“Organic Foods Not Healthier Than Conventional?” Let’s take a look at this, shall we?

The blogosphere exploded with this report.  I remember when my own brother emailed the article to me.  And then my co-worker mentioned it.  And then a client.  And then more family members, and more friends.

The amazing thing about the internet is the speed at which we can share information.  The other amazing thing is the speed at which we can share bad headlines–misleading headlines.

After watching a documentary about the Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News empire, and the control of media and information (the documentary is called “Out-Foxed” and can be found not Netflix), I started to wonder about this recent news release.  I’d only read the article once–skimmed it, really, because I knew the headline was vapid and misleading.  What I noted was that the “scientists” were from Stanford.

Ok, fine.  Stanford.  We’ve heard of that.  Academia is usually pretty reliable.  Government-sponsored studies, on the other hand, are not.

I wanted to know who was the first to report on the matter, and who owned/operated the source.  No dice (at least at first).  So then I browsed the dozen or so parrot articles from various blogs and news sites.  They all said nearly the same thing: that “Scientists claim that organic isn’t healthier.”

The original headline from the Stanford Health Policy site states “Stanford study shows little evidence of health benefits from organic foods.”  The original paper, found in the Annals of Internal Medicine, is called “Are Organic Foods Safer or Healthier Than Conventional Alternatives?: A Systematic Review.

This is quite a different statement than other headlines which read “Stanford: Organic food not healthier than conventional products.” or “Organic food is no healthier than conventional food.

Needless to say, the public ran wild with this headline, and I want to set the record straight.

“Healthy” is an ambiguous term.  The paper determined, according to the studies referenced, that organic produce was not significantly more “nutritious” than conventional.

Here’s the abstract:

Data Synthesis: 17 studies in humans and 223 studies of nutrient and contaminant levels in foods met inclusion criteria. Only 3 of the human studies examined clinical outcomes, finding no significant differences between populations by food type for allergic outcomes (eczema, wheeze, atopic sensitization) or symptomatic Campylobacter infection. Two studies reported significantly lower urinary pesticide levels among children consuming organic versus conventional diets, but studies of biomarker and nutrient levels in serum, urine, breast milk, and semen in adults did not identify clinically meaningful differences. All estimates of differences in nutrient and contaminant levels in foods were highly heterogeneous except for the estimate for phosphorus; phosphorus levels were significantly higher than in conventional produce, although this difference is not clinically significant. The risk for contamination with detectable pesticide residues was lower among organic than conventional produce (risk difference, 30% [CI, −37% to −23%]), but differences in risk for exceeding maximum allowed limits were small. Escherichia coli contamination risk did not differ between organic and conventional produce. Bacterial contamination of retail chicken and pork was common but unrelated to farming method. However, the risk for isolating bacteria resistant to 3 or more antibiotics was higher in conventional than in organic chicken and pork (risk difference, 33% [CI, 21% to 45%]).

Limitation: Studies were heterogeneous and limited in number, and publication bias may be present.

Conclusion: The published literature lacks strong evidence that organic foods are significantly more nutritious than conventional foods. Consumption of organic foods may reduce exposure to pesticide residues and antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

The senior author of the paper, Dena Bravata, stated, “There isn’t much difference between organic and conventional foods, if you’re an adult and making a decision based solely on your health.”

Interesting conclusion, considering that “there were no long-term studies of health outcomes of people consuming organic versus conventionally produced food; the duration of the studies involving human subjects ranged from two days to two years,” according to original press release.

So why on earth would the senior author, our revered scientist, make such a blanket statement?

Unclear.  Bad presentation, frankly.

Health isn’t something that can be determined over the course of a couple of years.  Health is the reflection of a lifetime of behavior, and what you eat certainly will impact your chances of developing cancer, heart disease, and autoimmune disorders.  The published paper states that indeed pesticide residues are higher in conventional produce, and pesticides do kill people.  Sure, only in high enough concentrations, states our “trustworthy” FDA, which is responsible for determining allowable pesticide levels and other chemical levels for our food, which I would posit were set after intense lobbying efforts from chemical companies.

The unfortunate reality of our food system is simply a reflection of our environment in the past 100 years.  ”Better living through chemistry” is a manta that might be causing more harm than good.  In The 100 Year Lie: How Food And Medicine Are Destroying Your Health, Randall Fitzgerald describes a horrifying and bleak picture of our world: one 100-year inadvertent experiment on human health. Never have we subjected ourselves to such high levels of synthetic chemicals.

“…according to the FDA, we each use nine personal-care products daily, containing about 126 chemical ingredients.” –Randall Fitzgerald.

If you combine all the chemicals from your carpets, your car, your plastic-wrapped, GMO, pedticide/fungicide sprayed food, your body products, your tap water, your swimming pools, your industrial waste, and the like…

…well, that’s a lot of toxic hits your body has to take.

There is no scientific study in the world–and there never will be–that can possibly calculate the possible deleterious synergies of these chemicals.  The only thing we can do is wait and see if it withstands the test of time–of multiple generations.  Heck, infertility is on the rise!  We’ll see if it can.

But I’m not going to be the guinea pig.

If I can control the amount of toxicity that ends up in my body, even a little bit, I’m going to try.  And the foremost thing to consider is what you put directly into your mouth: your food, because it ends up as you.  So even if organic produce is only 30% less likely to contain any pesticide residues, that’s good enough reason for me to eat it.

The rationale that conventional isn’t “that much worse” than organic is fine if you are starving and have to eat something.  But we spend far too little on our food as it is, and far too much on our ailing health.  It’s akin to the feeling of, “I’m already fat, so one extra pound gained won’t really show that much.”  A pound of fat is a pound of fat (fat stores toxicity, by the way).  Pesticides do not belong in your body, even if they’re a vessel for nutrition.

Getting back on topic… that there are no longitudinal studies in the published literature.  It is a terrible mistake to think that we can make a long-term bet on short-term bases.  Again, I am waiting for the test of time.  And that’s a heck of a long time to wait.

Health is affected by a myriad of environmental (and mental/emotional) conditions.  We know unequivocally that organic food production stems from better environmental stewardship.  The negative externalities of conventional food production are so numerous that I cannot begin to elaborate on them here.  The externalities have, arguably, a far greater effect on our health in the long term than on the actual mastication of the foods themselves!

I’d love to be able to download the studies referenced–download them straight to my brain and look at the how the foods were sourced and analyzed.  Because if there’s one thing that most commentators will fail to understand about organic food is this: organic, while certified, is not always created equal.

There’s Big Organic, and there’s little organic, and they are not the same.  Big Organic, in an effort to grab up market share, has done everything in its power to systematize production, just like conventional.  The more systematization, the more homogeneity in samples.  My prediction for Big Organic is that market pressure will continue to errode standards so that the product is, indeed, only marginally better than conventional.  That’s what profit margin is all about.

Little organic, on the other hand, has a tough battle ahead.  Organic vs. conventional is an unfair fight.  It’s a battle of biology vs. chemistry.  Chemistry is easier to control.  Science loves control.

The organic community isn’t the least bit shaken by this announcement.  Science has its limitations.  Again, the limits here are the amount of published data on the subject.

Anyone who eats, grows, and lives organic food knows the intrinsic value of organic that cannot be in any measure eclipsed by the verbal misrepresentation of limited scientific data.

Brief History Of Sugar

My feelings about processed sugar aren’t a surprise to anyone.

I mean, honestly–and I hate to be crude about this–but can you think of one fat person who doesn’t eat sugar?  Like never eats the stuff?

Right, okay.  There are naturally occurring sugars.  I don’t mean those.   I mean granulated sugar.  Table sugar.  Sucrose.  And all it’s little friends, the most famous of which is high fructose corn syrup in America, and probably glucose syrup in Europe.

Of course, there are people with legitimate thyroid problems, or people taking steroids… but the bottom line is, people who avoid sugar tend to be slimmer–and healthier.

So what’s the story with sugar?  How did it become so prevalent?  Below, I offer a brief history:

Refined sugar has only been available on a wide scale for the past 150 years.  Before then, sweetness was obtained from honey and fruit, fresh or dried.  Honey has had its place in human history for at least 15,000 years, obtained when our ancestors would smoke bees from their hives.

Generations before Europeans brought honeybees to North America, indigenous peoples of the continent had been making maple sugar by hollowing out logs and heating rocks to evaporate the sap.

Sugar cane is believed to have originated in Southeast Asia, and ancient writings indicate that people of India made sugar cane into moist crystals as early as 3,000 B.C.  Greek explorers encountered this “honey plant” in 325 B.C. on an expedition into Persia.  By 800 A.D., sugar cane grew in Mediterranean nations.

Christopher Columbus is touted to have inrtoduced sugar cane to the New World, and its value as an export crop was quickly recognized.  Europeans used the native populations as a cheap source of labor before disease and labor overtook them.  Europe then turned its head toward Africa to supply labor for sugar cane cultivation (Amazing, isn’t it?  Not only has sugar had a devastating impact on our health, it has made devastating strikes against our humanity).  While sugar cane did not grow successfully in Europe, price incentives led to the refinement of sugar cane in Europe, at which point, the price of this commodity plummeted.  Sugar transformed from a luxury to a staple.

You Are What You Eat: Karma

(This post is a continuation of yesterday’s post, “You Are What You Eat: Duh.”)

Energy is not always quantifiable.  Nor are all types of energy measurable.  Take karma, for example; most people I’ve talked to espouse some sort of belief in karma, or the power to precipitate one’s own ends.  The Golden Rule is based in it, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”

There are a lot of reasons not to eat meat, or to avoid factory-farmed food, or irresponsibly or unethically produced food.  For the sake of simplicity, I’ll focus on one food: eggs.

Eggs, to most people, are a more benign animal-derived food.  Laying hens don’t invoke images of chickens’ legs breaking under the weight of fat bodies, or chickens being caught by the legs and tossed/crammed into boxes en route to the slaughter house.  Nope.  We think that laying hens get to flap and scratch and move around (albeit, in a crowded house), and pop out eggs once or twice a day when their ready.

Far from it.

Laying hens have the most confined, miserable lives of any factory-farm species.  Exposed to artificial light, crammed into small cages, roosting in their own feces, and often roosting under the feces of other hens, these animals know nothing but stress and idleness.  It is not uncommon for farm workers to miss the carcass of a a dead bird due to the crowding and chaos.

I hate to use the Holocaust as an example, but anyone who has seen Schindler’s List or any other type of media on the subject can easily conjure up an image of human beings stuffed into boxcars and left in them for days or weeks under the most inhuman conditions.  It’s about the same for laying hens–for their entire lives.

The hen will be a product of its environment: environmental, nutritional, and emotional.

The egg is a product of that hen.

You eat that egg, and it becomes part of your nutritional makeup.

You are what you eat; and you are everything that went into that egg.  Every negatively charged emotion, every irresponsible practice, every unethical step of its production.

Some people are too “good” to buy stolen goods–but not if they don’t know those goods were stolen.  Wake up and realize what you’re eating.  I’ll call it a food’s “karmic load.”

It doesn’t stop there, and there’s no easy answer.  Foods you think are responsible, organic, or sustainable often are not.  Big Food works very hard to keep its consumers in the dark.  Start asking questions about how your food was produced, whether anyone was exploited in the process, and if the environment suffered in the process.  I’m not recommending that you do this from the viewpoint of  some touchy-feeling tree-hugging animal-rights enthusiast; I recommend it from a practical standpoint…

You are what you eat. See my related post “What you’re REALLY eating (part 2): What Consumer’s Should Know About Conventional Food.”

Your Body As A Project

I was at Barnes and Noble, scouring the cultural studies section (the goldmine for books about our current food system and food culture), when I stumbled upon a little book called Bodies, by Susie Orbach.  I didn’t have to read the back to know it would sing to me, as my profession deals with helping other people change their bodies.

Orbach makes many very striking observations about culture expressing itself through people’s bodies, and how everything from body language, to tattoos, to fashion, to personal space, to comforting touch is a result of an over-arching body culture.  Today, more than ever before, our bodies are in the forefront of culture (not merely subtly embedded in it).

You see fashion magazines, weight loss shows, billboards, commercials, super make-over shows, models, mannequins, athletes, posters, cosmetics, hair dyes, razors, tweezers, protein powders, skin creams, oh-Jesus-the-list-goes-on-and-on, ad infinitum… everything on the market seems to be some kind of body altering scheme or device.

What happened?  When?  Why did we become so body obsessed?

Her answer (or at least what I surmised): the body was once a tool for production.  We used to wash our own dishes, make our own clothes, dig our own holes, mow our own lawns… and then technology got the best of us.

We’ve all heard this before.  Of course labor-saving technology altered the course of our lives.

But it also altered the course of our body culture.

The body, once a tool for production, is now the object of production. We didn’t seem to have any other choice.

Should that be considered so bad?  What’s wrong with being healthy, trying to look good, trying to stay young?

Nothing, except you must remember that your body is inescapable.  It is wholly and completely personal to you, and experientially inaccessible to anyone else.  Culture is constructed; it is subjective, somewhat arbitrary, and pliable.  The body, however, is not; it is tangible, measurable, and difficult to alter, especially in trying to keep with the speed of culture.  This inability to conform rapidly enough–if at all–inevitably leads to frustration and stress.

Why do you want to alter your body?  Is it a game?  A cultural experiment?  Is there any practical reason for doing so?

I try to teach others that the body is a vessel.  It has to take you from one point to the next, and endure through time.  It has to work for you.  If it is healthy, it will work well, and you will feel well; don’t think for a moment that body chemistry does not affect brain chemistry.  The two are inextricably linked.

Try to go back in time.  Take a technological step backwards.  Put your body back to work.  Feel how useful it can be.  Make it, once again, an object for production.

Watch This Documentary: Food, Inc.

What are you really eating?  Who grew it, and where?  What inputs went into it?  How many people were exploited to bring it to your dinner plate?  What are those ingredients on the back?  What is sustainable agriculture?  What is the face of American industrial food production?

Do you even care?  Maybe not, but if you are a regular reader of this blog, you’ll probably want to take a look.

http://www.foodincmovie.com

Food, Inc., produced by Robert Kenner, featuring interviews with Eric Schlosser (author of Fast Food Nation) and Michael Pollan (author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma, The Botany of Desire, In Defence of Food), was nominated for an Academy Award for “best documentary feature.”  That means it’s pretty good.

This movie will take you from the inside of your supermarket, to the genetically modified soybean fields of middle America, to the twisted multi-national corporate influences over the FDA, to food safety issues and bills, to the countless corn-derived additives in processed food, to worker safety issues and exploitation… to the realization that there’s a lot going on in food production about which we are not very aware.  The current food production system likes it that way.

But don’t feel too depressed… the movie has an upswing.  Sustainable agricultural methods and organic food production are booming.  Organic is the fastest growing section of your supermarket.  You have control.  You vote with your dollars.

Capitalism is not ashamed to follow your dollar, and if you demand better food, the system will deliver it.

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