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My Big Fat Diet Frequently Asked Questions

December 31, 2008 by Good Samaritan

Dr. Wortman’s put the First Nations people of Alert Bay on their ancestral diet, a fatty paleolithic diet that consists of fatty meats, fruit and vegetables. The study diet is based on the traditional diet (wild salmon, oolichan grease) but also includes modern market foods, (bacon, eggs). i.e. foods that have protein and fat but no starch or sugar. Here are the frequently asked questions.

Permitted foods include; beef, pork, chicken, fish or seafood, cauliflower, broccoli, all the salad greens, eggs, cream, but not milk. Milk contains lactose, which is sugar.

Not permitted are starches like pasta, rice, potatoes, bread and sugar. Dr. Jay Wortman believes that it was the introduction of these by Europeans over a hundred and fifty years ago that caused the rise of diabetes and obesity.

And so the key to this diet is the avoidance of starch and sugar because those were not common components of a traditional diet.

An interesting component is oolichan grease. It’s a very healthy fat and in the fact it was a big part of the diet in the past, was one of the reasons it was such a healthy diet.

My Big Fat Diet FAQs from http://www.drjaywortman.com/blog/wordpress/my-big-fat-diet-faqs/

1. What is a carbohydrate?

We get our energy from the food we eat in the form of calories from protein, fat and carbohydrate (also alcohol). Foods from plant and animal sources provide protein and fat. Carbohydrates, however, come exclusively from plant sources. We commonly refer to carbohydrates as starch and sugar. Any food that contains starch or sugar, whether it is natural or refined, is a source of dietary carbohydrate. For example, a glass of fruit juice is rich in fructose, a natural sugar, while a can of pop will have sucrose, a refined sugar that has been added, but in both cases the carbohydrate content is about the same. Other common carbohydrate foods include fruit, starchy vegetables like potato and rice, anything made with flour including bread, pasta and pastries, anything that contains sugar and milk which contains lactose, a naturally occurring sugar. All these foods, once they enter our digestive system, will produce a rise in blood glucose.

2. Doesn’t our body need carbohydrates?

No. This is a common myth. For instance, many people, even medical professionals, will tell you that the brain needs glucose (from carbohydrates) to function. In fact, the brain can get up to 80% of its energy needs from ketones, an energy source produced from fat in our liver. There are a few tissues that do require exclusively glucose for their energy needs like the lens of the eye, the red blood cells and a part of the kidney. The fact is that the liver is capable of producing sufficient glucose to sustain these tissues through a process called “gluconeogenesis”. All other tissues of the body are quite happy to burn fat or ketones for their energy needs when glucose is absent.

3. Aren’t ketones supposed to be harmful?

We all produce ketones from time to time when our supply of dietary carbohydrates dwindles. Many people will produce them in the early hours of the morning after the carbohydrates they ate for dinner are used up. People on a low-carbohydrate diet will burn ketones along with fat for most of their energy needs. We sometimes test the urine of low-carb dieters to measure ketones to determine if the diet is working. The levels of ketones in the blood in all these instances is not high enough to cause any harm. There is a condition known as “ketoacidosis” which is harmful and part of the confusion around ketones may be due to this. Ketoacidosis is a serious problem that occurs in type 1 diabetics when they are not given insulin. In this case the ketone levels are many times higher and blood sugars are very high, too. While ketoacidosis is harmful, the ketosis experienced by low-carb dieters is not.

4. Will a low-carb diet increase my risk of heart disease?

This is another common myth. It is based on the notion that if you eliminate carbs as an energy source you will have to increase fat intake to compensate (there is a limit to how much protein you can eat). It was thought that an increase in fat would lead to high cholesterol which is associated with heart disease. When the studies were actually done on this, however, much to everyone’s surprise, the opposite happened. People on a low-carb diet improved their cholesterol readings even when they increased their fat intake and even when their intake of saturated fat (the so-called bad fat) increased. It appears that when you body must rely on fat for energy, the saturated fat you eat gets burned up before it can cause any harm. Another factor that plays a role in heart disease is the level of inflammation in our system. If the markers of inflammation are high we recognize this as a sign of increased risk of heart disease. We commonly order a C-reactive protein test, a marker of inflammation in the blood, to assess a person’s risk. A recent study showed that people on a low-carb diet demonstrated significantly reduced inflammatory markers.

Although there haven’t been any long term studies yet to prove it, the existing science suggests that a low-carb high-fat diet may actually reduce the risk of heart disease.

5. Will a low-carb diet harm my kidneys?

Many people mistakenly refer to low-carb diets as high-protein and we know that eating too much protein, if you have kidney damage, will worsen this problem. In fact, low-carb dieters tend to only moderately increase their protein intake and the scientific literature is clear that an increase in protein when your kidneys are healthy causes no harm. Dr. Mary Vernon, a Kansas physician who specializes in treating diabetics with a low-carb diet, has reported that patients who have very early signs of kidney damage from their diabetes can actually correct this problem with a low-carb diet, something that has not been demonstrated with any drug or other type of therapy.

The bottom line is that if you have documented kidney damage, you should not make a big dietary change without consulting your doctor. For everyone else, there is no need to worry about kidney damage from a low-carb diet.

6. Does a low-carb diet increase the risk of gall stones?

Gall stones develop when the gall bladder is inactive. Once they have developed, there is a risk that contraction of the gall bladder will cause a stone to block the gall duct. This will lead to an acute gall bladder attack which can be very painful. When gall stones are diagnosed, usually by ultrasound, surgery to remove the gall bladder is generally regarded as the best way to correct the problem. The gall bladder tends to contract in response to a fatty meal. If someone has gall stones and they eat a fatty meal this could trigger an acute gall bladder attack. On a low-carb diet, most of the calories come from fat but, initially this is the fat that the person has stored. Burning off stored fat won’t trigger a gall bladder attack. Later on in a low-carb diet, when weight loss has reached a plateau, increasing dietary fat could theoretically trigger a gall bladder attack. There have been no reports of this in the literature and my colleagues who have had years of experience in guiding people on low-carb diets tell me that the risk is no greater than if people were eating a regular diet.

7. Why do all the authorities on diet advise against a low-carb diet?

This is a hard question to answer in a few words. My friend Gary Taubes, the acclaimed American science writer, has authored a 460 page book which answers this question. I highly recommend “Good calories, Bad calories” to anyone interested in gaining a better understanding of what is wrong with the current nutritional approach. In short, the current recommendation to eat a majority of our calories as carbohydrates reflects the conventional wisdom that dietary fat is the cause of heart disease. Since there is a limit to how much of our daily energy needs can be obtained from protein, we are left to chose between carbs and fat. If you believe fat is harmful, then you are left with carbs as the main source of energy. As Gary documents in his excellent book, the science implicating fat in heart disease is not particularly sound. It may, in fact, be that carbs are the dietary villain, not fat. There have been a number of recent studies that have shown that people on a very low carb diet can eat lots of fat, including saturated fat, and achieve a better lipid profile than people eating the American Heart Association recommended low-fat diet. In a recent editorial, Dr. Frank Hu, a well-respected Harvard nutritional researcher, argued that, based on the evidence, public health programs to reduce cardiovascular disease need to shift from targeting dietary fat to targeting carbohydrates. He states that the original programs to discourage fat consumption may have backfired and inadvertently increased obesity and cardiovascular disease by encouraging a shift towards carbohydrate consumption.

My Big Fat Diet is a Paleolithic Diet, buy the DVD, follow the study

December 31, 2008 by Good Samaritan

A Dr. Jay Wortman helps convince the whole town of the Namgis First Nation of Alert Bay to revert back to the traditional diet of their indian ancestors, before the europeans arrived.  This means no grains, no rice, no wheat, no corn, no sugar, no potatoes, no bread, no cookies, no pasta, etc.  The town is encouraged to eat fatty meats, local vegetables and local fruit. Just so happens this is a paleolithic diet… a version that allows cooking.

They are selling a DVD of the television show for $35. Might be worth it, see the DVD introduction.

Check out the diet recommendations in the handout:

The traditional or pre-contact diet of First Nations peoples consisted of fish, meat, wild plants and berries. The Traditional Diet Program uses selected modern foods in groupings similar to what people ate before contact. It is designed to treat overweight and obesity, metabolic syndrome and diabetes.

Caution: If you are taking insulin or any other medication for diabetes, blood pressure or cholesterol your need for these medications will drop rapidly and you may become ill if you continue to take them after starting the diet.

IF YOU ARE TAKING THESE KINDS OF MEDICATIONS YOU SHOULD SEEK THE SUPERVISION OF A PHYSICIAN BEFORE STARTING THIS DIET SO THAT YOUR MEDICATIONS CAN BE WITHDRAWN AS YOUR NEED FOR THEM DIMINISHES.

EAT AS MUCH AS YOU WISH OF THE FOLLOWING FOODS:

Meat: beef, lamb, veal, pork, ham, bacon or any
game meat (rabbit, moose, venison)

Poultry: chicken, turkey, duck, pheasant or other
game birds

Seafood: any fish or shellfish including but not
limited to salmon, halibut, cod, oolichan,
crab, prawns, clams, oysters, mussels, squid,
octopus, any smoked, dried or plain canned
fish or seafood (not cured with sugar), roe
and roe-on-kelp

Eggs: whole eggs (do not eat whites without yolks)
LIMIT THESE FOODS UNTIL THE DIABETES IS IMPROVED OR ELIMINATED:

Salad Greens: 2 cups a day.
Any leafy vegetable including lettuce or other salad greens, parsley, spinach, the tops of green onions, sprouts, fiddleheads, seaweed. (If it is a leaf—you can eat it.)

Vegetables: 1 cup (measured uncooked) a day.

Vegetables that grow above the ground, including asparagus, beet greens, bokchoy, broccoli, brussel sprouts, cabbage, cauliflower, celery, chard, Chinese cabbage, cucumber, eggplant, green beans, kale, leeks, mushrooms, peppers, spinach, string beans, squash, tomatoes, turnips, wax beans and zucchini.

YOU MUST EAT VEGETABLES EVERY DAY.

Cheese: 4 ounces a day.
Includes hard, aged cheeses such as Swiss, cheddar, mozzarella, Monterey jack, Gruyere, goat cheese, bleu, feta and soft cheeses such as cream cheese, brie and camembert. Avoid processed cheeses, cheese spreads or cheese foods such as Velveeta.

Fresh cheese: 0 ounces a day (while on induction phase).
Includes cottage cheese, farmers cheese, ricotta and tofu.

Dr. Wortman’s Diet

The study diet is based on the traditional diet (wild salmon, oolichan grease) but also includes modern market foods, (bacon, eggs). i.e. foods that have protein and fat but no starch or sugar.

Permitted foods include; beef, pork, chicken, fish or seafood, cauliflower, broccoli, all the salad greens, eggs, cream, but not milk. Milk contains lactose, which is sugar.

Not permitted are starches like pasta, rice, potatoes, bread and sugar. Dr. Jay Wortman believes that it was the introduction of these by Europeans over a hundred and fifty years ago that caused the rise of diabetes and obesity.

And so the key to this diet is the avoidance of starch and sugar because those were not common components of a traditional diet.

An interesting component is oolichan grease. It’s a very healthy fat and in the fact it was a big part of the diet in the past, was one of the reasons it was such a healthy diet.

This poster (.pdf file) presents an interim analysis of results from study at Alert Bay. A final analysis will be done soon, once collecting data on everyone has been finished.

See Dr. Wortman’s blog to see discussions about the Big Fat Diet of the First Nations people.

http://www.drjaywortman.com/blog/wordpress/

The poster http://www.cbc.ca/thelens/bigfatdiet/Poster.pdf presents an interim analysis of results from study at Alert Bay. A final analysis will be done soon, once collecting data on everyone has been finished.

Chinese skin does not tan? It just burns red and painful?

December 25, 2008 by Good Samaritan

I made this observation while in our Palawan beach trip.  My kids probably spent 4 days on the beach.  I could only spend 2 days.  My skin burned hot red after 2 days so I copped out and rested the next 2 days.  My wife and my kids though tanned out really well.  Even my eldest child who is the lightest skinned, but not as light as mine, got tanned really well and never got burned.  None of us used sun tan oil, we don’t believe in that commercial chemical junk.

It would seem that the Ilocano blood my wife carries and passed on to our children gave them good skin protection and good skin color when tanning.  My wife looks more beautiful with all that sun on her skin.  I on the other hand have my Chinese, Malay and Spanish heritage which seems more sensitive to the sun.  I did not tan… I just got burned red.

I remember a long time ago, a business partner of mine was Chinese and he said that his family does not really enjoy going to beaches and getting soaked under the sun.  He said they just easily burn red painfully… they do not get tans.  Maybe this applies to me too?

During regular days in Manila in the morning I would stroll out with the kids bare chested and walk around under the morning sun.  But in Palawan, maybe the sun shone brighter, hotter, with less haze, and we were in the beach mid-morning and afternoons.

Until today I’m peeling off sun burned skin on my shoulders.  My children and my wife don’t have sun burns.  Ah, it must be genetic.

Ducks slaughtered with the kids watching with pictures and video

December 25, 2008 by Good Samaritan

If you can’t bear to watch slaughtering an animal then you are not allowed to eat it. This is what I teach my children. This is a basic philosophy, provincial children see this all the time, my city raised children need the same education.  *** Remember that we are Filipinos living in the Philippines and that slaughtering animals in our own back yard is socially acceptable… if in your country and culture you find seeing a duck slaughtered offensive, do not view the rest of this article as there are 2 pictures.

My cousin was available and he knew how to slaughter ducks. Our maids say they are not familiar about slaughtering ducks, they said it was different from slaughtering chickens. It was my cousin’s first time to slaughter a duck too. He tied the feet and tied the wings. Then he just got a small knife and slit away the main artery on the neck and sliced the wind pipe. The blood was collected as usual in a bowl of uncooked rice grains.

We even took a video. Which I’ll probably post on the internet soon for my raw paleolithic diet buddies.

The duck slaughter went on as normal as chicken slaughter.  I think those fears of ducks being harder to slaughter are baseless fears of the unknown.  I just reserved a raw breast for myself.  The rest of the ducks will be served at the grand family reunion Christmas party tomorrow.

The philosophy to caring and slaughtering our own poultry in our backyard is born out of me and my cook’s planning a few months ago that we need to be assured our poultry is clean and safe to eat.  That the poultry are not fed toxic stuff like commercial feeds.  That the slaughter process is clean.  That the meat is fresh.  That the ducks slaughtered were healthy.

The first of 2 ducks for slaughter

The first of 2 ducks for slaughter

Duck for dinner

Duck for dinner

Our male duck died in the cage

December 25, 2008 by Good Samaritan

On December 19, our male duck died in the cage. He was being held in the cage with 2 female ducks. My wife and the maids got tired of cleaning up their poop littered around the walkway. They decided to cage them. We went for our vacation for a week. I think the maids that were left behind did not bother taking care of the poor caged ducks. The male duck died.

So I ordered the release of the surviving 2 female ducks to let them graze and recover so they can be scheduled for slaughter this Christmas.

Maybe the male duck died due to verbal abuse by 2 wives? Seriously, we probably cannot match the living requirements of ducks free to graze on their own. They should never have been caged. I remember buying these ducks for immediate slaughter, not pets. Now, no eggs can be laid, there are no males.

We do have another female and 3 ducklings… they are set free every morning and caged in the evening. For some reason, the cats have not eaten the ducklings yet. Probably the stray cats are unfamiliar with ducks.

A parallel with humans here, maybe a couple of times a year we should be allowed to graze for our own food. Somehow get out of this self imposed captivity in the city jungle. I’m just upset with the duck that died… I felt like I threw out good money.

I bought a 22 inch LCD monitor for productivity and health reasons

December 21, 2008 by Good Samaritan

I just got myself a 22 inch LCD monitor for productivity and health reasons. This ASUS monitor came in at only 14 thousand pesos. And with a resolution of 1680 x 1050 I have a lot of real estate space on my screen. Besides the fact that I have multiple desktop spaces because I run Ubuntu Linux.

I read and I have noticed productivity gains. Meaning people get to work better, faster and save time with a big monitor. So hopefully this new monitor allows me to rake in more money. I’m a computer geek, network administrator, website developer and trying to be a business man. This health blog and hobby healing is for friends and family.

Anyway, if I save time on my tasks, I have more free time for my kids, and other healthy endeavors… like watching Star Wars Clone Wars the new 2008-2009 TV series? And my complete collection of Star Wars videos?

My 7 year old boy is diagnosed with Primary complex, bronchitis, and tooth decay

December 21, 2008 by Good Samaritan

My wife thinks our 7 year old boy has had a cold and a cough for 3 months.  2 days ago she went to Dr. Divina Hey-Gonzales the anthroposophic doctor to have our boy checked.  Dr. Hey’s diagnosis is primary complex, bronchitis, and tooth decay.  Now my wife wants a witch hunt for possible tuberculosis carriers in our staff.  I noted that our in laws’ driver Benny is well known to have tuberculosis.  And that my analysis is that driver Benny has one missing kidney.  So his lungs are being tasked to do what a missing kidney cannot.

Back to our son, Dr. Hey prescribed her anthroposophic solution.

For primary complex: to be taken for 6 to 12 months

Ferrum Rosatum / Graphites – 10 drops – 4 times a day

Phosphorus D12 – 10 drops – 2x a day AM only

Archangelica Ointment – apply on the neck and massage downward for lymph flow – 2 times a day

For cough:

Pertudoron 1 – 10 drops – 4x per day

Pertudoron 2 – 10 drops – 4x per day

Vitamin C:

Acerola – 1 tablet – 3x per day

Other strategies fall on my lap, finally, I get a free hand.  So I’m putting my boy on a more paleolithic schedule and more alkaline diet.  First adjustment is for him to only eat 1 animal meal per day at lunch, just 1 animal food purely whether raw or cooked, but preferrably raw.  Breakfast is fruit and fatty fruit, and if hungry raw or soft boiled fertilized eggs, eat until stuffed.  For lunch 1 animal meal say for example yesterday was seared fatty sirloin beef steak and today he ate 4 cups of goto – beef innards with liver with little rice in a soup – dinner are just some light fruits or cucumbers.  I figure, this eating schedule, will result in better sleep, and the first night’s experiment is he did sleep better, he said no bad dreams and he was hungry in the morning.  This is a good sign.

This Sunday my boy chose to stay home with me so he says I could attend to him personally.

Lately he plays the recorder, a wind instrument being taught at school.  See and hear Cush play Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer.  He’s learning to speak some English.

My solution for tooth decay is already on the way. I had ordered the book Healing Our Children by Rami Nagel and it will arrive soon. It’s not for me, it’s for my wife to agree to the changes I need to implement in our diet. It’s time I killed this rice based diet lunacy. No amount of brushing or flossing will beat tooth decay as long as you stay in a rice based diet. I cured my rice addiction last year, it’s time the kids did the same while it is still early.

What is wrong with a rice based diet?

Rice is an original junk food, white rice is just empty carbohydrates.
Rice displaces more nutritious items like fruits, vegs and animal food.
The combination rice plus animal food is hard to digest and is highly acid forming.
Eliminating rice, we can switch to a high fat diet which allows to absorption of more vitamins and minerals.

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