard and shared. They also checked online searches for information about quitting smoking, as well as calls to hotlines that offer counseling on how to stop smoking.

Compared to other days of the year, news reports about quitting smoking typically rose 61 percent on the day of the Great American Smokeout and tweets about quitting smoking were 13 percent higher. Researchers also found that Google searches for information about quitting smoking rose 25 percent, visits to Wikipedia on quitting smoking increased 22 percent, and calls to smoking hotlines rose 42 percent.

That translated into about 61,000 more smoking cessation-related Google searches, Wikipedia visits and calls to hotlines each year, according to the study. The findings were published March 31 in the journal JMIR Public Health and Surveillance.

“The Great American Smokeout is having a significant impact that far eclipsed our expectations for awareness days,” study leader John Ayers, a research professor at San Diego State University Graduate School of Public Health, said in a university news release.

He added that assessing the impact of awareness days has been difficult, but the method used in this study “shows how we can rapidly and efficiently evaluate hundreds of awareness days, many for the first time.”

More information

The American Cancer Society offers a guide to quitting smoking.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1pNmzJc

Racial Gaps in Homicide Victim Rates Changing

THURSDAY, March 31, 2016 (HealthDay News) — Overall homicide victim rates in the United States fell between 1990 and 2010, but the decrease was much larger among blacks and Hispanics than among whites, a new study finds.

During that time, homicide victim rates fell 47 percent among Hispanics (calculated by the number of homicide victims per 100,000 Hispanics), 40 percent for blacks, and 35 percent for whites, the study showed.

The findings were published in the April issue of the journal American Sociological Review.

“Because criminologists have long viewed group disparities in criminal violence as important indicators of broader patterns of racial/ethnic inequality, these appear to be promising trends,” said lead author Michael Light, an assistant professor of sociology at Purdue University, in West Lafayette, Ind.

Although there’s been a great deal of attention from the public and the media focused on race, crime and justice, there wasn’t a lot of evidence available about trends in violence, crime and race, Light explained.

“Our study is the first to show the trends in homicide victimization rates for these three groups from 1990 through 2010 in the U.S., as well as the first to show the racial and ethnic gaps in these rates,” Light said in a journal news release.

A major reason for the greater decreases in homicide victim rates among blacks and Hispanics than whites is a decline in segregated neighborhoods and racial differences in poverty and unemployment, the researchers said.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention offers resources on violence prevention.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1pNmBkg

Flu Shot Might Cut Stillbirth Risk

THURSDAY, March 31, 2016 (HealthDay News) — A seasonal flu shot may reduce a pregnant woman’s risk of stillbirth, according to a new study.

Australian researchers examined nearly 58,000 births to mothers in the western part of the country during the 2012 and 2013 flu seasons. More than 5,000 births were to women who received a flu shot during pregnancy.

Women who received the flu vaccine had a 51 percent lower risk of stillbirth than those who did not receive the vaccine, the study found.

The researchers also found that stillbirth rates rose after flu season and fell in the months prior to flu season, but said these seasonal differences were not statistically significant.

The study was published March 31 in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.

“During the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, we saw a similar reduction in stillbirths following vaccination,” study author Annette Regan, of the Western Australia Department of Health, said in a journal news release.

“Our results are particularly exciting since they show we can get the same protection during seasonal epidemics, which occur every winter. Unfortunately, we know that about 40 percent of pregnant women go unvaccinated, missing out on these benefits,” she added.

Further research is needed to confirm the possible association between stillbirth, seasonal flu and flu vaccination, according to the study authors. But the researchers said they are hopeful that expectant mothers and their health care providers will take note of these findings.

“I’m hoping results like these can convince more pregnant women to get vaccinated each year,” Regan said.

Everyone 6 months of age and older, including pregnant women during any trimester, should get an annual flu shot, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Pregnant women are at increased risk of serious flu-related complications, and having the flu during pregnancy has been linked to fetal death and premature birth. However, many pregnant women don’t get a flu shot because of concerns for the safety of the fetus.

There are more than 3 million stillbirths worldwide each year. If a link between flu season and stillbirth is found, it could have a major impact on infant deaths, according to the study authors.

More information

The March of Dimes has more about stillbirth.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1pNmB3M

Gene Variant May Explain Higher Rates of Some Cancers in Black People

THURSDAY, March 31, 2016 (HealthDay News) — A single gene variant may explain why black Americans with common cancers have shorter survival times and higher death rates than other races, a new study suggests.

While some researchers have examined possible socioeconomic factors to explain these differences, others have focused on genetics.

“We may finally have a truly genetic explanation for why African-Americans are more prone to a variety of cancers,” said study senior author Maureen Murphy. She is a professor and program leader in the Molecular and Cellular Oncogenesis program at the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia.

“This is a variant that has never been observed in Caucasian populations, so identifying people who have this variant may be crucial for providing improved prognosis and personalized treatment that will lead to better outcomes,” she said in an institute news release.

In this study, researchers zeroed in on a specific variant in a tumor suppressor gene that is mutated and activated in most cancers. This variant occurs only in people of African descent. It’s present in about 2 percent of African-Americans and up to 8 percent of Africans, the study authors said.

The researchers then created a mouse model to study the effects of this particular variant. In mice, 80 percent of those with the variant developed cancer. The most common types of cancers in mice with the variant were liver cancer, colon cancer and lymphoma, the study found.

It’s important to note that findings in mice don’t always translate to humans.

However, liver cancer is more common in African-Americans than in other racial/ethnic groups, the researchers said. And colon cancer accounts for about 9 percent of all newly diagnosed cancer cases among African-Americans, the researchers noted.

The study’s findings need to be validated in humans, Murphy said. To do that, researchers said they would need a large population of people to see this gene variant’s effects.

“However, we now have some of the strongest evidence ever obtained for a genetic basis for this disparity and a larger, population-based study is warranted,” Murphy said.

Results of the study were published in the journal Genes and Development.

More information

The American Cancer Society has more about cancer.





from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1pNmANl

How to Declutter Your Kitchen, According to Marie Kondo

How-to-Declutter-Your-Kitchen-According-to-Marie-Kondo

Image: Courtesy of Pond5

DailyBurn-Life-Logo

Professional organizer Marie Kondo has seemingly taken over the world—or at least the closet of someone you know—in the past year. Her bestselling book The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up is 213 compelling pages about, you guessed it, the art of tidying.

In Kondo’s newest book, Spark Joy, she breaks down her process of eliminating items that don’t (you guessed it again) spark joy, and expertly organizing and storing ones that do. If The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up was “Tidying 101,” Spark Joy is the ultimate master class in how to perform a systematic room-by-room overhaul. But lest you think you don’t need a guide for cleaning your house, Kondo’s signature KonMari method might convince you otherwise—especially because heeding her organizational advice can potentially aid in helping you stay slim. It all starts with an orderly kitchen.

RELATED: 12 DIY Kitchen Projects to Clean Up Your Eating Habits

Science Says: Clean Kitchen, Clean Eats

Why get your neat freak on in the kitchen? When it comes to healthy habits, even science is on Kondo’s side. A recent study published in the Environment & Behavior Journal suggested that the more cluttered our environments, the more likely we are to overeat. With an organized kitchen, you might be less likely to go on a 20-cookie bender when you’re scrounging for a nighttime snack. “Having a clean kitchen or home makes you feel more in control and primes you to stay in control,” says Dr. Brian Wansink, Director of the Cornell Food and Brand Lab and coauthor of the study. “It’s easier to simply clean your kitchen than to fight it by trying to talk yourself out of unhealthy decisions.”

Lauren Slayton, MS, RD, founder of Foodtrainers in NYC, agrees. “Having a tidy kitchen is stress-reducing, and having lower levels of stress hormones directly translates to more weight loss and less stress eating,” she says. “Plus, who wants to cook in a mess of a kitchen?” Kondo’s goal: Helping you create a kitchen that makes cooking fun. We enlisted Slayton to explain how seven of Kondo’s simple principles can help you find happiness in the kitchen and fewer pounds on the scale.

RELATED: 7 Cheap DIY Props to Pimp Your Home Gym

7 Expert-Approved Ways to Declutter Your Kitchen

1. Focus on ease of cleaning, not ease of use.
After observing a restaurant kitchen, Kondo realized the kitchen was designed so the chefs could easily clean as they cooked, instead of creating a massive pileup of dirty dishes and counters. There was no time-consuming cleanup at the end of their shift—they just had to do one final wipe of the counters. “If you want a kitchen that you can enjoy cooking in, aim for one that’s easy to clean,” she writes.

Slayton points out that we’re more likely to want to be in a space when it’s orderly. “Piles and clutter send us the message that we’re not doing what we should be and, frankly, leave less physical space for working, cooking, and whatever else you want to do,” she says. “But cleanliness and tidiness are examples of self-care. It’s not just about cleaning up—it’s about the positive repercussions from doing so.” Think of organizing your kitchen as the equivalent of getting a massage. You’re more likely to feel taken care of and, as a result, more likely to treat your body better by fueling up with good-for-you eats.

2. Keep your counters as clean and clear as possible.
“Put nothing on the counters or around the sink and stove top,” Kondo writes. “You will be amazed at how easy your kitchen is to use if you design your storage with this aim in mind.” If you’re in a teeny-tiny kitchen where your counter space is a precious commodity, it’s OK to keep some things on the counter so long as they’re away from the oil or water splash zones.

Ever hear the old adage “out of sight, out of mind?” It applies here. If you can see food, you’re more likely to eat it. “If you want to eat less toast, don’t keep the toaster out where you can see it,” Slayton says. “On the flipside, if you’re motivated to make smoothies, keep the [blender] ready and visible on the counter.” She keeps a fruit bowl on her counter because it’s colorful and inviting and it makes her smile—and then she’s more likely to grab an easy-to-reach piece of fruit than a brownie that’s stashed in a cupboard. Be smart about storage, too. “I love my juicer, but I don’t use it much in the winter, so I keep it in the laundry room,” Slayton says. “Teeny spaces force your hand a bit more, but that’s good—use it or lose it.”

RELATED: How to Start Clean Eating in 7 Easy Steps

3. Cut down on your dish supply.
All those fancy dishes you’re saving to use “for guests,” but haven’t actually whipped out in years? It may be time to part with them. “Take a fresh look at every dish you own and see if it sparks joy,” Kondo writes. “Make the dishes you love the ones you use every day.”

Studies have shown that we eat less off of smaller plates and drink more out of larger glasses. So keep that in mind when you’re doing your cupboard purge. Having fun with your food by making it look nice will create more enjoyable mealtime, too. “I encourage clients to plate their food the way they’d like it presented at a restaurant,” Slayton says. “Bento boxes can make your lunch feel more appealing, and—while it may be the Instagram effect—mason jars and glass straws are great for smoothies.” The prettier our food looks, the more likely we are to want to savor every bite or sip.

4. Toss anything that’s past its prime.
Kondo says to discard food that’s past its expiration date, or to simply eliminate anything you wouldn’t actually want to consume. (Hint: It may be time to toss that specialty hot sauce lurking in the back of your fridge.)

Creating a system for tossing overdue items can help with that. “For ingredients like spices and baking items, date them with a Sharpie and discard them by their first anniversary,” says Slayton. “And try to use ingredients up. If you’re making pesto turkey burgers one night, have pesto pasta the next. It makes me crazy to use a tablespoon of something and then have it sit around. Waste sparks the opposite of joy in me.”

RELATED: You Could Save $43 a Month By Cutting Food Waste

5. Keep your refrigerator 30 percent empty.
Not only will this strategy better help you see the actual contents of your fridge, it’ll also allow for extra room to store leftovers or unexpected gifts.

Keep what you want to eat at eye level in the fridge, says Slayton. She recommends working by category, and only keeping two to three items per category, like hot sauces, jams or vinegars, on hand at a time. “And keep things presented nicely within the fridge, like a tray for your eggs or a glass bottle to keep water cold,” she says.

6. It’s OK to have a lot of kitchen stuff.
The key is making sure you’re hanging onto items you actually use and love. If you’re a frequent spiralizer, smoothie-maker, or food processing whiz, by all means hang onto those bulky appliances even if they hog your shelf space. “What matters is the ability to see where everything is stored,” Kondo writes. Never underestimate the power of a label-maker, clear storage containers, or categorically organized pantry shelves.

Pro tip: Be smart about what you choose to keep around. “I cook, and I like my kitchen to reflect that,” Slayton says. “But if you registered for a paella pan when you got married but haven’t made paella by your fifth wedding anniversary, you can probably get rid of the pan.” Regardless of aesthetics, you need to be able to find the cumin or grab a mixing bowl without major effort.

7. Make your eating space a happy place.
Yes, it seems like a lot of effort to roll out a placemat and whip out the napkin rings, but if you have them, use them to enrich your mealtime, Kondo says. Your dining area should be free from distractions (sorry, Jeopardy) and filled with your favorite things.

“I turn on music and light my favorite candle whenever I enter the kitchen,” says Slayton. It sets the mood for more enjoyable meals. “Remove the eyesores and obstacles and include the scents, sounds and ingredients that make you happy. If standing at the counter, eating out of the package is at one end of the spectrum—and that isn’t the positive side — sitting at the table, using utensils and a placemat is different. I would predict very few binge episodes happen in placemat situations.”

More from Daily Burn:

dailyburn-life-logo.jpg Life by Daily Burn is dedicated to helping you live a healthier, happier and more active lifestyle. Whether your goal is to lose weight, gain strength or de-stress, a better you is well within reach. Get more health and fitness tips at Life by Daily Burn.



from Health News / Tips & Trends / Celebrity Health http://ift.tt/1TkOSuD