A reader made a comment on one of the posts in which he felt that you can get all your essential nutrients from food. As some people still believe this, which is a myth, I thought that it would be appropriate to post a copy of an article I wrote about seven years ago. The principles still apply today; in fact, even more than ever before.
XTEND-YOUR-LIFE
Issue - 21th August 2002
Malnourished...with fruit and veges? This will shock you!
This is a concept that you may have difficulty in accepting. Nonetheless it is one that I have been ‘preaching’ for years and has now been confirmed by studies showing people in the US, Canada and the UK are amongst the most malnourished in the world. This is the case in spite of obesity reaching epidemic proportions in the US. Malnourishment is without doubt a leading factor in a wide variety of health problems including cancers.
Does this mean that overweight people are eating all the food to the detriment of the rest of the population? Not at all! In fact, obese people figure prominently amongst those people who are malnourished.
I can sense you thinking... ”That’s a crazy statement”. After all, when you think of someone being malnourished your mind flashes to pictures which you have seen on TV of starving children in Africa. How can an overweight person be malnourished? Much easier than you think... please read on and I will explain.
The Problem is in the Food!
A recent analysis of a range of staple foods in Canada including potatoes, tomatoes, bananas, apples, onion, broccoli etc, etc was commissioned by The Globe and Mail and CTV news. The results were predictable to some and a shock to others. Let’s use potatoes as an example. This is what the analysis found:
Over the last 50 years the potato has lost:
•· 100% of its Vitamin A
•· 57% of its Vitamin C and iron
•· 28% of its Calcium
•· 50% of its riboflavin
•· 18% of its thiamine
Of the seven nutrients analyzed only niacin levels had increased. The results were similar for all the 25 fruits and vegetables tested. One of the worst results was from broccoli in which ALL nutrients had declined measurably including niacin with Calcium down 63%.
The Globe and Mail and CTV used comparative figures from government researchers for the years 1951, 1972 and 1999. These earlier figures had been published in various scientific journals in the UK including the British Food journal. Release of this data in the US has been limited to a few alternative health journals.
Tim Lang a professor at the centre for Food Policy in England says as a further example of how our food has been degraded is that you would now have to eat eight oranges today to get the same amount of Vitamin A that your grandparents got from eating just one orange.
What’s gone wrong?
That’s simple to explain. Consumer demand for cheaper and ‘good looking’ food has over recent decades changed traditional farming methods as well as distribution. A farmer used to rotate his crops to suit his land and maximized his yields through natural methods and then supplied his fresh produce to his local market for distribution.
Regrettably that is largely the way of the past. Now, the emphasis is on production, appearance, storability and transportability. Nutritional value of fruits and vegetables is of virtually no concern. As Dr Phil Warman, an agronomist and professor of agricultural sciences at Nova Scotia Agricultural College points out, “crops are bred to produce higher yields, to be resistant to disease and to produce more visually attractive fruits or vegetables, but little or no emphasis is placed on their vitamin and mineral content.”
Unfortunately the situation is getting worse as more Corporations become more vertically integrated and control the entire food process from supplying the seeds through all the production stages, and distribution. Because of these controls some farmers have become little more than modern day serfs with almost no options left to them other than contract to these major conglomerates and conform to their ‘corporate’ farming methods.
Add to this the increasing foothold of GE engineered crops where nutritional value is way down on the priority list and this problem is going to become much, much more serious and will I believe flow on to an elevation of health problems such as cancer and brain disease which may well reach epidemic proportions over the next couple of decades unless the public wake up to what is happening.
Do foods that have low nutritional values play a part in obesity?
Absolutely! I believe this is a major factor in the current epidemic of obesity. If you are lacking in essential nutrients it will have a serious flow-on effect in your body. First of all you will never really feel ‘well’, you will lack energy which means you exercise less, and you will have a tendency to seek out ‘comfort’ foods which generally contain sugars and thus the cycle continues and it gets worse and worse and ultimately ends up in obesity and ill health.
What can be done about this problem?
•· Try to eat organic fruit and vegetables wherever possible.
•· Avoid processed foods! If you think the loss of nutrient value in fresh fruit and vegetables is bad enough, I can assure you that it is nothing compared to the nutritional emptiness of processed foods...and to add insult to injury they are full of trans-fats due to the hydrogenated processing methods that are used.
•· Take a QUALITY multi NUTRIENT supplement such as our Total Balance. A multi vitamin/mineral tablet is not adequate for a number of reasons. The prime one is that most ‘multi vitamin’ supplements use synthetic ingredients with both questionable efficacy and bio-availability and they lack other important nutrients. Unfortunately this is an area in which many consumers are being mislead. It’s a complex subject and as such I may devote a newsletter to this very important subject in the not too distant future.
•· Take a quality Omega 3 fish oil supplement. In this regard you cannot find better than our own Xtend-Life Omega 3 DHA fish oil.
It was interesting to see that even some mainstream physicians are beginning to recognize this problem as evidenced by a recent article in JAMA which advocated people take quality supplements for preventative measures.
In good health,
Warren Matthews
Hi Warren,
Well, I agree with you on parts. For example, by the time an orange has been shipped across the world, sat on the supermarket shelf, and then in your fruit bowl, it may well have lost all it's Vitamin C by the time you come to eat it. That is why I am a big believer in growing your own fruit and veg.
Also, taking more than one supplement a day could increase your chances of prostate cancer. I don't know how true that is. But, everying comes with it's risks. "Moderation" is key. You have to remember that some vitamins are "fat-soluble" so too many can be toxic.
A balanced, varied diet is the best you can do for your body. There are some fruits that go amiss, which people wouldn't include in their typical fruit bowl. Goji berries, acai berries, Pomegranates to name a few. People should definitely include honey in their diet too -- I take a spoonful of Active Manuka honey a day. It may help keep an healthy digestive system -- which I believe an unhealthy digestive system is linked with some skin problems.
My point is this: If you grow your own food in nutrious soil, then I see no reason why you wouldn't be getting all the right vitamins and minerals.
June 14, 2009 | Jason
Hi Jason,
I don’t know where the claim that taking more than one supplement a day could increase your risk of prostate cancer came from. That is a bit of a weird one. There are many hundreds of different ingredients in supplements and a lot of them are necessary in avoiding prostate cancer. I take a lot, I am 62 and my PSA is around 0.5. I don’t have even a slight enlargement of the prostate.
On the other hand I agree with you that moderation is important. This is why we do not advocate or believe in mega doses of any vitamin, mineral or other ingredient. The key is variety and synergy. This can mean you can have a lot of supplements and still be moderate on your intake overall of the nutrients.
You will notice that the fat soluble component to all our formulas is very minimal. Also, unlike other companies we recommend periodic breaks from our Total Balance to ensure maximum efficacy for the lowest possible dose.
It would be great if we could all get our total nutrition needs from our own garden but, even in an ideal situation, there would still be some shortfalls which require a top up.
June 16, 2009 | Warren Matthews
Hi Warren,
Since i bought my mother and my sister TB and Omega 3 both of them have lost some weight which both have welcomed as they are overweight! Does TB help with weight loss?
My sister also has cataracts and eye pressure and she said it has helped with her pain in the eye and the vision a bit.
June 16, 2009 | Mohamed
Hi Mohamed,
Yes, many people find it easier to lose weight on Total Balance and Omega 3. This is because if you have any nutrient deficiencies you are inclined to be more hungry, TB and Omega 3 helps in that area so I am not surprised it they have been getting those benefits.
And, yes the TB will help with pressure behind the eyes and eye health in general.
I remember a couple of years ago getting an email from a customer who had been on Total Balance for about a year and his optician couldn't believe it when he went for his annual check up.as the pressure that he had behind his eyes for 20 years had gone. The customer could only put it down to Total Balance.
June 16, 2009 | Warren Matthews