SCIENTISTS AGREE PASTA IS A HEALTHY FOOD

Healthy Pasta Meals Scientific Consensus Statement

Pasta is a healthy carbohydratee food, and is a key ingredient of healthy traditional diets around the world, including the Mediterranean and Latin American Diets.

An international committee of scientists and food authorities released a Scientific Consensus Statement concluding that, contrary to fad diet thinking, pasta should be characterized as a healthy complex carbohydrate-containing food suitable to most diets. For the first time since the original Consensus Statement was introduced in 2004, scientists addressed topics including gluten-free trends, sports nutrition and sustainability.

This was the outcome of The Scientific Consensus Conference on the Healthy Pasta Meal, a scientific conference organized by the non-profit Oldways, the International Pasta Organisation (IPO) and AIDEPI, as part of the V World Pasta Congress, October 25-27, 2015, in Milan, Italy. Since, other international scientists have added their names to the Consensus Statement. Scientists on the panel represented: Argentina, Brazil, France, Greece, Italy, Mexico, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Turkey and U.S.

Key findings and conclusions from the Consensus Statement include:

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Scientific research increasingly supports the importance of total diet, rather than individual foods.
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Pasta is a key component of many of the world’s traditional healthy eating patterns, such as the scientifically-proven Mediterranean Diet. Most plant-based dietary patterns help prevent and slow progression of major chronic diseases and confer greater health benefits than current Western dietary patterns.
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Many clinical trials confirm that excess calories, and not carbohydrates, are responsible for obesity. Diets successful in promoting weight loss can emphasize a range of healthy carbohydrates, protein and fat. All these three macronutrients, in balance, are essential for designing a healthy, individualized diet anyone can follow for their whole life. Moreover, very low carbohydrate diets may not be safe, especially in the long term.
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Pasta is a simple plant-based food, and has a low environmental impact.
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Doctors, nutritionists and other health professionals should educate the consumer to choose varied and balanced pasta meals for good health.
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Pasta is satiating and keeps you fuller longer. A pasta meal can be moderate in its calorie content, assuming the portion is correct and the dressing-topping is not calorie-rich.
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At a time when obesity and diabetes have a high prevalence around the world, pasta meals, cheap viagra and other low-glycemic index foods may help control blood sugar and weight especially in overweight people. Glycemic index is a factor that impacts the healthfulness of carbohydrate-rich foods. There is a beneficial effect in the way pasta is made. The process of manufacturing reduces its glycemic response. Whole grain pasta, which provides more fiber, is also a good choice.
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Pasta is an affordable, healthy choice available in almost all societies. Promoting the affordability and accessibility of pasta meals can help overcome the misperception that healthy foods are too expensive.
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Pasta consumption is suitable for people who do physical exercise and particularly in sports. Pasta, as with other cereal foods, provides carbohydrates and is also a source of protein. Pasta may be used alone or lightly seasoned before training or combined with other foods after training, in order to improve physical performance. High protein and low carbohydrate diets are discouraged in active people.
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Healthy pasta meals are a delicious way to eat more vegetables, legumes and other healthy foods often under-consumed. Pasta is a way to introduce other Mediterranean diet foods (other cultural traditions), especially for children and adolescents.
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Pasta meals are enjoyed in cultural traditions worldwide. As they are like a canvas, they are versatile and easily adaptable to national/regional seasonal ingredients.
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The general population can eat pasta and should not choose a gluten-free product if not affected by a gluten-related disorder correctly diagnosed. For those with gluten sensitivities or allergies, or celiac disease, there are gluten-free alternatives.
SIGNATORIES OF THE SCIENTIFIC CONSENSUS STATEMENT | Consensus Committee Members
Joel Abecassis, PhD, National Institute for Agricultural Research (INRA) (Montpellier, France)
Sara Baer-Sinnott, President, Oldways (Boston, USA)
Nuno Borges, PhD, University of Porto (Porto, Portugal)
Hector Bourges, MD, PhD, Salvador Zubiran National Institute of Medical Sciences and Nutrition (Mexico City, Mexico)
Sergio Britos, University of Buenos Aires (Buenos Aires, Argentina)
Furio Brighenti, PhD, University of Parma (Parma, Italy)
Michel de Lorgeril, MD, Joseph Fourier University (Grenoble, France)
Mauro Fisberg, PhD, Federal University of São Paulo (São Paulo, Brazil)
Michelangelo Giampietro, MD, Sapienza University and University of Modena and Reggio Emilia (Rome and Modena, Italy)
Marta Garaulet Aza, PhD, DrPH, University of Murcia (Murcia, Spain)
Vasily Isakov, MD, PhD, AGAF, Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Federal Research Center of Nutrition, Biotechnology and Food Safety (Moscow, Russia)
Giancarlo Logroscino, MD, PhD, University of Bari (Bari, Italy)
Alessandra Luglio, Nutritionist (São Paulo, Brazil)
Oleg Stephanovich Medvedev, PhD, Board of the National Research Center “Zdorovoe Pitanye”(Healthy Eating); Moscow State University Department of Pharmacology (Moscow, Russia)
Pietro Migliaccio, MD, President, and Maria Teresa Strumendo, MD, Societa Italiana di Scienze dell’Alimentazione (Rome, Italy)
Glaucia Maria Pastore, PhD, University of Campinas UNICAMP (São Paulo, Brazil)
Luca Piretta, MD, Sapienza University (Rome, Italy)
Andrea Poli, MD, Nutrition Foundation of Italy (Milano, Italy)
Gabriele Riccardi, MD, Federico II University (Naples, Italy)
Nevin Sanlier, PhD, Biruni University (Istanbul, Turkey)
Ksenia Sergeevna Selezneva, MD, PhD, Dietology Department, Atlas Biomed Group (Moscow, Russia)
Kantha Shelke, PhD, Corvus Blue (Chicago, USA)
Joanne Slavin, PhD, University of Minnesota (Minneapolis, USA)
Elena Tikhomirova, Nutritionist and medical advisor (Moscow, Russia)
Kelly Toups, MLA, RD, Oldways (Boston, USA)
Dan Waitzberg, MD, PhD, University of São Paulo (São Paulo, Brazil)
Elizabete Wenzel de Menezes, PhD, Food Research Center and University of São Paulo (São Paulo, Brazil)
To download the Healthy Pasta Meal Consensus Statement in various languages, please click on a link below:
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Top Regions: World Pasta Production
  • Central & South America 21.0%
  • North America 14.4%
  • U.E. 33.6%
  • Other Europe 19.4%
by volume in tonnes - 2017

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