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Wednesday, January 12, 2011

HFCS-Innocent Sweetener or Evil Contributor to International Obesity Epidemic?

HFCS comes under my curious yet shrewd gaze

   As a 50 something woman with bad knees, tender kidneys and swollen feet often, I am avidly researching anything that has to do with food, cravings, incomplete digestion etc. I have been continuously perplexed by my edema because as a rule, I eat healthy. In my deductive process, I have been to western doctors who tell me that my weight gain is to be expected. It is the relative outcome to the amount of calories that I take in, doh! At the same time, I have a great rapport with an eastern medicine doctor who gives me roots to simmer and make tea out of, which improves my liver function as he’s identified that my liver is working much harder than it should.
     With my recent discovery of sugar additives becoming more prevalent in our food, this is all starting to make more sense.
     Remember that I am a shrewd shopper who rarely if ever brings home snacks, baked goods, candy, pop or other such groceries that I deem pretty useless. Although my life is sedentary at present, I’m not taking in that much. I HAVE been caving to cravings around caramel, jelly candies, gummy bears and worms and a decade ago, the International Delight creamer additives led my weight to skyrocket 30 lbs in a single summer. I cut that out based simply on my realizing it was the contributor to my gain, but still I crave Tim Horton’s Ice Caps. I cave to the craving less and less and almost instantly rue the decision as my shoes begin to tighten on my feet.

HFCS interrupts the brain's natural hunger reflex  
     Recently, I discovered an article online that warns about the dangers of ingesting High Fructose Corn Syrup or HFCS. There is a current flood of information in the dieting scene regarding this substance that has been added to our food by agribusiness as a sweetener since the 1970’s that digests in a particular way that leads the body to send the wrong messages to the brain regarding hunger responses.
     Corn and its byproducts is an enormous billion dollar agribusiness that claims to have a solution to world fuel shortages and has contributed to the demise of the sugar cane and beet industry. As corn is produced en masse at the expense of other crops, that which isn’t converted into ethanol for fuel, becomes disposable. A Japanese scientist in 1970 discovered that if you take that remaining corn, attach a fungus to it, then stir in a bacteria and let ferment, the resultant goo becomes a high fructose corn syrup concentrate that is easy to add to regular corn syrup, it is an inexpensive additive, making the corn syrup stretch a lot further and also doing several things as a result.
     One result is that by adding High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) to corn syrup and then that corn syrup to anything, the final product has an extended shelf life, like margarine, which is only one molecule removed from plastic. The HFCS food product becomes suspended in a state that no longer has the same decomposition tendencies. This makes digesting this product a challenge for the human body however.
     Not only does HFCS make things hard to digest, but the liver becomes overworked in the doing of it, where sugars in our body create insulin, HFCS does no such thing. At the same time, tests done recently have shown that continued digestion of HFCS sends false messages to the brain that indicate hunger is present and to add to the evil, those cravings become specific for products that contain… you guessed it, more HFCS.

To be the canary in the proverbial coal mine
     I am beginning to suspect that my errant consumption of HFCS foods is contributing to my weight gain, combined with other factors, such as menopausal body, sedentary lifestyle, access to more food. When I started to become aware of the prevalence of HFCS in our food, it was natural to start looking at ingredients of foods and it was harder, to my amazement, to find food that DIDN’T have it than it was to find foods that did. It is labeled in many different ways and there is no consistent vernacular for it. I suspect the food industry disguises it by not addressing it in its easily recognizable initials. HFCS is present on the label if its posted as ‘liquid sugar’, corn syrup, fructose, glucose as well as corn sugars. That’s not to say all corn syrup has HFCS, but how does one know and wouldn’t it be prudent to conclude that by eliminating all corn syrups, one lowers the risk of exposure to HFCS
     The use of this sugar additive is not new, imagine that you have been ingesting HFCS in greater and greater quantities since 1970. For some of us, that’s our whole lives!
     Canada produces less HFCS and uses less as a result. Europe is vigilant against it and baby food companies avoid it in their baby food, but use it in their juices for adults. What message does that send you?
     I’m beginning to narrow down all the foods that contain HFCS and as strong as my cravings make me yearn for them, my common sense is able to override those pangs because that stuff is contributing to my overall health demise and it’s going to STOP! This is a land of drugged, innocent people who are being fed something, but it's not food

Imagine, experiencing true Hunger for the first time
     So not only do we have to be vigilant about how often our body hits us with messages of hunger, and if it is a physical or emotional hunger, we also must be aware of the things that we ingest which offer up more confusion in that end. Imagine not knowing the most pertinent information that any product with HFCS in it will send us messages to eat when we’re not hungry, and not only that, but to crave a product that will provide our addicted bodies more of the dreaded HFCS it craves. Articles I’ve read online, and I will add the urls to several after this blog, have also stated that to eliminate this scourge to our wellbeing from our diets, we are to expect the body to retaliate as withdrawal symptoms ranging from severe headaches and dizziness, nausea and intense cravings can result.
     HFCS has been introduced to almost everything we eat as a way for the product manufacturers to cut costs on sweetening agents and still claim the sweetener to be ‘natural’ or 100% original. Law suits have drawn attention to the mislabeling involved, causing large food corporations to change the semantics on their labels from stating they are 100% organic, to state similar things that are just as easily confused with wholesome foods. I don’t know how ‘natural’ it is, when I looked at the aerial photos of industrial plants provided in one article, that are 5 square miles of pipes and buildings which is apparently what it takes to turn corn into HFCS with the bacteria and fungal additions.
     By becoming vigilant in our desire to heal from issues contributing to tendencies to use food inappropriately, we must also be consciously critical thinkers when it comes to WHAT kind of foods we are permitting into the sacred temples that are our bodies as well as how much and how often.
     Hard to quell a food obsession by coping with it, with the resultant vigilance bordering on food paranoia thanks to the development of Big Brother food supplier agendas, isn’t it? Don’t even get me started on the genetically modified corns that those Big Brother consortiums are imposing on the world farming industry.
What can we do as the ‘little people’?

How to avoid HFCS in your diet
     The best suggestion of all the articles I read on the perils of ingesting HFCS, stick to the outside aisles of the supermarket. Organic vegetables and fruits grown relatively locally (to avoid the pesticides and slack regulations of Mexican and Chinese providers), breads that are baked locally from actual sugar and not corn sugars, nuts, seeds and grains that will swell or germinate if given half a chance and meats that are not modified with additives, preferably organic. Fruit drinks that claim to be healthy are big culprits of adding HFCS, including Gatorade. As are ice creams that I used to think were the better brands, and every other canned or processed food item. Mayo, salad dressings, Ketchup, 7 up… its across the board.
     Do research online on products and become more pro-active by emailing companies and informing them that you think their decision to sweeten their product with HFCS is in poor regard for their customer base.
One step at a time… one label at a time. Just don’t be a sheeple around what you eat. Know that what we are eating is not nourishing us if its killing us. And THEN watch your urges towards Hunger.

URLS of interest: 

Pro and Con articles on High Fructose Corn Syrup
From Green Magazine: High Fructose Corn Syrup – A Not So Sweet Surprise – Get the rest of the facts! Click here.
From the Washington Post: High Fructose Corn Syrup: Not so sweet for the planet. Click here.
For an intriguing article accompanied by photos of big industry related to the corn industry from the website SPROL: Click here
From ‘In the kitchen with Mother Linda’ found online at:  Click here.

Tina Budeweit-Weeks'  philosophy has always been one of self-nurturance and dignity. Tina’s writing is designed to sympathize, support, encourage and inform.
 
Under Creative Commons License: Attribution

4 comments:

  1. Always good to be reminded. Thanks for the re-post

    ReplyDelete
  2. There is a lot of misinformation online, but according to the American Dietetic Association (ADA), “high fructose corn syrup…is nutritionally equivalent to sucrose. Once absorbed into the blood stream, the two sweeteners are indistinguishable.” http://www.sweetsurprise.com/sites/default/files/ADAHotTopicHFCS.pdf.

    In addition, no credible research has demonstrated that HFCS affects calorie control differently than sugar. You can see more at http://www.sweetsurprise.com/myths-and-facts/faqs-high-fructose-corn-syrup/fullness.

    You can also see third party point of views in regard to HFCS at http://digg.com/sweetcorn55

    Although there is much speculation on this, the introduction of high fructose corn syrup 35 years ago was not the cause of obesity. Most compelling evidence to this point is that many other parts of the world have rising rates of obesity and diabetes, despite having little or no high fructose corn syrup in their foods and beverages. You can see more data to support this at (U.S. Department of Agriculture, Table 52—http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/Sugar/data.htm; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 2009. U.S. Obesity Trends. http://www.cdc.gov/obesity/data/trends.html.

    There is also this widely held view that HFCS is in everything – unnecessarily. And that many of these foods/beverages never used to contain a sweetener until HFCS came along. In fact, almost all of the products that now contain HFCS used to contain another caloric sweetener (primarily sugar). And many more products still only contain sugar, in fact USDA data shows that per capita consumption of sugar has always exceeded the per capita consumption of high fructose corn syrup with sugar maintaining its position as the most widely consumed fructose-containing sweetener in the U.S. food supply. Moreover, the form of HFCS used in many of these foods (HFCS-42) is less sweet than sugar and contains less fructose.

    You can share other thoughts and concerns at http://www.facebook.com/SweetFacts

    Therese, Corn Refiners Association

    ReplyDelete
  3. What this comment reveals is that not unlike the labeling of ingredients as 'fragrance/parfum' actually being a chemical cocktail of over 400 ingredients that are unpronounceable, HFCS is a blanket term for a kind of chemical process that leads foods to be sweet but can consist of many differing degrees of mystery drugs.

    Mystery drugs that combine to cause interesting reactions as they stockpile consequences for human bodies over years of repeated exposure. Consequences such as tendon fragility, obesity, diabetes, loss of cognitive ability.

    Why is it the responsibility of the consumer to become a scientist versed in the cause/effect of chemical/human biology when they are just trying to feed themselves? If this isn't more reason to seek out local growers and farmer's markets and to stay out of supermarkets, I don't know what is.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Here is another link to a really informative article on the bane of the food industry. We eat POUNDS of this poison innocently thinking we are trusting the food industry! WAKE UP all you parents who feed this to your kids! Its no laughing matter. Scroll down to read the comments afterwards as well, seeing what other thinking people have to say about their thoughts on this is enlightening!

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dr-mark-hyman/5-reasons-high-fructose-c_b_861913.html

    ReplyDelete