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How
Health Savings Accounts Reduce Medical Expenses And Help You
Avoid Metabolic Syndrome
The most common set of
diseases facing Americans moving into their 40's and
beyond has been termed "metabolic syndrome". Metabolic
syndrome is a collection of disease symptoms that tend to
occur together. These are excess body fat around your
waist, high blood pressure, high LDL cholesterol, low HDL
cholesterol, elevated triglyceride levels, and high
fasting blood sugar.
As more Americans are carrying high-deductible health
plans along with health savings accounts, many say they
are beginning to pay more attention to their health.
Health savings accounts (HSAs) allow you to put aside
pre-tax money to be used for future medical expenses.
Because deposits grow tax-deferred and are not taxed for
medical withdrawals, if you fund your account and stay
healthy, you could have hundreds of thousands of dollars
in your HSA by the time you retire.
The fundamental metabolic disturbance that seems to be
common in almost all people who have metabolic syndrome is
insulin resistance. Insulin is a hormone that your body
uses to move the carbohydrate that you eat into your
cells. If you are insulin resistant, your cells don't
respond well to insulin, and your pancreas has to produce
higher amounts in order to keep your blood sugar from
going too high. (Once your pancreas is no longer able to
keep up with this increased demand, you become diabetic.)
If you are insulin sensitive, your body is responding well
to smaller amounts of insulin.
Fortunately, metabolic syndrome is almost entirely
preventable. Avoid it, and you'll greatly increase your
chances of also avoiding cardiovascular disease, breast
cancer, colon cancer, prostate cancer, stroke, and many
other serious conditions. Though all the mechanisms behind
the metabolic syndrome have not been worked out, the
evidence is strong that combinations of several lifestyle
strategies are very effective in preventing this
condition.
Exercise
Exercising does more than just burn calories or build
muscle. One of the most profound benefits of exercise is
its effect on insulin sensitivity. When insulin is
released in response to carbohydrate ingestion, glucose
transporters come to the surface of the cell in order to
carry the glucose into the cell. In muscles and fat cells
this transporter is called Glut-4. Exercise itself helps
Glut-4 to move through the cell membrane to the surface of
your muscle cell, causing these cells to be much more
insulin sensitive. Even a single bout of exercise will
cause your muscles to respond more effectively to insulin.
Eat Low-Glycemic Foods
The glycemic index is a measure of how quickly a food
raises our blood sugar. The high-glycemic carbohydrates in
the American diet are primarily the "white foods" (bread,
pasta, rice, white potatoes, and sugar). These foods cause
many of the changes associated with metabolic syndrome,
including lower HDL levels, and higher triglycerides. When
a person eats these foods year after year, insulin levels
remain chronically high. The result is that eventually the
cells become less responsive to the insulin, in turn
leading to increased risk of obesity, hypertension, heart
disease, diabetes, and premature death. Low-glycemic
carbohydrates include most fruits and vegetables. Eating a
diet that limits or avoids high-glycemic grains, potatoes,
and sugars, and includes more low-glycemic fruits and
vegetables, fish, and lean meat can dramatically improve
your insulin sensitivity.
Eat the Right Fat
We've talked in previous issues about the seemingly
miraculous health benefits of fish oil. Fish oil improves
insulin sensitivity. Eskimos, who consume high quantities
of fish oil, rarely experience diabetes, even though they
are often overweight. Though the mechanism by which fish
oil works isn't yet understood, many researchers believe
that fish oil makes the cell membrane more "fluid",
enabling the Glut-4 transporters to more easily move to
the surface of the cell in response to insulin. Everyone
who does not eat fish on a regular basis should consider
taking a high-quality fish oil.
Saturated fats and trans-fats, in contrast, make the cell
membrane more stiff and inflexible, and also reduce
insulin sensitivity. Saturated fats are found primarily in
beef, pork, and dairy products and trans-fats are found in
processed foods. Saturated fats should be minimized, and
trans-fats should ideally be completely eliminated from
your diet.
Eat Enough Protein
If you're avoiding starches, you'll need to replace those
calories with something else - that should be lean
protein. Protein satisfies your appetite more than any
other macronutrient, it increases metabolism, and it will
contribute to weight loss. The best proteins are lean
meats like turkey breast and chicken breast, lean beef,
fish, and eggs. And if you are overweight, nothing will
improve your insulin sensitivity faster than losing some
weight. In fact, weight loss significantly improves all
aspects of metabolic syndrome. Eat the right foods, and
your body will tend to normalize at the right weight
without you having to count calories or starve yourself.
Take Action
Remember, just reading an article has never made anyone
healthier. Though there are drugs available to treat some
of the symptoms, doctors have no pharmaceutical cure for
metabolic syndrome, and almost all individuals become more
insulin resistant as they age. It is the lifestyle choices
and the actions that you take today to improve your
insulin sensitivity that will have a powerful impact on
the length and quality of your life.
The characteristic that many people like about HSAs is
that they reward those who take responsibility for
themselves. By putting aside money to pay for future
medical expenses, you are being a responsible citizen, and
deserve the tax benefits that an HSA offers. Make the same
investment in your health, and you'll not only have the
good health to enjoy your retirement, but you'll also have
plenty of money in the bank as well.
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