Self-care

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"An apple a day keeps the doctor away." - Proverb

Self-care means taking the time to do things that help you live well and improve both your physical health and mental health.[1] This can include preventive medicine.

Self-care of one's spiritual/physical/mental health and achievement

See also: Achievement and Achievement orientation and Academic performance and nutrition and Cognitive decline and diet and Consumption of ultra-processed foods and health risks

One's spiritual/physical/mental health does affect how much energy one's ability to learn, one's energy level, and one's achievement levels in life.[2][3]

Jim Loehr, EdD., is a world-renowned performance psychologist and C-Suite Leadership Coach who has worked with hundreds of world-class performers from the arenas of sport, business, medicine and law enforcement, including Fortune 100 executives, FBI Hostage Rescue Teams, and military Special Forces.[4] Best-selling author Tim Ferris states concerning Jim Loehr: "From his more than 30 years of experience and applied research, Dr. Loehr believes the single most important factor in successful achievement, personal fulfillment, and life satisfaction is the strength of one’s character. He strongly contends that character strength can be built in the same way that muscle strength is built—through energy investment."[5]

See also:

Jim Loehr on energy management

Videos:

Preventative medicine and health

See also: Preventive medicine

According to the medical journal Lancet:

A substantial proportion of poor health in populations is preventable. Previous work from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study1 suggests that nearly half of all health burden in the USA is attributable to a list of 84 modifiable risk factors. Globally, it is also generally accepted that a quarter, or perhaps up to half, of all deaths fall into the category of preventable deaths,2 making illness that can at least theoretically be avoided an accepted part of our health accounting.

In The Lancet Public Health, Howard Bolnick and colleagues extend this logic in the US context and quantify the proportion of US health-care spending in 2016 that was due to preventable causes.3 They found that more than a quarter (27·0%, 95% uncertainty interval [UI] 25·7–28·4) of health-care spending was due to these preventable illnesses.[6]

Proverbs related to self-care

  • "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure."
  • "An apple a day keeps the doctor away."

Books

  • The Power of Full Engagement: Managing Energy, Not Time, Is the Key to High Performance and Personal Renewal by Jim Loehr. Free Press; Reprint edition (January 1, 2003)

See also

External links

References

  1. Caring for Your Mental Health
  2. What is Health and What is Important for its Achievement? A Qualitative Study on Adolescent Boys’ Perceptions and Experiences of Health, Open Nursing Journal. 2016; 10: 26–35. Published online 2016 Apr 29. doi: 10.2174/1874434601610010026
  3. WHAT COMES FIRST: ENERGY OR ACHIEVEMENT?
  4. Jim Loehr, Johnson and Johnson company website
  5. Dr. Jim Loehr on Mental Toughness, Energy Management, the Power of Journaling, and Olympic Gold Medals, Tim Ferris' blog
  6. The cost of preventable disease in the USA, Lancet, Open Access. Published: October, 2020. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/S2468-2667(20)30204-8