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Local Life - St Helens - Nov/Dec 2021

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36<br />

Six Tips for a<br />

Healthy Winter<br />

The shorter, darker, colder, wetter days of winter can leave even the fittest and chirpiest of us<br />

feeling mentally and physically run-down. To keep you feeling better through the winter:<br />

1. Reduce your infection risk<br />

Colds and flu are rife at this time of year, and while being<br />

cold cannot give you a cold (only a virus can do that) it<br />

can stress your body and lower your immunity. Take extra<br />

care with hygiene and take antibacterial hand gel with<br />

you when you go out. Sadly, not everyone who touches<br />

shop door handles and uses public transport practises<br />

good hygiene.<br />

If you’re eligible for a free flu vaccine, or are in an atrisk<br />

group for whom the vaccine’s recommended, make<br />

sure you get it early, before flu season gets underway.<br />

Ignore those who claim the vaccine gives you flu; it can’t,<br />

as it contains no live viruses. People who get flu after<br />

the vaccine may have a rarer flu strain not covered by<br />

the vaccine or may have already had a flu virus before<br />

their vaccination became fully active (10-14 days after<br />

vaccination).<br />

3. Get enough daylight, fresh air and<br />

vitamin D supplements!<br />

Tempting as it might be, hibernating indoors isn’t great<br />

for your health. Your body uses sunlight to regulate your<br />

body clock and create vitamin D, an essential vitamin for<br />

building strong teeth, muscle and bone. However, while<br />

daylight helps, between October and early March in the<br />

UK there’s not enough of it for you to make sufficient<br />

vitamin D, even if you regularly spend time outdoors;<br />

nor can you make up the deficit by eating vitamin<br />

D-rich foods like oily fish (e.g. salmon, sardines, herring<br />

and mackerel), red meat, liver, egg yolks and fortified<br />

foods like fat spreads and breakfast cereals. So while<br />

getting some winter sun and eating vitamin D-rich foods<br />

can help, the NHS recommends that everyone should<br />

top-up with a daily 10mcg vitamin D supplement during<br />

the autumn and winter.<br />

2. Keep exercising<br />

Exercise can boost your immune system, release<br />

endorphins that make you feel better and warm you up,<br />

too. If you’re normally an outdoor exerciser, cold, wet<br />

weather might put you off. If it doesn’t, bundle up and<br />

stay safe by avoiding exercising when its icy and wearing<br />

bright, reflective clothes if you’re out in the dark.<br />

If the winter weather does put you off, consider indoor<br />

alternatives: swimming, indoor climbing, exercise classes,<br />

short-term passes for a local gym, a new exercise DVD or<br />

even some home gym equipment like an exercise bike or<br />

weights.<br />

The NHS has some great free exercise routines. Check<br />

out www.nhs.uk/live-well/exercise and click on ‘fitness<br />

guides’ for a range of ten-minute workouts and exercises,<br />

or www.nhs.uk/conditions/nhs-fitness-studio for<br />

online exercise videos. The range covers yoga, Pilates,<br />

strength exercises, aerobic workouts and more, so there’s<br />

something for everyone.

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