10 Strategies to Stick to Your New Year's Resolution
Grace Weatherby
/ Categories: WELLNESS, 2023

10 Strategies to Stick to Your New Year's Resolution

Every New Year’s Day, millions of Americans create resolutions, often related to nutrition, exercise or weight loss. Unfortunately, most struggle to maintain them, with many giving up within the first month and only a mere 8% lasting the full year. Fortunately, there are strategies you can use to boost your chances of success in 2024. Here’s where to start:

1. Identify what really matters and make it your identity

Reflect on your current state and what you want for your future. Consider why change is important to you and how it will impact your life. Next, make the desired change part of your mental self-identity. For example, if you want to get healthier by running, start saying to yourself, “I am a runner.” Spend time thinking about the kind of person that runner is and the kind of habits they embrace. For example, a runner might schedule time in their day for exercise, prioritize eating well, and getting enough sleep. Begin thinking of these habits as your own.

2. Set a clear goal based on action rather than outcome

Avoid vague resolutions like “exercise more” or “get healthy.” Create specific, action-based goals that help you to live out your new identity and get you closer to your desired future. Think about what changes are needed, and what you need to do more or less of, or even stop or start doing. For example, rather than setting a resolution to “exercise regularly,” commit to a 20-minute walk three times a week after breakfast. Clear objectives make it easier to stay focused and accountable.

3. Make your goal realistic and achievable

One way people go wrong when creating resolutions is by setting a goal that is too big, too fast. Changing new habits in a way that will last is a gradual process. Focus on one small change at a time and build up as it starts to feel easier. 

4. Plan for obstacles

Let’s face it. Life isn’t always a smooth path. It’s important to recognize that there will be obstacles. The trick is not letting them derail you from you desired goal. Set aside time each week to look ahead to anticipate challenges and create strategies to work around them. Include a plan to get right back on track if your backup plan doesn’t work out as anticipated. Each minute, each meal, each hour, each day, is a new opportunity to get right back on track with your plan.

5. Surround yourself with support

Find friends or online communities who share similar goals. Supporting each other, sharing tips, and even engaging in activities together can make the journey more motivating and makes it more likely any changes will stick.

6. Acknowledge achievements

Acknowledge every success along the way. Whether it's celebrating in the moment when you follow through on a step or stick to a plan for a week. The positive feeling you get from recognizing and acknowledging achievements provides motivation to keep going.

7. Get curious

Treat your goal as an experiment. Assess what's working and what's not working and why. Ask yourself what you like about what you are doing. What are you proud of? If you are not enjoying what you’re doing, what could you do instead? Just because something works for someone else doesn't mean it will for you. Explore different options to discover what suits you.

8. Set yourself up for success

Just like your goals, keep your plans simple and doable. Plan meals and meal prep in advance, schedule time on your calendar for physical activity, find a workout buddy, or pack a nutritious snack to avoid stopping for fast food.

9. Schedule Check-ins

Schedule weekly, monthly and quarterly check-ins with yourself (TIP: Put them in your calendar now). Take note of how you are doing. If you have gotten off track, remember that you can get right back into it again by following the steps above.

10. Seek expert guidance:

If necessary, consult experts for guidance. For example, you might seek out a registered dietician for help with your specific nutritional needs, a personal trainer for guidance on exercise, or a health coach for personalized support in implementing new healthy habits. Enlist whoever you need to help you realize your resolution.

A note about weight loss

When it comes to weight loss, remember that losing weight is not an action you can take; rather, it’s the result of other actions. Instead of setting a goal to lose 20 pounds, think about the actions that promote weight loss such as walking, strength training, engaging in more healthful and mindful eating, etc. Then set a specific goal around one of those actions. If you think that working on more than one of those areas will help you lose weight, pick one for now, and then add on a second goal once you have been consistent with the first goal for at least several weeks, or longer.

This New Year, approach healthy change with specific, achievable goals, rather than resolutions. Set yourself up for success by planning around obstacles, getting right back on track when things get you off course, and remember that consistency with small goals over time leads to habits that last.

 

Kristina Schmidt, RN, NBC-HWC,LMC is a National Board-Certified Health Coach who specializes in empowering those struggling with weight, pre-or type 2 diabetes, blood pressure or cholesterol to, blood pressure or cholesterol to transform their health even if they’ve struggled or failed at every diet they’ve tried.

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The Latest Testing Information

The world of COVID-19 testing is very complex and changing rapidly. But gratefully, unlike early on in the pandemic, tests are available for everyone who wants one, whether they have symptoms or not. Below is a list of common questions, along with answers from SVMC’s Laboratory Services Director Karen Bond and SVMC’s Director of Perioperative Services Tanya Cowder, MSN, RN, CNOR.

What are the reasons someone may get tested for COVID-19, even if they don't have symptoms? People without symptoms of COVID-19 are being tested when they are admitted to SVMC, before being discharged to other facilities, before scheduled surgeries, or because they may have been exposed to the virus. Primary care providers are also able to order a test for those who need to return to work or school or to end quarantine or isolation. And anyone can be tested through the Vermont Department of Health's Pop-Up Clinics.

What types of tests are available for detecting active cases of COVID-19? SVMC offers Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) testing that is processed at both outside labs and our own lab, depending on how quickly results are needed. PCR, which was pioneered by American biochemist Kary Mullis in 1983, actually amplifies and detects the presence or absence of small gene sections. In this case, it determines whether or not COVID-19 is present.

The specimen is most often taken from deep in the nose-throat passageway (nasalpharyngeal). Patients experience eye watering and a burning sensation for 30 seconds or less. The test can also be taken from inside the nose (anterior nares), depending on the patient population. The most common type of test, like those administered both at SVMC’s drive-up testing station and at the Vermont Department of Health’s Pop-Up Clinics, is greater than 90% sensitive (meaning that the test picks up the virus, if it is present) and greater than 90% specific (meaning the test detects the COVID-19 virus, as opposed to other viruses).

How do I get my results and what should I do? Results are usually provided by a primary care provider within 48 hours. Your primary care provider will share specific directions regarding what you should do next. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is sharing this table, which provides a synopsis of tests, what results mean, and guidance for what to do. If the test is positive, the Vermont Department of Health may call before the primary care provider to initiate contact tracing.

Are all of the tests sufficiently available? Yes. Anyone with an order from their primary care provider can be tested at the drive-up testing site at SVMC. Anyone can be tested at the Vermont Department of Health's Pop-Up Clinics. Visit https://humanresources.vermont.gov/popups for times, dates, and locations. Tests for inpatients at the hospital are also in adequate supply.

Important Note: Remember test results offer a snap shot of the current active viral load. A negative test result doesn’t reveal whether you have been exposed in the past or predict whether you will be infected in the future. Whether or not the result is positive, we should all continue to wash our hands frequently, wear masks when in public and in proximity to those outside of our household, and stay 6 feet from others.

What about antibody tests? Antibody tests (serology) are also available. It does not tell you if you have active disease. Antibody tests check for antibodies that appear in the blood between about 1 – 3 weeks after symptom onset and may remain as long as a lifetime. Antibody tests may be positive while a person is infected. It is not yet known whether these antibodies protect against reinfection with the COVID-19 virus. For many other similar viruses, antibodies are protective for years or longer, but we do not yet have adequate data to know for COVID-19. Patients who would like the test would get a referral from their primary care provider and come to the SVMC Lab to have blood drawn. Results are delivered by the primary care provider.

Those who receive a positive antibody test or who have recovered from COVID-19 may qualify to donate plasma with the American Red Cross. The plasma, which includes antibodies, may help those fighting the disease. Learn more at https://www.redcrossblood.org/donate-blood/dlp/plasma-donations-from-recovered-covid-19-patients.html.

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