Healthy Diet Too Expensive
From The Age story, Healthy Diet Too Expensive
Eating a Mediterranean diet rich in fish, olive oil, legumes, fruit and vegetables may strengthen the heart but the cost strains the wallet and may deter healthy eating, according to Spanish researchers.
They’re not kidding! While a healthy Mediterranean diet has more carbs than a low-carb diet, try doing low-carb on a tight budget!
Don’t you love how doctors with six-figure incomes can sit there and pontificate about what we should and should not be eating. They haven’t a clue or any advice about how some people are going to afford to do so.
Consider a loaf of bread, often the whiter the cheaper, at say $2.50. Add to that some cheap toppings. The bread and the toppings most likely can last several days for lunches. So say $7 for all that. I’m dealing in Australian dollars, but would equally apply anywhere.
Consider a large bowl of salad. The lettuce alone would be $2-$3. The whole salad could easily cost $15-$20. Lettuce, tomatoes, cucumber, avocado, parsley, witlof, bell peppers, pea sprouts and more. No root vegetables. Or I could make a high-carb potato salad for a few dollars.
Add to that meat, chicken or fish, and you’ve got a very expensive meal. Multiply that for other meals in a week and you’ve got a healthy diet that is definitely too expensive.
If you’re on a pension or are a low-wage earner, trying to feed a family, it’s totally impossible.
Instead, it’s fine for governments and medical insurers to fork out millions in trying to fix the problem instead of being proactive and preventing it in the first place. Not sure what the answer is, but food production somehow needs to be subsidised. It’s getting far too expensive to eat well.




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