How Many Years Will Low-fat Living Add To Your Life?
How many years could you add to your life by reducing your weight to normal, and
maintaining it there? This is a question that can be answered, and the answer is a
dramatic one. No matter what your age may be, you can increase your life span by a
definite number of years. What's more, those additional years can be healthy, happy
years, full of things that make life worth living - really worth living. In the first six
chapters of this book we have heard the part that diet plays in warding off heart disease
and in promoting over-all good health. We have seen how your arteries work, and have
discovered the nature of the health wrecker - fat. You have been given a program of what
foods to eat and what foods to avoid to achieve health, by low-fat living. You have
learned how to use dietary supplements and how to count the calories, so as to keep your
weight at the proper level. All of these things have been given to you for one purpose -
to show you how to live the low-fat way, because the low-fat way is the key to healthier,
longer life. Now let's find out how many extra years of health and life you can count on,
once you have followed the low-fat way of life.
Even if you've had a heart
attack, the low-fat diet can double your normal span of expected years. During the
past 12 years, my associates and I have studied the effects of low-fat reducing diets on
men and women who had survived heart attacks. We found that those who followed a low-fat,
low-cholesterol diet such as you have found in this book, and who reduced their weight to
normal, gained twice as many years of life as the non-dieters who had also suffered heart
attacks.
The same low-fat diet may lengthen the life of everyone. The logical conclusion is
that if, as we have seen, coronary atherosclerosis is already extensively present in the
entire population, then this normal-weight-through-diet health program would give an
over-all additional five years to every person in the nation. This conclusion is borne
out by authoritative figures that will be given at the end of this chapter. The amazing
advances of American medicine since 1945, with all the new wonder drugs, surgical
innovations, improved treatment techniques, and public programs, have resulted in
extending the average American's life five years. This was achieved by the creative
genius of many researchers and the expenditure of billions of dollars. Now similar
results can be accomplished by a simple, intelligent health program, aimed at proper
nutrition for controlling weight and at the same time providing better health. As a
physician, I have been faced many times by the tragic spectacle of a family that will
impoverish itself to extend the life of an unfortunate victim of cancer or leukemia only
a few months or a year. With these examples in mind, it would seem well worthwhile to
convince people as a whole of the urgent necessity of maintaining normal weight through
proper nutrition. Yet, being only human, we forget the unpleasant aspects of living
unless we have a strong motive to change them by changing our habits.
You can do something about it. That is why I am basing this advice on an appeal to
self-preservation. At any age, it is natural for you to want to stay alive, in good
health, as long as possible, and to extend your years to the ultimate possible hour. Now,
with what you have learned in this book, you can do something about it, on your own, with
little effort, and with amazing results in health and longevity. The tables found in this
chapter are based on more than 50,000 individuals studied by insurance companies. Look at
them, and you will be able to see at a glance exactly how many years you can add to your
life span through proper nutrition and weight control.
Ideal weight can add
more "bonus" years of life. The figures in the tables are conservative ones because
they are computed on the basis of average weight rather than ideal weight. It is clear
that if you aim for ideal weight still more "bonus" years of life can be yours. But you
cannot expect to receive this "bonus" without working to earn it. A wit recently observed
that it takes more than a plaid waistcoat to keep a check on your stomach. Although said
in jest, there is a great deal of truth to the statement. Success will come through
careful study of the suggestions given here, as well as the careful and consistent
application of them. And it is never too late to begin. Let us suppose, for example, that
you are 50 years old and markedly overweight. How many years can you add to your life by
reducing to normal weight and staying that way? A check of our table reveals that if you
are more than 30 per cent overweight, you could add a little over four-and-a-half years.
That is well worth the effort, isn't it?
What about younger people? Our studies, and those made by life insurance companies, all
point to the same conclusion: Excessive weight put on in young adulthood, and maintained
through life, carries the risk of shortening life by a frightening number of years. Let
us say, for instance, that you are in your early twenties, and are markedly overweight.
If you do not reduce to a normal figure, and stay that way, you are sacrificing over
fifteen and a half years of life! Whatever your age, if you are obese, it is important to
get your weight down as quickly as it is safe to do so. This does not mean that you should
"fall" for the widely advertised but ineffectual and even dangerous reducing pills that
promise to "melt the fat off" within a few days without much dieting. Every practicing
physician has at one time or another sadly shaken his head at the spectacle of so many
Americans trying to reduce the quick and easy way, without sacrificing their deeply
entrenched dietary habits. The safe way, the effective way, is through the low-fat diet
program presented in this book. The low-fat way is the healthy way, the way of longer
life.
Now let's look at the tables. Table A shows desirable average weights for
men 25 and over, according to height and frame or build. Table B gives desirable weights
for women 25 and over. Table C shows the relationship that exists between your age and time
of death as they are affected by your weight, and gives the percentage increase in your
mortality rate caused by overweight. It shows clearly that no matter what your age, your
chances for longer life are greatly reduced if you are overweight.
Tables D, E, F, and G show the number of years of gain you can achieve by maintaining
normal weight. Figures for both men and women are given, and for people who are either
markedly overweight or moderately overweight. Study these tables carefully. Their
evidence is unmistakable. Find the figures that fit your own age, frame, and weight
condition. Check the normal situation as it applies to you. If you are not close to that
ideal, begin now to do something about it. You have only good health and more years to
gain, and nothing to lose.
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