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  • May 15, 2006

    Vegetarian Diets: Eat as Much as You Want & Still Lose Weight

    By Melinda Smith
    Washington, DC
    11 May 2006

    http://www.voanews.com/english/2006-05-11-voa48.cfm

    It seems too good to be true. Eat as much as you want
    and still lose weight? That’s the conclusion of a
    group of health experts who say a vegetarian diet is
    just the ticket for losing those unwanted pounds or
    kilos. But others say a side order of common sense
    goes along with it.

    Hamburgers and french fries … staples of what’s
    called the “Western diet”. Quick … easy … often
    cheap … and very fattening. This calorie-rich diet
    has become one of America’s most successful exports.
    McDonald’s and other fast food restaurants are popping
    up in China and elsewhere, and health experts lay much
    of the blame for a worldwide problem of obesity at
    their doorsteps.

    Obesity is a serious health problem in the United
    States. Fad diets that guarantee weight loss often
    make headlines. But one of the latest studies to grab
    attention supports the old-fashioned notion that if
    you eat your fruits and vegetables, you can lose
    weight.

    Washington dietitian Susan Levin is with the
    Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, which
    conducted the research. She says the diet is simple:
    just whole grains, fruits, vegetables and legumes.
    “Those are the four food groups that a plant-based
    diet should be built around and those food groups are
    so high in fiber and typically low in calories and low
    in fat that you don’t have to think about quantity.”

    But Washington nutritionist Janet Zalman is concerned
    about the reality of sticking to this kind of diet. “I
    think that’s for most busy people in major cities
    pretty impractical because there’s no way you can
    really eat in any kind of restaurant and do it in an
    effective way, because everything is going to have
    some butter, some cheese, and I think only having
    fruits, vegetables, grains and some nuts is going to
    be a plan that you’re really going to be hungry.”

    Susan Levin agrees that even a vegetarian has to watch
    out for the fat. “You don’t want to eat things like a
    lot of olive oil … a lot of cheese … a lot of
    anything that’s high in fat, because that’s where you
    get in trouble.”

    Butter and cheese are what separate the vegetarians
    from the vegans, says Gail Naftalin, who runs a
    vegetarian catering company in Wheaton, Maryland.

    As a vegan, she doesn’t eat dairy products and finds
    other sources of calcium in leafy green vegetables,
    like kale. Gail believes the nutritional balance in
    her diet can be found in the colors of what’s on her
    plate. “So that if you even think about it in terms of
    colors, you know … ‘have I had some green things,
    some orange things, some yellow things,’ you can get
    your nutrients very well satisfied that way.”

    With the growing concern about obesity and related
    problems of heart disease and diabetes, Americans are
    becoming more particular about what they buy. Frozen
    vegetables from the grocery store may be more
    convenient, but Gail Naftalin says fresh produce from
    the local farmers’ market has more appeal:

    “Local ingredients that haven’t had to be trucked
    across the country and seasonal ingredients that are
    growing now — and that’s the food that people really
    enjoy the most.”

    So, what is the food you enjoy the most? Gail
    Naftalin believes variety is the spice of healthy
    eating. “Meat eaters certainly can eat vegetarian
    food, whereas if you have something with meat or
    chicken stock, the vegetarians won’t eat it. So it’s
    a nice safe route to go and it’s healthy and it’s
    setting a good example.”

    Setting a good example can be critically important to
    your health. A British study of 500,000 people in 10
    countries has shown that a high fat diet is second
    only to tobacco as a leading cause of cancer, and when
    combined with alcohol, accounts for almost one third
    of the cancer rate in developed countries.

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    Tara

    Topics: Health & Wellness |

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