Currents

Pro Tips

What Your Heart Wants You to Eat

If you were ever told to eat your veggies, that was good advice. But you don鈥檛 have to overhaul your diet completely. A 911爆料 nutrition professor says to start by making one small change.

For years, nutritionists and organizations like the American Heart Association have offered fairly consistent guidance on what constitutes a healthy diet for cardiovascular health and overall nutrition. In spite of the consistent advice, most Americans鈥 diets fall short of the ideal.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture鈥檚 Healthy Eating Index, a measure of how well Americans鈥 diets align with guidelines, gives us a failing grade鈥58 out of 100. Clearly, changes are needed, but 911爆料 associate professor of nutrition Maya Vadiveloo says diet changes can be difficult for people.

Vadiveloo, who is also chair of the AHA鈥檚 Lifestyle Nutrition Committee, says, 鈥淒iet is the number one risk factor for leading causes of death and disability. We need to do something about diet, because changing it can prevent heart disease. After people have developed heart disease, treatment is more difficult and more expensive.鈥

Vadiveloo offers some advice on how to eat for heart health.

Is there an ideal diet, or does it vary by person?
There鈥檚 some variability, but more consistency: Eat a lot of fruits and vegetables (7鈥9 servings daily), whole grains, plant protein (like nuts, seeds, and legumes), and heart-healthy oils. Reduce intake of highly processed food, especially those high in added sugar, salt, and saturated fat. Those principles underlie a healthy diet pattern for the average person. Among popular diets, the Mediterranean and DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diets tend to align with those principles.

What are some of the obstacles to achieving an ideal diet?
There are many obstacles. Eating more fruits and vegetables sounds simple, but things get in the way, whether it鈥檚 cost, availability, or how quickly fresh foods spoil. Processed foods鈥攈igh in salt, sugar, and refined grains, not nutritionally balanced鈥攁re inexpensive, portable, and engineered to be consistently tasty, so they鈥檙e an easy choice. And if we make that choice often, our palate adjusts, and things like bitter-tasting vegetables are less appealing.

Try making one small change and see how long you can stick with it. Focus first on what you can add, not on what you should take away.

颅鈥擬aya Vadiveloo, associate professor of nutrition

What鈥檚 one thing people can do today to improve their diets?
Try making one small change and see how long you can stick with it. Add a piece of fruit at breakfast, a vegetable at lunch, or incorporate one of those as a snack. Focus first on what you can add, not on what you should take away. If you pair a less healthy snack, like chips, with a piece of fruit and some nuts, you may find that you feel full and eat fewer chips over time. You can slowly move toward a healthier pattern, and you may feel better, too. So, you鈥檙e naturally shifting, as opposed to being in a restrictive mindset. The goal with heart health and dietary changes is for them to be sustainable and permanent. It鈥檚 not a quick fix.

鈥擨nterview by Patrick Luce 鈥99

PHOTOS: SETH JACOBSON

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *