Sean C Lucan and James J DiNicolantonio. How calorie-focused thinking about obesity and related diseases may mislead and harm public health. An alternative. Public Health Nutrition, available on CJO2014. doi:10.1017/S1368980014002559.
http://journals.cambridge.org/download. ... 857fd4885c
Suppversity on Facebook reproduces a thought-provoking graphic that lists notions in the left-hand column and the challenge to them in the right-hand column: https://www.facebook.com/SuppVersity/ph ... =1&theater
Abstract: "The present commentary discusses various problems with the idea that ‘a calorie is a calorie’ and with a primarily quantitative focus on food calories. Instead, the authors argue for a greater qualitative focus on the sources of calories consumed ...and on the metabolic changes that result from consuming foods of different types.
In particular, the authors consider how calorie-focused thinking is inherently biased against high-fat foods, many of which may be protective against obesity and related diseases, and supportive of starchy and sugary replacements, which are likely detrimental....[A] central argument of the paper is that obesity and related diseases are problems due largely to food-induced physiology (e.g. neurohormonal pathways) not addressable through arithmetic dieting (i.e. calorie counting).
The paper considers potential harms of public health initiatives framed around calorie balance sheets – targeting ‘calories in’ and/or ‘calories out’ – that reinforce messages of overeating and inactivity as underlying causes, rather than intermediate effects, of obesity.
Finally, the paper concludes that public health should work primarily to support the consumption of whole foods that help protect against obesity-promoting energy imbalance and metabolic dysfunction and not continue to promote calorie-directed messages that may create and blame victims and possibly exacerbate epidemics of obesity and related diseases."
I think the arguments are familiar to a number of us and there are some interesting discussions. I liked the section about the children and the cheese v. potato chips study (fat/calories v. rapidly absorbable carbohydrates) and what it might reveal about different ways of thinking and responses as well as how they feed into reinforcement loops.
PR Web has a time-limited useful summary: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2014/11/prweb12339572.htm
NB: I think the authors are a tad trite/facile at some points (we're rarely going to be in wholehearted agreement on such topics) and I haven't checked their references to see if they've used them appropriately. I've no reason to think they haven't but I haven't checked.
http://journals.cambridge.org/download. ... 857fd4885c
Suppversity on Facebook reproduces a thought-provoking graphic that lists notions in the left-hand column and the challenge to them in the right-hand column: https://www.facebook.com/SuppVersity/ph ... =1&theater
Abstract: "The present commentary discusses various problems with the idea that ‘a calorie is a calorie’ and with a primarily quantitative focus on food calories. Instead, the authors argue for a greater qualitative focus on the sources of calories consumed ...and on the metabolic changes that result from consuming foods of different types.
In particular, the authors consider how calorie-focused thinking is inherently biased against high-fat foods, many of which may be protective against obesity and related diseases, and supportive of starchy and sugary replacements, which are likely detrimental....[A] central argument of the paper is that obesity and related diseases are problems due largely to food-induced physiology (e.g. neurohormonal pathways) not addressable through arithmetic dieting (i.e. calorie counting).
The paper considers potential harms of public health initiatives framed around calorie balance sheets – targeting ‘calories in’ and/or ‘calories out’ – that reinforce messages of overeating and inactivity as underlying causes, rather than intermediate effects, of obesity.
Finally, the paper concludes that public health should work primarily to support the consumption of whole foods that help protect against obesity-promoting energy imbalance and metabolic dysfunction and not continue to promote calorie-directed messages that may create and blame victims and possibly exacerbate epidemics of obesity and related diseases."
I think the arguments are familiar to a number of us and there are some interesting discussions. I liked the section about the children and the cheese v. potato chips study (fat/calories v. rapidly absorbable carbohydrates) and what it might reveal about different ways of thinking and responses as well as how they feed into reinforcement loops.
PR Web has a time-limited useful summary: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2014/11/prweb12339572.htm
NB: I think the authors are a tad trite/facile at some points (we're rarely going to be in wholehearted agreement on such topics) and I haven't checked their references to see if they've used them appropriately. I've no reason to think they haven't but I haven't checked.