#68: Is There an Optimal Diet for Humans? with Anahad O'Connor

Published: Aug. 15, 2019, 10 a.m.

b'Nutrition experts have long debated whether there is an optimal diet that humans evolved to eat. Studies show that modern hunter-gatherer groups across the globe generally have phenomenal heart and metabolic health, yet they eat a variety of diets, and tend to avoid the chronic diseases that kill most Americans.\\xa0\\nOn today\\u2019s Broken Brain Podcast, our host, Dhru, talks to Anahad O\\u2019Connor, a bestselling author and reporter for The New York Times. He joined the paper in 2003 and writes for Science Times \\u2013 the paper\\u2019s weekly science and health section \\u2013 and the Well blog. Anahad covers nutrition, medicine and chronic disease. He has published a number of groundbreaking investigative stories for the Times, including a series in 2015 that exposed Coca-Cola\\u2019s funding of scientific research that sought to downplay the role of sugar-sweetened beverages in the obesity epidemic. In 2018, he and his colleagues won an award from the Association of HealthCare Journalists for Planet Fat, a series that examined the food industry\\u2019s role in the spread of global obesity.\\xa0\\nAnahad is a graduate of Yale University and is a frequent guest on national news programs, such as PBS NewsHour, Good Morning America, and NPR\\u2019s All Things Considered. He is also the author of four books.\\nIn this episode, Dhru and Anahad talk about what life is like in hunter-gatherer societies, what a typical hunter-gatherer diet looks like, the challenges that are faced in these societies, and if there really is an optimal diet for humans. They talk about time-restricted eating and how when you eat could be more important than what you eat, how food variety causes you to eat more, something known as sensory-specific satiety, and why this is one of the reasons people in hunter-gatherer socieites don\\u2019t overeat and become obese. They also discuss another article Anahad wrote in the New York Times, How to Get Strong, and how everyone knows that exercise is one of the best things you can do for your health, but most people ignore one crucial component of it: resistance training and how it can reverse the age-related cellular damage that contributes to sarcopenia and functional impairment.\\xa0\\nIn this episode, we dive into:\\n-Modern hunter-gatherer societies and why they tend to avoid chronic diseases (3:09)\\n-The importance of eating local and seasonal foods (14:56)\\n-Time-restricted eating (17:47)\\n-Why food variety causes your to eat more (24:08)\\xa0\\n-Nature\\u2019s perfect food (31:04)\\n-Anahad\\u2019s groundbreaking investigative report that exposed Coca-Cola\\u2019s funding of scientific research that sought to downplay the role of sugar-sweetened beverages in the obesity epidemic (41:23)\\n-The impact of lifestyle and social connections on overall health (53:22)\\n-Longevity and resistance training (1:02:07)\\xa0\\n-How to make resistance training practical (1:11:13)\\n-Learn more about Anahad and his work (1:19:06)\\nFor more on Anahad O\\u2019Connor, be sure to follow him on Twitter @anahadoconnor, and check out his articles for the New York Times, right here.\\nSponsor: This episode is sponsored by our partnership with the AquaTru Water Filter. To get exclusive access to this deal visit www.brokenbrain.com/filter\\n Interested in joining Dhru\\u2019s\\xa0Broken Brain Podcast\\xa0Facebook Community? Submit your join request here:\\xa0https://www.facebook.com/groups/2819627591487473/\\nFor more on Dhru Purohit, be sure to follow him on Instagram\\xa0@dhrupurohit, on Facebook\\xa0@dhruxpurohit, on Twitter\\xa0@dhrupurohit, and on YouTube\\xa0@dhrupurohit. You can also text Dhru at\\xa0(302) 200-5643\\xa0or click here\\xa0https://my.community.com/dhrupurohit\\n Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.\\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices'