Mediterranean Diet Tucson AZ

It seems that a diet low in meat and dairy and rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, nuts and olive oil really may add years to your life, as well as health to your years. Overall, adherence to a Mediterranean diet alone reduced risk of death from all causes by 23 percent.

The Greatest Vitamin In the World
(520) 695-1393
922 E 4th St
Tucson, AZ
Brown Paul Chiropractic Phys
(520) 322-6161
3020 N Country Club Rd
Tucson, AZ
Stephanie Stark
520322WELL9355
4646 E Ft Lowell Rd, Ste 107
Tucson, AZ
Hunter Yost, MD
520-219-5060
6993 N Oracle Rd
Tucson, AZ
Gurgevich Steven Dr
(520) 886-1700
5215 N Sabino Canyon Rd
Tucson, AZ
Magic Bee Nutrition
(520) 326-0888
3161 N Country Club Rd
Tucson, AZ
Asian Institute of Medical Studies
520-322-6330
3131 N. Country Club Dr., Suite 100
Tucson, AZ
John Vlok Dommisse, MD
520-577-1940
1840 E River Rd Ste 210
Tucson, AZ
Wellness Council of Arizona
(520) 293-3369
1350 N Kolb Rd
Tucson, AZ
David Calvert
520-247-8047
5051 N. Sabino Canyon Road, # 1103
Tuscon, AZ
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Give Your Health a Mediterranean Vacation

Evidence on the merits of eating the Mediterranean way continues to mount. It seems that a diet low in meat and dairy and rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, nuts and olive oil really may add years to your life, as well as health to your years. Or, as noted in a recent study published in the British Medical Journal, a healthy man of 60 who follows a Mediterranean diet can expect to live a year longer than a man of the same age who doesn’t follow the diet.

The study involved more than 74,000 healthy men and women aged 60 and older living in Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom.

Another study published last September in The Journal of the American Medical Association observed the effect of a Mediterranean diet on 2,239 healthy adults aged 70 to 90 for a period of 10 years—measuring the diet’s influence on death rates relating to cancer, heart disease and other causes. The researchers also considered other lifestyle factors such as physical activity, alcohol use and smoking.

Overall, adherence to a Mediterranean diet alone reduced risk of death from all causes by 23 percent. The nonsmoking seniors who followed the diet, exercised at least 30 minutes per day and drank only moderately reduced their risk of death by a whopping 65 percent.

Other studies—including a 2003 trial that is one of the largest ever completed on the Mediterranean diet—have concluded that the “magic bullet” of the diet isn’t simply olive oil, as once believed, but a combination of all food in the diet with its emphasis on fresh vegetables and minimal saturated fat, along with the healthy monounsaturated fat found in olive oil.

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