In this health supplier segment, Hatem Zeine, founder and CTO at Ossia, a technology development company, discusses the Internet of Health (IoH) built from networks of Internet of Things (IoT) devices that could create a nationwide approach to the prevention and early detection of diseases using their Cota technology to build wireless powered products. www.ossia.com
Author: healthprofessionalradio
Male Breast Cancer Survivor
Bret Miller, breast cancer survivor and co-founder of the Male Breast Cancer Coalition, discusses his unique story and how genomic testing helped him determine the best course of treatment for his disease. He also talks about his nonprofit organization and its mission to help spread the word that breast cancer does not discriminate.
Pfizer’s RA NarRAtive Conversation Guide
Returning guest Dr. Ara Dikranian, a rheumatologist at Cabrillo Center for Rheumatic Disease, and a member of the global advisory panel on Pfizer’s RA NarRAtive initiative, discusses the new RA NarRAtive Conversation Guide that helps to improve doctor/patient communications. Visit Pfizer.com/RANarRAtive.
Baby Boomers Vaccinations
Pneumococcal Pneumonia is just one vaccine-preventable disease that boomers should help protect themselves against. Here to explain, is a physician and professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Dr. Donald Middleton, a spokesperson for Pfizer.
Clinically Proven Herbal Weight Loss Products – Vinomis Laboratories
Barry Yarkoni, CEO of Vinomis Laboratories, talks about their new herbal weight loss product VinThins. VinThins produces all-natural herbal formula that reduces appetite and cravings and makes you feel full faster and longer. Visit www.VinThin.com
Massive Stroke Survivor – How Stroke Changed His Life for the Better
Ted W. Baxter discusses his stroke, aphasia, and his new book “Relentless: How A Massive Stroke Changed My Life For the Better” (July 24, 2018 – Greenleaf Book Group Press).
Lupin Pharmaceuticals Healthcare for Women
Nick Hart discusses the importance of a forward-looking approach and how that’s guided and impacted their mission of advancing safe and affordable health care for women globally. Learn more at www.lupin.com
Long Kayak for Lungs 2018 – Raising Awareness of Lung Disease
Dr. Mick Foley, together with Bill van Nierop, talks about Long Kayak for Lungs 2018, an effort to raise awareness of Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF). IPF is a type of rare chronic lung disease that shows a progressive decline in lung health and function.
Bill was diagnosed with IPF in 2015, so he understands the challenges faced by those impacted by lung disease. Following his successful Long Walk for Lungs in 2017, Bill pushes to support Lung Foundation Australia with a new challenge for 2018 – The Long Kayak for Lungs, a 42-day charity kayak paddling 2,200kms from Albury NSW to Murray Mouth in South Australia.
5 Major Differences between Western and Eastern Diets
When we think of western diets, we think of steaks, burgers and fries while we normally associate eastern cuisine with rice, fish and soups. While there are many similarities between western and eastern cooking, there are several distinct differences that keep them on opposite ends of the cultural spectrum.
Many of us find ourselves wavering between the two extremes and end up with a mixture of western and eastern in our diets. Sometimes all we need is some fresh ideas to inspire us and the awesome HelloFresh recipes generator is a great place to discover new and amazing dishes.
Western and eastern cultures may have a lot of differences, but they both share a love for good food and family gatherings around the dinner table. So while there may be some superficial differences between how each cuisine is prepared, they are both fundamentally serving the same social purpose of bringing people together around a meal.
Let’s take a look at some of the biggest differences between western and eastern diets!
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Serving size
One of the most noticeable differences between western and eastern food is serving size. Compared with traditional eastern dishes, western serving sizes are much larger and sizes that are considered larger in eastern cultures appear only regular sized to westerners.
Larger serving sizes in western societies are part of the reason why westerners have higher rates of obesity and heart disease than those living in eastern countries. A common criticism of western diets is that we eat too much, too often, while eastern cuisine is considered much lighter while still being filling.
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Ingredients
Many of the main ingredients in most western dishes are missing from around 70% of eastern dishes and this is true of eastern cuisine as well. In western dishes, meat is used in much larger proportions than in eastern ones.
In eastern cooking, meat is only part of the entire meal while in western cooking; meat is the star of the show. Think about how many western dishes are just big slabs of meat on a plate, surrounded by some light salad that you can easily ignore. Eastern dishes are far more of a mix between meat and vegetables, and arguably provide better nutrition.
Eastern cuisine also uses rice in far more versatile ways that in western cuisine, which treats rice as more of side dish. If western dishes use rice at all, it’s because they are making an eastern-inspired dish whereas rice is a mainstay of many eastern cultural diets.
In western cooking, rice is often treated the same way as steamed vegetables and mashed potatoes. To contrast this, most eastern meals aren’t complete without rice. Sometimes noodles can replace rice, but many recipes will incorporate both ingredients if it can.
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Seasoning
Western cooking puts a great deal of emphasis on the use of seasonings and condiments. All western eating establishments have a wide array of sauces and seasonings including ketchup, gravy and mustard.
Eastern food uses its fair share of seasoning as well, including basil, cinnamon, cilantro, coriander, cloves, lemongrass, garlic and ginger to name a few. Eastern cuisine also uses many sweet sauces, like soy sauce, in a lot of its dishes.
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Flavours
In western cuisine there is an emphasis placed on looking for ingredients that “pair” with each other. This means that western dishes seek to create a controlled flavour palate that is very similar from start to finish.
This approach is flipped on its head in eastern cuisine, which seeks to combine as many different and contrasting flavours as possible. This is why so many people find eastern dishes to be a vibrant mix of flavour sensations that keeps them coming back for more.
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National differences
While western and eastern cuisine can be compared rather broadly, both can be broken up into hundreds of different cultural regions and national identities. For example, Italian cuisine is very well-defined while the differences between different regions of China can be more chaotic.
In many ways, eastern cuisine is more fluid in its differences from region to region while western cuisine is a little more rigidly defined. However, eastern cuisine is just a strongly defined between large cultural groups, such as the differences between Thai and Japanese cuisine.
With that said, many eastern restaurants will serve more than one cultural cuisine. Combinations of Chinese and Vietnamese, or Thai and Singaporean are commonplace as chefs can transfer their skills between the cuisines very easily.
As you can see, there are several distinctive differences between western and eastern cuisine that make eating each a wholly different experience. While many new dishes seek to combine both western and eastern elements, there are still stark differences between the two styles of cuisine that make it hard to compromise one with another.
Virtual Reality Training in Healthcare
Dr. Justin Barad, MD, co-founder and CEO of Osso VR, a leading virtual reality training platform discusses how VR is more resourceful way to better train hospital surgical teams as well as individual surgeons.