Vegan Dietitian Lakewood OH

This page provides useful content and local businesses that give access to Vegan Dietitian in Lakewood, OH. You will find helpful, informative articles about Vegan Dietitian, including "Going Vegan: A Healthy Choice?". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Lakewood, OH that will answer all of your questions about Vegan Dietitian.

Frances DiGiacomo, LD, MS, RD
Cleveland, OH
Preventive Medicine Group
440-835-0104
24700 Center Ridge Rd,# 317
Cleveland, OH
Michele Z Hiatt
440-827-5114
26908 Detroit Rd,# 300
Westlake, OH
Hope D Barkoukis, LD, PHD, RD
216-368-2441
C.W.R.U./Dept. of Nutrition10900 Euclid Ave
Cleveland, OH
Kelly J Satola, LD, MS, RD
216-973-8052
Stellar Nutrition, LLC6505 Rockside Rd., Ste 120
Independence, OH
Margaret G Doyle
440-356-0670
3035 Wooster Rd
Rocky River, OH
Andrea V. Dunn, CDE, LD, RD
440-899-5555
Westlake Family Health Center The Cleveland Clinic Foundation30033 Clemens
Westlake, OH
Silvia Altobeli
216-231-7700
8300 Hough Ave
Cleveland, OH
Kelly J Satola
216-973-8052
6505 Rockside Rd,# 120
Independence, OH
Jane E Korsberg, MS, RD
216-368-6630
CWRU Dept of Nutrition10900 Euclid Ave
Cleveland, OH

Going Vegan: A Healthy Choice?

No meat, no poultry, no eggs, no fish, no dairy, no animal products of any kind.  For some, a vegan diet is unimaginable; for others it is a path to good health.

You may like the idea of a Meatless Monday or a No-Face Friday, taking one day out of every week to skip meat and eat only plant foods, no food from anything that ever had eyes, ears or a nose. But could you give up bacon and eggs, grilled chicken, teriyaki beef and ice cream for the rest of your life? Should you?

The American Dietetic Association (ADA) says that a vegan diet is healthful, and may even provide benefits in the prevention and treatment of some diseases, as long as it is well designed to include all the nutrients you need, in the amounts you need. A healthful vegetarian diet is low in saturated fat and cholesterol and includes plenty of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, nuts, soy foods, fiber and other substances found only in plant foods. Overall, vegetarians have lower blood pressure and lower blood levels of LDL or "bad" cholesterol. Your risk of developing chronic diseases such as type 2 diabetes, hypertension, ischemic heart disease and cancer may be lower if you follow a well-planned vegan diet.

A vegan diet could be short on nutrients normally found in much higher amounts or only in animal products, such as protein, omega-3 fatty acids, iron, zinc, calcium, vitamin D, iodine and vitamin B-12. But it doesn't have to. As long as you eat a wide variety of foods over the course of each day, you will most likely get all the amino acids you need to provide your body with building blocks for making protein. Although fish oils are thought to be a better source, crushed flaxseeds and flaxseed oil also give your body the materials it needs to make omega-3 fatty acids

With so many fortified foods on the market, however, there is little risk of a vitamin or mineral deficiency on a vegan diet. Breakfast cereals, bread spreads, fruit juices, pasta and soy products have added B vitamins, vitamin D, calcium, iron, zinc and other essential minerals. If you eat a lot of commercial food products that are enriched or fortified with vitamins and minerals, along with a wide variety of whole foods that are naturally rich in essential nutrients, you may never need to take a supplement.

A plant-based diet is also healthy for the planet. Large-scale industrial farms that raise most livestock today emit toxins into the air, directly from animal waste products and from the processing of ...

Click here to read more from Quality Health