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Pritikin Principle - Weight Loss Approach
What
It Is
What
You Can Eat
How
It Works
What
the Experts Say
Food
for Thought
back
to diet list
What It Is
Everyone who's ever thought about going on a diet has at least heard
of The Pritikin Approach: a low-fat diet, not vegetarian, but largely
based on vegetables, grains and fruits. Fat in the diet accounts
for a mere 10%. Since 1976, more than 70,000 people have spent time
at the Pritikin Longevity Centers learning how to eat healthy, prepare
low-fat meals and snacks, and incorporate exercise and stress-reduction
techniques into their lives. Several books by Nathan Pritikin carried
the message of the Pritikin approach to the masses. It was an approach
designed largely to promote well-being by lowering cholesterol and
helping diabetics normalize their blood sugar without taking insulin.
That people lost weight was an added plus.
Now his son, Robert, has taken over and tweaked the concept. The
same plant-based foods of the original are the staples of his diet,
and the fat content of the regimen is still about as low as you
can go. But Robert's latest book, The Pritikin Principle (following
The New Pritikin Program and The Pritikin Weight Loss Breakthrough)
focuses on something he calls The Calorie Density Solution.
He claims the concern is not calories but rather how dense they
are in any given food. Fill up on foods that have relatively few
calories per pound and you will lose the "excess body fat that
threatens your health and longevity."
Choosing foods that are not "calorie-dense," such as
apples and oatmeal, promises to "give you the freedom to eat
until you are full and never limit your portions or be hungry in
order to lose weight." The higher the caloric density of any
given food, the more likely it is to cause weight gain, because
you will consume more calories to feel full than if you choose foods
with a lower caloric density. A pound of broccoli, for instance,
has only 130 calories (that's raw and unbuttered, of course) but
a pound of chocolate chip cookies has 2,140 calories. You get the
drift -- broccoli, good; chocolate chip cookies, bad.

What You Can Eat
Some foods have more calories packed in them, bite for bite
and pound for pound, claims Pritikin. If we eat foods with fewer
calories per pound, we can fill up on these foods and still have
the kind of calorie deficit that we need to lose weight. Pritikin
doesn't shy away from the basic principle that weight loss is achieved
by eating fewer calories than you burn each day, which is refreshing,
given the spate of current diet books that attempt to ignore that
simple but unalterable axiom. The Pritikin Principle has more than
20 pages of charts listing the caloric density of all kinds of foods,
from snacks to sausages, listing them in calories per pound to graphically
demonstrate the striking calorie differences between low-density
foods and high-density foods.
Not surprisingly, the more processed the food, the more likely
they are packed full of calories. Corn, for instance, starts out
at a somewhat reasonable 490 calories per pound. By the time it
ends up in a tortilla chip at your favorite Mexican restaurant,
it's skyrocketed to 2,450 calories per pound. However, eat it with
guacamole, and the combination (avocado dip with the chips) drops
the number to 1,450 calories per pound.
The plan is to eat food with a large volume of fiber and water
to fill up your stomach -- vegetables, fruits, beans, and natural,
unprocessed grains. These foods, he claims, "create tremendous
feelings of fullness, or satiety, in your stomach." In addition
to eating three meals a day, the program incorporates two "calorically
light" snacks as well. While Pritikin doesn't have you counting
calories, you do have to possess a basic understanding of how to
calculate the "average caloric density of your meal,"
and then keep that average below a certain number.
Exercise is strongly recommended, and walking is his favorite.
How much is just right to maintain weight loss? Based on observations
of obese people who lost weight and kept it off, Pritikin suggests
"All of us should use ... 30 miles a week as a goal."
For the rest of us, however, he suggests one 30-minute walk a day.
Going at a good clip, you might average 12 to 15 miles a week.

How It Works
To lose weight, most of us will need to keep the average caloric
density of each meal below 400 calories per pound. Since most vegetables
fall below 200 calories per pound, when they are eaten with meat
and starches, they bring down the calorie average of each meal.
High-carbohydrate food, along with pasta and hot cereals, range
between 230 to 630 calories per pound. Animal protein goes from
400 calories per pound (some fish) to 1,400 (that juicy porterhouse
steak) to 2,170 (bacon). By combining the leanest portions of animal
protein with plenty of vegetables, you can get the caloric density
down to a level where you will lose weight, according to Pritikin's
plan.
To keep within the suggested guidelines, Pritikin suggests we eat
whole, unprocessed, and natural carbohydrate-rich foods, such as
grains, vegetables, and fruit. Those preferred are:
- Brown rice
- Millet
- Barley
- Oats
- A wide assortment of dark green lettuces
- Onions
- Potatoes
- Squash
- Beans (black turtle beans, chickpeas, lentils, lima and pinto
beans)
- Apples
- Pears
- Strawberries
- Bananas
Some processed whole-grain foods, such as oatmeal, are acceptable.
Even white-flour pasta is okay, as long as it is combined with vegetables
to bring down the caloric density of the whole meal. Other guidelines:
Eat small portions of lean beef, chicken, fish, and low-fat dairy
products. Avoid fried foods, dressing with fat, and fatty sauces.
Eat frequently. Have three meals plus two snacks. Stay active and
avoid salty foods.
The book contains several pages of suggested meals and tips on
how they might be improved with substitutions, as well as a restaurant
guide for everything from a Junior Bacon Cheeseburger at Wendy's
to buttered noodles in a French restaurant to a serving of almond
chicken in a Chinese establishment. More than 50 recipes are also
included.

What the Experts Say
There seems to be little dispute that you will lose weight on the
Pritikin diet or that it is generally a nutritionally rich diet
low in calories. But there are caveats: "Because fat makes
one feel full, the extremely low fat content of this diet will make
those following it often feel hungry," says Teryl L. Tanaka,
RD, the clinical nutrition manager at the Santa Monica UCLA Medical
Center. Consequently, she adds, the likelihood is high of the weight
returning after one stops strictly adhering to the diet.
James Hill, PhD, the director of the Center for Human Nutrition
at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center in Denver,
agrees that the diet is not practical for many people. While observing
that people staying at the Pritikin Centers do really well losing
weight, he asks: "How realistic is the diet once they get away
from the centers and into the real world?"
Both the Pritikin diet and the nutritionally similar Ornish diet
are extremely low in fat, Hill notes, down to 10% of total calories.
"Yes, if we could do that we would all be healthier, but it
is very hard to follow that formula in our environment," he
cautions. "It's difficult to maintain such a low-fat content
of our diets if you eat out often, and it takes time to prepare
good,-tasting low-fat food. Most people do not have the time to
spend hours each day preparing food."
Another problem, adds Tanaka, is that the low-fat content may actually
be harmful to our health, "Pritikin also inhibits the intake
and absorption of fat soluble vitamins, and can even limit the amount
of essential fatty acids provided by the diet needed for normal
cell function, healthy skin and tissue, growth and development."

Food for Thought
What do most nutritionists and health authorities like about the
diet? Its strict limit of animal products -- often associated with
a variety of major diseases -- and that it incorporates exercise
and stress reduction, along with overall low calorie intake. But
this is qualified with a concern that the extremely low-fat regimen
is difficult to stick with over the long haul.
Reviewed by Gary Vogin, MD, March 18, 2002.
Choose a different diet to evaluate:
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Vegetarian Diet
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Healthy Soy Diet
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High Fiber Diet
Jenny Craig
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Perricone Nutritional Face
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