At the end of the year it’s easy to get caught up in family gatherings and holiday celebrations and lose track of longer-term goals. Yet, rather than wait until New Year’s Eve, now is the perfect time to start thinking about what you want to accomplish in 2007. For most people who experience back pain or are close to someone who does, good health will most likely be at the top of the list. How do you turn those good intentions into reality so that next December brings not only the excitement of another holiday season, but also a sense of accomplishment? This month’s newsletter provides tips on how to get and stay on track to better health.
The management adage ‘what gets measured gets done’ may be a cliché but it is also true. Good health, or lifestyle changes that lead to it, rarely just happen. Instead, planning is critical, as is the quality of the plan.
Find more ideas in A healthy weight for a healthy back [1].
By now most of us are aware of the strong connection between our state of mind and the health of our body. So it makes sense to have a plan designed to strengthen both physical and mental health, so that the benefits from each are mutually reinforcing.
Read more in Tai Chi for posture and back pain [2].
Losing weight plays a role in many New Year’s resolutions, and it’s true that excess weight can exacerbate back pain by adding stress on discs or nerves. Yet, most experts believe that achieving a healthy weight, particularly for Americans, starts with retooling what we eat and how we think about food.
See Nutrition and diet tips [3].
One of the most significant changes in how physical fitness is talked about is the recognition that short sessions of low-impact exercise can add up to big improvements in health. While no one would argue with going to the gym for an hour everyday, setting aside that amount of time can be difficult for most people. Instead, find ways to exercise that fit in with your lifestyle.
Find specific exercises in Strengthening exercise program for low back pain relief [4].
All progress, no matter how small, toward better health should be celebrated. Incremental changes in diet and nutrition, as well as physical exercise and mental health care, add up to huge differences over weeks and months. All of us at Spine-health.com thank you for your insights and generosity in building a great patient-focused community, and we wish you and your families a happy and healthy 2007.
Best wishes,
Peter F. Ullrich, Jr., MD, Medical Director
Stephanie Burke, President
About the Spine-health.com Newsletter: Each issue of the Spine-health.com newsletter, SpineNews Update, is written by the founders of Spine-health.com - Peter F. Ullrich, Jr., M.D., Medical Director for Spine-health.com and Stephanie Burke, President of Spine-health.com.The content in the newsletters is not peer reviewed by Spine-health.com’s Medical Advisory Board.The articles to which the Spine-health.com newsletters link have been peer reviewed by members of the Medical Advisory Board.
Links:
[1] http://www.spine-health.com/wellness/nutrition-diet-weight-loss/a-healthy-weight-a-healthy-back
[2] http://www.spine-health.com/wellness/yoga-pilates-tai-chi/tai-chi-posture-and-back-pain
[3] http://www.spine-health.com/wellness/nutrition-diet-weight-loss/nutrition-and-diet-tips
[4] http://www.spine-health.com/wellness/exercise/strengthening-exercise-program-low-back-pain-relief
[5] http://www.spine-health.com/