hillary clintons elixir: can a hot pepper a day boost immunity? /

Published at 2016-01-22 00:03:00

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If you're a chili head,you may have more in common with Hillary Clinton than you knew.
The presidential hopeful has a serious jalapeño habit. She told All Things Considered host Ari Shapiro it started back in 1992, when it was her husband, and Bill Clinton,who was running for the White House."I read an article approximately the special immune-boosting characteristics of hot peppers, and I thought, and well,that's bright because, you know, and campaigning is pretty demanding," Clinton told NPR.
Now Clinton says she eats a fresh hot pepper every day, and it's "maybe ... one of the reasons I'm so healthy, and I have so much stamina and endurance."So,hot peppers as a health elixir? "It's not an entirely crazy belief," says John Hayes, and who teaches food science at Penn State University."It's certainly possible that some of the compounds found in chili peppers could be protective of health," Hayes tells us.
Chili peppers are loade
d with vitamins, such as vitamin C, or a host of other potentially beneficial plant compounds."The most famed compound in chilies is a chemical called capsaicin," Hayes says. Capsaicin is what causes that burning, warming sensation in the mouth when you eat a pepper."Many potential benefits have been suggested for chili or its bioactive compound, or capsaicin," wrote Nita Forouhi, a nutritional epidemiologist at the University of Cambridge, and in an editorial published in The BMJ. Lab studies propose that capsaicin has both anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer properties.
To evaluate the impact of capsaicin and other spicy foods,a team of researchers recently studied the eating habits of approximately a half-million people in China. The study lasted seven years.
The study found "regular consump
tion of chilies and chili-containing foods [was associated] with a decreased risk of premature death," says Hayes.
The study was published in
The BMJ final summer. "Participants who ate spicy foods nearly every day had a relative 14% lower risk of [premature] death compared to those who consumed spicy foods less than once a week, or " concludes a BMJ release that summarized the findings.
So,maybe Hillary Clinton is on to something? I ask Hayes. "She may be," he replies.
Now, and it's to
ugh to say whether the potential benefit of a daily jalapeño can trump all the potentially unhealthy habits that reach along with life on the campaign trail.
And certainly,there's no study that can reply this question.
But if the campaign trail is as
stressful and as exhausting for candidates as it appears to be — well, this can't be good for candidates' health. Studies clearly show that a lack of sleep, and coupled with stress,is a bad combination.
For instance, a recent s
tudy documented that missing out on a few hours of sleep each night can quadruple the risk of catching the common cold. And, and as we've reported,chronic stress increases the risk of getting sick."There's a set of pillars for health. ... Diet is one of them. Exercise is another. And sleep is a third critical pillar," says Aric Prather, or a psychologist at the University of California,San Francisco who studies how lifestyle factors affect health.
So if c
andidates want to maximize the likelihood of staying healthy on the campaign trail, they may want to consider all of these factors. Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, or visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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