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Good News for Brain and Bone Health in the Seafood Department

New report highlights benefits. The Lempert Report: Fish is loaded with important nutrients, giving retailers an opportunity to sell.

Phil Lempert

December 19, 2019

2 Min Read
salmon
The Lempert Report: Fish is loaded with important nutrients, giving retailers an opportunity to sell.Photograph: YouTube

The Lempert Report

Consumer Reports magazine writes that the advantages of eating seafood as you get older is critical. Fish is loaded with nutrients that are crucial for health, such as high-quality protein, ­iodine, selenium and zinc. And it has more vitamins B12 and D—necessary for brain health and bone health, respectively—than any other food you can eat. But perhaps most important, it’s the best source of healthy omega-3 fatty acids.

 “Omega-3s have been shown to reduce blood clots (which can cause heart attack or stroke}, because they prevent blood platelets from getting sticky,” Julia Zumpano, a dietitian at the Miller Family Heart and Vascular Institute at the Cleveland Clinic, told Consumer Reports. “They also lower triglycerides—fat that can accumulate in the arteries—reduce blood pressure and inflammation, and increase levels of good cholesterol.”

Omega-3 fatty acids also appear to help prevent other problems that can come with growing older, such as muscle and bone loss, and possibly even cognitive issues. The health effects are so widespread that a 2018 study of older adults published in The BMJ found that having higher blood levels of omega-3s from fish is linked to healthier aging—reducing the risk of having a chronic disease or serious mental or physical problem by 24%, compared with having low levels.

To get the health benefits of omega-3s, the American Heart Association recommends eating at least two 3.5-ounce servings of nonfried fish per week. 

The magazine organized the following low-mercury fish into two healthy categories, depending on their omega-3 content: “Great Choices” have the most omega-3s, and “Good Choices” have less but are still healthy. “Eat Rarely, If Ever” fish are high-mercury types you should have only once in a while, if at all.

Great Choices: High in Omega-3s

  •  Anchovies

  • Atlantic mackerel

  • Herring

  • Oysters

  • Pacific chub mackerel

  • Sardines

  • Shad

  • Trout

  • Wild and Alaskan salmon (canned or fresh)

Good Choices: Lower in Omega-3s (but Still Healthy)

  • Atlantic croaker

  •  Canned light tuna

  • Catfish

  • Crab

  • Flounder and sole (flatfish)

  • Haddock

  • Lobster

  • Mullet

  • Pollock

  • Shrimp (wild and most U.S. farmed)

  • Tilapia

  • Scallops

  • Squid (wild)

It’s time to make your store’s fish monger the next food celebrity.

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