What to Eat Now Diet and Health
What to Eat Now - Diet and Health
— Receive access to exclusive information, benefits and discounts This conflicting dietary advice from the world of medical science is made even more complicated by the diet books, documentaries and news reports recently flung into the nutritional universe. (Meat and butter are good for you! Sugar will kill you!) Is it any wonder, then, that so many of us have decided to say the heck with it — we may as well have our filet mignon and foie gras while we're still alive to enjoy it? Well, not so fast. It's true that the science is confusing, says Walter Willett, M.D., noted nutritionist and chair of the Department of Nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health. But it's also true that we are in the throes of an obesity crisis so pervasive that 1 in every 4 health care dollars are spent combating the resulting side effects of heart disease, diabetes, and high . And the very nature of scientific discovery, with nutrition research a subset of that, is that findings build on one another, adding to our total understanding of what constitutes a This, then, is what most of the experts agree is true — at press time, anyway.
What to Eat Now
Here' s what really matters when it comes to diet and health
Ryann Cooley/Getty Images What constitutes a healthy diet? Are sugary drinks really that harmful? l Low fat, low sugar. High fat, low carb. High carb, plant-based. Mediterranean. Atkins. Ornish. At some point in the past 12 months, at least one study has appeared in a well-respected, peer-reviewed medical journal touting the health benefits of each of these diets. A study in the journal The Lancet Oncology found that the — a strict low-fat regimen that allows no more than 10 percent of calories from fat — not only reverses , but it also lengthens our telomeres, the bits of DNA on the ends of chromosomes, in effect increasing . Then again, a study in the New England Journal of Medicine found that a relatively high-fat — with its emphasis on fatty fish, nuts and olive oil — prevents heart disease and stroke while cutting your risk of , too. But wait! Adults who eat a mostly plant-based diet live significantly longer than , says JAMA Internal Medicine.Related
— Receive access to exclusive information, benefits and discounts This conflicting dietary advice from the world of medical science is made even more complicated by the diet books, documentaries and news reports recently flung into the nutritional universe. (Meat and butter are good for you! Sugar will kill you!) Is it any wonder, then, that so many of us have decided to say the heck with it — we may as well have our filet mignon and foie gras while we're still alive to enjoy it? Well, not so fast. It's true that the science is confusing, says Walter Willett, M.D., noted nutritionist and chair of the Department of Nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health. But it's also true that we are in the throes of an obesity crisis so pervasive that 1 in every 4 health care dollars are spent combating the resulting side effects of heart disease, diabetes, and high . And the very nature of scientific discovery, with nutrition research a subset of that, is that findings build on one another, adding to our total understanding of what constitutes a This, then, is what most of the experts agree is true — at press time, anyway.