obesity

More on “Fed Up”, Sugar Subsidies, and Obesity

Sugar in Processed Foods

Sugar in Processed Foods – UCSF

I featured Fed Up, the documentary in theaters now, in this earlier post. I noted then that while the film reinforces the emerging consensus that excess sugar and other high-glycemic-index sweeteners and fillers added to foods by processors to make them taste good is the probable cause for the obesity epidemic, that the film manages to avoid tagging the government’s role in demonizing fat, minimizing protein needs, and encouraging production of corn syrup sweeteners which are now used in *most* processed foods we can buy. On one hand the government subsidizes poor quality food, and the same people in Congress who keep the Big Agribusiness campaign contributions rolling in by spending $billions on farm and processor subsidies are ignoring their role in the problem and calling for taxes on sugared soda and other symbolic actions to make it look like they are “doing something.” (And don’t get me started on gasohol, which creates more environmental damage than it saves and drives up costs for both food and fuel.)

Reason covers this angle.

The New York Times takes note in an editorial.


Death by HR: How Affirmative Action Cripples OrganizationsDeath by HR: How Affirmative Action Cripples Organizations

[From Death by HR: How Affirmative Action Cripples Organizations,  available now in Kindle and trade paperback.]

The first review is in: by Elmer T. Jones, author of The Employment Game. Here’s the condensed version; view the entire review here.

Corporate HR Scrambles to Halt Publication of “Death by HR”

Nobody gets a job through HR. The purpose of HR is to protect their parent organization against lawsuits for running afoul of the government’s diversity extortion bureaus. HR kills companies by blanketing industry with onerous gender and race labor compliance rules and forcing companies to hire useless HR staff to process the associated paperwork… a tour de force… carefully explains to CEOs how HR poisons their companies and what steps they may take to marginalize this threat… It is time to turn the tide against this madness, and Death by HR is an important research tool… All CEOs should read this book. If you are a mere worker drone but care about your company, you should forward an anonymous copy to him.

 


For more on diet and weight loss:

Getting to Less Than 10% Body Fat Like the Models – Ask Me How!
Starbucks, Jamba Juice Make You Fat
Fat Doesn’t Make You Fat. Government Guidelines Did!
‘Fed Up’ Asks, Are All Calories Equal?
Fructose: The True Villain?
Another Study on Diet Drinks
LeBron James Cut Carbs for Lean Look
Why We’re Fat: In-Depth Studies Under Way
Almonds: Superfood, Eat Them Daily for Heart Health
Fish Oil Supplements Ward Off Dementia
More on Diet Drinks: Best Studies Show They Aid Weight Loss
Vani Hari: “Food Babe” and Quack
Cleanses and Detox Diets: Quackery
Sugared Soft Drinks: Health Risk? (and What About Diet Soda?)
Gluten-Free Diets: The Nocebo Effect
Acidic Soft Drinks and Sodas: Demineralization Damages Teeth
Fish and Fish Oil for Better Brain Health
Salt: New Research Says Too Little May Be Unhealthy
Bulletproof Coffee: Coffee, Oil, and Butter for Breakfast?

Fructose: The True Villain?

Another MIT person (a few classes ahead of me!) makes the news. He believes the primary reason for today’s obesity epidemic is excess sugar — especially fructose — in the diet. He’s been promoting this idea for years and as the science continues to support it, he’s practically made it a career. Unfortunately the dietary Conventional Wisdom takes decades to change, even with many people working hard to change it; and the food industry — notably the makers of sweet drinks and snack foods like Coca Cola and Frito Lay-Pepsi — tries hard to cast doubt. While the evidence definitely points added fructose as a big problem, all high-glycemic-index carbs are to be minimized in your diet if you want to stay trim into middle age. MIT’s alumni magazine Technology Review has this story:

In December of 2006, Robert Lustig ’77 was sifting through journal articles on liver disease in preparation for a talk on obesity for an environmental-health symposium when he was struck by a realization about sugar. Little did he realize that his simple insight would change the course of his career—and quite possibly change the way all of us eat.

Lustig, an endocrinologist and professor of pediatrics at the University of California, San Francisco, was already an authority on childhood obesity and director of the university’s weight assessment program for kids and teens, but he wasn’t yet the famous antisugar crusader he is today. He hadn’t yet been featured in the New York Times Magazine or appeared on 60 Minutes. He hadn’t published his popular book, Fat Chance, or exchanged barbs with Stephen Colbert on The Colbert Report.

And so when asked to discuss why so many of us were becoming obese and sick, he didn’t yet have a good answer. He understood that the hormone insulin plays a role in obesity. The children with brain tumors whom he’d cared for at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis often suffered from hypothalamic damage, either from the cancer itself or from the treatment, and many of them became obese. Following up on suspicions posited in the 1970s by other researchers, Lustig had shown in 1999 that those obese patients had increased activity of the vagus nerve, which in turn led to greater insulin secretion. When he administered an insulin-­suppressive agent, they lost weight and became more active.

Although Lustig understood that elevated insulin levels were linked to obesity, he hadn’t focused on the relationship between insulin and sugar. Like most other medical professionals at the time, he thought all calories were essentially alike in their ability to make us fat. The problem with sugar, this line of thinking goes, is that it provides only empty calories, negligible in nutritional value.

And yet as Lustig began to look more closely at the literature on sugar in preparation for the symposium, a different picture emerged. Table sugar, or sucrose, is made up of equal parts glucose and fructose, but it was the molecule of fructose that grabbed his attention. Fructose didn’t seem to act at all like most substances we consume. Rather, Lustig realized, it behaved like one particular substance: alcohol.

In some ways, the connection between alcohol and fructose was obvious enough. After all, fermentation can turn both glucose and fructose into alcohol. But while glucose is metabolized by every cell in the body, fructose—like alcohol—is primarily metabolized in the liver, where some of it is converted into fat through a process known as de novo lipogenesis. Consume enough fructose and you could very well end up not only increasing the fat in your blood but also fattening your liver, just as you might by drinking too much alcohol. In fact, that’s exactly what happens in rodents. “I started to research the sugar literature, and it was almost like a one-to-one match,” Lustig says of the similarities between the metabolism of fructose and alcohol. This led him to his controversial conclusion: consumed chronically in large amounts—that is, the way most of us consume it—sugar is poison.

Scientists are still unraveling the biological mechanism at work and sorting out exactly how much fructose might be too much in humans. What’s clear is that fructose and glucose are metabolized very differently, and that unlike glucose, which is the body’s main source of energy, fructose isn’t biologically necessary. Although humans have always consumed carbohydrates, which we convert into glucose, essentially all the fructose we ate before the rise of the worldwide sugar industry 500 years ago came from the small amount in fruits and honey. (The natural fructose in fruit isn’t thought to be a health concern because the fruit’s fiber and cellular structure slow down the rate at which it hits the liver.) [ed. note: but beware fruit juice, which accelerates the fructose’s absorption!]

Glucose, too, can be dangerous in excess, Lustig acknowledges. The glucose from our meals that doesn’t end up being used for fuel or stored in the form of glycogen can also end up as liver fat. And whether it’s being driven by fructose or glucose, this accumulation of liver fat appears to be the first step toward insulin resistance and increased insulin levels—the same phenomenon that was making Lustig’s young cancer patients obese. Worse yet, insulin resistance is believed to contribute to a cascade of other metabolic disorders that result in type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and even many cancers. Either way, sugar looked like a villain.

Lustig feared that he would be booed off the stage when he delivered this news to the environmental-health scientists. After all, he was doing much more than telling them that their favorite foods could be toxic. He was also challenging the medical establishment’s most basic dietary advice. For decades Americans had been warned by doctors, scientists, and government agencies that eating too much fat, particularly saturated fat, would clog their arteries and shorten their lives. Now one of the nation’s experts on childhood obesity was declaring that maybe everyone had been focusing on the wrong target. Or, as Lustig would later declare, “It ain’t the fat, people.”

Lustig set out to learn as much as he could on the subject. And the more he learned, the worse the picture looked. Each day, Americans were consuming a startling 22 teaspoons of “added” sugar—that is, sugar beyond the naturally occurring fructose in fruit or lactose in dairy products. Lustig believes that amount far exceeds what our livers can handle. The safe upper limit, both he and the American Heart Association believe, is four teaspoons of added sugar per day for children, six for women, and nine for men (nine teaspoons—or 36 grams—is about what you’ll find in a typical 12-ounce can of soda). More troubling yet, sugar is no longer something manufacturers add only to sweets. Today, it’s almost impossible to avoid. “Of the 600,000 items in the American grocery store, 77 percent of them have added sugar,” Lustig says. “You can’t even reduce your consumption when you’re trying to.”

Although Lustig quickly made an impression in public-health circles, it wasn’t until July 2009, when University of California Television posted one of his lectures on YouTube, that he reached a mainstream audience. The lecture, called “Sugar: The Bitter Truth,” is an hour and a half long and packed with scientific data on fructose metabolism. In other words, it isn’t exactly the type of video that has “Internet sensation” written all over it. And yet, it has been viewed more than four million times.

Why did a long scientific lecture go viral? It turns out that Lustig, who has authored more than 100 research articles and is the former chairman of the Obesity Task Force of the Pediatric Endocrine Society, is also a veteran performer.

In “Sugar: The Bitter Truth,” his talents for public speaking are on full display. Between the graphs and the dense scientific explanations, he peppers the talk with personal anecdotes about his childhood, long dramatic pauses, provocative statements (he calls fructose “alcohol without the buzz”), and plenty of tantalizing, if unproven, claims—he not only suggests that Coke includes lots of salt to make us thirstier (and extra sugar to cover the taste of all that salt) but dubs this supposed scheme “the Coca-Cola conspiracy.”

“Lustig deservedly gets attention for his ideas, not least because he’s fun,” says Marion Nestle, a New York University nutritionist and the author of the book Food Politics. “He is a master of exaggeration and hyperbole, but underneath all that, he really knows what he’s talking about and cares deeply about keeping kids healthy.”

Lustig, who lives with his wife and two daughters in San Francisco, can trace his foundations in science to his undergraduate days at MIT. He credits 20.30, Sanford A. Miller’s course in nutritional biochemistry, with spurring his curiosity about diet and nutrition. (Miller would later serve as director of the FDA’s Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition.) But Lustig’s MIT experience also contributed to his ability to engage an audience. In the three years he spent at the Institute, he managed to be involved in 14 plays, acting in most of them. “It taught me how to get on stage and how not to be scared,” he says.

If Lustig’s gift for public speaking has earned him a lot of online fans, some of his fellow researchers seem less enthused by what they see as his willingness to make bold claims that aren’t substantiated by the scientific literature. Critics point out that the strongest evidence against fructose comes from animal studies, which can’t tell us very much about our own metabolism. Other studies that point to the hazards of sugar, if not fructose specifically, generally are not controlled experiments but merely associations observed between the foods consumed in certain countries (or by specific groups of people) and the health problems those people later develop. Even though such studies may receive a lot of media attention, they can’t conclusively show that sugar is driving the disease process. And while small clinical trials with human subjects have pointed to the dangers of fructose—one 2009 study found that a single week of fructose overfeeding could increase triglycerides (associated with cardiovascular disease) and decrease insulin sensitivity—the large, randomly controlled trials that might provide a more definitive answer would be extremely difficult to carry out.

Luc Tappy, a researcher at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland and a leading authority on fructose metabolism, isn’t yet convinced about the dangers of fructose. In a 2012 paper, he wrote that for humans, “there is no solid evidence that fructose, when consumed in moderate amounts, has deleterious effects.” Though Tappy doesn’t question the honesty of Lustig’s intentions, he says he should not be relied upon as a scientific expert on the topic: “He certainly does not provide a balanced view of things.”

But if Tappy has doubts about Lustig’s presentation of the science, he also thinks he has played a key role in bringing the sugar debate to the public. “At some stage, you have to take decisions without knowing everything, because it would take forever to collect all relevant scientific data,” he says.

Lustig refutes the idea that he’s more provocateur than scientist. He says he wouldn’t be sticking his neck out if he didn’t believe that the science supported his claims. “The science is there,” he insists. He recently coauthored both The Fat Chance Cookbook and a study in the journal PLOS One that shows a strong link between the amount of sugar in a country’s food supply and the prevalence of diabetes in that country. And last year he earned a master of studies in law from the UC Hastings College of the Law in order to better understand how to influence public policy. His ultimate goal is to see fructose removed from the FDA’s list of foods that are “generally recognized as safe.” He points to the recent announcement that the FDA plans to take trans fats off the list—a change that came after 25 years of scientific debate—as evidence that such change is possible.

Lustig may not have to wait a quarter of a century to see some of the steps he seeks. In February the FDA proposed major changes to nutrition labels on food packages. One of those changes: a new line that would highlight added sugars.

“I can’t take credit, and they most certainly won’t bestow it,” Lustig says. “But it does validate the work I’ve been doing.”

Another of his videos about obesity:

For more on diet and weight loss:

Getting to Less Than 10% Body Fat Like the Models – Ask Me How!
Starbucks, Jamba Juice Make You Fat
Fat Doesn’t Make You Fat. Government Guidelines Did!
‘Fed Up’ Asks, Are All Calories Equal?
More on “Fed Up”, Sugar Subsidies, and Obesity
Another Study on Diet Drinks
LeBron James Cut Carbs for Lean Look
Why We’re Fat: In-Depth Studies Under Way
Almonds: Superfood, Eat Them Daily for Heart Health
Fish Oil Supplements Ward Off Dementia
More on Diet Drinks: Best Studies Show They Aid Weight Loss
Vani Hari: “Food Babe” and Quack
Cleanses and Detox Diets: Quackery
Sugared Soft Drinks: Health Risk? (and What About Diet Soda?)
Gluten-Free Diets: The Nocebo Effect
Acidic Soft Drinks and Sodas: Demineralization Damages Teeth
Fish and Fish Oil for Better Brain Health
Salt: New Research Says Too Little May Be Unhealthy
Bulletproof Coffee: Coffee, Oil, and Butter for Breakfast?

‘Fed Up’ Asks, Are All Calories Equal?

The movie “Fed Up” is coming out in theatres — just saw Katie Couric doing publicity for it. Despite the popularity of spinning it as a case of corporate greed, I don’t see much corporate villainy here. I do see cheap foods that taste good pushed by government subsidies for Big Agriculture, plus a move to eat on the go. There are two problems with the “calories in, calories out” theory now amply disproved: first, calories of energy absorbed from food are not the same as calories of the same food burned in a bomb calorimeter. And second, the components of what you eat (notably high-glycemic-index carbs) can drastically affect your metabolism and cause you to crave even more, and to use less energy. “Eat less and exercise more” may be very difficult unless you change what you eat.

The New York Times story (also tie-in PR for the movie) goes on to say:

Dr. David Ludwig, the director of the obesity program at Boston Children’s Hospital, argues in the film that [all calories are not the same]. In recent studies, Dr. Ludwig has shown that high-carbohydrate diets appear to slow metabolic rates compared to diets higher in fat and protein, so that people expend less energy even when consuming the same number of calories. Dr. Ludwig has found that unlike calories from so-called low glycemic foods (like beans, nuts and non-starchy vegetables), those from high glycemic foods (such as sugar, bread and potatoes) spike blood sugar and stimulate hunger and cravings, which can drive people to overeat.

While people can certainly lose weight in the short term by focusing on calories, Dr. Ludwig said, studies show that the majority of people on calorie-restricted diets eventually fail. “The common explanation is that people have difficulty resisting temptation,” he said. “But another possibility is that highly processed foods undermine our metabolism and overwhelm our behavior.”

At Harvard Medical School, Dr. Dariush Mozaffarian, an associate professor of medicine and epidemiology whose research was cited by experts in the film, said that the long-held idea that we get fat solely because we consume more calories than we expend is based on outdated science.

He has studied the effects that different foods have on weight gain and said that it is true that 100 calories of fat, protein and carbohydrates are the same in a thermodynamic sense, in that they release the same amount of energy when exposed to a Bunsen burner in a lab. But in a complex organism like a human being, he said, these foods influence satiety, metabolic rate, brain activity, blood sugar and the hormones that store fat in very different ways.

Studies also show that calories from different foods are not absorbed the same. When people eat high-fiber foods like nuts and some vegetables, for example, only about three-quarters of the calories they contain are absorbed. The rest are excreted from the body unused. So the calories listed on their labels are not what the body is actually getting.

“The implicit suggestion is that there are no bad calories, just bad people eating too much,” Dr. Mozaffarian said. “But the evidence is very clear that not all calories are created equal as far as weight gain and obesity. If you’re focusing on calories, you can easily be misguided.”

For more on diet and weight loss:

Getting to Less Than 10% Body Fat Like the Models – Ask Me How!
Starbucks, Jamba Juice Make You Fat
Fat Doesn’t Make You Fat. Government Guidelines Did!
Fructose: The True Villain?
More on “Fed Up”, Sugar Subsidies, and Obesity
Another Study on Diet Drinks
LeBron James Cut Carbs for Lean Look
Why We’re Fat: In-Depth Studies Under Way
Almonds: Superfood, Eat Them Daily for Heart Health
Fish Oil Supplements Ward Off Dementia
More on Diet Drinks: Best Studies Show They Aid Weight Loss
Vani Hari: “Food Babe” and Quack
Cleanses and Detox Diets: Quackery
Sugared Soft Drinks: Health Risk? (and What About Diet Soda?)
Gluten-Free Diets: The Nocebo Effect
Acidic Soft Drinks and Sodas: Demineralization Damages Teeth
Fish and Fish Oil for Better Brain Health
Salt: New Research Says Too Little May Be Unhealthy
Bulletproof Coffee: Coffee, Oil, and Butter for Breakfast?

Starbucks, Jamba Juice Make You Fat

starbucksfrappuccino

[2006] This article discusses those sweet, caffeinated smoothies Starbucks sells, and their desire to sell them to kids without appearing to market to children directly. They are introducing Frappucino™ juice blends; I don’t see nutritional info on the new drinks on their web site, but they are probably even worse than the existing Frappucinos, which typically have more than 400 calories of (mostly) sugar (80 g carbs) for a 16-oz serving. This is a sugar bomb — drinking one of these will spike your blood sugar, leading to more fat deposition followed by a carb-craving coma.

Note that Jamba Juice-ish smoothies are almost as bad, usually having 200+ calories of sugar in the same 16 oz. format. But juicing fruit lets the liquid sugars enter your bloodstream quickly, whereas fruit itself slowly releases its nutritional value as the cell walls break down in your digestive system, which is much better.

I’m not suggesting (as surely some will) that some government should step in to protect children (or anyone else) from unhealthy processed foods. But the constant advertising of fruit juice as something healthy misleads people into thinking they are choosing wisely when they pick up one of these.

It’s not unusual for people to have several of these concoctions a week. Then they wonder why they can’t stop gaining weight….

For more on diet and weight loss:

Getting to Less Than 10% Body Fat Like the Models – Ask Me How!
Fat Doesn’t Make You Fat. Government Guidelines Did!
‘Fed Up’ Asks, Are All Calories Equal?
Fructose: The True Villain?
More on “Fed Up”, Sugar Subsidies, and Obesity
Another Study on Diet Drinks
LeBron James Cut Carbs for Lean Look
Why We’re Fat: In-Depth Studies Under Way
Almonds: Superfood, Eat Them Daily for Heart Health
Fish Oil Supplements Ward Off Dementia
More on Diet Drinks: Best Studies Show They Aid Weight Loss
Vani Hari: “Food Babe” and Quack
Cleanses and Detox Diets: Quackery
Sugared Soft Drinks: Health Risk? (and What About Diet Soda?)
Gluten-Free Diets: The Nocebo Effect
Acidic Soft Drinks and Sodas: Demineralization Damages Teeth
Fish and Fish Oil for Better Brain Health
Salt: New Research Says Too Little May Be Unhealthy
Bulletproof Coffee: Coffee, Oil, and Butter for Breakfast?