July
2005 Newsletter
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Prof Mark Wahlqvist
AO, MD, FRACP
|
Welcome
to the July edition of the HEC
newsletter.
This
edition looks at scientific
studies published on:
obesity and mortality; olive
oil and blood pressure;
herbs and cooked meat; drug-nutrient
interaction website
|
|
WHAT'S
NEW IN NUTRITION RESEARCH
The
health risk associated with being overweight
may have been overstated
A recent
analysis of deaths in the United States
(from their National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey) suggests that being
overweight may not increase your risk
of dying. This finding is contrary to
past research. They estimated the numbers
of premature deaths linked to weight
in the year 2000. The findings were
that underweight and seriously obese
people have an increased chance of dying
compared to normal weight people. Interestingly,
however, being overweight, was associated
with a slightly lower chance of dying
for your age. The impact of obesity
on mortality may have decreased over
time, perhaps because of improvements
in public health and medical care. The
authors highlight that body weight may
not be such an important risk factor
for premature death and that fitness,
smoking and saturated fat in your diet
may be more significant.
Flegal KM et al. Excess
deaths associated with underweight,
overweight and obesity. Journal
of the American Medical Association
2005;293:1861-1867
Mark DH. Deaths attributable to obesity.
Journal of the American Medical Association
2005;293:1018-1919
Olive
oil may help lower blood pressure
A study
from Greece (Psaltopoulou
et al) examined whether the Mediterranean
diet, as an entity, and olive oil, in
particular, reduce arterial blood pressure.
The study was based on the Greek arm
of the European Prospective Investigation
into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) study.
Of the Greek participants, 20 343 had
never received a diagnosis of hypertension
and were included in an analysis in
which systolic and diastolic blood pressure
were statistically regressed with possible
predictors of blood pressure, including
a 10-point score that reflects adherence
to the Mediterranean diet and, alternatively,
the score's individual components and
olive oil. The statistical analysis
showed that adherence to the Mediterranean
diet, and olive oil intake, per se,
is associated with lower blood pressure.
Sprinkle
some herbs on meat before cooking to
reduce the formation of cancer causing
chemicals
Sprinkling
some herbs (e.g rosemary, oregano) on
meat before high temperature cooking
(like frying, grilling, barbecuing)
appears to counteract the formation
of potentially dangerous (carcinogenic)
compounds, according to a recent study
from the US (Kansas State University).
This applies to any high protein foods
cooked at high temperatures like chicken,
fish, pork.
Ideally, meat
should be cooked long and slow with
little or no burning such as in stews
or casseroles. For barbecues, the researcher
says wood smoke may be better than charcoal
briquettes because earlier studies indicate
tree and plant smoke contain antioxidants.
Native Americans even used to treat
certain illnesses with wood smoke. To
find out more, read the Interview with
the researcher on the ABC
website
._______________________________________________________________________________________________________________
NUTRITION
RESOURCES ON THE WEB
Drug
Nutrient Interaction Website -
Safety Checker - Using medicines with
vitamins/herbal supplements.
Find out if your medication may be causing
any nutrient deficiencies/abnormalities
or if certain nutrient supplements may
be needed/ avoided due to the medications
you are taking.
______________________________________________________________________________________________
HEC
PRODUCTS
Find
out how to IMPROVE YOUR DIET by doing
our on-line course module on "Healthy
Eating Tips" for $29.95 (as
part of your 12 months HEC subscription).
Subscribers
also get:
-
12 months access to the on-line book
"Food Facts" by Professor
Wahlqvist
- 12 months access to our novel dietary
assessment program
"Food Web"
- member discounts for all our on-line
healthy eating course modules
More.....
HEC
short on-line Healthy Eating course
( 5 modules,
$195) More
....
The
HEC website is the only website currently
offering on-line reputable course modules
for the general public in nutrition.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
 |
Asia
Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition
Subscribe
to APJCN
for only $135 hardcopy and online
or
$120 on-line only
|
APJCN
vol 14, issue 2, 2005 issue
out now - read
abstracts.
Articles include: review on red meat
and heart health; health properties of
cranberry juice; the antioxidant lycopene
better absorbed from tomatoes cooked in
olive oil; nutritional status of people
in Iran; vitamin A may be a heart disease
risk factor in Saudi Arabia and more.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Consultant
Nutritionist/Dietitian
Dr
Antigone Kouris, PhD,
Post Grad Diet, BSc (Hons)
Consulting Rooms (by appointment only):
110
Atherton Rd, Oakleigh, Vic, Australia,
T: 03 95690030
1371 Centre Rd, Clayton, Vic, Australia,
T: 03 95435966
___________________________________________________________________________

Recipe of the month:
Pumpkin
and red lentil soup
If
you have a recipe you would like to
share with other HEC fans please email
to info@healthyeatingclub.org
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