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Vegetarian Times (1-year)

Vegetarian Times (1-year)

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Publisher: Active Interest Media
Category: Magazine

List Price: $44.91
Buy New: $12.00
You Save: $32.91 (73%)

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Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 17 reviews
Sales Rank: 3

Format: Magazine Subscription, Print
Type: Consumer magazine
Subscription Issues: 9
Subscription Length: 12 Months
Issues Per Year: 9
First Issue Lead Time: 6-10 Weeks

ASIN: B000IOMPZ6

Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 months

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review

Editorial Reviews

Who Reads Vegetarian Times?
Vegetarian Times is written for those at the forefront of the healthy living movement. Published nine times a year, it provides delicious recipes, expert wellness information, and environmentally sound lifestyle solutions for both full-time and part-time vegetarians. Replete with beautiful photography and articles from leading experts, Vegetarian Times will be of interest to anyone with a passion for eating healthy while staying environmentally conscious.

What You Can Expect in Each Issue:

  • Health: Vital food, health, and nutrition news. Nutritionists and doctors answer questions about vegetarian lifestyles.
  • Eco-Beauty: Presenting environmentally friendly, cruelty-free beauty buys.
  • Quick: All about making great tasting meals in not a lot of time. Expect to read about healthful and delicious 30 minute meals, and dishes you can make using just 5 ingredients.
  • Life--Carrot and Stick: Who walks the walk and who's nothing but talk. Tips to make your habitat healthier and become more eco-enlightened travelers
  • Cuisine: Editors find creative new ways to incorporate your favorite flavors into dishes.
  • Vegan Gourmet: Our popular plant-based column.
  • Features: From recipe contests to eco-friendly advise, features run the gamut of information that vegetarians crave most. Recent stories have included "10 Ways to Green your Fridge," "South American Superfoods," and "Earth to Table Herbs."
Past Issues:

Contributors:
Contributors range from Restaurateurs, chefs, nutritionists, artists. These people are carefully selected for their passion and knowledge of vegetarian food and the accompanying lifestyle.

Magazine Layout
Each issue features beautiful food photography, focusing on a soft palette of colors for long reading sessions.

Comparisons to Other Magazines
The magazine is written for both vegetarians and flexitarians alike. It promotes a healthy vegetarian lifestyle without putting guilt on those who eat meat. The editors strive to bring readers articles in a positive light without preaching and politics.

Advertising
Readers will find advertisements mainly from companies making vegetarian foods products. Additional frequent advertisements include supplements, cruelty-free beauty products and eco-friendly products. Most advertisements include a "Reader Service" option so readers may request more information about specific products.



Product Description
Vegetarian Times is the magazine of great food, good health, and smart living. Each issue is packed with mouth-watering recipes that taste great-and are good for you too. You'll find new tastes, old favorites, and tips on how to cook with fewer calories and less fat.


Customer Reviews:   Read 12 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Informative Magazine   August 17, 2008
M. Martinelli (Rhode Island)
I've been a subscriber of this magazine for many years. It's an important tool for vegetarian cooking, but a good resource for non-vegetarians as well. It has limited recipes for vegans, but most non-vegan recipes can be altered. The price was right for this magazine, at full price I would not have ordered a subscription.


5 out of 5 stars Awesome, awesome, awesome...   August 10, 2008
Krishnagirl (New Jersey)
This magazine offers great vegetarian options for people. The pictures of food are wonderful, but my favorite part of the magazine is that it gives informative articles on health and wellness. I really like to hear which companies are doing the right thing. I like all the articles on organic produce, bottled water, and other hot topics. A definite must read.


3 out of 5 stars Okay, not great.   August 2, 2008
D. Farrow (Shell Beach, CA)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I've read and have been a subscriber for years. Vegetarian for most of my life.
The magazine goes through editors like we go through soy milk. They just can't find their way it seems.
These days, most recipes call for expensive and / or hard to find ingredients. Worse, some call for pre-made items that just can't be found. Case in point, the latest issue with the very yummy looking pizza on the cover? You will not find the recipe for the crust in the magazine. Funny, eh? Also, the magazine, for the most part, ignores the male reader.

After all this time, I'm saying farewell to VT. With a host of wonderful blogs on the net, and amazing cooks who generously share there "secrets", I'll save the trees it takes to produce this advertising biased magazine.



4 out of 5 stars Vegetarian Times   August 1, 2008
Randy (Arroyo Grande, CA USA)
We've received 2 issues so far. The recipes are interesting, uncomplicated, and do not require exotic ingredients. They seem very accessible to the home cook that wants to prepare tasty and healthy food. The articles are interesting yet brief enough for a quick read.


1 out of 5 stars Just incredible   July 21, 2008
A. Franco (Miami, Florida United States)
0 out of 5 found this review helpful

One and a half month after ordering, I still do not have received the first issue.

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Worth Reading

How to Use an Automated External Defibrillator (AED) - It's Very Simple!
By Linda Woolsey

An Automated External Defibrillator (AED) is a device that can give an electric shock to a victim of sudden cardiac arrest and potentially reverse this fatal condition and restore a victim's heartbeat. In the first few minutes of cardiac arrest the heart is fibrillating (chaotic electrical activity) and can be corrected by an electric shock. In December 2005 the American Heart Association simplified assessment protocols for aiding a victim in sudden cardiac arrest. It is now an uncomplicated two-part evaluation.

1. The victim does not respond when shaken and spoken loudly to.

2. The victim is not breathing.

If both criteria are met then Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) should be initiated and an AED should be placed on the victim as soon as possible. AEDs vary in size, shape and even color as part of the manufacturers marketing ploys to distinguish between them. All AEDs on the market have been cleared by the Food and Drug Administration as a safe and effective medial device. They are designed specifically for the non-medically trained user who is undoubtedly nervous and fearful.

AEDs have verbal cues that begin as soon as they are turned on. These instructions are very straightforward and talk the user through the simple steps of defibrillation. Some AEDs give more in-depth directions that cover the steps of CPR as well. One of the first instructions will be to place the pads (also called electrodes) on the victim's chest. The pads are in a sealed foil package and are pre-jelled with a conductive substance which is quite sticky. The package and often the pads themselves will have pictures that clearly show where to place them. One pad goes on the upper right side of the chest just below the collar bone and the other one goes on the left side below the ribs. The heart is in the center of the chest just left of the breastbone. The pads are placed so the shock actually travels from pad to pad inside the victim's body through the heart. One AED has a one piece pad that is connected in the middle between the two pads offering greater simplicity in placement.

There are several special considerations before placing the pads on a victim. There should be a 'prep kit' with the AED that includes gloves, a razor, scissors and a dry wipe.

1. If the victim has a lot of chest hair (especially if the skin in not visible) they will need to have the excess removed. This should take about ten seconds using the disposable razor only on the areas where the pads are to be applied.

2. Jewelry around the neck particularly that hangs down into the chest area should be removed or pushed aside. Body piercings should be left alone regardless of location. The pad should be placed at least one inch away from body piercings.

3. A Band-Aid or adhesive type patch on the chest may be a meditation patch and should be removed and the area cleaned off with the dry wipe.

4. If the victim's chest is wet or sweaty it should be dried off before applying the pads.

5. If the victim has a pacemaker or internal defibrillator (you will notice a lump or visible scar) place the pad at least one inch away.

Once the pads are adhered to the victim's chest the AED will give a verbal cue to the user to stop touching the victim as it automatically begins to analyze the electrical activity in the heart. If the AED interpret the hearts electrical activity as fibrillation it will tell the rescuer to press the clearly marked flashing shock button. There should be no physical contact with the victim during analysis and shock. Some AEDs automatically shock after issuing a verbal warning.

Regardless of outcome all AEDs will instruct the rescuer to begin Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation immediately after a shock is administered. American Heart Association protocol calls for two minutes of CPR before the AED automatically reanalyzes and if necessary advises another shock. This sequence of shocking followed by two minutes of CPR should be continued until the victim revives or until emergency medical personnel arrive and take over.

Sudden Cardiac Arrest is a leading cause of death that can occur without warning. Fortunately automated external defibrillators are becoming more and more prevalent outside of the hospital. CPR/ AED training classes are available through various agencies including the American Heart Association and the American Red Cross.

Linda Woolsey RN, BA is a registered nurse and a Basic Life Support Instructor with the American Heart Association. She is also certified by the American College of Sports Medicine as a Health/Fitness Instructor and has worked extensively with people to improve their medical conditions through nutrition and exercise. For the past seven years she has worked with businesses assisting them in implementing a Automated External Defibrillator Program.

She can be reached at woolseyconsulting@gmail.com or check out her blog at http://lindasheartbeat.blogspot.com/


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