Latest News Archive

Please select Category, Year, and then Month to display items
Previous Archive
04 June 2020

The UFS is continuously working to ensure that you are kept abreast of important critical information. It is therefore important that the cellphone number you are using is updated to reflect your current correct number. 

To update your cellphone number, please go to the UFS self-service portal at https://www.ufs.ac.za/kovsielife/student-self-service OR contact the Call Centre at +27 51 401 9666. Please provide the following information to the call centre agent:

– your initials, surname, student number, cellphone number, email address, and physical address.

Monitor the official UFS communication platforms regularly for important information, and please stay safe during this lockdown period.


News Archive

Tim Noakes delivers lecture at UFS symposium
2014-08-04

 

Prof Tim Noakes
Photo: Renè-Jean van der Berg

The Metabolic Research Unit at the University of the Free State (UFS) held a symposium on diabetes, with Prof Tim Noakes as one of the guest speakers.

Prof Noakes, a professor in Sports Medicine at the University of Cape Town, became known mainly for his research and findings on nutrition and health and is also the person behind the infamous ‘Noakes diet’.

The ‘Noakes diet’ – or the Paleo diet – focuses on avoiding carbohydrates in favour of including high fat and oil content for a healthy diet.

During his lecture, Prof Noakes explained how this diet can actually help control certain stadia of diabetes and shared several success stories with the symposium.

Prof Noakes’ reasoning concerning the ‘traditional’ nutritional requirements known to everybody, is that it has never been studied before to determine its effectiveness.

According to this nutritional plan, often depicted as a food pyramid, carbohydrates should form the biggest part of a healthy diet and foods from the fats and oils group should be restricted.

Prof Noakes explained that the human body converts carbohydrates into glucose (sugar) to be able to digest it. It is this sugar that leads to weight and health problems in people, of which heart disease and diabetes are some of the most common. 
 

We use cookies to make interactions with our websites and services easy and meaningful. To better understand how they are used, read more about the UFS cookie policy. By continuing to use this site you are giving us your consent to do this.

Accept