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The Food Industry's Conspiracy to Keep You Hooked

Over the last few years a great deal of information has been uncovered about how the tobacco companies knowingly engineered their cigarettes to become more addictive, usually by adding chemicals to cigarettes that increase the addictiveness of nicotine and keep smokers hooked.

What if the food industry was doing the same thing?

According to David Kessler, MD, that's exactly what food manufacturers have been doing for years, and that's at least partially responsible for the epidemic of overeating and obesity we're now witnessing.

Kessler, the former Commissioner of the FDA, has written a terrific and compelling book called "The End of Overeating". The book makes several arguments:

  1. Food has been "engineered" to contain various combinations of fat and sugar and salt that have never before been found in the human diet
  2. These combinations- particularly of fat and sugar together- are designed to stimulate brain chemistry in a way that makes it virtually impossible to resist these foods (Remember "betcha can't eat just one?")
  3. These foods "amp up" the neurons in the brain, getting them to fire more. "The message to eat becomes stronger, motivating the eater to act more vigorously in pursuit of the stimulus", he writes
  4. The most important goal of food "design" is not nutrition but to create a feeling of anticipation and desire by activating the pleasure centers of the brain
  5. Once the pleasure centers of the brain have been "hijacked" by these foods, our desire for them no longer has anything to do with hunger and more resembles addictive behavior than anything else


Now there's a lot more to the book than that, and I strongly recommend that you read it. But a few points that Kessler makes are worth mentioning here.

Kessler thinks that to overcome the addictions to certain "trigger" foods, it may be best to eliminate them completely – at least for a while. This is exactly what we do on the first two weeks of Diet Boot Camp and here's why: When you're addicted to something (cigarettes, alcohol, sugar, grains)- the idea of "everything in moderation" is useless. An alcoholic can't drink in moderation, a person with an allergy to peanuts can't eat peanuts in moderation, and those of us who are addicted to lethal combinations of sugar and fat might have to treat the foods that contain those combinations in the same way- abstinence!

Kessler also believes, however, that it's very difficult to stay on an eating plan that completely eliminates foods you're in love with. He suggests that you (very carefully) begin to add back certain foods you really love, but with a renewed consciousness about their dangers and a different attitude about portions. (This is what we do after the first two weeks in Diet Boot Camp.)

I think "The End of Overeating" is an important contribution to the literature about appetite, brain chemistry and obesity. After reading it, I find myself thinking a lot more about what I'm eating, why I'm eating it and how much of it I'm consuming. All of a sudden cravings aren't seen as just compulsions to be obeyed, but as the result of a carefully engineered plan on the part of food manufacturers to keep me "hooked".

Read this book and you're unlikely to ever look at a chocolate chip cookie in quite the same way as you did before reading it.

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Blogger davor said...

Even from that little video (and your article/review), I learned that instead of being overawed by, and allowing ouselves to be victims of, certain foods, we may like to try looking at them in the same way as cigarettes: deadly, dangerous, cancerous things. One has to be able to see through the presentation and face the horror beneath the surface.
Even shops spray a special scent into the air, that smells like bakery products, which stimulates a sentimental reaction in the shoppers. We're being manipulated at every turn on the road.
I've gone to the point where I've started to fret over non-organic fruit and vegetables. Do you think I have a legitimate worry here Dr Bowden, or is it in the realms of the neurotic?
Thanks for the book recommendation.

August 03, 2009 9:27 PM  
Blogger elenemurray said...

Jonny,
Gotta give you a head's up.
Looks like the good Dr. is a former FDA Commissioner rather than the former Surgeon Genera.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surgeon_General_of_the_United_States

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Aaron_Kessler
is his wiki bio.
Thanks for your passion!
Elene Murray

August 04, 2009 8:34 AM  
Blogger Dr. Jonny Bowden said...

you are absolutely right! i must have been brain dead.. we're working on fixing this now.

he was indeed the FDA commissioner, not the surgeon general!

thanks for pointing this out!

warmly
jb

August 04, 2009 8:52 AM  
OpenID healthhabits said...

Another great book about this topic is Free Market Madness. One topic it touches on is how food producers/retailers use anthropologists to study your shopping behaviors in order to better sell you the food that has been designed to "addict" you on a chemical/hormonal level.

It sounds pretty "Big Brother", doesn't it?

August 04, 2009 12:51 PM  
Blogger chefchipdes said...

Dr. Jonny,

I'm a new subscriber; really enjoying your articles.

While I do agree with the gist of your article, I'm having a hard time digesting Dr. Kessler's comparison of food mfrs. with tobacco companies. Or the idea of some sinister plan acted out by combining fats with sugars (Mankind has been enjoying the invention of ice cream long before this epidemic of obesity.)

It would have been sufficiently accurate to simply say "we should not be so easily lured by food mfrs' efforts to lure us into buying their product." Which is something any profit-minded company should be doing anyway.

I just don't think anyone is evil enough to be compared to tobacco companies (except, perhaps, psychiatric drug mfrs.)

August 04, 2009 6:45 PM  
Blogger juno said...

chefchipdes,

Ice cream that was available before the obesity epidemic had 4 or 5 ingredients. Today, there are mostly unpronounceable ingredients and quite a few more than 5.

McDonalds fries:
Potatoes, vegetable oil (canola oil, hydrogenated soybean oil, natural beef flavor [wheat and milk derivatives]*, citric acid [preservative]), dextrose, sodium acid pyrophosphate (maintain color), salt. Prepared in vegetable oil ((may contain one of the following: Canola oil, corn oil, soybean oil, hydrogenated soybean oil with TBHQ and citric acid added to preserve freshness), dimethylpolysiloxane added as an antifoaming agent).
CONTAINS: WHEAT AND MILK *(Natural beef flavor contains hydrolyzed wheat and hydrolyzed milk as starting ingredients).

You don't think they put sugar, beef flavor (which contains wheat, and extra oils in them to make them more addictive? I do.

August 09, 2009 5:55 AM  
Blogger deannaf said...

chefchipdes,

What makes you think that food and fast food companies are above deliberately addicting the public?

Do you honestly believe that the tobacco companies have the market cornered on 'dirty tricks'?

No way, you bet they've engineered food to be addictive.

September 20, 2009 10:38 AM  

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