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Whats CHIP?
CHIP is an educationally
intensive lifestyle intervention program with more than
50,000 graduates worldwide. Founded and presented by Dr.
Hans Diehl, and endorsed by the Physicians Committee
for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) and the Center for Science
in the Public Interest (CSPI), both headquartered in Washington,
D.C., the CHIP program focuses on markedly reducing coronary
risk factor levels through the adoption of better health
habits and appropriate lifestyle changes. The goal is to
facilitate disease reversal by lowering blood cholesterol,
triglyceride and blood sugar levels by reducing excess weight,
lowering high blood pressure, enhancing daily exercise,
and by eliminating smoking. Risk factor levels are carefully
assessed before the educational intervention begins, immediate
following the completion of the 40-hour educational program,
and again after three and 12 months. The results have been
published in 11 scientific articles published in peer-reviewed medical journals, including the American Journal of Cardiology, the Journal of the American Diabetic Association and Preventive Medicine. (click to see references)
CHIP is a community-based program conducted either
by Dr. Diehl himself as a live program,
or via a state-of-the-art DVD video set with trained
facilitators. The program is either conducted over a period
of four weeks, where people meet from Monday through Thursday
for two hours for four weeks, or, they attend the CHIP program
offered twice a week for eight weeks conducted in corporate settings. The CHIP program is
currently conducted in more than 350 cities via the video
program offered through faith- or corporate-based communities, through
licensed CHIP leaders, or through arrangements with corporations and hospitals.
CHIP
is based on the foundation that, according to the U.S. Surgeon
General, 75% of our Western diseases are lifestyle-related.
They relate to our rich diet, our lack of exercise, our
use of cigarettes, alcohol, and caffeine, our level of stress,
and the quality of our support. The diseases include: heart
disease, stroke, hypertension, diabetes, gout, arthritis,
overweight, certain adult cancers, impotence, diverticular
disease, constipation, heartburn, and gall bladder disease.
The CHIP program is community- or corporate-based, works closely with
referring physicians, schools, and local restaurants, and
sustains adherence to the program guidelines through an
active CHIP alumni support organization.
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