Eat Fish, Be Happy

It’s amazing! When researchers took a close look at the foods typically eaten in various countries, they discovered an interesting insight: as fish consumption increased, depression decreased. Of course, depression isn’t uniform in each country; it varies from city to city and town to town. But what is consistent is this: People who consume the most fish (found in Japan, Thailand, and Hong Kong) were the least depressed, while those with the lowest fish consumption (found in North America, Europe, and New Zealand) had the highest rates of depression. And the secret seems to be the abundance of a particular type of fat found in fish (and in other foods): omega-3 fatty acids.

Fish-fat findings
A closer look at the Japanese diet sheds still more light on the fish-omega 3-depression link: Typically, about 15 times more omega-3s are in the diet of the Japanese than are in the American diet. Depression-wise, this translates into a Japanese culture with one-tenth the depression rate of Americans. Viewed from another vantage point, this means that almost 50% of elderly Americans have symptoms of depression, compared with about 2% of the Japanese elderly. Even more striking is the discovery in 1995 by psychiatrists who interviewed elders living in a Japanese fishing village: they did not find even one case of clinical depression.
 
Anatomy of Omega 3s and Mood
How might Omega-3 fats ward off depression?  One of the omega 3s—with the long name of docosahesaenoic (DNA)—is believed to boost the blues because it is concentrated in the brain. Contributing to about 50% of the total fats in nerve tissue, they play a key role in the functioning of nerve membranes, and in turn, your nervous system. Add the link between deficiencies in omega-3 fatty acids and low levels of serotonin, and you’re more vulnerable to depression.
 
Fish for feel-good feelings
From dreary doldrums to a deeper depression, a diet that is deficient in omega-3 fats can contribute to the problem. Here are some omega-3-rich fish to integrate into your diet.
 
Seafood (3 ounces, before cooking)
Sardines, in sardine oil  (3.3 grams omega 3s)                                                                                                     
Mackerel, Atlantic  (2.5 grams omega 3s)                                                                                                             
Trout, lake (1.6 grams omega 3s)                                                                                                       
Anchovy, European (1.4 grams omega 3s)                                                                                                           
Salmon, pink (1.0 grams omega 3s)
 
Two or three servings are all you need each week to get the benefits of fish oil (while avoiding too much mercury and other toxins often found in fish). If you find it’s not always convenient to eat omega-3-rich fish, it’s a good idea to consider supplementing your diet with a good fish oil supplement that is mercury and toxin-free. Keep in mind that fish oil-rich food is your best defense against depression, but taking a daily supplement can also be good insurance against deficiency. For more insights into natural mood boosters, read “Get High with Movement and Motion," by Deborah Kesten, MPH.
 
Deborah Kesten, MPH, was the nutritionist on Dean Ornish, MD’s first clinical trial for reversing heart disease through lifestyle changes—without drugs or surgery, and Director of Nutrition on similar research in cardiovascular clinics in Europe. Specializing in preventing and reversing overweight and heart disease through lifestyle changes, she is the award-winning author of Feeding the Body, Nourishing the Soul, The Healing Secrets of Food, and The Enlightened Diet. Call her at 415.810.7874, or visit her at www.Enlightened-Diet.com to take her FREE What’s Your Eating Style? Quiz, and to learn more about her Whole Person Nutrition Program for wellness, weight loss, and heart-health; coaching; and books.
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About deborah.kesten

Deborah Kesten, MPH and Certified Wellness Coach, is an international nutrition researcher and educator, with a specialty in preventing and reversing obesity and heart disease and related ailments. She was the nutritionist on Dr. Dean Ornish’s first clinical trial for reversing heart disease through lifestyle changes, and co-director on research about her Whole Person Nutrition Model and Program (www.Enlightened-Diet.com), the results of which were published in Explore: The Journal of Science and Healing. With more than 200 published nutrition and health articles, she is also the award-winning author of Feeding the Body, Nourishing the Soul and The Healing Secrets of Food, a comprehensive, evidence-based nutrition program about the power of food to heal multi-dimensionally. Her most recent book, The Enlightened Diet, offers a practical guide to weight loss success through her comprehensive and research-based Whole Person Nutrition Program. Deborah’s accomplishments include contributing articles to scientific books and medical journals, including the Journal of the American Medical Association, and to magazines such as Yoga Journal and Spirituality and Health. She lives in Washington with her husband Larry Scherwitz, PhD.

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One Response to Eat Fish, Be Happy

  1. jiten51 June 10, 2009 at 9:58 am #

    jiten51

    My dear Deborah,

    Your command of the matters of food is second to none, your praise of such food, er, its not quite food, I mean, praise of chocolate is lips-smacking good. The problem is am an old-fashioned veggie, no fish, no egg nothing.

    Am sure you have heard the recent findings in scientific circles that put the combination of Indian spices as good for all-round health. So, I shall be free of such diseases as … I had better not tempt fate.

    All the best,

    Jiten