Earlier this month, the Food and Drug Administration announced a preliminary determination
that partially hydrogenated oils, the main source of artificial trans fats in
processed foods, are unsafe to eat and should
not be allowed in foods in the United States.
Although consumption of trans fats has declined over the last two
decades, it is argued that current intake remains a significant public health
concern. Trans fats can be found in
processed foods like microwave popcorn, frozen pizza, margarines and certain
desserts.
The FDA proposes elimination of these fats from foods in
the U.S. by classifying them as unsafe
food additives and thus permitting them only in certain cases. Manufacturers might not be very happy – the
initial cost of changes and recipe reformulations could exceed $8 billion. It is hoped manufacturers will find new ways
to make the foods while keeping them as good as the way they are right now.
It’s well known that artificial trans fats are a major
contributor to cardiovascular disease, and the UnitedHealth Group has just released projections that as many as
50% of Americans could have pre-diabetes or diabetes by 2020, coming with a
healthcare price tag of $3.35 trillion over the decade. On November 12th, the American Pharmacists Association summarized
the guidelines for treating lipid and weight disorders as including stronger
recommendations for using statins over other lipid-lowering drugs, and a call
for more research into weight-loss medications.
Yes, more weight-loss medications.
The Declaration of
Independence clearly states that all endowed have, “certain unalienable Rights, that
among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” As sometimes happens over hundreds of years,
in this case 237 years, the original meaning of a statement can pale, or
perhaps can be interpreted in a different way.
Maybe now it means that all endowed have, “to buy mandatory medical insurance so the U.S. can afford to treat
your diabetes and cardiovascular disease."
Another possibility… ”Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness”
could also mean “You get cheaper medical insurance if you are not diabetic, are
not overweight, have a triglyceride level under 100, wear skinny jeans, drink
diet soda – but if standing, two sips or less at one time – and only eat the
newly formulated Twinkies that taste like rice cakes stuffed with green seaweed
protein.”
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