DIETETICS VERSUS
NUTRITIONAL BALANCING SCIENCE
by Dr. Lawrence Wilson
©
October 2014, L.D. Wilson Consultants,
Inc.
All
information in this article is for educational purposes only. It is not for the diagnosis, treatment,
prescription or cure of any disease or health condition.
Dietetics
is a science of nutrition that is closely allied with the allopathic or drug
medical system of health care.
Dietitians are either registered or licensed in some states in America,
and work in hospitals, schools, clinics and elsewhere.
Their
training is in chemically-based diet concepts such as counting calories,
proportions of protein, carbohydrates and fats, and learning basic diet
modifications for those with diabetes, heart disease, cancer, or other
conditions. Below are their major
diet concepts and my comments about them.
THE
FOUR FOOD GROUPS
This
is the basic and older dietetic concept that divides foods into four basic
groups. One is supposed to eat a
balanced diet by including some foods from each group with every meal.
The
food groups are as follows:
á
Meats,
poultry and fish. These
provide a wide range of minerals, B-complex vitamins, essential fatty acids and
much more.
á
Grains
and cereals.
These provide mainly critical minerals, but also supply calories and
other nutrients.
á
Vegetables and fruits.
These can provide hundreds of what are called phytochemicals or
substances our bodies require.
Fruit also supplies a lot of sugars.
á
Dairy products, such as milk products
and eggs. These, if organic or raw, provide
usable calcium, omega-3 fatty acids and many other nutrients.
The
four food groups concept is valid, as far as it goes. It encourages variety in oneÕs diet, and it is true that
each of the food groups supplies different nutrients.
Problems with the four food groups idea. The problems are:
á
Little
or nothing is said about quality or even the quantity of the foods to eat. For example, is one supposed to eat the
same amount of all the groups?
Also, what kind of meats are best, for example, or are they all the
same?
á
The
effects of food processing are not considered. For example, French fries and ketchup
are in the vegetable category.
While these items contain vegetables, they are not very high quality due
to the processing they undergo.
á
Fats and oils are not considered at
all. Modern nutritional research has shown
that obtaining adequate omega-3 fatty acids and other components of fats and
oils are essential for our health, yet they are not even mentioned.
á
The way food is raised or grown is not
considered. This may not have been important 100
years ago when the four food group idea began, but it can matter a lot
today. Some food is laced with
pesticides and some meats are pumped full of antibiotics and hormones, for
example. Other food is raised in a
more healthful manner.
á
Individual differences, food allergies
or sensitivities, yin and yang aspects of food, and perhaps other issues are
not mentioned.
For
all the reasons above, the four food groups idea is not too useful in
nutritional balancing science. It is,
however, an interesting way to consider our diets.
THE
ÔFOOD PYRAMIDÕ
This
is a newer dietetic concept that has replaced the four food groups to a degree
in US government food programs and in dietitian education programs. The basic idea is to eat more of
certain foods and less of others, according to a diagram that looks like a
pyramid. Here is the basic layout:
Base of the pyramid: Grains and cereals, such
as bread, rice, corn and others.
Since the base is largest, one is supposed to eat the most of these
foods.
Next layer up: Vegetables and fruits.
One is supposed to eat somewhat less of these foods.
Next layer up: Proteins, which includes
meat, poultry, fish and eggs.
Top of the pyramid: Fats and oils. One is supposed to eat the least of
these foods such as butter, fried foods and so on.
Problems with the food pyramid. This newer dietetic
concept is very incorrect, in my view.
Thanks to this food pyramid idea, Americans have been overeating on
sugars, fruits, sweets and breads and becoming fatter and fatter, and sicker
and sicker with diabetes and cancer.
I
believe that cooked vegetables should be at the base of the pyramid, meaning
one should eat the most of these foods.
In fact, cooked vegetables should occupy the first two or three levels
of the pyramid. Next should be
quality proteins and quality fats and oils. The food group to eat the least of, in my view, are the
carbohydrates, which are starches and particularly all sweets including fruit
and fruit juices.
So,
in the view of nutritional balancing science, the food pyramid is quite a
disaster. Some changes were made
to the food pyramid to exclude trans fatty acids and refined sugars, but the
pyramid is still backwards and upside down in our view. In fact, it is a step backwards from
the four food groups idea in some ways.
Other
problems with the food pyramid scheme are similar to those of the older four
food group idea:
á
Not enough attention to the processing of the
food.
á
No attention to the way the food is produced.
á
No
attempt to differentiate individual needs in terms of quantity, specific types
of proteins, oils, etc.
á
No
attention to other concepts that we find important, such as the yin or yang
qualities of food.
RECOMMENDED
DAILY ALLOWANCES (RDA) and MINIMUM DAILY REQUIREMENTS (MDR)
These
represent another dietetic concept of setting minimum standards for vitamins,
minerals, calories, and perhaps other food components. The idea is that if one can obtain the
minimum amount of these nutrients, one will be healthy.
The value of the RDAs and MDRs. The
main value of the RDAs in my opinion is to note that millions of people,
especially in America, are not even getting the minimum required daily amount
of many nutrients such as calcium and vitamin A. This is sad to have to say, but it is the truth.
Problems with the RDAs and the MDRs. Beyond the value discussed above, the
RDAs have little interest for practitioners and clients using nutritional
balancing science.
The
RDAs and MDRs are far too low, in my view, as they are based on averages of
ÒhealthyÓ people, many of whom are getting ready to be diagnosed with cancer or
diabetes. So I do not make use
this concept.
In
nutritional balancing science, one is not interested in how much vitamin C or
vitamin E a person needs to stay ÒhealthyÓ in terms of external
appearance. One is interested in
how much of the vitamins and minerals are needed to maintain the body in
optimum health, remove toxic metals, heal chronic infections, and so on. This amount is far higher than the RDAs
and differs depending on oneÕs age, sex, stress level, illnesses, lifestyle,
weight, height, and other factors such as the oxidation rate.
Dr.
Weston Price, DDS, was a dentist who traveled the world studying the healthiest
tribes of people around the world.
He wrote Nutrition and Physical Degeneration. He found that all the healthiest people obtained between
4-11 times the recommended daily allowance of the major vitamins and
minerals! His book is a classic nutrition
text. Unfortunately, it is now
almost 100 years old, so I do not agree with all of Dr. PriceÕs
recommendations, since things have changed somewhat. For example, it is simply not safe to eat raw food today
very much due to concerns with parasites, in particular. However, overall, Dr. Price was a very
wise physician and researcher.
In
summary, the RDAs and the MDRs are much too low for optimum health and not of
much use at all if one wants optimum health or even decent health.
COUNTING
CALORIES AND GRAMS OF FOODS
This
is another important concept in modern dietetics. It is the idea that a person should eat a certain set amount
of calories (which are heat units in foods) and a certain number of grams or
ounces of protein, starch and fats.
The dietitians use this idea to design 1000-calorie diets and so
on. They also use it to decide
what proportions of protein, starch and fat a person should eat.
A
good thing about this idea is that it is mathematical and precise. Certainly there is some truth to the
idea that if you eat too many calories, for example, you will gain too much
weight.
Problems with this concept. Unfortunately, we
find that this idea of counting calories and grams does not work very
well. Here are just a few of the
reasons:
á
Not
all calories are alike.
What I mean by this is that the calories or heat units in foods are
burned or metabolized differently depending on the type of food, the nutrients
in the food, the overall food quality, or other factors.
á
PeopleÕs
needs vary greatly!
This is the most important problem. The needs depend on a personÕs digestive capability,
lifestyle, activity level, age, sex, illnesses, temperament, oxidation rate,
mineral deficiencies and general nutritional status.
For
example, athletes need more food an sedentary workers. Older people may need a little
less. Fast oxidizers need more as
they burn their food faster. Slow
oxidizers need less, and so on.
For this reason, mathematical standards are only useful in general, and
must often be modified, reducing the effectiveness of the concept. We find we donÕtÕ need to bother with
it to help people lose lots of weight and regain their health.
In
fact, we find that following diets based mainly upon counting calories and
grams of food often causes subtle starvation, making peopleÕs health much worse
over time.
MIXING
MANY FOODS AT A MEAL
Dietitians
often suggest mixing fats, proteins and carbohydrates and sugars at one
meal. They believe this way you will
obtain more nutrients and it is a more ÔcompleteÕ meal. In nutritional balancing, we do not
subscribe to this idea simply because it is harder to digest. It is far better to have simple meals
of two or three, or even just one type of food at a meal. This is how babies tend to like to eat,
and it is how many primitive tribes still eat their meals. It is far easier on the digestion. So we suggest having just a few
vegetables and some chicken, for example, at one meal. At the next meal, have some yogurt or
cheese, maybe with some rice crackers, and so on.
SUPPLEMENTS
Dietitians
generally do not subscribe to the idea that nutritional supplements are
critical for health. Here I
believe they are just ignorant or brainwashed, since food analysis and other
research clearly shows that our food today is grossly deficient in certain
nutrients, even if one eats well.
The most obvious are the omega-3 fatty acids, enough vitamin D, vitamin
A, calcium and a few others. I
feel that dietitians and doctors have been thoroughly brainwashed to believe
that people do not need extra supplements when it is not true. In fact, everyone needs them today
because the quality of the food is not great, the soils are depleted of
nutrients around the world, and common methods of food processing such as
making whole flour into white flour greatly depletes the nutrient content of
the food.
Dietitians
and doctors also do not agree that nutritional supplements can be used for
specifically healing various symptoms and conditions in the body. This is also the result of either gross
ignorance or brainwashing, or likely both. Once again, thousands of pages of medical literature support
the idea that extra vitamin A and C, for example, can boost the immune response
and extra zinc is helpful for the skin, the immune system and much more. Many other examples could be cited.
ORGANIC
FOOD, TOXIC METALS AND OTHER TOXINS IN FOODS
Dietitians
and medical doctors do not generally pay much attention to toxic metals and
other toxic chemicals in foods.
This is a terrible omission, as many food chemicals irritate the
intestines, damage the liver and kidneys, reduce the nutritional value of food
in some cases, and upset body chemistry in many other ways. Doctors and
dietitians often recommend processed foods for their patients with chemicals
that offer no nutritional value and can upset the patientÕs body in serious
ways.
In
contrast, nutritional balancing is well aware of the harmful effects of some
food chemicals such as excitotoxins in Aspartame, MSG, some colors, flavors and
preservatives, and we specifically warn people to avoid most food chemicals.
We
also find that fish, for example, except for sardines and a few other small
fish, are too high in mercury for safety.
Foods laden with pesticides are often high in lead, arsenic and other
toxic metals used in these insecticides and pesticides. While occasional exposure is okay,
eating them on a daily basis is not wise and eventually causes illness. This is one argument in favor of organically
grown foods and free-range, antibiotic-free meats and dairy products. This is not a guarantee of no chemical
residues, but in general they appear to be better quality.
Several
studies also show that organic foods are higher in many nutrients, but this is
also generally ignored by most dietitians and doctors.
FOOD
AS THERAPY TO BALANCE THE BODY CHEMISTRY
This
is a more advanced concept of nutrition that is not even considered in
dietetics, to my knowledge. It is
based on the idea of metabolic typing, which is generally foreign to allopathic
medicine and dietetics.
Nutritional
balancing science makes use of hair mineral testing to assess a personÕs
metabolic type and metabolic or oxidation rate. Then the diet is altered because research by Dr. George
Watson and Dr. Paul Eck indicates that by so doing, one can actually balance
the body and greatly improve oneÕs health. At the same time, these doctors showed that eating the wrong
foods for oneÕs oxidation type worsens oneÕs health, even if the foods are
nutritious.
CONCLUSION
Modern
medical dietetics is used in hospitals, clinics and schools across
America. While they have a
rudimentary understanding of the complex area of diet and health, I believe
their methods are sadly outdated, simplistic, and even lacking in common
sense. In fact, their
recommendations may be largely responsible for the epidemic of obesity,
diabetes, attention-deficit disorder, cancer, arthritis and many more diseases.
In
addition, most medical and dietetic professionals are quite arrogant and
unwilling to change, in spite of thousands of pages of well-conducted studies
that contradict their approach and their recommendations.
Home | Hair Analysis | Saunas | Books | Articles
| Detox Protocols
Courses | About
Dr. Wilson | Contact Us | The Free Basic Program