The Dr. Hyman Show - The #1 Thing You Can Do Every Day To Improve Your Health
Episode Date: August 26, 2022This episode is sponsored by InsideTracker and Athletic Greens. There are 37 billion chemical reactions happening within your body every second. And every single one of these reactions requires vitami...ns and minerals to make it work. This is why what you put on your fork is the most important thing you do every day, and it’s why I say food isn’t like medicine—food is medicine. It’s information, and it’s the most powerful drug on the planet. It influences your capacity to live a rich, energetic, connected, soulful life. In today’s episode of a new series called Health Bites, I discuss how to use food as medicine. I share the principles of eating an optimal diet, a list of the foods we should avoid, my number-one food philosophy, and more! This episode is sponsored by InsideTracker and Athletic Greens. InsideTracker is a personalized health and wellness platform like no other. Right now they’re offering my community 20% off at insidetracker.com/drhyman. AG1 contains 75 high-quality vitamins, minerals, whole-food sourced superfoods, probiotics, and adaptogens to support your entire body. Right now when you purchase AG1 from Athletic Greens, you will receive 10 FREE travel packs with your first purchase by visiting athleticgreens.com/hyman. Here are more details from the episode (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): Why food is the most powerful tool in your medical toolbox (3:44 / 1:38) How food upgrades or downgrades your biological software with every bite (6:46 / 4:50) Nutrigenomics and personalized nutrition (10:01 / 7:47) What is the optimal diet? (13:13 / 11:03) What should we avoid? (17:17 / 15:03) My number-one food philosophy (18:38 / 16:26)
Transcript
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
In every bite of food, there's only thousands of informational molecules
that can upgrade or downgrade your biological software with every single bite.
Literally, in real time.
Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark.
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let's get back to this week's episode of the doctor's pharmacy.
Welcome to the doctor's pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman. And this is a place for conversations
that matter. And I'm excited to be offering you a new little feature of the doctor's pharmacy
called health bites, little chunks of health
information that can help you live better, longer, and healthier. And today we're talking about one
of the most important literal health bites, which is that food is medicine. And we're going to get
deep into why that's true. Not just an abstract idea, but actually food is medicine. And it is
the most important thing you
need to know about your health, which is how to use food, not as calories, but as information.
And it is really my favorite subject. In fact, I've started an entire nonprofit to focus on
helping the government change its policies to focus on food as medicine. That's how much I
care about it. So I like to think of food literally as a drug. So my fridge is my medicine cabinet,
the grocery store is my pharmacy, and the farmer's market too, for that matter. And there's all these
colorful medicines in there, and not the kind of blue pills and green pills and yellow pills, but
actually phytochemically rich foods that have so much power to make you healthier. So I want to
share a little bit more about this with you today. Okay, so why is food the most important medicine in your medical toolbox? Why is it the most
important thing you could be focused on for your health? And you know, I actually was watching a
podcast the other day with Rich Rolls, a friend of mine, and there was a guy who was 100 years old
on there. And he's like, the most important thing is diet. And he is right. Now, it is the most powerful tool you have to change your health. What you put at the end of
your fork is more powerful than anything you'll ever find in a prescription bottle. It works
faster, better, and cheaper. It has the power to influence and improve the expression of tens of
thousands of genes, to optimize tens of thousands of protein networks, to balance your
hormones, improve your brain chemistry, to upregulate your immune system, and even to
enhance your microbiome. And it works without any side effects, except good ones. So this is really
a drug. And I'll just give you a quick story. I've told this story before, but it's so important to
understand how quick and fast this is. I had a patient,
this just patient illustrates this more than anything. She was part of our program at
Cleveland Clinic. She came to one of our groups called Functioning for Life. She was 66. She had
heart failure. She had angina, had multiple stents. She had type two diabetes, insulin for
years, hypertension. I mean, you name it, she had it. Her kidneys were failing. Her livers were failing. Her liver was failing. You only have one liver, right?
I do remember that from medical school. And she was so sick and she was this big. Her body mass
index was 43. 30 is considered obese. 40 is severely obese. And she just was enormous.
And she took insulin shots every day. She came to see us and she changed her enormous. And she took insulin shots every day.
She came to see us and she changed her diet.
And she did exactly what I'm gonna tell you to do today in this doctor's pharmacy health bite.
And within three days of changing her diet,
she was off insulin.
And by the way, she was on a pile of pills
that cost $20,000 a year for her copay.
In three days, she was off insulin.
In three months, she was off her
medications, her A1C, which is your average blood sugar going from 11, which is like almost
hospitalized, to five and a half, which is normal. Her heart failure reversed, her kidneys normalized,
her liver normalized. She got off her blood pressure pills and she lost a bunch of weight.
And after a year, she lost 116 pounds and had none of those conditions and was off all
her medications.
There is no drug on the planet that can do that.
All those drugs were managing her diseases.
Food, I don't even think we should call it medicine.
It's like a miracle cure because it's so powerful.
And I've seen this over and over and over in my practice.
And I honestly, as a doctor, I've been doing functional medicine for a long time, okay,
decades. And I think I was
the first one to say, you are not allowed to see a doctor in my practice unless you also see the
nutritionist. Because if I'm a doctor and food is medicine, then how am I going to practice without
a nutritionist? That is fundamental, fundamental to the premise of functional medicine. And there's
five nutritionists that work with me
in my practice. So what is food? You know, okay, it's protein, it's fat, it's calories, it's
carbohydrates, it's fiber, it's vitamins, minerals, but it's so, so much more. In every bite of food,
there's only thousands of informational molecules, like code, that can upgrade or
downgrade your biological software with every single bite. Literally, you change your biological
software, you change your genetic expression, you change the way your hormones work, the way your
immune system works, you change which bugs you're growing in your gut, depending on which
foods you eat, literally in real time, not over
decades or days, but literally within minutes. So it's so powerful. And we have the ability to
speak to our genes through food. And I think this is why it's so important to understand how to use
food as medicine. But by the way, okay, by the way, it's not suffering here. I'm not talking
about, you know, eating, you know, wheatgrass shots and a bunch of oat bran or something.
I'm talking about yummy, delicious, tasty, amazing, gorgeous food.
I had a party for my office staff last night, and we had the most unbelievable array of
vegetables and foods and dishes and flavors.
And I mean, nobody went away going,
oh, this was healthy food. They're not thinking, oh, this is healthy food because it just tastes
so good. So if it doesn't taste good, no one's going to eat it, right? But actually food tastes
good. And by the way, you might not know this, but flavor in food, and the reason why the food
industry puts so many chemicals and additives and colorings and flavorings and sugar and salt
in food is to make it taste good. How do you take processed ingredients and make them taste edible?
You have to add all this crap. But if you eat real food, inside the food are the molecules
that give food its flavor. So think about this. If you ever grew a garden or you had a fresh tomato grown in your
organic garden and you went like a cherry tomato or something, you went at the end of the summer
in August and stuck in your mouth, it's like an explosion of flavor. Whereas if you take a tomato
that was like grown in some hothouse and shipped across the country and it was designed to be
fit in a box in a certain size and square and not squish. I mean, it looks like a tomato, but it doesn't taste very good.
And the reason for the difference in taste, the reason is the phytochemicals,
these plant compounds that produce the flavor.
But guess what?
Those phytochemicals that produce the flavor are also the medicines in food.
So flavor and medicine in food go together.
Not the flavor that you add with
all kinds of crap, but the actual flavor of the food, right? Think of a ripe peach at the end of
the summer that melts in your mouth and squishy and juicy. I'm drooling already. Okay, so it is
the end of summer, it's peach season. So you want to just understand that you want to seek out
flavor. And Dan Barber actually did a company called Rose 7 Seeds, where he created a company to improve the flavor of foods by breeding them to produce more flavor.
But as a side effect, the way they get the flavor is through the phytochemicals.
So I want to sort of help you really understand this is so important. Now, the next question I
want to answer is, what is this whole field of nutrigenomics? You might've heard about
personalized nutrition or nutrigenetics, nutrigenomics. This is the science of how
food regulates your gene expression and your epigenetics. When you eat, it's literally sending
messages to turn genes on or off. I'm going to turn on the antioxidant genes, or I'm going to
turn on the anti-inflammatory genes, or I'm going to turn on the genes that cause cancer, or I'm
going to turn off the genes that cause cancer, or I'm going to turn on the genes that cause cancer, or I'm going to turn off the genes that cause cancer, or I'm going to turn on the genes that cause heart disease, or turn off the genes
that cause heart disease. So we really think of them as like the food as the little signals and
the code that is regulating your biological software. And you want a new operating system
that's an operating system of health and well-being, well, you have to put in the right
code. And the right code is the right food. So, so I mean, what, what messages
are you sending to your biology when you eat a double cheeseburger, fries and a Coke,
right? What messages are you sending to your body? If you're eating like we had last night,
this watercress salad, uh, we had this incredible watermelon gazpacho with mint.
Uh, we had, Oh my God, so many different things. Eggplant with all kinds of spices and sauces on it.
It was so delicious. And spices also are full of these phytochemical flavor things. So there's so
many ways that we should be thinking about how we regulate our body. What if you had, you know,
fresh wild salmon and wild berries, maybe wild strawberries. Every taste of wild strawberries
is bursting with flavor. And fresh wild greens like they had in Ikaria where they live to be
a hundred years old. And that's a very different set of molecules that you're putting
in your body that regulate what's going on. So this is really about personal nutrition. It's
about understanding how genes are affected by what you eat. And then also we have to think about how
each of us are different. But as a whole framework, the power of food as medicine is huge and the power of understanding the phytochemicals in food is huge.
And here's another interesting phenomena that's going on around food is you would think that
all the phytochemicals were in animal, plant foods, right?
So you need phyto means plant, not dog, not phyto the dog, but plant foods.
And the phytochemicals come from plants.
So how would you get them in animal
food, in milk or meat? Well, turns out that those animals that are eating industrial feedlot food,
corn and silage and all kinds of weird things, they feed them like skittles and ground up feathers.
That doesn't do very well for those animals in terms of the quality of their meat
or their milk. But if you have a grass-fed cow or sheep or goat or a wild animal eating all these
wild plants or even grass-fed pasture-raised animals that are foraging on a lot of varieties
of plants, those compounds in those plants will be taken up in the milk and meat. And now this
is being studied and we're seeing these phytochemicals in the meat and milk of these animals. So for example, if you look at a wild animal like a
kangaroo and they did a study in Australia and they're starting to do more of these studies here,
they give them to people and see what happens to their blood chemistry versus the same amount of
meat from, let's say, a feedlot cow versus a kangaroo. And the kangaroo meat, same ounce for
ounce of meat, will reduce inflammation where the feedlot meat versus a kangaroo. And the kangaroo meat, same ounce for ounce of meat,
will reduce inflammation,
where the feedlot meat will increase inflammation.
Why?
It's because of what the animal's eating, right?
That's the message.
Okay, so how do we personalize our diet for us?
What should we be eating?
What's an optimal diet?
It doesn't really have to be complicated.
Listen to your body.
I always say the smartest doctor in the room
is your own body.
How do you feel when you eat this? I just talked to him complicated. Listen to your body. I always say the smartest doctor in the room is your own body. How do you feel when you eat this? And I just talked to him yesterday. So when I eat dairy,
my nose starts to run immediately. Well, guess what? Your body's telling you something. Listen to it, right? Don't eat the dairy because you're having some reaction. Or if you're eating,
you know, if you eat a ton of pasta and you feel like you're going to a food coma,
probably good clue. You probably shouldn't be doing that. So listen to your body. And it's amazing to me after decades
and decades of being a doctor that people, even the smartest people I know, do not connect what
they eat with how they feel. It's just mind boggling to me. And then when you start to
connect the dots, they go, wow, this is powerful. So you need to customize what you're doing you need all the
the bad stuff you got to take it out processed food sugar junk food refined oils all that stuff
goes i mean just take out the bad stuff we know what all it is i've talked about frederick and
then add in a ton of good stuff just i went to the farmer's market and you bought all this stuff the
other day and it's just it's yummy it's fresh it's local it's way more tasty than stuff you
buy in the supermarket.
If you can do that, do it.
If you can't, fine.
Even with Snap or food stamps, you can get double bucks.
So you can go to the farmer's market and afford it,
even if you're struggling with food security.
So really important to customize your diet.
And then what actually is a good diet?
And I've written a lot about this.
I wrote food, what should I eat, the Pagan diet.
There's no guessing what I think,
but essentially it's whole real food.
I kind of used to do a lot of speaking in churches with the Daniel plan I did.
And I used to say, it's really easy to figure out what to eat.
And I just asked you to have one question.
Did God make this or did man make this?
Did God make an avocado?
Yeah.
Did God make a Twinkie?
No.
Did man make an avocado? No. It's pretty easy Twinkie? No. Did man make an avocado?
No. It's pretty easy. Even a kid in kindergarten could figure out what to eat. So ask yourself
next time you go buy something, who made this? Was it coming from nature and God, or was it just
coming from a factory somewhere? And then you should probably stay away from the stuff that's
not actually made by God or nature. So you want to eat whole foods, real food, lots of plant foods.
80% of your diet should be unprocessed whole plant foods, vegetables, fruits, nuts, seeds.
Obviously, some grains and beans are good, some aren't. Gluten is a problem, especially modern
wheat. You probably want to stay away from that. You need to eat foods that have good fats in them,
avocados, nuts, olive oil, fatty fish like sardines, mackerel, herring.
You also want to eat a lot of fiber. So that's going to happen naturally as you eat a lot of
plant foods. You want to make sure you have prebiotic foods like plantains and artichokes
and asparagus. And I even sometimes add that from a microbiome. You also want polyphenols
for your microbiome. Things like cranberry and pomegranate and green tea and all these prickly
pear and olive leaf extract and all these different things that you can use to actually
increase the growth of the good bugs in your gut because that determines so much of your health.
You're not only feeding yourself, you're feeding all those guys in there. Then you can also take
fermented foods, things like tempeh and sauerkraut and miso and kimchi. These are all foods that are
traditionally made in diets because we had to
preserve our food in the past. We didn't have refrigerators, so we had a way of preserving
all this stuff. And also protein is important. Now, especially as we get older. Now, you don't
want too much protein, but you want enough protein and you want the right kind of protein.
And I've written a lot about this, especially in my book, Young Forever. But there's basically a
few, the rule is a palm-sized amount of protein in most meals.
And this can be plant proteins, but often you need a lot more.
Nuts and seeds, grains and beans are okay, but they're lower quality.
They don't have all the amino acids you need for, or in the right volumes for building muscle,
particularly as you get older.
So I like grass-fed meat.
I like pasture-raised chicken.
I like pasture-raised chicken. I like
pasture-raised eggs. I like small wild fish. I like goat whey. These are my kind of go-to proteins.
So that's what I think. Tofu, tempeh are probably the most dense plant-based proteins,
but you want to eat the right protein. Now, what should we not be eating? Well,
it's stuff that's not food, right? Obviously, there's another thing is junk food.
There's junk and there's food.
So obviously, if you see a label with 45 different ingredients, don't eat it.
If you can't pronounce the ingredients, don't eat it.
If you don't recognize what the ingredients are, don't eat it.
You know, you can shop around the outside of your grocery store.
There's a few key tips that you should just stick to 100%, never fall off of this. There's no high fructose corn syrup every period.
Why?
Well, one is sugar, and two, it's a special form of sugar
that does a lot more damage
and is a lot more likely to cause harm.
The next is hydrogenated fats.
Never eat anything with that.
And it's supposed to be not safe to eat,
according to the FDA,
but it's still everywhere in the grocery stores.
I don't know how they get away with this,
but seven years ago, they said it's not safe to eat, and it's still in the grocery stores. I don't know how they get away with this, but seven years ago, they said it's not safe to eat,
and it's still in the grocery stores.
You can go figure.
Anyway, I won't get into that.
Refined vegetables, want to stay away from that.
Stay away from additives, chemicals, preservatives, pesticides.
I mean, if you wouldn't sprinkle it on your salad
or on your vegetables at night,
well, why would you eat it?
I mean, who has butylated hydroxy toluene in their cupboard? But that's a common preservative found in most processed food. Also, artificial sweeteners
are really bad. They tend to cause bacterial overgrowth in the gut. They actually increase
the risk of obesity and diabetes. You don't want to do that, and they'll wreck your health.
So what's the number one take-home philosophy? Just that simple question. Did God make this,
or did man make this?
And ask yourself that next time you pick something up
at the grocery store.
So I hope this health bite has been helpful.
Remember, food is medicine.
It's the most powerful drug on the planet.
Use it well.
Enjoy it.
And that's really it for this week's health bite.
I hope you enjoyed this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
If you loved it, share with your friends and family
on social media.
Leave a comment.
How have you used food to heal your body and your soul.
And we'll see you next week on The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Hey, everybody.
It's Dr. Hyman.
Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy.
I hope you're loving this podcast.
It's one of my favorite things to do and introduce to you all the experts that I know and I love
and that I've learned so much from.
And I want to tell you about something else I'm doing, which is called Mark's Picks. It's my
weekly newsletter. And in it, I share my favorite stuff from foods to supplements to gadgets to
tools to enhance your health. It's all the cool stuff that I use and that my team uses to optimize
and enhance our health. And I'd love you to sign up for the weekly newsletter. I'll only send it to you once a week on Fridays.
Nothing else, I promise.
And all you do is go to drhyman.com forward slash pics to sign up.
That's drhyman.com forward slash pics, P-I-C-K-S,
and sign up for the newsletter,
and I'll share with you my favorite stuff that I use to enhance my health
and get healthier and better
and live younger longer. Hi, everyone. I hope you enjoyed this week's episode. Just a reminder that
this podcast is for educational purposes only. This podcast is not a substitute for professional
care by a doctor or other qualified medical professional. This podcast is provided on the
understanding that it does not constitute medical or other professional advice or services. If you're looking for help in your journey, seek out a qualified medical
practitioner. If you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner, you can visit ifm.org and
search their find a practitioner database. It's important that you have someone in your corner
who's trained, who's a licensed healthcare practitioner and can help you make changes,
especially when it comes to your health.