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Mon, 28 Apr 2003 14:00:01 -0500

HSI - Jenny Thompson

Stop The Presses!

 

STOP THE PRESSES!

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

 

April 28, 2003

 

**************************************************************

 

Dear Reader,

 

This just in: frozen vegetables are better for you than

fresh vegetables. That's right - don't waste your money or

risk your health on fresh vegetables. And not only that:

fruit is bad for you. Fruit, it turns out, can give you

Parkinson's disease!

 

And you can file all of the statements above under the

heading of " don't believe everything you read. " The sad

thing is, all of those statements (based on bad science in

one case and poor reporting in another) appeared in the

mainstream press where the casual reader might easily come

away with the impression that whole fresh plant foods are

inferior to processed foods.

 

As you'll see, there's a comical aspect to this sort of

reporting. But at a time when obesity is one of the major

health problems in the U.S., articles like these benefit no

one but the processed food industry.

 

-----------------------------

Knock out punch

-----------------------------

 

" Fruit Linked to Parkinson's Disease. "

 

That was the headline of a recent WebMD article that

appeared on the Microsoft Network. The basis for this

surprising claim comes from a University of Hawaii research

project that examined records from the Honolulu Heart

Program, a large ongoing study that began in 1965 with 8,006

men.

 

The UH research found that subjects who ate fruit or drank a

fruit drink at least once each day were twice as likely to

be diagnosed with Parkinson's disease as those who consumed

lesser amounts of fruit or fruit juices. But the devil is in

the details. Such as the fact that fruit consumption

included frozen fruits. Fresh fruit is a far cry from its

frozen counterpart, which often contains sugar and coloring,

added during processing. But here's my favorite detail:

consumption of canned juices also counted as fruit intake -

including Hawaiian Punch!

 

A study that considers a glass of Hawaiian Punch a fruit

serving - comparing its nutritional value to, say, an apple -

is a deeply flawed study.

 

In the end, the authors of the research admit that the

increased risk of Parkinson's may actually be due to

pesticides, herbicides, or food-borne toxins, " rather than

the fruit itself. "

 

In other words, the more accurate headline for this article

would have been: " Does Fruit Intake Cause Parkinson's? Of

Course Not. That Would Be Insane. "

 

-----------------------------

The freeze out

-----------------------------

 

Meanwhile, the BBC reported last month that a survey by the

Austrian Consumers' Association found that fresh vegetables

that have spent time in transit or in storage may have fewer

nutrients and more harmful nitrates than frozen vegetables.

The BBC headline: " Frozen Veg 'Healthier Than Fresh.' " And

like the WebMD headline, this one should be followed with

something like: " Not Bloody Likely! "

 

Without question, the fresher the vegetable, the higher the

nutrient value. Food that is shipped or stored loses some of

that value daily. The fresh spinach you bought on your

weekend trip to the green grocer will not have the same

nutrients when you eat it on Wednesday that it had when you

bought it on Saturday. Nevertheless, it's still a whole

food - unprocessed and relatively untampered with.

 

Also without question, freezing and processing damages

nutrients. And in some cases (as with the frozen fruits)

it's common to have little extras added along the way. I'll

take my chances with the fresh, thank you. Especially

because (as the article admits) the actual danger of the few

extra nitrates they found in the fresh vegetables is

probably negligible.

 

-----------------------------

Freshen up

-----------------------------

 

The BBC and WebMD articles have one thing in common: their

logic completely falls apart under scrutiny. Maybe they were

trying to come up with shocking leads that would catch the

eye of the reader. Or maybe the reporters still harbor a

secret grudge for the vegetables they were forced to eat as

kids.

 

In any case, they don't do their readers any favors when

they report that the very foods that everyone should be

getting more of in their diets are somehow harmful. Those

who are inclined to embrace any reason to keep eating highly

processed foods will find it too easy to point to those

headlines and say, " Yeah, I'll have a large order of fries

with that. "

 

**************************************************************

 

 

....and another thing

 

I recently sent you an e-Alert about the new medical privacy

regulation ( " Orwell Redux " 4/14/03) and received a number of

e-mails in response to one particular detail. An HSI member

named Carlos sent a question that, in so many words,

represents the others:

 

" I wanted to know if there is a specific statement within

the new privacy regulation that addresses the issue of being

assigned and referring to patients by a new medical ID

number. My wife works for several doctors and apparently has

not read or heard this. "

 

The same week I sent that e-Alert (and the same week that

the new HIPAA regulation went into effect), I paid a visit

to my doctor. I wasn't given information about the new

privacy rules, and I was called in from the waiting room by

my name, not by my medical identification number. And to be

honest, that didn't surprise me. In the e-Alert I sent, I

said, " Once you've received your new medical ID number, the

receptionist may call you in from the waiting room by your

number instead of your name. "

 

In other words, I meant to illustrate just one of the more

superficial ways that protocols in doctors' offices might

change. I didn't mean to imply that this was a strictly

spelled out regulation that would be followed to the letter.

 

Many of the new procedures called for by the medical privacy

regulation won't be noticed by the average person paying a

visit to their doctor - such as the requirement for

encryption software that must be used for the transfer of

private records. And while some of these measures will

protect our privacy, many of them will simply add

unnecessary constraints and paperwork that - according to

government estimates - will cost healthcare providers,

insurance companies, pharmacists, and hospital

administrators as much as $4 billion dollars in order to

comply.

 

As one HSI member (an insurance agent) wrote last week, " Who

needs it? "

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson

Health Sciences Institute

 

**************************************************************

Sources:

" Fruit Linked to Parkinson's Disease " Charlene Laino, WebMD

Medical News, 4/2/03, content.health.msm.com

" Are Frozen Vegetables 'Healthier Than Fresh'? " Dr. Joseph

Mercola, mercola.com

" Frozen Veg 'Healthier Than Fresh' " BBC News, 3/31/03

" Dispel Myths About the Danger of Nitrates " Alex A. Avery,

Center for Global Food Issues, cgfi.org

 

Copyright ©1997-2003 by www.hsibaltimore.com, L.L.C.

The e-Alert may not be posted on commercial sites without

written permission.

 

**************************************************************

Before you hit reply to send us a question or request, please

click here http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/questions.html

 

**************************************************************

 

 

**************************************************************

If you'd like to participate in the HSI Forum, search past

e-Alerts and products or you're an HSI member and would like

to search past articles, visit http://www.hsibaltimore.com

 

**************************************************************

To learn more about HSI, call (203) 699-4416 or visit

http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/HSI/WHSIC313/home.cfm.

 

**************************************************************

 

 

Gettingwell- / Vitamins, Herbs, Aminos, etc.

 

To , e-mail to: Gettingwell-

Or, go to our group site: Gettingwell

 

 

 

The New Search - Faster. Easier. Bingo.

 

 

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