❤️ Reversing heart disease | Plant based Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn

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- Hi, I'm Jenna. Welcome back to "Down-to-Earth." I am so excited to share with you that I had the opportunity to speak with Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn. Dr. Esselstyn wrote the book on preventing and reversing heart disease. His work was featured in the documentary "Forks Over Knives," and he has spent his entire legendary career examining the link between nutrition and heart disease. I have been such a big fan for such a long time, and I'm gonna leave this in show at that 'cause it's raining on me right now and I think it's time that you listen to him. - Welcome back to "Down-to-Earth." (laughing) - How are you doing? How's quarantine treating you? - Like everybody else. - Well, I have a lot of questions for you, and just before we get started, I wanted to thank you so much for what you do. I said this on the phone, but you've not only kind of saved so many people's lives, but you've also delivered your message about the power of good nutrition in a way that has always been respectful and kind, and we've all noticed. So thank you for doing what you do. - Thank you, Jenna. - Doctor, you've always said that heart disease is a food-borne illness, and poor nutrition is the cause. If we know this to be true, in your opinion, why is it so, so hard for people to eat right still? Why are people so confused? - When you touch poison ivy, it's not gonna be but an hour or two before you really are paying the price. But when you sit down and have a steak, or you have pork, or you have bacon, or you have cheese, you know, it takes sometimes decades, literally, decades to build cardiovascular disease. So there's no really immediate association there at all. And it really doesn't do any help when the cardiologist, and again, with all due respect to my cardiovascular friends, they really have no training in nutrition in medical school. They have no training in nutrition that's substantive in their post-graduate years. So frequently when I end up seeing patients that have had an unsuccessful bypass, they've had an unsuccessful stent, or they've been told because they have symptoms they're gonna have to have one of these procedures or some of the drugs. None of the drugs that cardiology uses, none of the stents, none of the bypasses, have one single solitary thing whatsoever to do with the causation of the illness. When you have the profession that is treating this disease sort of deny the reality of the science that has been out there now for thirty years, showing clearly that if we take patients who are seriously ill with cardiovascular disease, and we get them to change the way they're eating and stop eating any foods that are gonna injure the endothelial cell, then the endothelial cells will begin to recover. They make enough nitric oxide so we can halt disease progression. And often, we'll see a significant ailments of disease reversal. Leveling the playing field is so much better now than it was 30 years ago, 34 years ago when I started. I mean it's, in all fairness, there are cardiologists who have become aware of this. There are physicians who have become aware of it, but it's very awkward for physicians to try to believe in something for which they were never trained. And also, it's hard to imagine that there is something that is more magical and more powerful when you're speaking about Brussels sprouts and broccoli, than you are with somebody who's invented this drug, which has taken many, many years to develop, is going to cost a great deal of money to take regularly. It'll have hideous side-effects, and it doesn't have anything to do with curing the disease, but it'll help the symptoms. So it's coming. You know, it's really so embarrassing when you think that half the planet Earth doesn't have cardiovascular disease. If you were a cardiac surgeon and you were gonna take your, hang out your shingle in Okinawa, rural China, Central Africa, the Papua Highlands in New Guinea, the Tarahumara in Northern Mexico, forget it. You better plan on selling pencils. Why? They don't have any cardiovascular disease. Why? Because they all thrive on whole food, plant-based nutrition essentially without oil. - In light of that, a lot of people think that genetics is the cause. Okay, genetics is the cause and pharmacology is the cure, right? - Okay genetics is the cause. Why is it then Okinawa doesn't have any heart disease, but as soon as they move to the West then they all develop heart disease? - And there have been studies that have shown this, no doubt. - Yeah. - Okay, so you're much more, if we're looking at nature versus nurture-- - Why is it you take a family where no male has ever lived beyond the age of 50 or 55 because of heart disease, but if you that younger male who is in his 40's, who hasn't yet, he can absolutely vanquish cardiovascular disease. But we are in such a habit. How many times do you go to a restaurant in this country and go to the menu and find there's no oil? None? - None. (laughing) - So what does oil do to your endothelial cells? It injures them. I just wrote a paper last year in the "International Journal of Disease Reversal and Prevention." The title was "Is Oil Healthy?" And I review all the animal studies, the human studies, showing how oil injures the endothelial cells. - Doctor, it's kind of hard for people to hear that olive oil is something that we should avoid. And I'm sure you get this question a lot, which is why you wrote a paper on it. Can you outline your recommendations for, and I know that you've done this plenty of times, but I'm asking you to do it one more time, your recommendations for how we all should eat? - First of all, what the foods that every time they pass our lips we injure the endothelial cells? Any drop of oil. Olive oil, corn oil, soybean oil, safflower oil, sunflower oil, coconut oil, palm oil, oil in a cracker, oil in a piece of bread, oil in a salad dressing. Oil injures the endothelial cell. Now, just so that... I'll continue with that, but I want to just be sure that your audience will probably say, well, what is my credential for being able to say those things? We will compete our results in reversing heart disease with anybody on the planet. We've written multiple papers about this before we ever wrote the book. And when we eliminate, for patients who are seriously ill with heart disease, the foods that I've been sharing with you, oil and the rest that I'm about to comment on, not only did we stop their disease, but we showed that we were able to reverse it. Okay, eliminate the oil. Also, anything with a mother or a face. Meat, fish, chicken, fowl, turkey, and eggs. Animal protein injures endothelial cells, as does dairy, milk, cream, butter, cheese, ice cream, and yogurt, and sugary foods. Diet colas, Pepsi, Coke. I don't like sugary foods. Cakes, pies, cookies, stevia, agave. Too much maple syrup or molasses. We have some maple syrup in some of our recipes in some of the book, but for patients who have heart disease, I'd like 'em to eliminate that. Take very little amount of it. Also, I don't like nuts, peanut butter, cashew sauce, or avocado, and too much saturated fat, and coffee with caffeine. Decaf, okay. Tea with caffeine, okay, but coffee with caffeine injures endothelial cells. - Doctor, for people that are listening to your right now, eat most of those things. Right? I mean, even just nuts. People make nuts like peanut butter, almonds. I heard almonds are good, right? Even Brazil nuts. Often times Brazil nuts are cited as something that's good for the heart. You know, it's kind of overwhelming to hear even... Not the coffee. Don't take away the coffee. You're taking away my coffee, right? I'm sure you get this a lot. It must be difficult having such tight-- - But that all stops when they suddenly find that, especially the patients who come with chest pain and angina, and suddenly they find out in four or five or six days their chest pain is diminishing and going away. Why? Why am I so tough on nuts? You'll see a number of papers out in the scientific literature praising nuts. You have to look often very carefully at how this study was designed, and also where was the money coming from? Because as the late Arnold Relman has said that, he was formerly the editor of "The New England Journal of Medicine," said you must be extremely cautious in reading a paper where the authorship has a relationship with industry. Now, the thing about nuts is interesting. You know, probably if the truth were known, you can't tell anybody this, but suppose I were to say it was okay to have three walnut halves on you cereal. That's not what people would remember. They'd say, hey, I heard Esselstyn say that nuts are okay. Huh? So they'll be in the glove compartment, they'll be in the bathroom, they'll be in the bedroom, they'll be in the kitchen, the hallway, the dining room, at the workbench. They're highly addicting. And it's interesting that I have yet to see in the scientific literature, any group of patients who are seriously ill with heart disease, where you give them nuts and peanut butter and cashew sauce, and have their disease ever halt, or be reversed. - So it's more than just an Omega-3 verses and Omega-6 thing. - Omega-3 and Omega-6 are sort of an essential fatty acids. You will very likely never be short on Omega-6. Unlikely to be as short on Omega-3 if your getting plenty of green leafy vegetables, chia seeds, or flaxseed meal, but if you do wanna be sure and you get checked, and you have the Omega-3 check test, and it says you've got, you can either be optimal, you can be borderline, or low. You could always take a supplement of Omega-3 algae until you bounce your numbers up where you're more optimal. - So in theory, if I was a very healthy individual that's in my 30's and 40's, in theory, I could consume a very small amount of nuts. That would be healthy, but ultimately the recommendation is-- - Yeah, on page 69 of my books I don't have anything about patients who are otherwise healthy, against them having nuts. This is for patients for heart disease. - Got it. Would you... I think about my Italian friends listening to you. So it's like no olive oil, no mozzarella, no pizza. - No, you can have all kinds of pizza, but you can't have cheese on it, and you can't have olive oil with it. They're delicious pizzas, vegetable pizzas, sure. - So when people call your recommendations Draconian, what they're really not seeing is that it actually has results attached to them, right? - I don't think they're Draconian at all. When you think about it, they are Draconian in the sense that they're so powerfully curative. When somebody calls it severe, strict, or Draconian, look at the foods that are in our diet and nutrition plan. There's not one food that we're asking people to eat that they haven't already eaten throughout their lives. The only thing that they're deciding is they're Draconian is the fact that we are asking them to simply remove from that diet the foods that if they continue to eat them will guarantee that they will become sick, ill, and perish from disease. So our Draconian step is to take away the killing foods. And I don't think that's Draconian. What happens with our diet, if we were to take our diet to Okinawa, the Okinawans would look at us and say, well, it's about time you guys caught on. We've been doing this for centuries. - True or false, red meat has the same level of carcinogenicity as cigarettes? - That was the famous saying that came in October of 2015, The World Health Organization, imagine that. Representatives from countries throughout the world agreed that it was time to label red meat as having the same level of carcinogenicity as smoking cigarettes. What a tremendously powerful statement. - Doctor, what about people that say that fish and fowl, chicken, are okay? Is that still in the same-- - They don't know the science. - Okay, so it-- - Animal protein. - So if someone's making the choice for chicken because they think-- - It's a question of whether you want to be shot or hung. - Wow. (laughing) Neither, please. Okay, and so what if I, let's say I'm listening to you right now, and I'm bought in, I'm bought in, but there's a lot of other information that I'm getting lately. There are trends towards intermittent fasting, or genetics-related dieting plans, or inflammatory foods. There's a lot of trends that are happening in the world of nutrition. No doubt, you've seen them throughout your career. How do you feel first about intermittent fasting? - Well, you can look, if you just wanna get comfortable about it, you ask yourself what do the rural Chinese do? What do the Okinawans do? What do those in Central Africa do? Do they all have intermittent fasting? There are gonna be these fads. I don't have a problem with people who wanna fast. That's not gonna hurt them. It's what they do when they stop fasting that hurts them. I don't have a problem with that. There are different types of fasting. We have a situation when, let's say I, and this happens all the time, we've got patients who come into our program and let's say they come in, they weigh 250, 300, 350, 400. A month or two ago I had a patient who weighed 500 pounds. You know, you gotta get to work on that, and that's where we borrowed something from the National Institute of Aging about eight or nine years ago that I think is a very powerful and very strong addition. And that is you have to watch it if they're diabetic 'cause you don't want them to have a hypoglycemic episode, but we'd like those patients to have a total water-only fast two days a week. 24 hours, water only. And that really kind of kick starts the weight loss along with the plant-based diet itself, and then they don't go through those awkward moments where you lose weight, they plateau for a number of months, they get discouraged, then they get recidivism, and then they end up gaining the weight back. But if they have a program where they are successful it really helps them to keep going and really achieve the goals that they're after. - I'm hearing you, and I personally am totally bought in to what you're saying, but then if you walk into a supermarket and you go to a frozen food section, there's such a long distance between how we should be eating, and we're currently eating throughout American society today. And I'm wondering are we destined to be addicted to unhealthy food when so much unhealthy food, processed food, fried food, is around us everyday? I mean, it seems like such a difficult thing for so many people who, many of whom, are just trying to put food on the table, you know, to walk into a supermarket to see their choices, and to not choose somethings that's unhealthy. I'm curious how you feel about compliance. I know you're not a psychologist, but how do you feel about compliance in a world where so many of the choices are so poor and addictive? - When we recently looked up some 200 patients who had been through our program for close to four years, and we found that the compliance and adherence when we looked it up, was about 89.3. That's almost 90%. And a number of physicians who often will attend our seminar just because they wanna feel familiar with it, they're really quite astounded. And often they'll say, well, Dr. Esselstyn, I've tried your approach, but I really cannot get a patient to follow this approach. And what we find is that why is it that we're getting 90% adherence? And I think the answer to that, quite clearly, is that we're showing the patient respect. How do you show a patient respect? The only way that I know to really show a patient respect is to give them our time. And personally, with this seminar that I was conducting until the virus hit, once a month we would have 12 or 14 participants, always with their significant other or their spouse in attendance, which rarely happens at the doctor's office. Because both parties have to know what you're asking for. And then the seminar itself is six hours in length. These patients come in, they start at nine o'clock in the morning, and we finish about three o'clock in the afternoon. They're gonna learn all about how they have created their disease, and precisely how we are going to empower them as the locus of control to halt and reverse their disease. Why is it six hours? Because in six hours, they're gonna learn all the details of this. They get a very hefty notebook that is a copy of every PowerPoint slide that I use. They have a copy of several of our scientific articles, a 44-page handout with many additional recipes that add to the 240, which will be in the two books that we provide them. There's a marvelous hour and a quarter from a woman who has had 33 years acquiring plant-based nutrition, showing how to deal with restaurants, travel. And everybody receives a DVD of the entire seminar so that when they go home, they get forgetful or rusty, they can flip this on and get themselves back up to speed. Then we always have two or three local or regional participants who've had a previous successful experience share their story with those in attendance, who can then say to themselves, listen, if he or she can do this, I can do this. And then we have an opportunity to answer everybody's questions. We have a plant-based luncheon, and then stay in touch as necessary through email or phone call. But I only, see since these patients come from throughout the United States, 90% are outside the state of Ohio, or from throughout Canada, or from overseas, I get them once. So I have really got to make this six hours very imperative and meaningful. And also, to show them respect I ask my secretary, who will give me two weeks before the seminar, she will present me with a list of everybody who's coming, plus their telephone number. And I then will call everyone of these patients myself beforehand so that I can get my arms around their story, and at the same time, present them with an opportunity to ask questions of me. So that coming to the seminar, we already have a strong platform from which we can all move forward. And really, with all due respect to my fellow physicians who say it's unsuccessful, if you think that you're gonna get somebody to change their lifestyle in a 12 or 15 minute office visit without the spouse, not gonna happen. And I must say that where I think we really throw the whole hook, and I spend at least an hour on the endothelial cell and the gas that it produces, nitric oxide, which is the great salvation and protection of all our blood vessels. Can you imagine somebody who's been with us for six hours, who understands what I've said about the endothelial cell and nitric oxide, how could they possibly look me in the eye and say, "Dr. Esselstyn, Lois and I are gonna "have our 35th wedding anniversary "in a couple of weeks, and boy am I gonna destroy "my few remaining endothelial cells." What? Not gonna happen. So you provide them with a this message and enough science in the vocabulary that they can grasp and get their arms around, and I think that's why we have that degree of success. I'd like to have it be even better. I'd like to have it be 95 to 100%. It's a tough sell because everywhere that these people have been going through all their lives, anytime they're in an gathering there's always food, and it's always the food that's gonna destroy endothelial cells. - Doctor, we talked about the things that people should avoid. In the light of knowledge is power, let's try and inspire people. Like, what should we be eating? - I would start with all these marvelous whole, W-H-O-L-E, whole-grains, whole grain and for your pasta, bread, rolls, bagels, and so forth. 101 different types of legumes, lentils, and beans. All these marvelous red, yellow, and green leafy vegetables, and some sweet potatoes, white potatoes, and some fruit. And you know, in my book, and the one by my wife and my daughter, "The Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease Cookbook," and in the books by John McDougall, and Neal Barnard, I mean, there are hundreds of wonderful recipes that are available. - You've been advocating for a plant-based diet since 1984. As I recall, there's a story that you like to share about being at a dinner for doctors, and they gave you a big steak and you didn't want it anymore. How do you feel about this new era in plant-based nutrition? Now days, there's a lot more news about it, there's a lot more adherence. People are kind of waking up to the idea that eating plant-based, formerly known as vegan, is the right way to go. How do you feel about this new era? And I'm also curious about how you feel about the labeling plant-based? - I treat vegans for heart disease. Vegans will eat oil. Vegans will eat french fries. Vegans will eat glazed donuts. The terminology whole-food, plant-based nutrition really encapsules exactly what we are striving for. There's one thing I wanna be sure, in case some of your listeners have heart disease, that we've been using for the last eight or nine years, it's not in the book, but it's so important, and that is if I have somebody who has heart disease and they have blockages in the coronary arteries to their heart, and I ask them to try to imagine shrinking their brain to a size that they actually crawl inside that artery, they would see that the blockage is an absolute cauldron of oxidated inflammation. So we need antioxidants. But no, do not go down to the health food store and buy a jug of pills that says antioxidant 'cause it doesn't work, and it's gonna be harmful. I need them to get their antioxidants from food. Fair enough, what food? Food that is high in what we call orac value, O-R-A-C, oxygen radical absorptive capacity. So this means if you're having raspberries, blueberries, strawberries, and blackberries on you morning oat cereal, that is a terrific start. However, nothing, nothing, nothing can trump the antioxidant value of green leafy vegetables. So I need these patients to chew, not smoothies, not juicing, to chew a green leafy vegetable six times a day, after it has first been boiled in water, five and a half to six minutes, or steamed so it's nice and tender. Then you must, must then anoint it with several drops of a delightful balsamic vinegar. Why? Because it's the acidic acid in the vinegar that will restore the nitric oxide synthase enzyme, which is the enzyme contained within the endothelial cell responsible for making nitric oxide. Now, therefore, you're gonna chew this alongside your breakfast cereal. Again, as a mid-morning snack. Again, with you luncheon sandwich. That's three. Mid-afternoon, four. Dinner time, five. And of course, I adore it when you have that evening snack of kale. What are you doing? All day long you are absolutely bathing horrible oxidative cauldron of inflammation with nature's most powerful antioxidants. And at the same time, you're helping to restore the endothelial capacity to make nitric oxide. However, while the second thing that chewing the greens does, chewing the greens will restore the capacity of your bone marrow to once again make the endothelial progenitor cells. What do they do? They replace our senescent, injured, worn-out endothelial cells. Now, the third thing, and this is so important, the third thing that chewing the greens does, when you are chewing the greens, you are chewing a nitrate. As you chew that nitrate, it is going to mix with the facultative anaerobic bacteria that reside in the crypts and grooves of your tongue. Those bacteria are going to reduce those nitrates that you are chewing to nitrites. Now when you swallow the nitrites it is your own gastric acid which is going to further reduce the nitrites to more nitric oxide. So there you are, literally, morning to dusk, all day long, you are absolutely restoring nitric oxide, the very molecule, the deficiency of which gave you this disease in the first place. Now, there are some caveats here. One: you can't use mouthwash or antibiotics because they will destroy the beneficial bacteria in your mouth. And be careful of any antacids because antacids will reduce the amount of acidity in you stomach, and you'll not be able to convert the nitrites to more nitric oxide. Now, what are the green leafy vegetables I'm talking about? They are, ready? Bok choy, Swiss chard, kale, collards, collard green, beet greens, mustard greens, turnip greens, Napa cabbage, Brussels sprouts, broccoli, cauliflower, cilantro, parsley, spinach, and arugula, and asparagus. And the top five are kale, Swiss chard, spinach, arugula, and beets. And look what it does for your memory. - Next question for you, currently in the United States by the time that one graduates high school they have the foundation for heart disease. - Right. - Many out there might be listening to this and thinking, well, I'm healthy. I don't need to do this, right? Like six times a day, that sounds kind of crazy. I don't need... Like eating green leafy vegetables, I can get away with a burger on the weekends, right? Are we all a little bit unaware of our current state of health and what's happening inside? Like how much... It's kind of, when I first read that statistic, I thought that was absolutely crazy that there could be-- - This is a very, very, very sickly country. When public health experts outline the multiple things that people are to do to get their health, you get exercise, very few Americans getting it regularly. You see lots of it on television, but very few people are getting the appropriate amount of exercise. Sleep, no. As a matter of fact be sure you want to avoid sleep apnea. Are they getting plenty of socialization? And most importantly of all, are they eating plant-based? I mean, this is why we have an epidemic of chronic illness. You know, here we are talking about cardiovascular disease, however, if we look carefully, cardiovascular disease is not the only disease we're treating with plant-based nutrition. You're getting rid of diabetes, you're getting rid of obesity, you're getting rid of hypertension, you're getting rid of vascular dementia, you're decreasing the likelihood of any kind of Alzheimer's disease. And then, of course, you're helping yourself be protected from ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, multiple sclerosis, allergies, asthma. I mean, the list goes on and on. The heavens have opened up and given this profession the most powerful tool ever that we've had in our toolbox. - So people are a lot more sick than they realize? - Well, obviously, when you think about the progression of this, we said you don't se much in the way of any heart disease at age seven or eight, but by the time you get autopsied, if you're a late-teenager, or early-20's, you've already got the foundation of the disease. And, therefore, not a great surprise that by the time people are in their 40's we now start seeing the clinical cardiac events of heart attack and stroke. - Many are worried about switching to a whole foods, plant-based diet because they're unaware of how to achieve the nutrition required for a child who's growing. Children need more fat. - It's interesting that when the late Bill Connor went down to Northern Mexico, and he studied the Tarahumara Indians, the Tarahumara Indians eat the three sisters. Beans, corn, and squash. No nutritional deficiencies. No nutritional deficiencies. They are absolutely champion athletes and runners. Now, if people sensibly have a whole-grain cereal in the morning with maybe a few raisins, a banana, and raspberries, blueberries, strawberries, and blackberries, and at lunchtime you can have, in the wintertime you can have a soup in which you put every conceivable kind of vegetable and greens, they can delicious. And then, of course, my favorite for supper is beans and rice with all the various cut up vegetables. Whether peas, and corn, and cut up peppers and chestnuts, and you've got an absolute feast. And it's a delicious way to eat. And you're not gonna be protein deficient. As a matter of fact, if your listeners have seen the movie "The Game Changers," you'll never see such incredible athletic specimens. Muscles bulging everywhere. The strongest man on the planet, the German, Baboumian, plant-based. Yeah. - And you would know about that because you were an Olympic rower. - Thank you. - Next question. You know, now a days, your business is not just your own. Your family's very involved. It's really incredible to see your son out there advocating. Your wife. Now that this is kind of, again, moving it forward into this new era, I mean, back in 1984, this message was a lot harder to get out there than it is now, right? And so where do you see the current nutrition movement? Are you excited about it? I mean, you just cited "The Game Changers," that's a new documentary that's been making a lot of rounds. So how do feel about the current nutrition movement? The next generation, in light of all that we know now? - You know, you cannot even begin to compare the difference 34 years ago with today. I got very excited about this and in 1991 I put together, with what I thought was really a blue ribbon panel of physicians, and I entitled the conference The First National Conference on the Elimination of Coronary Artery Disease. And we had a hundred people, but the speakers were great. We had a couple from Boston, Dr. Ornish was there, Colin Campbell was there, Castelli was there, Dr. Alexander was there, and it was really kind of exciting. And I thought, boy, this is the way to do it, but nothing happened. Eating is such an ingrained situation, so we had another one. This time in 1997. We had 500 people and it was really well received. And again, it was kind of slow, but somewhat after that as we moved into the early-2000's, you know, Ornish came out with his data, we came out with our data. Suddenly it was possible for this disease to be halted, and excitingly, even reversed. But the thing that was holding it back was that physicians never learned about any of this in medical school. It was very bizarre. But I should share with you that next month I've been asked to speak to Harvard Medical School, and this will be my third visit to Harvard, and there are some very important people there who I think are beginning to realize the efficacy of this. Because it's just so hard for physicians to somehow make the transition to think that that Brussels sprouts and broccoli, which have never been designed by a great pharmaceutical company, they're just simply been designed by the ground from a seed, would be so powerful as plants. And increasingly, as there is an awareness, that we should eat to avoid an injury to the endothelium, this will really help to turn this around. You know, I think what also is gonna happen is that there's been a basic covenant of trust since the days of Hippocrates that whenever possible the caregiver, meaning the physician, will share with the patient what is the causation of the illness. And sadly today in cardiovascular medicine, that was not being done. But I think increasingly, there is that developing awareness and that it will begin to happen. We have several now absolutely stunning examples of an angiogram, which shows the blockage in the artery, and then as these patients have gone into whole food, plant-based nutrition, and they've had subsequent follow-up angiograms, you can see that area of narrowing begin to enlarge. And for those who had older plaques that have now filled up with scarring and calcification and they won't go away, even those patients, amazingly, develop such strong collateralization, and as well as opening up much wider all those vessels that are in the heart muscle. Even the older patients have enormous benefit from this approach. - Doctor, it must be funny kind of going to being interviewed for news channels, going to events, and always running into your friends. So T. Colin Campbell, Dr. Ornish, Dr. Gregor. Who are some researchers and people in the field that you wish we would all kind of know a little bit more about? Whether it's someone who may not be US based, or any women within the US that have been doing this type of research for a while? Or are we really just at the beginning and you know-- - Oh, no, no, no, there's a wonderful, if you just look at the American College of Cariology, the Nutrition Committee, four years ago I was invited by the American College of Cardiology to become a member. Because they wanted me to join their Nutrition Committee, which I have done. And it's really a glowing group of people who are totally committed to plant-based nutrition. It is very empowering to be a part of that group. And it really gives you a great sense of pride and reassurance that this is eventually going to get there. Because, you know, right now this poor nation is being drawn into debtor's prison. Now, it's been accelerated by this virus, obviously, but before then we have Social Security, which is fine, then we have Medicaid and Medicare. Medicare is an enormous expense for this nation. What do you think is 45% of Medicare? Cardiology. All the drugs, all the imaging, all the procedures, the bypasses, the stents. All these things cost enormous amounts of money, and yet, this is a disease that doesn't even exist in half the planet. - With all the news around COVID-19 right now, do you find that people, if we all were eating a lot better, whole foods, plant-based diets, we'd be in a much better position when it would come to fighting this virus, right? - It's very easy to state right at the outset that if people have a strong immune system, they might do much better. I'm convinced that that's probably the case, but there may be something in the genetics of our immune system that is different in all of us that we respond differently to the virus. Because there are some people who literally have had COVID-19, Coronavirus, and they never even knew it. They're testing positive, or they tested with antibodies, knowing that they've had it. Others have smiled and others it, obviously, is very crippling, and others it actually kills them. But one of the things that's been fascinating is that from data when the SARS virus was around, it was made aware that somehow the gas nitric oxide was very capable of injuring the virus. And so the Massachusetts General Hospital has taken that information to heart, and they have started two studies. One study where they are identifying patients with Coronavirus, where they three times a day have them inhale for 30 minutes nitric oxide. Morning, noon, and late afternoon, early evening. And they wanna see if they can shorten the course of the illness in these patients. And the other study they're doing, they're taking healthcare workers who are very susceptible to developing and acquiring this disease because of their exposure. And they're giving them inhalations of nitric oxide. 30 minutes when they come to work, 30 minutes when they leave. Then it would be fascinating. And I wrote a little editorial-like piece about nitric oxide and Coronavirus because I feel that if people will eat in a way that you keep your nitric oxide levels very, very high, and you do that especially by eating the green leafy vegetables that I've already mentioned, six times a day for heart disease. Well, it's six times a day to try to... Because if a virus tries to infect your windpipe or your trachea and your making plenty of nitric oxide, the hope is that that will greatly diminish the likelihood that you will acquire the disease, or if acquired, it may mitigate against the intensity of the disease. - Is this why you're still doing what you're doing? I mean, I feel like a lot of your friends at this point must be like, you know what? It's time for me to relax. Been there done that. But you're still talking to me right now. You're still running seminars. You're still writing op-eds. Is it because you see such a distance between where we're at in the United States and where we could be? I mean, what's kind of driving you at this point to continue to put in this much time and effort into spreading this message? I mean, listening to you rattle off all of the leafy greens that we should eat, I mean, you've certainly said that so many times. Countless times. I actually felt kind of guilty asking you to say that again, right? (laughing) So what's driving you at this point, Doctor? Because, you know, you've written the book. You literally wrote the book on preventing and reversing heart disease. How are you... You did so much, why do you feel this need to continue? - Well, because I think it's kind of the reason, I guess, I went into medicine in the first place. Is that maybe you would be able to help out and I suddenly after a surgical career it became obvious to me that while you can help people one at a time with something like surgery, when you are able to get information out about changing nutrition that will vanquish 80% of chronic disease, I mean... When you talk about getting bang for the buck, I mean, it's so enormous where if it all worked out right, you would save the planet as well as saving lives throughout the world. And it's been very exciting when I've had a chance to travel to Singapore, to China, to Denmark, to Iceland. But I would simply have to say that I think the, right now, I guess it's because I really visualize in front of us, what I call the seismic revolution in health. And the seismic revolution in health is never gonna come about with another pill, another procedure, another operation. The seismic revolution in health will come about when we in the profession have the will and the grit and the determination to share with the public what is the lifestyle, and most specifically, what is the nutritional literacy that will empower them to absolutely annihilate illness and disease.
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Channel: Jenna Matecki
Views: 136,663
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: nutrition, heart disease, coronary artery disease, atherosclerosis, plant-based, health, WFPBNO, Whole foods, esselstyn, forks over knives, clinton, cleveland clinic, healthy eating, cooking, vegan, fasting, eat your greens, healing, curing, WFPB, science-first, diet, healthcare, standard american diet, diabetes, obesity, hypertension, china study, prevent and reverse heart disease, campbell, ornish, greger, plant-based news, medicare, cardiology, stents, bypass, no oil, game changers, blue zones, okinawa
Id: iGU4fcgt9UI
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 50min 1sec (3001 seconds)
Published: Sun May 17 2020
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