Category Archives: healthy habits

Corporate nanny is the one we should be fearing

 

http://sydney.edu.au/news/84.html?newsstoryid=13388

It’s the corporate nanny we have to fear



28 April 2014
Responsible adults should be left alone to make their own choices: so goes the customary argument against the nanny state. However, that ignores a very large elephant sharing the room with state and citizens – corporations.

Corporate efforts to influence our choices dwarf anything even the most ambitious government health expert can dream of. The Department of Health and Ageing spent $51.9 million on advertising and related expenses in 2010-11. That budget, spread across everything from smoking to annual flu shots, can be matched by a single company promoting a single class of products. Last year, McDonalds spent $74.1 million on advertising in Australia, according to Nielsen estimates.

Perhaps the difference between the nanny state and the nanny corporation is that the government is trying to change us and corporations are not – corporations are just giving us what we want.

As responsible adults we know what’s best for us, so big business is on our side. While it’s true that advertising helps people buy the things they want at the best price, it also influences people to want things they would otherwise not want, and choose things they would otherwise not choose. It’s no accident that the psychologist primarily responsible for the modern theory of behavioural conditioning, John B Watson, spent a large part of his career as a successful advertising executive.

Head down to your local pub and order a middy to see the corporate nanny in action. The bar staff might tell you that you can only get a middy in “the other bar”. Or they might provide the helpful tip that a schooner is almost the same price. You will quickly get the impression that someone would prefer you to have a schooner.

If the nanny state made it hard for you to get a large beer, the benefits of the policy would have to be weighed against the cost to freedom. But when the pub makes it hard for you to get a small beer, freedom is apparently left untouched. Even if the nanny state legislated to ensure you get the option of a small beer, you can bet that someone would denounce this as an assault on freedom. This is just not thinking straight.

There are many proven ways to influence choice. If you want people to donate to a good cause at the same time as paying a bill, adding the information that 80 per cent of people donate has a measurable effect. Labelling a bin as “landfill” rather than “general waste” makes people more likely to use the recycling bin.

When governments do this, it is known as nudging, a gentle kind of nannying. Not everyone approves, because it is a little creepy to think of governments hiring psychologists to manipulate the unconscious parts of our minds. However, corporations are way ahead of government in nudge technology. Charging a little more money for a lot more stuff, as with the schooner of beer, can increase overall consumption.

The impact of a price rise on sales can be moderated by shrinking the packet and keeping the old price. A big serving on a big plate looks small, and a small serving on a small plate looks big – both useful effects when you want to influence what people order.

It’s a mistake to assume that only the state is trying to interfere with freedom of choice – corporations are in the same game. This effectively gives us a choice between two nannies, and there is good reason to be suspicious of the corporate nanny. Corporations have a responsibility to their shareholders to make as much money as they can, and it is well documented that adding fat, sugar and salt is one of the easiest ways to do that. At least the nanny state has some interest in our wellbeing, even if it is only to keep healthcare costs down. What is more, at least some of the time, the nanny state tries to give us freedom, not take it away.

Contrary to popular opinion, freedom and legislation are not engaged in a zero-sum game, where one can only win if the other loses. A good example is the recent stoush between public health advocates and the Australian food industry over food labelling.

It stretches credulity to believe that the current system is designed to make it easy for me to eat the way I want to eat. I have to take my reading glasses to the supermarket to find out which “percentage of daily recommended intake” corresponds to a “serving size”. A simple and informative front-of-pack star rating system was painstakingly negotiated by industry and health experts between 2011 and 2013, at the urging of the federal government. But the Australian Food and Grocery Council, the main industry lobby group, now argues that much more research is needed before any changes can be made, and that the cost of changing labels will be prohibitive.

I won’t be able to leave my glasses and calculator at home when I go shopping any time soon.

Government interference in how corporations label and market food is a prime example of the nanny state in action. But nanny is not taking away our freedom, she’s giving it back to us. Freedom is being able to live your life the way you want to live it, but you can’t do that when you’re being kept in the dark about the choices on offer, or nudged in the wrong direction by corporations.

A two-part symposium, Who’s Afraid of the Nanny State: Freedom, Regulation and the Public’s Health, presented by the University of Sydney’s Charles Perkins Centre and Sydney Law Schoolon 28-29 April 2014, will discuss the role and impact of government and corporations on our health and wellbeing.

Professor Paul Griffiths is Associate Academic Director for Humanities and Social Sciences at the Charles Perkins Centre, University of Sydney.

 

Healthways Australia Workshop with NSWHealth

Healthways Presentation (PDF): 20140508_Healthways_Workplace_Health_Workshop

NSWHealth Presentation (PDF):GetHealthyAtWork_Presentation_Prof.Rissel

Dear all,

Thank you to all of you who attended the Healthier Workplace Workshop on Thursday 8th May. We hope you found the event both interesting and informative.

Following a number of requests, the speaker presentations are now available online:

http://www.healthwaysaustralia.com.au/PPT_Presentations/GetHealthyAtWork_Presentation_Prof.Rissel.pdf

http://www.healthwaysaustralia.com.au/PPT_Presentations/20140508_Healthways_Workplace_Health_Workshop.pdf

We welcome your feedback on this event and any future topics you would like to see covered. If you would like more information of the wellbeing programs run by Healthways please don’t hesitate to contact a member of the team on 02 8264 4800  or visit the Healthways website: www.healthwaustralia.com.au .

We look forward to seeing you at one of our future events.

Kind regards

Sara Stevenson

Marketing and Business Development Specialist

Healthways Australia

Level 2, 1 Julius Ave

North Ryde, NSW, 2113

Tel: 02 8264 4800

Mob: 0427 461 035

Sara.Stevenson@healthways.com

http://www.healthwaysaustralia.com.au

 

 

Creating a healthier world one person at a time

 

PACT – tool to motivate exercise

Larger fines fund smaller rewards. Perfect!

http://www.medicalobserver.com.au/news/money-a-motivator-in-exercise-app

Money a motivator in exercise app

6th May 2014

Dr Rosemary Atkinson   all articles by this author

PACT is a good tool to recommend to the techno-savvy patient needing motivation to get out and moving.

Created by a pair of Harvard students, it purports to help 92% of users live a healthier life by using money as a motivator.

Pact requires users to set the number of exercise sessions they will complete in the coming week. They then agree to a fine ($5–50) for every session they miss. Those who meet their goals are rewarded by receiving money paid by those who fail (25–60 cents per workout).

In order to verify that the exercise is being done, visits are logged at a gym via GPS check through the app, or for physical activity outside of a gym by measuring activity with a ‘motion tracker’, or in conjunction with partner apps such as Run-Keeper, Fitbit, Jawbone Up, MapMyRun or MyFitnessPal.

Users can access the number of workouts completed and money earned via the profile page. The settings screen allows you to set and modify your workouts for the next week, withdraw rewards and schedule a break.

Pact uses a carrot and stick approach to promote positive behaviour change and although the monetary reward is small, it may be enough to provide motivation for at least a proportion of patients.

AppPact

CostFree 

CompatibilityiPhone, iPod touch, iPad

RequirementsiOS 6.0 or later

Registration requiredYes 

The verdict: 3 stars

1=optional 2=useful 3=recommended 4=must have

iTuneshttps://itunes.apple.com/au/app/pact-earn-cash-for-living/id456068701?mt=8

Polypill Barriers

 

https://www.mja.com.au/insight/2014/16/polypill-barriers-remain

Polypill barriers remain

Nicole MacKee
Monday, 12 May, 2014
Polypill barriers remain

BARRIERS to the global availability of a polypill to prevent cardiovascular disease remain despite growing evidence of its clinical potential, according to former BMJ editor and long-term advocate of the polypill, Dr Richard Smith.

Dr Smith, who was in Melbourne last week to attend the Cardiovascular Combination Pharmacotherapy Global Summit, in conjunction with World Congress on Cardiology, said momentum was starting to gather with growing evidence of increased adherence and clinical benefit with the polypill — a fixed-dose combination of commonly used blood pressure and cholesterol-lowering medications, and aspirin.

“But in terms of actually getting it made available to lots of people, the progress is fairly slow because, although the big drug companies are the people who know how to get a drug on the market, they’re generally not interested”, Dr Smith told MJA InSight.

Dr Smith, director of the Ovations Chronic Disease Initiative, welcomed findings from the Single Pill to Avert Cardiovascular Events (SPACE) project that showed the polypill was associated with a 43% boost in patient adherence to medication at 12 months. (1) (2)

“That’s tremendously dramatic”, he said, of the research that was presented at the cardiology congress. “Generally, if you have people taking treatment for life … after a year [of starting therapy], you’ve only got about 50%̄60% of people [still] taking the treatment, so anything that can increase adherence is really important.”

The SPACE project, led by researchers from the George Institute for Global Health, analysed data from three clinical trials involving 3140 patients, including the Kanyini-GAP trial in Australia. (3)

Dr Ruth Webster, of the George Institute, said the polypill’s capacity to prevent cardiovascular events was “potentially massive”.

“In Australia, 50% of people who should be taking these combination medications don’t take them”, she said. “Globally at least 90% of people in lower income countries who would potentially benefit from these medications are not taking them.”

Dr Webster said the affordability of the polypill could ensure that its benefits were felt in low- as well as high-income nations.

“One of the key aims of the polypill has always been … to make it cheap so that patients can afford it”, said Dr Webster, adding that governments and health care organisations could use their buying power to ensure a cheap and effective pill was available globally.

Although a polypill is available in some Latin American and Asian countries, the UK, the US and Australia do not yet have one on the market.

Dr Webster said the George Institute was actively involved in efforts to have a polypill made available in Australia.

Dr Smith said that Iran was trialling providing the polypill to everyone over the age of 50 years who had at least one risk factor for cardiovascular disease. “The future is going to come not from Australia or Britain or the US, but from these kinds of countries, where … there’s much more to gain … as there are many people not being treated [at all]”, he said.

In addition to regulatory hurdles, cardiologists were also a barrier to polypill development, said Dr Smith, who recently wrote about the key barriers to polypill uptake in his BMJ blog. (4)

“[Cardiologists] think … that constantly titrating the drugs you give people, measuring their blood pressure regularly and their lipids … is a better way of doing things. But the problem is that we have this famous rule of halves — of all of the people at risk, half are not diagnosed; and of the half that are diagnosed, half are not treated; and the half that are treated, are not treated adequately”, he said. “So you end up with a very high proportion of people who are at risk who are not getting good treatment.

“The strongest argument for the polypill is how bad things are at the moment. Not just in low- and middle-income countries where, on the whole, they are terrible, but also in high-income countries because a lot of people are not getting adequate treatment.”

Dr Smith said the polypill had also faced opposition from public health experts concerned that giving people such a pill would discourage improvements in lifestyle and diet.

“But I think that’s a myth that’s been laid to rest because in three trials that have looked at lifestyle, people on the polypill don’t get fatter, they don’t smoke more, they don’t eat unhealthier diets”, he said.

1. Nature 2007; 450: 494-496
2. George Institute for Global Health: SPACE Project
3. BMC Public Health 2010; Online 5 August
4. BMJ Blogs 2014; Online 1 May

 

Peter Baume on Money in Medicine

Former senator, doctor and colleague, Professor Peter Baume, used to say that:

“matters of principle usually turned out in politics to be matters of money, while matters of high principle usually turned out to be matters of lots of money.”

He could have been talking about matters of health policy.

Quoted by Steve Leeder

https://www.mja.com.au/insight/2014/16/stephen-leeder-policy-means-people

 

Stephen Leeder: Policy means people

Stephen Leeder
Monday, 12 May, 2014
Steve Leeder

SHOULD we pay more from our pockets for health care and less from the public purse?

What current institutions in health can we do without? Should prevention be a major concern of government or should it be left to the individual?

These questions should be addressed by a national government elected to oversee — among many things — the health of the nation.

Much health care in Australia is paid for from taxes. A long history explains why this is so, much of it expressing humane concern for people who are sick and assuring access to care for those who are not so well off financially.

Our politicians have choices — they can leave the health system as it is or they can try to change it by changing the underpinning policy. In seeking to make change they inevitably provoke the interest of those who stand to lose or gain as a result — doctors, nurses, patients, managers, insurers, pharmaceutical companies and many others.

So, whether they leave the system mostly in place and merely fiddle, or propose branch and root changes, politicians are engaging in policy decisions whether they recognise it or not (policy in this case being deciding how to apply resources available for health care).

These policy decisions affect people’s lives and are not trivial. For example, increasing theprivatisation of health care, as has been proposed in Queensland, carries costs for those least able to pay.

The more privatised the system, the less the needs of the poor and the marginal are met. This in turn means that society is changed and the values that it expresses — a fair go for all and concern for the weak — are hammered in the promotion of profit.

The results of a two-tiered health system are rapid access to quality care for the rich, who pay privately, and inferior care with long waiting times for the poor through a publicly funded safety net, a system well known in less developed countries.

Because it involves money, the health policy debate occurs in the context of other public policy discussions, most notably those that have to do with the Budget. Former senator, doctor and colleague, Professor Peter Baume, used to say that matters of principle usually turned out in politics to be matters of money, while matters of high principle usually turned out to be matters oflots of money. He could have been talking about matters of health policy.

As the word implies, policy has to do with the polis — the people. In a democracy the people expect their voices will be heard, alongside those of experts in health, the financial controllers and other interest groups. They also expect that changes to the system are canvassed with them before being announced and that they have a chance to have their say.

Optimally, a competitive, comprehensive statement of intent for health care would be provided by contestants for our vote at each election. This did not happen at the last federal election and we have not been canvassed about proposed changes.

Instead we have been bombarded in the past few weeks by government and the media about proposed cuts in tomorrow’s federal Budget, rumours of extinctions (eg, the Australian National Preventive Health Agency and Medicare Locals), increased costs to visit GPs and nothing much about our public hospital system.

It would be healthy if tomorrow’s Budget acknowledged the need for people-based health policy.

We should be presented with options that emanate from clear-headed policy thinking as well as a sound budget. The publication recently of the National Commission of Audit report is not reassuring. It focuses heavily on the supply side of the cost equation for health care but does not provide any insights into what can be done to achieve real efficiency through structural change. Instead, we just hear about rising charges through copayments and by forcing high-income earners out of Medicare and into private insurance schemes.

How to achieve more efficient (and generally more effective) care is left unconsidered. For example, in the Western Sydney Local Health District in the past 2 years, we have cut millions of dollars from our recurrent budget with an 8% increase in activity by attending to contracting, procurement and not using expensive part-time staffing from a budget of a mere $2.4 billion.

Let’s have less haste and hysteria, and more speed towards an efficient and humane health system, thank you.

 

Professor Stephen Leeder is the editor-in-chief of the MJA and professor of public health and community medicine at the University of Sydney. He chairs the Western Sydney Local Health District Board.

Katz on attitudes to wealth vs health

Lots of quotable quotes…

https://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20140330140626-23027997-health-wealth-and-wisdom-be-serious

Health, Wealth, and Wisdom? Be Serious!

(Note: some content adapted for use in this column originally appeared on the Huffington Post on 3/9/12.)

As my newly published review article, “Can We Say What Diet is Best for Health?” makes the media rounds, some questions arise more commonly than others- and some are just more interesting than others. One that stands out in both categories is: what’s the problem? Why, if we really do (and yes, we really do!) have knowledge of the basic theme of eating that could do so much to promote health- adding years to life, and life to years– don’t we embrace it and put it to that excellent use for ourselves and those we love?

There are a number of answers, and different ones received particular emphasis in different interviews. But several of the most important start along distinct trajectories only to wind up at exactly the same place: money.

One such trajectory has to do with those entities – Big Food, Big Publishing, Big Pharma, Madison Avenue, Big Weight Loss industry- that profit enormously from the status quo. Many in this space would be well within the bounds of reason, if not propriety, to wish fervently for our dietary pseudo-confusion and related health travails to last forever. Maybe they do- but I won’t presume to say. I will say: it’s much about the money being made.

But it’s about our hard-earned, carefully tended money as well, and that’s the more interesting part of the story. Because if most of us in our culture treated our money and wealth in any manner vaguely comparable to how we treat our health we would be, in a word, morons. Or, at best, suckers. That’s the problem, right there. Fix this, and a world of opportunity would open up before us.

What’s the case?

Over nearly 25 years of patient care, I have seen — far too many times, painful to recall — people reach retirement age with nicely gilded nest eggs, and disastrously scrambled health. I have never met anyone seriously willing to trade their capacity to get out of bed for a large bundle of cash. I have known many people who would gladly give up large fortunes for the chance to get out of bed one more time, or get out of a wheelchair or be free of weekly dialysis.

But now we enter the Twilight Zone, where what’s real and important, and how we behave, part company. We value money (i.e., wealth) before we have it, while we have it and if ever we had it. We want it if we can’t get it. It’s a crime when someone takes it from us. We fight to keep it.

Health is more important, but most of us — and our society at large — value it only after it’s lost.

Consider that one of the more significant trends in health promotion is providing some financial incentive for people to get healthy. This strategy is populating more and more programs in both real space and cyberspace, and is incorporated into many worksite wellness initiatives.

I have no real problem with it — whatever gets us to the prize is okay with me. But it is… bizarre. We have to be paid to care about getting healthy.

Consider if it were the other way around. You could do a job, and you would get money for doing the job, but then you demanded an “incentive.” Money is not an incentive? No! We insist on being provided “health” to incentivize us to work for the sake of wealth. Unless you, my employer, can guarantee that working for you will help make me healthy, you can take this job and paycheck and…

Ludicrous, right? It doesn’t even sound rational to insist on getting paid in health to accept benefits in wealth. And yet, we all accept that it’s perfectly rational to require payment in wealth to accept benefits in health. We all accept it, that is, until health is gone, we realize what really mattered all along, and we say: What the %#^$ was I thinking? Too late.

I have a real problem with this, not because I want to be in charge of anyone else’s life, but because I know that people want to be in charge of their own lives. Once health is gone, so is control. Your life is governed by medications, procedures, doctor visits and emergencies. You are the very opposite of in charge.

Our society makes it quite clear that responsible adults take care of their money. They don’t spend it as they earn it — they put some into savings. They anticipate the needs of their children, and their own needs in retirement. Wealth — or at least solvency — is cultivated. If you neglect to take care of your budget and your savings, you are, in the judgment of our culture, irresponsible.

But our culture renders no such guidance for those who routinely neglect their health. Those who don’t have time today to eat well, but will have time tomorrow for cardiac bypass. Those who don’t have time today to exercise, but will have time tomorrow to visit the endocrinologist. Those who get, and apply, mutually exclusive recommendations dosed almost daily by daytime television. Prevailing neglect of health costs us dearly, individually and collectively, and it costs us both health and wealth. Being sick is very expensive — in every currency that matters: time, effort, opportunity cost, legacy and yes, dollars.

What if health were more like wealth?

  • If health were like wealth, we would value it while gaining it — not just after we’d lost it.
  • If health were like wealth, we would make getting to it a priority.
  • If health were like wealth, we would invest in it to secure a better future.
  • If health were like wealth, we would work hard to make sure we could pass it on to our children.
  • If health were like wealth, we would accept that it may take extra time and effort today, but that’s worth it because of the return on that investment tomorrow.
  • If health were like wealth, society would respect those who are experts at it- and not substitute the guidance from those who are not.
  • If health were like wealth, young people would aspire to it.
  • If health were like wealth, we would be serious about it.

But health is not like wealth. We venerate wealth, and all too often, denigrate health. People are routinely willing to lose weight fast on some cockamamie diet to look good for a special event. It’s not healthy, but what the heck? Well, it would be like cashing out your 401(k) to show up at the special event in a flashy car you can’t really afford. It would feel good for a day, and bad for the rest of your life. We know this, and responsible people don’t treat wealth this way. But we mortgage health to the point of foreclosure as a matter of routine.

Health is not like wealth. It is vastly MORE important. Just ask anyone who has one but not the other.

We are raised to aspire to wealth, while health is often left to languish in that space where stuff just happens. Wealth is its own prize; we need an incentive in another currency to recognize health as such. We watch sitcoms to laugh at get-rich-quick gullibility, then apply that very delusion ourselves to promises of get-thin-quick, get-healthy-quick, or stay-young-forever. We look to genuine experts for advice in almost any field, and certainly when it comes to managing our money- but if some Hollywood celebrity tells the world “I lost weight by eating only pencil erasers while being thrashed about the elbows with wilted artichoke leaves”- we get in line and reach for our credit cards.

To the extent we own wisdom or at least common sense, we are encouraged at every turn to apply them to our careers, and our bank accounts. But they lapse into a coma with every weight loss infomercial.

The result is an endless appetite for an unending parade of “my diet can beat your diet” contestants, rather than a sensible devotion to applying the fundamentals of healthful eating. It’s exactly analogous to frittering away all of our money on a comparable parade of get-rich-quick schemes, while ignoring the readily available, reliable information about sound investing. Or, if you prefer: it’s shopping for fiddles while Rome burns.

Wise is wonderful, but probably sets the bar too high. We could be both healthy and wealthy- or at least exercise comparable control over both- if we were just comparably sensible about both. We don’t even need to be wise to be healthy- we just need to be serious about it, rather than silly. What’s the problem? When it comes to eating well and being healthy, we are not serious people. Silly prevails.

-fin

Dr. David L. Katz has authored three editions of a nutrition textbook for health care professionals. He is editor-in-chief of the peer-reviewed journal, Childhood Obesity, and President of the American College of Lifestyle MedicineHe was commissioned by Annual Review in Public Health to write the review article, Can We Say What Diet is Best for Health? He is the author, most recently, of Disease Proof.

www.davidkatzmd.com
www.turnthetidefoundation.org

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Dr-David-L-Katz/114690721876253
http://twitter.com/DrDavidKatz
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/david-l-katz-md-mph/7/866/479/

Photo: Stefan Holm/Shutterstock.com

Katz on Butter

 

http://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20140327141338-23027997-bittman-butter-and-better-than-back-to-the-future

Bittman, Butter, and Better than Back to the Future

I generally appreciate the work and writing of Mark Bittman. But on one prior occasion, I was obligated to highlight his erroneous interpretation of an epidemiologic study about sugar, obesity, and diabetes. Mr. Bittman responded cordially and graciously when I pointed out his error, and more generally, his want of training or qualifications to offer up seemingly expert opinion to the public on research studies. I was pleased and gratified by the exchange that ensued between us, including a phone conversation and plans to meet for lunch, which alas, never came to fruition.

But old habits, it seems, die hard- and in this week’s New York Times, Mr. Bittman is indulging again in intellectual mission creep, with predictable consequences. While not trained as a chef, Mr. Bittman has established himself among the foodie elite, and is thus qualified to opine expertly on the culinary merits of butter. Or, at least, I am not qualified to say he is unqualified to do that- I defer to Jacques Pepin.

But Mr. Bittman is absolutely not qualified to assert the health effects of butter based on arecent meta-analysis I rather doubt he read in its somewhat excruciating detail. (In fact, he doesn’t even seem inclined to pretend he read it; he references the work several times, but in each case, the links he provides lead to someone else’s blog about the study, each reaching a conclusion- surprise- aligned with his own.) He should restrain himself from such inclinations to impersonate an expert, and the New York Times should set the bar higher. Experts should earn the rarefied real estate of New York Times pages only for their domain of actual expertise; the public probably expects, and certainly deserves, no less.

Mr. Bittman’s writing is, as ever, engaging and stylish. Overall, his column entitled “Butter is Back,” which turns out to be much about other things, such as limiting our overall intake of meat for ecological and humane reasons, is balanced, and thoughtful, and reaches generally reasonable conclusions about a diet of real foods, mostly plants – for the benefit of human health, our fellow species, and the planet alike. This is a topic near and dear to my heart, and one to which I have devoted considerable, recent effort.

But speaking of hearts, his conclusion that butter has now been exonerated of all harms formerly alleged is, in a word, wrong.

Since the study Mr. Bittman cites was about fatty acids, not foods, and only headlines in pop culture said anything about butter or cheese, we might begin with: what, exactly, are the saturated fatty acids in butter, and how did they fare specifically in the meta-analysis in question? I am betting you don’t know or care-but my point is, I bet the same of Mr. Bittman.

We could, perhaps productively, wade into just such weeds of the meta-analysis, but I’ve done that already, and see no value in redundancy here. My prior column is accessible to you. Note, as well, that colleagues have identified potentially quite important flaws in the actual analysis, the investigators themselves have conceded those flaws, and an outright retraction of the paper is at least being discussed.

But we can leave all of that alone and grind better grist altogether. Consider that the meta-analysis, even if sound, showed only that Western diets with lower and higher levels of saturated fat still produced roughly comparable levels of heart disease. It actually showed slightly less heart disease with lower saturated fat intake, but statistically speaking, that’s picking a nit, so we can let it go. Let’s accept that without addressing at all what replaces the saturated fat, a fairly typical Western diet produces about the same amount of heart disease whether higher or lower in saturated fat content. Substituting in Mr. Bittman’s leap of faith, this might mean that typical Western diets with higher or lower amounts of butter produce about the same amount of heart disease.

On this basis, Mr. Bittman says: bring back the butter.

Before you do, consider these points, in no particular order:

1) All ‘Western’ diets produce very high levels of heart disease, at least 80% of which has been shown to be outright preventable by a litany of studies spanning decades.

2) The new meta-analysis did NOT consider what was replacing the saturated fat in the diets of those who ate less, but others have told us that: mostly refined starch and sugar. Importantly, then, despite Mr. Bittman’s assertions that these are the ‘real’ culprits in our diets- diets lower in saturated fat did NOT show higher levels of heart disease, as we might expect if we were replacing a false culprit with the real ones (i.e., cutting saturated fat, adding sugar). So, the new study might just as well be interpreted to show that ‘adding sugar and starch to the diet in the place of saturated fat’ does not increase heart disease rates. So on what basis does this study indicate these are the ‘real’ culprits? Mr. Bittman just brought his preconceived notions along for the ride. (My view? Excesses of saturated fat, sugar, and refined starch are in on it together, and all still wanted for further questioning.)

3) The new study did show lower rates of heart disease with higher intake of omega-3 fat. There was a favorable trend with polyunsaturated fats in general, but this was not significant.

4) Overall, then, the study showed that some dietary fats can be beneficial to health, butsaturated fats as a class were not among them. The best the study said of saturated fats is:they don’t seem to make things worse than the prevailing status quo.

5) But to rephrase point 1: the status quo stinks!

6) Other studies have blown the status quo away. In his famous study years ago, Dean Ornish showed a relative 70% reduction in the rate of heart attack with a plant-based, low-fat diet that certainly did not feature butter.

7) Perhaps of more general interest: the Lyon Diet Heart Study showed exactly the same, impressive, relative 70% reduction in heart attack rates. But in this case, the intervention diet had no ascetic overtones; it was a Mediterranean Diet. The control diet, which resulted in standard –and thus appallingly high- rates of heart attack was a typical Western diet. But the Lyon Diet Heart Study, as the name suggests, was centered in Lyon, France- and conducted in European countries. The ‘typical’ diet was not American junk- it was the real-food diet of Northern Europe, dripping in, among other things, butter. Other Mediterranean Diet studies have shown much the same.

8) Combining point 7 with the new study could be said to show this: saturated fat (and therefore, maybe, butter) may not be bad for hearts and health compared to other things that are bad for hearts and health. But there is no evidence they are good for hearts and health. That hardly seems cause to start shmearing.

9) In contrast, a balanced portfolio of monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats-characteristic of all of the world’s most healthful diets; particularly associated with the Mediterranean diet; and derived from foods such as olives, avocadoes, nuts, seeds, with or without fish and seafood- is decisively associated with lower rates of all chronic disease, dramatic reduction in the rate of heart attack, and reduction in the rate of premature death overall. And that’s without buttering it up.

10) Well, I guess I’m done. Just reread 1-9, and there you go.

I don’t think butter is poison. Go ahead and have some if so inclined. But do it for pleasure, not health. The new study was not about butter, but had it been, it could have concluded that there are things we can eat instead that are just as good, or just as bad. Either way, there was no hint that adding butter to our diets would improve our health. Since other studies do show us how to do just that, why would we settle for a lateral move, and stay mired in a place where coronary disease is practically a middle-aged rite of passage? There are places around the world that get the healthy living formula right where heart disease is all but unknown.

I have opinions about cuisine-but they are just opinions. I cannot, and do not, claim culinary expertise. Mr. Bittman, by popular affirmation, can-and I, like many of you, am happy to listen and learn when he does so. But he is no scientist, and when he forgets that, he becomes a potential danger to public heath, misdirecting his considerable influence, and exploiting the faith of his followers. When it comes to clear messaging about nutrition and health, we all should be a bit more careful about which side of the bread is being buttered, and who wields the knife.

If you don’t mind living in a world where everyone you know over age 50 is on multiple medications to fix what lifestyle as medicine could fix far better, by all means add back the butter. If you think it’s normal that most adults of a certain age have had their chests opened up or their coronaries ballooned open, butter away.

But we certainly know how to do far better than such variations on the theme of eating badly. Even in the home of the famous French paradox, replacing butter with olive oil –among other things- slashed rates of heart disease. In my unprofessional opinion, cold-pressed, extra virgin kalamata olive oil on fresh, whole grain bread is sublime. In my professional opinion, it’s good for me. I’m sticking with it for both reasons.

Butter is not, and never was, a singular nemesis– any more than sugar is, or wheat is. But butter never did our health any favors either- however it may treat our taste buds. Advice to add it back takes us back, not forward, to our nutritional future. We know how to do far better.

-fin

Dr. David L. Katz has authored three editions of a nutrition textbook for health care professionals. He is editor-in-chief of the peer-reviewed journal, Childhood Obesity, and President of the American College of Lifestyle MedicineHe was commissioned by Annual Review in Public Health to write the review article, Can We Say What Diet is Best for Health? He is the author, most recently, ofDisease ProofHe likes olive oil.

Leeder on ageing – UN: “Good health adds life to years”

 

“Good health adds life to years”

In old age, as the WHO theme suggests, it is the disease burden rather than age itself that is the biggest problem.

It is also among older people that attention should be lavished on the modifiable factors that multiply absolute risk of death and disability. Treating blood pressure, for instance, is more, not less, important in the individual older patient than it is in a younger person in the prevention of stroke and heart disease, as the Lancet implies.

 

http://steve-leeder-better-health.blogspot.com.au/2012/05/age-old-debate.html

Saturday, May 12, 2012

An age-old debate*

World Health Day is celebrated on 7 April to mark the anniversary of the founding of WHO in 1948.  It is not a day that stops the nation – no sweeps and no light switched off, especially this year.

 

What is it?  The WHO web site states that: ‘World Health Day is a global campaign, inviting everyone – from global leaders to the public in all countries – to start collective action to protect people’s health and well-being.’

 

This year the topic was Ageing and health with the theme “Good health adds life to years”. Noting the theme of World Health Day this year, a recent Lancet editorialhttp://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736%2812%2960518-2/fulltext points out that while the biggest causes of years of life lost among people aged 60+ years are ischaemic heart disease and stroke, only between 4-14% of older people in less- and least-developed settings are receiving antihypertensive treatment.

 

April 7 received zero media coverage.  Old age is boring.  It is not news.

 

Shortly after World Health Day, in Australia, $3.7 billion of reforms to aged care over five years were announced by the federal government. http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/at-a-glance-aged-care-reforms/story-fn59niix-1226334312515

 

  • $1.2 billion to strengthen the aged-care workforce.
  • $268.4 million for dementia.
  • $54.8 million to support carers.

These proposals are linked to existing aged care support and include $880.1 million over next five years to expand home care with 80,000 new home-care packages by 2012.  The ageing of the world’s population is a special challenge for nations still undergoing economic growth such as China and India. The population aged 65+ years in those countries will, according to UN projections, double between 2000 and 2020 and quadruple — to 900 million people — by 2040. The number of older citizens in more-developed countries by 2040 will be only one-third that of those in the less-developed countries. The economically-advanced world thus holds no monopoly on old age.

 

In China where a one-child-per-family has operated since 1978 and applies to 40% of families, family for older parents will be very challenging, especially if the one child lives in a city and the parents live rurally.  Whereas now there are 10 million people in China aged 80 or over, by 2050 there will be, according to current estimates, 100 million.

 

In old age, as the WHO theme suggests, it is the disease burden rather than age itself that is the biggest problem.

 

It is also among older people that attention should be lavished on the modifiable factors that multiply absolute risk of death and disability. Treating blood pressure, for instance, is more, not less, important in the individual older patient than it is in a younger person in the prevention of stroke and heart disease, as the Lancet implies.

 

The policy challenges for an ageing world, especially one that seeks to sustain health in old age, concern the context, content and cost of services.

 

The context is not a straightforward policy component because social attitudes towards older people vary widely. Oriental concepts of filial duty will confront the practicalities of distance, time, and new lifestyles.  In some cultures, the wisdom of the elders is prized while in others it is ignored. In multicultural Australia, sensitivity to cultural variations is critical to the effective provision of support for older people. Different cultural attitudes to institutional, home and respite care all need to be respected.

 

The content of care includes the technicalities and includes decisions about how resources for aged care will be used to best effect.  That is true at the macro level but closer to the people we are aiming to help, end-of-life discussions are a valuable part of a patient-centred aged care policy.

 

When it comes to cost, we must ask if the welfare model of health service provision that we follow at present is sustainable in the light of population ageing, and if it needs modification. How will this be achieved without doing violence to notions of equity and bankrupting the nation? Questions such as these have been addressed partially in the financial arrangements in the new federal aged care proposals.

 

As grey demand increases, the attitude of younger taxpayers cannot be assumed to one of selfless generosity towards meeting the costs of care and support of ever more older people. This makes the development and protection of superannuation and personal savings a huge political priority right now.

 

Ageing is not like HIV or bird flu — it is entirely predictable and susceptible to rational examination, prediction and policy formation. The Productivity Commissionhttp://www.pc.gov.au/projects/inquiry/aged-care/report and groups such as Alzheimer’s Australiahttp://www.fightdementia.org.au/dementia-an-economic-and-fiscal-disaster-waiting-to-happen.aspx are urging us to think, discuss and debate seriously the major policy elements within ageing.

 

*Published in MJA Insight Magazine

Steve Leeder on the shutting down of ANPHA

 

http://steve-leeder-better-health.blogspot.com.au/2014/05/anpha-lost-in-earthquake.html

Monday, May 5, 2014

ANPHA: LOST IN AN EARTHQUAKE

So. The seismic monitor suggests that ANPHA, the Australian National Preventive Health Agency, established in 2011, is likely to slip into Hades through a crack in the ground as the tectonic plates of the Commission of Audit and the Hockey budget shift and grind.  What a pity.  ANPHA began in 2011. Let’s be clear why it was a good idea, so that when it’s gone (assuming it goes) we can mourn its passing properly.

The major afflictions of our community are conditions such as heart disease. stroke, cancer, depression, and problems of bones and joints.  None of these things are as preventable as whooping cough or polio, but the decline in heart disease in Australia in the past half century is deeply encouraging.  Through a combination of better treatment, less smoking and dietary change we’ve more than halved – considerably more in the case of the under 65s – death rates.  These disorders have a major preventive element in them.

The risks for heart disease are fully described.  They relate closely to what we eat, how much we drink, our physical activity and more.  Yes, these behaviours are ultimately matters of choice: we are, as GW Bush would say, are the deciders.

But we’re not really.  The shopping environment influences what we choose to buy.  The advertising environment powerfully influences our purchases of alcohol.  The economic environment determines where we can afford to live.  Get real. These are shapers, the causes behind the causes.  And we must attend to these things if prevention is to work.

Without legislation, kiss goodbye to tobacco control.  Other countries label foods so that people – not just robots – can work out which are the healthiest.  New York has eliminated trans fats – by legislation from all prepared food.  More broadly in the US, man-made trans fat consumption fell by 600 million tonnes between 2005 and 2012 as Dow and other vegetable oil producers acceded to the expectations and legislative urging of American citizens and govenrnments that they would produce stuff that was health promoting and not damaging.

Set yourself a preventive agenda that seeks to achieve these lifestyle opportunity-promoters and you need strength including at a national level.  Individuals struggle to win these battles.  Groups such as the National Heart Foundation, cancer societies and others have been zealous.  But the thought behind ANPHA was that it could become a counterweight to the big-time, burly avarice that drives health-destroying profiteering.  No wonder the alcohol industry will declare drinks all rounds in celebration when the bulldozers demolish ANPHA!  Bewdy mate, drink up!

The politics of prevention are what made ANPHA so important to our health future and so hated by those who, like the tobacco barons of yore, want free rein to push their wares no matter the health costs.  Get rid of food labelling, they beseech the government!  It infringes our liberty as manufacturers to sell whatever we want.  Think of our civil liberties!  Make health a matter of choice but diminish the capacity of the consumer to choose intelligently! Please, Mr Government, DO it!

Yes, ANPHA could support more research in prevention.  From the perspective of big business research is pretty innocent stuff and usually has little commercial impact.  It’s safe.  But when research is translated into advocacy, that’s when trouble starts. That’s when those driven fundamentally by profit start worrying, and when the political tectonic plates start grinding in response. And advocacy is what a national agency with muscle could do.

So. When ANPHA goes that is what goes with it – the ability for an agency, with clout, to argue for changes that will help ensure a future in which it would be easier to choose to be healthy.  Shame.

Severed heads in coca-cola

i think this is a prank, but I’m not sure, from John Butter’s feed…

http://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/business/coca-cola-admits-natural-flavors-include-a-severed-head-2014050686280

Coca-Cola admits ‘natural flavors’ include a severed head

06-05-14

coke425

DRINKS maker Coca-Cola has admitted using severed human heads to add a touch of piquancy.

After withdrawing a flame retardant from some of its products, the corporation also revealed the horrifying nature of the enigmatic ‘natural flavors’ mentioned on its cans.

A spokesman said: “We drop a man’s head into the distillation vats, that’s where coke gets its unique spicy flavour from.

“We fish the severed head out at the end, as if it were a cinnamon stick.

“It depends what’s lying around the factory really, the basic principle is to just lob anything in and then sweeten the living shit out of it.”