Note: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.
Purchase Benefits
What is included with this book?
Acknowledgments | ix | ||||
Foreword | xiii | ||||
|
|||||
Introduction | |||||
|
1 | (10) | |||
|
|||||
|
11 | (4) | |||
|
15 | (4) | |||
|
19 | (9) | |||
|
28 | (9) | |||
|
|||||
|
37 | (12) | |||
|
49 | (13) | |||
|
62 | (9) | |||
|
71 | (13) | |||
|
84 | (14) | |||
|
98 | (11) | |||
|
109 | (15) | |||
|
124 | (14) | |||
|
138 | (15) | |||
|
153 | (7) | |||
|
160 | (11) | |||
|
171 | (10) | |||
|
181 | (13) | |||
|
194 | (13) | |||
|
|||||
|
207 | (49) | |||
|
256 | (13) | |||
|
269 | (8) | |||
|
277 | (28) | |||
Bibliography | 305 | (22) | |||
Index | 327 |
The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
Chapter One
How Your Diet Is Killing You
The foods you eat every day, from the fast food you mindlessly consume to the best meals you savor in a top restaurant, are doing much more than making you fat or thin. Their effects on your body are making the difference between the development of chronic disease and a vigorous extended life. They can prevent or greatly reduce your risk of vision problems, stroke, heart disease, diabetes, and a host of killers. These are not just vague promises; they are facts that are now supported by an impressive and irrefutable body of research.
Most respectable scientists in the world today agree that at least 30 percent of all cancers are directly related to nutrition. Some would argue that the figure is as high as 70 percent.
For example, we know that the people who eat the most fruits and vegetables are half as likely to develop cancer as those who eat the least amount of these foods.
It's not just cancer that's nutrition related: about half of all cardiovascular disease and a significant percentage of hypertension cases can be traced to diet as well. In the Nurses' Health Study (an ongoing study of over 120,000 female nurses, begun in Framingham, Massachusetts,in 1976), the nonsmoking women with a median daily intake of 2.7 servings of whole grains were half as likely to suffer a stroke as other women in the study. Given this, it's particularly alarming to learn that fewer than 8 percent of Americans eat this much whole grains.
Indeed, most of us are eating ourselves to death: only about 10 percent of Americans eat the foods that would enable them to be free of chronic disease and premature death.
Our Western diets are literally killing us. While man evolved on a plant-based diet more than fifty thousand years ago,our modern diet—the one our parents ate and the one we're eating—developed only during the past fifty to eighty years. It is not serving us well. We humans are genetically "wired" for starvation, not an overabundance of food. Our genes are set for hunter-gatherer mode, and a diet rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, nuts and seeds, and lean, wild game, not for the majority of foods and beverages found in today's supermarkets.
Here are eleven disastrous developments in nutrition that are ruining your health and the health of most everyone in modern industrialized societies:
Few people, including health professionals, are aware of the significant recent decline in our overall health status. More than 125 million Americans have at least one chronic condition like diabetes, cancer, heart disease, or glaucoma. The Centers for Disease Control estimates that one-third of Americans who were born in 2000 will develop diabetes in their lifetime. Sixty million Americans have more than one condition. It's getting worse every day. In 1996, estimates were made projecting the rate of chronic disease in the future.
Four years later, in 2000, the number of people with chronic ailments was twenty million higher than had been anticipated. By the year 2020, a projected one-quarter of the American population will be living with multiple chronic conditions, and estimated costs for managing these conditions will reach $1.07 trillion.
The most shocking nugget of information in this dismal overview of American health is that the age of the "chronically ill" is declining. About half of chronically ill Americans are under age 45 and, stunningly, 15 percent of that number are children who are suffering from diabetes, asthma, developmental disabilities, cancer, and other disorders.
As a doctor, I see the imperfections of the system every day. The general unspoken assumption among many people is that you can eat whatever you feel like eating and count on a pill or a surgery to take care of the fallout down the line. For many of us, the only diet-related concern, if we have one, is weight control.
What's the answer? Clearly, we need to do better if we want to live longer and avoid chronic disease. In simplest terms, we need to work with a systemour bodiesthats geared to thrive in times of starvation and high-energy expenditure and adjust for greatly reduced activity levels in a world where food is overabundant. In other words, we need to get as much nutrition as possible from fewer calories. This is possible only if we select the most nutrient-dense, low-calorie foods and make these foods the backbone of our daily diet. SuperFoods Rx will show you how easy this is to do.
SuperFoods Rx
Excerpted from Superfoods Rx: Fourteen Foods That Will Change Your Life by Steven G. Pratt, Kathy Matthews
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.