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Diet and lifestyle choices play a bigger role in long-term health than genetics alone. An expert explains how daily habits influence obesity, chronic disease, and overall wellbeing

According to the Economic Survey 2025–26, nearly 24% of Indian women and 23% of Indian men are overweight or obese, highlighting obesity as a growing public health challenge driven by unhealthy diets, sedentary lifestyles, and increasing consumption of ultra-processed foods.
In modern healthcare conversations, genetics and medical interventions often dominate discussions around long-term health. Yet, mounting evidence suggests that everyday habits play a far greater role in shaping health outcomes over time. According to the Economic Survey 2025–26, nearly 24% of Indian women and 23% of Indian men are overweight or obese, highlighting obesity as a growing public health challenge driven by unhealthy diets, sedentary lifestyles, and increasing consumption of ultra-processed foods.
“Long-term health outcomes are shaped less by occasional treatments and far more by habits repeated daily over years,” explains Dr Rohini Patil, Founder & CEO, Nutracy Lifestyle. “Diet and lifestyle remain among the most underestimated, yet most powerful, determinants of both longevity and quality of life.”
The survey also underscores how lifestyle-related factors influence biological processes that contribute to chronic disease and the ongoing mental health crisis in India, reinforcing the urgent need to shift focus from reactive care to prevention.
The Science Linking Lifestyle to Long-Term Health
Lifestyle-related conditions, commonly referred to as non-communicable diseases (NCDs), are now the leading cause of mortality worldwide. Cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, obesity, and certain cancers are far more strongly linked to modifiable lifestyle behaviours than to genetic destiny.
“Research consistently shows that a significant proportion of chronic diseases can be delayed or even prevented through sustained improvements in diet, physical activity, and daily routines,” says Dr Patil.
Lifestyle choices directly affect foundational biological systems, including metabolism, immune function, inflammation, and cellular repair mechanisms. Poor dietary habits and physical inactivity increase chronic low-grade inflammation, insulin resistance, and oxidative stress. In contrast, healthier habits help maintain metabolic efficiency and physiological balance, reducing long-term disease risk.
Diet as the Foundation of Preventive Health
A balanced, nutrient-dense diet is central to long-term health, energy levels, and disease prevention. Consuming a variety of whole foods supports metabolic health and lowers the risk of chronic conditions.
“Regular intake of refined carbohydrates, added sugars, and high-sodium processed foods disrupts metabolic balance, leading to weight gain, cholesterol abnormalities, and unstable blood sugar levels,” notes Dr. Patil.
Modern nutrition science increasingly focuses on dietary patterns rather than isolated nutrients, recognising that sustained health benefits come from consistent food choices over time not short-term dietary trends or restrictive regimens. This philosophy underpins disease-specific nutrition planning widely recommended by experienced nutritionists, dietitians, and PCOS specialists.
Lifestyle Habits Beyond Food
While nutrition is foundational, long-term health depends on a broader lifestyle framework especially for individuals seeking structured, weight-focused care. Research shows that multiple healthy habits work synergistically, amplifying their overall impact.
Physical Activity: Regular movement supports cardiovascular health, improves insulin sensitivity, and helps maintain healthy body composition. Even moderate, consistent activity significantly reduces the risk of chronic disease. “Movement doesn’t need to be intense to be effective, it needs to be regular,” says Dr. Patil.
Sleep Patterns: Adequate sleep is essential for hormonal regulation, immune resilience, and metabolic balance. Chronic sleep deprivation increases the risk of obesity, type 2 diabetes, and heart disease. “Sleep is often neglected, yet it’s one of the most powerful metabolic regulators,” she adds.
Tobacco and Alcohol Use: Smoking remains one of the strongest preventable risk factors for cardiovascular disease and cancer, while excessive alcohol intake increases the risk of liver disease, hypertension, and metabolic dysfunction.
Stress Management: Persistent psychological stress disrupts inflammatory pathways and metabolic stability, gradually increasing disease susceptibility. “Chronic stress quietly erodes health, it doesn’t announce itself, but its effects accumulate,” explains Dr. Patil.
Together, these behaviours form lifestyle profiles that strongly predict long-term health outcomes.
Practical Strategies for Sustainable Health
Sustainable health improvements are built through realistic, evidence-based actions not extreme measures.
Prioritise Diet Quality: Focus on whole foods, increase fibre intake, and reduce reliance on ultra-processed foods through gradual, manageable changes.
Integrate Physical Activity: Incorporate walking, structured exercise, and daily movement into routine life for lasting benefits.
Protect Sleep: Maintain consistent sleep schedules and prioritise quality rest to support hormonal and metabolic health.
Avoid Harmful Substances: Eliminate tobacco use and limit or avoid alcohol consumption.
Focus on Consistency: “Health is not built through short-term interventions, it’s built through habits sustained over time,” emphasises Dr. Patil.
Rethinking Long-Term Health
Health is shaped by the accumulation of daily choices made over years, not by isolated actions. A substantial body of scientific evidence supports the understanding that food choices and lifestyle behaviours are central to long-term wellbeing.
“Recognising nutrition and lifestyle as integral to medical care allows us to shift from reactive treatment to proactive prevention,” says Dr. Patil.
As chronic diseases continue to rise globally, acknowledging and acting upon the role of diet and lifestyle is no longer optional. Sustainable health is built quietly, through informed decisions repeated day after day, long before illness ever appears.
February 10, 2026, 12:01 IST