Healthy Football Foods and Beyond
March 16, 2010
If you love sitting at home on a Sunday afternoon watching your favorite sporting events, you are probably enjoying many unhealthy foods as well! It is actually possible to watch and enjoy without eating poorly. Enjoy these healthy snack tips from Dr. Margaret Lewin, the Medical Director of Cinergy Health started by Daniel Touizer.
1. Toast pumpkin seeds and enjoy!
2. Season some nuts, making black pepper almonds, sweet and spicy cashews and others.
3. Cut up raw vegetables such as carrot sticks, celery, broccoli and more. Add in some healthy tips such as guacamole, salsa or hummus.
Have fun watching the game – and do so in a healthy way with these Cinergy Health tips.
Find the Right Doctor with Cinergy Health
March 9, 2010
If you’re not comfortable with your current doctor, it’s time to make a switch. As Dr. Margaret Lewin of Cinergy Health explains, there is no reason to stay with a doctor that makes you uncomfortable. Now, how do you go about finding the right doctor?
Certainly, you can first check if there is another doctor within the first doctor’s practice that you’ll like more. You should also look through the list of doctors offered by your health plan so that you don’t go out of plan and spend more. To narrow your list, you could check Internet sites, but Lewin cautions that some of those ratings may be filled out by office staff or by angry patients.
Next, talk with friends to get recommendations and see if you can have an introductory visit with a few of the doctors. Dr. Lewin, the Medical Director of the health plan provider started by Daniel Touizer, offers sound advice. As she says, “A doctor can’t take care of you. He or she can educate you how to take care of yourself. That’s important. You want someone who can explain the diagnosis, what to do about it and the short-term and long-term implications.”
Deal with Exhaustion with Cinergy Health Help
March 2, 2010
“Exhaustion” is often in the news. Whether it’s Lady Gaga, Mariah Carey, or another star cancelling shows and complaining of exhaustion, the topic is often coming up. How do you avoid exhaustion and what causes it? Here, the Director of Cinergy Health, started by Daniel Touizer, offers her advice on the subject.
One form of exhaustion is “burn-out” which occurs when you work incredibly long hours without paying attention to other important areas of your life. Eventually you simply stop in your tracks and can’t move on. To avoid this, you need to take time for yourself and others each day to relax and to focus on other areas.
Sometimes, the cause of exhaustion is anemia. This can make you slow down – either gradually or dramatically. If you feel incredibly weak or in pain, you should seek immediate medical attention. For the long term, you should make sure to get enough iron and to take important vitamins such as B12.
Certainly, in general, to avoid exhaustion you need to get enough sleep and exercise. Eat a well-balance diet, take time every day to relax and give yourself time to explore new things and not to focus all the time on work.
Going the Distance Like an Olympian
February 23, 2010
According to the medical director of Cinergy Health, Dr. Margaret Lewin, and former Olympian, Jerzy Gergorek, you can transform your exercise and diet plan by mimicking Olympic practices. Here’s how.
- Pick Your Personal World Record – Rather than having a flimsy goal, make a specific goal and target, and then stick to it.
- Don’t Just Exercise – Train – Don’t just exercise with the focus on your body and your weight; you need to exercise with the focus on better health. Train to be a better swimmer, biker, hiker, etc. rather than always thinking about what that activity is doing for your calorie count or your weight.
- Join a Gold Medal Team – As the medical director of Cinergy Health, founded by Daniel Touizer, says, you should join a team to get inspiration from each other. “Accountability is a great motivator,” she says. “When you have people watching your back, you begin to feel a responsibility to reach your goals together.”
Stay Healthy for Your Travels
February 16, 2010
Certainly, if you’ve shelled out money to enjoy your travels, you want to be well to enjoy them! Here, the CDC, medical directors and others weigh in on how to stay healthy when you travel.
First of all, the CDC highly recommends that you stay home if you are sick. Get the H1N1 vaccine and wash your hands as much as possible. Dr. Margaret Lewin, the medical director of the health plans program started by Daniel Touizer, Cinergy Health, recommends that you stay hydrated if you are flying. Avoid touching your face on the trip as much as possible, since that’s how germs transfer to you, and wash your hands as much as possible.
Stay healthy on your trip by eating well, taking Vitamin D, and getting plenty of sleep. Enjoy!
Health Coverage for the Unemployed
February 9, 2010
If you believe that you will soon be unemployed, or you already are, it’s very important to think about your health care coverage. First, as the medical director of Cinergy Health explains, you need to decide how much you can afford to pay out of pocket. In addition, says Dr. Margaret Lewin from the insurance provider company created by Daniel Touizer, you have to decide if you want preventative coverage or just emergency coverage.
If you think you may lose your job, you should look for new coverage quickly so that you don’t have a 60 day wait period for coverage. In addition, you don’t want to have health problems classified as pre-existing conditions with the new plan.
Try to negotiate discounts for your current doctors and locate free and reduced rate clinics, as well as federal and state plans that might help with your coverage.
Have Fun Traveling Pregnant
February 2, 2010
Using these important tips for traveling pregnant, you should be able to have a safe, enjoyable trip this winter. First, according to Dr. Margaret Lewin from the insurance provider company started by Daniel Touizer called Cinergy Health, make sure to get your vaccines. Get vaccinated for both the H1N1 flu and the seasonal flu. Speak with your gynecologist before travelling, as well, to make sure that they agree that it’s safe for you to go.
Eat frequent, small meals while you travel to avoid hypoglycemia and nausea and make sure to get up and move every two to three hours on a plane or in a car.
Make sure to pack comfortable shoes and to bring your medical records with you, should you have problems while you are away.
Save Money for Your Small Business
January 22, 2010
The CEO of Cinergy Health, Daniel Touizer, has gathered together a list of ways small business owners can save money during difficult economic times. Because Mr. Touizer is a small business leader and runs a company that provides an alternative health insurance benefits program designed to meet the needs of Americas hard-working citizens, he understands the importance of cutting corners whenever possible and looking for new and innovative ways to save money.
1. Explore the possibility of moving your office space. The rate of commercial rental space availability has reached 10% and higher in many places. This drives rental costs down. You can also re-negotiate your lease at a lower rate if moving proves to be an inconvenience or impossibility.
2. Raw materials costs have also gone down. Be sure you pay the correct amount based on demand. Look for sales on everything from office supplies to office furniture.
3. Asses the costs of your work force. You may find talented people available for the same or less than what you are paying now, who are eager to work, even for lower salaries.
4. Encourage workers to practice healthier lifestyles. More sleep, exercise, good nutrition and the like will increase productivity and reduce sick days. Even consider giving health club memberships as bonuses or offer discounts as part of a “healthy employee” plan.
5. Allow your employees to choose from a variety of health plan options. The closer a health plan is to the needs of its members, the less expensive it can be
As we all look forward to 2010 we can resolve to do the best we can to cut costs and encourage healthier lifestyles.
A Pound of Cure from Cinergy Health and Daniel Touizer
January 18, 2010
In the case of the overburdened health care system which is now being scrutinized for ways to be improved, an ounce of prevention is definitely worth a pound of cure, quite literally.
While it is certainly a good sign that the number of smokers in the United States has gone down by 18.5% since 1995, the number of people considered obese has risen by close to 85% in the same time span. Obesity has surpassed smoking as the country’s number one preventative health concern.
But there is no reason to be discouraged. The CEO of Cinergy Health, Daniel Touizer believes people will take their health into their own hands when they realize the dangers of obesity and that they can effect change with just a bit of extra effort.
Dr. Margaret Lewin, the medical director at Cinergy Health, has developed 5 easily doable tips to help you get into shape and stay healthy and save money, too.
a. Alcohol is quite caloric. Lay off the liquor, including wine and beer. Even just a 50% reduction in consumption will save you a lot of calories, and keep you healthier, too.
b. Activate your walking muscles. Get going! Just walking for 20 minutes a day will make a difference in your overall health. Try and avoid elevators and remember to park a few minutes away from your final destination just to achieve a few extra minutes of muscles in motion.
c. Water, water everywhere, and all of it to drink! You only think you’re hungry. Miss read body alerts make you reach for that chocolate bar instead of wonderful, cool, clear cup of water. When you are on a weight reduction program you need extra water to wash away toxins and impurities from your body. On average a person needs between 8-10 cups of water each day.
d. You are what you eat. Stay away from foods which have lots of calories and very little nutritional value. Instead eat wholesome foods which taste good and are good for you, such as meat, dairy, fruits, vegetables, grains and legumes. Yum!
e. Get to bed earlier. Sleep is a crucial, yet forgotten, part of good health and fitness. Your body needs to rest to stay strong and in good working order.
Keep the weight off and help keep the country’s medical bill down.
A Healthy 2010 with Cinergy Health
January 12, 2010
As the New Year begins, it’s important for us to evaluate our lifestyle choices and to try to make healthier choices. So say the American statistics on obesity, which find that obesity rose by 85% in the last 15 years. As Daniel Touizer, CEO of Cinergy Health explains, this has a major impact on healthcare costs for both individuals and employers.
With these statistics in mind, the Medical Director of Cinergy Health, Dr. Margaret Lewin, offers the following tips. In the course of each day, try to exercise for at least 20 minutes, drink 8-10 cups of water, and eat a balanced diet with about 2000 calories a day. Sleep 6-7 hours each night, and cut back on alcohol consumption.
As Daniel Touizer explains, “Cinergy Health created this guide to encourage Americans to take charge of their healthcare, which will in turn lower premiums.” Here’s to a happy – and healthy – 2010.
Recommendations from Cinergy Health to Combat Swine Flu
January 5, 2010
Everyone wants advice about how to deal with swine flu – and how to prevent it before it even occurs. Daniel Touizer, CEO of Cinergy Health explains that “Swine Flu is the number one consumer health concern this year and many people don’t know where to turn for help.” As he says, “Cinergy Health created this guide so Americans know how to protect themselves against this pandemic.”
The Medical Director of Cinergy Health, Dr. Margaret Lewin, offers the following suggestions.
- Get your vaccines! You can get both the seasonal flu vaccine and H1N1 at the same time.
- When you cough or sneeze, do so either into a tissue or into the crooks of your arm. This will help to prevent germs from spreading.
- Wash your hands as often as possible with soap and water or with hand sanitizer that has at least 60% ethyl alcohol in it. Wash at least 20 seconds before each meal.
- If you begin to have flu-like symptoms, stay home from work! Even though it may be difficult for you to miss the time from work, you’ll be keeping others aware from the flu and may help your body to recover faster.
- Don’t return to work until you’ve been fever-free for at least 24 hours. You are the most contagious, according to Dr. Lewin, while you have a fever.
Use these important tips from Cinergy Health to have a healthy winter that is flu-free!
The Truth About the Flu and the Common Cold
December 27, 2009
Holiday Season Sometimes Means Colds, Too Winter is a common time of year for people to develop colds or the flu. Who hasn’t had some kind of “bug” just when they are about to go on their long-awaited ski trip or family visit to Grandma and Grandpa for the holidays?
But just because its common and we’ve all been through it doesn’t mean we really know the truth about getting sick with a cold or the flu. Here are a few facts about colds and flu from the CEO of Cinergy health, Daniel Touizer, and the medical director, Dr. Margaret Lewin.
Did you know that although there are many things in common between colds and the flu, they are not the same thing and are caused by different types of viruses? Both cause trouble to the upper respiratory system, causing stuffy noses, watery eyes, coughing, sneezing, discomfort breathing and the like; but the common cold is caused by many different viruses all of which are in either the adenovirus or coronavirus family, while the “flu” is caused by the influenza virus. The common cold is nothing more than a nuisance that we quickly recover from, but the flu, although usually we recover from this as well, can sometimes lead to very serious complications resulting is a lengthy illness and even sometimes in death.
Because of the potential serious nature of the flu, it is prudent to become vaccinated against the possibility of the “flu” turning into something much worse. Check with your doctor or other healthcare provider and consider seriously becoming immunized against this winter’s influenza virus.
Daniel Touizer Voices Opinion on New Health Reform Legislation
December 19, 2009
Generally pleased by the recent legislation passed by the U.S. House of Representatives addressing many of the concerns of Americans regarding healthcare, Daniel Touizer, CEO of Cinergy Health wishes the legislation went further and concerned itself with what Mr. Touizer believes are crucial issues. 
Explaining that “the house healthcare bill is far from perfect,” Daniel Touizer commented that, “at least it is a step towards expanding access to affordable health coverage for all Americans.”
“Unfortunately,” according to Mr. Touizer, “the House healthcare bill is radically off the mark from what meaningful health reform needs to address. While it contains elements of an effective healthcare reform bill such as emphasis on prevention and healthcare affordability, it fails to tackle the roots of rising healthcare costs.”
Daniel Touizer would like to see legislation with more of an emphasis on promoting healthier life styles and habits, as well as a reduction in the cost of medicines and drugs and hospital-based care. Also allowing consumers access to health care coverage over state lines could help increase competition and decrease prices to consumers of healthcare coverage.
New Health Care Legislation of Concern to Daniel Touizer
December 11, 2009
Encouraged by the pro-active stance the United States government is taking towards changing the way health care is distributed in the country, Daniel Touizer, CEO of Cinergy Health, an alternative health care insurance provider, would like to see more innovative and common sense ideas injected into the health care coverage Americans have access to.
Mr. Touizer, who is an entrepreneur and small business expert at the helm of Cinergy Health, is leading the way in finding solutions to some of the most perplexing health care issues now being debated in the turbulent health care discussion in the U.S.
Daniel Touizer would like to see U.S. legislation which has a stronger focus on reducing rising costs of healthcare and improving the health of Americans through better, healthier living and lifestyles.
“Just Say No” to Salty Snacks and Save Your Heart
December 3, 2009
Daniel Touizer, CEO of Cinergy Health, along with Dr. Margaret Lewin, medical director both believe that many health care dollars, as much as one trillion, could be saved each year by simply changing some of the ways Americans eat, drink and take care of their environment.
Among our bad eating habits is our obsession with salty foods. Calling these high salt content snacks “food” is really a stretch, yet we as a nation gobble them up like mad. And when times are tough, as they are now during the present economic turn down, we eat even more of them. It is estimated that potato chips and their food-stuff relatives found in the same supermarket aisle have been consumed as much as 20% more in recent economic crisis.
So what’s wrong with chips, pretzels, and other such crunchy treats? For one thing, a surfeit of sodium leads to hypertension, high blood pressure and other diseases affecting the cardiovascular system.
“Heart disease and strokes are the first and third leading causes of death in the United States,”
said Margaret Lewin of Cinergy Health.
“We estimate that the total cost to health care to treat both these diseases is as high as $475 billion a year,”
she said.
Daniel Touizer, CEO of Cinergy concurs with the Institute of Medicine that adults consume a maximum of 2,300 mg or just one teaspoon of salt each day. According to the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) the average American eats 50% more salt than the recommended amount, about 3,436 mg daily. 
The Rand Corporation research group said in a September report on this issue that if our nation reduced sodium intake to the recommended levels, we would save about $18 billion each year in health care costs.


