Antelope Valley Press

How you can eat healthy without breaking the bank

- Common Sense Health W. Gifford-Jones M.D. Visit www.docgiff.com for health tips and more. For comments, contact-us@docgiff.com. Follow us on Instagram @docgiff and @diana_ gifford_jones

How would you like to have a cart full of healthy foods and still save money?

Anyone who does the grocery shopping will tell you it is more expensive to buy the ingredient­s for a healthy diet like vegetables, nuts, fruit and fish than the refined grains, processed prepared foods and meats of an unhealthy diet. Is there a way to buy healthy and keep costs down?

Dr. Dariush Mozaffaria­n, professor of nutrition at the Tufts Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, emphasizes that it is worth spending the time to spend your grocery dollars wisely.

“We have seen again and again that people who eat more fruits and vegetables have a lower risk of heart disease, diabetes, cancers and other chronic diseases,” he said.

His colleague, Dr. Jeffrey Blumberg, notes that planning makes a big difference in the food budget. He says, decide what you need for a week’s meals and buy only those items.

Try to incorporat­e healthy meals that take advantage of store deals. Build meals around items you already have in your pantry and plan menus that are suitable for cooking extra portions that can be easily reheated for another meal.

Blumberg adds, look into the refrigerat­or to make good use of the things you already have. For items that have a long shelf life, buy bulk. Remember, when buying perishable foods, consider what you will use promptly and freeze the rest.

Avoid purchasing readymade meals. They are invariably more expensive than buying the ingredient­s.

There’s also a myth that organic selections are more nutritious than convention­al counterpar­ts. Dr Alice H. Lichtenste­in, professor of nutrition and science policy, also at Tufts, says all fruits and vegetables (whether fresh, frozen, cooked or raw, organic or convention­al) are health promoting choices from a nutritiona­l standpoint.

Another misconcept­ion is that gluten-free foods are better for health than those that contain gluten. But Dr. Mozaffaria­n says replacing refined wheat products with refined rice and corn products may have some health gains but also possible harms.

Gluten-free diets, according to studies at Tufts, were significan­tly lower in protein, magnesium, vitamin E, dietary fiber and higher in calories that most people do not need.

The point is that unless you are in the one percent of the population that suffers from celiac disease or the six percent that are thought to have non-celiac gluten sensitivit­y, there is no need for gluten-free foods. Save your money.

A few years ago, researcher­s showed that, on average, it cost $1.50 a day more to choose healthy foods when shopping in a supermarke­t. They also wisely suggested that you could save that much by saying “no” to coffee, dessert or some other goodie.

These savings translate to better health for individual­s and tremendous savings for families and government­s in terms of health care expenditur­es down the road.

Finally, consider the impact of smarter shopping in terms of food wastage and environmen­tal concerns. It is estimated that 30 to 40 percent of the North American food supply goes unconsumed every year. That is a matter of disgracefu­l waste and economic inefficien­cy.

But the amount of food and food packaging that terminates unused in landfills is also an environmen­tal problem that industry, government­s and consumers all share. As consumers, when you shop, make a point of refusing to buy products in excessive or non-recyclable packaging.

While there are still big challenges around easy and equitable access to nutritious and affordable food, you can take steps toward smarter shopping. In this uncertain world, remember this sage advice: a dollar saved is also a dollar earned.

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