Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Carbs are good for you

Eating bread, pasta and rice in moderation lowers your risk of early death, Harvard finds

- By Colin Fernandez (© Daily Mail, London)

Cutting carbohydra­tes from the diet could actually increase the risk of an early death, a major study has found.

The findings suggest trendy diets which encourage slashing all bread, potatoes and pasta from the diet may actually do more harm than good.

But the study of 15,400 people, led by Harvard School of Public Health, found eating too many carbs is also damaging to health.

Instead, it suggests eating moderate levels of carbohydra­tes - enough to make up 50 to 55 per cent of the diet - is the healthiest. People whose diet was made up of less than 40 per cent and or more than 70 per cent carbohydra­tes had a higher mortality risk.

The study - published in the Lancet Public Health journal - goes some way to ending the decades- old debate about whether cutting carbs or fat is the best way to improve health.

The healthiest approach, it suggests, is to eat a balanced diet with nutrients in moderation.

And it raises concerns that the increasing­ly popular all- or- nothing ‘exclusion’ diets can do severe damage to people’s health.

The findings also support the advice of Public Health England - which suggests starchy carbohydra­tes should form the main components of a healthy diet.

The US scientists also looked at the combined results of previous studies including 432,000 people from more than 20 countries, which confirmed their find- ings.

They found that the biggest risk of cutting carbohydra­tes was if people replaced it with meat and cheese.

If they instead started eating more plant-based food - such as vegetables, lentils, beans and nuts - the risk was lower.

Researcher Dr Sara Seidelmann, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said: ‘ We need to look really carefully at what are the healthy compounds in diets that provide protection.

‘Low-carb diets that replace carbohydra­tes with protein or fat are gaining widespread popularity as a health and weight loss strategy.

‘However, our data suggests that animal-based low carbohydra­te diets, which are prevalent in North America and Europe, might be associated with shorter overall life span and should be discourage­d.’ The authors recruited 15,528 adults aged 45 to 64, and then tracked them for 25 years.

Of the original group, 6,283 people died over the study period.

But those who had low carb consumptio­n were 20 per cent more likely to die than those with a moderate consumptio­n.

The re s e a rchers extrapolat­ed these results to estimate that someone who was aged 50 with a moderate carbohydra­te intake could expect to live another 33 years - taking them to age 83.

Those with a low carbohydra­te intake could expect to live to 79 - four years fewer.

And those with a high carb intake could expect to live to 82, one year less than the moderate group.

Co-author Professor Walter Willett of Harvard School of Public Health, said: ‘ These findings bring together several strands that have been controvers­ial.

‘Too much and too little carbohydra­te can be harmful but what counts most is the type of fat, protein, and carbohydra­te.’ And researcher Professor Scott Solomon of Harvard Medical School said: ‘This work provides the most comprehens­ive study of carbohydra­te intake that has been done to date, and helps us better understand the relationsh­ip between the specific components of diet and long term health.

‘ These data suggest that shifting towards a more plant- based consumptio­n is likely to help attenuate major morbid disease.’

Dr Andrew Mente from McMaster University in Canada, writing in a linked comment, said eating anything in moderation was advisable - and a ‘U-shaped’ mortality curve could probably be seen for any nutrient.

He led a study published in the Lancet last year, which found that extremely low- fat diets could also do more harm than good.

Dr Mente says there a ‘sweet spot’ of consumptio­n levels for all nutrients - and eating too much or too little will be damaging.

‘ Essential nutrients should be consumed above a minimal level to avoid deficiency and below a maximal level to avoid toxicity,’ he wrote.

‘On the basis of these principles, moderate intake of carbohydra­te is likely to be more appropriat­e for the general population than are very low or very high intakes.’ British scientists also backed the findings.

Dr Ian Johnson of the Quadram Institute Bioscience, a food research centre in Norwich, said: ‘The risk of death was convincing­ly shown to be lowest in those participan­ts who obtained about half their calories from carbohydra­tes.

‘This figure is close to the average carbohydra­te consumptio­n by the UK population observed in dietary surveys.

‘These findings emphasise that there is nothing to be gained from long-term adherence to low-carbohydra­te diets rich in fats and proteins from foods of animal origin.’

Professor Tom Sanders of King’s College London added: ‘The bottom line is that a balanced diet providing about half of the food energy from carbohydra­tes is best for health.’

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? If carbs make up 50 percent of your diet, you may well live longer: Harvard study.
If carbs make up 50 percent of your diet, you may well live longer: Harvard study.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka