Can I please ask if there are health concerns over the greater intake of processed and/or red meats and fats as per all the headlines that regularly appear in the papers?
Ali, I will reply regarding my own experience. This won't hold true for all low carbers, but will reflect the thinking behind a low carb high fat diet, often called an LCHF diet.
Before that, I can see at least three reasons to restrict carbs.
One, that carbs raise the blood sugar of the majority (over 50%) of diabetics. NOT ALWAYS TO THE SAME DEGREE. Some are more affected, whilst others can tolerate a higher carb intake. Many on this forum appear to testify to the benefits they personally experience when going low carb.
Two, for weight loss.
Three, for long-term health reasons.
When I first investigated (Dec 2011) for myself what might be a healthy way for me to eat, given my recent diagnosis of T2D, one of the books I borrowed from the library had the following statement :
Saturated fat is good for you !
My initial reaction was that can't be right - we've been told since I was a boy that it was bad for you, and gave you heart disease.
That was the beginning of my journey which overthrew what I'd believed about what was healthy or unhealthy for a person of average constitution. There's always the person who smokes 40 ciggies a day, and lives to a healthy 90 ! They're not average.
I discovered there's a growing movement of people who choose to follow an Atkins/Paleo/LCHF diet.
Some think they're mad, and deluded.
I also discovered there's a growing group of medical doctors, heart surgeons, professors in cardiology etc who agree with
this approach.
http://preventdisease.com/news/12/03011 ... ease.shtml
If such ideas appeal to you check them out. Here's a repudiation (there are others !) that answers your concern :
http://garytaubes.com/2012/03/science-p ... -and-meat/
A layman's way of putting it : more meat eaters die than vegetarians. Why ? Vegetarians tend to be more health conscious and look after themselves better. Meat eaters may be more likely to be more of the 'something's got to kill you' variety, and be less health conscious. These are vast exaggerations, but point towards why results may seem to implicate what's eaten, rather than someone's attitude to good nutrition. That doesn't get measured :roll:
So, I eat what I eat now mainly because I believe it's the best way of eating for my long-term health.
I've come to see fat as something we can be in danger of depriving our bodies of. So I'm a low carber, and a high fat advocate.
Many on the approaches I mentioned (Atkins, Paleo, LCHF) seem to thrive, and report improved health markers (BMI, cholesterol, triglycerides, blood pressure etc)
My advice would be to look into all possible courses, and choose what works for you. That's why we're not all the same on this forum
Be well
Geoff