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Nutrition in Crisis
Richard David Feinman
其他書名
Flawed Studies, Misleading Advice, and the Real Science of Human Metabolism
出版
Chelsea Green Publishing
, 2019-03-04
主題
Health & Fitness / General
Health & Fitness / Diet & Nutrition / Diets
Health & Fitness / Diet & Nutrition / Nutrition
Health & Fitness / Diet & Nutrition / Weight Loss
Health & Fitness / Diseases & Conditions / General
Health & Fitness / Diseases & Conditions / Cancer
Health & Fitness / Diseases & Conditions / Diabetes
Health & Fitness / Diet & Nutrition / General
Medical / Diet Therapy
Medical / Endocrinology & Metabolism
Medical / History
Medical / Nutrition
Medical / Oncology / General
ISBN
1603588191
9781603588195
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=MBWGDwAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Almost every day it seems a new study is published that shows you are at risk for diabetes, cardiovascular disease, or death due to something you’ve just eaten for lunch. Many of us no longer know what to eat or who to believe. In
Nutrition in Crisis
distinguished biochemist Richard Feinman, PhD, cuts through the noise, explaining the intricacies of nutrition and human metabolism in accessible terms. He lays out the tools you need to navigate the current confusion in medical literature and its increasingly bizarre reflection in the media.
At the same time,
Nutrition in Crisis
offers an unsparing critique of the nutritional establishment, which continues to demonize fat and refute the benefits of low-carbohydrate and ketogenic diets—all despite decades of evidence to the contrary. Feinman tells the story of the first low-carbohydrate revolution fifteen years ago, how it began, what killed it, and why a second revolution is now reaching a fever pitch. He exposes the backhanded tactics of a regressive nutritional establishment that ignores good data and common sense, and highlights the innovative work of those researchers who have broken rank.
Entertaining, informative, and irreverent, Feinman paints a broad picture of the nutrition world: the beauty of the underlying biochemistry; the embarrassing failures of the medical establishment; the preeminence of low-carbohydrate diets for weight loss, diabetes, other metabolic diseases, and even cancer; and what’s wrong with the constant reports that the foods we’ve been eating for centuries represent a threat rather than a source of pleasure.