Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

Do you know these tricks to avoiding fat for healthier eating?
While some fat in the diet is necessary, and it would be a mistake to try to eliminate all fat from the diet, most people simply eat too much fat. Cutting back on fat is an important part of creating a healthier diet and lifestyle. There are a...

Drink Water, Eat Organic, And Walk For Faster Weight Loss
Now that there is a better understanding by scientists of body genetics and why people have a tendency to be overweight, here are some tips that will help you lose more weight faster. Tip #1: Drink water upon arising: First thing in...

Eating For Two
You provide your baby the best nutrition every day by breast feeding. Much of the nutrition your baby receives from breast milk comes from your body's stored nutrients. So don't forget – your nutrition is important too! Even while you are nursing,...

Exercise And Breast Cancer
One Sunday afternoon, I stopped by a children's clothing store to distribute a few postcards for my new book. Upon leaving the parking lot, my six year old son caught a glimpse of "those sticker ribbons with two lines". In my half-engaged...

Lose Weight By Eating More
I always thought weight loss was only possible by eating a very strict diet, intense exercise in the gym, or a combination of the two. While both are necessary to an extent, there was something I recently stumbled across in an ebook called...

 
Colon Cancer - The Maori Factor

Recent research by a New Zealand University team into colon cancer has uncovered a very interesting phenomenon that sheds light on why colon cancer is almost non-existent in the Maori race. Naturally this fact created a spin-off from the original study because if the reason why the indigenous Maori people avoided this disease could be found they would gain precious information to help the constant fight to prevent colon cancer.

Initially they looked at diet and discovered that both red and purple berries and fruits formed a higher proportion of their diet than it did with non-indigenous New Zealanders. Based upon common practice they were aware of the anti-oxidant value of fruit and assumed that non-Maori people gained the same amount of anti-oxidants from other fruit and vegetables. This appeared to cancel out any benefit the Maoris gained by having a diet high in red and purple fruits and vegetables. That was until they decided to check anti-oxidant levels individually.

The results of the independent checks of anti-oxidant levels across a wide range of fruits and vegetables discovered that rather than these levels being the same, as commonly thought at the start of the experiments, they vary widely. For instance fruits with red or purple skins like berries, plums, red apples and even red skinned sweet potato have around four times the anti-oxidant levels of other fruits and vegetables. At this point the entire project started to make sense and the higher levels of ant-oxidants in a traditional Maori diet pointed to the reason for such low levels of colon cancer within the race.

The research continues today but based upon these findings there is strong reason to eat more strawberries, raspberries, redcurrants, cherries, plums, red apples and sweet potato in our daily diets. In fact any fruit or vegetable with a red or purple skin contains around four times the anti-oxidant level of other fruits and vegetables and therefore should be utilized in our diets for health reasons.

Somebody is bound to raise the question of whether frozen is as a good as fresh fruit. Here I can only give a personal opinion and state that whenever we cook, or freeze, foodstuffs we change the chemical make-up of the food and therefore it is unlikely to be the same as eating it fresh and uncooked. But, if frozen is all that is available then I guess its better than nothing.

People interested in this article may also be interested in visiting: http://www.recipesmania.com/Iodinedeficiency.html

This article is copyright © David McCarthy 2005. It may be reproduced in its entirety with no additions.


About the Author: David McCarthy is webmaster of http://www.recipesmania.com a site dedicated to freely sharing knowledge of food, healthy eating and recipes. This article is one of many that deal with the affects of what we eat on our health.

Source: www.isnare.com

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.