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Big Food and you: rules for a healthy life

Christine Armarego - Monday, July 05, 2010
Posted 1st July, 2010 in "Wellbeing" from Sydney Morning Herald

http://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/wellbeing/big-food-and-you-rules-for-a-healthy-life-20100701-zp5p.html

Would you have thought a can of Coke and a "97% fat-free" yoghurt had the same amount of sugar in them? If you didn't, well that's OK - you're not alone. This article looks at how "healthy" diets and "healthy" foods can be doing us more harm than good!

"Michael Pollan is desperate to end our addiction to processed food. Jon Henley hears why

Michael Pollan, tall, fit, not quite skinny but very definitely lean, is holding a fruit yoghurt in one hand and a Coca-Cola in the other.

"So," he says, "which do you think, per 100 grams, contains more sugar?"

The Coke, I reply. Duh.

"Wrong," he says. "The yoghurt. And look, it's low-fat. Isn't that great? We're getting fat on low-fat food."

It's a nice illustration of Rule Nine in Pollan's magnificently sensible new book, Food Rules.

Along with such gems as "Don't eat anything your great-grandmother wouldn't recognise as food" and "Don't get your fuel from the same place your car does", Pollan recommends that you "Avoid food products with 'lite' or 'low-fat' or 'non-fat' in their names."

His reasoning: if you remove the fat from a foodstuff, it doesn't necessarily make it non-fattening.

Certainly not if the producer ratchets up the sugar content to compensate.

In fact, Pollan notes, since Americans began producing low-fat food products, they have been consuming up to 500 extra calories a day. Brilliant.

Pollan, an award-winning author, journalist and campaigner, is on a mission.

Food Rules is, in effect, a condensation of his previous work: much of the science behind these 64 deliberately catchy injunctions towards a healthier diet ("The whiter the bread, the sooner you're dead") has already been expertly dissected in his earlier books The Omnivore's Dilemma and the US bestseller In Defence of Food.

The rules spring from two facts.

The first is that people who eat what Pollan defines as a western diet ("lots of everything except vegetables, fruits and whole grains") tend to suffer from western ailments: obesity, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and cancer.

The second is that people who eat more traditional diets - including those of certain indigenous peoples - that, by the lights of western food science, might be considered way too high-fat, high-carb or high-protein, do not tend to suffer from these diseases.

In other words, people can thrive on a wide variety of foods and diets, with one major exception: the diet most of us in the west are now eating.

So why are we eating our way to death?

Because for big food manufacturers, the western diet is payday, every day.

"The more a food is processed, the more profitable it gets," says Pollan, who refers to these products as "edible food-like substances".

And that status quo is not challenged by modern food science, which is all about identifying the "good" and "bad" nutrients in processed foods and tinkering with them - by lowering the fat, for example, or fortifying the vitamins - rather than questioning the value of processed food products in the first place.

"We don't talk about food any more," says Pollan.

"We talk about nutrients, omega-3, antioxidants, saturated fats, polyphenols. And so we play into the hands of the food marketers."

This all has the crushing logic of truth.

But can we do anything about it?

Pollan has little faith that Big Food will change voluntarily: legislation will be needed, he fears, although he takes heart from the Obama administration's victory on healthcare reform in the US.

"Pretty soon," he explains, "the insurance industry is going to realise that we have to tackle obesity and type 2 diabetes.

"They might even come out in favour of taxes on soft drinks. And once we see one powerful industry pitted against another, then we might see progress."

The complication of food has been under way for a long time now.

After agriculture became more productive following the second world war, "corn and soy and wheat and rice got cheaper - and the only way to make money out of them was to process them.

"A sort of arms race started to make food more complicated: don't buy flour, buy cake-mix; don't buy cake-mix, buy cakes.

"Don't buy oats, buy Cheerios; not Cheerios, cereal bars."

Is that process reversible?

It may have to be, Pollan argues, as we start running out of fossil fuels.

Big Food as it exists today is, patently, not sustainable.

Pollan is sure we can produce enough real food, but fossil fuels will have to be replaced by manpower.

"Organic farms are wildly productive," he says, "but a lot more labour-intensive.

So convincing is Pollan's logic that you wonder where it all came from.

He started out, he says, as more of a naturalist than a foodie, but was gradually won over by the notion that "what happens on our plate represents our most powerful engagement with the natural world".

He no longer eats junk food (though his teenage son does).

He acknowledges, though, that many of the exchanges he has about this issue "are with skinny people".

An interest in good food is, still, something of a middle-class preoccupation.

"But abolition, women's suffrage, those movements began as elitist too," Pollan says. "I won't be discouraged."

The Guardian"

diabetes related to Cancer and Depression

Christine Armarego - Wednesday, November 11, 2009
World Diabetes Day: Understanding Diabetes and Taking Control
Diabetes increases our risk of cancer and depression by 50 – 80%
We have all heard of diabetes and the obesity epidemic sweeping the world. We know that diabetes puts our health at greater risk, but the fall out of this epidemic is more far reaching than we ever thought possible. For many years we have known that diabetes is linked to obesity and heart disease and now ground breaking new research from Europe has turned the medical world on its head.  
At the 2009 European Association for the study of Diabetes Conference in Vienna, research1 was presented which showed that if you develop type 2 diabetes your risk of developing cancer is far greater.  In men, having diabetes increases your risk of getting the following cancers: 80% for pancreatic cancer; 30% for colorectal cancer; and 24% for bladder cancer. For women too, breast and endometrial cancer risk increases by 20 to 100% respectively, if you have diabetes.
In addition there is a new relationship between cancer and obesity, which is often seen with diabetes. Research has shown us that if you have a high BMI (over 35 or 40), men are 52% and women 62% more likely to die from cancer2
The devastation of diabetes does not stop there.
The relationship between diabetes and depression is often overlooked. People with diabetes have double the risk of developing depression compared to people without diabetes.3 Approximately 15% of people with diabetes will experience major depression, and 25–30% will have milder forms of depression.4 Unfortunately, depression often goes undiagnosed and untreated in people with diabetes, as there are often other medical issues that need addressing. This often leaves people to suffer depression without assistance or sometimes awareness of it.  

Even here in Australia we have determined that there is consistent evidence that depression is a risk factor for heart disease, stroke and diabetes mellitus.5 The relationship works in both directions, as older adults with depressive symptoms are at least twice more likely to develop diabetes than those without depressive symptoms.6

There is good news! Research has shown that simple lifestyle changes such as increased physical activity and diet change can dramatically reduce a person’s chance of developing diabetes, depression and cancer.   

Studies in both the US7 and Australia8 have highlighted the benefits of exercise in the treatment of depression. These studies showed that physical activity was up to two times as effective as anti-depressive medication in the treatment of depression. Similarly, studies have been completed on physical activity substantially reducing the risk of cancer9.

Diabetes, depression and cancer are three of the most devastating and life changing medical conditions we can ever experience. Knowing that they are linked places an even greater importance on leading a healthy lifestyle in order to prevent these diseases and any related complications.
Diabetes experts and authors of the book Sugar Daddy Dr Adam Fraser and Christine Armarego are working to raise awareness of the impact, complications and risks of diabetes for World Diabetes Day.
World Diabetes Day (WDD) is celebrated every year on November 14. The International Diabetes Federation (IDF) and its member associations lead the World Diabetes Day campaign. It engages millions of people worldwide in diabetes advocacy and awareness. Diabetes Education and Prevention is the World Diabetes Day theme for the period 2009-2013. The campaign slogan for 2009 is "Understand Diabetes and Take Control".  Type 2 diabetes can be prevented in the many cases by helping and encouraging those at risk to maintain a healthy weight and take regular exercise.

The Glucose Club
http://www.theglucoseclub.com.au
http://www.worlddiabetesday.org/
For more information or comments contact:
Aimée Cavanagh
E: aimee@dradamfraser.com
Ph: +61 2 9564 5763

1.    Jeffrey A Johnson, School of Public Health, University of Alberta, Edmonton Canada.
2.    Calle EE, Rodriguez C, Walker-Thurmond K, Thun MJ.  Overweight, obesity, and mortality from cancer in a prospectively studied cohort of U.S. adults.  N Engl J Med. 2003 Apr 24;348(17):1625-38.
3.    Anderson RJ, Freedland KE, Clouse RE, Lustman PJ. The prevalence of comorbid depression in adults with diabetes: a meta-analysis. Diabetes Care 2001;24:1069–78.
4.    Polonsky W. Diabetes burnout: what to do when you can’t take it anymore. Alexandria (Virginia, USA): American Diabetes Association, 1999.
5.    Clarke DM, Currie KC. Depression, anxiety and their relationship with chronic diseases: a review of the epidemiology, risk and treatment evidence.  Med J Aust. 2009 Apr 6;190(7 Suppl):S54-60.
6.    Atlantis E, Browning C, Sims J, Kendig H. Diabetes incidence associated with depression and antidepressants in the Melbourne Longitudinal Studies on Healthy Ageing (MELSHA). Int J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2009 Oct 5. [Epub ahead of print]Click here to read Links
7.    Blumenthal JA, Babyak MA, Moore KA, Craighead WE, Herman S, Khatri P, Waugh R, Napolitano MA, Forman LM, Appelbaum M, Doraiswamy PM, Krishnan KR. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710, USA. Effects of exercise training on older patients with major depression.Arch Intern Med. 1999 Oct 25;159(19):2349-56.
8.    Singh NA, Stavrinos TM, Scarbek Y, Galambos G, Liber C, Fiatarone Singh MA. A randomized controlled trial of high versus low intensity weight training versus general practitioner care for clinical depression in older adults. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2005 Jun;60(6):768-76.
9.    Emilie Friberg, Christos Mantzoros and Alicja Wolk Division of Nutritional Epidemiology, The National Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden and 2Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism, Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

Kids at risk of major health problems!

Christine Armarego - Tuesday, July 07, 2009

An article in yesterdays Daily Telegraph (Monday 6th July 2009) entitled “Kids put at risk by fatty diet” brings to the fore some startling statistics about Australian Children (http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,,25737756-2682,00.html).

The research to be published in Diabetes Care states that one third of all 14 year olds and one in four eight year olds fall into high-risk category for heart disease, stroke and diabetes.  One of the authors for the report, Professor Stanley, advises that this is so because there has been a dramatic increase in the amount of cheap and high fatty foods with “slick” advertising.  She also states that more activity for the whole family is needed.  They also comment that the definition of obesity is too focused on Body Mass Index alone and that in this report they considered waist circumference, blood pressure and insulin resistance.


This highlights how important a healthy lifestyle and getting control of your Sugar Daddy is for the whole family and how our kid’s health is suffering in this fast paced society.  I for one look forward to reading the report in full!


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