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Processed Food and Low-Fat Diets
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 »  HPA Articles Home  »  Nutrition  »  Processed Food and Low-Fat Diets
Processed Food and Low-Fat Diets
By Jane Sheppard | Published  07/18/2004 | Nutrition |
Jane Sheppard
Jane Sheppard is the Executive Director of the Holistic Pediatric Association and editor and publisher of Healthy Child Online at www.healthychild.com. Jane is a child health advocate, parent educator, and the author of Super Healthy Kids: Strengthening Your Child's Resistance to Disease, helping to empower parents to make informed choices to protect the health of their children. She lives with her daughter in Northern California.  

View all articles by Jane Sheppard
Processed Food and Low-Fat Diets
With all the conflicting information out there about nutrition, no wonder most of us are confused as to what to feed our children. I was a vegetarian for years and advocated a vegetarian diet as one of the most important ways to increase health. I ate no meat or dairy throughout my entire pregnancy, and had an exceptionally healthy baby. It's important to note, though, that I ate plenty of organic eggs and supplemented my diet with flaxseed oil and natural vitamins and minerals.

I am no longer a strict vegetarian like I used to be. The more I research food and nutrition, the more I'm finding that a moderate amount of naturally produced animal fat and protein can be a healthy part of a whole foods diet. Yes, I did say animal, but the crucial thing here is to stay away from commercial meat and dairy - the kind you find everywhere in all the grocery stores and restaurants.

The meat and dairy I'm talking about comes from grass-fed animals raised humanely on family farms without hormones and antibiotics. The dairy is not pasteurized nor homogenized. It is organic, raw, whole milk from grass-fed cows. The nutritional value of these foods is far different than the commercial factory-farmed meat and dairy that you find in a regular grocery store. In this age of factory farming and high-tech food processing, finding high-quality food is increasingly vital to your family's health.

Children Need Fats

Children must have fat in their diets, since fats are needed for growth and provide the building blocks for cell membranes and hormones. Fats act as carriers for the fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E and K. Without dietary fats, carotenes do not convert to vitamin A and minerals are not absorbed properly. Both cholesterol and saturated fat are essential for growth in babies and children, especially in the development of the brain. In fact, mother's milk contains over 50% of its calories as fat, much of it saturated.

Moderate amounts of healthy fats in the diet do not cause obesity. The real culprits in obesity and a host of chronic diseases are refined sugar, white flour products, and trans-fatty acids in the form of heated refined vegetable oils or hydrogenated oils such as margarine and vegetable shortening.

The Work of Weston Price

One simply cannot advocate a certain way to eat without considering the work of Dr. Weston Price. Dr. Price was a dentist in the early 1900s around the time when processed food was first introduced. He was concerned about the increased, widespread dental disease and poor health of his patients. He noticed they were suffering from more and more chronic degenerative diseases, and the children had a greater number of cavities and more crooked teeth than ever before. He had heard of native people in other countries, untouched by civilization and processed food, with perfect teeth and exceptional health. Dr. Price traveled around the world, visiting and studying these people and their diets. He visited with and examined 14 groups of native people and found on average less than 1% of tooth decay and perfectly straight teeth in all the people he visited. The amazing thing was that not one of these people had ever used a toothbrush. He found no incidence of any of the degenerative diseases that are so widespread in our culture.

The important factor in the traditional diets was that all the foods were natural and unprocessed. There were no preservatives, additives, or colorings, no added sugar (except moderate amounts of natural sweets like honey and maple syrup), and no white flour or canned foods. The milk products were not pasteurized, homogenized, or low fat. The plant foods consumed were grown in mineral-rich, pesticide-free soil and the animals were raised on their natural pasture and not given growth hormones or antibiotics. On his journeys, Dr Price never once found a totally vegetarian culture. They all ate some form of animal fat and protein.

Some of the groups Dr. Price studied lived close to racially similar groups that had abandoned their traditional diets since they had come in contact with traders or missionaries. They began to eat the food available in the newly established stores - sugar, refined grains, canned foods, pasteurized milk and devitalized fats and oils. In these people, he found rampant tooth decay, infectious disease and degenerative conditions. Price concluded that race had nothing to do with these changes. He noted that physical degeneration occurred in children of native parents who had adopted the processed diet; while mixed race children whose parents had consumed traditional foods were healthy and born with wide handsome faces and straight teeth.

Processed Food

The modern convenience foods of today - sugar and white flour products with hydrogenated or rancid vegetable oils and factory-farmed meat and dairy - are key factors in the alarming rate of chronic degenerative diseases. These denatured, processed foods do not provide sufficient nutrients to allow a child's body to reach its full potential of health, nor the proper functioning of the immune, nervous, skeletal, digestive, and reproductive systems. We need to get back to natural, wholesome foods that are prepared and preserved in a way that promotes health, not disease.

Nourishing Traditions

Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats, by Sally Fallon with Mary G. Enig, Ph.D. (NewTrends Publishing, Inc., 1999) derives essential wisdom from the traditional diets of the past and combines this wisdom with the latest independent and accurate scientific research. Sally Fallon discredits the U.S. nutritional guidelines that favor the highly profitable and powerful grain cartels, vegetable oil producers and food processing industry, and she shows that the big trend toward low-fat diets is based on research that is misrepresented or incorrect.

Much more than a cookbook, Nourishing Traditions provides a bounty of solid information about natural, whole foods with a full discussion about healthy fats, carbohydrates, proteins, vitamins and minerals. Most importantly, this book teaches food preparation and preservation techniques that will not devitalize foods like commercial food processing does, but instead enhances the quality and nutritional value of the food. Included is an excellent chapter on feeding babies. The recipes are surprisingly easy, but will definitely take time in the kitchen. Feeding your family a healthy diet is not quick and convenient, but the results you'll see in shining, vibrant children will make it well worth the time and effort.

 

Resources:

The Weston A. Price Foundation www.westonaprice.org

Politically Incorrect: The Neglected Nutritional Research of Dr. Weston Price, DDS, by By Dr. Stephen Byrnes www.powerhealth.net

Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats, by Sally Fallon with Mary G. Enig, Ph.D. (NewTrends Publishing, Inc., 1999)




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