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Research Behind the Paleo Diet

21 Jul

A lot of diet experts and academics have withheld comment on the Paleo diet.  I understand their hesitation to embrace a lifestyle that is rather radical without extensive data and research.  It’s true that longitudinal studies have no been completed to show the effectiveness of the paleolithic lifestyle on people.  One thing, however, that I think trumps all of that is your own body.  If you give the paleo diet a try for 30 days, do you feel better?  What is your body telling you?  Given the wide array of human response to dietary lifestyles, this may be more important than any study that could come out.  Listen to your body, understand its messages, you’ll be fine.

Doctor Opinion on Paleo Diet

15 Jul

Keeping with our theme of Doctor’s discussing their opinions of the the paleo diet, here is an intesting YouTube video of Dr. Joseph Kaye discussing the paleo diet.  I like being informed and Dr. Kaye seems to be a good proponent of the diet.

Yale Doctor Discusses Paleo Diet

12 Jul

Here is a very interesting article written by Dr. David Katz of the Yale Prevention Research Center.  In it he discusses the merits of the Paleo diet, but also warns of the “devilish” details in its implementation that people must be aware of.  Katz discusses the recent poor ranking of the paleo diet among “diet experts” most of whom scored the diet very low.  Katz, however, was one who did not.  He does have his caveats for people considering the paleo diet.  They are nuanced, but he wants to emphasize they are not criticisms meant to write off the entire diet.  Here are some excerpts of his article.

I explained … that I am a proponent of our true ancestral diet, while dubious about its many modern variants. The notion — expressed in much of Prof. Cordain’s own work — that our ancestors ate a lot of meat, has invited modern carnivores to run up their “Paleo diet” banner and claim to be eating under it.

In other words, his criticisms, were not of the paleo diet, but of the diet as used today by heavy meat eaters, not staying true to the concept of “lean meats”.

But they are not, because modern meat is not Stone Age meat. There were no wild corned beef, salamis or pastramis in the Stone Age, so processed meat is certainly off the Paleo diet menu. There were no grain-fed cattle; no pigs fed slop; and no domesticated feed animals raised without demands on their muscles, either.

Feel free to read the rest of the article, it is interesting throughout to get a respected doctor’s opinion of the paleo diet.

Paleolithic diet explained via video

2 Jul

This is actually a pretty good video on the paleolithic diet, completed by a biology high school student.  It’s garnered a decent number of hits for such a video.  I thought I’d share it with you all because its information and short.  Kudos young man!

Cave man diet?

29 Jun

One of the reasons that I do not use the terms cave man diet and hunter gatherer diet as much is because I think they take away from the point.  The term cave man has some pejorative sentiment behind it and I think it dilutes what the paleolithic foods movement is all about.  Maybe this is just a reaction to the infamous Geico commercials, but I just think it’s more appropriate to relate this method of food to the time.  In fact, it was not necessarily the cavemen who sat down and thought of the perfect diet for their people.  The diet came about as a product of its time: the paleolithic era.  Maybe this is just a rant, but I try to avoid the other terms when I can.  As I’ve posted before, there really is not difference in the diet or food list itself.