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Founded in 1985, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) is a nonprofit organization that promotes preventive medicine, conducts clinical research, and encourages higher standards for ethics and effectiveness in research. PCRM resources help both medical professionals and laypeople put powerful preventive medicine to work. The leading killers in the Western world—heart disease, cancer, and strokes—can often be prevented and even treated with dietary and lifestyle measures. Explore nutrition’s role in combating specific illnesses and ensuring good health with these informative books from PCRM.

Healthy Eating for Life for ChildrenHealthy Eating for Life for Children by Amy Lanou, Ph.D.
Nourishing growing children is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. The foods we eat during pregnancy affect not only our child’s development, but his or her health later in life. And the preferences that babies learn early on will influence which foods they pull from the refrigerator as teenagers or pick from a menu in adulthood.

Children who learn to enjoy healthy foods have a tremendous asset. The right foods can help them stay slim and healthy, strengthen their immunity, reduce the risk of health problems as they age, and even boost their learning ability. It’s easier than many of us might imagine. Healthy cooking and eating will soon be second nature for the entire family.

Author Information

Amy Joy Lanou, Ph.D., is director of the nutrition department at the PCRM, overseeing PCRM’s Cancer Project, conducting clinical research, working with cancer foundations, and promoting a vegetarian diet among policymakers, dietitians, and researchers.

Healthy Eating for Life for WomenHealthy Eating for Life for Women by Kristine Kieswer
Until now, to battle headaches, arthritis, or menstrual cramps, many women have needed fistfuls of over-the-counter remedies. Menopause has meant lifelong dependence on prescription hormones. Preventing cancer has meant yearly mammograms and precious little else. These approaches are certainly useful, but they are also expensive, riddled with side effects, and, far too often, simply inadequate.

Through simple diet changes, headaches can become a thing of the past. Menopausal symptoms may never even start. And women can gain new power over the most common and problematic forms of cancer. Everything from improving fertility to erasing the signs of aging to managing osteoporosis, arthritis, and urinary tract infections has been subjected to new methods of research and can now be dealt with more easily than ever. The answer, more often than not, lies in nourishing the body in new and healthy ways. It’s a prescription that women will be happy to fill.

Author Information
Ms. Kieswer is the editor of Good Medicine magazine, PCRM’s quarterly publication for member physicians and laypersons. Her freelance articles on vegetarian nutrition have appeared in Minority Health Today, Plus, Better Nutrition, Vibrant Life, Essence, and other magazines. She has a B.A. in Journalism from the University of South Carolina.

Healthy Eating for Life to Prevent and Treat CancerHealthy Eating for Life to Prevent and Treat Cancer by Vesanto Melina, M.S., R.D.
Cancer has leapt from being a fairly rare disease just a few decades ago to what is now a condition of everyday life. Far too many of us find ourselves in doctors’ offices having frank and frightening discussions about what this diagnosis means, desperately trying to sort through difficult treatment choices.

However, that dismal scenario is rapidly transforming into a far more optimistic one. New approaches come from researchers who have carefully studied people with cancer and those seemingly protected from it. They have examined individuals who, despite the diagnosis, have lived far longer than expected or even had complete remissions. In teasing apart their diets, clues have emerged that have then been put to the test in confirmatory studies. While this line of research is still ongoing, we have already learned enough that if people everywhere took full advantage of its findings, many cancers would never occur.

Author Information
Vesanto Melina, M.S., R.D., was trained at the University of Toronto and the University of London. She has taught nutrition at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, B.C., and at Seattle’s Bastyr University. She was a coordinator for the American Dietetic Association’s Manual of Clinical Dietetics and co-authored the nutrition classic Becoming Vegetarian (now in nine countries and three languages) and its companion volumes, Cooking Vegetarian and Becoming Vegan.

Healthy Eating for Life to Prevent and Treat Diabetes by Patricia Bertron, R.D.Healthy Eating for Life to Prevent and Treat Diabetes by Patricia Bertron, R.D.
Many people with diabetes—and their doctors—think of the condition as a one-way street. After diagnosis, we begin a never-ending series of blood-sugar tests, medication adjustments, and gradually worsening symptoms. Happily, that has begun to change.
In a research study at PCRM, in cooperation with doctors at Georgetown University, a group of people with Type 2 diabetes, the kind that typically begins in adulthood, tested a new diabetic diet. They found that their blood sugars got better and better, and their need for medication quickly fell. Many have found that as improvements continue, the disease simply disappears.

Author Information
A former nutrition director for PCRM, Patricia Bertron, R.D., has also worked as a clinical and renal dietitian in a teaching hospital in New Jersey, counseling patients with various health conditions, including cardiovascular disease, kidney disease, and diabetes. She has worked as a sports nutritionist for a fitness facility and currently teaches classes on weight control through a hospital-based program in New Jersey.

Books by Neal Barnard, M.D.

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