Relations (1)

related 0.10 — supporting 1 fact

The western diet is defined in [1] by its specific nutritional profile, which serves as the comparative baseline for understanding the intake of essential nutrients and phytochemicals found in alternative dietary patterns.

Facts (1)

Sources
Evolutionary Eating — What We Can Learn From Our Primitive Past todaysdietitian.com Juliann Schaeffer · Today’s Dietitian 1 fact
claimCordain asserts that late Paleolithic hunter-gatherer diets differed from the modern Western diet by having a lower glycemic load, a net base yielding to the kidney, higher potassium and lower sodium levels, higher fiber levels, more protein, fewer carbohydrates, and higher levels of vitamins, minerals, and phytochemicals.