[FITNESS] Fat: Good for your diet?

This article I found explains the notion of fat in your diet  and its benefits. Check the article HERE

The Skinny on Fat

After years of being told to limit fat in your diet, now there’s news that fat — as long as it’s the healthy kind — is part of good nutrition.

By Diana Rodriguez
Medically reviewed by Cynthia Haines, MD

Finally, there’s the news we’ve all been waiting for when it comes to the right diet: Eat more fat. But how can that possibly be true — or healthy? The recent recommendations to focus more on fat in the diet for better nutrition don’t apply to all fats. Only the “good” fats are recommended to boost health.

Fat in the Diet: What Is Healthy Fat?

Fats are now divided up as either good or bad. “We speak about fats differently now than we used to,” says Sandra Meyerowitz, MPH, RD, LD, a nutritionist and owner of Nutrition Works in Louisville, Ky. “They all used to be clumped together, and now we separate them out. We steer clear of the saturated and the trans fats, which are unhealthy, and lean toward the other ones.”

The recommendations about ensuring adequate daily fat intake only pertain to the healthy fats. Experts, in other words, are not advocating eating more fried foods or desserts. “The unsaturated fats are the kind that are better for us,” says Meyerowitz. Unsaturated fats, both the mono- and poly-unsaturated kinds, include fats like the anti-inflammatory omega-3 fatty acids.

Fat in the Diet: The Link Between Fats and Weight

Despite what’s been previously preached, fat is a necessary part of a healthy diet. Without it, Americans tend to put on more weight. During the 1960s, before the low-fat diet craze, people got about 45 percent of their daily calories from fat. Back then, only about 13 percent of Americans were obese.

Today, with about 34 percent of the U.S. population defined as obese, only about 33 percent of our daily calories come from fat. Why the discrepancy? One possible reason is that people are exchanging fats for even more unhealthy alternatives, like calorie-rich, sugar-laden carbohydrates.

There’s actually no proof that restricting fats in the diet improves weight loss or reduces heart disease risk. A major study by the Women’s Health Initiative found no health benefit in women who followed a low-fat diet over those who didn’t restrict their fats. And a Nurses’ Health Study found no improvement in heart health or weight loss, probably because they were cutting out the protective good fats as well as bad fats.

The current recommendation is between three and nine servings of fats each day; most of these should come from good fats, with very little saturated fat and ideally no trans fat.

Fat in the Diet: Why Good Fats Are Good for the Body

Good fats are important for the body in a variety of ways, improved heart health among them, says Meyerowitz. And they’re such an important part of a healthy diet because your body doesn’t make essential fatty acids, some of the most important fats. To get what your body needs for good heart and brain health, you have to eat them. Change the way that you cook, says Meyerowitz, and use healthy vegetable oils. Snack on nuts, add avocados to salads and sandwiches, and dress up dishes with olives.

Fat in the Diet: Finding Good Fats

Foods with the good fats that can help boost your health include:

  • Fish and other seafood, especially salmon and other fatty fish
  • Walnuts, pecans, and almonds
  • Flaxseed oil
  • Vegetable oils like canola, olive, soybean, corn, sunflower, and safflower
  • Sesame, pumpkin, and other seeds

Fat in the Diet: The Bottom Line on Fats

While some fats should be limited (saturated) or avoided altogether (trans fats), don’t think of fat as a dirty word, and don’t deprive yourself of foods that are both healthy and delicious. Feed your body the good fats that it craves — your heart and brain need fat to function


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Comments

  1. shubby doo says:

    so i live by a diet that has 10 principles…& principle 10 is: eat fat to loose fat…

    just like the article above, it teaches that some fats contain essential fats just like you say but it mentions omega 3 and omega 6 as the two that the body needs to function properly.

    so yeah i totally co-sign this post about consuming less saturated fats while making sure you get it in with the essential fats *stops and ponders* that last sentence sounds wrong but i know what i mean lol

    • Streetz says:

      Yup. Exactly!

    • larnelw says:

      Actually I believe its Omega-3 and Omega-9. Too much Omega-6 can have a very bad effect on your body. I've read into it before but here is a quick excerpt from Wiki:

      "Some medical research suggests that excessive levels of n−6 (Omega-6) fatty acids, relative to n−3 (Omega-3) fatty acids, may increase the probability of a number of diseases and depression.

      Modern Western diets typically have ratios of n−6 to n−3 in excess of 10 to 1, some as high as 30 to 1. The optimal ratio is thought to be 4 to 1 or lower.

      Excess n−6 fats interfere with the health benefits of n−3 fats, in part because they compete for the same rate-limiting enzymes. A high proportion of n−6 to n−3 fat in the diet shifts the physiological state in the tissues toward the pathogenesis of many diseases: prothrombotic, proinflammatory and proconstrictive"

  2. dr john says:

    -saturated fat is bad for me?
    -didn't humans evolve on saturated (animal) fats for millions of years? (4.4 M since Ardipithecus a.)
    -didn't we ascend to the top of the food chain doing so?
    -so now all of a sudden sat fat is bad for me?
    -how is saturated fat bad for me?
    -does it cause heart disease? cancer? strokes? diabetes?
    -aren't vegetable oils like canola, olive, soybean, corn, sunflower, and safflower pro-inflammatory and produce coronary artery intimal damage?
    -and thus raising levels of C-Reactive protein?
    -isn't this (CRP) a sound bio-marker for inflammation and coronary heart disease?
    -didn't humans evolve for millions of years without ever eating vegetable oils?
    -why do you want me to eat these Omega-6 oils that tend to stimulate the production of coronary vessel endothelial damage? and thus coronary vessel damage?

    ….strange advice without sound foundation…

    • Streetz says:

      Dr John,

      Thanks for the comment and the questions. I'm not a doctor so I don't know if they were directed a t me. Do you have any research to backup your statements? I'm curious to learn.

      Thanks

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