Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Cutting Calories For Science


Could the fountain of youth be found in the number of calories you eat every day? Check out my Cover Story tonight at 10 p.m. and find out.
For the past 80 years, scientists have proven over and over again that small animals who get the fewest calories live the longest, healthiest lives.
Now, they're studying humans who restrict calories to see if they get the same physical effects.
The study is called "CALERIE," which stands for Comprehensive Assessment of Long-Term Effects of Reducing Intake of Energy..
Volunteers are put into one of two groups: a control group that tries to keep food and activity levels relatively stable for two years. And a group that restrict calories: basically cutting 25 percent of the calories they'd usually consume a day with the goal of losing 15 to 18 percent of body weight.
Interested? Be sure to check out my Cover Story.
And if you're interested in becoming a volunteer, call (314) 747-3182 or find out more on line at http://calerie.dcri.duke.edu

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Kay Quinn
Name: Kay Quinn
Location: St. Louis, MO
ABOUT ME

Health and medical issues make up one of the most exciting beats in the newsroom. Few other areas of news touch each and every one of us so closely and so often.

 

Whether you're a senior worried about paying for prescription drugs, a parent concerned about the health of a child or waging your own fight against cancer or heart disease, you can usually find health news that applies to you in my daily reports.

 

I always tell St. Louisans they are so fortunate when it comes to health care. Our city is home to two research hospitals.

 

Doctors and scientists at Washington University School of Medicine and St. Louis University School of Medicine are involved in some of the most critical research underway in medicine today.

 

Work is bring done right at this moment, right in our area, that could lead to a vaccine for bird flu or better ways to diagnose and treat Alzheimer's disease.

 

I enjoy staying on top of those stories, as well as bringing you health and medical news you can use.

 

Along with the latest medical breakthroughs, you'll frequently find information on low-cost exercise programs right around the corner from where you live, or details on where to get this year's flu shot.

 

Many viewers want to know whether I have a medical background.  I don't, but my mother was a nurse and I know her health background made a big impression on me as a child.

 

It's the lifelong curiosity and interest I have in health issues that serves me well in my work as health reporter.

 

Staying on top of what you need to know to stay fit and healthy is a job I love.

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