| Literature DB >> 21150013 |
Abstract
Globalization has made calorie rich, cheap, convenient marketed foods the main menu for the common man. Indians are particularly susceptible to the adverse outcomes of this dietary change because of ethnic, epigenetic reasons and sarcopenic adiposity (less muscle more fat for the same body weight). Children have smaller body frame making them more susceptible to adverse effects of hyperglycaemia leading to stress on beta cells and their damage. This has resulted in escalation of lifestyle diseases by three-fold, that too at our younger age group at lower body mass indices. Preventive measures are necessary in early life to protect the beta cells, to achieve a metabolically healthy society. This will help in sustaining optimal beta cell function throughout a person's life. Modification in dietary habits by educating the society, proper food labelling and legal regulation, restricting calorie, sugar, saturated fat, trans-fat and salt intake has proved its benefits in the developed world. Changes in the quality of food is as important as restricting calorie intake. This includes facilitation of increased consumption of dietary fiber, complex carbohydrates, nuts, fruits and vegetables. Restrictions are needed to reduce trans-fats, saturated fats and cooking habits such as deep frying which oxidizes cholesterol and lipids. Foods with long shelf-life shorten the life line because of their salt, sugar or trans-fat content. Individual meals need to be targeted in the general dietary guidelines, to minimize the post-prandial metabolic insult. In general, we need healthy start to early life particularly the first twenty years of life so that the habits cultured during childhood are sustained for the rest of productive years.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21150013 PMCID: PMC3028947
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Med Res ISSN: 0971-5916 Impact factor: 2.375
Major interventions implemented as a policy to achieve a cardioprotective diet
| Intervention | Country | Ref. | National policy |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Reduction in salt intake | Australia | 16 | ‘Pick the tick’ healthy food sign. |
| 2. Reduction in saturated fat | Mauritius | 27 | Substitution of soybean oil instead of palm oil in the public distribution |
| 3. Reduction in animal fat, dairy products, and salt and increasing fruit and vegetable consumption | Finland | 23 | Mass education, campaign to change over to alternatives like berry cultivation from animal farming |
| 4. Banning junk food at school, | USA, UK and Australia | 24,25 | Mass education, co-operation of the food industry, and legal actions |
| 5. Minimizing trans-fats in commercial products | USA | 11 | Legal binding on food industry and local outlets to minimize trans-fats |
Figure 1The spectrum of body response to diet and physical activity.