Home Question and Answer Weight Loss Tips Common Sense To Lose Weight Weight Loss Recipes
 Lose Weight > Common Sense To Lose Weight > Obesity > A Mediterranean Diet Won’t Make You Fat

A Mediterranean Diet Won’t Make You Fat

You’ve probably heard that a “Mediterranean Diet” will help you live longer. What is a “Mediterranean Diet”? Essentially, a diet like that of the Greek and Mediterranean regions–a diet low in meat and dairy products, but high in vegetables, legumes, fruits and nuts, cereals, fish, and olive oil, with a moderate alcohol intake.

Recently, though, there’s been some concern that although a Mediterranean diet might be good for your heart, it appears to lead to weight gain and obesity. (And we know that being overweight is NOT good for your heart!) Specifically, surveys done in the European Union indicate that those who most closely adhere to a Mediterranean diet (the Greek population) have a high prevalence of overweight and obesity.

A study published last year in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition (Am J Clin Nutr 2005;82:935-40) seems to show that a Mediterranean diet does not, in and of itself, lead to weight gain and obesity.

The study included 23,597 male and female volunteers between the ages of 20 and 86 who were recruited to participate in a much larger European study to investigate cancer and nutrition. Subjects who had coronary artery disease, cancer, or diabetes were excluded.

For the study itself, each volunteer was weighed and their height measured so that their Body Mass Index (BMI) could be calculated. Their waist and hip circumferences were also measured and their Waist-to-Hip Ratio (WHR) was calculated. Finally, each volunteer answered a detailed food questionnaire regarding their dietary intake over the past year, which allowed the researchers to assign each volunteer’s adherence to the Mediterranean diet on a scale of 0 to 9, with 9 being the the highest level of adherence to the Mediterranean diet.

Researchers also collected information on the subjects’ level of education, whether they smoked and if so, how much, their level of physical activity, and their average caloric intake, among others.

The results? The researchers found that:

BMI Increased:

  • As age increased
  • For smokers
  • As caloric intake increased (for men, but not women)

BMI Decreased:

  • As educational level increased
  • With higher physical activity

What they did NOT find, however, is any indication that a high level of adherence to the Mediterranean diet actually caused the subjects’ BMI to increase. Even when the researchers did not take caloric intake levels into account, they found that a higher adherence to the Mediterranean diet only increased BMI by 0.21 among men and 0.05 among women. They found similar results for Waist-Hip Ratio, as well. The high level of obesity in Greece? Most likely had more to do with low levels of exercise and overeating than with what type of diet people were following.

The take-home messages are twofold. First, no diet, even a heart-healthy style of eating like the Mediterranean diet, is a magic bullet. You can eat lots of food that is good for you and still risk your health by being overweight. Moderation in eating is key. Second, exercise is critical to low BMI and overall health. You can improve your health by improving your diet, but the only way to be slim AND healthy (because you can be slim and UNhealthy) is to eat right and exercise.

A practicing, board-certified Internist in northern Virginia, Tim’s love of food preparation began as a teenager working in the restaurant business. Starting as a dishwasher, by age twenty-two he opened his own restaurant: a small country-French café. After three years as chef-owner, Dr. Harlan decided to return to school. He’d originally intended to pursue a degree in hotel and restaurant management, but events led him toward medicine and the decision to become a physician. In medical school, Dr. Harlan wrote _It’s Heartly Fare_, a book best characterized as a food manual for patients with cardiovascular disease. His latest book, _Hand on Heart_, is a healthy cookbook.

Dr. Gourmet has been an on-air consultant to the TV Food Network show “Cooking Thin” as well as a host on the DIY network show, “AskDIY”. In 2002 “The Dr. Gourmet Show” won an Emmy award.

Dr. Gourmet is a natural outgrowth of Dr. Harlan’s interest in good food and good health: “Eating well and eating healthy are the same thing,” he says.

  1. Prev:
  2. Next:

Copyright © www.020fl.com Lose Weight All Rights Reserved