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Back Clinic UTEP (Local) RSS Feed. We are proud to present UTEP athletics as a recognized collegiate sports program distinguished by academic excellence, premier athletic teams, and strong moral principles. The athletics program will add value and advantage to the university through the cultivation of relationships. Through these sports stories, Dr. Jimenez’s goal is to get young kids interested in sports, not only to play but to understand the value of exercise, training, and movement. These are essential for a healthy, productive life.

UTEP (Local) RSS: Our training programs are designed for athletes that look to gain a competitive edge in their sport. We provide sport-specific services to help increase an athlete’s performance through mobility, strength, and endurance. Occasionally, however, the excess workouts can lead many to suffer injuries or develop underlying conditions. Dr. Alex Jimenez’s chronicle of articles for athletes displays in detail the many forms of complications affecting these professionals while focusing on the possible solutions and treatments to follow to achieve athlete’s overall well-being.


NMSU Extension Service, NM Dept of Health hosts Cooking Schools for Adults with Diabetes

NMSU Extension Service, NM Dept of Health hosts Cooking Schools for Adults with Diabetes

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Adults in New Mexico who have been diagnosed with diabetes can learn how to prepare healthy and delicious meals by participating in the Kitchen Creations cooking school, sponsored by the New Mexico Department of Health and offered by the New Mexico State University Cooperative Extension Service.

The next Kitchen Creations session in English will be offered from 5:30-8:30 p.m. April 6, 13, 20 and 27 at Mayfield High School (1955 N. Valley Drive – Las Cruces)  The next Kitchen Creations session in Spanish will be offered from 5:30-8:30 p.m. April 7, 14, 21 and 28 at Santa Teresa High School (100 Airport Road in Santa Teresa, N.M.)

The cooking schools are free thanks to funding from the New Mexico Department of Health Diabetes Prevention and Control Program.

“There was so much interest in our last Kitchen Creations session that we were able to schedule two more for April, one in English and one in Spanish,” said Karim Martinez, Doña Ana County Extension Home Economist.

Each Kitchen Creations session consists of four classes taught by a registered dietitian and an Extension Home Economist. Participants will learn food safety, how to plan meals, measure appropriate serving sizes, read food labels, balance carbohydrates and other useful cooking tips. Participants will also prepare and sample a variety of recipes during each class.

Research has shown diabetes complications may be decreased when blood glucose levels are maintained within a range that mimics “normal” levels. In order to achieve these levels, people diagnosed with diabetes are often prescribed lifestyle changes such as diet modification.

According to New Mexico’s Indicator-Based Information System, nearly 11 percent of adults in New Mexico were living with diabetes between 2011 and 2013. The national average during the same time period was about 10 percent.

“Many people with diabetes are not sure what to do to improve their health, especially when it comes to food,” said Cassandra Vanderpool, registered dietitian and extension diabetes coordinator for NMSU’s Department of Extension Family and Consumer Sciences. “Kitchen Creations goes beyond simply providing nutrition information to engaging participants in hands-on cooking and other activities so they can immediately apply what they are learning.”

Vanderpool said that last year, more than 400 people attended Kitchen Creations cooking schools. At the last class, Vanderpool said, every participant reported they understood strategies to plan and prepare healthy meals, and that they were satisfied with the classes.

“Several months after attending the Kitchen Creations cooking school in Valencia County, a participant called the home economist to share her good news,” Vanderpool said. “She had just returned from the doctor, and her A1C had dropped. She attributed the improvement to the changes that she and her husband, who also attended the classes, had made in their cooking and eating habits as a result of what they learned from Kitchen Creations.”

To enroll in the Kitchen Creations cooking school, contact the Doña Ana Cooperative Extension Service at 575-525-6649.

Author: Adriana M. Chavez – NMSU

TTUHSC El Paso Hosts Colon Cancer Awareness Events

TTUHSC El Paso Hosts Colon Cancer Awareness Events

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In honor of Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month this March, the Against Colorectal Cancer in Our Neighborhoods (ACCION) program is teaming up with community partners to raise awareness about colorectal cancer and to encourage El Pasoans to get tested for the disease.

ACCION is a cancer prevention program at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso (TTUHSC El Paso) that offers no-cost screenings to qualifying El Paso residents.

Even though colon cancer is easily prevented with a simple screening test, this cancer is the second leading cancer killer in the U.S. Doctors encourage adults age 50 and older to be regularly tested for colon cancer, but many El Pasoans do not follow these guidelines.

In fact, El Paso has one of the lowest colon cancer screening rates in Texas. According to theTexas Department of State Health Services, only 54 percent of qualifying residents get tested for the cancer, compared to 66 percent of the rest of the U.S.

On March 15, TTUHSC El Paso will join efforts with El Pasoan’s Fighting Hunger and New Mexico State University to conduct colorectal cancer education at Guillen Middle School. The event will include a food pantry distribution and NMSU’s giant, inflatable colon for families to tour.

On March 23, TTUHSC El Paso’s ACCION team will visit the San Jacinto Adult Learning Center to educate some 150 adult students about colorectal cancer. Those who are eligible for colon cancer testing will be offered a free screening through the program.

A former ACCION participant will be on-hand to discuss the program and to encourage students to get screened, thereby lowering their risk of colon cancer. NMSU will assist with cancer education and have their giant colon on display.

What: Colon Cancer Awareness Month Events

When: 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday, March 15 and 8 to 11 a.m. Wednesday, March 23

Where: Guillen Middle School, located at 900 S. Cotton Street, and the San Jacinto Adult Learning Center, located at 1216 Olive Avenue

Free Memory Screenings offered in Socorro Friday & Saturday

Free Memory Screenings offered in Socorro Friday & Saturday

Memory

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Senator José Rodríguez, in partnership with Ventanas de Socorro, will offer free memory screenings on Friday and Saturday (May 20 and 21) as part of the Alzheimer’s Foundation of America’s National Memory Screening Program (AFA).

AFA’s National Memory Screening Program provides free, confidential memory screenings to individuals who are concerned about memory problems or who want to check their memory now for future comparisons.

Qualified healthcare professionals will administer the face-to-face memory screening, which lasts approximately 10 minutes and consists of a series of questions and tasks designed to gauge memory, language skills and other intellectual functions.

  • What: Free Memory Screenings
  • When: 3- 6 p.m., Friday (May 20) –and– 2-6 p.m., Saturday (May 21)
  • Where: Ventanas de Socorro, 10064 Alameda Ave, Socorro, TX 79927.

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Locally Owned Tropical Smoothie Cafe set to Open 2nd Location at Fountains at Farah

Locally Owned Tropical Smoothie Cafe set to Open 2nd Location at Fountains at Farah

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After opening his first Tropical Smoothie Café location in East El Paso, local businessman and law enforcement officer Kaleb Warnock is set to open his second location.

The second location for Warnock’s Tropical Smoothie Café is set to host a special VIP event Thursday afternoon at the Fountains at Farah, ahead of his grand opening on Saturday. His original location, at 1513 North  Zaragoza continues to be popular with thousands of El Pasoans every week.

Warnock’s career often calls upon a shift from a law enforcement officer to an emergency first-responder, assisting local, state and federal agencies. The demands of the job require physical fitness and good health; meaning that eating and living healthy are essential requirements to Kaleb’s lifestyle.

Kaleb’s appetite for that healthy lifestyle has given him the opportunity to provide healthier options his fellow El Pasoans via Tropical Smoothie Café.

“I’ve always been a health enthusiast with an appetite. Yearning for a delicious smoothie (especially after a workout) has helped me maintain a healthy diet and lifestyle for my job and my family.”

Warnock adds that his cafés offers “bold, flavorful food and smoothies with a “healthy” appeal, all made to order from the freshest ingredients.”

The café features real-fruit smoothies, toasted wraps, sandwiches, flatbreads, and salads are the healthier food options needed for active lifestyles.

The Skinny on Keeping Your New Year�s Resolutions

The Skinny on Keeping Your New Year�s Resolutions

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SANTA FE, N.M. — The most popular New Year’s resolutions for 2016 involved staying fit and losing weight, and chances are good that many people are setting the same goal again in 2017. The psychology of motivation may hold the answer to how people can keep their resolutions in the new year.

According to Elliot Berkman, an associate professor of psychology at the University of Oregon, it’s important to start with a goal that is less abstract and more actionable than just “staying healthy” – and to start on it as soon as possible.

“What you want to do is to get those immediate reinforcements as early as you can,” Berkman said. “So, it’s kind of classic advice and it’s good advice to start small, and to make sure to reinforce each little step.”

According to a Nielsen study, 43 percent of people said they planned to lose weight at the beginning of this year by eating healthier. But more than 75 percent who had that goal had not followed a healthy diet or weight-loss program the year before, so they hadn’t developed the healthy habits necessary for success.

Berkman said this can be the biggest obstacle. Our habitual behavior – which may not involve regular visits to the gym – is the easiest for us to fall back on. Following through on a New Year’s resolution means rewiring the brain for a new habit – literally. Berkman said people are better off doing something they like and connecting the habit to something bigger.

“Maybe it’s connecting it to your family or your work, or earning money,” he said. “Whatever is the thing that you really care about, find the way that that new goal is connected to that, and that’s going to also serve as a reinforcement for it.”

Technology also can be useful for keeping people motivated. Berkman said at the University of Oregon’s Social and Affective Neuroscience Lab where he works, he and other researchers use text messaging to remind people of their goals. He said abstract goals can be hard to keep in mind day to day, especially when concrete temptations exist all around.

“It helps combat fire with fire, a little bit, to get those texts in your daily life,” Berkman said. “And so, you don’t need to go out of your way to remember why you care about losing weight or exercising more. We’re going to remind you, and we’ll do it in your own words.”

Author – Suzanne Potter, Public News Service (NM)