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Filed under: diet, weight loss — Tags: diet, weight loss — Matt Schoeneberger M.S. @ 11:44 am
Fast Food Restaurants: Unjustly singled out as the primary cause of the weight crisis in the U.S.
It is a common belief that the increase in the availability and frequency of eating at fast food restaurants is a major cause of the current bodyweight and health crisis that is occurring in the U.S. For instance, Schlosser states “…it seems that wherever America’s fast food chains go, waistlines start expanding” (p.242) and a recent article by Craig Morgan in a local paper, which spurred me to write this article, stated “Fast foods’ [from fast food restaurants] ill effects on kids are well documented and real” (p.30). I will concede that fast food restaurants do have a number of items that can have a negative affect on health if eaten often. But, they do have a number of items that can fit into a fairly healthy diet and can actually be included in a weight loss diet. For a good rebuttal to Morgan Sperlock’s Super Size Me you should watch the documentary Fat Head by Tom Naughton. There is much more that could be said on these topics but that is outside the premise of this article. The premise of this article is that Fast Food Restaurants, such as McDonalds, Taco Bell, and others should not be singled out as the major players in the weight and health crises.
It is really the whole processed food industry that needs to be discussed if any “blame” is to be given out. You can get plenty of high sugar, processed “crap” in the grocery store, convenience store, movie theaters, and most any place that food is sold! Not to mention that it is likely that a person will eat MORE food when eating at family type restaurants than at a fast food restaurant. (Brownell, p.37) Even then there is still the case to be made for personal responsibility. Nobody is making you drink a 32 oz soda (has about 100 grams of sugar) or eat 4 donuts with a coffee that is loaded with sugar and so on. When it comes to kids, parents have a lot of control of what the kids will eat. The problem is that many parents eat poorly; therefore, they are setting a poor example and passing on these habits to their kids. How does a 5 year old purchase a sugar filled soda, or a tub of ice cream, or a jumbo bag of chips or a super size fry? There is no doubt that a lot of marketing and advertising practices are specifically aimed at modify eating behavior. It is clear that a majority of these ads are for products that are not very good for us, particularly in volume. Anyway, there are many reasons, (biological, psychological and social aspects as well as conflicting recommendations from experts and so forth), why people eat what they do and why they eat the amount they do.
Back to the discussion of whether Fast Food restaurants, specifically, are causing the weight problems. The evidence for this view is rather weak. Dr. Glassner, in The Gospel of Food, does a good job of discussing the validity of this issue as well as other hot topics related to food and health (Glassner, 2007). With respect to bodyweight, he states “only a small number of studies have attempted to test the fast-food hypothesis directly, and they have come up with mixed results” (Glassner, p.183). He discusses the details of a number of these papers. I too read these papers and found that the view that eating at fast food restaurants causes weight problems in a lot of people is not very convincing. For example, a 2001 paper in the International Journal of Obesity stated “Overweight status was not significantly associated with FFFRU [frequency of fast food restaurant use] among males and female. Interestingly, BMI was significantly lower among males who reported using fast food restaurants three or more times per week, compared to those reporting less frequent fast food restaurant use” (French et al, p.1828). Another paper on the subject states “…cross-sectional studies did not find any association between fast food restaurant use and bodyweight or body mass (BMI, in kg/m2) in children” (St-Onge et al, p.1069). This final quote, from the St.Onge et al paper, should be considered when trying to pin the blame on fast food restaurants:
Although longitudinal data are not available concerning increased fast food consumption and body weight changes, one can propose that increases in body weight and increases in fast food and snack consumption are concurrent events that potentially are causally related. However, any reference to causal relations should be made with extreme caution, given that no data are currently available to show such a relation (St-Onge et al, p.1069, emphasis added).
However, the situation is certainly not a bed of roses. For instance, one of the papers previously mentioned stated “fast food restaurant use was associated with greater intakes of soft drinks and lower intakes of fruit, vegetables, grains, and milk” (St-Onge et al, p.1069). Another paper had a similar conclusion “FFFRU is of concern because of its association with lower calcium intake and higher soft drink [non-diet] consumption” (French et al, p.1831). It is more likely that the increase in soft drink consumption, which is available everywhere, is playing a more significant role in the weight and health problems than does the eating at fast food restaurants (St-Onge et al; Bray et al; DiMeglio et al). So it is clear that eating at these types of establishments can negatively affect the quality of the diet. This would certainly not be beneficial for overall well-being. Again, poor eating habits occurs everywhere and poor quality foods, such as soda and deep-fried anything, are available everywhere.
It does seem clear that singling out fast food restaurants as a major cause of our current weight and health problems is not well supported and is a very big oversimplification of the problem. There are some good and bad aspects to this particular vehicle of food delivery. There are ways to dine at these facilities so that is fairly healthy. In fact, as Tom Naugton displayed in his documentary, you can actually lose weight while eating at these types of establishments daily. I will end with a fitting quote from Dr. Glassner “I come neither to praise fast food nor to bury it, only to question its easy portrayal as the root of all evil” (p.146). To make a truly educated decision, I would encourage everyone to start out by reading The Gospel of Food, Fast Food Nation, The Omnivores Dilemma, and watch Tom Naugton’s funny and informative documentary Fat Head.
References:
Bray, G. et al (2004). Consumption of high-fructose corn syrup in beverages may play a role in the epidemic of obesity. Am J Clin Nutr, 79: 537-543.
Brownell, K. & Horgen, KB. (2004). Food Fight: The inside story of the food industry, America’s obesity crisis, and what we can do about it. Chicago. Contemporary Books.
DiMeglio, DP. et al (2000). Liquid versus solid carbohydrates: effect on food intake and bodyweight. Inter J Obesity, 24: 794-800
French, SA. et al (2001). Fast food restaurant use among adolescents: associations with nutrient intake, food choices and behavioral and psychosocial variables. Inter J Obesity, 25: 1823-1833.
Glassner, B. (2007). The gospel of food. New York. Harper Collins.
Morgan, C. (2009, Dec, 2). Unhealthful fast food won’t be an option for my kids. Gilbert News.
Naughton, T. (2009) Fat Head. Morningstar Entertainiment.
Schlosser, E. (2002). Fast food nation: The dark side of the All-American meal. New York. Perennial.
St-Onge, MP. et al. (2003). Changes in childhood food consumption patterns: a cause for concern in light of increasing body weights. Am J Clin Nutr; 78: 1068-1073.
Filed under: diet, fat loss — Tags: diet, weight loss — Jeff Thiboutot M.S. @ 11:39 am
Yogurt, whey protein and a Clif bar: Another quick and fairly low carb meal.
Here is another quick meal; 1 cup organic whole milk plain yogurt (Trader Joes brand), 1 scoop of whey protein (Jay Robb brand), ½ of a blueberry crisp Clif bar adn 1tbs flax seed meal (I blended the protein powder and flax meal with the yogurt, and broke up the bar (1/2 the bar) into small pieces and through it into the mix). I had this for lunch today.
Here is the meal breakdown. It is a bit on the higher side for carbs, but for a low-carb, non-ketogenic eating style it should fit in fine.
| Food |
Protein(g) |
Net Carbs(g) |
Fats(g) |
Calories |
| ½ Clif bar (blueberry crisp) |
4.5 |
19 |
2.5 |
120 |
| 1 cup organic whole milk yogurt (Trader Joes) |
12 |
14 |
7 |
170 |
| 1 scoop whey protein (Jay Robb) |
25 |
1 |
0 |
110 |
| 1 tbs flax seed meal (Health from the Sun) |
1 |
0 |
3 |
37 |
|
Meal total |
42.5 |
34 |
12.5 |
437 |
An additional note about convenience; you could have made an additional serving of this (using the other ½ of the bar) and had it for another meal in the same day, dinner for instance. Having this twice in one day would give you about 68 grams of carbs. As long as your other meal (if you had one) is a low carb meal, say less than 10 grams (i.e., a big piece of grilled salmon and a big salad or a few cups of steamed broccoli with butter), your daily carb total would probably be in a good weight loss range. Having the same meal twice in one day is fine and it can make food preparation easier.
Filed under: fat loss, nutrition, weight loss — Tags: diet, weight loss — Jeff Thiboutot M.S. @ 5:07 pm
Grass-fed animals: Why what animals eat affects your health.
We mention in S.P.E.E.D. that there are weight loss and health benefits from ingesting a certain amount of omega 3 fats. However, we did not mention that grass fed cows can be a good source of omega 3’s. Grass-fed cows and their resulting milk and meat will also have more CLA (more about this nutrient in a latter post), vitamin A & E, and less overall fat per serving (not that we are advocating a low fat diet) than conventional (grain-fed) cows. There are also health benefits for the cows and some environmental benefits as well.
You can get grass-fed beef and dairy at some health food stores. There are also a number of places on the web. One good source that we have used for grass fed meats is U.S. Wellness Meats. A good directory for finding grass-fed animals, as well as the benefits of grass-feeding, is eatwild.com. The one drawback is that this type of meat and milk is more expensive. But, this is one place to spend a little extra if you can because the overall benefits to your health seem worth it. In fact, a recent review of this subject concluded:
“The scientific literature supports the hypothesis that grassfed beef contains higher proportions of healthful lipids [fats] and antioxidants important to human health as compared to conventional [grain-fed] beef.” (Abbott et al)
If you want to learn more about grass-fed animals see the reference paper listed as well as the www.eatwild.com website.
Reference:
Abbott, A. et al (n.d). Enhanced nutrient content of grass fed beef : Justification for health benefit label claim. Retrieved on October 1, 2009 from http://www.csuchico.edu/agr/grsfdbef/pdf/amberabbottgrassfedbeef.pdf
Filed under: diet, fat loss, weight loss — Tags: diet, nutrition, weight loss — Jeff Thiboutot M.S. @ 3:34 pm
Trader Joe’s organic cottage cheese and a LARA bar: A quick and fairly low carb meal.
We mentioned a similar meal in the book, but because I (jeff) had this for lunch today, I though I would pass it along for a meal idea. You can eat healthy and low-carb with little effort or time. The LARA bars taste very good. My favorite flavors are the apple pie and the cinnamon roll. They are very simple bars; nuts, seeds, a little dried fruit and some spices. You can check them out @ http://www.larabar.com/ or pick some up @ Trader Joes or other health foods stores.
Here is the meal breakdown.
| Food |
Protein(g) |
Net Carbs(g) |
Fats(g) |
Calories |
| 1 LARA bar (apple pie) |
4 |
19 |
10 |
180 |
| 1 cup low fat cottage cheese (Trader Joes organic) |
26 |
8 |
5 |
200 |
| 1 tbs TJ’s Tuscon Italian |
0 |
2 |
3 |
40 |
|
Meal totals |
30 |
29 |
18 |
420 |
HCG for Weight Loss – Practitioners Should Know Better
Today, I got an email from a practitioner I respect announcing the use of HCG in their facility. The message touted all the usual HCG nonsense; re-setting the hypothalamus, three kinds of fat… all the stuff straight out of Simeons’ and Trudeau’s books. Here’s a quote from the email:
“The third type of fat is the abnormal Secure Fat Reserve. This third fat is also a reserve of fuel, but unlike the normal, readily accessible fat reserves spread throughout the body, this fat is located in what is called the “problem areas” and is virtually inaccessible.”
Fat around these areas is not virtually inaccessible. They just tend to be the places the body preferentially stores fat, and this is regulated by the difference in hormones between sexes.(Power) Continue losing weight and it will come off these areas eventually.
What about the fact that stored fat in the hip area is correlated with good health? Yup, that’s right. Here’s an excerpt from our upcoming weight loss ebook:
“…larger hip and thigh measurements, commonly due to subcutaneous fat, are negatively associated with increased health risks. (Janssen) This means your risk goes down.”
One more thing. Promoters of the HCG diet commonly take text straight from Simeons’ book, written far too long ago. Can they at least update it with the current vocabulary? Maybe mention visceral fat and subcutaneous fat instead of structural fat and the fat reserve? The HCG diet and nearly everything I’ve seen written that promotes it is just plain nonsense.
Please, read our HCG report and pass it on to as many people as possible.
Hey! HCG Promoters! Look Here! This is what real research looks like:
Power MP, Schulkin J. Sex differences in fat storage, fat metabolism, and the health risks from
obesity: possible evolutionary origins. Br J Nutr. 2008;99:931–940
Janssen, I. et al (2004). Waist circumference and not body mass index explains obesity-related health risks. American J Clinical Nutrition; 79: 379-384.
Filed under: weight loss — Tags: diet, fat loss, HCG, HCG diet, weight loss — Matt Schoeneberger M.S. @ 3:05 pm
As you all know, we’re getting closer and closer to being finished with this weight loss ebook. It’s getting more exciting each day. We apologize for our infrequent posting lately, we’ve just been pouring our energy into the book itself rather than this blog and our L.E.A.N. Wellness Letter. We thank you for your patience and we hope you find the posts we have been making useful and intriguing.
Now to the point. We’ve nailed down most of the original myths we came up with for the book, and we’ve thought of some more issues we’d like to tackle. Two of them are the hCG diet (Simeons Protocol) and the whole B12 shot fad. We’re digging into the science and evidence for these right now. But, we wanted to ask you…
What controversial weight loss topics do you want us to investigate? Are there any diet or exercise programs for which you would like to see the evidence (or lack thereof)?
Reply with a comment and let us know.
Filed under: Exercise, Research, body composition, diet, fat loss, nutrition, weight loss — Tags: diet, Exercise, nutrition, S.P.E.E.D. Weight Loss — Matt Schoeneberger M.S. @ 2:44 pm
Our trainer Wendy submitted this recipe.
1/2 cup pecans
1/8 cup almonds – sliced
1/8 cup ground flax seeds
8 egg whites
1 tbls vanilla
2 tbls agave
2 scoops whey protein
1/8 cup cinnamon
Blend all in blender for about 3 minutes. Pour onto griddle (med. high heat). Blend between each batch.
I had these a few weeks back when Wendy brought some in and they were amazing. If I try making them, I’d use whole eggs and cut the number in half, maybe.
Chime in and let us know what they’re like!
A recipe sent in by a L.E.A.N. client, as submitted to us:
Mexican Shrimp
Boil about a 1 or 2 lbs of fresh Black Tiger Shrimp (best from Costco), just until they turn pink, drain and add to bowl of ingredients below.
In separate bowl add:
Fresh garlic 5-10 cloves through press
Cilantro, ½ to 1 bundle (depending on how much you like)
Juice of 5 to 7 limes (depending on how juicy they are)
Sea salt and course black pepper to taste
Onion powder to taste
Chili infused Olive Oil for spice
Diced Avocado
Peeled, diced cucumber
***radishes would be good to add also
Mix together and serve, enjoy!!
Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: diet, fat loss, health, Low-carb, nutrition, weight loss — Matt Schoeneberger M.S. @ 3:58 pm