Guest guest Posted July 8, 2004 Report Share Posted July 8, 2004 Differing Views of the Carb Controversy That Miss the Point GREETINGS -- The following article is from the Diabetes In Control newsletter and is written by its editor. The article identifies two major articles offering diametircally opposed views of the high-carb/low-carb viewpoints which are both worth reviewing. However, author also introduces a subject that in my view is extremely important and is conspicuous by its absence from both major articles -- portion control. wambo1941 Carb Controversy Continues: Recently I received an email concerning The Partnership for Essential Nutrition. This group consists of 11 agencies who have banded together to deliver what they call the truth about low carb diets. When I reviewed the media campaigns they were running, the message seemed to be " Popular low-carbohydrate diets are leading Americans to poor health and spawning a rip-off industry of " carb-friendly " products. They also had very bad things to say about any low carb program, and wanted to show you all their research to back it up. They even stated that low glycemic eating has no value at all. At the same time the Carbohydrate Awareness Council, which is representative of many multi-disciplined health professionals thinking wants to talk about the virtues of low carb, low glycemic eating and how all their research shows that these programs are the answer to our burgeoning obesity and diabetes problems. But personally I think they both miss the point. Some years ago, the ADA had a diabetes diet, this paper was given to newly diagnosed and uncontrolled patients and they were sent home. We all know that this did not work. In fact in recent years the ADA has said there is no one diet for everyone and each patient needs individualized instruction. So what works for one patient will not work for another. There are simple problems that all our patients have in common and both sides of this discussion often overlook. We all know that calories burned have to be greater than calories in to lose weight and, Portion Size is typically the most overlooked problem. Our society has come to believe that bigger is better and so over the years, portion sizes have increased tremendously. In 1962 Pepsi introduced the king size bottle. This " giant glass bottle " held a full 10 ounces, and there were no free refills. This 10 ounce marvel had 130 calories and 31 carbs. In comparison, just this evening, I was at dinner with my wife and son and during the course of the meal I was served 5, 20 ounce glasses of soda(ice occupied ½ of the volume so each glass had 10 ounces of soda). Although we were drinking diet soda, the table next to us wasn't and so those 5 glasses of soda were equal to 650 calories and 135 carbs. When you look at the fat, protein and calories for a steak you find that recommended serving size is 4 ounces but the most popular size in a restaurant is 12 ounces. This means that instead of getting the 250 calories and 5 grams of saturated fat that a person should get in one portion they end up getting 15 grams of saturated fat and 750 calories. To me this where we should all be working the hardest…..Portion Control. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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