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Junk food threatens healthy
Mediterranean hearts
New York -
With its mountains of ripe tomatoes, red peppers, fresh fruit
and glistening fish, Barcelona's world-famous La Boqueria market is a
celebration of healthy eating.
For centuries its produce has helped
underpin a record of healthy hearts, giving Spain's northern region of
Catalonia one of the lowest rates of heart attacks to be found
anywhere in Europe.
But doctors meeting here for the
World Congress of Cardiology warn that traditional Mediterranean-style
diets -- rich in vegetables, fruit, fish and olive oil but sparing in
meat -- are under siege from junk food.
Across Spain, as well as Italy and
Greece, the story is the same, as young people increasingly turn away
from old-style family meals in favor of burgers and fries.
"The Mediterranean diet is changing,"
Dr Ramon Estruch of the University of Barcelona told Reuters.
"Young people are not eating well
today -- obesity is increasing and we are losing our diet. We need to
return to the classical patterns of Mediterranean diet that we had in
the 1960s and 1970s."
The virtues of eating fresh produce
and olive oil were first recognized by medical researchers 50 years
ago. Ever since, the scientific evidence has kept piling up.
Estruch
and colleagues, for example, demonstrated two months ago that
Mediterranean-style diets, rich in healthy fats, are even better than
conventional low-fat diets at improving cholesterol, blood pressure
and blood sugar levels.
Yet doctors find that dietary
patterns across Europe that were once very different are now
converging -- to the detriment of the cardiovascular health of those
living on the Mediterranean rim.
"It's really a problem," said Dr
Michal Tendera, president of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC).
"In northern Europe we are seeing a
tendency to a more healthy diet," he added.
"Unfortunately, in those countries
that traditionally have had a Mediterranean diet, the situation is not
improving but deteriorating. Diet is getting worse and the amount of
exercise that people take is very, very low."
Dr Valentin Fuster, president of the
World Heart Federation, said economic development and a poor diet
often went hand in hand, as people ate more and more of the wrong
thing, while opting increasingly for fast food due to their busy
lifestyles.
One in four Spaniards under the age
of 19 are now overweight and between 16 and 17 percent are obese, he
said.
The price is likely to be a rising
toll of heart attacks and strokes, putting additional pressure on
already strained public healthcare budgets.
In the Europe Union alone, the ESC
estimates that cardiovascular disease costs the economy around 170
billion euros ($218 billion) a year -- 100 billion in healthcare
provision and the rest in lost productivity. -- Reuters
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