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 »  Home  »  Low Fat  »  Eat, Drink & Be Healthy
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Eat, Drink & Be Healthy
Published 03/4/2006 | Low Fat , High Fiber | Rating:


As the obesity crisis in the U.S. rises, the USDA food pyramid has been at the forefront of controversy, under fire from nutrition experts and physicians who deem it "wrong." Health researcher Dr. Walter Willett is one of these people who believe the pyramid actually does more harm than good.

His alternative is the Eat, Drink & Be Healthy. As chairman of the Department of Nutrition at Harvard School of Public Health, Dr. Willett has done a vast amount of research involving the effects of a healthy diet on disease prevention. He points to findings that show 82 percent of heart attacks, 70 percent of strokes, 90 percent of type 2 diabetes and 70 percent of colon cancer can be warded off by eating the right foods.

Dr. Willett and his associates have assembled their own food guide pyramid based on the most up-to-date science. At the bottom of the pyramid is regular exercise.

The next level is complex carbohydrates such as whole-grains and healthy forms of fat (from vegetable oils). Most calories are derived from some source of carbohydrate and fat. Some of the fats from the top of the pyramid have been moved down to the base.

The pyramid emphasizes fruits and vegetables with the exception of potatoes. There is a level for legumes and nuts. At the top of the pyramid are foods high in saturated fat: red meat, dairy products and dairy fat. Other foods include white bread, white rice, white pasta and sweets which should be used minimally. More than 30 percent of calories should come from healthy fats. 


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  • Comment #1 (Posted by mari)
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    DRINK 100% milk. Yes pure homogenized milk. Eat only BUTTER. Oleo causes cancer, it's plastic. My mother, her mother and sisters were in high 90's and also over 100 years old, when they passed away.
    Peacefully. They enjoyed life. Enjoyed the kitchen and were the best cooks. We all are in the high 280 pound or more bracket. Now IF you would rather be a skinny boney full of cancer and heart
    disease woman, well its your choice. For you, life
    is short. Live as God intended. Enjoying what he
    gave us on this earth to eat/drink. Use your head!
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by Denise)
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    The article have a great beginning, could you supply me with the additional information, i.e. pyramid that you spoke of/
     
  • Comment #3 (Posted by Jewel)
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    Great article, and I agree, this new food pyramid is bunk. I am sticking to the old "tried & true" pyramid. I think it is a much healthier way to eat.
     
  • Comment #4 (Posted by Tiffany)
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    Why can't you guys just leave the food pyramid guide alone and leave it be? Stop trying to change it. It's been the same for ages and there are still alot of healthy people out there. It's not about the foods you eat that causes weight gain, but it's how much of it you consume. I know lots of people in their sixties, and up and they have never dieted in their whole lives and are healthy as horses. They are not overweight either. My mom is 62 years old and she is still very slim. She had five of us and got her figure back within three months. She doesn't excercise, or diet or anything. She eats pretty much what she wants. No diet foods, no fat free, low fat, etc. Just regular foods. Today she is still a perfect size 6 after having five kids. I recently had my blood tested for cholesterol, diabetes, etc and everything was fine. And please keep in mind that I eat whatever I want as well. I am a sweet freak and I too was surprised that my results were normal because I was for sure that the sweets would higher my cholesterol but guess what? I'm fine. So I don't believe in your pyramid. What the last person said about that diet stuff causing cancer is true. You don't know what is added to that stuff. The best way to weight loss is to eat in moderation and exercise. That's the only key. Point blank.
     
  • Comment #5 (Posted by Marian Elliott)
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    I agree that the food pyramid needs to be changed. This might be a great beginning if we could see the revised pyramid.
     
  • Comment #6 (Posted by Louise)
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    the Food Pyramid, as wll as dieticians, have been confused for a long time. Just because you're thin or not overweight, doesn't mean you are healthy. A lot of healthy-looking people who eat right and exercise fall over dead every day. A lot has to do with genetics which we don't have control over. Health started being a problem with we got away from eating healthy foods and started eating prepared, packaged foods out of either laziness or alleged necessity. Forget the mixes, the boxes and the frozen dinners as well as fast food. Take the time to cook from scratch. Use whole milk and natural products. Stay away from meat that has been inujected with hormones and antibiotics and salt-solutions. Go organic as much as possible. Enjoy the taste of real food. Eggs are good for you. Eggs are the only perfect food. Use olive oil. Eat fish that was caught in the ocean, not raised on a fish farm, where they swim in their own excrement because the water is never changed. How healthy do you think that kind of fish is for you? Eat fresh vegetables but wash them first. Visit your local farmers market. And, walk more. We have more people dying because of chemicals in our foods, our carpets, our clothes and our toothpaste. Drink distilled water. And stay away from flouride in anything. See, it's not so hard to be healthy. You have to be aware, and you need to make more of an effort in being healthy. And, don't smoke. Make sure you get your daily dose of red wine. And enjoy life because even with all of that, there is still no guarantee that any of this will help you not get hit by a car.
     
  • Comment #7 (Posted by Kelly)
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    Most of us who are responding have (at least) a basic idea on how to eat correctly. However I (personally) would like to see the new and revised pyramid to compare it with the old one. Most americans eat WAY too many unrefined carbs, so prehaps there is something to a new pyramid?
     
  • Comment #8 (Posted by Tammy)
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    These articles are wonderful, but they never state how to obtain the information that is being discussed. Just how do you find Dr. Walter Willett's pyramid?
     
  • Comment #9 (Posted by Loveley Lyd)
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    You have some good thoughts there.
     
  • Comment #10 (Posted by Carolyn Lee)
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    I believe that the changes made reflect the lifestyle of the average
    adult today, including those of us over 65.
     
  • Comment #11 (Posted by Carla)
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    This seems to be like so many of your articles...sketchy and vague. I still wonder if it isnt always just a ploy to get us to buy something like somebody's product/service, or book.
     
  • Comment #12 (Posted by Debbie)
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    It would have been more beneficial and educational to the reader if Willett's recommendations had been compared to the USDA Pyramid. I am not as familiar with the USDA version, along with many Americans, I'm sure, and would like to have seen it side-by-side. Thank you.
     
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