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Fast Carbs, Slow Carbs: The Simple Truth About Food, Weight, and Disease [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 320 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 191x127x27 mm, kaal: 329 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Apr-2020
  • Kirjastus: Harper
  • ISBN-10: 0062996975
  • ISBN-13: 9780062996978
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 320 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 191x127x27 mm, kaal: 329 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Apr-2020
  • Kirjastus: Harper
  • ISBN-10: 0062996975
  • ISBN-13: 9780062996978
Teised raamatud teemal:
"The American body is plagued by obesity, heart disease, and diabetes. In Fast Carbs, Slow Carbs, the follow up to his bestselling book The End of Overeating, Dr. David A. Kessler explains how we can reduce heart disease, keep weight off, and reduce chronic disease"--

The American body is in trouble. Unprecedented numbers of us suffer from obesity, heart disease, diabetes, and other debilitating illnesses. The root cause is a once-revolutionary idea that seemed to offer so much promise, but instead has become the cause of a global health crisis: processed foods. Over the past seventy-five years, a number of factors aligned to create a reality in which processed carbohydrates became our main food source. In Fast Carbs, Slow Carbs, bestselling author and former FDA Commissioner David A. Kessler explains how the quest to feed a nation resulted in a population that is increasingly suffering from obesity and chronic disease and offers a  solution for changing course.

For decades, no one questioned the effects of these processed carbohydrates. The focus was on fertile grassland, ideal for growing vast amounts of wheat and corn; an industrial infrastructure perfect for refining those grains into starch; a food production behemoth that turns refined grains into affordable, appealing, and ever-present food items, from pizza to burritos to bagels; and an efficient distribution network that ensures consumption by Americans nationwide.

But during those same decades, our bodies quietly contended with the metabolic chaos caused by consuming rapidly absorbable starch. Slowly but surely, these effects accumulated and became disastrous, leading to the public health crisis in which we find ourselves today.

In Fast Carbs, Slow Carbs, Kessler explains how eating refined grains such as wheat, corn, and rice leads to a cascade of hormonal and metabolic issues that make it very easy to gain weight and nearly impossible to lose it. Worse still is how excess weight creates a very real link to diabetes, heart disease, cognitive decline, and a host of cancers.

We can no longer afford to dismiss the consequences of eating food that is designed to be rapidly absorbed as sugar in our bodies. Informed by cutting-edge research as well as Dr. Kessler&;s own personal quest to manage his weight, Fast Carbs, Slow Carbs reveals in illuminating detail how we got to this critical turning point in our health as a nation&;and outlines a plan for eliminating heart disease, allowing us to, finally, regain control of our health.

Introduction: The Birth of Fast Curbs x
Part I Trapped in Food Chaos
Chapter 1 An extraordinary opportunity to save lives
3(5)
Chapter 2 There is a path out of the lifelong trap of food chaos that leads to lasting weight loss and health
8(5)
Chapter 3 Until we learn the truth about fast carbs, we won't break the weight loss-and-gain cycle
13(3)
Chapter 4 The problem posed by highly processed (fast) carbs has been suspected for decades
16(3)
Chapter 5 Only 12.2 percent of Americans are metabolically healthy
19(6)
Part II How Food Stopped Sustaining Us
Chapter 6 Over the past half century, Americans have greatly increased their average daily intake of processed carbohydrates
25(3)
Chapter 7 A turning point for our diet
28(4)
Chapter 8 Government guidelines led us to carbs
32(3)
Chapter 9 "Complex carbohydrates" is a misleading term that fails to distinguish rapidly absorbable carbs from those we absorb slowly
35(3)
Chapter 10 Today's ultraprocessed foods allow us to absorb more calories
38(3)
Chapter 11 The food industry claims there are no negative effects to processing
41(5)
Chapter 12 From whole grain to the cereal box: What are we really eating?
46(2)
Chapter 13 Food processing changes the chemical structure of starch
48(5)
Chapter 14 The altered structure of processed starch makes it a rapidly absorbable fast carb
53(4)
Chapter 15 Processed fast carbs serve as delivery vehicles for the pleasures of sugar, fat, and salt
57(4)
Chapter 16 Without processed starch, we would not have a vast array of processed foods
61(4)
Part III Weight
Chapter 17 Recommendation: reduce or eliminate fast carbs for good to achieve and maintain a healthy weight
65(8)
Chapter 18 Highly processed carbs wreak havoc on our bodies
73(3)
Chapter 19 Where we digest carbs determines how our hunger is satisfied
76(6)
Chapter 20 Highly processed food triggers speed eating
82(6)
Chapter 21 Eliminating as many fast carbs as you can is essential to weight maintenance
88(6)
Chapter 22 Maintaining weight loss requires us to eat less over the long term
94(3)
Chapter 23 Creating new habits can lessen the appeal of fast carbs
97(6)
Part IV Metabolic Chaos
Chapter 24 Recommendation: to avoid metabolic harm, reduce or eliminate fast carbs for good
103(10)
Chapter 25 Consumption of fast carbs may lead to metabolic syndrome
113(4)
Chapter 26 Fast carbs interfere with fat metabolism
117(4)
Chapter 27 A vicious cycle connecting fast carbs, obesity, and diabetes traps many people who struggle with their weight
121(6)
Chapter 28 We have the ability to reverse metabolic disease
127(3)
Chapter 29 Improving metabolic health is important for preserving cognitive function, reducing the risk of certain cancers, and improving male libido
130(7)
Part V Heart Disease
Chapter 30 Recommendation: reduce your LDL levels to prevent heart disease
137(3)
Chapter 31 LDL causes heart disease
140(5)
Chapter 32 Eating less starch reduces salt intake and lowers blood pressure
145(3)
Chapter 33 Diet or medicine to lower LDL? Probably both
148(3)
Chapter 34 Recommendation: engage in daily moderate-intensity exercise to stay healthy
151(8)
Part VI The Optimal Diet
Chapter 35 Most successful diets have one thing in common: limited fast carbs
159(5)
Chapter 36 A diet emphasizing plants and slow carbs is optimal for your health
164(4)
Chapter 37 The pros and cons of low-carb diets
168(5)
Chapter 38 Don't consume processed meats
173(5)
Chapter 39 Your diet doesn't have to be perfect
178(5)
Epilogue In the Public Interest: Changing Our Food Environment 183(4)
Meal Charts 187(16)
Q&A 203(8)
Notes 211(76)
Acknowledgments 287(4)
Index 291
David. A. Kessler, MD, served as Chief Science Officer of the White House Covid-19 Response Team under President Joe Biden and previously served as commissioner of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration under Presidents George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton. He is the author of the New York Times bestsellers The End of Overeating and Capture and two other books: Fast Carbs, Slow Carbs and A Question of Intent. Dr. Kessler is a pediatrician and has been the dean of the medical schools at Yale and the University of California, San Francisco. He is a graduate of Amherst College, the University of Chicago Law School, and Harvard Medical School.