Engineering:Pritikin diet

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Short description: Low-fat, high-fibre diet

The Pritikin diet is a low-fat, high-fibre diet which forms part of the "Pritikin Program for Diet and Exercise", a lifestyle regimen originally created by Nathan Pritikin. The 1979 book describing the diet became a best-seller.[1][2]

Reception

The diet is based around low-fat, high-fibre food and limiting red meat, alcohol, and processed food.[3] When it was launched, the diet was considered radical, but its precepts are now considered largely in alignment with mainstream nutritional advice.[3] The Pritikin Diet has been categorized as a fad diet with possible disadvantages including a boring food choice, flatulence, and the risk of feeling too hungry.[4]

Gastroenterologist David Hershel Alpers and colleagues described the Pritikin diet as "nutritionally adequate, but the low fat content makes it unpalatable, and the likelihood of compliance is low."[5]

See also

  • List of diets

References

  1. McFadden, Robert D. (23 February 1985). "Nathan Pritikin, whose diet many used against heart ills". The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/1985/02/23/us/nathan-pritikin-whose-diet-many-used-against-heart-ills.html. 
  2. "The Pritikin program: Claims vs. facts". Consumer Reports 47 (10): 513–518. 1982. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Camille Noe Pagan (22 January 2017). "Pritikin Diet". WebMD. http://www.webmd.com/diet/a-z/pritikin-diet. 
  4. Alters S, Schiff W (22 February 2012). Chapter 10: Body Weight and Its Management (Sixth ed.). Jones & Bartlett Publishers. p. 327. ISBN 978-1-4496-3062-1. https://books.google.com/books?id=VegUiVbruBMC&pg=PA327. 
  5. Alpers, David H; Stenson, William F. Bier, Dennis M. (1995). Manual of Nutritional Therapeutics. Third Edition. Little, Brown and Company. p. 495