3 Reasons To Avoid The Blood-Type Diet

For starters, it has no basis in science or reason. Learn how the fit-minded should eat instead.

By: Marie Spano

3 Reasons To Avoid The Blood-Type Diet

Eat Right For Your Blood Type, a book by Dr. Peter J. D’Adamo, isn’t a nutrition work for Twilight fans. The author’s concept, simply put, is that everyone can and should follow an optimal diet according to whether their blood type is A, B, AB, or O.

It all sounds very scientific, doesn’t it, in a nerd-glasses-and-lab-coat kind of way? You know there’s some 23-year-old actress out there waiting to offer a gushing endorsement of this diet as the cure for everything that ails everyone on Earth.

Indeed, we’re all born with a different set of genetics, which we know contributes to our risk for some diseases and other medical conditions. To eat in a manner that coincides with our genetic makeup, while improving our health? Makes perfect sense, right?

The problem is, unless you recoil from garlic and sleep in a coffin, the so-called blood-type diet kind of, well, sucks.

The good doctor believes that certain foods are good for your blood type, and that others are dangerous. Eat foods from the latter category, and you may experience a variety of health issues, ranging from inflammation and bloating to a slower metabolism and even diseases such as cancer. Or so the book says.

Blood Type Specifics

Here’s how he breaks down the dietary specifics for each blood type:

O = “old” or ancient times.

A = “agrarian”

B = “nomadic”

AB = “modern”

Click To Enlarge. The good doctor believes that certain foods are good for your blood type, and that others are dangerous.

Eat Right For Your Blood Type gives you portions of the best foods listed for you. It also lists foods that encourage both weight gain and loss for each blood type. He also offers case examples, answers common questions, and addresses different situations that might arise (food allergies, diseases etc.) for each group.

Why This Diet Isn’t For You

Unfortunately, the book raises more questions than it answers. I’ve singled out three reasons in particular why this diet isn’t necessarily for you:

1. The diet is short on science

The recommendations made on Bodybuilding.com are based on science and experience. The take-home:

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April 19, 2011 • Tags: Diet • Posted in: Diet Help

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