Daily Times (Primos, PA)

BALANCE IS THE KEY WORD IN NEW DIETARY GUIDANCE FOR HEART HEALTH

- By Michael Merschel,

The latest word on heart-healthy eating is balance. A new report encourages people to think of broad eating habits instead of narrowly focusing on single foods. Rather than one-size-fits-all rules, it leaves room for personal preference­s.

“The emphasis is on dietary patterns, not specific foods or nutrients,” said Alice H. Lichtenste­in, who led the writing committee for the American Heart Associatio­n scientific statement. “And it’s not just about what people shouldn’t be eating. The focus is really on what people should be eating, so they can customize it to their personal preference­s and lifestyles.”

The guidance, last updated in 2006, was published Tuesday in the AHA journal Circulatio­n. The advice is consistent with federal dietary guidelines but emphasizes

the latest research on reducing the risk of heart disease.

The report seeks to dispel the idea that a heart-healthy diet is about adding one vegetable or vitamin, said Lichtenste­in, Gershoff Professor of Nutrition Science and Policy and director of the Cardiovasc­ular Nutrition Laboratory at Tufts University in Boston. Instead, it emphasizes the importance of “the whole package” of what someone eats over the course of a day or week.

“If we increase our intake of one thing in our diets, we tend to decrease our intake of something else,” she said. “And both the increase in one dietary component and decrease in another dietary component can have independen­t effects. What’s really important is the balance of everything together that has the biggest impact on cardiovasc­ular health.”

A heart-healthy dietary pattern, the report advises, includes:

• Achieving and maintainin­g a healthy body weight.

• Eating a variety of fruits and vegetables.

• Choosing whole grains rather than refined grain products.

• Choosing healthy sources of proteins, mostly from plant sources (legumes and nuts); regularly eating fish and seafood; substituti­ng nonfat and low-fat dairy products in place of full-fat versions; and for people who eat meat, choosing lean cuts rather than processed forms.

• Using liquid plant oils instead of tropical oils (coconut, palm and palm kernel) and animal fats (lard and butter) or partially hydrogenat­ed fats.

• Choosing minimally processed over ultra-processed foods.

• Minimizing foods and beverages with added sugar.

• Choosing foods with little or no added salt.

• Limiting alcohol, if you already consume it, and not starting if you don’t.

• Adhering to the guidance regardless of where food is prepared or consumed.

Instead of offering calorie counts, the guidance acknowledg­es that everyone’s needs vary, Lichtenste­in said. During adulthood, for example, energy needs decrease with every decade.

“If you are physically active, you have a little more flexibilit­y in terms of what you eat,” she said.

And when balancing how much and what you eat, said report co-author Maya Vadiveloo, “the goal is to make sure all of those calories count and that you’re consuming nutrient-dense foods.”

Americans’ eating habits have changed, said Vadiveloo, an assistant professor in the department of nutrition and food sciences at the University of Rhode Island in Kingston.

“Decades ago, people would eat out, and it would be a treat,” she said.

People might have set aside thinking about their health.

Now, people can choose from meal delivery kits and prepared foods at grocery stores as well as fast-food, fast-casual and sit-down restaurant­s, she said.

“It’s much more of a regular part of almost every person’s dietary pattern,” she said.

And people need to think about what they’re eating no matter where they are.

But heart-healthy eating habits shouldn’t be seen as punitive, Lichtenste­in said. “You can eat what you enjoy,” she said. But sometimes, you just have to choose “a little more carefully, consider frequency and adjust serving sizes.”

The new guidance emphasizes the importance of incorporat­ing food and nutrition education into schools, starting at an early age, Lichtenste­in said.

“This will ensure children have the basic facts and can draw on these as they develop into independen­t adults, making their own choices,” she said.

The statement also acknowledg­es misinforma­tion and the systemic problems – such as racism, neighborho­od segregatio­n, food insecurity and targeted marketing – that can be barriers to adhering to heart-healthy eating patterns. The report called it a “public health imperative” to work on policies that remove these barriers.

Meanwhile progress can happen individual­ly, one small step at a time.

For example, Lichtenste­in said, someone who regularly eats presweeten­ed full-fat yogurt can identify fat-free or low-fat varieties containing less sugar. Someone who regularly eats crackers can shift to varieties made with whole grains and less sodium. Or someone might halve their portions of pasta or white rice at a meal and add an extra serving of vegetables.

Vadiveloo also suggested simple substituti­ons – such as replacing white sandwich bread with whole wheat. “Maybe one meal a week you’re using beans for your protein source, or maybe one time you’re switching a processed meat for fish.”

What you choose to eat is only one part of heart health, Lichtenste­in said. Just keep in mind, “it’s not all of one thing and none of another. It’s the balance among your choices in terms of diet and, ultimately, lifestyle.”

If you have questions or comments about this story, email editor@heart.org.

 ?? PIXNIO ?? A heart healthy diet has room for personal preference­s.
PIXNIO A heart healthy diet has room for personal preference­s.

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