Carvings July 15, 2024

In the news

Increasing rates of colon cancer in young persons

          In less than a generation – from the year 2000 to 2023 – the incidence of colon cancer in persons below the age of 40 has doubled or tripled in some parts of the world. Colon cancer is one of the most common forms of cancer, not far behind number one, lung cancer. Three main causes of this increase have been emerging in the past few years: increased sugar consumption, low intake of fiber, and taurine, an ingredient in energy drinks. All three are associated with disruption of the good germs that inhabit the large intestine, the site of colon cancer.

            A diet that is high in sugar and low in fiber tends to promote the growth of organisms that are linked to increased inflammation, a factor that increases the formation of cancer cells, and in addition increases the risk of heart disease, stroke, diabetes and osteoporosis. Younger persons have a high intake of energy drinks that contain taurine, an ingredient that further promotes the growth of bacteria that promote inflammation. Young persons also have an abysmally low intake of fiber. Instead of the recommended 10 servings a day of fiber-rich plant foods, the average teenager gets less than ONE serving a day, most likely to be iceberg lettuce, a nearly worthless “vegetable.”

            About half of the adolescent population consumes one or more energy drinks every day. This does not bode well for the health of our population by mid-century.

Lifestyle

Are you a food label reader? Two reasons why you should be.

            Some food manufacturers deliberately mislead buyers and they have government’s permission to do so. Perhaps the most egregious example is the deceptive listing of “sugar” to make it look like there’s not as much of it in that product as you might think.

            Food manufacturers are required to list ingredients in order of weight and if they listed the amount of sugar in many foods you might put them back on the shelf. So if they are allowed to list every different type of sugar in pastry, for example, each ingredient would be farther down the list and thus appear to be less detrimental to your health. For example, the nutrient label on a popular supermarket’s almond bear claw coffee cake contains the following TEN different kinds of sugar, each listed separately: sugar, almond paste (which contains sugar), corn syrup, fructose, dextrose (also known as glucose), sucrose, invert sugar (a mixture of glucose and fructose), cornstarch (which breaks down into sugar), maltodextrin and high-fructose corn syrup. Some manufacturers even list glucose and dextrose as separate entities, even though they are one and the same. Except for the relatively small amounts of fructose and glucose found in fruit, none of the other forms were part of the human diet until a couple of hundred years ago. Today the average American takes in approximately one pound of sugar a week – 57 pounds a year. Is it any wonder that more than 80 percent of Americans are either overweight or obese?

            When you pick up a loaf of bread you might think that anything with a brown color is more healthy than white bread. Not necessarily, unless whole wheat or whole grain flour is the only ingredient. The term enriched flour means white flour and some breads have both, suggesting a healthy choice, and there might be much more white flour than brown. On the other hand, the brown color might be due to the addition of molasses, caramel, coffee or cocoa.

            Learn to read labels. It’s not rocket science!