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It's time to stop counting the calories, and
instead start promoting the nutritional value of foods if we are to
rapidly cut illness and death from cardiovascular disease and curb the
rising tide of obesity, say experts in an editorial published in the
online journal Open Heart.
For
example, boosting omega 3 fatty acid (from fatty fish), olive oil, and nut
intake have all been associated with reductions in deaths from all causes and
from cardiovascular disease, within months, they say.
But
clinicians have failed to act for far too long, amid an excessive focus on the
calorific content of food by the food and weight loss industries, despite
mounting evidence that it's the nutritional content that matters, they suggest.
Daily
consumption of a sugary drink (150 calories) is associated with a significantly
increased risk of type 2 diabetes whereas daily consumption of a handful of
nuts (30 g of walnuts, 15 g of almonds and 15 g hazelnuts) or four tablespoons
of extra virgin olive oil (around 500 calories) is associated with a
significantly reduced risk of heart attack and stroke.
It
has been estimated that increasing nut consumption by two servings a week could
stave off 90,000 deaths from cardiovascular disease in the US alone.
And
the Action for Health in Diabetes trial shows that a low calorie diet on top of
increased physical activity in patients with type 2 diabetes was not associated
with a reduced risk of cardiovascular death despite significant weight loss and
a monitoring period of 13.5 years, they point out.
"Shifting
the focus away from calories and emphasising a dietary pattern that focuses on
food quality rather than quantity will help to rapidly reduce obesity, related
diseases, and cardiovascular risk," they insist.
"Primary
and secondary care clinicians have a duty to their individual patients and also
to their local populations. Our collective failure to act is an option we
cannot afford," they write, citing the human and economic toll this is
taking.
Obesity
costs the NHS over £5 billion a year, while the costs of type 2 diabetes add up
to more than £20 billion and are predicted to double over the next 20 years.
Similarly, the cost of diabetes has risen 40% in the past five years in the US,
adding up to $245 billion in 2012, they say.
The
evidence shows that poor diet is consistently responsible for more disease and
death than physical inactivity, smoking and alcohol put together, they say,
calling for sugary drinks to be taxed; government subsidies to make fruit,
vegetables, and nuts more affordable; and tighter controls on the marketing of
junk food.
"Applying
these population wide policies might achieve rapid reductions in disease and
hospital admissions visible even within the electoral terms of most
politicians," they suggest.
"It
is time to stop counting calories, and time to instead promote good nutrition
and dietary changes that can rapidly and substantially reduce cardiovascular
mortality. The evidence indeed supports the mantra that 'food can be the most
powerful form of medicine or the slowest form of poison'," they write.
"Recommending
a high fat Mediterranean type diet and lifestyle to our patients, friends and
families, might be a good place to start," they conclude.
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