Personalised diets - 6 Minute English

110,177 views ・ 2022-01-20

BBC Learning English


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Hello.
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This is 6 Minute English from
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BBC Learning English.
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I'm Sam.
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And I'm Neil.
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In recent years new diets with names
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like 'vegan', 'keto' and 'paleo' have
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become very popular.
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Are you a
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vegetarian, Neil?
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Do you follow
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any particular diet?
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Well, I eat lots of fresh fruit
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and vegetables and only a little
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meat from time to time.
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Well, while many diets claim to
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improve health or help you
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lose weight, recent research
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shows that what counts is not
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what you eat but how
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your body reacts.
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Yes, and that reaction doesn't
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happen where you might think - not
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in the brain, or tongue, or even
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the stomach, but in the gut - another
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name for the intestines - the
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long tube inside your body
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which digests food.
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Inside everyone's gut are millions
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of microbes - tiny living organisms,
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too small to see without a
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microscope.
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Some of them are good
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for us, some bad.
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Microbes help digest food, but
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they influence our bodies more
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than we know.
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Think of them as
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chemical factories that cause our
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individual reaction to
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the food we eat.
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This mix of gut microbes is
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unique and different for everyone,
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even identical twins.
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And it's the reason why some
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doctors now recommend a
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personalised diet, one that
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perfectly fits your own unique
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combination of microbes.
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We'll hear more soon, but first
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I have a question for you, Neil,
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and it's about the gut - the
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tube which includes the large and
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small intestine.
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It's very
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long - but how long exactly is
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the average adult's gut?
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Is it:
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a) 3 and a half metres?
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b) 5 and a half metres?
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or,
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c) 7 and a half metres?
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Well, everybody is different
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of course, but I'll say on average
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the gut is b) 5 and
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a half metres long.
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OK, Neil, I'll reveal the answer
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later in the programme.
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Among the first to investigate gut
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microbes was Dr Tim Spector, author
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of bestselling book, The Diet Myth.
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He wanted to check whether the
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dietary advice he had heard and
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believed, advice like 'eat little
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and often' or 'avoid fat',
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was really true.
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Listen as Dr Spector explains
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how he started to doubt some of
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this advice - 'food myths', he
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calls them - to BBC Radio 4
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programme, The Life Scientific:
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All these so-called myths that
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I'd believed, whether it was
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about calories, about fats,
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when to eat, how to eat, were
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based on flimsy or no evidence,
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very old, very poor quality,
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and had been repeated so much
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that people didn't
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think to question them.
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One of the food myths Dr Spector
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questioned was counting calories - the
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units which measure the amount
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of energy food provides.
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He discovered that much of
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the dietary advice he had
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heard was either incorrect or
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based on flimsy evidence.
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If
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evidence is flimsy, it's
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weak and unconvincing.
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As Dr Spector questioned these
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food myths, he remembered an
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earlier study involving
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identical twins, pairs of brothers
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or sisters with the same genes.
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It was the surprising differences
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in weight between one twin and
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another that made Dr Spector
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realise that no two people
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have the same gut - even
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identical twins' guts are different.
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But, as he told BBC Radio 4's,
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The Life Scientific, the discovery
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came in a very smelly way - by
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asking his volunteers to send
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samples of their poo in the post!
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We collected lots of these
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samples, sequenced them,
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and looked at twins where
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one was overweight and one
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was skinny... and we found
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in every case, the skinnier
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twin had a more diverse
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microbiome, greater numbers
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of different species and
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they also nearly always had
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high numbers of a couple
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of microbes that just
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stuck out of the crowd - and
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one was called christensenella
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and the other was
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called akkermansia.
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Although genetically identical,
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one twin was overweight, while
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the other twin was skinny,
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or very thin.
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Because the weight difference
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could not be explained
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genetically, Dr Spector
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suspected the microbes in
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the skinnier twin's gut
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held the answer: the more
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diverse someone's microbes,
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the better their gut was at
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digesting food, regulating
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fat and maintaining health.
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Two microbes, christensenella
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and akkermansia, were especially
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effective.
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Dr Spector says these
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microbes stuck out of the crowd,
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meaning they were easy to notice
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for their positive effect.
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And since everyone's microbes are
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different, it follows that a
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personalised diet which selects
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the friendliest food for
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your gut, is best.
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Right,
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and all this talk of eating
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is making me hungry, so tell me,
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Sam, was my answer
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to your question, right?
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Ah yes, I asked about the
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length of the gut in
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the average adult.
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I said it was 5 and
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a half metres.
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Which was... the correct answer!
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Well done, Neil - that took 'guts',
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which is the second meaning
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of the word: courage.
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OK, let's recap the vocabulary we've
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learned starting with gut - an
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informal word for the intestines,
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the tube which digests
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food from the stomach.
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Microbes are microscopic organisms
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living inside the body.
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A calorie is a unit measuring
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how much energy food provides.
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If an argument or evidence is
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flimsy, it's weak
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and hard to believe.
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A skinny person is very thin.
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And finally, if something
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sticks out of the crowd,
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it's noticeable in a good way.
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Unfortunately, our six minutes
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are up, but remember:
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look after your gut, and
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your gut will look after you!
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Goodbye!
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