MINNEAPOLIS, June 18, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Step One Foods announced today that its Lemon Almond Bar and Dark Chocolate Walnut Bar have been named winners in Good Housekeeping's 2025 Snack Awards. The ...
While knowing what nutrients (and the foods containing them) that directly benefit the heart is important, it is only half the battle—actually eating them is what really matters. To help make that ...
Most Americans think about food in terms of servings, but Johns Hopkins-trained cardiologist Elizabeth Klodas talks about the snack bars, pancake mix, granola-like sprinkles and packets of oatmeal she ...
If you’re among the millions of Americans who need to lower your cholesterol but can’t take or won’t take a statin drug? Well, a new study is offering a potential solution. GDC caught up with Dr.
MINNEAPOLIS — Sometimes things sound too good to be true, like a snack food that can aid heart health. Now, thanks to a Twin Cities doctor, this cholesterol-lowering treat is a reality. Dr. Elizabeth ...
EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn., Feb. 27, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Step One Foods, a cardiologist-led company dedicated to improving cardiometabolic health through nutrition, has been selected as a participant in the ...
When Minnesota cardiologist Dr. Elizabeth Klodas looked around her waiting room, she saw patients who looked sick despite their now “perfect” numbers. Trained at Johns Hopkins, Dr. Klodas recognized ...
Step One Foods, a nutrition-based food program, opened its new office and production facility Wednesday in Eden Prairie. The company strives to help lower cholesterol with heart-healthy products so ...
About 15 years ago, Elizabeth Klodas MD FACC, a John Hopkins trained cardiologist, looked around her waiting room and saw a whole bunch of people whose number were perfect, but didn’t look any better.
NEWS 4. JENNIFER, THANK YOU. HEALTH NEWS NOW. IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO IMPROVE HEALTH IN THE NEW YEAR, A CARDIOLOGIST SAYS REMEMBER, SMALL CHANGES CAN HAVE A BIG IMPACT. SHE RECOMMENDS TRYING TO EAT MORE ...
While cardiovascular disease remains the number one killer of men and women in the U.S., eclipsing COVID-19 by a margin of two to one, a new national survey finds about two in five Americans (41%) ...
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