Contact Us
-
Diet Specialists
Categories
-
Recent Posts
- Healthy Habits: A Family’s Guide to Living Better Together
- How Anant Ambani struggled from weight gain due to steroids from asthma treatment – The Times of India
- Usha Chilukuri says hubby Vance adapted her vegetarian diet and learned how to cook Indian food for his mom-in law – The Tribune India
- Instead of crisps, kids could eat snacks from the sea: the forager chef looking to revolutionise Chiles diet – The Guardian
- Banana to mushroom: How a plant-based diet can help you hair and overall well-being – The Times of India
Archives
Search Weight Loss Topics: |
Category Archives: Diet And Food
England’s top doctor warns there’s only a tiny chance that quick-fix slimming regimes will work – Infosurhoy
Posted: December 31, 2019 at 10:45 pm
Its the time of year where millions of us are looking for an easy way to get rid of our Christmas-induced bulge.
But its never a good idea to try detox teas, diet pills or other appetite suppressants, a top doctor has warned.
Professor Stephen Powis, the NHS medical director, said such products have a slim chance of success and are potentially dangerous.
Some contain ingredients which have a laxative effect, which may cause diarrhoea, unplanned pregnancies and even heart problems.
Professor Powis said:Its always a good time to try to get in shape, and New Years resolutions are a great time to make a change.
But the reality is theres a slim chance of success with diet pills and detox teas and people could end up doing more harm than good.
Making new year goals and shifting a few excess pounds after Christmas can be a good idea but is much easier to maintain when done gradually and safely.
Professor Powis said there are safe ways to lose weight without buying into products, including the NHS 12-week plan.
Other experts supported his advice against quick-fix diet products, but said the NHS plan wasnt the best alternative.
Dr Zoe Harcombe, an independent obesity researcher and diet expert, said: I agree with Professor Powis that theres a slim chance of success with diet pills and detox teas.
The NHS plan being promoted as an alternative is not evidence based. [Its] based on carbs, carbs and more carbs.
If it were based on the most nutritious foods red meat, oily fish, eggs, dairy products and green things I would be shocked and impressed.
Professor Powis advice follows a crackdown on the endorsement of diet products by celebrities on Instagram and Facebook.
The social media giant said age restrictions would be applied to some posts while others would be banned completely if they are linked with a commercial offer.
Advertising agencies have also threatened companies to stop making exaggerated claims about their products with little science-based evidence.
Products which claim to rid your belly or cleanse your insides, such as tea-toxes, sound miraculous.
But experts, such as the British Dietetic Association, say they are marketing myths with wild and exaggerated claims.
Such products have been slammed because they may cause long term damage both physically and mentally.
Ingredients such as senna leaf, yerba mate, fennel seeds and nettle leaves have a laxative effect, which causes frequent trips to the toilet.
This is how the body initially loses weight. But used for prolonged periods, these ingredients can damage the gut lining.
The addition of dandelion has been shown to interact with medications by changing how they are broken down by the liver.
Bootea has previously admitted the tea can affect the reliability of the Pill, with a wave of women having Bootea babies as a result.
Diarrhoea can decrease the efficacy of medication, as it rushes it through the system without being absorbed in the gut into the bloodstream.
The psychological aspects of diet products are of concern because they fuel body image worries among youngsters following celebrities online.
Social media platforms, where diet products are flogged by celebrities, have put new rules in place to help combat the issue.
Instagram and Facebook said this year it will censor posts promoting miraculous fat-burning products or glorifying cosmetic surgery.
Under Instagrams new rules, posts which advertise the sale of weight-loss products or cosmetic procedures will be hidden from users under 18.
It also said any content which makes a miraculous claim about a diet product, and is linked to a commercial offer such as a discount code, will be removed.
The move followed extensive criticism of celebrities by anti-diet movements, such as I Weigh, led by actress and body positivity campaigner Jameela Jamil.
She has repeatedly criticised high-profile online figures including Khlo Kardashian for posting on social media about diet products.
Manufacturers of extreme diet products have also faced a backlash on the advertising front.
Agencies havecome down harder on companies in recent years who falsely advertise the benefits of their products.
For example, Bootea was ordered to remove various unsubstantiated health and weight claims from its website by the Advertising Standards Authority in 2014.
This month, the extent of false advertising and endorsement was laid bare when celebrities, including reality TV star Lauren Goodger, were duped into promoting a fake and poisonous diet drink by the BBC for a documentary.
Miss Goodger was secretly filmed during a meeting where she was asked to promote a fake diet drink named Cyanora, containing hydrogen cyanide, before it was ready to be tasted.
In the show, Miss Goodger admitted she had never tried Skinny Coffee, which she previously claimed had helped her lose 12lbs in three weeks on Instagram.
MailOnline have contacted Bootea, XLS-Medical, Protein World and Skinny Coffee Club for comment.
A statement form XLS-Medical said: XLS-Medical products are clinically proven to help individuals lose more weight than dieting and exercise alone.
All of the weight management products in the XLS-Medical range have been tested in gold-standard, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials and have a well-established safety and tolerability profile.
Given the prevalence and serious health implications of obesity, we believe choosing to lose or maintain weight for a healthier lifestyle is one of the most important self-care decisions.
Go here to read the rest:
England's top doctor warns there's only a tiny chance that quick-fix slimming regimes will work - Infosurhoy
Posted in Diet And Food
Comments Off on England’s top doctor warns there’s only a tiny chance that quick-fix slimming regimes will work – Infosurhoy
How KSI Built the Body That Crushed Logan Paul – menshealth.com
Posted: December 31, 2019 at 10:45 pm
How did KSI build the body that beat Logan Paul in a boxing match? In a new video for Men's Health, the British YouTuber and rapperreal name Olajide Olatunjiresponded to hilarious comments from fans and let us in on his workout secrets.
When he saw a fan applauding his fitness transformation, KSI pulled out his phone and read one of his workout plans: a sweat-inducing series involving 800-meter runs, dumbbell thrusters, deep squats, and burpees.
He also gave some insight into his Nov. 9 YouTuber-on-YouTuber showdown with Paul, which ended with a split-decision victory in KSI's favor. One fan observed that his defensive stance resembled Floyd Mayweather's.
"Yeah I didn't use it though," KSI said. "There's a time and a place, and that wasn't the fight for it. I wasn't trying to be defensive at all. I was trying to get up in his grill. Hands up, move forward, close him down, punch."
One fan asked how the rapper managed to learn boxing in such a short time frame. "Practice, man," he said. "Practice and hard work. You just have to keep doing something over and over again." And the new hobby has had a positive effect on his lifeand we don't just mean the satisfaction of besting Paul.
"Boxing has changed me so much, man," he said. "Maturity-wise, mentally, physicallyit's one of the best things I've ever done.
"All of the boxing purists, they think I was just doing this for money and fame and clout, nah man. Your boy did this for inspirations. And just for myself as well, man. To prove that I can overcome the odds as the underdog to defeat him when everyone counted me out, there's no better feeling."
See original here:
How KSI Built the Body That Crushed Logan Paul - menshealth.com
Posted in Diet And Food
Comments Off on How KSI Built the Body That Crushed Logan Paul – menshealth.com
Local leaders offer their Happy New Year wishes – Wilkes Barre Times-Leader
Posted: December 31, 2019 at 10:45 pm
WILKES-BARRE Another holiday season is winding down and 2019 is in the rear-view mirror.
As we dismantle our Christmas trees and put away the decorations, we vow to get in good enough shape to fut into all those nice clothes in our closets that we used to fit into not that long ago.
As we devour our pork and sauerkraut today, we look ahead to a bright 2020. Spring will soon arrive, flowers will bloom and the Democratic Party will choose its sacrificial lamb to take on President Donald Trump.
The days and months will again fly by, the snow will have melted, the heat and humidity will return, the leaves will change in the fall and my rescued Santa Claus toilet seat cover will again grace my front door in December.
Happy New Year to all and read on to see what our leaders wish for in 2020.
Gov. Tom Wolf: In the new year, I am hopeful we can do more to invest in infrastructure, raise the minimum wage, tackle poverty, reform our probation system, expand gun safety laws, and even more to improve education, reduce health care costs, and enhance the quality of life for all Pennsylvanians. I wish, as well, that Pennsylvanians will continue to reach out to their neighbors and lend a helping hand.
Wico Van Genderen, CEO of Greater Wilkes-Barre Chamber: There are going to be many market headwind and tailwind dynamics for 2020. Knowing that you make your best sea captains in a storm, heres wishing that our captains of industry and community can navigate the swirling waters.
U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Lehigh: Unemployment is at a 50-year low, wage growth is accelerating for low-income Americans, and for the first time in our nations history, there are more jobs than people seeking work. In 2020, Congress should resume work on pro-growth policies that will build upon the economic progress made over the past three years. I wish everyone across our great commonwealth a happy, healthy, and prosperous New Year.
U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, D-Scranton: We must continue the fight to protect access to quality, affordable health care in 2020. My wish for the new year is for Republicans to get serious and work with Democrats to support middle class families and people with preexisting conditions by strengthening the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. I will keeping fighting like hell against GOP efforts to sabotage access to health care.
Outgoing Wilkes-Barre Mayor Tony George: To spend more time with his family.
Gerry ODonnell: My best wishes to all in our community for a safe and healthy New Year while remembering the New Year is a time of new beginnings and fresh starts that also comes with a time of reflection.
Harold E Flack II, Dallas: At 58.7 cents per gallon, Pennsylvania had the highest gas tax in the U.S., until we were nudged back to second place by California in July of 2019. Pennsylvanias gas tax remains 22 cents higher than the national average. We spend our winters trying not to get another flat tire or break another wheel with potholes and craters everywhere on back roads and main roads alike. My wish is for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to make a serious effort to upgrade our roads, and to stop diverting gas tax revenue into other black holes of State Government.
Sen. John Yudichak: Ill go with the state motto, I wish for everyone a year filled with virtue, liberty, and independence.
U.S. Rep. Dan Meuser: As we close out the year and decade and enter into our own Roaring Twenties, I look forward to working together to keep the American Dream alive and well for all.
Master Sgt. JP Karpovich, U.S. Army: I would like to wish all military, police, firefighters, first responders, nurses and doctors, as well as teachers, a Happy and Healthy 2020.
Teri Ooms, executive director of The Institute: My wish for 2020 is that we all find a way to work towards innovative solutions collaboratively. The parochialism and divisiveness that has engulfed nearly every aspect our lives does nothing to improve or sustain anything positive. We have so much potential as a region, state, and nation and we need to work together to harness that greatness so that it benefits everyone. Personal or political party agendas, geographical and political boundaries, and traditional political party ideology should not drive decision making that only benefits a few.
Will Beekman, general manager of ASM Global, Mohegan Sun Arena: My wish is for Wilkes-Barre to build a downtown skate park, and for Christian Wielage and crew to continue fighting the good fight on saving the Irem Temple.
Paul Keating, Kingston administrator: Happy New Year and best wishes to our great community and all of Northeastern Pennsylvania.
Incoming Wilkes-Barre Mayor George Brown: Rebuild a working relationship between the Mayor of Wilkes-Barre and all members of Wilkes-Barre City Council based on mutual respect and the common goal of working hard for the betterment of the residents of Wilkes-Barre.
Create a 2020 Wilkes-Barre City budget that is based on sound fiscal management rather than hypothetical revenue sources that may or may not come to fruition in the coming year.
Promote safe, clean neighborhoods, work to address the homeless population, and increase revenue productivity within the city on a daily basis.
Former U.S. Rep. Lou Barletta: Looking at the start of the New Year my wish for 2020 is that the politicians down in DC end the impeachment sham that is doing nothing but wasting taxpayers money. I wish that they will remember the voters that elected them also elected President Trump and that they will work with him to continue growing the greatest economy weve seen in decades allowing everyone a chance at the American Dream.
In 2020, my resolution is to build the Jordans Army Foundation. My family and I have been so touched by the prayers and support for my grandson Jordan and want to give back. We will be working on growing the foundation to support research for Rhabdomyosarcoma and to help families that are battling this awful disease like our Jordan.
C. David Pedri, Luzerne County manager: Im wishing for all Luzerne County citizens to have a positive experience with the Countys new voting machines. Also, Im wishing for a great turnout for Julys Rockin The River concert series.
Wilkes University interim President Paul S. Adams: First and foremost, we wish every success to the more than 1,100 students in the Wilkes Class of 2020. May your every wish come to be! Second, we wish for continued success under the leadership of our seventh president, Dr. Greg Cant. Dr. Cant will begin in June and we look forward to the ways in which he will continue to advance Wilkes as a small doctoral university like no other. And finally, our University has long enjoyed a productive partnership with Wilkes-Barres leaders. We look forward to continuing this tradition under the leadership of Mayor George Brown as he officially takes office.
John L. Augustine III, President/CEO Penns Northeast: Our new year goal is to add one more County to our regional partnership. We also hope to close on project Dempko, bringing hundreds of jobs to our area. And finally, a happy and healthy year for all in NEPA.
Anne E. Rodella, artistic director of F.M. Kirby Center: My wishes for 2020 are to continue to bring quality arts and entertainment to the F.M. Kirby Center, to make the arts accessible to all, to read more/create more/dance more, and to book Tom Waits at the F.M. Kirby Center.
U.S. Rep. Matt Cartwright, D-Moosic: I wish everyone in Northeastern Pennsylvania a happy and healthy New Year. In 2020, Im planning to continue to use my increasing seniority on the House Appropriations Committee to bring our fair share of federal money to Northeastern Pennsylvania, attract more federal contractors to open shop in our area, and provide more and better-paying jobs.
State Rep. Tarah Toohil, R-Butler Township: My New Years wish for our community is that our seniors (through legislative action) receive more property tax relief in 2020 so some of their burdens are lifted. For our children to have an increasingly innovative education so that they can bring in the next generation of family sustaining jobs to our region and to Pennsylvania. I also hope that more families will consider becoming emergency foster families for brief periods of time in order to meet our increased child protection needs in the Commonwealth.
State Sen. Lisa Baker, R-Lehman Township: That the joy, grace, and meaning of this holiday season carry into 2020 and guide our public policy-making toward constructive and productive results. That we are able to more deeply realize that the diversities in heritage and belief among us distinguish and strengthen Pennsylvania.
Larry Newman, executive director of Diamond City Partnership: My wishes for the new year are to continue making progress toward the goal of a vibrant Downtown Wilkes-Barre, with more historic preservation wins and more local businesses choosing to invest in the economic engine that is our center city.
And, from a personal perspective: health, happiness, and more time spent enjoying the outdoors with my family.
State Rep. Aaron Kaufer, R-Kingston: I wish that we could build enough support in the legislature and from the governor to get property tax elimination done. Our area needs it.
State Rep. Karen Boback, R-Dallas: Wishing everyone a healthy, happy new year filled with love, peace and prosperity!
Plymouth Borough Council: Members would like to extend warm wishes of a happy and healthy New Year to the residents, businesses, local organizations and all who have helped in providing support and services to improve our community. Community support provided much success in 2019 and Council looks forward to continue to work with the community and organizations in making 2020 even better.
Joe Nardone Sr., Gallery of Sound/Magnus Productions: Stay young in mind and spirit and never get old. And remember to Shake A Hand.
Happy New Year snowman.
Bill OBoyle
Reach Bill OBoyle at 570-991-6118 or on Twitter @TLBillOBoyle.
Read the original:
Local leaders offer their Happy New Year wishes - Wilkes Barre Times-Leader
Posted in Diet And Food
Comments Off on Local leaders offer their Happy New Year wishes – Wilkes Barre Times-Leader
Toddlers and tofu: is it safe for children to be vegan? – Her.ie
Posted: December 31, 2019 at 10:45 pm
Everyone and their mother is chatting about the diet that could be en route to saving the world. And, as it turns out, so are their kids.
We already know that's entirely possible to follow a vegan diet and get every single nutrient that you need to live a completely healthy life, but what about those among us who might be more vulnerable when it comes to growth and development?
Specifically, children.
It seems as if every couple of months we're presented with another shocking story of parents starving their children to the point of malnourishment via a so-called 'vegan diet.'
But is it really the 'vegan diet' we should be focusing on, or the active neglect these people are inflicting on their children.
And, at the end of the day, is it safe for children to be vegan?
According to dietician Maeve Hanan from Orla Walsh Nutrition - yes, it is.
She says that when it comes to nutrition, each individual is different.
What works for one person diet-wise may not work for another. However, choosing to eat a diet free from any animal products can be entirely safe if done properly, no matter how old a person is.
"A vegan diet can be safe and appropriate at all life stages," she says, "but there are certain groups that are more nutritionally vulnerable."
"Were talking about infants, young children, pregnant women, older adults, somebody whos unwell or malnourished, or someone who has an eating disorder. All those things can impact whether its appropriate, and those people may need some extra support."
This extra support could come in the form of working with a dietician, closely monitoring the person's health, and regularly going for check ups to ensure that they - and this is particularly applicable for children - are developing correctly.
It could even mean taking specific supplements that are suitable for children, providing them with their specific needs.
"There are appropriate supplements that vegan children and infants can take," says Maeve, "but generally you do need that extra bit of support and planning."
"If a child doesnt get the right nutrients at that stage, it can impact growth and development long term.
"[Veganism] absolutely can be done but if someones unsure, they should get individual advice from a dietician."
You can read more of Her's in-depth look at veganism in Irelandhere.
See the article here:
Toddlers and tofu: is it safe for children to be vegan? - Her.ie
Posted in Diet And Food
Comments Off on Toddlers and tofu: is it safe for children to be vegan? – Her.ie
What Is the 16:8 Diet – Does the 16/8 Intermittent Fasting Method Work? – GoodHousekeeping.com
Posted: December 31, 2019 at 10:45 pm
Silicon Valley moguls, celebrities, and social media influencers alike prescribe to the 16:8 diet, a form of intermittent fasting also known as the 8-hour diet. Proponents claim that restricting mealtimes you eat during an 8-hour window each day and fast the rest of the time helps with everything from weight loss to lowering the risk of chronic disease.
The problem with this popular method is that youre not making decisions based on how full or hungry you feel, but rather on a restricted time window a setup that can backfire in the long run if you're not careful. Here's what you need to know about 16:8 fasting before you start missing meals.
The 16:8 diet is a type of time-restricted fasting done to achieve better health or lose weight. (The 5:2 diet followed by Jimmy Kimmel, where you eat whatever you want five days a week and only consume 500 calories or less on the other two days, is also a modified form of fasting.)
On the 16:8 diet, you spend 16 hours of each day consuming nothing but unsweetened beverages like water, coffee, and tea. The remaining eight-hour window is when you eat all of your meals and snacks. Most people do this by starting a fast at night, skipping breakfast, and eating their first meal in the middle of the day. No foods are inherently off limits during that time, but some people will follow the keto diet at mealtimes to supercharge their weight loss.
While the term intermittent fasting (or IF) may be new to many of us, the practice isnt all that different from the way our ancestors likely lived: Hunt, gather, and eat during daylight; sleep and fast during darkness.
Some studies have found that theres virtually no difference between people who regularly practiced intermittent fasting and those who simply cut back their calorie intake overall.
A growing body of research demonstrates that a better strategy is optimizing the nutritional quality of what you already eat (veggies, fruit, lean protein, whole grains, and healthy fats) versus fasting or counting calories. Also, science suggests any potential benefit from fasting is quickly undone during the eating part of the cycle, in which appetite-suppressing hormones switch gears to make you feel even hungrier than you felt at baseline.
But some dieters may benefit from daily fasting if they have trouble sticking to prescribed meal plans or restrictive diets; a 2018 pilot study published in the Journal of Nutrition and Healthy Eating suggests that a 16:8 fasting plan can help obese dieters lose weight without having to count every single calorie they eat. This approach to fasting could also aid those battling other weight-related issues namely, high blood pressure. A new scholarly review published in the New England Journal of Medicine suggests that a 16:8 fasting plan may help the body naturally improve blood sugar regulation, as well as decrease blood pressure overall in the long run.
Forms of intermittent fasting like the 16:8 diet rely on the concept that fasting reduces oxidative stress on the body, which can decrease inflammation and the risk of chronic diseases.
Its also theorized that fasting gives your vital organs, digestive and absorptive hormones, and metabolic functions a break, according to a recent study published in Cell Metabolism. Since our bodies secrete insulin to help our cells absorb sugar, fasting is linked to reducing our susceptibility to insulin resistance over time. (High insulin levels ultimately put us at risk for a whole host of diseases.)
However, research has also linked fasting to increases in LDL cholesterol (the "bad" kind). Intermittent fasting can make you feel dizzy and nauseated and cause periods of low-blood sugar and dehydration. Despite the fact that most 16:8 enthusiasts drink water during fasting periods, it may not be enough (reminder: food itself provides quite a bit of water).
I also have a much deeper concern about the disordered eating behaviors that may arise from intermittent fasting. Research shows that fasting for a period of time followed by a limited window for eating primes you to overeat. It's a cycle that can be difficult to get out of because it impairs our body's natural hunger cues and metabolism. Restricted eating may also lead to an increased risk of depression and anxiety.
This is especially concerning for women, who have historically been more likely to develop eating disorders. The allotted periods of restriction followed by eating lends itself to binge-purge tendencies that cannot (and should not) be ignored. According to the National Eating Disorders Association, periods of fasting and binging are considered risk factors for eating disorders.
JGI/Jamie GrillGetty Images
Ultimately, it's a personal choice. But there are a few beneficial behaviors you can try without committing to the riskier elements of 16-hour fasts. The first is to better understand mindfulness and how it relates to your food choices. To get started, consider these questions when you're deciding when and what to eat:
Many of us eat based on scenario, not hunger levels. Case in point: Raise your hand if youve ever gone to the movies after dinner and suddenly wanted popcorn? Yep, me too!
By considering the moments when you eat, you may become aware of patterns you didn't notice before. Say youre a person who loves to graze during The Bachelor. If youre fasting after 8 p.m., youve automatically cut hours and subsequently, calories from your post-dinner snacking.
If you've cut out late-night snacking, that alone could help you go to bed earlier a very crucial component to any weight loss plan. Getting seven hours of sleep per night has been linked to better weight management, reduced risk of chronic disease, and improved metabolism.
The bottom line: Its simply not feasible for many of us to restrict food entirely for set periods of time in order to achieve better health. In addition to being difficult socially (who wants to skip happy hour or dinners with friends?), self-imposed rules are simply not as joyful as having the right information and making choices that empower you versus hold you back. It's best to find ways to make eating nutritious food work for you in the context of your day-to-day life. If you are considering intermittent fasting, Id encourage you to try it by starting small and keeping it as simple as possible: Close your kitchen after dinner, aim to get more sleep, and sit down for a full breakfast at your usual time tomorrow.
Read more here:
What Is the 16:8 Diet - Does the 16/8 Intermittent Fasting Method Work? - GoodHousekeeping.com
Posted in Diet And Food
Comments Off on What Is the 16:8 Diet – Does the 16/8 Intermittent Fasting Method Work? – GoodHousekeeping.com
What science says about the best way to eat (and what we’re still figuring out) – NBC News
Posted: December 30, 2019 at 6:41 pm
Eggs are good for you. Eggs are bad for you. Avoid red meat. Enjoy red meat in moderation. Butter is out. Butter is back. If your head is spinning, youre not alone. According to a recent International Food Information Council Foundation survey, 80 percent of people feel confused about nutrition. Of course, headlines are partly to blame, but disinformation on social networks along with food marketing makes matters worse.
Yet despite the seemingly always changing nutrition landscape and turnabouts in opinion and setting aside tribalistic views theres actually a lot of agreement in the nutrition world. In other words, these headline shifts are actually at odds with what we know. Heres a look at where there is consensus, along with a look at some areas where even the scientists are still a bit unclear.
Research consistently shows that when you eat mostly plant foods, markers of health improve. Benefits include lower blood pressure, triglyceride levels, glucose and waist circumference, which can translate to a lower risk of a number of different diseases, including heart disease and diabetes.
An interesting, recent study looked at different patterns of plant-based eating, from a strict vegan diet to a more flexible semi-vegetarian approach to a non-vegetarian diet, examining how each dietary pattern impacts different predictors of health. What was notable about this study is it investigated a spectrum of plant-based eating styles. It turns out, a strict vegan diet produced the highest levels of healthy biomarkers and the lowest levels of unhealthy markers. Vegetarians who include eggs, dairy and/or fish scored next best. The non-vegetarian group had the least favorable health markers in their blood, urine and tissue samples.
Plant-based eating isnt a new concept. Its been studied for decades and research repeatedly shows that a plant-focused plan can help offset a lot of the health challenges that develop over time. No matter what type of dietary pattern you follow, you should be eating mostly plant-based foots. That means 75 percent of your plate should include some mix of veggies, fruits, nuts, seeds, pulse and whole grains.
Though headlines this fall claimed otherwise, the majority of scientific evidence is on the side of limiting or avoiding these foods. In fact, the study from which these headlines arose was massively criticized and disputed. If you like red meat, but you also want to reduce your chances of dying prematurely from any number of causes, including heart disease and cancer, consider how you might cut back. Maybe that means eating a smaller portion of red meat on the occasions youre enjoying it, or maybe it means having it a little less often. Also consider what else youre eating alongside your steak dinner or at other eating occasions. A little red meat can be fine if your diet is rich in plant foods (see above).
The case against processed meat is a little more concerning. Earlier this year, Frank B. Hu, MD, Professor and Chair, Department of Nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, told me, The current evidence suggests the higher intake of processed meat, the higher the risk of chronic diseases and mortality. When pressed on what amount might be safe, he explained that we dont have evidence to suggest a safe amount, but that eating a small amount of processed meat on occasion (which he defined as once or twice a month) is unlikely to have a considerable impact on your health. If youre currently eating above this amount, it makes good health sense to cut back.
In the fat vs. carbs war, healthy wins. In other words, you can eat a low-fat, high-carb diet healthfully just as you can eat a high-fat, low-carb diet healthfully. The main thing is choosing your fat or carb options wisely. Were crystal clear on the fact that carbs from foods like veggies, starchy veggies (such as potatoes), fruits and pulses, all of which supply antioxidants, vitamins, minerals and fiber, are quite different from overly processed carbs, which supply few, if any, whole food nutrition.
There is also considerable agreement that fat is not the enemy and that fats from plant and fish sources provide anti-inflammatory health benefits. Inflammation within the body may not cause obvious symptoms, but when it persists, its thought to be involved in a number of disease processes, from mood disorders like depression, to heart disease, diabetes and Alzheimers disease. Though butter and other saturated fats may not be as unfavorable as we once thought, anti-inflammatory fats when eaten along with other foods that lower the inflammatory process may help you live and age more healthfully. In fact, even if youre following a high-fat keto diet, health experts recommend focusing on these fats over others.
Get the better newsletter.
I struggle to think of any dietary advice that has more unanimous agreement than to reduce your intake of hyper-processed foods and to favor whole or minimally processed foods instead. Weve discovered that heavily processed foods, which include processed meats, refined grains and many snacks and sweets, drive the inflammatory process that promotes disease, and diets high in heavily processed foods are associated with higher body weights and poorer health.
For the most part, choose whole or minimally processed foods whenever you can. That means looking at ingredient lists and trying to make healthier swaps for foods that are high in sodium, sugar, artificial sweeteners, colors and preservatives, which often signal that a product is heavily processed. This doesnt mean giving up convenience, though. Theres a wide range of minimally processed foods that make meal prep saner and get the green light from nutritionists.
Any one person can benefit from any number of eating patterns if focused on the above factors. Eating is a highly personal experience and it involves more than just fueling your body or sitting down to nutrients on a plate. Food can be nostalgic, part of social and religious events, and it can elicit an emotional response, providing a sense of comfort, stress reduction or joy. A meal is hardly ever just one thing and understanding all of the things it is to you, along with your personal non-negotiables (what you wont give up), can help guide you toward a dietary approach that you can live with.
Your neighbor might be successful on a keto plan and your co-worker may love being a pescatarian, but if youre a kosher vegetarian, these plans pose too many challenges. This may be an extreme example, but its meant to illustrate how important it is to understand your unique needs and then identify an eating pattern that suits you best. Its now widely recognized that different eating patterns can be appropriate for different situations, but thats only if you can stick with the advice. There are people who thrive on an intermittent fasting protocol while others cant put up with the hunger or limitations of restricting eating to certain time windows each day. Nourishing your body is a commitment not a passing fling so determine what type of eating pattern sounds most doable to you and then try to adhere to it in the healthiest way possible. That means something different to everyone, so just do you.
Nutrition isnt a perfect science in fact, far from it and we dont have everything sorted out. Heres where were not as buttoned up.
Many of our health recommendations boil down to reducing certain nutrients and emphasizing others but you dont eat a nutrient say fiber in isolation. Health recommendations based on these reductionist principles can be very misleading. Sticking with the fiber example, theres a tremendous difference between a fiber-rich quinoa and vegetable nourish bowl and a fiber-enhanced powdered supplement drink taken with a fast-food meal. Both meals might provide the same amount of an individual nutrient (fiber), but other than that, these two meals arent comparable.
In 2015, our Dietary Guidelines started talking about eating patterns, but it still called out individual nutrients, including saturated fat and sodium. And the following example highlights why this approach needs to be reassessed.
Under the suggestion to limit saturated fat, which has been linked to an increased risk of heart disease, you might cut full-fat milk, yogurt and cheese (all notoriously high in saturated fat) from your diet. But studies have shown that the saturated fats from these foods dont deserve the bad rap.
A recent, large meta-analysis involving 29 studies and more than 900,000 participants found that neither total dairy consumption nor milk consumption was linked with an increased risk of death and more notably, death from heart disease. To the contrary, in fact. Cheese, which is especially high in saturated fat (and also high in sodium), was associated with a slightly lower risk of stroke and coronary artery disease. An earlier study involving more than 5,000 participants reached similar conclusions that high-fat dairy foods arent as risky as we once thought.
There are many theories about why the saturated fats in dairy foods dont seem to promote cardiovascular diseases, but its a solid example of why we cant reduce our dietary advice to single nutrients.
Plus, the advice to remove something from your diet doesnt clearly address what to replace it with, which is a big deal. Looking back, when we cut fat from our diet, we replaced it with high-sugar carbs (Snackwells, anyone?), which set off a cascade of health problems. In this case, replacing a bit of cheese with potato chips isnt the same as replacing it with olives.
Instead of worrying about each individual nutrient, you can begin to make healthier shifts to your diet by following the advice described above (what weve gotten right), which are broader, health promoting eating patterns.
While Harvard researchers now predict that close to 50 percent of the population will be obese by 2030 and 25 percent will have severe obesity, we havent figured out how to tailor dietary advice to help people successfully lose weight for the long term. In fact, one study by Stanford University researchers attempted to determine whether people with certain genetic traits would lose weight better with either a low-fat or low-carb diet. Results were all over the map. After a year, people had lost an average of 13 pounds, but weight loss varied widely (some lost much more and others gained weight) and the study offered no clues as to which genotype might be predictive of weight loss success with either menu.
What this tells us is that neither eating pattern is superior, something weve seen repeatedly when pitting one diet against another. So again, do you. In this case, the study also underscores much of what I said earlier. Because eaters in both arms of the study were offered similar advice to include more veggies, emphasize whole foods and to limit junk food it validates that you can lose weight by following these three pillars of healthy eating.
Marketing is way ahead of science here and while you may be able to send off a stool sample in order to reveal information about your microbiome, we dont yet know how to reconfigure your microbiome or influence your weight based on this, your genetics or your metabolism.
In terms of your microbiome, heres what we do know. You can alter your microbiome in response to altering your diet, but other factors, including age, sex, ethnicity, environmental factors, lifestyle factors and medications can also influence the microbiome, making it difficult to create a personalized nutrition plan. Plus, even among food patterns we know to cause favorable shifts in the microbiome, like eating a fiber-rich diet that includes diverse food sources, there are individual responses that we cant yet predict and address. According to a recent review study, a tailored nutritional approach is in its infancy, and more feasible, sustainable personalized nutritional strategies need to be developed to optimize ones gut microbiome and improve host responsiveness. A new survey among physicians finds that 53 percent of doctors think this technology needs five or ten more years before its standard practice.
If youre curious about your genetics or your microbiome and you want to get tested, do so knowing that theres a lot we still dont know about how to personalize an eating approach based on those results.
Want more tips like these? NBC News BETTER is obsessed with finding easier, healthier and smarter ways to live. Sign up for our newsletter and follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Follow this link:
What science says about the best way to eat (and what we're still figuring out) - NBC News
Posted in Diet And Food
Comments Off on What science says about the best way to eat (and what we’re still figuring out) – NBC News
Make 2020 the Year of Less Sugar – The New York Times
Posted: December 30, 2019 at 6:41 pm
And too much added sugar in your diet can damage your liver, similarly to the way that alcohol can. About a third of American adults and 13 percent of children have nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, a condition linked to added sugar consumption that is on the rise and that can progress to serious, even deadly, liver illness.
Weve all seen the beer belly associated with drinking too much alcohol. Consuming too much added sugar can lead to a similar condition called sugar belly, in which your waist is bigger than your hips. Sugar belly can arise when the liver repeatedly detects more fructose, a form of sugar found in fruits that is also added to many processed foods, than our bodies can use. To deal with it, the liver breaks down the extra fructose and changes it to fat globules, which are then exported into the bloodstream and deposited around your internal organs and your midsection.
But isnt sugar a natural food? Thats a counter argument often promoted by the sugar industry, but there is nothing natural about the way most of us eat added sugar. When you eat a strawberry or other fruit, you are eating fructose in its natural state, and it comes with a number of micronutrients plus fiber, which slows absorption and the rate at which sugar enters your bloodstream. So yes, its O.K. to eat fruit! Your body can handle fructose when its eaten as whole fruit.
But the fructose found in ultraprocessed foods and beverages is concentrated from corn, beets and sugar cane, and much or all of the fiber and nutrients have been removed. Without the fiber to slow it down, your body gets a big dose of fructose that can wreak havoc.
High consumption of processed fructose also can dull your bodys reaction to the brain hormone leptin, which is a natural appetite suppressant. A condition called leptin resistance can develop among high-sugar eaters, and the brain stops getting the message to stop eating, leading to weight gain.
And increasingly, the scientific community is acknowledging the addictive nature of the fructose in processed foods and beverages. Brain scan studies show that fructose affects the dopamine system, a messenger center in the brain that controls how we experience pleasure. Eating lots of added sugar can create changes in the brain similar to those found in people who are addicted to cocaine and alcohol, and its one reason so many of us find ourselves craving sweets.
Cutting sugar is a simple concept, but it can be challenging when a majority of foods available in supermarkets contain added sugar. Gary Taubes, author of The Case Against Sugar and an advocate of low-carb eating, scoffs at the food industry recommendation that added sugars be consumed in moderation. Mr. Taubes has built a career touting the deleterious effects of processed food and added sugar. Just a few bites of a food like banana bread, he says, leave him wanting more.
View original post here:
Make 2020 the Year of Less Sugar - The New York Times
Posted in Diet And Food
Comments Off on Make 2020 the Year of Less Sugar – The New York Times
GOLO Diet and Weight Loss – Is Golo Safe and Effective – menshealth.com
Posted: December 30, 2019 at 6:41 pm
You're familiar with the fad diet cycle: Today's keto diet is yesterday's Atkins.
There's a near-constant rotation of weight loss plans that promise to supercharge your metabolism, tap energy stores, and ignite your fat burnersall in the name of a thinner, leaner you.
The GOLO diet is an exception only to the fad diet churn-and-burn cycle in that it builds itself around an expensive supplement. That pill, called Release, isn't FDA approved. The research GOLO uses to tout the power of Release isn't, well, all that powerful.
And there's more to it.
The GOLO diet suggests that spiked insulin levels are the cause of slow metabolism, which, in turn, is responsible for weight gain. GOLO argues that when you can control your insulin levels, you wont store excess sugar in your blood, which your body then stores as fat. Regulated insulin levels equal regulated weight.
The company makes this claim based on a team of doctors and pharmacists, though the company does not disclose the names and affiliations of these experts.
To its credit, the GOLO diet, unlike Whole30 or keto, does not prohibit or severely restrict you from eating entire food groups.
Instead, the GOLO diet focuses on whole, unprocessed, and unrefined foods. At mealtime, a dieter selects one to two servings from each categoryproteins, carbs, vegetables, and fats.
A GOLO dieter eats three meals a day, with breakfast and lunch meals larger than dinner. The diet permits snacks if you go longer than four to five hours between meals or if you exercise.
While this type of eating plan can work, this is where the GOLO diet starts to veer into questionable territory.
Supplement territory.
One of the core components of the GOLO diet is a supplement called Release. The company claims that Release will help kickstart your body's ability to regulate insulin, increase your metabolism, and burn more fat.
Here's what's in Release: magnesium (15 milligrams in 1 capsule), zinc (10 mg), chromium (70 micrograms)*, rhodiola root extract, inositol, berberine HCl, gardenia, banaba leaf extract, salacia bark extract, apple extract, vegetable cellulose, dextrin, glycine, silica, citric acid
*These three ingredients are the only three ingredients with amounts listed on the label. The amounts of these ingredients, however, are not disclosed because the formulation is patented.
And then there's the price.
One bottle (containing 90 capsules) costs $50. Buy three bottles and you'll reduce that fee to $99, but you can't shop around for Release anywhere cheaper because you can only buy the supplement through the company.
Approach with caution, says Abby Langer, R.D., founder of Abby Langer Nutrition.
First, there's the idea that eating certain foods can drastically improve your metabolic rate.
Theres nothing you can really eat to boost your metabolism to any degree that you will have a significant change in weight, Langer says. Your metabolism is dictated by genetics and muscle mass and, sure, hormones. But there are so many factors that something you eat wont radically change it.
Theories do exist linking increased insulin and weight gain, but scientists still arent certain which hormones control metabolism and weight.
Its a theory for a reason. It hasnt been studied a lot in humans, she says. We really dont know definitively if insulin resistance is responsible for increased body mass.
The GOLO diet centers on whole foods, and doesn't require you to eliminate food groups, which is a smart way to eatbut you don't need the GOLO diet to eat this way.
And you surely don't need a supplement, says Langer.
Release is just a supplement. While it may not be harmful physically, I dont recommend it," she says.
GOLO dieters have reportedly lost upwards of 100 pounds in just 12 months, and that can carry undeniable allure for someone looking to lose weight.
Except that that weight loss may have occurred not from GOLO's proclaimed ability to help regulate insulin, but instead from switching from processed foods to whole foods.
While GOLO leans heavily on the theory that insulin resistance slows metabolism, Langer cautions that there is no simple or accurate way to definitively measure a persons metabolism. As a result, there is no way to measure the GOLO diet's success.
This is the hallmark of a fad diet, Langer says. You give the followers an outcome that they cant measure.
And the research cited by the company?
The research studies done to support GOLOs claims were small, she says. The studies were done by the company. None of their stuff has been published in peer reviewed journals."
Rather than following one of these one-size-fits-all diets, Langer says the best path to an effective diet is to talk to a registered dietitian and carve out a plan tailored to you life, your goals, and your eating habits.
And consider this, as it pertains to all diets: If there was one diet on which everyone would lose weight and keep that weight off foreverwouldn't everyone already be on that diet?
Link:
GOLO Diet and Weight Loss - Is Golo Safe and Effective - menshealth.com
Posted in Diet And Food
Comments Off on GOLO Diet and Weight Loss – Is Golo Safe and Effective – menshealth.com
Everything you need to know about the keto diet – INSIDER
Posted: December 30, 2019 at 6:41 pm
Compared to the low-fat craze in the '90s, the keto diet seems to go against all diet logic. Because instead of cutting out fat, you eat large amounts of it for every meal.
And research shows that this diet can be effective and help fight diseases related to obesity. That said, the keto diet is not for everyone. Here's what you need to know.
The ketogenic diet was first introduced in the 1920s as a way to treat epilepsy, a seizure disorder. Medical professionals used the diet for two decades until modern epilepsy drugs were developed and it fell out of favor by the 1950s.
That was it for the keto diet for over half a century. Then, about 15 years ago, the diet reemerged. This time as a treatment for obesity and type 2 diabetes.
But even people who are not obese or have type 2 diabetes have adopted the keto diet at some point, including celebrities like Halle Berry, Vaness Hudgens, and LeBron James.
The way it works is that you eat mostly fat and very few carbohydrates. A typical keto diet consists of 75% fat, 20% protein, and 5% carbs. Compared to the average American diet which is 33% fat, 16% protein, and 51% carbs. On keto, common foods include:
When you follow the keto diet, your body stops relying on carbs as the main source of energy, which sends your body into ketosis. Ketosis is when your metabolism changes to burn fat for energy instead. This can lead to a loss of body fat, which can help prevent or improve medical conditions related to obesity like type 2 diabetes.
That's because, on keto, your body may also become more sensitive to insulin, a hormone that helps balance your blood sugar. A 2017 review of nine studies found that people with type 2 diabetes on a low-carb diet generally could control their blood glucose levels better than diabetes patients on either a normal or high-carb diet.
When following the keto diet, weight loss can vary from person to person, says Jeff Volek, a registered dietitian and professor at Ohio State University. "When people with excess weight start a ketogenic diet, they typically lose about 6 to 8 pounds the first week, then about 1 to 2 pounds per week thereafter," Volek says.
However, some people who go on keto reportedly suffer from some initial side effects including:
The initial weight loss is partly due to losing water weight because you tend to retain less water on a low-carb diet. And some studies suggest that you may not continue to lose weight on keto long-term. Some call this the "keto plateau" which is when you stop losing weight altogether.
Volek says that the keto diet is safe for many people to try and that it may mimic the way early humans ate. However, Volek says that in some cases, you should proceed with caution. "If you have diabetes and are using diabetes medications to control blood sugar, you should work closely with your physician in order to adjust medications appropriately."
The keto diet can be very restrictive and may be difficult for people to stick to, says Little. "The average 'healthy' person probably does not need to follow a keto diet but they could probably benefit from reducing their intake of refined/processed carbohydrates."
Keto isn't necessarily for everyone. Take kids, for example. Nutritionists recently told Insider that putting children or teens on the keto diet or basically any restrictive diet can lead to nutritional deficiencies and eating disorders.
Moreover, keto isn't great long-term if you have, or are at risk of, heart rhythm problems. A large 2019 study, published by the American College of Cardiology, that involved medical records of nearly 14,000 people reported that people who don't consume many grains, fruits, and starchy vegetables for years at a time, are at a higher risk of developing a heart condition called AFib.
Even if you're otherwise healthy, long-term keto could lead to vitamin B and C deficiencies, since many foods rich in these vitamins like beans, legumes, and fruit are also high in carbs. And if you're not getting the right nutrients, keto may actually lead you to gain weight, not lose it.
Bottom line: The keto diet is not for everyone and you should speak with a certified nutritionist before starting it, especially if you have a medical condition that the diet may affect.
Read more:
Everything you need to know about the keto diet - INSIDER
Posted in Diet And Food
Comments Off on Everything you need to know about the keto diet – INSIDER
The New Year’s Noise Diet: Why you should cut the empty brain calories in 2020 – Wiscasset Newspaper
Posted: December 30, 2019 at 6:41 pm
If youre like most of us, you overindulged a bit too much in 2019. No, not on calories (well, maybe those too!), but on noise. Thats the name for the dizzying onslaught of information from work emails, app notifications, the 24/7 news cycle, social media updates, and other forms of screen time that leaves us unable to focus, listen, or do deep work.
A smidgen of noise now and again is okay. (We all have our guilty pleasures!) But consuming it mindlessly, all day long, is as bad as keeping a bag of chips, a monster-size soda, and a can of frosting at our desk and reaching for them every few minutes.
Too many empty brain calories won't make you fat but they will make you mentally anemic. Noise keeps you in a constant state of distraction. And like actual junk food, a high-noise digital diet is addictive, yet it never satisfies or nourishes you.
The real problem with giving into noise temptation isnt what youre doing; its what youre not doing. Youre tuning out what really matters. Youre skimming the surface. When youre scrolling Facebook, for instance, you arent learning a new language, refining that career-changing presentation, or engaging with your kids in a meaningful way.
The new year is the perfect time to put yourself on a noise diet. To help with your calorie count, lets take a look at what noise junk food looks like:
The irritatingyet addictiveparade of social media stock characters in your newsfeed. This band of noisemakers assaults your brain with their cries for attention. For instance:
The humble bragger. Your college rival who subtly slips into her post that she just got another promotion at her swanky company. #blessed #gag
The cryptic drama-stirrer. That self-righteous friend who calls out people anonymously for perceived slights or makes vague poor me pity posts. (Cue the wave of very concerned commenters.)
The over-sharer. We dont need a play-by-play of your colonoscopy. Thanks.
The drop-of-a-hat ranter. Whose day would be complete without a furious recounting of how the barista screwed up your nonfat, dairy-free, double-shot, decaf, extra-hot mochaccino with extra foam? The nerve!
The overly zealous kid promoter. Yes, yes, we know Junior is the smartest, cutest, cleverest tot around your other 15 posts this week made that perfectly clear.
The amateur political pundit. Do not engage...just dont.
Dumb shows on TV. You dont need to waste your precious attention span watching Jerry Springer, B-list celebrity lip-synch contests, or those morning talk shows. Substance-free television combined with the lure of a cozy couch can quickly turn into a lost day or evening.
The 24/7 news carousel-of-darkness. Sadly, most news is bad news, and during a controversial election year it can also be fodder for controversy, vitriol, and the loss of civility with friends, family, and neighbors. (Hint: You don't need to totally disengage, but its good to be discerning about what you let in and about how often you engage in debates with the people in your life.)
Your work email. Your boss just had to email you at 9:30 p.m. ... again. The moment you jump out of the bath to write back is the moment work email becomes yet another source of noise.
Are you feeling that noise hangover settle in? Dont worry, you can kick off the new year with a different kind of diet one that cuts the empty brain calories of digital distraction and gives you what youre really craving: a more intentional life. Join my Just Say No to Noise Movement and tip the scales in the other direction. A few suggestions:
Try going a week without social media. (We promise, youll survive.) A short detox from social media is a pretty painless way to unplug and reclaim a lot of lost time. When the week is over, you can see if you even want to go back to occasional scrolling.
Reduce temptation by hiding distracting devices from yourself. OK, you probably can't hide your computer but you can shut the office door. As for cell phones and tablets, treat them like what they are: gateways to digital distraction (and it is a very slippery slope). Find an out-of-the-way place to charge and store your devices so youre not constantly reaching for them.
Break the idiot-box background noise habit. It's easy to mindlessly turn on the TV when you get home. Problem is, its broadcasting nonstop noise into your work-free hours. Instead, plan a time to watch your favorite shows. Daily exposure to the depressing litany of pain and conflict we call news isn't making your life better. Neither is watching the Fatty McButterpants episode of King of Queens for the 50th time. (OK,we admit that one is pretty funny.)
Set some work/life boundaries with the 7-to-7 rule. The company won't crash if you stop answering emails around the clock. After 7 p.m., put away your devices for the night. Don't pick them up again until 7 a.m. the next day.
Insist on phone-free family dinners ... Yes, the kids might whine at first, but soon enough they'll get used to conversing with the out-of-touch Boomers and Karens at the table.
...and screen-free family fun days. For instance, make video games and TV completely off-limits every Wednesday and Friday. Yes, even if the kids swear they have no homework. Instead, do something fun or productive as a family. Play a board game. Go bowling or skating. Cook a great meal together. Volunteer at the local animal shelter. Heck...maybe even read.
Learn to save your appetite for the stuff that really matters ... Your appetite is really your attention span, and its your most precious resource. Filling up on headlines, emails, and social media means there's little left over for doing the deep and meaningful work that helps you reach big goals at work and in your personal life. Before you cozy into an hour of lurking on your ex's Facebook page, close the laptop and find something productive to do.
...and choose some meaningful goals to pursue. When you are able to sharpen and aim your focus, you can do some pretty impressive stuff. Want to start a website? Get a better job? Learn to code? These North Star goals are the best incentive to rethink your relationship with noise and see how your life changes.
We don't realize that very often our addiction to information is the thing holding us back from getting a huge promotion, becoming valedictorian, or training for a marathon, but thats exactly what happens as time passes. Once you think of it this way, its so much easier to put yourself on a noise diet. Make this the year you take back your time and use it to do something that matters.
Joseph McCormack is the author of NOISE: Living and Leading When Nobody Can Focus. He is passionate about helping people gain clarity when there is so much competing for our attention. He is a successful marketer, entrepreneur, and author. His first book, BRIEF: Make a Bigger Impact by Saying Less (Wiley, 2014), sets the standard for concise communication. Joe is the founder and managing director of The BRIEF Lab, an organization dedicated to teaching professionals, military leaders, and entrepreneurs how to think and communicate clearly. His clients include Boeing, Harley-Davidson, Microsoft, Mastercard, DuPont, and select military units and government agencies. He publishes a weekly podcast called Just Saying that helps people master the elusive skills of focus and brevity.
To learn more, visit http://www.noisethebook.com
Excerpt from:
The New Year's Noise Diet: Why you should cut the empty brain calories in 2020 - Wiscasset Newspaper
Posted in Diet And Food
Comments Off on The New Year’s Noise Diet: Why you should cut the empty brain calories in 2020 – Wiscasset Newspaper