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USANA and Biathlon Canada July 12, 2012

USANA and Biathlon Canada
“Biathlon is one of the most physically and mentally demanding sports on an athlete’s body. Our national team athletes train extensive hours throughout the year and staying healthy is critical to their pursuit of excellence. We are delighted to be partnering with an industry leader in providing the highest quality nutritional products to ensure our athletes are ready to train and perform at their best each day.”

— Joanne Thomson, executive director, Biathlon Canada
 
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USANA & U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association (USSA)

USANA & U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association (USSA)

“Nutritionals are a key component of athlete performance. USANA provides us with both innovative products that work for athletes as well as a high standard of quality in manufacturing.”

–Troy Flanagan, High Performance Director

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Establishing Healthy Habits in Children by USANA July 11, 2012

Establishing Healthy Habits in Children


USANA is involved in many programs and initiatives to empower children and teenagers to live healthier lives: the Linus Pauling Institute’s Healthy Youth Program, HealthCorps®†, and even our own charity, the USANA True Health Foundation. Despite these worthwhile efforts, we can’t take the place of proper nutrition in the home. But we do our best to help you establish a healthy home with our commitment to producing nutritional products that make a difference.

Ensuring children establish healthy lifestyles is an uphill battle for parents. Dr. Tina Matthews, a Bronze Director from Toronto, Ontario, says, “The importance of healthy habits for children is a more pressing issue today than it was when the parents of today’s children were children.”

One of the best ways to ensure children—and adults—get the nutrients they need is to add supplements to their diet. USANA values the health of children and teens a great deal, and created Usanimals™ and Body Rox™ specifically for that purpose*. In fact, these products make up half of the Essentials product line. These products are a perfect choice to help children obtain the vitamins and nutrients they need daily that aren’t obtained from food.

As a result of picky eating or poor eating habits many, children do not get the necessary daily nutrients from their food. Dr. Christine Wood, a member of the USANA Scientific Advisory Council and author of How to Get Kids to Eat Great & Love It says parents can have the greatest effect for good when it comes to establishing healthy habits in children. “The best way parents can help their kids establish healthy habits, is to be a role model of healthy living. Parents who start their children with healthy habits early, those children have an easier time staying with those choices.”

For those who are seeking to make changes, Dr. Matthews recommends starting by changing one thing in each of what she calls the four pillars of health: diet, exercise, nutritional supplements, and mental/spiritual health.

USANA is dedicated to providing children with balanced, healthy lives. Whether meeting this goal through charitable partnerships or nutritional supplements, USANA is dedicated to helping children find health and happiness. For the youngsters in your life, be sure to take advantage of the USANA products specifically formulated for growing bodies. 

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Sensé Makes Skin Care Simple by USANA July 10, 2012

Sensé Makes Skin Care Simple


You single-handedly constructed your own two-tier deck, hand scraped all the hardwood floors in your 3-story house, and completely rebuilt the engine of your 1966 Shelby Mustang GT350—all without an instruction manual. Let’s face it; you can pretty much do it all. Yet you still tend to shy away from skin care.

Although it may seem intimidating, skin care shouldn’t require a 104-page instruction handbook (not that you would use it anyway). Fortunately, USANA has you covered. By sticking with Sensé products, you can easily establish a basic routine and give your skin the tender loving care it deserves while remaining focused on your projects.

By following these four simple steps your skin will be clean, smooth, and touchable, without too much effort:

  1. Wash—Remove dirt and clear out your pores with the Gentle Daily Cleanser. Just rub it on and rinse it off.
  2. Exfoliate—Get rid of rough, dead skin cells before shaving with the Rice Bran Polisher. This will help prevent bumps and ingrown hairs. Use the polisher 2–3 times a week.
  3. Moisturize—Without the proper care, your manly skin can get rough and scaly. Renew and protect your skin with the Daytime Protective Emulsion during the day and Night Renewal Crème at night.
  4. Customize—Try the Sensé Enhancers to find out what works best with your skin. For example, if you have excessively oily skin or an uneven skin tone, moisturize with Perfecting Essence; to prevent the appearance of wrinkles, use Serum Intensive.

Let’s be honest; you need to conserve your brainpower for installing a new sprinkler system, constructing a personal man cave, and rewiring the basement. Stay focused and keep your skin care under control with Sensé—no assembly required.

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USANA July LifeMasters: It’s All About the “Why”

July LifeMasters: It’s All About the “Why”


Because USANA is in the business of network marketing, our Associates don’t have an 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. schedule, nor do they follow the typical workweek schedule. They’re allowed to have time freedom—meaning, they do business if, how, and when they want. And while this is obviously one of the perks to managing a direct-selling business, if you’re not careful, it can also be your biggest downfall. It only takes an extra day off or an unreturned phone call to derail all of your efforts and cause you to lose focus on your business.

To help you keep focused on running a successful business we’ve gathered some of the most disciplined and respected USANA Associates to speak for July’s edition of LifeMasters. These people have kept at their businesses for years, never wavering from their mission of achieving financial and personal success. And they’re finally ready to discuss the secret behind their dedication. The secret to remaining focused through both the good and the bad times. The unmovable anchor—their “why.”

You won’t want to miss the advice offered by these top Associates, because out of all the “why” speeches, presentations, and activities Associates are constantly bombarded with throughout their careers, this one is different, because these people practice what they preach!

You can soak up the knowledge from this and other LifeMasters recordings by downloading the audio tracks on USANAtoday.com! Just subscribe to the series, and access the wealth of wisdom under the “Training” tab. Simply right click the track you’d like to download and save it to a location you’ll remember—like your desktop—you don’t want to lose it. After the save is complete, click and drag the audio file into your iTunes library. Simple as that! From there, you can treat it like any other song in your collection and burn it to a CD or add it to your iPod.

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Miss World Canada Supports Her Health and Beauty with USANA

Miss World Canada Supports Her Health and Beauty with USANA


Riza Santos is inarguably beautiful—so it’s no wonder she won the title of Miss Earth Canada in 2006. Her fame was amplified when she took second place in Pinoy Big Brother: Celebrity Edition 2 and hosted the Asian Poker Tour in 2008 and 2009. Winning the Miss World Canada pageant confirmed that she is incredibly charming, a talented singer, and an overall lovely woman. Her increasing fame has allowed her to raise even more awareness for the charity dearest to her heart: Variety Children’s Charity, an organization that helps children with special needs.

When Riza was nine years old, she probably didn’t know how bright her future would be—but thanks to her mother, USANA Associate Isabelita Santos, she knew the importance of taking Usanimals™ every day.

Riza has taken USANA’s supplements her whole life to build a strong foundation for her health. Naturally, after she moved on from Usanimals, she started taking Body Rox™.  Now, she’s a big fan of the USANA® Essentials™, Proflavanol® C100, BiOmega™, and Active Calcium™. And even though she is naturally slim, she recently completed the 5-Day RESET™ Kit just to eat especially healthy for a few days.

For skin care, Riza turns to USANA’s Sensé™ line, which she has been using ever since it was created. As her mother describes, “That’s why she has such smooth skin—she uses the entire line!”

By using USANA, Riza has made a decision to support the cellular health of her entire body—proving that beauty is much more than skin deep.

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USANA Associate Shares Message of Hope After Losing 320 Pounds July 7, 2012

USANA Associate Shares Message of Hope After Losing 320 Pounds

The following is a guest post written by Hattie Montgomery, a USANA Associate who has lost 320 pounds through diet, exercise and a lot of hard work. She recounts her weight loss journey below.

Hattie Montgomery in 2008.

Imagine being 530 pounds. You know your life is slowly slipping away, and you’ve allowed that to happen because of all the pain you endured. But there’s this yearning inside you to live, to save your life. Where do you go? What do you do?

That was me three years ago.

Faced with an enormous task, I found myself wondering where to even begin. The first year, I practiced a calorie-restricted diet of lean proteins, fruits and vegetables, eliminating all refined carbs and sugars from my diet. The only exercise I could do was a bit of walking. It was slow and painful, but the more I tried to do it, the further I could go. After that first year I had lost 180 pounds and knew my life-altering journey was really happening.*

I’ve always been the person who researches and tries things out. I began exploring protein shakes and protein bars to add to my diet plan. I tried so many, I lost track, but they all gave me the spike then crash reaction.

That’s when my life and journey took a turn. I was plateauing with my weight loss. I knew I had to revamp my diet and expand my exercise, but again, I was left with the questions of what do I do. Then I met Matt Ryan and was introduced to USANA. I tried the RESET program and lost 8 pounds, jumpstarting my weight loss again. As I used the USANA program, I was ecstatic to finally find products that left me feeling energized and didn’t leave me needing a nap two hours later from the terrible crash.*

Hattie works out at the gym.

Hattie works out at the gym.

I began practicing the transform phase and was amazed at how easy the program was to follow. One thing that I found myself struggling with was planning my days and meals.  There is such an emotional connection to food, so when I have a plan laid out for me that’s quick and easy to follow, it makes my life so much easier.  I believe in this program so much because of the quality of products, but also because it’s the first time that I haven’t been stressed or worried about what to eat. I have been following the USANA Transform program now for two years, along with the daily MyHealthPak™ vitamins, and would never go back to any other plan.

I also ventured out and tried adding more activity into my routine. After Year 1, I could move, and so I decided I would try to take up tennis, practice yoga and even try jogging. I joined the gym and started working out with my personal trainer, Ray. Each week I do three days of resistance training and three days of cardio. I also spend time outside walking each day with my dog, Bear. In February, I competed in my gym’s indoor triathlon; I cried at the end because I just couldn’t believe how three short years ago I could hardly walk and now I was becoming the athlete I always dreamed of being.

By following the USANA program and adding more exercise to my plan, I lost an additional 140 pounds in two years.**

Hattie after losing 320 pounds.

Hattie after losing 320 pounds.

Imagine being 530 pounds and giving up on your life. Suddenly your life is blessed with an amazing company that believes in your success and happiness so much that they put out the best quality product and then take an active interest in your life. All of the pieces finally came together for me — the right eating program and supplements, the right exercise program, and an amazing group of people who love and support me unconditionally.

In three years I’ve lost 320 pounds. Yes, my life is forever changed, and I’m so grateful to have this amazing second chance to tell my story and spread the message of hope. It’s never too late, and USANA will be with you every step of the way.

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
 
**Individual results may vary. RESET weight-management system lowers your daily caloric intake and recommends moderate exercise for best results. Average results are 4.5 lbs. in five days.
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USANA Scientific Method: Good Science Springs from Collaboration

Scientific Method: Good Science Springs from Collaboration
By David Baker

 
“We want to stay on the cutting edge of nutritional research. That means we need to have a direct connection to the places where the groundbreaking research is being done.”—Brian Dixon, Ph.D., USANA director of product innovation

Science seems a scary, incomprehensible idea for some. In truth, it is nothing more than the quest for understanding. Today, scientists are simply using the corner pieces of previous scientific discovery as a starting point to complete the puzzle of existence.

USANA is a science company. Our lab-coat-clad scientists are interested in a particular section of the larger puzzle—developing a better understanding of how supplementation can promote optimal health. This understanding can lead to more effective products and help spread true health around the world—a worthy, if imposing, goal.

Luckily, USANA isn’t searching for puzzle pieces by itself. Although USANA’s team of scientists is second to none, good science often springs from collaboration. That’s why USANA also reaches out to the scientific community to build symbiotic research relationships with a variety of prestigious institutions and organizations.

“Solid science is the key to everything we do,” said USANA’s Director of Product Innovation Brian Dixon, Ph.D. “We want to stay on the cutting edge of nutritional research. That means we need to have a direct connection to the places where the groundbreaking research is being done.”

Dixon is talking about places like the Linus Pauling Institute (LPI) at Oregon State University (OSU). This world-class research institute—named after Dr. Linus Pauling, a pioneer in nutritional science and the only person to win two unshared Nobel Prizes—shares USANA’s mission to help people live healthy and productive lives through their research in vitamins, essential minerals, and phytochemicals. At LPI, USANA has funded and collaborated on research involving vitamin C and lipoic acid interactions, zinc and DNA damage, the role vitamin D plays in immune function, an assessment of the micronutrient status of children, and numerous other projects.

He is talking about places like The Orthopedic Specialty Hospital (TOSH). Since 1991, TOSH has been an international leader in orthopedics, sports medicine, and sports science—providing surgical, physical rehabilitation and medicine, and sports and nutritional science under one roof. USANA began partnering with TOSH in 2009. The relationship has yielded one study about vitamin D in patients with osteoarthritis symptoms, and four other human clinical studies involving USANA products and joint health, strength recovery, and performance in athletes.

And Dixon is also talking about places like Utah State University (USU). On the Logan campus—about two hours north of Salt Lake City—USANA and USU are examining the role of supplementation in counteracting the negative health effects of exposure to polluted air. Such exposure is the 13th leading cause of mortality worldwide, so this research could have a huge positive impact.

Partnering with research entities like LPI, TOSH, and USU—as well as others throughout the years—greatly benefits USANA. It allows the company to continue to produce the most effective, science-based products in the industry, and provides the extra layer of credibility that comes from working with some of the best researchers in the world.

But these research partnerships are mutually beneficial. The help USANA provides—monetarily and otherwise—gives partner institutions the ability to carry out important research that wouldn’t be possible using traditional channels, like the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

“The kind of cutting-edge research that’s unconventional and breaking new ground is often funded by non-NIH sources,” said Balz Frei, Ph.D., director and endowed chair of LPI and OSU distinguished professor of biochemistry and biophysics.

Grants from the NIH are part of a traditional, government-centric framework for research funding. Government grants typically pack a lot of zeros, but they are hard to come by, especially for work that isn’t a sure thing.

“They’re hesitant to put money into anything too risky,” said Adrian “Fritz” Gombart, Ph.D., an associate professor at OSU and an LPI principal investigator. “Somebody gets an out-there idea—and they may have good reasons for it—but the people giving out the money are conservative in their views and they may say, ‘Well, I don’t know. You might be wasting taxpayers’ money.’”

Some of the more unconventional, cutting-edge research gets dismissed, because the NIH and other traditional funding sources need to see significant evidence showing the possible viability of a study before they open the funding floodgates. As a result, this approach leads to only the incremental advancement of science.

“Without preliminary data, you can’t get any funding from NIH,” Frei said. Unfortunately, without money you can’t get any data, which has sent scientists scrambling for other ways to pay for their research. That’s where partners like USANA come in, providing the dollars to do pilot studies that accumulate the evidence needed to secure government funding.

“Even great scientists are having trouble getting money,” Gombart said. “So any source of money—whether it’s the government or a partnership with a company that has an interest in an area of research—is really important.”

Frei estimated that currently less than 10 percent of proposals to NIH are being funded. “We need to diversify,” he said. “And we need to have funding from the private sector as well, because the government is not providing enough funding for all the interesting ideas and projects we have in the Institute. Certainly, that’s where USANA is a big help.”

Being part of the advancement of nutritional science wholly aligns with USANA’s founding principles. Collaborating on studies and funding groundbreaking research is another way—using the vehicle of solid science—to spread true health.

“As a science-based company, we have a strong interest in having access to cutting-edge scientific data,” said Dixon, who spent time at LPI before coming to USANA. “But it’s important to help fund and collaborate on studies that lead to cutting-edge results. I’m excited to be supporting and working with other scientists who are doing important work that can have a positive impact on people’s lives.”

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A Perfect Hollywood Ending for US Women’s Ski Jumping July 4, 2012

A Perfect Hollywood Ending for US Women’s Ski Jumping
By David Baker


Fade in on legs bent, wrapped in colorful fabric and attached to skis rushing over a snowy jump. The crouched figure explodes off the bottom of the ramp, morphing from balled fist to cruise missile in less than a second.

See the figure soaring smoothly through the frozen winter air in slow motion—body and skis forming three perfect lines against the white of the hill. Watch for what seems like minutes as the human blade cuts an arc through the heavens.

There’s something perfectly cinematic about human flight, something compelling about the people soaring through the air, refusing to be grounded. The US Women’s Ski Jumping Team has many celluloid-worthy stories, and there are many ways to tell them.

Let’s try a few.

Queens of the Hill

“I take a pack of USANA vitamins every day. I honestly do, I swear to God. I feel like I’m getting old. I don’t bounce back from things like I did when I was 17, 18.”— Jessica Jerome, US Women’s Ski Jumping

OK, so here’s your movie: a group of girls head to the Arctic Circle looking for ski-jumping glory, but take home more than medals—they win a group of lifelong friends and learn valuable life lessons in the process. It’ll be fun, lots of laughs to accompany the triumphs and tears.

It would be based on a true story, of course, ripping off experiences like the one Sarah Hendrickson tells about ice cream. “The time when we went to Finland and didn’t see the sun for like a whole week and we got back to Norway, and it was sunny and we all got ice cream and just laid out in the sun because we hadn’t seen it in so long,” says the 17-year-old superstar and winner of the first women’s ski jumping World Cup competition.

You’d include a trip to the world’s northernmost McDonald’s and a shot of the reindeer—“Sometimes they’re just on the street for display, but I’m pretty sure they’re heavily drugged and sedated,” says Lindsey Van, the North American record-holder for longest jump, and the sport’s first world champion.

How about a scene where Sarah teaches Jessica Jerome what a Justin Bieber is? Probably during a night Jessica—the 24-year-old, eight-time US national champion—spends with the team’s young bloods.

“I got stuck in the room with the two 17 year olds,” Jessica recounts. “And at first, I was like, ‘You gotta be kidding me. You’re making me babysit.’ I was mad for about 20 minutes and I was like, ‘This is kind of fun.’ It’s goofy and they had like matching pajamas and they were googling baby animals and listening to music that—like, I didn’t know what a dubstep was—so I was like, ‘Oh, I can act like a kid and we can have fun together.’”

You need dramatic scenes, too. The times when the young girls get on the veteran’s nerves. The part where it “burns to the ground,” as Jessica puts it, that’s inevitable when a group of girls in their late teens and twenties spend months together. The longing for home and family. “One of our teammates said it pretty good once, she said, I sleep in the same bed as Jessica more than I sleep in the same bed as my boyfriend of six years,” Jessica says.

But mostly it would be about how friendship and fun can create an unstoppable force on and off the hill. Nothing shows it better than a scene like this:

Jessica: “Sarah and I had a pre-competition routine this year. Every competition, before we got out of the van, we would listen to just one Ke$ha song.”

Lindsey: “As loud as possible.”

Jessica: “Loud as we could.”

Lindsey: “The van is literally shaking.”

Jessica: “We’d just scream it at the top of our lungs, and then after the song was over, it was like, OK.”

Sarah: “Teams would walk by and they would be like—”

Jessica: “—What the hell?—”

Sarah: “—They all have their headphones on, completely zoned out.”

Lindsey: “Everybody has this serious look, like their grandma just died that day.”

Jessica: “It’s funny, too, because we had the most fun, but it showed in the results. We took away the Nations Cup by a lot. We crushed everybody.”

Queens of the Hill 2: Jumping Around the World

So it’s a sequel. Same characters. Different locales. Different stories. This one will be a road movie that glides easily across a snowy map of the Earth. Equal parts hi-jinx and heart—there’s a good line for the poster.

We’ll travel with the women’s ski jumping team to places like Japan. It’s their favorite. “There’s this cool, stark contrast,” Jessica says. “You show up on a bullet train and everybody’s on their cell phones that can control the world, and then you sit down in your traditional robe and eat—“

“—On the ground,” Lindsey interjects.

“On the ground, exactly. You drink tea in a ceremony they’ve been doing for thousands of years. We’ve gotten in trouble sometimes for doing those cultural taboos that we’re not aware of, but it’s pretty cool.”

The girls will bond over the blow drier their coach travels with. They’ll cling to each other and scream when the team gets in two separate, minor car crashes—true stories that will add a dash of action. Lindsey will spend five traumatic days in the Munich airport. The team will get through a 40-hour, two-day travel nightmare after finding salvation in a Japanese airport shower.

And lest we forget the saga of the abandoned jumpsuit. A tired, groggy Jessica exits a plane in Munich en route to Poland. We’ll follow her down the breezeway and smash cut to the jumpsuits—precious cargo that’s “a pain in the butt to get perfect”—hanging alone and forgotten in the airplane’s closet.

“We went to get on our flight to Poland, and as I’m stepping on the airplane, I realize it, and I just look Lindsey straight in the eye and I said, ‘I have to get off this flight,’” Jessica says. “Everybody was like, ‘What? Why does she have to get off this flight? What does she know?’”

She’s reunited with her suits, and we’ll leave it open for a sequel to the sequel.

Snow Angels

“USANA helps when we’re on the road. When we’re in Europe, we don’t get the nutrition that we need. Our diet is all over the place when we’re over there. So it kind of keeps a good balance.”— Sarah Hendrickson, First Women’s Ski Jumping World Cup Champion

Basically, it’s a high-concept buddy cop comedy. Mixing ski jumping and crime antics isn’t the first thing that comes to mind, but hear it out before you judge: Two women’s ski jumpers with a lot of history attempt to thwart a plot by mad men intent on blowing up a ski jump. And it’s funny.

Sounds a bit silly, right? But, without a doubt, Lindsey and Jessica could carry the movie. The decade or so they’ve spent together has fostered an easy timing that makes their playful back and forth sparkle.

“I can never describe this. Ever.” Lindsey is talking about what happens during a ski jump.

Jessica jumps in without missing a beat. “Usually you’re looking at your coach.”

“Go for it.”

“No, we should do this back and forth, like telephone. It’ll be fun.”

“OK,” Lindsey says, half convinced.

“So you get on the bar and you’re either looking at your coach or a light, and…”

“…And then your coach flags you and you get off the bar and you go about 60 mph, headfirst in…to…”

“Into the transition of the takeoff, and usually you can feel that force, like the Gs and the pressure, and you jump off the takeoff, headfirst…”

Lindsey laughs before picking up, “…And you fly through the air and you feel that your whole body’s like a wing, kind of, and you can manipulate it any way that you want. It’s kind of like putting your hand out at 60 mph and you go like this (she makes a wave motion), but with your whole body.”

“And you know whether it was good or bad. Usually you see about where you’re going to land, and you pull for that spot, or you try and pull past that spot to get extra distance. And you land.”

“Yep. And then you have to stop after going 60.”

Liftoff

Or there’s this. It’s the one you’ve been waiting for. It’s the big, inspirational true story of triumph against great odds. It’s the kind of transcendent sports movie people quote in locker room speeches and at graduations.

The story begins with our heroes in peril. Back in 2006, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) excludes women’s ski jumping from the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, saying the sport lacks elite competition. Jumpers from five countries join a discrimination lawsuit, taking the fight for inclusion to the courts.

In 2009, a judge in British Columbia says the IOC discriminated against the women, but doesn’t order Vancouver to hold an event. After several denials for appeal in higher courts, our heroes’ dreams of Olympic glory are dashed.

But the fight continues for the 2014 Sochi Olympics in Russia. The girls take to the air, proving they belong at the highest level of competition. Cracks of hope start emerging, and in April 2011, word comes down.

In.

“We sort of felt like we had a moral obligation,” Jessica says, speaking for Lindsey, too. “But it felt wrong and it was unsettling, and we felt like if we could help that in any way, we would do everything we could because, at the end of the day, we both love the sport.”

“There’s a whole lost generation of girl ski jumpers that are living real life and have kids and families now because it was just stagnant,” she adds. “And we didn’t want that to happen again.”

But that’s not the end of the story. “We’re just trying to push the sport forward, and that was part of the whole process, part of the puzzle,” Lindsey says. “It wasn’t entirely about the Olympics.”

There’s more in store for our heroes. World Championships. Injuries. World Cups. Training. Rehab. Sarah still has to ascend to the top of the podium nine times in 13 events during the sport’s first World Cup season. Lindsey still has to save a life.

Inspired by a former roommate who had a rare form of leukemia, Lindsey donated bone marrow twice in eight months to a man she has never met. She couldn’t help her roommate, but right after the 2011 World Championships, she flew to San Francisco for the first stem cell draw to help a stranger. The second came during the first women’s ski jumping World Cup event, ever. Lindsey was sidelined after ankle surgery.

“There’s bigger things in life than sport, and it was one of those things,” she says.

That’s what makes these women so fascinating. Ski jumping is just the start. You also have friendship, struggle, adventure, even comedy. But the real beauty is found in the blank pages awaiting unwritten triumphs. The obvious end is a jumper in a colorful fabric springing from her crouch into stiff, straight lines, flying down, down, down, through the air of the Caucasus Mountains near Sochi, soaring into the pages of history.

What You Need to Know about Ski Jumping

1. “We do not do flips,” Sarah says.

“Correct,” Jessica adds. “And we don’t land in a pool in the summer. Pools are aerials—freestyle. We are a Nordic sport.”

“If we do a flip or land in a pool, something bad will really happen,” Lindsey says.

2.  There’s no lip on the takeoff.

“People are always just like, ‘That’s the one where you just hit the lip and go like this,’” Jessica says, making a takeoff motion with her hand. “No, it hangs at negative 11 degrees, so if you were just to slide off the ski jump, you would go 10 meters. There’s a very technical aspect in it.”

3. You never get comfortable jumping off a mountain. But when you’re one of the best in the world, that’s not a problem at all.

“I would say I’m more comfortable ski jumping, or in the air, than doing anything else, really,” Lindsey say. “And I like when it’s uncomfortable, and I like when I get scared. That one in a hundred jumps makes me come back. That’s what keeps me going. I look forward to those uncomfortable moments.”

4. Ski jumping is fun.

So watch it, and continue to follow Lindsey, Jessica, Sarah, and their teammates as they prepare for Sochi.

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USANA Research Partnerships June 29, 2012

 

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USANA Research Partnerships

In addition to conducting countless clinical studies in-house, USANA scientists often collaborate with respected universities and research centers to ensure our formulations remain on the cutting-edge of nutritional science and to test the effectiveness of our products in helping consumers achieve optimal health.

Universities
USANA has partnered with a number of universities to conduct research studies, including the University of Utah, Boston University, and the University of Sydney. In early 2008, USANA announced the results of a large, third-party clinical study completed at the University of Colorado Denver, which confirmed that lifestyle changes involving diet, supplementation, and exercise, can improve metabolic syndrome (Wyatt HR, et al).

Specific university research sponsored by USANA includes:

Linus Pauling Institute
In 2007, USANA announced a 10-year partnership with the Linus Pauling Institute (LPI). Based at Oregon State University, LPI is one of the nation’s first two Centers of Excellence for Research on Complementary and Alternative Medicine designated by the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine of the National Institutes of Health. The Linus Pauling Institute conducts research based on the idea that a balanced and nutritious diet is the key to optimal health. USANA works closely with LPI to explore new products and ingredients and conduct extensive studies on the health benefits associated with key nutrients.

LPI papers, abstracts, and presentations supported by USANA include:

  • Barker T, Leonard SW, Hansen J, Trawick RH, Ingram R, Burdett G, Lebold K, Walker JA, Traber MG. Vitamin E and C supplementation does not ameliorate muscle dysfunction following anterior cruciate ligament surgery. 2009. Free Radic Biol Med 47:1611-8.
  • Barker T, Leonard SW, Martins TB, Trawick RH, Hill HR, Kjeldsberg CR, Traber MG. Cytokine alteration following antioxidant supplementation and anterior cruciate ligament surgery. 2009. American College of Sports Medicine, Medicine and Science in Sport and Exercise 41:5 (Supplement).
  • Barker T, Leonard S, Trawick RH, Martins TB, Hill HR, Traber MG. The influence of alpha-tocopherol and ascorbic acid on circulating inflammatory cytokines following anterior cruciate ligament surgery. 2008. Free Radical Summer School, Spetses, Greece.
  • Barker T, Leonard SW, Trawick RH, Martins TB, Kjeldsberg CR, Hill HR, Traber MG. Modulation of inflammation by vitamin E and C supplementation prior to anterior cruciate ligament surgery. 2009. Free Radic Biol Med 46:599-606.
  • Barker T, Leonard SW, Trawick RH, Martins TB, Kjeldsberg CR, Hill HR, Walker JA, Traber MG. The supplementation of vitamins E and C modulate the relationship between circulating mediators of muscle weakness but not limb strength following anterior cruciate ligament surgery. 2009. Diet and Optimum Health Conference, Portland, OR.
  • Barker T, Leonard SW, Trawick RH, Walker JA, Traber MG. Antioxidant supplementation lowers circulating IGF-1 but not F2-isoprostanes immediately following ACL surgery. 2009. Redox Report 14:221-6.
  • Barker T, Martins TB, Hill HR, Kjeldsberg CR, Trawick RH, Leonard SW, Walker JA, Traber MG. Antioxidants induced cytokine alterations indicative of a better prognosis after ACL surgery. 2010. FASEB J 24:535.7.
  • Barker T, Martins TB, Hill HR, Kjeldsberg CR, Trawick RH, Leonard SW, Walker JA, Traber MG. Vitamin E and C supplementation modulates cytokine associations after ACL surgery indicative of a better prognosis. 20XX. International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism, in review.
  • Barker T, Traber MG. Does Vitamin E and C Supplementation Improve the Recovery from Anterior Cruciate Ligament Surgery?. 20XX. Journal of Evidence-Based Complementary & Alternative Medicine, in review.
  • Bemer B, Krueger SK, Orner GA. Sulindac pharmacokinetics. The role of flavin-containing monooxygenases. 2008. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Summer Internship Presentation, Oregon State University, September 26.
  • Johnson S, Hagen TM. Changes in Acute Human Plasma Glutathione Levels Following Lipoic Acid Supplementation. 2009. Howard Hughes Medical Institute Summer Internship presentation, Oregon State University, September 24, 2009, and Center for Health Aging Research Life Scholars presentation, Oregon State University, October 14, 2009.
  • Jubert C, Mata J, Bench G, Dashwood R, Pereira C, Tracewell W, Turteltaub K, Williams D, Baily G. Effects of chlorophyll and chlorophyllin on low-dose aflatoxin B1 pharmacokinetics in human volunteers. 2009. Cancer Prevention Research 2(12):1015-22.
  • Kesinger NG, Langsdorf BL, Yokochi AF, Miranda CL, and Stevens JF. Formation of a vitamin C conjugate of acrolein and its paraoxonase-mediated conversion into 5,6,7,8-tetrahydroxy-4-oxooctanal. 2010. Chem Res Toxicol 23:836-44.
  • Leonard SW, Barker T, Mustacich DJ, Traber MG. Measurement of vitamin K homologues in biological fluids and tissues by APCI LC/MS. 2009. Diet and Optimum Health Conference, Portland, OR.
  • Leonard SW, Barker T, Mustacich DJ, Traber MG. Measurement of vitamin K homologues in biological fluids and tissues by APCI LC/MS. 2010. Experimental Biology, Anaheim, CA.
  • Leonard SW, Barker T, Taylor AW, Traber MG. APCI LC-MS quantitation of vitamin K in the plasma of anterior cruciate ligament surgery patients. 20XX. Analytical Biochemistry, in review.
  • Michels AJ, Dickinson BC, Chang CJ, Frei B. Generation of H2O2 by ascorbate auto-oxidation: possible implications for cancer therapy. 2010. Society for Free Radical Biology and Medicine Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL.
  • Peluso MR, Miranda CL, Hobbs DJ, Proteau RR, Stevens JF. Xanthohumol and related prenylated flavonoids inhibit inflammatory cytokine production in LPS-activated THP-1 monocytes: structure-activity relationships and in silico binding to myeloid differentiation protein-2 (MD-2). 2010. Planta Med 76:1536-43.
  • Song Y, Chung CS, Bruno RS, Traber MG, Brown KH, King JC, Ho E. Dietary zinc restriction and repletion affects DNA integrity in healthy men. 2009. Am J Clin Nutr 90:321-8.
  • Song Y, Chung CS, Bruno RS, Traber MG, Brown KH, King JC, Ho E. Zinc status affects DNA damage and oxidative stress in healthy adult men. 2009. FASEB J 23:216.1. (Yang Song won the Young Investigator award with the American Society of Nutrition for this work.)
  • Song Y, Ho E. Effects of zinc deficiency on DNA damage, oxidative stress and oxidant defense in peripheral blood. 2008. FASEB J 22:A697.
  • Traber MG, Barker T. Vitamins E and C in ACL (Anterior Cruciate Ligament) Injury. 2009. 3rd International Symposium; Nutrition, Oxygen Biology and Medicine. Paris, France.
  • Yilmazer-Musa M, Tucker AM, Frei B. Inhibition of a-amylase and a-glucosidase activity by bioflavonoids: implications for carbohydrate metabolism and type-2 diabetes mellitus. 2010. Society for Free Radical Biology and Medicine Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL.

The Orthopedic Specialty Hospital (TOSH)
USANA and The Orthopedic Specialty Hospital (TOSH) began formal research collaboration in 2009, though an informal research partnership existed since 2007. TOSH is a leading facility for orthopedic surgical care, rehabilitation, physical therapy, sports performance training, and nutrition counseling. In addition, TOSH has an extensive research program that includes orthopedic surgery, sports medicine, exercise physiology, sports biomechanics, physical therapy, occupational therapy, athletic sports performance training, and nutrition. Working in close collaboration with scientists, doctors, therapists and students, TOSH works to develop a better understanding of factors that affect human performance, the risk of injury to sports participants of all ages and levels, and optimal medical interventions to help get individuals back to their healthiest as quickly as possible.

TOSH papers, abstracts, and presentations supported by USANA include:

  • Barker T, Martins TB, Hill HR, Kjeldsberg CR, Trawick RH, Leonard SW, Walker JA, Traber MG. Vitamins E and C Modulate the Association Between Reciprocally Regulated Cytokines After an Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury and Surgery.  2011. American Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Mar 22. [Epub ahead of print].
  • Barker T, Dixon BM, Schneider ED, Weaver LK. Smaller concentration-supplementation slopes at a higher vitamin D treatment dose. (20XX). Experimental Biology, in review.
  • Barker T, Martins TB, Hill HR, Dixon BM, Schneider ED, Weaver LK. Different doses of supplemental vitamin D mediate disparate cytokine responses. (20XX). To be submitted.
  • (Certain papers were published in collaboration with both TOSH and LPI scientists.  For sake of brevity, these papers are listed only in the LPI section.)
  • Barker T, Traber MG. Does Vitamin E and C Supplementation Improve the Recovery From Anterior Cruciate Ligament Surgery? 2011. Journal of Evidence-Based Complementary & Alternative Medicine 16(2): 114-128. http://chp.sagepub.com/content/16/2/114.abstract

 

Glycemic Index Foundation
A collaboration between the University of Sydney, the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation of Australia, and Diabetes Australia—the Glycemic Index Foundation (GIF) backs the GI Symbol Program in Australia. The GI Symbol Program is the only independent worldwide GI certification program requiring foods meet a number of criteria to prove they are a healthy choice within their food group. All USANA Foods carry the GI Symbol in Australia, and all testing data quality has been verified by the GIF.

More information

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