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Healthy Habits
Resolutions for the New Year
By Suzy Feine
As the clock strikes midnight on December 31 of each and every year, millions of people make New Year's resolutions: eat less, exercise more, cut back on sweets and many others. Few, if any, of these resolutions are still in place by the end of January.
This year, resolve not to resolve. Instead, make generalized lifestyle changes, not specific health resolutions. Dr. Allen S. Josephs, a practicing, board-certified neurologist and physician of internal medicine and president of Vitacost.com, offers his recommendations for a healthy new year. Below are Dr. Josephs' new twists on the old resolutions, along with a few new ideas to boost one's health and well being this year.
Recent research has shown that certain, specific kinds of fats are essential to human health and well-being. The monounsaturated fats found in olive and canola oils and the omega-3 essential fatty acids (EFAs) found in fish oils are important for promoting cardiovascular, neurological and psychological health. Salmon and tuna are good dietary sources of EFAs, as are high-quality, ultra-distilled fish oil supplements.


