News Release
Tuesday, June 3, 2003
Contact:
Jeanne S. McVey
202-686-2210, ext. 316; jeannem@pcrm.org
Nutrition Expert Provides New Ammunition for Fast-Food Lawsuits
New
Book Shows Food Really Is Physically Addictive; Chocolate, Cheese,
Meat, and Sugar Act Like Drugs
Washington, D.C.—A provocative new book by nutrition researcher
Neal Barnard, M.D., presents biochemical evidence that America’s
obsession with certain unhealthy foods stems more from physical
addiction than a lack of willpower.
In the book, Dr. Barnard reports on recently conducted but previously
unpublicized studies, showing that cheese, chocolate, sugar, and
meat all spark the release of opiate-like substances that trigger
the brain’s pleasure center, making these foods so hard to
resist. Breaking the Food Seduction (St. Martin’s
Press, June 2003) is expected to bolster the case of the new fast-food
lawsuits seeking redress for America’s obesity and diabetes
epidemics. The book also includes new information proving that industry
has purposefully manipulated our tastes for unhealthy foods.
“Until now, Big Food has tried to defend itself from Big
Tobacco-like lawsuits by arguing that unhealthy foods, unlike cigarettes,
are not addictive. Ever since the first fast-food lawsuit was filed
last summer, industry has argued that customers who get suckered
into high-fat meals—like cheeseburgers and shakes—have
only themselves to blame for their health problems,” says
Neal Barnard, M.D. “But it’s high time we stopped blaming
ourselves and recognized there’s a real physiological reason
we feel inexplicably drawn to these foods.”
Cheese, for example, is loaded with casein, a protein that breaks
up during digestion to produce morphine-like opiate compounds called
casomorphins. These substances are thought to contribute to the
mother-infant bond that occurs during nursing. A cup of milk contains
about six grams of casein, and skim milk contains a little more,
but casein becomes even more concentrated in the production of cheese.
So it’s no surprise that many of us feel bonded to our pizzas.
Chocolate, sugar, and meat work in slightly different ways, but
they all release drug-like substances that seduce the brain into
coming back for more.
In addition to explaining the biochemistry behind food cravings,
Dr. Barnard also reveals how Big Food—often aided by government—has
intentionally manipulated the addictive qualities of its products.
For example, the chapter on cheese includes FOIA-obtained information
proving that the USDA-sponsored marketing promotions focused on
“triggering the cheese craving.” And the chapter on
chocolate reveals how industry scientists have labored to find exactly
the right balance of fat and sugar to keep us hooked.
Breaking the Food Seduction: The Hidden Reasons Behind Food
Cravings and Seven Steps to End Them Naturally by Neal Barnard,
M.D., is published by St. Martin’s Press (June 2003). In addition
to its research and policy focuses, the book offers a three-week
vegetarian diet and exercise program that helps people block their
cravings for unhealthy foods.
Founded in 1985, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine is a
nonprofit health organization that promotes preventive medicine,
especially good nutrition. PCRM also conducts clinical research
studies, opposes unethical human experimentation, and promotes alternatives
to animal research. President Neal Barnard, M.D., is a nutrition
researcher and adjunct associate professor of medicine at George
Washington University School of Medicine in Washington, D.C. He
is also the author of six previous books on diet and health, including
Food for Life. To schedule an interview with Dr. Barnard, call Jeanne
Stuart McVey at 202-686-2210, ext. 316.
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