Thursday, 10 July 2014

Top 10 sources of calories in the U.S. diet

Also: Low-fat, low-carb, or Mediterranean: which diet is right for you? New strategies help smokers quit.
HEALTHbeat
July 10, 2014
Harvard Medical School

Top 10 sources of calories in the U.S. diet

According to the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee (a panel of 13 nutrition experts charged with helping develop federal nutrition standards), Americans are eating many more calories than they used to.

Very few people follow the federal dietary guidelines, which recommend daily servings of dark green vegetables, orange vegetables, legumes, fruits, whole grains, and low-fat milk and milk products. Instead, we eat foods full of refined grains, sugar, fat, and calories — just check out the list below.



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This is one Top 10 list you don’t want to make. Take a look and see what you can do to get closer to the recommended dietary guidelines.

What Americans eat: Top 10 sources of calories in the U.S. diet

  1. Grain-based desserts (cakes, cookies, donuts, pies, crisps, cobblers, and granola bars)

  2. Yeast breads

  3. Chicken and chicken-mixed dishes

  4. Soda, energy drinks, and sports drinks

  5. Pizza

  6. Alcoholic beverages

  7. Pasta and pasta dishes

  8. Mexican mixed dishes

  9. Beef and beef-mixed dishes

  10. Dairy desserts

Source: Report of the 2010 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee

For more on weight loss strategies, buy Healthy Solutions to Lose Weight and Keep it Off, a Special Health Report from Harvard Medical School.

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News and Views from the Harvard Health Blog

New strategies help smokers quit when nicotine replacement alone doesn’t work

Nicotine is so addictive that smoking, or using tobacco in other forms, may be the toughest unhealthy habit to break. Two new studies offer good news to smokers who want to quit but haven’t been able to do it with just nicotine replacement.

Read More

Low-fat, low-carb, or Mediterranean: which diet is right for you?

Losing weight sometimes takes some experimenting. If you give a diet your best shot and it doesn’t work for long, maybe it wasn’t the right one for you, your metabolism, or your situation. Your genes, your family, your environment — even your friends — influence how, why, what, and how much you eat. So don’t get too discouraged or beat yourself up because a diet that “worked for everybody” didn’t pay off for you. You can always try another, keeping in mind that almost any diet will help you shed pounds — at least for a short time.

Here’s a look at three common diet approaches.

1. Low-fat: Doesn’t taste great … and is less filling

Once the main strategy for losing weight, low-fat diets were shoved aside by the low-carb frenzy. But healthy fats can actually promote weight loss, and some fats are good for the heart; eliminating them from the diet can cause problems.

Because fat contains nine calories per gram while carbohydrates contain four, you could theoretically eat more food without taking in more calories by cutting back on fatty foods and eating more foods that are full of carbohydrates, especially water-rich fruits and vegetables. Still, such a diet tends to be less filling and flavorful than other diets, which lessens its long-term appeal. And if the carbs you eat in place of fat are highly processed and rapidly digested, you may be sabotaging your weight-loss plan.

2. Low-carbohydrate: Quick weight loss, but long-term safety questions

Eating carbohydrates — especially highly processed ones like white bread and white rice — quickly boosts blood sugar, which triggers an outpouring of insulin from the pancreas. That surge of insulin can rapidly drop blood sugar, causing more hunger. Low-carb proponents claim that people who eat a lot of carbohydrates take in extra calories and gain weight. Limiting carbs in favor of protein and fat is supposed to prevent the insulin surge and make you feel full longer.

To make up for the lack of carbohydrates in the diet, the body mobilizes its own carbohydrate stores from liver and muscle tissue. In the process, the body also mobilizes water, meaning that the early pounds shed are water weight. The result is rapid weight loss, but after a few months, weight loss tends to slow and reverse, just as happens with other diets.

The American Heart Association cautions people against following the Atkins diet because it is too high in saturated fat and protein, which can be hard on the heart, kidneys, and bones. The lack of carb-rich fruits and vegetables is also worrisome, because eating these foods tends to lower the risk of stroke, dementia, and certain cancers. The South Beach and other, less restrictive low-carbohydrate diets offer a more reasonable approach.

3. Mediterranean-style: Healthy fats and carbs with a big side of fruits and vegetables

Good fats are the monounsaturated fats found in olive oil and other oils, and the polyunsaturated fats found in fish, canola oil, walnuts, and other foods. (Saturated and trans fats are the bad guys.) Mediterranean diets tend to have a moderate amount of fat, but most of it comes from healthy oils. The carbohydrates in Mediterranean-style diets tend to come from unrefined, fiber-rich sources like whole wheat and beans. These diets are also rich in fruits and vegetables, nuts, seeds, and fish, with only modest amounts of meat and cheese.

People living in Mediterranean countries have a lower-than-expected rate of heart disease. But the traditional lifestyle in the region also includes lots of physical activity, regular meal patterns, wine, and good social support. It’s hard to know what relative roles these different factors play — but there is growing evidence that, in and of itself, a Mediterranean-type diet can reduce cardiovascular risk and the development of diabetes.

Make your own

A good diet should provide plenty of choices, relatively few restrictions, and no long grocery lists of (sometimes expensive) special foods. It should be as good for your heart, bones, brain, and colon as it is for your waistline. And it should be something you can sustain for years. Such a diet won’t give you a quick fix. But it can offer you something better — a lifetime of savory, healthy choices that will be good for all of you, not just parts of you.

To learn more about weight loss and choosing the right diet, buy Healthy Solutions to Lose Weight and Keep it Off, a Special Health Report from Harvard Medical School.

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