Diet
guide- eat good fats
Reuters
- Americans, often guilty of overeating, should cut harmful fats, get more
exercise and watch their weight under a new set of U.S. government dietary
guidelines being written by nutrition experts.
A
preliminary version of the rules for healthful eating, unveiled on Thursday,
flatly tells Americans to cut consumption of saturated fat, trans fat and
cholesterol.
The
draft guidelines also warn Americans not to eat more food than they need, to
"be physically active every day," and to eat more fruits, vegetables
and whole grains, to reduce the chance of chronic illnesses such as cancer and
heart disease.
Two-thirds
of U.S. adults are overweight and childhood obesity is ballooning. Poor diet
and physical inactivity, blamed for 400,000 deaths a year, may soon overtake
smoking as the No. 1 cause of preventable death.
Panelists
were unable to finish their work and set another meeting for Aug. 10 and 11 to
wrap up suggestions for the new edition of the Dietary Guidelines for
Americans, slated for release in January. First published in 1980, the
guidelines are updated every five years to reflect new research on nutrition.
Often
reduced to a handful of short reminders, such as "choose and prepare foods
with less salt," or a pamphlet, the Dietary Guidelines also are a 44-page
document expanding on the pithy advice.
If
it follows the committee's proposals, the new edition would explicitly tell
Americans to balance food intake with physical activity while eating a variety
of foods. The current advice is "aim for a healthy weight."
Overeating
"is a big problem right now," said panelist Penny Kris-Etherton, a
nutrition professor at Pennsylvania State University.
A
long-standing admonition to "moderate your intake of sugars" was
dropped from the tentative guidelines. Panel members disagreed whether sugary
drinks lead to obesity.
"I
don't like targeting a single item," said Theresa Nicklas of the Baylor
College of Medicine. Joanne Lupton of Texas A&M University said research
found no clear result.
Carlos
Camargo of the Harvard Medical School said three studies showed a link. Many
people do not offset calories from drinks by eating less food, he said.
Panel
members settled on language saying people who consume food and beverages high
in added sugar consume more calories overall and that "sugar-sweetened
beverages are not as well-regulated as calories in solid form" by the
body.
Experts
acknowledged that the 2005 guidelines were unlikely to include any major
changes.
"We're
really talking about a fine-tuning of messages," said Regina Hildwine,
senior director of food standards for the National Food Processors Association.
"I think there are going to be some opportunities here for food
companies," she said, such as those selling foods that use more whole
grains.
Margo
Wootan of the activist group Center for Science in the Public Interest said
America's bulging waistline was the result of eating too-large portions of
food, She called for easy-to-follow advice on trimming calories from the diet.
While
advising Americans to eat less saturated fat, trans fat and cholesterol, linked
to clogged arteries, the advisory committee gave a green light to omega-3 fatty
acids, found in fish. Omega-3 acids reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease,
researchers say.
But
the panel noted there should be a general warning about mercury in fish. The
government said in March that shark, swordfish, king mackerel and tilefish
contain too much mercury to be eaten by pregnant women, nursing mothers,
children and women who may become pregnant. Adults can eat up to 12 ounces (340
grams) a week of seafood lower in mercury.
Article:
agriculture.com May 2004