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  • "Is Vegan Food Always Healthy?"

  • In my video on flexitarians, I talk about how the benefits

  • of eating a plant-based diet are not all-or-nothing.

  • Simple advice to increase the consumption

  • of plant-derived foods with parallel reductions in the

  • consumption of foods from animal sources was found to

  • confer a survival advantage,” a live-longer advantage.

  • They call it a pro-vegetarian eating pattern, just moving in that direction,

  • as a more gradual, gentle doable approach.

  • If you're dealing with a serious disease, though, like diabetes,

  • avoiding some problem foods completely may be easier

  • than attempting to moderate their intake.

  • It's like clinicians would never tell alcoholics to simply cut down on alcohol.

  • Avoiding alcohol entirely is a more effective and,

  • ironically, easier for a problem drinker.

  • Paradoxically, asking patients to make a large change

  • may be more effective than making a slow transition.

  • Diet studies show that recommending more significant changes

  • increases the changes that patients actually accomplish.

  • It may help to replace the common advice, 'all things in moderation'

  • with 'big changes beget big results.'

  • Success breeds success.

  • After a few days or weeks of major dietary changes,

  • patients are more likely to see improvements

  • in weight and blood sugar levels

  • improvements that reinforce the dietary changes.

  • Furthermore, they may enjoy other health benefits of plant-based eating.

  • that may give them further motivation.

  • Those who choose to eat plant-based for their health say it's mostly

  • for general wellness and disease prevention, or to improve

  • their energy levels or immune function.

  • They felt it gave them a sense of control over their health,

  • helps you feel better emotionally, improves your overall health,

  • and makes you feel better.

  • Most felt it was very important for maintaining their health and well-being.

  • For the minority that used it for a specific health problem,

  • it was mostly for high cholesterol or weight loss,

  • followed by high blood pressure and diabetes, with most

  • reporting they felt it helped a great deal.

  • But others choose plant-based diets for other reasons like animal welfare

  • or global warming, and it looks like they're more likely to be eating

  • things like vegan doughnuts, sugary and fatty foods,

  • compared to those eating plant-based because of

  • religious or health reasons.

  • I mean the veganist vegan could bake a cake using soda instead of eggs,

  • with frosting, covered in marshmallow fluff and chocolate syrup,

  • topped with Oreos, with a side of Doritos dipped in, vegan bacon grease.

  • But fruit for dessertin the form of Pop Tarts and Krispy Kreme pies.

  • This, is a vegan meal.

  • Yes, plant-based diets have been recommended

  • to reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes.

  • However, not all plant foods are necessarily beneficial.

  • Like in that pro-vegetarian scoring system you got points for eating

  • potato chips and French fries, just because they were technically

  • plant-based, but Harvard researchers wanted to examine the association

  • of not only an overall plant-based diet, but both healthy and unhealthy versions.

  • So, they created the same kind of pro-vegetarian scoring system

  • weighted towards any sort of plant-based foods,

  • and against animal foods and then also created a healthful plant-based diet index,

  • where at least some whole plant foods took precedence

  • and Coca-Cola was no longer considered a plant.

  • Then lastly, they created an unhealthful plant-based diet index

  • by assigning positive scores to processed plant-based junk,

  • and negative scoring healthier foods and animal foods.

  • And then they found that a more plant-based diet in general was good

  • for reducing diabetes risk, but eating especially healthy plant-based foods

  • did better, nearly cutting risk in half,

  • while those eating more unhealthy plant foods did worse.

  • Now, but is that because they were also eating more animal foods?

  • People often eat burgers with their fries;

  • so, they separated out the effects of healthy plant foods,

  • less healthy plant foods, and animal foods.

  • And healthy plant foods were protectively associated,

  • animal foods were detrimentally associated,

  • and less healthy plant foods were more neutral when it came to diabetes risk.

  • Here's what the graph looks like: higher diabetes risk with more and more

  • animal foods, no protection whatsoever with junky plant foods,

  • and lower and lower diabetes risk associated with more and more

  • healthy whole plant foods in the diet.

  • So, they conclude that yes, plant- based diets are associated with

  • substantially lower risk of developing type 2 diabetes,

  • but it may not be enough to just lower the intake of animal foods,

  • but also less healthy plant foods as well.

"Is Vegan Food Always Healthy?"

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