Category Archives: nutrition

Quantified-self harm..?

OK. This is purely a rant based on a shallow, n=1 observation.

I lost my fitbit down the toilet in December and chose not to replace it.

Since then, I’ve been maintaining my active habits (walking to work, training for a fun run) without the motivational air cover provided by the device.

Since then, I’ve been eating slightly healthier, primarly reducing meat consumption in favour of vegetables, and also increasing the depth and number of fasting days.

As a consequence, I’ve been losing more weight.

The interesting thing is that the only quantified self metric I’ve been looking at has been my weight.

It’s all a bit zero-sum, but I feel that by no longer monitoring my activity, I’m now focusing more on what matters – weight.

This isn’t to poo poo the tracker. I’m confident that it supported the development of activity habit. It’s just that now I’ve covered that, I need to focus on more salient measures.

It makes me think there’s change management a process that’s required to get healthy:

Firstly, get active using whatever motivational means necessary -trackers, fun runs etc.

Second, perhaps simultaneously, concentrate on diet… fasting, nutrition etc.

For further discussion, no doubt…

Wearables snapshot…

A market snapshot of wearables… useful for presentations.

Want A Neat Overview Of What’s Going On In Wearables? Point Your Eyes Right Here…

Want A Neat Overview Of What’s Going On In Wearables? Point Your Eyes Right Here…

Posted  by  (@riptari)

Former Groupon Product SVP Jeff Holden Joins Uber As Chief Product Officer

Wearables are so hot right now. Apple iWatch rumours are in rude health. Google isapparently looking (beyond Glass) at picking up and strapping onto its business anotherstartup in the wearables space (guesses for which in the comments pls).

Jawbone, maker of the UP fitness tracker bangle (and apparently not the company in Google’s Glassy sights), is running sweat-free towards an IPO. Action camera maker GoPro — ok, not technically a wearables company but the point of its cameras are that they are, y’know, wearable — has already filed for one. Smartwatch maker Pebble has raised a tonne of money since 2012, first via Kickstarter and then, off the back of its snowballing crowdfunder, from VC checkbooks.

Even though the genuine usefulness of bits of technology that you strap to your person still has a lot of proving to do – vs the intrusion (both visual, with a lot of these early devices being best described as uuuuuuuugggglllyyy; and, more importantly, the sensitive personal data being captured and monetized) – it’s the big huge lucrative potential that’s exciting makers and investors.

Mature Western markets are saturated with smartphones — ergo step forward sensor-stuffed wearables as the next growth engine for device makers. Devices whose literal positioning on our bodies enables them to gather far more intimate data on the lives and (physical) habits of users than previous generations of consumer mobiles. If only we can be persuaded to wear this stuff.

Yesterday analyst Canalys suggested 2014 will be the year for the wearables category becomes a “key consumer technology” — with more than 17 million wearable bands (alone) forecast to ship this year, rising to 23 million by 2015, and more than 45 million by 2017.

So that’s only wearable tech targeting the wrist, such as the Fitbit fitness tracker and Samsung’s Galaxy Gear smartwatch — it does not include devices aiming to squat on other body-parts (such as Google Glass). In short: tech makers gonna put a smart ring on it. Many are already trying.

On the ‘who is already making what’ front, wearable tech research and consulting firm Vandrico has put together this neat overview of the space — tracking the number of devices in existence; areas of market focus; and even which parts of the body are being targeted most.

(The most popular anatomical target for wearables is the wrists, since you’re curious — with 56 devices vying for that small patch of flesh; followed by the head, with 34 devices wanting to cling to it. On the flip side, the least popular body part for wearables thus far is apparently the hand, with just two devices listed, although the data doesn’t delve into the crotch region, so, yeah, there’s there too. Makers apparently not falling over themselves to fashion iCodpieces…).

According to Vandrico, there are some 115 wearables in play already; with an average selling price of $431; and with lifestyle, fitness and medical being the most popular market areas targeted (in that order).

wearables

The researcher has also taken the time to list and profile every single one of the 115 wearables it reckons are currently in play, so you don’t have to — from 3L Labs Footlogger to the ZTE Bluewatch (another mobile maker doing a smartwatch, who knew?).

Or at least all of the wearables its research has turned up. It’s asking for submissions for missing devices so it can keep expanding this database. (I’m going to throw the Fin into the ring on that front.)

Click here to check out — and start quantifying — the data for yourself.

[Image by IntelFreePress via Flickr]

John Yudkin: the man who tried to warn us about sugar

Terrific article reprinted in the SMH from the Sunday Telegraph, London…

One of the problems with the anti-sugar message – then and now – is how depressing it is. The substance is so much part of our culture, that to be told buying children an ice cream may be tantamount to poisoning them, is most unwelcome. But Yudkin, who grew up in dire poverty in east London and went on to win a scholarship to Cambridge, was no killjoy.

”He didn’t ban sugar from his house, and certainly didn’t deprive his grandchildren of ice cream or cake,” recalls his granddaughter, Ruth, a psychotherapist. ”He was hugely fun-loving and would never have wanted to be deprived of a pleasure, partly, perhaps, because he grew up in poverty and had worked so hard to escape that level of deprivation.”

”My father certainly wasn’t fanatical,” adds Michael. ”If he was invited to tea and offered cake, he’d accept it. But at home, it’s easy to say no to sugar in your tea. He believed if you educated the public to avoid sugar, they’d understand that.”

”It is not just Big Tobacco any more,” Chan said last year. ”Public health must also contend with Big Food, Big Soda and Big Alcohol. All of these industries fear regulation and protect themselves by using the same tactics. They include front groups, lobbies, promises of self-regulation, lawsuits and industry-funded research that confuses the evidence and keeps the public in doubt.”

 

http://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/diet-and-fitness/john-yudkin-the-man-who-tried-to-warn-us-about-sugar-20140212-32h03.html

John Yudkin: the man who tried to warn us about sugar

Date

Julia Llewellyn Smith

A British professor’s 1972 book about the dangers of sugar is now seen as prophetic. Then why did it lead to the end of his career? 

Sweet beauty: is sugar aging?Not so sweet: sugar. Photo: Lyndall Larkham

A couple of years ago, an out-of-print book published in 1972 by a long-dead British professor suddenly became a collector’s item.

Copies that had been lying dusty on bookshelves were selling for hundreds of pounds, while copies were also being pirated online.

Alongside such rarities as Madonna’s Sex, Stephen King’s Rage (written as Richard Bachman) and Promise Me Tomorrow by Nora Roberts; Pure, White and Deadly by John Yudkin, a book widely derided at the time of publication, was listed as one of the most coveted out-of-print works in the world.

Pure, White and Deadly.Pure, White and Deadly.

How exactly did a long-forgotten book suddenly become so prized? The cause was a ground-breaking lecture called Sugar: the Bitter Truth by Robert Lustig, professor of paediatric endocrinology at the University of California, in which Lustig hailed Yudkin’s work as ”prophetic”.

”Without even knowing it, I was a Yudkin acolyte,” says Lustig, who tracked down the book after a tip from a colleague via an interlibrary loan. ”Everything this man said in 1972 was the God’s honest truth and if you want to read a true prophecy you find this book… I’m telling you every single thing this guy said has come to pass. I’m in awe.”

Posted on YouTube in 2009, Lustig’s 90-minute talk has received more than 4.1 million hits and is credited with kick-starting the anti-sugar movement, a campaign that calls for sugar to be treated as a toxin, like alcohol and tobacco, and for sugar-laden foods to be taxed, labelled with health warnings and banned for anyone under 18.

Lustig is one of a growing number of scientists who don’t just believe sugar makes you fat and rots teeth. They’re convinced it’s the cause of several chronic and very common illnesses, including heart disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s and diabetes. It’s also addictive, since it interferes with our appetites and creates an irresistible urge to eat.

This year, Lustig’s message has gone mainstream; many of the New Year diet books focused not on fat or carbohydrates, but on cutting out sugar and the everyday foods (soups, fruit juices, bread) that contain high levels of sucrose. The anti-sugar camp is not celebrating yet, however. They know what happened to Yudkin and what a ruthless and unscrupulous adversary the sugar industry proved to be.

The tale begins in the Sixties. That decade, nutritionists in university laboratories all over America and Western Europe were scrabbling to work out the reasons for an alarming rise in heart disease levels. By 1970, there were 520 deaths per 100,000 per year in England and Wales caused by coronary heart disease and 700 per 100,000 in America. After a while, a consensus emerged: the culprit was the high level of fat in our diets.

One scientist in particular grabbed the headlines: a nutritionist from the University of Minnesota called Ancel Keys. Keys, famous for inventing the K-ration – 12,000 calories packed in a little box for use by troops during the Second World War – declared fat to be public enemy number one and recommended that anyone who was worried about heart disease should switch to a low-fat ”Mediterranean” diet.

Instead of treating the findings as a threat, the food industry spied an opportunity. Market research showed there was a great deal of public enthusiasm for ”healthy” products and low-fat foods would prove incredibly popular. By the start of the Seventies, supermarket shelves were awash with low-fat yogurts, spreads, and even desserts and biscuits.

But, amid this new craze, one voice stood out in opposition. John Yudkin, founder of the nutrition department at the University of London’s Queen Elizabeth College, had been doing his own experiments and, instead of laying the blame at the door of fat, he claimed there was a much clearer correlation between the rise in heart disease and a rise in the consumption of sugar. Rodents, chickens, rabbits, pigs and students fed sugar and carbohydrates, he said, invariably showed raised blood levels of triglycerides (a technical term for fat), which was then, as now, considered a risk factor for heart disease. Sugar also raised insulin levels, linking it directly to type 2 diabetes.

When he outlined these results in Pure, White and Deadly, in 1972, he questioned whether there was any causal link at all between fat and heart disease. After all, he said, we had been eating substances like butter for centuries, while sugar, had, up until the 1850s, been something of a rare treat for most people. ”If only a small fraction of what we know about the effects of sugar were to be revealed in relation to any other material used as a food additive,” he wrote, ”that material would promptly be banned.”

This was not what the food industry wanted to hear. When devising their low-fat products, manufacturers had needed a fat substitute to stop the food tasting like cardboard, and they had plumped for sugar. The new ”healthy” foods were low-fat but had sugar by the spoonful and Yudkin’s findings threatened to disrupt a very profitable business.

As a result, says Lustig, there was a concerted campaign by the food industry and several scientists to discredit Yudkin’s work. The most vocal critic was Ancel Keys.

Keys loathed Yudkin and, even before Pure, White and Deadly appeared, he published an article, describing Yudkin’s evidence as ”flimsy indeed”.

”Yudkin always maintained his equanimity, but Keys was a real a——-, who stooped to name-calling and character assassination,” says Lustig, speaking from New York, where he’s just recorded yet another television interview.

The British Sugar Bureau put out a press release dismissing Yudkin’s claims as ”emotional assertions” and the World Sugar Research Organisation described his book as ”science fiction”. When Yudkin sued, it printed a mealy-mouthed retraction, concluding: ”Professor Yudkin recognises that we do not agree with [his] views and accepts that we are entitled to express our disagreement.”

Yudkin was ”uninvited” to international conferences. Others he organised were cancelled at the last minute, after pressure from sponsors, including, on one occasion, Coca-Cola. When he did contribute, papers he gave attacking sugar were omitted from publications. The British Nutrition Foundation, one of whose sponsors was Tate & Lyle, never invited anyone from Yudkin’s internationally acclaimed department to sit on its committees. Even Queen Elizabeth College reneged on a promise to allow the professor to use its research facilities when he retired in 1970 (to write Pure, White and Deadly). Only after a letter from Yudkin’s solicitor was he offered a small room in a separate building.

”Can you wonder that one sometimes becomes quite despondent about whether it is worthwhile trying to do scientific research in matters of health?” he wrote. ”The results may be of great importance in helping people to avoid disease, but you then find they are being misled by propaganda designed to support commercial interests in a way you thought only existed in bad B films.”

And this ”propaganda” didn’t just affect Yudkin. By the end of the Seventies, he had been so discredited that few scientists dared publish anything negative about sugar for fear of being similarly attacked. As a result, the low-fat industry, with its products laden with sugar, boomed.

Yudkin’s detractors had one trump card: his evidence often relied on observations, rather than on explanations, of rising obesity, heart disease and diabetes rates. ”He could tell you these things were happening but not why, or at least not in a scientifically acceptable way,” says David Gillespie, author of the bestselling Sweet Poison. ”Three or four of the hormones that would explain his theories had not been discovered.”

”Yudkin knew a lot more data was needed to support his theories, but what’s important about his book is its historical significance,” says Lustig. ”It helps us understand how a concept can be bastardised by dark forces of industry.”

From the Eighties onwards, several discoveries gave new credence to Yudkin’s theories. Researchers found fructose, one of the two main carbohydrates in refined sugar, is primarily metabolised by the liver; while glucose (found in starchy food like bread and potatoes) is metabolised by all cells. This means consuming excessive fructose puts extra strain on the liver, which then converts fructose to fat.

This induces a condition known as insulin resistance, or metabolic syndrome, which doctors now generally acknowledge to be the major risk factor for heart disease, diabetes and obesity, as well as a possible factor for many cancers. Yudkin’s son, Michael, a former professor of biochemistry at Oxford, says his father was never bitter about the way he was treated, but, ”he was hurt personally”.

”More than that,” says Michael, ”he was such an enthusiast of public health, it saddened him to see damage being done to us all, because of vested interests in the food industry.”

One of the problems with the anti-sugar message – then and now – is how depressing it is. The substance is so much part of our culture, that to be told buying children an ice cream may be tantamount to poisoning them, is most unwelcome. But Yudkin, who grew up in dire poverty in east London and went on to win a scholarship to Cambridge, was no killjoy.

”He didn’t ban sugar from his house, and certainly didn’t deprive his grandchildren of ice cream or cake,” recalls his granddaughter, Ruth, a psychotherapist. ”He was hugely fun-loving and would never have wanted to be deprived of a pleasure, partly, perhaps, because he grew up in poverty and had worked so hard to escape that level of deprivation.”

”My father certainly wasn’t fanatical,” adds Michael. ”If he was invited to tea and offered cake, he’d accept it. But at home, it’s easy to say no to sugar in your tea. He believed if you educated the public to avoid sugar, they’d understand that.”

Thanks to Lustig and the rehabilitation of Yudkin’s reputation, Penguin republished Pure, White and Deadly 18 months ago. Obesity rates in the UK are now 10 times what they were when it was first published and the amount of sugar we eat has increased 31.5 per cent since 1990 (thanks to all the ”invisible” sugar in everything from processed food and orange juice to coleslaw and yogurt). The number of diabetics in the world has nearly trebled. The numbers dying of heart disease has decreased, thanks to improved drugs, but the number living with the disease is growing steadily.

As a result, the World Health Organisation is set to recommend a cut in the amount of sugar in our diets from 22 teaspoons per day to almost half that. But its director-general, Margaret Chan, has warned that, while it might be on the back foot at last, the sugar industry remains a formidable adversary, determined to safeguard its market position.

Recently, UK food campaigners have complained that they’re being shunned by ministers who are more than willing to take meetings with representatives from the food industry. ”It is not just Big Tobacco any more,” Chan said last year. ”Public health must also contend with Big Food, Big Soda and Big Alcohol. All of these industries fear regulation and protect themselves by using the same tactics. They include front groups, lobbies, promises of self-regulation, lawsuits and industry-funded research that confuses the evidence and keeps the public in doubt.”

Dr Julian Cooper, head of research at AB Sugar, insists the increase in the incidence of obesity in Britain is a result of, ”a range of complex factors”.

”Reviews of the body of scientific evidence by expert committees have concluded that consuming sugar as part of a balanced diet does not induce lifestyle diseases such as diabetes and heart disease,” he says.If you look up Robert Lustig on Wikipedia, nearly two-thirds of the studies cited there to repudiate Lustig’s views were funded by Coca-Cola.

But Gillespie believes the message is getting through. ”More people are avoiding sugar, and when this happens companies adjust what they’re selling,” he says. It’s just a shame, he adds, that a warning that could have been taken on board 40 years ago went unheeded: ”Science took a disastrous detour in ignoring Yudkin. It was to the detriment of the health of millions.”

Sunday Telegraph, London

Oz economy outpaces confectionary growth

  • Well this is good news, I suppose, but it is still growing at 2.6%… better not tell Barclay and Brand-Miller!?
  • Chocolate accounts for about half of the value, with sugar confectionery at a quarter.
  • 255,000 tonnes in volume in 2012.
  • Sugar confectionery is the dominant segment in China.
  • Australia’s per capita consumption of chocolate at 6.3kg, higher than New Zealand (4.8kg) but below Switzerland (11.9kg) and the UK (9.4kg).

http://www.foodnavigator-asia.com/Markets/Oz-economy-outpaces-confectionery-growth/

Oz economy outpaces confectionery growth

Post a commentBy Annie-Rose Harrison-Dunn , 10-Feb-2014

Australia's confectionery market fails to keep pace with economy, according to research

Australia’s confectionery market fails to keep pace with economy, according to research

The Australian confectionery market is growing slower than the country’s economy, according to a report from Market Line.

The research firm told ConfectioneryNews that stable growth in the Australian confectionery market over the past five years was forecast to continue to 2017, but said the country’s economy was growing faster.

Behind overall growth

“If we look at GDP between 2008 and follow it through to the end of our forecast period in 2017, we see an average growth rate of just below 6%. In comparison, the confectionery market in Australia is set to have an average growth rate of 2.6% a year, over the same period, meaning that this market is growing at a slower rate than the Australian economy,” Market Line said.

Chocolate dominates the Australian confectionery market and accounted for over half of value sales in the sector in 2012, while sugar confectionery accounted for around a quarter of revenues in the same year.

Market Line said cereal bars, gum and chocolate sales were expected to slowly decelerate up to 2017, meanwhile sugar confectionery sales were expected to grow slowly.

In a separate report released last year, Leatherhead estimated that the Australian confectionery market was worth 255,000 tonnes in volume in 2012, representing a 10% increase from 2008.

Competitive neighbors

Australia is Asia-Pacific’s third largest confectionery market, with Japan and China taking the top spots. “Australia has, however, grown at a faster compound annual growth rate (CAGR) than the Japanese market between 2008 and 2012 at 4.8% as opposed to 0.5%,” Market Line said.

The Chinese market has grown at over double the rate of the Australian market at a CAGR of 4.8%, where sugar confectionery is the dominant segment.

Looking at Australian confectionery on this global stage, the Leatherhead report put Australia’s per capita consumption of chocolate at 6.3kg, higher than New Zealand (4.8kg) but below Switzerland (11.9kg) and the UK (9.4kg).

New activity guidelines

  • 60 minutes physical activity per day
  • Add muscle strengthening exercise twice a week

http://theconversation.com/sit-less-move-more-new-physical-activity-guidelines-22948

Sit less, move more: new physical activity guidelines

If you’ve been sitting for an hour, you’ve been sitting for too long. Image from shutterstock.com

Australians should aim for around 60 minutes of physical activity per day, double the previous recommendation, according the new national physical activity guidelines, published today.

And for the first time, the guidelines urge the 12 million Australians who are sedentary or have low levels of physical activity to limit the time they spend sitting.

The recommendations aim to prevent unhealthy weight gain and reduce the risk of some cancers. Physical inactivity is the second-greatest contributor to the nation’s cancer burden, behind smoking.

The guidelines emphasise that doing any physical activity is better than doing none, but ideally adults will get 150 minutes of moderate physical activity each week. This includes brisk walking, recreational swimming, dancing and household tasks such as raking leaves.

This could be swapped for 75 minutes of high-intensity exercise that makes you “huff and puff”, such as jogging, aerobics, fast cycling and many organised sports. Ten minutes of vigorous exercise equals moderate-intensity activity.

The guidelines also recommend including muscle-strengthening activities at least two times a week. This could be achieved by going to the gym and using free weights or resistance exercise machines.

“But it also includes things like going to the store and carrying your shopping bags,” said Jannique van Uffelen, senior research fellow in active living at Victoria University. “It’s anything where you’ve got repeated stimuli with increasing weight or resistance for your muscles so they become stronger.”

Baker IDI’s laboratory head of physical activity David Dunstan said he was heartened to see the recommendations emphasise the health harms of prolonged sitting, for which there has been growing evidence over the past decade.

“For many people, sitting occupies a lot of their time. We need to be encouraging people to avoid long periods of sitting and break up sitting throughout the day,” he said.

“If you’ve been sitting for an hour, you’ve been sitting for too long. We should be aiming to break up sitting times with light-intensity activity one to two times per hour.”

The other major change to the guidelines is the inclusion of muscle strengthening activity, Associate Professor Dunstan said, and the acknowledgement that while brisk walking will improve heart fitness, it will not necessarily improve muscle strength.

“What happens is as we hit the age of 45, we start to lose our muscle mass and that’s accelerated once we get past 65,” he said. “As we lose our muscle mass, we lose our muscle strength, which is an important part of our daily lives.”

Dr van Uffelen said the guidelines were “thorough and comprehensive” and based on the latest international evidence. But with just 43% of Australians meeting the previous target of 30 minutes of moderate-intensity activity on most days of the week, many people found it difficult to work the recommendations into their day-to-day life.

“We live in a society where it’s often easier to jump in a car than to go for a walk or to get to places on your bike,” Dr van Uffelen said.

Governments must “make it easier for people to choose the active option, instead of the passive option – for example, good infrastructure for active transport,” she said.

Kids’ activity

The guidelines recommend children aged five to 12 accumulate at least 60 minutes of moderate- to vigorous-intensity physical activity each day and include activities that strengthen the muscles and bones three days per week.

“We’re not suggesting that young children go out and start lifting weights,” said Alfred Deakin Professor at Deakin University Jo Salmon, who co-authored the scientific review and recommendations for children.

“Strength training activities include running, jumping, skipping, sports like netball or basketball – anything that involves being on your feet and running around. Even hanging from the monkey bars, you’re holding their own body weight,” she said.

“This is based on evidence around strength training for optimising bone health for kids – that’s really going to see them have much less chance of developing osteoporosis in adulthood. Childhood is really a key period for laying down healthy bones.”

The guidelines also emphasise the importance of reducing the time children spend sitting. And it’s not just to promote physical health, Professor Salmon said, emerging evidence shows prolonged sitting affects cognitive development and educational outcomes.

Teachers can play a part by delivering standing lessons, she said, by delivering standing lessons, getting children up during class, giving active homework and encouraging students to complete their homework while standing.

“The other major part of sitting for a lot kids and adolescents is sitting in a car. So if you can promote active transport and even public transport and walking to school, you’re going to reduce the sitting time in transit,” Professor Salmon said.

Katz on Sugar :: The dose makes the poison

Another good rant.

http://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20140212122027-23027997-sweet-heart-you-suck?trk=eml-ced-b-art-M-0&midToken=AQGaT5hJmHa79A&ut=31wm0nXNnA5m81

Sweet Heart, You Suck

February 12, 2014 

Just in time for Valentine’s Day, epidemiology has given “sweetheart” a whole new meaning with a study demonstrating an association between sugar intake and heart disease. In this case, “sweet” heart is not a term of endearment; it’s a bad prognosis. Sweet heart, suddenly- you suck.

In deference to the holiday, we might repine the dispassion of epidemiologists inclined to replace boxes of chocolates with prescriptions for statins. But epidemiologists, presumably, need love too, even if they have an odd way of showing it. So we’ll let them be, and move on to the study and its implications.

Like much nutritional epidemiology, the study in question was observational. There was no intervention, no randomized assignment to sugar or placebo (historically referred to as “sugar pills,” which clearly won’t do these days). This study, conducted jointly by researchers from the CDC, Emory University, and Harvard, simply used population data about dietary intake to compare variation in percent calories from added sugar, and heart disease mortality.

Let’s digress a moment to emphasize a fine point: the relevant metric was not total sugar, or sugar calories, or sugar grams. It was percent of total calories from sugar. This matters, because we all have only 100% of our calories in play each day. When a higher percentage of calories comes from sugar, a lower percentage comes from everything else. Health is affected both by what we do eat, and what we don’t.

Let’s digress again to note a thing or two about observational studies. My impression is that when people don’t like the results, they are quick to point out the methodologic weaknesses: observational studies can’t prove cause and effect; observational studies just show association; observational studies have often been proven wrong when randomized intervention trials are done; and so on. When people DO like the results, the observational nature of the research is forgiven, and the attendant weaknesses routinely ignored, as wastrue of media coverage in this case.

But what’s good for the goose is good for the gander, and the merits and liabilities of observational studies are the same whether the results support or refute the hypothesis we love best. This new study does not, and cannot, prove cause and effect. It merely showed more cardiovascular mortality among people with a higher percentage of calories coming from added sugar. That may mean that sugar causes heart disease (I suspect it does contribute). It may also mean that diets higher in sugar are just poorer diets- and people with poorer diets are more prone to heart disease. That is somewhat less than astonishing.

In fact, it is tempting to ask about this news headline-generating study: where’s the news? We have long known that excess sugar intake is bad for our health in general. We have long known that excess sugar intake is associated with obesity, insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome, and diabetes. And we have long known that diabetes is among the most potent of risk factors for heart disease. Leaving aside the prior studies that directly address the link between sugar and heart disease, we are left to wonder: how could excess sugar intake NOT be associated with heart disease? That it must be is clear to all who recall the transitive property we learned in 6 grade algebra- if A leads to B and B leads to C, then A leads to C. “A” here is sugar, “B” can be diabetes, and “C” is cardiovascular mortality.

The new study was statistically sophisticated; they don’t publish casual observations inJAMA. But while the researchers controlled for many factors, they did not control for insulin levels, metabolic syndrome, or diabetes- and rightly so. Observational research is subject to the peril of “over adjustment,” where the very factors important to a causal pathway are bullied by the study methods.

I suspect that’s clear as mud for you non-researchers, so let me clarify with an illustration. Imagine an observational study looking at the association between gunshot wounds and health outcomes. Further imagine a researcher thinking you can only assess the harms of the gunshot if you exclude the effects of the bullets. So the group goes on to study the harms of gunshot wounds only in those not actually hit by bullets. I think even the NRA would have to acknowledge the problem here. This is over adjustment.

The new study did not do that, which means that excess sugar could have led to increased heart disease in all the customary ways: inflammation, insulin resistance, and diabetes among them.

Given that, I am surprised at how surprised people seem to be that sugar is linked with heart disease. Social media were buzzing with the news as if it were…news. And the “sugar is poison” cabal, which seemed to be king of the sandbox until quite recently when the “not so fast, grains are the real poison” clan muscled in, has been heralding the news far and wide as if it proves their perspicacity. One colleague in that camp virtually rolled up the new study and smacked me in the head with it to the accompaniment of a hearty: “told you so!”

But I’m not impressed. Diets higher in added sugar and lower in everything else are bad diets. Bad diets are bad for us. In fact, that’s the very thing that makes them bad diets. I’m struggling to find the revelation.

The trouble with this “study generates publication; publication generates headlines; headlines generate blogs; blogs generate tweets, which generate more blogs and tweets…” cycle is that it makes it seem as if every incremental addition to the sum of what we know is a brand new, stand-alone, alternative truth. That’s nonsense. Worse, it’s dangerous nonsense- because there are many more “one nutrient at a time” ways to eat ourselves to sickness and premature death than there are to eat ourselves healthy. As a culture, we seem committed toexploring them all.

Coincidentally, I heard on the car radio today that despite all the twists and turns in the U.S. economy over recent years, bacon sales have ramped up unfailingly. That’s really too bad, because eating more bacon is bad for the environment, bad for the planet, really bad for the pigs- and in my opinion, decisively bad for our health as well. But this is the predictable outcome when we assert or imply that sugar is the one thing wrong with our diets; or wheat is; or grains are. It means everything else is exonerated at worst, exalted at best. So bring on the perfect meal: bacon, potato chips, and diet soda. It must be perfect: there’s no wheat, no grains, and no added sugar.

The importance of sugar intake to health does not obviate the importance of other factors. Some of the same researchers involved in the new study have published other observational studies showing associations between meat and heart diseasemeat and diabetes;processed meat and cancermore fruit intake with less diabetesmore nut intake with less heart disease; and so on. These results don’t disappear when new ones are published. Notably, researchers at Harvard also studied the association between the nutrition guidance system I helped develop and health outcomes, and showed that the higher the overall nutritional quality of foods in general, the lower the rate of chronic disease and premature death from any cause.

Just like ingredients in a recipe, research results must be blended appropriately to avoid half-baked nonsense. Nutrition makes the most sense when viewed holistically.

And so does health. Among the more indelible insights of medical education is that the shinbone is connected to the anklebone. It’s right up there with “all bleeding stops.” I have always taken the shinbone in this case for more than just the tibia- I have taken it for a symbol indicating that everything in the body is connected.

That, of course, includes the heart. Putting the heart in context- namely the thorax, connected to the rest of the body via veins and arteries- argues strongly against any epiphanies about sugar. If excess sugar is bad for health, which seems indisputable, then it is bad for hearts ineluctably configured into that health. Honestly, folks, there are times our reductionism makes the Blind Men from Indostan look omniscient.

If we keep insisting on treating each study as if it is a new truth displacing everything we thought we knew before, we will never make any progress. We are looking at the world through a preselected tunnel, and any light at the end is apt to be the next on-coming train.

Of course excess sugar is associated with heart disease. Of course that doesn’t mean nothing else is. And, of course, this new study didn’t truly prove anything. There was no epiphany here, except for those already shopping for one.

In lieu of sequential epiphanies, I offer up my sound bites of ingestive truth intended to stand the test of time. You can be the judge. Chew on them, and either swallow or spit as the spirit moves you:

1) We can never get to good diets, or good health, one nutrient (or food) at a time.

2) What’s genuinely good for any part of us is just plain good for us.

3) What’s just plain good for us is good for every part of us.

4) What’s genuinely bad for any part of us is just plain bad for us.

5) What’s just plain bad for us is bad for every part of us.

6) Getting a higher percentage of calories from X means getting a lower percentage of calories from Y.

7) Our health is affected for good or bad both by what we don’t eat, and what we do eat in its place.

8) The dose makes the poison.*

9) There are many nutrition details we don’t know, but we know enough to eat well; we are not clueless about the basic care and feeding of Homo sapiens.

10) If you want to get out of the woods, it helps to see the forest through the trees.

 

As for the timing of those prosaic epidemiologists, inveighing against sweet hearts just in time for Valentine’s Day- they’re just doing their jobs, and probably not as heartless as they seem. We can take comfort in the fact that dark chocolate is still good for our hearts, as are strawberries. And to my knowledge, there’s never even been a question about love.

 

-fin

*courtesy of Paracelsus

Confectioners prepare for sugar batter

Industry response – resealable packages… SO CYNICAL!!

http://www.confectionerynews.com/Regulation-Safety/Sugar-health-concerns-overblown-claims-confectionery-industry

Confectionery industry prepares to battle its sugar demons

Scientists have linked added sugars to obesity, type two diabetes, heart disease and tooth decay, but the candy industry says the commodity is being unfairly demonized. Photo Credit: The Health Guardians

Scientists have linked added sugars to obesity, type two diabetes, heart disease and tooth decay, but the candy industry says the commodity is being unfairly demonized. Photo Credit: The Health Guardians

The US National Confectioners Association (NCA) and leading US firms say sugar has been ‘unjustly’ victimized in recent months and the public should be free to enjoy a sweet treat if they so desire.

Sugar came under fire at the turn of the year after scientists behind the Consensus Action on Salt and Health (CASH) set up Action on Sugar , a group urging manufacturers to curb global obesity by cutting sugar in brands by 30-40%.

Sugar ‘demonized’

The confectionery industry issued its response at the recent International Sweets and Biscuits Fair (ISM) in Cologne, Germany.

Larry Graham, president of the NCA, said that sugared confectionery was a sometime indulgence that could fit into a healthy diet.

“Sugar’s getting a bad rep unnecessarily. It’s a minority of NGOs and food activists that are demonizing sugar. There are these claims that sugar is addictive and toxic, but there’s no science that supports that.”

He said that almost 50% of Americans’ confectionery consumption came at four major holidays – Halloween, Christmas, Easter and Valentine’s – which meant candy had a limited impact on the population’s health.

A sometime indulgence

How much sugar do we consume?

According to FAO figures, global average added sugar consumption is about 24 kg a year – equivalent to 66 g a day or 260 calories a day. The EU figure is closer to 32 kg a year, or 350 calories a day.

The NCA chief continued that the major concern was ‘hidden sugars’ – sugars in product you may not expect, such as ketchup and pasta sauces. ”That’s not the case with us – it’s clear what’s in our products.”

Promotion In Motion CEO Michael Rosenberg added: “Candy is 2% of the diet, so when it comes to holidays or someone wanting to relax and enjoy a little treat, they ought to be able to.”

“We represent such a small share of the overall caloric intake of the average person and it’s only a small minority of groups that are blowing this way out of proportion.”

Recent science

Excessive consumption of added sugars in drinks, snacks and sweets was recently associated with an increased risk of dying from heart disease, according to a major US review published in JAMA Internal Medicine.

Action On Sugar’s chairman Graham MacGregor, professor of Cardiovascular Medicine at the Wolfson Institute previously told ConfectioneryNews that unnecessary’ added sugar was indisputably linked to rising global obesity and type 2 diabetes. He said there was no commercial reason not to reduce sugar in products and called downsizing the preferred option.

The World Health Organization’s (WHO) recommends that no more than 10% of calories in a person’s diet should come from added sugars, but it is widely anticipated to cut its recommendation to 5% in light of scientific research linking sugar to tooth decay.

“Any fermentable carbohydrate left on your teeth will cause cavities. Some candies are a little stickier, but there’s no indication that there’s any increase in cavities because of the consumption of candy.” said NCA president Graham, who also claimed that current WHO sugar guidelines for sugar were not supported by science.

Jelly Belly: Educating consumers to exercise discipline

 “It’s all a question of discipline,” said Sharon Duncan, vice president of International Business at Jelly Belly.

“But candy is an indulgent treat – the body needs sugar – it’s not something we feel should be demonized and we’re doing everything we can to educate the public.”


Jelly Belly manufactures a sugar-free line for the US that uses Tate & Lyle’s sucralose sweetener Splenda. It plans to introduce the product in Canada and the Middle East, but indicated that demand was not yet great enough to warrant a global rollout.

“It’s a significant segment of the market but the demand for non-sugar-free is significantly higher. It seems a more pronounced request in the Middle East than in other markets. Quite honestly it’s such a small request that we don’t feel obligated to be doing it for the rest of the world.”

Portion control and reseal packs

The NCA said that many of its members were unwilling to sacrifice on taste for a reduced sugar product.

“But one thing we are seeing is more packaging that allows you to save the bar; you can eat half the bar and repackage it,” said Graham.

The NCA has earmarked education as a priority for the year ahead and said it would look to educate consumers on how confections fit into a healthy diet. The organization is also funding research. One recent NCA-backed study found that children could eat candy in moderation without increasing their risk of becoming obese and developing heart problems later in life.

Caroline Scott-Thomas, editor of our sister site FoodNavigator , said in a recent editorial that it was time for the food industry to embrace moderation for added sugars like the rest of us – or risk appearing like the tobacco industry.

Our recent special on sweeteners explored possible alternative sweeteners for confectionery. Click below to read about the most viable alternatives in:
Chocolate 
Sugar confectionery 
Gum

Big Sugar needs to tone down the rhetoric…

Interesting references in the comments.

sugar, health and bigotry

Following an exhaustive review of some 1500 studies on sugar published in the British Medical Journal last year, the authors Te Morenga et al noted that ““any link to body weight was due to overconsumption of calories and was not specific to sugars”. Walter Willett, a professor of nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health, responding to the study, pointed out that “the association between sugar and poor health has remained contentious over the past few decades.” A totally narrow focus on sugar is simply too limiting, as “Many starchy foods, particularly highly processed grains and potato products, have a high glycemic index, raising blood glucose and insulin more rapidly than an equivalent amount of sucrose.” He goes on to say that “Unfortunately, the 2003 WHO report disregarded evidence suggesting that refined grain and potato products have metabolic effects comparable to those of sugar.” It is apparent that the charlatans parading their medical and nutritional backgrounds, greedy for publicity, are quite prepared to attack sugar without reference to solid scientific evidence.

Posted by Arvind Chudasama

http://www.foodnavigator.com/Market-Trends/Smoke-signals-Sugar-industry-needs-to-embrace-moderation-like-the-rest-of-us/

Smoke signals: Sugar industry needs to embrace moderation (like the rest of us)

Sugar is not like tobacco. So why does the sugar industry keep borrowing tobacco industry terms?

Most of us could cut back on the sweet stuff. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends less than 10% of our calories should come from added sugars, but few of us manage that.

According to FAO figures, average global added sugar consumption is about 24 kg a year – equivalent to about 260 calories a day – but in the EU, the figure is closer to 32 kg a year, or an average of nearly 350 calories a day. (And Americans eat nearly half that again in the form of high fructose corn syrup.)

But does sugar warrant the bad press it’s had in recent months? I think not, but industry is not doing itself any favours with its response to genuine concerns about the health issues that come with too much sugar.

Even the most vociferous sugar critic (I’m looking at you, Robert Lustig ) doesn’t suggest that the odd spoonful of sugar is going to kill you. The problem is over-consumption – a big one, considering that most of us are guilty of it. What’s more, looking at average consumption is only helpful to a point; there are some consumers who eat and drink far, far more sugar than could be construed as healthy.

Tobacco, on the other hand, has no known ‘safe’ consumption level .

Cringeworthy, knee-jerk denial?

There has been a flurry of studies linking sugar with poor health outcomes – and every one of them is clear about the problem being large amounts of dietary sugar, rather than any sugar at all. But that’s not what you’d think from reading reactions from industry – and, to be fair, some pretty hysterical headlines from the media.

The industry needs to accept that there is a mounting pile of evidence suggesting that excessive sugar intake is worse for the body than we ever suspected. In particular, excessive consumption has been linked to heart disease and cancers , in some very large observational studies. Sugar users have been quick to point out that these are observational studies, which can prove association but not cause and effect.

“Importantly, demonstrating association is not the same as establishing causation,” said the American Beverage Association, after a major US review linked high sugar intakes with significantly increased risk of death from heart disease. This kind of knee-jerk protectionist reaction makes me cringe.

Where are the double-blind randomised controlled trials? Well, it’s simply not possible to design such a study – at least not without major ethical concerns. Who’s volunteering their children, from birth, for a strictly controlled diet alongside an intravenous solution that may or may not be sugar syrup for the next 50 years, so we can see once and for all which group has the highest rate of heart disease?

And doesn’t this sound familiar? That’s right, the tobacco industry rolled out the same message.

As recently as 2003, the British tobacco firm Imperial used as a defence in court documents:“Cigarette smoking has not been scientifically established as a cause of lung cancer. The cause or causes of lung cancer are unknown.”

The UK government had accepted the cancer-tobacco link in 1957. Thankfully, no one had to volunteer their kids to ‘prove’ that link in a controlled trial.

The middle road

Of course, there are exceptions to blundering PR messages in the sugar sector. It was refreshing to hear AB Sugar’s head of food science saying earlier this week that the company“would not advocate a high sugar diet”. Yes, sugar can have a role to play in making foods and drinks tasty, and it should be okay to say that; we don’t have to live on kale and açaï berries.

I have a message for sugar makers and sugar users: It may not be unhealthy per se, but you need to accept that sugar is not healthy either. Accept that intakes need to continue on a downward trajectory for a while yet. Diversify your portfolio to include zero-calorie sweeteners. Keep cutting sugar.

Then reap the rewards of a healthier population – that can keep eating moderate amounts of sugar for longer – and avoid the PR nightmare of constantly trying to defend a nutritionally questionable product.

Everyone loves sugar. Unlike the tobacco industry, you’ve got nothing to worry about.

5 COMMENTS

sugar, health and bigotry

Following an exhaustive review of some 1500 studies on sugar published in the British Medical Journal last year, the authors Te Morenga et al noted that ““any link to body weight was due to overconsumption of calories and was not specific to sugars”. Walter Willett, a professor of nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health, responding to the study, pointed out that “the association between sugar and poor health has remained contentious over the past few decades.” A totally narrow focus on sugar is simply too limiting, as “Many starchy foods, particularly highly processed grains and potato products, have a high glycemic index, raising blood glucose and insulin more rapidly than an equivalent amount of sucrose.” He goes on to say that “Unfortunately, the 2003 WHO report disregarded evidence suggesting that refined grain and potato products have metabolic effects comparable to those of sugar.” It is apparent that the charlatans parading their medical and nutritional backgrounds, greedy for publicity, are quite prepared to attack sugar without reference to solid scientific evidence.

REPORT ABUSE

Posted by Arvind Chudasama
12 February 2014 | 09h18

Why does the sugar industry keep borrowing tobacco industry terms?

“So why does the sugar industry keep borrowing tobacco industry terms?”

The answer is stunningly obvious – it is responding to tactics by the anti-sugar campaigners that are exact copies of the tactics of anti-tobacco advocates.

REPORT ABUSE

Posted by Stephen
11 February 2014 | 23h02

Meta knee-jerk

“This kind of knee-jerk protectionist reaction makes me cringe”

This is in itself pretty much a knee-jerk reaction. Too often the results of observational studies get completely blown out of proportion. Thus it is absolutely legitimate to point to the difference between correlation and causation. Just pointing at the tobacco industry is also not a very convincing argument because the similarity of the defense strategy of both industries does not tell us anything about the science. Yes, one can’t do double-blind randomised controlled trials but that doesn’t mean we can just skip ahead to the conclusion that suits our opinion.

REPORT ABUSE

Posted by PhD candidate
11 February 2014 | 18h21

Sugar is also addictive

Another key point the sugar industry denies: like tobacco, sugar is addictive. No wonder so many people have difficulty consuming it in moderation, especially when we are overloading kids on sugar and hooking them early.

REPORT ABUSE

Posted by Casey
11 February 2014 | 16h27

Sugar makes the mood go up

Several years ago our MIT research on the mood changes of premenstrual women found sugar along with other carbohydrates significantly improved mood. Our findings were published in leading ob/gyn journals. The reason: consuming sugar and other non-fructose carbohydrates increases serotonin which is inactive during PMS

REPORT ABUSE

Posted by Judith J Wurtman Ph.D
11 February 2014 | 15h16

 

Uber-broccoli

  • two natural additives could prolong shelf life and increase levels of anti-cancer compounds
  • Extremely significant… bring on the broccoli magnate!

http://www.foodnavigator.com/Science-Nutrition/Better-broccoli-Researchers-identify-method-to-increase-shelf-life-and-beneficial-compounds/

Better broccoli: Researchers identify method to increase shelf life and beneficial compounds

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By Nathan Gray+

12-Feb-2014

The combined application of two natural compounds to broccoli could help to increase levels of its suggested anti-cancer compounds while also increasing shelf life, say researchers.

The findings, published in PLoS One, come from research investigating new methods to increase levels of broccoli’s much mooted anti-cancer compounds glucosinolate (GS) and quinone reductase (QR –  an in vitro anti-cancer biomarker) through the use of natural plant based compounds.

However, while researching methods to increase these suggested beneficial compounds, the US-based team also found a way to prolong the vegetable’s shelf life – offering up a natural and inexpensive method to produce broccoli that has even more potential health benefits and won’t spoil so quickly in storage.

“We had figured out ways to increase the anti-cancer activity in broccoli, but the way we figured it out created a situation that would cause the product to deteriorate more rapidly after application,”explained Jack Juvik from the University of Illinois – who led the research. “For fresh-market broccoli that you harvest, it’s not too big a deal, but many of these products have to be shipped, frozen, cut up, and put into other products.”

“If we could figure out a way to prolong the appearance, taste, and flavour long after harvest and maintain the improved health-promoting properties, that’s always of great interest to growers,”he added.

Study details

Juvik and his team first used methyl jasmonate (MeJA), a non-toxic plant-signal compound that is produced naturally in plants to increase the broccoli’s anti-cancer potential, which they sprayed on the broccoli about four days before harvest.

When applied, MeJA initiates a process of gene activity affiliated with the biosynthesis of glucosinolates (GS), which have been identified as potent cancer-preventative agents because of their ability to produce enzymes, such as quinone reductase (QR), that detoxify and eliminate carcinogens from the human body, explained the researchers.

However, during this process, MeJA the team found that also signals a network of genes that lead to plant decay, by inducing the release of ethylene, explained Juvik.

“While we can use MeJA to turn on phytochemicals like the glucosinolates and dramatically increase the abundance of those helpful anti-cancer compounds, MeJA also reduces the shelf life after harvest,” he said.

Therefore the researchers tried using a recently developed compound known as 1-methylcyclopropene (1-MCP), which has been shown to interfere with receptor proteins in the plant that are receptor-sensitive to ethylene.

By applying the compound after harvesting to the same broccoli that had already been treated with MeJA before harvest, the team hoped to procude broccoli with increased levels of GS without the issues relating to shelf life.

Like MeJA, 1-MCP is also a non-toxic compound naturally produced in plants, although Juvik noted that synthetic forms can also be produced.

“It’s very cheap, and it’s about as toxic as salt. It takes very little to elevate all the desirable aspects. It’s volatile and disappears from the product after about 10 hours,” he said – stressing that both the MeJA and 1-MCP sprays required very small amounts of the compounds.

Food security and battling malnutrition

Juvik suggested that use of the new method could make a great impact on important global dilemmas such as food security issues and health-care costs.

“It’s a fairly cheap way to maintain quality, but it provides a preventative approach to all the medical costs associated with degenerative diseases,” he said.

“It’s a way to protect people by reducing the risk they currently have to different diseases. It won’t take it away, but it could prevent further damage,” he said.

As for its impact on impending global food security concerns, Juvik commented that any mechanism which improves people’s health, especially later in life, will benefit food security.

“We need to look at what mechanisms we can use to improve not only food security but the functioning of people later in their life spans,” he said.

“When you look at how much the United States spends on medical costs associated with these diseases, you see it’s a huge burden on the economy, which is the same in all countries. It basically takes away resources that could be used to improve food security,” Juvik opined.“Also, promoting and prolonging food stability with quality after harvest means less waste, which is a big issue in terms of food security.”

Source: PLoS One
Published online ahead of print, doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0077127 
“Methyl jasmonate and 1-Methylcyclopropene treatment effects on quinone reductase inducing activity and post-harvest quality of broccoli”
Authors: Kang Mo Ku, Jeong Hee Choi, Hyoung Seok Kim, Mosbah M. Kushad, Elizabeth H. Jeffery, John A. Juvik