
1. Blood Pressure
High blood pressure can cause different medical problems including cardiovascular disease, chronic kidney disease and stroke.
- Your blood pressure can be tested in several places like your doctor’s office or at a pharmacy. Learn to test your own blood pressure and invest in a device you can use at home.
- Get in the habit of testing your blood pressure once a month. Make sure each time to test it at the same point in the day, when you’re most relaxed. For accuracy, take 3 readings and figure out the average number between them.
- Pay attention to the top number – the systolic pressure, which indicates the pressure when the heart beats while pumping blood – the best lifelong measurement for hypertension. A systolic reading above 140 is considered too high and warrants seeing your doctor.
If you’re sporting a large waistline, your risk of dying prematurely is nearly double. The reason is because belly fat, often fondly referred to as a spare tire or a beer gut – sends out a toxic stream of chemicals impacting the whole body.
- Take your waist size once each month with a measuring tape.
- Measure at your natural waistline, which is above your hipbone and below the ribcage – not where your belt lies or around your hips. Be mindful of your posture and suck in your stomach since the fat you’re measuring is deep inside the belly.
- A waist size over 35 inches in women and over 40 inches in men greatly increases the risk of chronic diseases like diabetes, heart disease and more.
- The ideal waist size for women is 32 ½ inches and 35 inches for men.
Stepping on a scale and finding out your body weight is one of the easiest numbers to calculate and an excellent indicator of your overall health. Over weight can cause a numbers of health problems such as cardiovascular disease, gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), gout, hypertension, high blood pressure and cancer.
- The average woman of approximately 5’4” tall should weight less than 175 pounds.
- The average man of about 5’9” tall should weigh less than 196.
- Taller folks can add 5 pounds per inch; if you’re shorter, subtract 5 pounds per inch.
- Write your weight down monthly. Studies show that by tracking this number, you’ll do a better job keeping it down.
High cholesterol is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease.
- To test your cholesterol levels, you need to see a doctor or someone in the health care field who can administer a simple blood test.
- You don’t need to memorize your total cholesterol number, which can be misleading. Instead, memorize the 2 forms it’s carried in: HDL and LDL. Your HDL, the healthy cholesterol, needs to be 50 or better; your LDL, the unhealthy cholesterol, should be under 100. If your numbers do not fall in this range, discuss strategies for lowering your LDL and increasing your HDL with a health care professional.
Fasting blood sugar (FBS) measures your risk for diabetes, a chronic disease that can lead to blindness, cardiac disease, kidney failure, nerve problems and an impaired immune system.
- Your fasting blood sugar number must be measured after an 8-hour fast. Fasting is a key since ingesting food—say, a banana an hour beforehand—would raise blood sugar levels and could create a false pre-diabetic or diabetic reading. Your FBS can be determined with a simple blood test or a finger stick test.
- A fasting blood sugar number above 100 is considered pre-diabetic; treatment measures should be discussed with a physician.