Tag: Bharat Nutrition

  • From Heavy Diets to Conscious Eating; Gagan Dhawan on Rethinking Nutrition Through a Plant-Based Lens

    From Heavy Diets to Conscious Eating; Gagan Dhawan on Rethinking Nutrition Through a Plant-Based Lens

    New Delhi [India], February 07: Indian food culture has a rich and diverse history of being plant-forward. Across the country, grains, lentils, vegetables, and fruits have formed the base of everyday meals. These century-old habits might have been routine at one point in time, but the popularity of modern eating patterns has seen a turn towards faster, more processed alternatives.

    For entrepreneur and wellness thinker Gagan Dhawan, the concern lies in the outcome it has on the human body instead of simply looking back with nostalgia.

    “What we now call a vegan diet is supported by solid global science,” he says. “Interestingly, many Indian food patterns already reflected these principles long before research caught up.”

    When abundance replaces awareness

    As people have become more urbanised, westernised food systems are altering how people eat. Meals are heavier, faster, and increasingly disconnected from the body’s actual needs. Processed foods are an indulgence that have become routine.

    “We are now eating in ways our bodies don’t really understand,” Dhawan explains. “Food may not be bad, but an unbalanced diet can leave us feeling off. Left to itself, the body will always demand cleaner food.”

    The results are now visible at scale. Heart disease, diabetes and cancer remain among the leading causes of death globally. Compounding matters, these diseases are systemic outcomes of the food being produced and consumed.

    From trends to systems

    Like many professionals, Dhawan explored multiple diet frameworks over the years. From his experiences, trendy diets and elimination-based approaches delivered short-term changes but the results rarely lasted.

    “Extreme diets may show quick results, but they also stress the body,” he says. “A diet that is sustainable matters more.”

    His shift came through exposure to whole food vegan research emerging from medical and academic institutions. Large-scale studies, like that by New York University, show that a WFPB diet can significantly reduce medication dependence and, in many cases, reverse conditions such as hypertension and type 2 diabetes.

    Taking this approach means an emphasis on unprocessed plant foods, vegetables, fruits, legumes, whole grains, nuts and seeds.

    “What you eat every day is what you become,” Dhawan says. “When you make the right choices, you see the results in your body. Think of your plate as the direction of how your body will look and feel.”

    Understanding our food

    Dhawan’s framework focuses on a whole food vegan pattern that delivers fibre, micronutrients and bioactive compounds essential for long-term metabolic health.

    “A vegan diet can still be highly processed,” he notes. “A whole food vegan diet is about what you include and how little you rely on refinement.”

    There have been multiple studies proving that whole food vegan diets support cardiovascular health, reduce inflammation, and improve cognitive function. Contrary to common myths, vegan diets are also able to support the building of muscle and strength, with unprocessed carbohydrates playing a key role in fat reduction and performance.

    What science is now confirming

    Nutrition science increasingly points to food as a primary intervention rather than a secondary support. Studies from institutions such as Harvard have demonstrated greater weight loss on vegan diets compared to controlled diets over similar timeframes. An added benefit is that plant proteins deliver significantly higher antioxidant levels than animal proteins, which are linked to inflammation and increased disease risk.

    Another challenge when changing mindsets is the assumption that vegan diets are expensive. Following a whole food diet includes staples that remain among the most cost-effective foods available.

    “When people see this as a restriction, they miss the variety,” Dhawan says. “There are thousands of vegan recipes, and even regular restaurants offer vegan options.”

    Beyond the numbers

    While health outcomes matter most, Dhawan also highlights the broader implications of dietary choices. Going vegan has a lower environmental impact and is one of the most effective ways to shrink your carbon footprint, as per a study published by Oxford University.

    There is also a psychological dimension when avoiding dairy and meat consumption. For many, a change in their diet toward whole foods provides mental health benefits, more energy, and a greater sense of well-being when they shift.

    “It’s about supporting the body properly,” he says. “When it is properly supported, everything else works better.”

    A step forward

    For Dhawan, this way of eating is not a dramatic overhaul of a person’s habits or associated with their identity. It is a series of small, conscious choices made over time to better your diet and opt for healthier alternatives. That’s why he emphasis meals that feel familiar, accessible, and sustainable within modern routines.

    Progress, in this sense, shows up in steadier days, and better lifestyle choices. In choosing foods that work with the body rather than against it, the shift from heavy diets to conscious eating becomes less about trying something new and more about a mental shift.

    In a world overwhelmed by extremes, Dhawan’s approach is deliberately practical. To eat smarter and let the science lead.

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  • Bharat Nutrition and Lifestyle Classroom by Team Luke Goes Live on Republic Day, Free for All

    Bharat Nutrition and Lifestyle Classroom by Team Luke Goes Live on Republic Day, Free for All

    A first-of-its-kind virtual nutrition and lifestyle classroom session for children across India, created in support of PM Narendra Modi ji’s vision of a healthier Bharat.

    Mumbai, January 27, 2026: Luke Coutinho, Foundational Medicine and Lifestyle Expert, and Team Luke announced the release of the Bharat Nutrition and Lifestyle Classroom on the 26th of January, 2026. This is an exclusive Republic Day special, with a structured classroom session designed for children across India, free of cost and accessible to every home, school and community.

    Created in support of the Hon. Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi ji’s vision of a healthier Bharat, the classroom brings a simple belief to life: when lifestyle education reaches children at the grassroots level, it strengthens families, schools and the nation.

    How it All Began: The Story Behind the Bharat Nutrition and Lifestyle Initiatives

    Reflecting on the origin of the initiative, Luke, a Wellness Champion for the Hon. Prime Minister’s Fit India Movement, shares, “At the end of February 2025, after a long day of consults, I received a call from our Hon. Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi Ji’s office. It wasn’t routine; we were asked to create a Bharat-inspired dish and lifestyle guidelines aligned with the national vision for a healthier Bharat. In that moment, it didn’t feel like work. It was a responsibility.”

    That call set in motion a clear national intent, amplified at NXT Conclave 2025, where Luke was invited by Shri Kartikeya Sharma, Hon. Member of the Rajya Sabha and Founder of the ITV Media Network, to create a Bharat-inspired dish and lifestyle framework aligned with the Hon. Prime Minister’s vision. The NXT Conclave brought together 20+ global leaders and changemakers, and Luke was honoured to be the only keynote speaker in the health and wellness category, addressing the importance of lifestyle and preventive care for our nation.

    On 28th February 2025, the Bharat Dish and Lifestyle Plan was unveiled at the NXT Conclave and later shared widely in English and 5+ Indian languages. Built to be simple, familiar, and deeply rooted in Bharat, it included millet khichdi and sattu kadhi, traditional foods, daily lifestyle foundations, and 100+ recipes, anchored by the message: Made in India. Heal in India.

    During the same time, Luke also had the opportunity to visit Anganwadi centres and witness Poshan Abhiyaan at the grassroots. The 24-language Poshan Tracker reinforced a truth the team carried forward: lasting health begins early, with children.

    From a Bharat-inspired Plan to a Nation-wide Education Mission

    On 1st March 2025, Luke met our Hon. Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi ji. His message to Luke was clear: “If we are to build a healthier Bharat, then we must begin with children and start at the very grassroots, because they are our future.”

    In March 2025, Team Luke expanded access further by launching the Bharat Nutrition and Lifestyle Plan, a free, downloadable offering designed for schools, principals, teachers, parents and institutions across India, helping school canteens, home kitchens, and tiffin boxes return to balance, nourishment and common sense. The initiative has since reached thousands, continuing to expand.

    On 1st May 2025, Team Luke launched India’s first Bharat School Menu and Lifestyle Plan, a free monthly initiative offering balanced, child-friendly menus and simple lifestyle guidance in English and Hindi, designed to be simple, seasonal, and rooted in Indian food wisdom. The plan is inclusive, with vegan, vegetarian, and non-vegetarian options to support diverse Indian households.

    Recognising that awareness without continuity fades, Team Luke then introduced free online weekend Bharat Nutrition and Lifestyle Classrooms in English and Hindi, designed not as lectures, but as conversations with children and caregivers. These sessions were primarily led by Luke and Priyanka Vithlani, Meal Analyst and Lifestyle as Foundational Medicine Expert at Team Luke.

    A New Phase of the Bharat Nutrition and Lifestyle Classroom

    This Republic Day marks a new phase of the Bharat Nutrition and Lifestyle Classroom, introducing India’s first structured, curriculum-based, virtual lifestyle education program for children. The special classroom session is built on five pillars: nutrition, exercise and movement, sleep, emotional wellness and yoga. From awareness to education. From sessions to structure. From inspiration to curriculum. It is free, culturally rooted and age-appropriate, focused on foundations, not quick fixes.

    As Luke shares, reflecting the intent behind the classroom, “What you are seeing here is not a campaign or a project. It is a responsibility we felt deeply as Indians to contribute something meaningful to the future of our country.”

    This initiative has been championed since its inception by Shri Kartikeya Sharma, Hon. Member of the Rajya Sabha and Founder of the ITV Media Network, and Dr. Aishwarya Pandit Sharma, Chairperson of the ITV Foundation, whose support and endorsement have played a pivotal role in taking this vision forward.

    Availability: The Bharat Nutrition and Lifestyle Classroom is now available free of cost on Team Luke’s official YouTube channel.

    Session Link: https://youtu.be/GTRu6gmt7d4

    Made in India. Heal in India.

    Disclaimer: This classroom session is intended for education and general lifestyle awareness. It does not replace personalised medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.