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More than 800 health care professionals logged in virtually to attend the International Conference on Nutrition in Medicine to hear the latest research on dietary interventions that can help prevent, manage, and sometimes even reverse chronic diseases.
From Aug. 6-8, the Physicians Committee and the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences hosted the eighth-annual International Conference on Nutrition in Medicine.
More than 800 health care professionals logged in virtually to attend the
International Conference on Nutrition in Medicine to hear the latest
research on dietary interventions that can help prevent, manage, and
sometimes even reverse chronic diseases—which are now the leading cause of
death and disease in the United States. Topics included heart disease,
weight loss, type 2 diabetes, Crohn’s disease, cancer, longevity, and the
link between diet-related health conditions and COVID-19 outcomes.
Keep reading to see five of the top takeaways from ICNM 2020!
1. Improved diets may improve COVID-19 outcomes:
Dr. Kim Williams, past president of the American College of Cardiology
and chief of cardiology at Rush University, opened up the conference by
stating that: “We don’t have a single epidemic. We have two: cardiovascular
disease and COVID-19.” Dr. Williams pointed out that the same
recommendations for reducing the risk for cardiovascular disease—our
nation’s top killer—can also help reduce severe COVID-19 outcomes.
That’s because underlying conditions—including obesity, type 2 diabetes,
hypertension, and cardiovascular disease itself—have been associated with
more severe COVID-19 outcomes. According to Dr. Ted Barnett of Rochester
Lifestyle Medicine Group, “chronic disease was already responsible for
overwhelming and unnecessary suffering. Then COVID-19 arrived, and those
same chronic conditions were responsible for worse outcomes.” To address
these underlying conditions, Dr. Williams recommended eating a whole food,
plant-based diet, reducing sodium intake, reducing alcohol intake, and
exercising.
“If we start today with a plant-based diet, over the next months and years
that we may be living with COVID-19, we should be able to decrease the
amount of hospitalizations, intubations, ICU stays, and death,” concluded
Dr. Williams.
2. Plant-based diets can improve your health, from head to toe:
The world’s leading experts in their fields presented powerful data
showing that plant-based diets can help prevent, manage, and sometimes even
reverse common health problems throughout the body.
Breast cancer surgeon Dr. Kristi Funk of Pink Lotus Breast Center talked
about the link between food and breast cancer risk. She shared data showing
that a healthful plant-based diet can improve cancer risk factors, including
estrogen levels, inflammation, immune system function, and free radical
formation. Dr. Funk also encouraged attendees to eat their fruits and
veggies! She shared a study finding that 30 grams of fiber per day is
associated with a 50% reduced risk for breast cancer.
Gastroenterologist Dr. Alan Desmond of the Devon Gut Clinic stated that
“more plants in your diet may protect you from Crohn’s disease,” and
presented research showing that people who eat the most fiber have a 40%
reduced risk for Crohn’s disease, while Western diets have been associated
with an increased risk. Dr. Desmond also shared research showing that 70% of
newly diagnosed Crohn’s disease patients who switched to a diet low in
animal foods and rich in fiber experienced remission within 6 weeks!
Cardiologist Dr. Danielle Belardo of the Institute of Plant-Based Medicine
shared important information on the links between diet and heart failure:
Fruits, vegetables, soy proteins, whole grains, and legumes were associated
with decreased incidence and severity of heart failure, while foods high in
saturated fat increased the risk and severity. Dr. Belardo also shared that
a plant-based diet is a “low-risk, low-cost” method of seeing meaningful
improvements in heart health.
Nephrologist Dr. Shivam Joshi of NYU shared that “the key to halting the
progression of kidney disease may be in the produce aisle, not the
pharmacy.” Dr. Joshi talked about how diet-related conditions, including
type 2 diabetes and hypertension, can lead to chronic kidney disease. He
concluded that plant-based diets “prevent and treat lifestyle diseases and
the complications of those diseases like chronic kidney disease.”
Obstetrician and gynecologist Dr. Christie Cobb of Little Rock Gynecology
and Obstetrics and the Physicians Committee’s Dr. Neal Barnard explored the
link between foods and sex hormones. They presented research showing that a
plant-based diet can help improve menstrual pain, endometriosis,
infertility, polycystic ovary syndrome, and other hormone-related
conditions.
3. The same foods that are good for our health are good for the planet:
"Eat as if the world depends on it—because it does. It's that simple."
Those were the words of Dr. David Katz of Yale University and True Health
Initiative, who explained that the world’s growing appetite for animal
products—particularly beef—has not only harmed our health, but also the
health of the planet.
“Agriculture is a dominant user of natural resources and contributor to
environmental impacts,” added the University of Michigan’s Dr. Martin
Heller, who explained that agriculture is responsible for 25-30% of human
greenhouse gas emissions and 80-90% of global freshwater consumption, and
38% of ice-free land area, while also being a major driver of biodiversity
loss and dead zones in waterways. Dr. Walter Willett of the Harvard T.H.
Chan School of Public Health summed it up by saying: "It's hard to imagine
that we could have created a more dysfunctional agricultural system than we
have today.”
Dr. Heller presented data showing the greenhouse gas emissions associated
with producing a variety of protein sources and determined that plant-based
sources, including lentils, beans, and tofu, are low on the scale, while
beef, cheese, and other animal products are the biggest contributors. Dr.
Heller stressed that these same foods that are good for the planet are also
good for our health.
As Dr. Barnett said, “there’s no point in being healthy on a planet that
can’t support a healthy population.”
4. Plant-based diets are best for achieving long-term and healthy weight
loss:
"What appears to be the most effective weight loss diet just so happens
to be the only diet ever proven to reverse heart disease in the majority of
patients. Only one diet has ever been shown to do all that: a diet centered
around whole plant foods." Those were the words of Dr. Michael Greger of
NutritionFacts.org, who presented on evidence-based weight loss. Dr. Greger
shared the science behind calorie density and why eating fiber-rich
plant-based foods allows you to eat more food, while still losing weight.
Dr. Greger also presented data comparing the average BMI of individuals
following a variety of diets. The vegan group was the only group in the
“ideal” BMI category, when compared with vegetarian, pescatarian,
flexitarian, and non-vegetarian groups.
Dr. Kevin Hall of the National Institutes of Health and the Physicians
Committee’s Lee Crosby, RD, both discussed the effects of the ketogenic diet
on weight and determined that plant-based diets are most effective for
long-term, healthful weight loss. Lee noted that in some cases, keto diets
have been associated with short-term weight loss, but that there are often
serious side effects. For example, in a small pilot study, participants
assigned to a keto diet increased dangerous LDL cholesterol by 40 points, on
average, within just 12 weeks.
5. Doctors can be leaders in promoting healthful diets:
"What appears to be the most effective weight loss diet just so happens
to be the only diet ever proven to reverse heart disease in the majority of
patients. Only one diet has ever been shown to do all that: a diet centered
around whole plant foods." Those were the words of Dr. Michael Greger of
NutritionFacts.org, who presented on evidence-based weight loss. Dr. Greger
shared the science behind calorie density and why eating fiber-rich
plant-based foods allows you to eat more food, while still losing weight.
Dr. Greger also presented data comparing the average BMI of individuals
following a variety of diets. The vegan group was the only group in the
“ideal” BMI category, when compared with vegetarian, pescatarian,
flexitarian, and non-vegetarian groups.
Dr. Kevin Hall of the National Institutes of Health and the Physicians
Committee’s Lee Crosby, RD, both discussed the effects of the ketogenic diet
on weight and determined that plant-based diets are most effective for
long-term, healthful weight loss. Lee noted that in some cases, keto diets
have been associated with short-term weight loss, but that there are often
serious side effects. For example, in a small pilot study, participants
assigned to a keto diet increased dangerous LDL cholesterol by 40 points, on
average, within just 12 weeks.
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We began this archive as a means of assisting our visitors in answering many of their health and diet questions, and in encouraging them to take a pro-active part in their own health. We believe the articles and information contained herein are true, but are not presenting them as advice. We, personally, have found that a whole food vegan diet has helped our own health, and simply wish to share with others the things we have found. Each of us must make our own decisions, for it's our own body. If you have a health problem, see your own physician.