Please enter any offer
code here
Home Email Customer Charter Offers Fast Order Check Out Help Search  
FREE P&P
for all orders worth £10 or more to UK addresses
Vitamin faq's


It has been long thought that a Mediterranean diet rich in vegetables and fruits and low in saturated fat can help us live longer.


The traditional diets from the Mediterranean include a variety of cuisines including those of Southern Italy, Southern France, Spain and Greece. Although these cuisines vary in flavour there are some common elements, which include olives, grapes and wheat and their derivatives.

The dishes are largely plant-based, with grains, seasonal vegetables and fruits, beans and pulses, nuts and olive oil. Minimal processing and the seasonal use and freshness of these products,maximise their nutrient content and are packed with vitamins and minerals, antioxidants and fibre. Despite differences in the levels of dietary fat intake between the different countries, a high monounsaturated to saturated fat ratio is a common feature.

A recent study* has shown that older people who eat a Mediterranean diet can expect certain health benefits and to live longer. The study was of 74,607 men and women aged over 60 from nine European countries including the UK.

They collected information on different areas including diet, lifestyle, medical history, smoking and
physical activity. The men and women were
each given a score based on adherence to a Mediterranean diet, with higher scores for
those who ate the most foods linked to
such a diet.

* Source: British Medical
Journal ‘Modified
Mediterranean diet and
survival: EPIC -
elderly prospective
cohort study’
published
8 April 2005

The researchers found that overall a higher dietary score was linked to a lower overall death rate. They said that a two-point increase in the score was linked to an 8% reduction in mortality. A three-point increase was associated with an 11% drop in mortality and a fourpoint increase was associated with a 14% drop.

This meant a healthy man of 60 who stuck closely to a Mediterranean diet could expect to live around one year longer than a man of the same age who did not.

The researchers said the link was strongest in Greece and Spain probably because people in these countries followed a genuinely Mediterranean diet. And concluded that a dietary pattern that resembles that of the Mediterranean is associated with a lower overall death rate.
 
Mediterranean Diet
High intake of vegetables, fruits and cereals
Moderate to high intake of fish
High intake of unsaturated fats, such as olive oil.
Low intake of dairy products and meat
Modest intake of alcohol, mostly wine is also linked to this diet.
 




Ecommerce Solution provided by Advanced Mail Order – Mail Order Software Specialists