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In Defense of Food Page 9


  The Abo­ri­gi­nes di­vi­ded the­ir se­ven-we­ek stay in the bush bet­we­en a co­as­tal and an in­land lo­ca­ti­on. Whi­le on the co­ast, the­ir di­et con­sis­ted ma­inly of se­afo­od, sup­ple­men­ted by birds, kan­ga­roo, and witc­het­ty grubs, the fatty lar­vae of a lo­cal in­sect. Ho­ping to find mo­re plant fo­ods, the gro­up mo­ved in­land af­ter two we­eks, set­tling at a ri­ver­si­de lo­ca­ti­on. He­re, in ad­di­ti­on to fresh­wa­ter fish and shel­lfish, the di­et ex­pan­ded to inc­lu­de turt­le, cro­co­di­le, birds, kan­ga­roo, yams, figs, and bush ho­ney. The cont­rast bet­we­en this hun­ter-gat­he­rer fa­re and the­ir pre­vi­o­us di­et was stark: O’Dea re­ports that pri­or to the ex­pe­ri­ment “the ma­in di­etary com­po­nents in the ur­ban set­ting we­re flo­ur, su­gar, ri­ce, car­bo­na­ted drinks, al­co­ho­lic be­ve­ra­ges (be­er and port), pow­de­red milk, che­ap fatty me­at, po­ta­to­es, oni­ons, and va­ri­ab­le cont­ri­bu­ti­ons of ot­her fresh fru­its and ve­ge­tab­les”-the lo­cal ver­si­on of the Wes­tern di­et.

  After se­ven we­eks in the bush, O’Dea drew blo­od from the Abo­ri­gi­nes and fo­und stri­king imp­ro­ve­ments in vir­tu­al­ly every me­asu­re of the­ir he­alth. All had lost we­ight (an ave­ra­ge of 17.9 po­unds) and se­en the­ir blo­od pres­su­re drop. The­ir trigly­ce­ri­de le­vels had fal­len in­to the nor­mal ran­ge. The pro­por­ti­on of ome­ga-3 fatty acids in the­ir tis­su­es had inc­re­ased dra­ma­ti­cal­ly. “In sum­mary,” O’Dea conc­lu­ded, “all of the me­ta­bo­lic ab­nor­ma­li­ti­es of type II di­abe­tes we­re eit­her gre­atly imp­ro­ved (glu­co­se to­le­ran­ce, in­su­lin res­pon­se to glu­co­se) or comp­le­tely nor­ma­li­zed (plas­ma li­pids) in a gro­up of di­abe­tic Abo­ri­gi­nes by a re­la­ti­vely short (se­ven we­ek) re­ver­si­on to tra­di­ti­onal hun­ter-gat­he­rer li­festy­le.”

  O’Dea do­es not re­port what hap­pe­ned next, whet­her the Abo­ri­gi­nes elec­ted to re­ma­in in the bush or re­turn to ci­vi­li­za­ti­on, but it’s sa­fe to as­su­me that if they did re­turn to the­ir Wes­tern li­festy­les, the­ir he­alth prob­lems re­tur­ned too. We ha­ve known for a cen­tury now that the­re is a comp­lex of so-cal­led Wes­tern di­se­ases-inclu­ding obe­sity, di­abe­tes, car­di­ovas­cu­lar di­se­ase, hyper­ten­si­on, and a spe­ci­fic set of di­et-re­la­ted can­cers-that be­gin al­most in­va­ri­ably to ap­pe­ar so­on af­ter a pe­op­le aban­dons its tra­di­ti­onal di­et and way of li­fe. What we did not know be­fo­re O’Dea to­ok her Abo­ri­gi­nes back to the bush (and sin­ce she did, a se­ri­es of com­pa­rab­le ex­pe­ri­ments ha­ve pro­du­ced si­mi­lar re­sults in Na­ti­ve Ame­ri­cans and na­ti­ve Ha­wa­i­i­ans) was that so­me of the most de­le­te­ri­o­us ef­fects of the Wes­tern di­et co­uld be so qu­ickly re­ver­sed. It ap­pe­ars that, at le­ast to an ex­tent, we can re­wind the ta­pe of the nut­ri­ti­on tran­si­ti­on and un­do so­me of its da­ma­ge. The imp­li­ca­ti­ons for our own he­alth are po­ten­ti­al­ly sig­ni­fi­cant.*

  The ge­ni­us of Ke­rin O’Dea’s ex­pe­ri­ment was its simp­li­city-and her re­fu­sal to let her­self be drawn in­to the sci­en­ti­fic laby­rinth of nut­ri­ti­onism. She did not at­tempt to pick out from the comp­le­xity of the di­et (eit­her be­fo­re or af­ter the ex­pe­ri­ment) which one nut­ri­ent might exp­la­in the re­sults-whet­her it was the low-fat di­et, or the ab­sen­ce of re­fi­ned car­bohyd­ra­tes, or the re­duc­ti­on in to­tal ca­lo­ri­es that was res­pon­sib­le for the imp­ro­ve­ment in the gro­up’s he­alth. Her fo­cus ins­te­ad was on lar­ger di­etary pat­terns, and whi­le this ap­pro­ach has its li­mi­ta­ti­ons (we can’t ext­ract from such a study pre­ci­sely which com­po­nent of the Wes­tern di­et we ne­ed to adj­ust in or­der to blunt its worst ef­fects), it has the gre­at vir­tue of es­ca­ping the wel­ter of conf­lic­ting the­ori­es abo­ut spe­ci­fic nut­ri­ents and re­tur­ning our at­ten­ti­on to mo­re fun­da­men­tal qu­es­ti­ons abo­ut the links bet­we­en di­et and he­alth.

  Li­ke this one: To what ex­tent are we all Abo­ri­gi­nes? When you con­si­der that two thirds of Ame­ri­cans are over­we­ight or obe­se, that fully a qu­ar­ter of us ha­ve me­ta­bo­lic syndro­me, that fifty-fo­ur mil­li­on ha­ve pre di­abe­tes, and that the in­ci­den­ce of type 2 di­abe­tes has ri­sen 5 per­cent an­nu­al­ly sin­ce 1990, go­ing from 4 per­cent to 7.7 per­cent of the adult po­pu­la­ti­on (that’s mo­re than twenty mil­li­on Ame­ri­cans), the qu­es­ti­on is not ne­arly as silly as it so­unds.

  TWO - THE ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM

  I n the end, even the big­gest, most am­bi­ti­o­us, and wi­dely re­por­ted stu­di­es of di­et and he­alth-the Nur­ses’ He­alth Study, the Wo­men’s He­alth Ini­ti­ati­ve, and ne­arly all the ot­hers-le­ave un­dis­tur­bed the ma­in fe­atu­res of the Wes­tern di­et: lots of pro­ces­sed fo­ods and me­at, lots of ad­ded fat and su­gar, lots of everyt­hing ex­cept fru­its, ve­ge­tab­les, and who­le gra­ins. In ke­eping with the nut­ri­ti­onism pa­ra­digm and the li­mits of re­duc­ti­onist sci­en­ce, most nut­ri­ti­on re­se­arc­hers fid­dle with sing­le nut­ri­ents as best they can, but the po­pu­la­ti­ons they rec­ru­it and study are typi­cal Ame­ri­can eaters do­ing what typi­cal Ame­ri­can eaters do: trying to eat a lit­tle less of this nut­ri­ent, a lit­tle mo­re of that one, de­pen­ding on the la­test thin­king. But the ove­rall di­etary pat­tern is tre­ated as a mo­re or less unal­te­rab­le gi­ven. Which is why it pro­bably sho­uld not surp­ri­se us that the fin­dings of such re­se­arch sho­uld be so mo­dest, equ­ivo­cal, and con­fu­sing.

  But what abo­ut the elep­hant in the ro­om-this pat­tern of eating that we call the Wes­tern di­et? In the midst of our de­epe­ning con­fu­si­on abo­ut nut­ri­ti­on, it might be use­ful to step back and ga­ze upon it-re­vi­ew what we do know abo­ut the Wes­tern di­et and its ef­fects on our he­alth. What we know is that pe­op­le who eat the way we do in the West to­day suf­fer subs­tan­ti­al­ly hig­her ra­tes of can­cer, car­di­ovas­cu­lar di­se­ases, di­abe­tes, and obe­sity than pe­op­le eating any num­ber of dif­fe­rent tra­di­ti­onal di­ets. We al­so know that when pe­op­le co­me to the West and adopt our way of eating, the­se di­se­ases so­on fol­low, and of­ten, as in the ca­se of the Abo­ri­gi­nes and ot­her na­ti­ve po­pu­la­ti­ons, in a par­ti­cu­larly vi­ru­lent form.

  The out­li­nes of this story-the story of the so-cal­led Wes­tern di­se­ases and the­ir link to the Wes­tern di­et-we first le­ar­ned in the early de­ca­des of the twen­ti­eth cen­tury. That was when a hand­ful of da­unt­less Euro­pe­an and Ame­ri­can me­di­cal pro­fes­si­onals wor­king with a wi­de va­ri­ety of na­ti­ve po­pu­la­ti­ons aro­und the world be­gan no­ti­cing the al­most comp­le­te ab­sen­ce of the chro­nic di­se­ases that had re­cently be­co­me com­monp­la­ce in the West. Al­bert Schwe­it­zer and De­nis P. Bur­kitt in Af­ri­ca, Ro­bert McCar­ri­son in In­dia, Sa­mu­el Hut­ton among the Es­ki­mos in Lab­ra­dor, the anth­ro­po­lo­gist Ales? Hrdlic­ka among Na­ti­ve Ame­ri­cans, and the den­tist Wes­ton A. Pri­ce among a do­zen dif­fe­rent gro­ups all over the world (inclu­ding Pe­ru­vi­an In­di­ans, Aust­ra­li­an Abo­ri­gi­nes, and Swiss mo­un­ta­ine­ers) sent back much the sa­me news. They com­pi­led lists, many of which ap­pe­ared in me­di­cal jo­ur­nals, of the com­mon di­se­ases they’d be­en hard pres­sed to find in the na­ti­ve po­pu­la­ti­ons they had tre­ated or stu­di­ed: lit­tle to no he­art di­se­ase, di­abe­tes, can­cer, obe­sity, hyper­ten­si­on, or stro­ke; no ap­pen­di­ci­tis, di­ver­ti­cu­li­tis, mal­for­med den­tal arc­hes, or to­oth de­cay; no va­ri­co­se ve­ins, ul­cers, or he­mor­rho­ids. The­se di­sor­ders sud­denly ap­pe­ared to the­se re­se­arc­hers un­der a stri­king new light, as sug­ges­ted by the na­me
gi­ven to them by the Bri­tish doc­tor De­nis Bur­kitt, who wor­ked in Af­ri­ca du­ring World War II: He pro­po­sed that we call them Wes­tern di­se­ases. The imp­li­ca­ti­on was that the­se very dif­fe­rent sorts of di­se­ases we­re so­me­how lin­ked and might even ha­ve a com­mon ca­use.

  Se­ve­ral of the­se re­se­arc­hers we­re on hand to wit­ness the ar­ri­val of the Wes­tern di­se­ases in iso­la­ted po­pu­la­ti­ons, typi­cal­ly, as Al­bert Schwe­it­zer wro­te, among “na­ti­ves li­ving mo­re and mo­re af­ter the man­ner of the whi­tes.” So­me no­ted that the Wes­tern di­se­ases fol­lo­wed clo­sely on the he­els of the ar­ri­val of Wes­tern fo­ods, par­ti­cu­larly re­fi­ned flo­ur and su­gar and ot­her kinds of “sto­re fo­od.” They ob­ser­ved too that when one Wes­tern di­se­ase ar­ri­ved on the sce­ne, so did most of the ot­hers, and of­ten in the sa­me or­der: obe­sity fol­lo­wed by type 2 di­abe­tes fol­lo­wed by hyper­ten­si­on and stro­ke fol­lo­wed by he­art di­se­ase.

  In the ye­ars be­fo­re World War II the me­di­cal world en­ter­ta­ined a li­vely con­ver­sa­ti­on on the su­bj­ect of the Wes­tern di­se­ases and what the­ir ri­se might say abo­ut our inc­re­asingly in­dust­ri­ali­zed way of li­fe. The con­cept’s pi­one­ers be­li­eved the­re we­re no­vel­ti­es in the mo­dern di­et to which na­ti­ve po­pu­la­ti­ons we­re po­orly adap­ted, tho­ugh they did not ne­ces­sa­rily ag­ree on exactly which no­velty might be the culp­rit. Bur­kitt, for examp­le, be­li­eved it was the lack of fi­ber in the mo­dern di­et whi­le McCar­ri­son, a Bri­tish army doc­tor, fo­cu­sed on re­fi­ned car­bohyd­ra­tes whi­le still ot­hers bla­med me­at eating and sa­tu­ra­ted fat or, in Pri­ce’s ca­se, the ad­vent of pro­ces­sed fo­od and in­dust­ri­al­ly grown crops de­fi­ci­ent in vi­ta­mins and mi­ne­rals.

  Not ever­yo­ne, tho­ugh, bo­ught in­to the idea that chro­nic di­se­ase was a by-pro­duct of Wes­tern li­festy­les and, in par­ti­cu­lar, that the in­dust­ri­ali­za­ti­on of our fo­od was ta­king a toll on our he­alth. One obj­ec­ti­on to the the­ory was ge­ne­tic: Dif­fe­rent ra­ces we­re apt to be sus­cep­tib­le to dif­fe­rent di­se­ases went the ar­gu­ment; whi­te pe­op­le we­re dis­po­sed to he­art at­tacks, brown pe­op­le to things li­ke lep­rosy. Yet as Bur­kitt and ot­hers po­in­ted out, blacks li­ving in Ame­ri­ca suf­fe­red from the sa­me chro­nic di­se­ases as whi­tes li­ving the­re. Simply by mo­ving to pla­ces li­ke Ame­ri­ca, im­mig­rants from na­ti­ons with low ra­tes of chro­nic di­se­ase se­emed to qu­ickly ac­qu­ire them.

  The ot­her obj­ec­ti­on to the con­cept of Wes­tern di­se­ases, one you so­me­ti­mes still he­ar, was de­mog­rap­hic. The re­ason we see so much chro­nic di­se­ase in the West is be­ca­use the­se are il­lnes­ses that ap­pe­ar re­la­ti­vely la­te in li­fe, and with the con­qu­est of in­fec­ti­o­us di­se­ase early in the twen­ti­eth cen­tury, we’re simply li­ving long eno­ugh to get them. In this vi­ew, chro­nic di­se­ase is the ine­vi­tab­le pri­ce of a long li­fe. But whi­le it is true that our li­fe ex­pec­tancy has imp­ro­ved dra­ma­ti­cal­ly sin­ce 1900 (ri­sing in the Uni­ted Sta­tes from forty-ni­ne to se­venty-se­ven ye­ars), most of that ga­in is at­tri­bu­ted to the fact that mo­re of us are sur­vi­ving in­fancy and child­ho­od; the li­fe ex­pec­tancy of a sixty-fi­ve-ye­ar-old in 1900 was only abo­ut six ye­ars less than that of a sixty-fi­ve-ye­ar-old li­ving to­day.* When you adj­ust for age, ra­tes of chro­nic di­se­ases li­ke can­cer and type 2 di­abe­tes are con­si­de­rably hig­her to­day than they we­re in 1900. That is, the chan­ces that a sixty-or se­venty-ye­ar-old suf­fers from can­cer or type 2 di­abe­tes are far gre­ater to­day than they we­re a cen­tury ago. (The sa­me may well be true of he­art di­se­ase, but be­ca­use he­art di­se­ase sta­tis­tics from 1900 are so sketchy, we can’t say for su­re.)

  Can­cer and he­art di­se­ase and so many of the ot­her Wes­tern di­se­ases are by now such an ac­cep­ted part of mo­dern li­fe that it’s hard for us to be­li­eve this wasn’t al­ways or even ne­ces­sa­rily the ca­se. The­se days most of us think of chro­nic di­se­ases as be­ing a lit­tle li­ke the we­at­her-one of li­fe’s gi­vens-and so co­unt our­sel­ves lucky that, com­pa­red to the we­at­her, the di­se­ases at le­ast are mo­re ame­nab­le to in­ter­ven­ti­on by mo­dern me­di­ci­ne. We think of them strictly in me­di­cal rat­her than his­to­ri­cal, much less evo­lu­ti­onary, terms. But du­ring the de­ca­des be­fo­re World War II, when the in­dust­ri­ali­za­ti­on of so many as­pects of our li­ves was still fa­irly fresh, the pri­ce of “prog­ress,” es­pe­ci­al­ly to our he­alth, se­emed mo­re ob­vi­o­us to many pe­op­le and the­re­fo­re mo­re open to qu­es­ti­on.

  One of the most int­re­pid qu­es­ti­oners of the pre­war pe­ri­od was Wes­ton A. Pri­ce, a Ca­na­di­an-born den­tist, of all things, who be­ca­me pre­oc­cu­pi­ed with one of tho­se gla­ring qu­es­ti­ons we can’t even see any­mo­re. Much li­ke he­art di­se­ase, chro­nic prob­lems of the te­eth are by now part of the fur­ni­tu­re of mo­dern li­fe. But if you stop to think abo­ut it, it is odd that ever­yo­ne sho­uld ne­ed a den­tist and that so many of us sho­uld ne­ed bra­ces, ro­ot ca­nals, ext­rac­ti­ons of wis­dom te­eth, and all the ot­her ro­uti­ne pro­ce­du­res of mo­dern mo­uth ma­in­te­nan­ce. Co­uld the ne­ed for so much re­me­di­al work on a body part cru­ci­al­ly in­vol­ved in an ac­ti­vity as cri­ti­cal to our sur­vi­val as eating ref­lect a de­sign de­fect in the hu­man body, so­me sort of over­sight of na­tu­ral se­lec­ti­on? This se­ems un­li­kely. Wes­ton Pri­ce, who was born in 1870 in a far­ming com­mu­nity so­uth of Ot­ta­wa and bu­ilt a den­tal prac­ti­ce in Cle­ve­land, Ohio, had per­so­nal­ly wit­nes­sed the ra­pid inc­re­ase in den­tal prob­lems be­gin­ning aro­und the turn of the last cen­tury and was con­vin­ced that the ca­use co­uld be fo­und in the mo­dern di­et. (He wasn’t the only one: In the 1930s an ar­gu­ment ra­ged in me­di­cal circ­les as to whet­her hygi­ene or nut­ri­ti­on was the key to un­ders­tan­ding and tre­ating to­oth de­cay. A pub­lic de­ba­te on that very qu­es­ti­on in Man­hat­tan in 1934 at­trac­ted an overf­low audi­en­ce of tho­usands. That hygi­ene ul­ti­ma­tely won the day had as much to do with the ne­eds of the den­tal pro­fes­si­on as it did with go­od sci­en­ce; the prob­lem of per­so­nal hygi­ene was easi­er, and far mo­re pro­fi­tab­le, to ad­dress than that of the di­et and en­ti­re fo­od system.)

  In the 1930s, Pri­ce clo­sed down his den­tal prac­ti­ce so he co­uld de­vo­te all his ener­gi­es to sol­ving the mystery of the Wes­tern di­et. He went lo­oking for what he cal­led cont­rol gro­ups-iso­la­ted po­pu­la­ti­ons that had not yet be­en ex­po­sed to mo­dern fo­ods. He fo­und them in the mo­un­ta­ins of Swit­zer­land and Pe­ru, the low­lands of Af­ri­ca, the bush of Aust­ra­lia, the outer is­lands of the Heb­ri­des, the Everg­la­des of Flo­ri­da, the co­ast of Alas­ka, the is­lands of Me­la­ne­sia and the Tor­res Stra­it, and the jung­les of New Gu­inea and New Ze­aland, among ot­her pla­ces. Pri­ce ma­de so­me re­mar­kab­le dis­co­ve­ri­es, which he wro­te up in ar­tic­les for me­di­cal jo­ur­nals (with tit­les li­ke “New Light on Mo­dern Physi­cal De­ge­ne­ra­ti­on from Fi­eld Stu­di­es Among Pri­mi­ti­ve Ra­ces”) and ul­ti­ma­tely sum­ma­ri­zed in his 510-pa­ge to­me, Nut­ri­ti­on and Physi­cal De­ge­ne­ra­ti­on, pub­lis­hed in 1939.

  Altho­ugh his re­se­arch was ta­ken se­ri­o­usly du­ring his li­fe­ti­me, Wes­ton Pri­ce has be­en all but writ­ten out of the his­tory of twen­ti­eth-cen­tury sci­en­ce. The sing­le best ac­co­unt I co­uld find of his li­fe and work is an un­pub­lis­hed mas­ter’s the­sis by Mar­tin Ren­ner, a gra­du­ate stu­dent in his­tory at UC San­ta Cruz.* This neg­lect might owe to the fact that Pri­ce was a den­tist
, and mo­re of an ama­te­ur sci­en­tist in the ni­ne­te­enth-cen­tury mo­de than a pro­fes­si­onal me­di­cal re­se­arc­her. It might al­so be be­ca­use he co­uld so­me­ti­mes co­me ac­ross as a bit of a crack­pot-one of his ar­tic­les was tit­led “Den­tistry and Ra­ce Des­tiny.” His dis­cus­si­ons of “pri­mi­ti­ve ra­ces” are off-put­ting to say the le­ast, tho­ugh he en­ded up a harsh cri­tic of “mo­dern ci­vi­li­za­ti­on,” con­vin­ced his pri­mi­ti­ves had mo­re to te­ach us than the ot­her way aro­und. He was al­so so­met­hing of a mo­no­ma­ni­ac on the su­bj­ect of di­et, cer­ta­in that po­or nut­ri­ti­on co­uld exp­la­in not just to­oth de­cay and he­art di­se­ase but just abo­ut everyt­hing el­se that be­de­vi­led hu­man­kind, inc­lu­ding juve­ni­le de­lin­qu­ency, the col­lap­se of ci­vi­li­za­ti­ons, and war.

  Still, the da­ta he pa­ins­ta­kingly gat­he­red from his cont­rol gro­ups, and the li­nes of con­nec­ti­on he was ab­le to tra­ce, not only bet­we­en di­et and he­alth but al­so bet­we­en the way a pe­op­le pro­du­ces fo­od and that fo­od’s nut­ri­ti­onal qu­ality, re­ma­in va­lu­ab­le to­day. In­de­ed, his re­se­arch is even mo­re va­lu­ab­le to­day than in 1939, be­ca­use most of the gro­ups he stu­di­ed ha­ve long sin­ce va­nis­hed or adop­ted mo­re Wes­tern ways of eating. If you want to study the Wes­tern di­et to­day, cont­rol gro­ups are few and far bet­we­en. (You can of co­ur­se cre­ate them, as Ke­rin O’Dea did in Aust­ra­lia.) Pri­ce’s work al­so po­ints the way to­ward a pro­to­eco­lo­gi­cal un­ders­tan­ding of fo­od that will be use­ful as we try to es­ca­pe the traps of nut­ri­ti­onism.