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| Saturday, May 17, 2008 | |||||||||||||
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Foods And DietsFrom the dawn of civilization, humans have been omnivores.
FOODS AND DIETS The food systems of industrialized countries produce more food than their population can consume. As a result, they compete for consumer food dollars. About 80 percent of every food dollar is spent for processing beyond the food itself, including transportation, packaging, and advertising. Potatoes are cheap; it is much more profitable to sell potato chips. Food companies introduce more than twelve thousand new food products—many of them candy, snacks, soft drinks, and desserts—into the American food supply each year. A typical supermarket stocks more than thirty thousand different food items, and manufacturers market them with about $30 billion worth of annual advertising. Marketing affects dietary choices. Thus, the changing food supply favors consumption of processed foods higher in energy and relatively lower in nutritional value than the basic foods from which they were derived. OPTIMAL DIETS At issue is how to select a health-promoting diet from the array of possible choices. When the leading causes of illness and death were infectious diseases made worse by inadequate diets, health officials advised people to eat more foods from specific groups such as dairy, meat, fruits and vegetables, and grains. As diseases such as coronary heart disease, certain cancers, diabetes, and stroke overtook infectious diseases as the leading causes of death, new recommendations were needed to address these chronic conditions. A large body of biochemical, animal, epidemioligic, and clinical research indicated that diets high in energy, saturated fat, cholesterol, sugar, salt, and alcohol raise risks for multiple chronic diseases, whereas diets high in fruits, vegetables, and whole grains reduce chronic-disease risk factors such as obesity, high blood cholesterol, and high blood pressure. This evidence established the basis for new dietary recommendations. DIETARY GUIDELINES
In the United States, collections of such precepts are published as the Dietary Guidelines for Americans. Issued every five years since 1980, and required by Congress since 1990, the Guidelines document is a policy statement that governs federal nutrition programs and educational activities. The separate guidelines are meant to be followed as a whole, and they define a distinct dietary pattern. When translated into food choices, this pattern derives most daily energy from grains, vegetables, and fruits, with less from meat and dairy foods, and even less from fats and sweets. To help the public translate this advice into healthful food choices, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), with the assistance of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, developed the food guide pyramid. The pyramid suggests that people consume specified numbers of daily servings of certain food groups. Its design indicates that the foods are hierarchical. People are supposed to eat more foods from the base of the pyramid (the plant food groups) but to eat fewer servings from the upper sections (meat, dairy, and processed foods). In contrast to earlier advice to "eat more," this pattern demands "eat less" in order to prevent chronic diseases. DIETARY CONTROVERSIES Economic concerns about guidelines derive from their impact on food producers. Meat and dairy foods together account for about 40 percent of the total fat, 60 percent of the saturated fat, and all of the cholesterol in the food supply, and processed foods are often high in energy, salt, and sugar. Soft drinks, for example, are a leading source of added sugars in American diets. Dietary recommendations to reduce such nutrients necessarily translate into decreased intake of meat, dairy, and processed foods. Since 1977, any federal recommendation to "eat less" has been strongly—and often effectively—protested by interested commodity groups. In 1992, objections of meat producers to the location of their products on the pyramid led the USDA to suspend publication until additional research confirmed its effectiveness. Given such considerations, government advice about healthful diets elicits more attention than might be expected for messages that have not changed in years. Virtually every government or health organization—national and international—that has examined research linking diet to health has issued similar dietary guidelines. This international policy consensus, based on research that is uncertain, incomplete, sometimes contradictory, and endlessly debated, can be explained by the fact that scientific arguments usually focus on the role of single nutrients such as fat, specific fatty acids, cholesterol, fiber, sugar, or sodium. But individuals do not eat single nutrients; they eat food. Evidence for the substantial health benefits of dietary patterns that follow recommendations has remained constant, despite debates over nutritional details. If this point is not widely recognized, it may be because the underlying message to "eat your vegetables" is not headline news, is difficult to follow in societies where meals are increasingly consumed outside the home, and is likely to lead to politically unpopular changes in food patterns. From the standpoint of health, pyramid-like diets make sense. In the light of current societal pressures that encourage people to eat more, not less, the challenge is to find ways to make it easier to follow the pyramid's recommendations.
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