In the News
As reported by The Hartford Courant, March 31, 2008.
Big Health Benefits Attributed To Raw Diet
Six Diabetics In Documentary Are Able To Reverse Their Disease
By Joann Klimkiewicz
In his 2004 film "Super Size Me," director Morgan Spurlock
humorously documents the dramatic health consequences of eating all
the wrong things for 30 days. Subsisting on a McDonald's-only menu,
he gains 25 pounds and a host of ailments, among them the decidedly
unfunny side effects of liver damage and sexual dysfunction.
So what might happen, then, after 30 days of eating all the right
things?
That question was the seed that evolved into "Raw for 30 Days,"
an independent documentary film that chronicles the experience of
six diabetics who sign up for a radical diet change. The
participants, most diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, move into an
Arizona retreat center where they are medically supervised during a
challenge to stay off dairy, meat, sugar, alcohol and processed
foods. Keeping to a vegan, raw-foods diet of only uncooked, organic
plant-based foods, the filmmakers claim participants were able to
naturally reverse their diabetes, losing significant weight and
coming off their insulin.
Set to be distributed online before a summer release at smaller
film festivals, the documentary is by no means poised to be a
cinematic blockbuster. But buzz has been building for more than a
year in raw- and health-food circles. Proponents are wondering if
the information can resonate with a mainstream American public
plagued with an obesity epidemic and chronic diseases.
"I think it's going to take people to the level of believing,
truly believing, that you are what you eat," says Glen Colello, a
holistic health counselor and owner of the newly opened West Haven
raw- and health-foods cafe Catch a Healthy Habit. "Maybe people will
see this movie and realize medication isn't their only option."
Such was the intent of the team behind the film, led by creator
and executive producer Mark Perlmutter, a longtime vegetarian who
himself shifted to a largely raw, or living-foods, lifestyle. He
said he witnessed the health benefits in eating fruits, vegetables,
nuts and seeds in their natural state. The philosophy is that
uncooked foods are more nutrient-rich and have their enzymes intact
and take less energy to digest, thereby freeing the body to heal
itself.
Perlmutter learned more after moving to Arizona, where he became
familiar with the work of raw-food pioneer Gabriel Cousens, a
medical doctor who runs the Tree of Life Rejuvenation Center in
Patagonia. The center became the setting for the documentary, filmed
in 2006 with six diabetics picked from a pool of more than 100
candidates.
Audiences will see those who stick with the program go through
dramatic transformations. One participant initially diagnosed with
type 2 diabetes later learns he actually had type 1 diabetes,
considered incurable without a pancreas transplant.
"So, how do we get people to do this for themselves? They can't
all go to Arizona," says Perlmutter. "It's great to get a couple of
miracle stories about these people having major breakthroughs, but
the question is how do you get [the medical establishment] to
embrace something that obviously works for some people?"
But traditional medicine has embraced alternative therapies over
the last decade, with many doctors now weaving holistic and
naturopathic approaches into conventional treatments. There is,
however, skepticism about the long-term benefits and loftier claims
of extreme approaches such as raw foods, which dietitians caution
can be difficult to sustain and may add up to an unbalanced diet
that leaves out too many important foods. Most doctors advise
patients to seek their physician's opinion before starting any such
diets.
Scientific studies do show clearly the relationship between
dietary choices and health. The World Health Organization determined
that 70 percent of chronic diseases worldwide could be prevented
entirely with changes to diet and lifestyle. In the United States,
that figure jumps to 80 percent.
"Absolutely. Yes. Diet has a tremendous impact on disease
progression and disease manifestation," says Dr. Mitch Kennedy of
the University of Connecticut Health Center, the facility's first
certified naturopathic physician. "And the fact is that most people
don't eat well. All you have to do is look around at what's
available — the fast-food chains and packaged foods and what's in
the food labels."
Kennedy says there are merits to a raw-foods lifestyle. The
nutrient content in foods is best preserved in its raw state. And
considering the average American doesn't get the recommended five
servings of fruits and vegetables a day, most would do well to
introduce more into their diets. Yet, he rarely recommends an
entirely raw plan. It can be a drastic change, hard on the digestive
system and lead to deficiencies in vitamin B12 without consumption
of meat or dairy products.
When asked for comment, the American Diabetic Association
declined to address the film directly, saying only that "weight loss
through any means can lower glucose levels in those with type 2
diabetes, sometimes even to normal." It cautioned against any
"one-size-fits-all diabetic diet" and encouraged healthful eating
and exercise habits.
Kirt Tyson, the misdiagnosed type 1 diabetic, and the most
successful of the film's six participants, says he knows the
raw-food plan cured him of his disease. A Baltimore native, he says
he went from his worst — a four-day hospitalization with his blood
sugar at 1,200 — down today to normal levels. He remains on a raw
diet, no longer on insulin.
"When you get diagnosed with this disease, you're always told ...
there's no cure. So from that moment, you feel so defeated," says
Tyson, 26, now a graduate student studying naturopathic medicine at
Southwest College of Naturopathic Medicine & Health Sciences in
Arizona. "What this film does is give hope back to people. It's not
a one-shot thing. You have to work for it. I have to work at it
every day."
He doesn't advocate ignoring traditional medication, but says
patients need to be better informed about all options available to
them.
"Hopefully in the future, I'll be able to do some research to
show how this diet is actually working," he says. "I don't know the
chemistry behind it. But you can't look at a guy who was once taking
insulin, and now is not and say there's not something to it.
Clearly, it's working for me."
For more information about the film, visit
www.RawFor30Days.com. |