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    America’s Oldest Woman: 115-Year-Old Texan Feels Like a ‘Little Young Chicken’– Her Secrets to Stress & Diet

    By Kavontae Smalls,

    1 day ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2FUlbM_0uo5NzRX00


    The Benefits of Adopting Healthy Lifestyle Habits

    • Elizabeth Francis of Texas turned 115 years old this year, making her among the oldest in the U.S. She credits her longevity to her faith and healthy lifestyle habits, which include not smoking, limited alcohol, regular physical activity, and a healthy diet.
    • SurvivorNet experts recommend regular exercise, a balanced diet, and stress management for cancer survivors to lead healthy lives. They may also recommend regular checks for recurrence.
    • One benefit of maintaining optimal health for those with cancer is they are more likely to endure treatment better and experience fewer side effects, MD Anderson’s Dr. Sairah Ahmed told SurvivorNet.
    • New York City Presbyterian Pastor Tom Evans previously spoke with SurvivorNet about how faith can help people cope with the complex emotions that come with cancer.
    • A study published in Cancer includes data that found “69% of cancer patients reported praying for their health” compared to “only 45% of the general U.S. population.”
    • When it comes to dealing with anxiety and stress, psychologist Dr. Marianna Strongin says it’s important to have a healthy relationship with your anxiety and get to know it rather than fear it, avoid it, or push it away.
    A Texas woman, Elizabeth Francis, is one of the oldest Americans in the country at 115 years old. She recently celebrated her birthday, and among the keys to living a long fruitful life are leading a healthy lifestyle with healthy habits and managing stress. She was born in 1909. William Taft was President. The US was just leaving Cuba and baseball's first steel and concrete stadium opened in Philadelphia. “I’m very, very young! Look at me. I’m like a little young chicken,” Francis said during an interview with Good Morning America.
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1khkdF_0uo5NzRX00
    Photo: Screenshot of 'Good Morning America' news story featuring Elizabeth Francis.
    “I just feel like living every day,” Francis said to medical resource outlet MDLinx. Reaching the ripe age of 115 is no small feat and a milestone worth celebrating any chance Francis and others like her can. According to LongeviQuest, an online outlet focused on the world’s oldest people, Francis has never smoked, maintained a healthy diet focused on plant-based foods, kept her stress levels low, engaged in regular physical activity, and avoided smoking and excessive alcohol. In a previous interview with SurvivorNet, Dr. Robert Wright , chair of the Department of Environmental Medicine and Public Health at Mount Sinai, said
    preventing cancer generally involves “eating more vegetables and less meat, particularly red meat." Wright’s focus on red meat is important—according to one study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, "Red and processed meat intakes were associated with modest increases in total mortality, cancer mortality, and cardiovascular disease mortality." Can't cut out meat completely? Instead, try lowering your overall intake. Eat meat only twice a week, for example, instead of every day. Interestingly, some of Francis’ healthy habits can go a long way to reducing cancer risk as well. Francis also credits her faith in God for her longevity. Like the other aforementioned healthy habits, many cancer patients also rely on their faith during their journeys to aid their mental health.

    Helping You Live a Healthy Lifestyle

    Living a Healthy Lifestyle

    The general recommendations for a healthy lifestyle are similar whether you have cancer or not. Dr. Ken Miller , the Director of Outpatient Oncology at the University of Maryland Greenebaum Cancer Center, shared some guidelines for cancer survivors who are concerned about a recurrence with SurvivorNet:
    • Exercise at least two hours a week, and walking counts.
    • Eat a low-fat diet.
    • Eat a colorful diet with lots of fruits and vegetables. The American Cancer Society recommends aiming for two to three cups of vibrant vegetables and fruits each day.
    • Maintain a healthy weight. Studies have shown that being obese can increase your risk for several types of cancer.
    “The more physically fit you are going through your cancer treatment, the fewer side effects you’ll have and the faster you’ll get back to your normal quality of life,” Dr. Sairah Ahmed told SurvivorNet. Dr. Ahmed is an associate professor in the Department of Lymphoma/Myeloma, Division of Cancer Medicine, at MD Anderson Cancer Center.
    Francis’ healthy lifestyle mirrors that of Jacques Houot , 83, an avid skier, biker, and all-around athlete. He believes the secrets to a long, healthy, active life rest in:
    • Maintaining physical activity
    • Keeping your brain active
    • Not smoking
    • Maintaining a healthy weight
    • Eating a plant-based diet
    • Sleeping well
    • Socializing
    • Having a sense of humor

    Managing Your Stress

    During Francis’ many decades on Earth, she’s dealt with numerous stressors, including world wars, pandemics, and economic recessions. Throughout the years, she’s learned how to cope with life-altering situations and manage her stress. Stress often manifests regularly among cancer patients. However, learning how to manage it offers many benefits. Dr. Marianna Strongin , a clinical psychologist and founder of “Strong In Therapy,” has been helping the SurvivorNet community by sharing coping mechanisms and a structured way to think about handling these issues. WATCH: Learning to Cope With Anxiety Dr. Strongin says that one of the main causes of anxiety is uncertainty about life, and a cancer diagnosis can fuel that anxiety for people because of the lack of certainty about the future. Dr. Strongin recommends checking in with yourself every day to try and find the root cause of the stressor that’s causing anxiety. “The answers are our coping skills,” Dr. Strongin says. “Some people are really good at always giving themselves answers…other people don’t have the coping skills to answer their anxiety, and as a result, the anxiety increases. … We are all facing the same questions.” “Some are facing them much more than others, and some are better at answering those questions than others. What’s really important is to pay attention to what those questions are, what the frequency of those questions are, and how you’re answering them.”

    The Power of Having Faith

    Francis credits part of her longevity to her faith. She’s not the only one who believes religion can impact one’s health. Having faith can help keep your spirits high even during times of struggle. SurvivorNet experts also say it helps cancer patients during their cancer journeys. New York City Presbyterian Pastor Tom Evans previously spoke with SurvivorNet about the importance of finding ways to cope with the complex web of feelings you may be experiencing after a challenging health diagnosis, such as cancer or a threatening tumor. WATCH: SurvivorNetTV produced a special episode, “Turning to Faith,” in which we followed the journeys of four women and how they turned to faith to get through their diagnoses. “It’s important to reach out in a simple prayer to God, even if you’ve never prayed before, you don’t know what to say, a heartfelt plea, ‘God, help me, be with me,'” Pastor Evans told SurvivorNet. “You can reach out to God, and you can reach out to people, your friends and family, and say, ‘I can’t do this on my own. I need you.’ “It’s in that willingness to be open and to receive that we can find something deeper that we never would’ve encountered without this hardship,” Evans continued. A study published in Cancer includes data that found “69% of cancer patients reported praying for their health” compared to “only 45% of the general U.S. population.” Cancer psychologist Dr. Andrew Kneier helped co-author “Coping with Cancer: Ten Steps toward Emotional Well-Being.” He also co-authored a column published by Stanford Medicine with Rabbi Jeffery M. Silberman, director of spiritual care at Danbury Hospital in Connecticut. The two add more context to the impact faith has on cancer patients. “A person’s faith or spirituality provides a means for coping with illness and reaching a deeper kind of inner healing,” Kneier and Silberman said. “Coping means different things to different people: it can involve finding answers to the questions that illness raises, it can mean seeking comfort for the fears and pain that illness brings, and it can mean learning how to find a sense of direction at a time of illness. Religious teachings can help a person cope in all of these dimensions,” Kneier and Silberman continued.
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