Expert claims modern ’superdiets’ just based on myths
November 23rd, 2009 - 1:59 pm ICT by ANI
London, Nov 23 (ANI): A leading professor has claimed that ’superdiets’ like drinking large amounts of grapefruit juice or eating only raw fruit and vegetables are based on just food myths.
Professor Chris Hawkey, president of the British Society of Gastroenterology (BSG), said some people developed a “quasi-religious” attitude towards what was the best thing to eat, based on little or no scientific evidence.
He highlighted more than a dozen famous diets including rawism, which argues that cooking food makes it less nutritious.
The grapefruit diet, based on the idea that an enzyme in the juice breaks down fat, and the alkaline diet, which seeks to maintain the slightly alkaline nature of the blood by eating certain foods.
“Food has been shrouded in myths and fairy tales since time immemorial,” the Telegraph quoted Professor Hawkey as saying at the Gastro 2009 conference, which is being held in London until November 25.
“But what’s important is to recognise that, despite the popularity of fad diets, we are losing a grip on the fight with obesity,” he said.
He said the grapefruit diet, which Kylie Minogue has reportedly used, was unlikely to have an effect because the enzyme would probably be broken down in the gut before being able to get at body fat.
Professor Hawkey also flagged up the lack of evidence for the ‘chewing movement’, which dates back to the 19th century and counsels chewing 32 times to aid digestion.
“[Former Prime Minister] Gladstone was apparently very eccentrically in favour of this diet. The idea is that salivary enzymes start digestion,” he said, adding that it was based more on “theory than evidence”.
However he had mixed feelings about the controversial Atkins diet, which says people should avoid carbohydrate and eat protein.
“It is not terribly healthy in the sense that you are going to have a lot of fat, but if you lose weight then it is a good thing,” Professor Hawkey said.
“The theory is that it resets the metabolic rate and there is some science to back that up,” he added. (ANI)
Related Stories
- A simple cuppa a day, or glass of juice, can cut heart disease risk - Sep 06, 2009
- Soon, a drug that cuts appetite, boosts energy - Jul 21, 2009
- Why an apple a day keeps the doctor away - Jan 20, 2010
- Fibre-rich diet may help maintain healthy immune system - Oct 29, 2009
- 'Anti-inflammatory diet' can keep Alzheimer's, cancer at bay - Dec 06, 2009
- Having grapefruit juice with certain drugs could lower their effectiveness - Aug 20, 2008
- New food rating system for healthy and affordable diet - Oct 20, 2009
- Fat Brits prefer diet pills to gym - Oct 31, 2009
- Teeth of some apes are formed primarily to survive toughest times - Dec 18, 2009
- High-fat diets 'make us lazy, forgetful' - Aug 13, 2009
- alkaline diet
- atkins diet
- bsg
- carbohydrate
- chris hawkey
- controversial atkins
- fad diets
- fairy tales
- food myths
- former prime minister
- fruit and vegetables
- grapefruit diet
- grapefruit juice
- kylie minogue
- lack of evidence
- mixed feelings
- professor chris
- raw fruit
- religious attitude
- salivary enzymes
Posted in Life Style, |