Tuesday, July 11, 2017

Poor Diet Tied To Health Problems

I wrote about losing body fat, exercising, and diet so when I found this post on WebMD I wanted to reblog it. I wrote a similar post this week on another blog. I was emphasizing the need for a good diet. You can't tell immediately that your body isn't functioning properly. It takes time, sometimes years and by that time you just think your condition is because of your age, but it not. Your bodies condition is due to a bad diet and lack of exercise or just not active enough. Read the post below for more information on a bad diet.
Study explores which foods and nutrients may be helpful or harmful
By Karen Pallarito
HealthDay Reporter
Nearly half of all deaths from heart disease, stroke, and diabetes in the United States are associated with diets that skimp on certain foods and nutrients, such as vegetables, and exceed optimal levels of others, like salt, a new study finds.
Using available studies and clinical trials, researchers identified 10 dietary factors with the strongest evidence of a protective or harmful association with death due to "cardiometabolic" disease.
"It wasn't just too much 'bad' in the American diet; it's also not enough 'good,'" said lead author Renata Micha.
"Americans are not eating enough fruits, vegetables, nuts/seeds, whole grains, vegetable oils or fish," she said.
Micha is an assistant research professor at the Tufts University School of Nutrition Science and Policy in Boston.
The researchers used data from multiple national sources to examine deaths from cardiometabolic diseases -- heart disease, stroke, and type 2 diabetes and the role that diet may have played.
"In the U.S. in 2012, we observed about 700,000 deaths due to those diseases," Micha said. "Nearly half of these were associated with suboptimal intakes of the 10 dietary factors combined."
Too much salt in people's diets was the leading factor, accounting for nearly 10 percent of cardiometabolic deaths, according to the analysis.
The study identifies 2,000 milligrams a day, or less than 1 teaspoon of salt, as the optimal amount. While experts don't agree on how low to go, there is broad consensus that people consume too much salt, Micha noted.
Other key factors in cardiometabolic death included low intake of nuts and seeds, seafood omega-3 fats, vegetables, fruits and whole grains, and high intake of processed meats (such as cold cuts) and sugar-sweetened beverages.

We are killing ourselves because of what we eat. Lose your body fat, eat the right foods and walk more and you can live a longer, healthier life.
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