Understanding Macronutrients
Macronutrients provide the energy necessary for our bodies to function and grow, each playing a unique role in our overall health and well-being.
Some cancer risk factors remain out of our control, such as genetics and environment, but the rest is up to us. Adopting a healthy diet can play a crucial role. Furthermore, making healthy lifestyle changes such as not smoking, limiting alcohol, maintaining a healthy weight, and exercising regularly, are all great steps towards helping reduce your risk of cancer.
Diet has a major impact on our health, including our propensity for certain cancers. Below we are going to explore some dietary habits that can help reduce our risk factors. If you have a family history of cancer, making even small changes now can have a huge impact on our long-term health. If you’re like me, and have already been diagnosed with cancer, eating a beneficial diet can strengthen your body and mind, and start you on the right path towards eating to beat cancer.
To lower your risk for many types of cancer, switch to a predominantly plant-based diet, based around fruits, vegetables, nuts, beans, whole grains, and healthy fats. Most of us fall short of the daily recommended five servings of fruit and vegetables. Focus on adding “whole” foods – which means eating things as close to their natural state as possible. For example, have a grapefruit for breakfast, or a salad for lunch.
Fruits and vegetables may lower the risk from several types of cancers, including cancers of the:
We should eat (at least) five servings of fruits and vegetables a day.
To lower your risk for many types of cancer, build your diet around a variety of antioxidant-rich fruit and vegetables, nuts, beans, whole grains, and healthy fats. Also, limit the amount of processed and fried foods, unhealthy fats, sugars and refined carbs you consume.
Melinda Smith, M.A. and Lawrence Robinson (World Cancer Research Fund International)
Plant-based foods are rich in nutrients known as antioxidants, that boost your immune system and help protect against cancer, such as beta carotene, selenium, carotenoids, lutein, lycopene, and vitamins A, C and E. Foods high in antioxidants include various berries (blueberries, cranberries, blackberries, raspberries, strawberries), fruits (prunes, black plums, apples), beans (red kidney, pinto, black beans) and leafy greens.
Plant-based foods also contain naturally occurring substances called phytonutrients. Examples include carotenoids found in red, orange, yellow, and some dark-green vegetables, polyphenols, found in herbs, spices, vegetables, tea, coffee, chocolate, nuts, apples, onions, berries, and other plants, and allium compounds, which can be found in chives, garlic, leeks, and onions.
Additionally, phytonutrients play an important part in your overall health. Some phytonutrients regulate hormones, others slowing cancer cell growth, block inflammation, or reduce the risk of damage by oxidants.
Cruciferous vegetables. Green, leafy vegetables have been well studied for their cancer fighting powers. These foods include broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, Brussels sprouts, bok choy, and kale. Frequently eating these foods is associated with a reduced cancer risk.
Cruciferous vegetables protect against cancers of the:
Lycopene is the plant-based antioxidant that gives red and pink fruits their color. It is linked to numerous health benefits ranging from heart health, to protection against sunburns and certain types of cancers. Lycopene can be found in tomatoes, pink grapefruit, pink guava, watermelon, papaya, and apricots.
Lycopene may protect against cancers of the:
Dietary fiber is found in fruits, vegetables, and whole grains, and plays a key role in keeping our digestive systems clean and healthy. Fiber helps flush cancer-causing compounds from your digestive tract before they can cause harm, and helps maintain a healthy microbiome – the community of microbes living in our digestive tracts. A healthy microbiome has been linked with a lower cancer risk. Foods that have fiber include whole grains and seeds, including barley, oats, spelt, bulgur, corn, psyllium, whole grain bread and pasta, legumes and pulses and some vegetables and fruits.
Studies show that eating a diet high in fiber may protect against cancers of the:
Eating a diet high in fat increases your risk for many types of cancer. But, consuming healthy fats may help protect against cancer. As a general rule aim to always do the following things:
Consuming refined carbs can cause rapid spikes in blood sugar, and has been linked to an increased risk of developing prostate cancer, as well as other serious health problems. Instead of consuming sugar sweetened drinks and cereals, refined grains and processed foods, switch to drinking water, consuming whole grains and focusing on whole foods.
Studies show that cutting down on sugar and refined carbs may not only help you reach and maintain a healthy weight it may also protect against cancers of the:
Many different studies have established a link between an increased risk of cancer and eating processed and red meats. Red meats include pork, beef, veal, and lamb, while processed meats include things such as bacon, sausages, and hotdogs. The safest approach is to stop consuming all red and processed meats. Instead replace them with alternative protein sources, such as fish, eggs, soy, or plant-based protein sources, like nuts, lentils, beans and quinoa. Consuming any amount of processed meat, anything over 18 ounces of fresh meat per week have a strong correlation with an increased risk of cancer.
Reducing your intake of red and processed meats may protect against cancers of the:
Choosing healthy food is not the only important factor in preventing cancer. How you prepare, store and cook your food also has an impact on your health.
Carcinogens are cancer-causing substances found in food. They can form during the cooking or preserving process and as foods starts to spoil. Foods that contain carcinogens include cured, dried, and preserved meats; burned or charred meats; smoked foods; and foods that have become moldy. To reduce your exposure to carcinogens:
Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) include plants and animals whose DNA has been altered in ways that cannot occur in nature or in traditional crossbreeding. One of the most common purposes for genetically modifying and organism, is to boost resistance to pesticide, or make a more drought resistant crop. While the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the biotech companies that engineer GMOs insist they are safe, many food safety advocates point out that these products have undergone only short-term testing to determine their effects on humans.
If you’re worried about GMOs and pesticides, buy organic or local foods
In most countries, organic crops contain no GMOs and organic meat comes from animals raised on organic, GMO-free feed. Locally grown produce is less likely to have been treated with chemicals to prevent spoilage.
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