Showing posts with label quot;YESquot;. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quot;YESquot;. Show all posts

Standard American Diet (Yes, it’s SAD)

The average American consumes 45 gallons of soft drinks annually. This does not include noncarbonated sweetened beverages, which add up 17 gallons a person per year. Chips and Coke are a common breakfast.

Nearly a third of American children are overweight or obese. In our inner cities a prevalence of obesity of more than 50% is not uncommon. Too many calories in, too little energy out. An 18% tax on pizza and soda can decrease U.S. adults' weight by 5 pounds (2 kg) per year, according to some researchers.

Here are some ideas how to promote healthy diet from from the NYTimes:

- taxing unhealthy food would reduce consumption and generate billions of dollars annually. That money could be used to subsidize the purchase of staple foods like seasonal greens, vegetables, whole grains, dried legumes and fruit. Sell those staples cheap - let’s say for 50 cents a pound - and almost everywhere: drugstores, street corners, convenience stores, bodegas, supermarkets, liquor stores, even schools, libraries and other community centers.

- convert refrigerated soda machines to vending machines that dispense grapes and carrots, as has already been done in Japan

 Some pizzas are 'saltier than the sea' (NHS blog).

References:

The solution: Tax Soda, Subsidize Vegetables? NYTimes.
Timeline of the Standard American Diet in the NYTimes.
18% tax on pizza and soda can decrease U.S. adults' weight by 5 pounds (2 kg) per year
The long history of dieting fads: "soap should be eaten for its diuretic properties", wrote a prominent surgeon in 1810. Lancet, 2012.
How We Eat: Analyzing Half a Million Meals - 5 INFOGRAPHICS
Top diets of 2012 - from Cleveland Clinic health blog http://buff.ly/X2I4BJ
Image source: Soft drinks, Wikipedia, public domain.

Comments from Twitter:

@drjohnm (John Mandrola, MD): Call me simple, even progressive; yet it's hard 2 oppose a soda tax.

@DrJonathan (Jonathan,DO,MS,NCC): I'm against soda as much as anyone. But, this is America. People should have the right to make their own food/beverage choices.

Comments from Google Plus:

Jamie Rauscher - Mark Bittman makes some excellent points. Taxing unhealthy foods may help (studies have shown cigarette taxes can discourage smoking) but it is not the complete solution. We must continue to educate people too about the importance of eating at home. The amount of time people spend preparing meals continues to decline. (See report "Who has time to cook?" by US Economic Research Service) Many people also no longer know how to cook. Finally we need to teach nutrition to children and adults. I recently completed a nutrition class in a graduate program at Boston University. It was a real eye opener--and I thought I was pretty knowledgeable going into the class.

Mayo Clinic latest computer toy: "YES" Board patient tracking system

From Mayo Clinic YouTube channel:

Vernon Smith, M.D., an emergency room physician at Mayo Clinic in Arizona, discusses the benefits of the computerized YES Board patient tracking system which he developed over the course of several years and input from hundreds of doctors, nurses and emergency room staff while he worked at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.



According to Mayo Clinic, "the YES board reduces the time required to translate data, allowing physicians to forecast the needs of their patients and track progress. It has the capacity to walk physicians through current and past information for each patient — in addition to all patients collectively. Additionally, the YES Board helps to secure usable space and resources and detect the most at-risk patients and also helps forecast the needs of the patients in the emergency department. Plus, the YES Board can be viewed through any approved computer with an internet connection."