24/03/2022
The Truth about Fish 🐟
For decades fish has been placed on a health pedestal, believed to be ‘the healthiest meat’, due to improvements in cardiovascular health, blood pressure and brain health when consumed.
While fish do have remarkably healthy qualities and most health associations still recommend we eat 2-3 serves a week because of this, If we look at fish from a whole perspective, how healthy are they... really?
In what kind of environment do they now live? What do they ingest or absorb which enters their bodies, remaining in their flesh that we then eat?
Not to mention, what is commercial fishing doing to the globe and the oceans?
Fish contains two types of Omega 3: Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), which have been given almost rock star health status dating back to the discovery of the Mediterranean diet, whose population had the longest life expectancy,
the lowest rates of cardiovascular disease along with most other chronic diseases, in the world.
Recently, the science behind fish intake has been wavering, finding “inconclusive health results”, states one study from the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
“There was no significant effect of fish-oil supplementation on blood pressure, plasma lipids,
or plasma glucose”, says another Journal. OOPS - CHUCK THOSE SUPPLEMENTS AWAY PEEPS. - Hoodwinked again 🧐...
Wild Fish v.s. Farmed:
Wild Fish:
Wild fish now live in a thick toxic soup, a plethora of poisonous chemicals of plastics, sewage, pesticides, unrefined oil, industry, farming and mining run off contaminants.
Farmed Fish:
This has led to the emergence of fish farms.
The downside of most farms is that the fish live in crowded enclosures, are generally fed processed GMO meal pellets containing fish, other chemical products and colour pigments.
What's the recommendation?
Eating smaller fish, such as anchovies, sardines, herring, wild salmon, shrimp, prawns, small crab, oysters, mussels, clams, scallops, are safer as they have very little mercury or contaminants and still contain Omega 3.