Friday, July 20, 2007

Animal Medicine from A(cupuncture) to Z(oonoses)

144th Annual Convention of the American Veterinary Medical Association
www.avma.org
July 14-18
Washington Convention Center

Attendance: 10,000 stewards of animal health and counselors of often-confused humans

Quick Take: Impressive range of sessions on breakthroughs and best practices, spanning companion animal health and behavior, farm animal medicine, and holistic health techniques.

Issues: Many, including: New vaccination protocols, the impact of physical conditions on behavior and vice versa, behavior counseling, complementary and alternative medicine, epidemic outbreaks, pet food poisoning.

Insight-Bites: Summaries of select sessions.


COMPANION ANIMAL BEHAVIOR


Storm Phobias

Rather than resort to drugs, Dr. Terry Curtis suggested products that have helped many dogs, such as DAP (dog appeasing pheromone) and anxiety wraps. Based on the theory that dogs sense storm build-up through electrical charge, the Storm Defender Cape has a metallic lining that discharges the dog’s fur and shields him from static charge build-up. Is it the lining or the caping that has the most effect? She’s not certain, but amused the crowd with a photo of one man’s attempt at a homemade “Foil Suit.” An easier way for cheapskates: rub the animal with dryer sheets.


Nuisance Behaviors

Step 1: Dispel owner notions that usually but needlessly guarantee failure: “My dog is dumb” “...is trying to be dominant” ... “is being spiteful” ... and, “my dog already gets plenty of exercise.” (Then there’s the eye-roller, “Oh, I tried that and it didn’t work.”)

“First, find out ‘what is the client’s perception of the dog?’” said Dr. Emily Levine.


Management Techniques to Gain Control Now

“We all do what works,” said Jacqueline Neilson. “Unfortunately, aggression typically works to make threatening things go away or back off.” When people back off at a growl or exposed teeth, this reinforces the behavior. The solution is not to risk a bite, but to practice exercises with the aggressive dog in controlled environments and to manage the situation – preventing an incident. Avoid triggers of undesirable behavior to avoid unintentionally reinforcing and the potentially damaging behaviors that result.

Why food aggression training techniques that annoy and aggravate often fail, and sometimes trigger bites: Randomly taking the food bowl always creates stress and is perceived as a threat. Instead, randomly slip special higher-value goodies into the bowl.

Avoidance works: So for food-aggressive dogs, no long-lasting food treats...and feed meals behind closed doors...keep kids and others away from the dog’s bowl and treats.

For dogs with urinary problems, have a schedule they can count on and don’t expect a dog with a medically based problem to “hold it.” Take him outside before an accident can occur.

Don’t make your animal “hold it” too long. Realize that the feeling of relief of emptying a full bladder makes this act a self-reinforcing behavior.

A guiding principle: “Tell the animal what to do instead of what not to do.”

Maximizing Behavior Modification Success

Veterinary behaviorist Gerrard Flannigan imparted wise advice such as:

* Have all household members, including children, attend the behavior session.

* Document, not just describe: When needed, take a video to capture the problem behaviors.

* Meeting in person allows the pro to observe the people’s reaction to their dogs’ actions.


How to Help Puppies Become Better Dogs

Dr. Margaret Duxbury shared uncommon common sense:

* Have the dog do something before giving anything in return. Aim for 40+ rewarded interactions a day to establish good habits.

* Look for learning situations – and observe what pups are learning accidentally.

* Put breaks on toddlers and visitors. It’s not fair to put the pup in situations in which he feels the need to defend himself.

* Teach that hands never hurt – and that an approaching hand is a good thing.

* Control your visitors so they don’t undo your lessons.

Aggression Between Cats

Karen Overall’s many excellent tips included becoming aware of cat stressors: irregular and unpredictable feeding and cleaning times; absence of stroking, over-petting, unpredictable and unfamiliar manipulation, and changes in social environment.

Watch: are you sure the aggression occurs in absence of any provocation and without the cat signaling he is being annoyed?

Note that long-term caging has proven to be counterproductive. It’s important to avoid not only the development of problem behaviors but aggressive incidents. Why? Because, she said, animals learn behaviors at a molecular level and this changes their neurochemistry – making change all the harder.

Another tip: Take a video of the animal at home. When reviewing the video, fast-forward and the problems will jump out.


THE INTERPLAY OF BEHAVIOR AND MEDICAL DISORDERS

Many neurological conditions, endocrine disorders, skin disorders, chronic disease and other medical conditions are at the root of behavioral issues. Behavior can change brain chemistry and structure. Prolonged stress sets off a cascade of reactions that can leave us with overstimulated or suppressed immune systems.

Expert vets shed light in a track of sessions so content-rich that they defy summary, but here’s a snapshot of practical ideas:

* Help! Excessive grooming or indoor urination may be a cry for help. Dr. Ellen Lindell observed that many conditions that owners perceive as sudden onset turn out to have developed gradually. Roots can involve a change in owner’s schedule, a new addition (person or pet) to the household, a house remodel with attendant noise (or shuttling the dog in a crate), cutbacks in exercise, a medication change, diet change, or impacted anal glands.

* I itch, therefore I ache. Dr. Vinl Virga focused on attention-seeking and owner-reinforced behaviors, noting how discomfort and pain can change personality as well as habits. So will insufficient physical and mental stimulation. Can cats and dogs hallucinate? Absolutely.

* Stress and disease change behavior. Explained Dr. Gary Landsberg, anxiety and stress set off brain activity. Common outward signs include piloerection – raised fur – in cats and dogs. Chronic stress can alter the brain, in turn changing behavior and sparking aberrant behaviors such as head shaking, hallucinations, escape attempts, excessive grooming, and also hyperglycemia.

Any disease that affects the central nervous system can alter behavior, as can pain (arthritis, dental disease, injury), decreased sensory function (vision and hearing loss add to fear), and altered motor ability.

ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE

AVMA members noted interest in complementary and alternative medicine has quadrupled in the last decade. Many attended sessions on acupuncture, chiropractic, medicinal herbs, and holistic principles – and a hot emerging modality.

* Electromedicine: The Wave of the Future?

Dr. Ava Frick is an expert in this alternative to “chemical medicine,” which uses micro-currents to treat behavioral problems, relieve chronic pain, mediate storm phobias, alleviate phantom limb pain, restore function to paralyzed animals, sterilize wounds, speed up tissue growth, and heal wounds.
All at levels too low enough to sense.

Electromedicine is based on the proposition that biological processes are electromagnetic. Publicized by Robert Becker in his book “The Body Electric: Electromagnetism and the Foundation of Life,” the modality was used to treat surface wounds over 300 years ago when charged gold leaf was found to prevent smallpox scars. Work in 1960s demonstrated its use for accelerated skin healing; Becker maintained electrical activity is what enables salamanders to regenerate the cells of lost limbs.

Dr. Frick explained that all of the senses are based on pulse transmissions. Mircocurrent application helps the body’s hard and soft tissue “regain its capacitance so healing can begin.” She cited success with golden retrievers, horses and cats suffering from gaping wounds, fears and pain.


* Chiropractic:

Chiropractic care offers another treatment avenue; the practitioner mechanically corrects a structural problem without drug therapy and surgery. Derived from the Greek words for “hand” and “practice,” chiropractic employs the hands to diagnose and treat disease. Dr. Gene Giggleman explained how correcting vertebral subluxations that create imbalance helps the body heal itself. When nervous interference disturbs biomechanical and neurological function, the chiropractor releases nervous energy to flow to the tissues.

A chiropractic adjustment is a specific force applied in a specific direction to a specific vertebra. On a neurological level, it affects both mechanoreceptors (movement impulses) and nociceptors (pain receptors). The goals: reduce pain, restore normal joint motion, stimulate neurological reflexes and relax muscles, improve range of motion, and “ affect extracellular and extravascular fluid flow.”


* Acupuncture

Dr. Joseph Kincaid discussed acupuncture techniques that could be used with or without needles. The ancient practice stimulates points on the body to release and disperse blocked energy within the body. “This is real science, not hocus-pocus,” he said.

Every vet and owner can help animals by conducting the 4 Examinations, based on the principles that history-taking is not enough; you must ask the animal how he feels.

He gave examples of food nutrition translating to energy and through energy, supporting immune function and healing the body. Disrputions of electromagnetic patterns throw off bird navigation and are largely responsible, he explained, for colony collapse disorder (CCD) imperiling bee survival.

Pathogens, parasites and predators can sense disruptions in a body’s healthy electromagnetic fields. This may sound like junk science – until realizing the reliance of even Western medicine on energy fields, such as in diagnosis. Example: the EEG, a picture of composite radiation of the energy put out by brain cells.

Notable quote: “Literature shows that when you put a needle in a dog’s butt to open up a flow, the dog feels great.”

Caveat: Good nutrition is a prerequisite for these therapies. The same surely goes for traditional therapies.

* Holistic Principles:

Dr. Robert Silver explained how concerns over overvaccination, processed pet food, increased incidence of cancers, and dead-ends with allopathic (Western) medicine are spurring more veterinarians nationwide to make referrals to alternative health specialists and integrate holistic treatments into their own practices.

Areas of increased interest include Ayruveda, which is Hindu Indian traditional holistic medicine based on body balance, integrating diet, herbal treatment, and yoga exercise. Herbal therapies were covered in detail by Dr. Stephanie Schwartz.


REHABILITATION

Laurie McCauley gave a lively presentation about canine rehabilitation tools and techniques.
The most important tool? Hands

Her novel, smart practices included targeted use of knuckles to motivate recovering animals to walk. Tailwork often yields rapid results. Smearing peanut butter along wall to persuade an animal to walk? Priceless.

Dr. Jacqueline Davidson discussed passive manipulations such as PROM – passive range of motion exercises.

Good points: Withhold medications during periods of increase to avoid masking signs of pain – since pain signals harm to the joint. Watch weight – excess will stress joints. And don’t subject the recovering animal to slippery flooring.

NUTRITION

* Home-Made Diet Do’s and Don’ts

Given today’s increasing interest in home-cooked diets for pets , Dr. Korinn Saker warned that a fresh diet can be risky if not nutritionally customized to the individual. Her case in point: a very young Sheltie who suffered from skeletal changes and fractures due to an inadequate homemade diet.

Ingredient balance, quality and preparation are key. An expert review should be done before feeding a homemade diet. Evaluate factors such as sources and ratios of protein, carbs, fat, calcium and other minerals and vitamins. Online experts and computer programs are available to develop nutritious custom diets.

Tips: a human adult daily vitamin can be used, but not the gender-tailored varieties.

Dr. Robert Silver weighed in with the holistic perspective. He noted evidence that processing of foods, both human and pet, creates byproducts that have inflammatory and insulin dysregulating side effects linked to degenerative health conditions. Some kibble and canned foods contain potentially toxic byproducts. Reactive oxidative species can be created by food processing, leading to tissue damage down the road. Then there are chemical preservatives, aflatoxins and other mycotoxins occasionally contaminating commercial kibble, and basic lack of whole foods.

Interesting side-benefit of milled flax seed, a highly recommended addition to dog and cat diets: the fiber will help manage hairballs.

He agrees that the client tendency to substitute ingredients – “Recipe Drift” – can unbalance the diet.

Not ready to commit to daily homecooking for your pet? Dr. Silver suggests preparing at least one good homemade unprocessed meal a week. Also, people who eat healthy whole foods can make extra and share with their pets. Tip; Remove a half cup of kibble per each cup of fresh food supplements.

* Nutritional Myths: Fat is unhealthy and causes diarrhea? Panelists said not so. Balance is necessary for digestion and health. Dietary allergies are common? Dietary intolerance is more common.


MORE TOPICS & ISSUES

* Pet Food Crisis – Lessons Learned: Panelists analyzed their own organizations’ responses to the melamine-tainted pet food additives from China that poisoned pets across the U.S. Lessons included: Convey facts as soon as they’re confirmed. Set up multiple channels for consumers and health professionals to get answers and to report cases. Establish linkages between industry associations and government agencies. Investigate immediately. The first consumer complaints were filed with Menu Foods Feb. 20. On April 2, the Chinese government was still denying its exports were contaminated, though its mislabeled rice protein and wheat gluten concentrates entered the U.S. in 2006.

And: take pet poisoning seriously, which the major media failed to do, preferring to chase wayward celebrities and rehash political hijinks – leaving bloggers to do the initial investigative reporting.

Wal-mart demonstrated a proactive response, programming check-out scanners to block the sale of recalled foods, noted Pet Central host Steve Dale.

* Mating Isn’t Just About Multiplying: In her talk on “Sexual Diversity in the Animal Kingdom,” Joan Roughgarden presented evidence to disprove Darwin’s theory of sexual selection, which assigned behaviors by gender and labeled same-sex sexual play as maldaptive social behavior. The Stanford University researcher said homosexuality has been documented in more than 450 unique vertebrate species, from bighorn sheep to bonobos, fruit flies to sunfish.

In the animal kingdom and other human cultures, straight and gay are not mutually exclusive. Those friendly copulations between female macaques? They foster social stability, akin to cooperative game theory, said Roughgarden. She regards the hetero/homo distinction is purely a cultural creation. Then there are co-fathering communities of birds. Viva la difference.

* Radiofrequency Surgery: Gaining fans due to its pinpoint precision, tactile feel while making incisions, cutting at lower heat than lasers thus enabling faster healing, scalpel-speed with less bleeding.

* One Health Initiative: Promotes collaboration between nonhuman animal and human physicians, researchers, and epidemiologists to improve public health. In the past 25 years, 75% of the emerging diseases have been zoonotic, such as avian flu and SARS. “Zoonotic disease a growth industry,” said keynote speaker Julie Gerberding, MD, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The melamine-poisoned pet food crisis was a sentinel that triggered action before the poison-laced China exports spread too far in farm animal and human food products. In addition to pathogenic infections and deadly food additives, the effort will limit the destruction of potential bioterrorism. SARS, which sprung from the animal slaughter and marketing practices in some Asian provinces, reached an epidemic tipping point in 48 hours as it spread between guests in a hotel in which a research doctor was staying; it led to 8,000 ill and 800 dead.

On the domestic health front, Americans spend excessively but not wisely. “We need to get our voice heard over the cacophony of junk science,” said Dr. Gerberding. “We need to reach Dr. Mom” – with common sense messages such as “wash your hands!”

* End of Life Overtreatment: Per a Best Friends Animal Sanctuary vet, waiting too long before euthanasia is common. Technology exists to lengthen life, but quality of life is something vet should help their clients evaluate.

* Reconcile – a new separation anxiety drug: The first drug approved by the FDA for treating canine separation anxiety, the once daily, chewable tablets harness serontonin, “the civilizing neurotransmitter,” to reduce anxiety. Other anti-anxiety drugs such as amitriptylene and chomicalm affect multiple neurotransmitters resulting in wider-ranging side effects. Dr. Barbara Sherman emphasized it does not alone alone; it’s part of the medication, modification, management trinity.

* New Test Kit Detect Breed Ancestry in Mixed Breed Dogs: “Doctor, what is my dog?” Now vets can answer the question they’ve been hearing for 400 years.

Many characteristic breed traits and diseases are hereditary. Genetic screening can identify animals at risk of certain breed-linked diseases, drug sensitivities, and behavioral traits before onset of clinical signs. Based on blood testing of 13,000 purebred dogs, Mars Inc. developed the DNA-based Wisdom Panel MX kit that ID’s the breed heritage of mixed-breed dogs within 3 weeks.

* Farm Animal Aid: Downer cows were briefly in the news with the recent federal government decision to permanently prohibit slaughter of nonambulatory cattle for use as food. But they were also on the AVMA conference program as vets discussed treatment issues. For example, when lying down, a cow’s body weight can apply enough pressure to cause nerve and muscle damage. Physical therapy can help the animal stand on hind limbs; devices include hip clamps, slings and flotation tanks. Injury, calving trauma and poor nutrition can result in the syndrome. Nutritional therapy will help.

In his presentation on Herd Lameness Dynamics, Dr. Nigel Cook noted that cows kept standing on concrete walkways in intensively managed dairy herds leads to claw horn lesion development, and poor lying times are a significant risk factor for lameness.

Worth noting: There are economical methods for large-scale livestock operations that do not require the extreme confinement, deprivation and privation that dominate the industry today, wrote Nedim C. Buyukmihci, president, Association of Veterinarians for Animal Rights and professor at University of California’s School of Veterinary Medicine. Labor cost savings from factory farming is offset by the cost of equipment, water, fuel and other factors, as well as compromised human health, soil health, depletion of resources that will be needed by future generations. He cited a pasture system developed by University of Tennessee proved more efficient and less costly than a traditional confinement system. There were less post-weaning losses and disease and better consistency in sow and pig performance.

* Other notable sessions: New vaccination guidelines summarized by Dr. Richard Ford (who predicts a 4-way lepto vaccine to arrive by year-end and explained the downsides of a vaccine adverse reaction database). NIH’s Dr. Anthony Fauci zipped through a survey of emerging and reemerging infectious diseases. Among arresting points: The problem with HIV/AIDS vac development: with all other diseases, the best path has been to study those healthy immune responses to the pathogen and mimic in vax. HIV not one spontaneous recovery from it, so can’t mimic body’s attempts to fight the disease.

Resources:

* Holistic animal health

www.ahvma.org

DrDoMore.com

* Animal Protection

Animal Welfare Institute
Wealth of literature on Animals’ Legal Rights, Childhood Cruelty, Threatened Wildlife, Farm and Laboratory Animals (even those professionals who do not oppose animal research or use of animals for food and fiber still stress the need for compassionate treatment, environmental enrichment and prevention of physical and mental suffering among these animals who give their lives involuntarily to satisfy human demands); Alternatives to Animal Testing, Animal Dealers.

www.awionline.org

* AVAR Association of Veterinarians for Animal Rights
Nonprofit committed to humane treatment; recommends modifying the Veterinary Oath to base it upon the interests and needs of the individual nonhuman animal. Information on animal lab standards, improving factory farm conditions, non-animal research alternatives, and healthy life-supporting diets for all.

www.avar.org

* Veterinary Services and Locators

www.avma.org

* Organic-related health news and food/farming

www.acresusa.com

* Vaccination

AAHA Canine Vaccine Guidelines
www.aahanet.org

AAFP Feline Vaccine Guidelines
www.aafponline.org


A few of the many products in the exhibition hall:

* Health Supporting Supplements

Geri-Form intracellular nutrition for geriatric and convalescing animals.

www.lloyd.inc.com

Standard Process unique formulas

wwww.standardprocess.com

* New book

Blackwell's Five-Minute Consult Clinical Companion: Canine And Feline Behavior by
vets Debra Horwitz and Jacqueline Neilson (who spoke at the convention)

http://www.vin.com/MainPub/Misc/M05000/PUBCE_M07849.htm

* Sorbay Pet Oral Care

www.bonmange.com

* New Greenies animal dental products and Pill Pockets

www.greenies.com

Friday, July 13, 2007

Art-iculate interpretation of the news

THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN EDITORIAL CARTOONISTS (AAEC)
50th Anniversary Convention
July 4-7, 2007
Mayflower Hotel
Washington, DC

* Attendees: Drew such a crowd that the number of cartoonists exceeded seats.

* Lower Common Denominator: Town Hall comment about newspapers today: “It’s the only industry where as they lose customers they make the product worse.”

* Views on View: The “Bush Leaguers” political cartoon competition features 99 winners drawn from some 800 entries; they’re on view a few weeks at the American University/Katzen Museum of Art.

* Deciding on a Decider theme: Said Rob Rogers, AAEC president and cartoonist for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, cartoonists would have trouble digging back any further. These artists dwell in and on the here and now. The contest received 800 entries.

* Ha to the Chief: Referring to the exhibition, syndicated correspondent and special guest speaker Helen Thomas said there’s not much to laugh about with this White House, but it’s a gold mine for satirists.

* Crank Case: Pulitzer winner Walt Handelsman with Newsday draws 4 cartoons a week and produces an animation video each month for the paper’s website. These include “Pirates of the Constitution” and an NSA musical send-up reimagining the lyrics of Stevie Wonder’s “I Just Called to Say I Love You.”

* Truth and Dare: From the AAEC’s 50th Anniversary commemorative book: Jeff MacNelly once described the profession as such: “Political cartoonists violate every rule of ethical journalism – they misquote, trifle with the truth, make science fiction out of politics and sometimes should be held for personal libel. But when the smoke clears, the political cartoonist has been getting closer to the truth than the guys who write political opinions.”

Sampling the Sessions:

- Blog Or Die! (“Is this the wave of the future or just an act of desperation to hold on to readers and advertisers?)

Does blogging trivialize journalist? Or is it a vital medium for airing views that don’t get published in newspapers? Who has time to read blogs? The public – or it is mostly other bloggers?

What about hecklers with keyboards? Bozo filters let the blogger post comments visible only to the commenter.

Why blog? “There are more things I’m angry about than cartoon slots,” replied one blogging cartoonist.

- Funny People Who Don’t Draw

Kevin Bleyer, writer for the Daily Show and previously for Bill Maher and Dennis Miller, admitted he could be characterized as a centrist or intellectual prostitute. He described serendipitous moments like noticing that the Bushism, “When the Iraqis stand up, we will stand down” had 17 syllables, leading to a hilarious haiku for the Daily Show. And then there was the Metaphorical Mapquest....

- What’s So Funny About War?

What’s the role of the cartoonist in wartime? Panelists such as Ted Rall contrasted being embedded with the troops and drawing from the safety of a cubicle.

“You don’t have to depict Mohammed in your cartoon to get threatened,” said Signe Wilkinson, whose daughter’s teacher was among those picketing the Philadelphia Daily News in protest of one of her panels.

War correspondent David Axe learned a novel treatment overseas for the parasite giardia: eat a whole garlic and wash it down with beer.

- What Do You Mean You’re Not Animating Yet?

Kevin “KAL” Kallaugher, longtime Baltimore Sun and The Economist cartoonist, described the process of creating 3-D figures for animations, starting with styrofoam blocks. He then blends shapes, paint skin, textures and colors of puppets – then use motion capture technology to animate bodies quickly. An actor wears a suit lined with LEDs; as he moves around, the sensors plot and track, create a moving character.

He showed a gardening-themed satire of pro-war politicians: “You’re either for poison ivy or against it ... is this just a ploy to distract from your failed gardening projects?”

* Election Prospects: Political analyst Mark Shields quipped: “this is a field in which Bill Clinton could be the family values candidate.” And speaking of that former president’s don’t ask/don’t tell military policy: “It’s OK if Uncle Sam wants you, but if you want Uncle Sam, keep it to yourself.”

As for John Kerry: “so unexciting that his secret service name is...John Kerry.”

And with a nod to Red Smith: “I love writing except for the paperwork.”

* Resources:

Association of American Editorial Cartoonists

www.editorialcartoons.com

Article on related exhibition of recent editorial cartoons of note:

http://dcpaper.examiner.com/content/e-edition/2007/07/07/2/23.pdf

Animated editorial cartoons

www.newsdayinteractive.com/project/2007/pulitzer-winner/walt-handelsman.html

Alternative Presidential Library:

www.cluelessgeorge.com

Monday, June 25, 2007

KNOW Book Notes: Six Arguments for a Greener Diet

Six Arguments for a Greener Diet
by Michael F. Jacobson, Ph.D., and the staff of the Center for Science in the Public Interest.

www.EatingGreen.org

Green is the new black. But it transcends fads, since it’s about reducing impact on the environment, using sustainable practices that don’t irreversibly deplete resources, and producing products with minimal or no risk to health. Going green has been touted as a way each of us can help save the world. Greening our diets can help save the world and out lives.

In this well-researched, thoroughly documented wake up call, the authors enumerate many compelling reasons to adopt a more plant-based diet. Michael Pollan’s “Omnivore’s Dilemma” reveals the origins of the foods we eat, and “Six Arguments” trains its telephoto lens on the environment impact of specific food-raising and livestock management practices on the land, waterways, air, our own health and that of other species.

To aid short attention span readers, each chapter ends with a summary of “What It All Means.”

Consider these examples of environmental impact statements:

* Its takes 4,500 gallons of rain and irrigation water to produce a quarter-pound of beef. About 7 pounds of corn is needed to add 1 pound of weight to feedlot cattle. It takes 1 pound: of fertilizer to produce 3 pounds of cooked beef. Yes, it takes resources to grow fruits and vegetables – a tiny fraction of what goes into producing an equivalent amount of animal-derived food.

* Livestock plus the manure lagoons on factory farms generate enough methane to produces nearly as much global warming as the release of carbon dioxide from 33 million automobiles.

* Health? A 16% decrease in death from heart disease is associated with eating one extra serving of fruits or vegetables each day. Vegetarians have 24% fewer heart attacks as nonvegetarians. To save money, factory farms switched cattle from the natural diet of grass to mainly corn/grain. But a steer fed grain rather than grass has meat that’s twice as fatty.

About 63,000 people die from coronary heart disease annually that is linked to fat and cholesterol in meat, dairy, poultry and eggs. Adding to the toll are the toxic chemicals, such as PCBs that accumulate in livestock animals’ muscle, fat and milk, linked to 50,000 to 100,000 premature deaths each year.

This doesn’t include the established but hushed link between colon cancer and beef consumption and prostate cancer and milk. America spends $37 billion annually on drugs to treat high blood pressure, heart disease and diabetes. Those who profit from work at and investments in these drugs or from factory farms don’t support such research. But to be sure, this issue affects health, quality of life, length of life, worker, productivity insurance costs, and your wallet.

Full of illuminating studies, the brief, pithy paperback is a must-read for the sake of your health and that of your family. And even reading just the first few pages – which feature the chart “The Web of Animal -Based Foods and Problems” and the quick-list of facts called “Eating Green: By the Numbers” – will make you a more enlightened consumer. And a healthier, more socially responsible one if you modify your diet as a result.

And if you care about animals....

Consider these examples of treatment of animals used in agribusiness, specifically factory farming. A half-square foot allotted to the average layer hen. The hogs whose tails are chopped off and chickens whose beaks are cut off to reduce the financial costs of psychological stress. (See farm animal handling systems engineer Temple Grandness book “Animals in Translation: Using the Mysteries of Autism to Decode Animal Behavior” for the effects of profit-squeezing treatment on factory farmed animals.

And the growing number of filmed documentation of chickens smashed against walls and cattle having their throats slit and hoisted in the air by their legs while still conscious indicates such inhumane treatment occurs frequently – when there is no need for it to happen at all. (See the documentary “Peaceable Kingdom,” which features live footage as well as testimony from farmers and workers.)

To meet the demands of carne consumers, 140 million cows, steer, pigs and sheep are slaughtered each year. 13,200 chickens are killed every hour in a modern slaughterhouse. In return for giving their short lives to satisfy human appetites, at minimum humans could treat these animals humanely.

Under the radar, the nonprofit Center for Science in the Public Interest (CPSI) has developed the “Eating Green” project, which proposes a more plant-based diet to protect health and the environment. As a nonprofit, CPS lacks the financial firepower of the huge factory farming industry (which includes the well-funded and politically protected and government-subsidized beef, diary, poultry, pork and other animal product industries). It does have a boatload of research findings from scientists and doctors.

Most people don’t think about the source of the foods they eat. They don’t know that producing the vast quantities of corn, soybean meal, alfalfa and other ingredients of livestock for humankind’s dining table requires vast quantities of natural resources and thousands of square miles of land. Much of the Midwest’s grasslands and forests have been plowed over by grain farms.

Because of all the fertilizer that washes down the Mississippi River, the Gulf of Mexico has a poorly oxygenated “dead zone” the size of New Jersey. Farming and development practices continue to kill aquatic life, including “commercially valuable” seafood. The dead zone is caused largely by agricultural fertilizer runoff from Midwestern farms.

What is the true cost of raising so many animals to kill for human food? What are the effects on human health and the environment that’s being leeched by our generation?

We can’t get into the fully secured feedlots and poultry factory farms, but the book will offer a real-world view beyond the well-funded public image campaigns that tell consumers to eat more and more animal products.

* Some illuminations from “Six Arguments for a Greener Diet”:

Nutrition researchers examined the ecological impact of 3 diets: the typical Western diet, low meat and lacto-ovo vegetarian. Compared to a typical diet, a low-meat diet uses 41% less energy and generates 37% less carbon dioxide equivalents (greenhouse gases) and 50 percent less sulfur dioxide equivalents (respiratory problems, acid rain). For a lacto-ovo (animal flesh-free) vegetarian diet, the savings are even greater: 54% less energy 52% less carbon dioxide equivalents and 66% less sulfur dioxide equivalents. Though not studied, the diet with the smaller environment foot print is vegan (no eggs, milk or other animal-derived products).

What to eat instead of animal-derived foods? Vegetables, fruits, beans, nuts, seeds and whole grains (grains that have not been processed to remove the high-fiber bran and germ, which contain much of the protein, vitamins like the B family, and minerals), and healthful oils such as flax oil. Specific diet modifications are listed in a practical “Changing Your Own Diet” section.

Much of the book focuses on “Changing Government Policies.” Not sexy reading, but important and long ignored, overfeeding the corporate farming machine for several decades – in turn, making change an uphill struggle.

Eating lower on the food chain is a big step in a healthy direction. Also watch the intake of salt, partially hydrogenated oils, and sugar -- itself produced from sugar cane, the raising of which contributes to environmentally destruction

The U.S. has set an example, and upward-aspiring citizens of developing countries – such as China, India, Indonesia – are following our footsteps to the meat counter. Per Earth Policy Institute president and global agriculture researcher Lester Brown (author of the 2006 book on environment solutions, “Plan B 2.0”), the animal-rich American diet requires the production of four times as much grain per person as the average Indian diet. If the whole world’s population were to eat as much meat as Westerners, two-thirds more farm land would be needed. The increased demand for water, fertilizer and pesticides would increase pollution and eventually devastate the planet.

Another point brought up in the quest to update the U.S. Farm Bill: Farmers who grow crops to feed livestock receive billions of dollars in taxpayer-funded annual subsidies, hundreds of times more than received by fruit and vegetable growers. This practice is increasingly out-to-step with the government’s evolving dietary guidelines being promoted to the public.

We’re reminded of the cattle industry’s successful tactics to defeat South Dakota George McGovern after the senator – respected for being guided by ethics that shielded his public stands and his votes from lobbyist/campaign contributor influence – suggested that people eat less beef.

What about alternative food sources to America’s entrenched factory production/consumption complex? Those not ready to grow their own food can shop at farmers’ markets, local veg/fruit farms, coops and CSAs (community-supported agriculture) – as well as grocers that offer humanely raised, locally grown, organic and healthful whole (unprocessed) foods.

Myths exploded: why the “goodness” of grain-fed livestock is good only for producers and marketers, not consumers. Corn and grain fatten an animal faster, meaning they go to slaughter sooner and at a younger age, but the meat is fattier (and more artery-clogging) and lower-grade.

Consumption of any kind of beef was shown to increase colon cancer risk in various studies.

Notes the book: “The practices that lead to the fastest production and cheapest prices are not what’s best for the consumer’s health.”

As for healthy omega-3 fatty acids, the best, purest sources are flaxseed, followed by canola and soybean oils. The book also notes the popularity of fish oil.

Realizing the dependence of Western consumers on animal-derived foods, the authors note that those who do eat beef should seek that from cattle raised on pastureland instead of factory farmed grain-fed. This would “dramatically reduce the fat content of beef, the waste and pollution of water and the fouling of air caused by manure and agricultural chemicals, and the misery experienced by the cattle consigned to feedlots.”

Argument 1: Less Chronic Disease and Better Overall Health

Our diet is killing us. The saturated fat and cholesterol in beef, pork, dairy foods, poultry and eggs have been proven to cause some 63,000 fatal heart attacks a year.

Vegetarians have lower levels of cholesterol, less obesity, hypertension, diabetes, strokes and other maladies than carnes (people whose diet includes animal flesh).

Although Americans are eating one-third fewer eggs (egg yolks are the key source of cholesterol, which leads to heart disease) than in 1953, Americans are eating 4 times as much cheese, which is high in saturated fat and is clearly linked to heart disease.

There are non-animal-derived dietary culprits too: refined grains used for white bread, white pasta, white rice), which are stripped of many nutrients and fiber; sodas high in refined sugars (including high-fructose corn syrup, or HFCS), which replace more healthful foods; and baked goods and fried foods, particularly with partially hydrogenated vegetable oil.

Instead, humans thrive better eating more whole grains, fruits and vegetables.

Enlightening findings of studies compare vegetarian and nonvegetarian Seventh Day Adventists, the Mediterranean Diet (heavy on vegetables, whole grains, beans, nuts; light on animal products), a vegan diet for fighting the progression of prostate disease, a study of the impact of switching to a plant-based diet on patients with coronary artery disease; intervention studies using a low-fat vegetarian diet on type 2 diabetes – enabling the patients to discontinue use of insulin and another on the pain- and symptom-relieving effects of a vegan diet for diabetes patients. Also addressed: the possible preventative effects of certain dietary approaches on cancer (good candidates include tomatoes, citrus fruits and cruciferous vegs).

There’s a handy chart outlining specific foods that help prevent/fight disease (plant sterols, folates, legumes) or aggravate (alcohol, dairy, salt) diseases. “Beans, beans, good for your heart....” the childhood ditty rings true. Ditto for certain nuts.

Debates over soy, the bone-strengthening effects of dairy, fish risks and nutrients, and specific components of these and other foods provide actual nourishment are addressed. For dairy, this includes vitamin D and potassium, for example, which can be found in many plants (spinach, cantaloupe, beans and bananas, for example). And what components cause harm, such as pesticides that suppress the immune system and cause autoimmune disorders.

Argument 2: Less Foodborne Illness

“Chicken, ducks and pigs serve as major reservoirs for flu viruses. Because pigs can become infected with both human and avian strains of a given virus, the viruses may swap genes, creating a new harmful strain to which humans may be susceptible.” Tight quarters speeds spread of disease.

When food poisoning germs are resistant to antibiotics, ordinary illnesses may become life-threatening.

We’re courting disaster when we allow farmers to use penicillin, erythromycin and other key antibiotics for economic – not medical – reasons.” For example: “Using low levels of antibiotics day in and day out on millions of animals greatly increases the chances that bacteria – including those that cause foodborne illnesses – will develop antibiotic resistance. The problem arises when a germ happens to mutate in one of several ways that reduces the antibiotic’s effectiveness. The tougher new bacteria pump the antibiotic out of their cells, degrade the antibiotic, change the antibiotic’s chemical structure, or modify target molecules to ‘fool’ the antibiotic.”

*** “Just as public health experts finally figured out that cleaning up water and air drastically reduced infectious diseases in people, so agribusiness should turn to different approaches to prevent illnesses in their animals. If they cleaned up their hog sheds, gave their chickens more room to roam around, stopped feeding cattle an unnatural grain-rich diet, and bred animals not just to grow fast but to have strong immune systems, farmers could both raise healthier animals and protect the effectiveness of precious antibiotics.”

Problems are exacerbated by the federal government’s incomplete and fragmented food-safety system. The U.S. lacks a system to track animals and meat from the farm to the slaughterhouse to the table. So health officials can’t trace the cause of a food-poisoning outbreak. Also, the government can’t require food processors to recall suspect projects; instead, they must negotiate with companies; meanwhile more get sick. There are no fines for violating the law from the USDA, and the FDA can only fine a company $1,000. As for imported foods, the USDA has the power to inspect foreign processing plants, but the FDA does not. (Plus USDA is famous for lack of actual inspections.)

Speaking of a fractured system, the FDA oversees dehydrated beef soup, the USDA regulates dehydrated chicken soup. FDA regulates chicken broth, but the USDA regulates beef broth.

The authors raise a critical question in an age when people seek high-tech antidotes to health risks that have logical, low-tech solutions – or rather, preventive strategies. Where is the wisdom of attacking food-safety problems with the development of costly new technology from steam-treating to acid-washing beef carcasses to vaccinating poultry to irradiating cuts of meat? More effective and ultimately more economical: address the root causes of animal disease, dishealth, disease transmission (see above).

*** How can you make a difference? Vote with your wallet and protect your health at the same time: consume fewer animal products. And wash your fruits and vegetables since microbes and fertilizer leeches into the soil and travels far and wide.

Argument #3: Better Soil

Modern agriculture practices have put immense demands on soil. Growing crops for animal feed erodes the topsoil, a precious commodity for all agriculture.

Raising almost 100 million acres of feed crops for livestock production depletes topsoil of nutrients and causes erosion. 22 billion pounds of fertilizer, about half of all fertilizer applied in the the US, gets applied to lands used to grow feed grains for American livestock each year. The energy used to manufacture that fertilizer could provide a year’s worth of power for about 1 million Americans. Soil, and crops can be contaminated with cadmium, lead and other heavy metals in sewage sludge and chemical fertilizers.

Monocropping is hard on land, but that’s how so many farmers respond to the huge demand for feed grains. Inadequate crop rotation with corn and other crops also causes big problems.

*** It takes a pound of fertilizer to produce 2 1/2 pounds of cooked pork. One pound of fertilizer is required to produce 3 pounds of cooked beef. Hogs are the least fertilizer-efficient of major farm animals. Unlike cattle, they eat grains their entire lives.

Argument 4: More and Cleaner Water

Agriculture uses about 80% of all freshwater in the U.S. Example: Lake McConaughy, once “Nebraska’s ocean” and a haven for migrating birds, is now a mud hole after years of heavy irrigation by farmers raising animal feed grains such as soybeans and corn. Half the lake’s water has been lost.

*** It takes 1,000 gallons of irrigation water to produce a quarter-pound of animal protein.
Half of all irrigation water is used to raise livestock. 14 trillion gallons per year are used to water crops grown to feed U.S. livestock; another 1 trillion are used directly by livestock producers.

The water used to irrigate just alfalfa and hay – 7 trillion gallons per year – exceeds the irrigation needs of all the vegetables, berries and fruit orchards combined.

Farms pollute water with fertilizer, pesticides, manure, antibiotics and eroded soil.

About 90 percent of U.S. water is renewable, coming from rain, lakes and rivers. The remainder comes mainly from nonrenewable underground aquifers AKA groundwater. In the U.S., agriculture consumes 80% of freshwater and over 60% of groundwater.

Taxpayers pay for irrigation for livestock producers through heavy tax subsidies. The World Resources Institute estimates that the federal government – rather, us taxpayers – pays an average 83% of the costs of irrigation projects.

California’s Central Valley has log suffered a host of environmental problems due to over-irrigation including “devastation of fish and wildlife habitat and severe toxic pollution.” according to the nonprofit Environmental Working Group., which also notes that American taxpayers provide up to $416 million per year for California’s Central Valley Project.

Pollution also comes from manure lagoons. For example, an 8-acre cesspool breach that spilled 22 million gallons of waste from the Oceanview Hog Farm into NC’s New River Basin in June 1995.

Modern farming practices pollute water. Irrigation leds to erosion, runoff and salinization. In California, selenium – a naturally occurring element in soil – was so highly concentrated in irrigation water runoff that it caused an epidemic of deformities in migrating waterfowl, including hatchlings born with no eyes or feet. (photo)

Salinization: water contains salts; irrigation water carries those salts onto cropland. When the water evaporates, salts are left behind. Salt buildup reduces crop yields. Estimates put the affected acreage at about 10 million acres, or almost 20% of all irrigated land.

Fertilizers, including manure, suffocate aquatic life. Runoff from fertilizer and manure is the biggest polluter of lakes and ponds and among the top 5 polluters of rivers and streams. When those nutrients wash into waterways, they promote excessive growth of aquatic plants and algae. That increased growth leads to oxygen depletion and eutrophication – the decomposition of vegetation that absorbs almost all oxygen in the water (hypoxia). Aquatic species then either suffocate or if they can swim are forced out of the affected area.

Phosphate fertilizers -- 12 million tons of which are produced annually – are made by treating phosphate rock with strong acids. A byproduct is highly corrosive chemicals that cause air and water pollution, including hydrogen fluoride. Chronic exposure to hydrogen fluoride weakens the skeleton and can irreparably damage any tissue in the body.

See “Dead zone” reference above.

Manure contains ammonia, thus using too much manure on cropland can pollute waterways and soil with pathogens (dangerous bacteria) and excess nutrients.

Antibiotics in manure contaminate water. (Factory farming uses antibiotics as a crutch with disastrous consequences.)

Pesticides wash off of farmland, infiltrating waterways and soil far and wide. (See articles about pollution carried by such waterways as the Mississippi River...re: dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico.)

“Cutting back on meat consumption would protect waterways from pollution caused by fertilizer production, runoff from chemical fertilizer and manure, and soil erosion. Of course, producing more fruits, vegetables, beans and nuts still would require water, but far less than is needed to produce animal products.”

Argument #5 : Cleaner Air

Burning fossil fuel emits noxious gases, particulate matter, and methane.


Argument #6: Less Animal Suffering

More and more consumer-citizens are echoing the concern expressed by West Virginia Senator Robert Byrd: How long will we tolerate the barbaric treatment of the helpless, defenseless creatures raised to feed our families?”

Each year in the U.S., food producers slaughter 140 million cattle, pigs, and sheep, 9 billion chickens and turkeys, and millions of fish, shellfish and other sea creatures.

Industrially farmed chickens are raised in huge, crowded sheds. Most never see the outdoors; many exhibit abnormal behavior. Layer hens live in tiny cages, are debeaked, and are periodically starved to maximize egg production.

* The unnatural high-grain diets of cattle in feedlots are linked to liver, hoof and digestive diseases.

* Pregnant and nursing pigs spend most of their lives in pens so small they cannot even turn around in them.

* Fish bycatch: Billions of pounds of commercially useless fish, turtles and other sea animals are unintentionally caught as bycatch and discarded, dead or dying.

* Wildlife is poisoned by pesticides applied to crops [see research news reports about “mysterious” mass deaths in Virginia’s Shenandoah and James Rivers, the Potomac...with frogs born with with excess appendages... and elsewhere].

Farm animals die of injuries or illnesses before they reach the slaughterhouse [Google “downed animals” to learn about another whole category of animals suffering at the hands of factory farm workers before these pitiful animals are processed into the food supply.]

* The egg industry literally shreds millions of male chicks at birth since they don’t lay eggs and they don’t produce tender meat. Cruel, painful methods include suffocation and grinding machines or macerators (in which the chicks are placed alive). Details at http://www.factoryfarming.com/eggs.htm

* Chickens to be used for food are separated early from their mothers – visibly traumatic for both mother and offspring, who bawl for each other. Neuroses result.

* Food animals are not protected by federal animal welfare laws. “Inconvenient” parts are removed using usually painful methods without sedatives or anesthesia – debeaking, dehorning, tail docking, detoeing, chopping off testes.

* Economics in part spur ranchers to castrate bull calves: packers pay less for bulls than for steers, ostensibly because consumers prefer the fattier steer meat.

* Sows are confined to gestation crates, resulting in psychological suffering, sickness and organ problems.

* Chickens are confined 5 to 7 at a time in battery cages. A single farm may house up to 800,000 birds at a time. Wire floors injure feet and legs, catch head neck wings in the wire sides.

* Pigs and cattle and chickens are forced to eat, sleep, stand where urinate and defecate.

** Many of the abnormal behaviors of confined pigs, including tail biting, may be reduced simply by providing them with straw, sawdust or other fibrous material. Straw keeps floors drier and helps piglets stay warm. It also keeps animals from slipping, thereby reducing leg injuries. Finally, it helps alleviate the tedium by allowing them to build nests and engage in other natural forms of behavior.

* Animals on factory, and some other, farms today, are fed like living garbage disposals. They’re fed foods contaminated with pesticides and feed from unknown/suspect origins, some found to contain PCBs and other industrial byproducts that pollute the environment. A 2000 FDA test found that 44% of samples of animal feed contained with pesticide residues, with 2% exceeding the legal limits.

* Feedlot operators use antibiotics and antacids routinely to prevent and treat diseases caused by the unnatural high-grain diets in cattle. One-fourth of all baking soda produced in the US is fed to livestock. Growth hormones are routinely fed to livestock hurt humans.

* Since large-scale farm operators do not allow visits and bar reporters from their sites, some have gone in with hidden camera: “In 2004, workers at a West Virginia facility owned by Pilgrim’s Pride – the second largest poultry producer in the U.S. – were caught on videotape stomping on live chickens, throwing them against walls, and kicking them.”

* Poultry litter is a euphemism for the mixture of manure, feathers, wood chips and spilled feed collected from the floors of poultry houses. It is commonly fed to other animals.

* Transportation can be harrowing for the animals. Cattle not meant to be moved. Sheep have been inhumanely treated during transported by ship.

* Abattoirs: slaughterhouses are hell for workers too. An undercover videotape revealed widespread routine mistreatment. The New York Times described the taped scene: “After steers were cut by a ritual slaughterer, workers pulled out the animals’ tracheas with a hook to speed bleeding. In the tape, the animals were shown staggering around the killing pen with their windpipes dangling out, slamming their heads against walls and soundlessly trying to bellow. One animal took three minutes to stop moving.”

* In these venues of slow and excruciating deaths, some holding areas have no water. So animals are parched with thirst as well as frightened while waiting for death. [For better alternative facility design and handling that would even benefit high-volume animal producers along with the animals, see Temple Grandin’s books.]

* Layer hens are typically conscious when their throats are slit. Why aren’t they stunned? Again, profit-focused “efficiency”: because their bones, due to a life without exercise or room to move, are so brittle they shatter when exposed to electrical current.

In contrast to American practices, Switzerland banned the use of cages barren of nesting materials; the European Union (EU) is in the process of banning them as well.

* Wildlife also affected by factory farm practices that result in destructive algae bloom and runoff pesticides causing sickness, birth defects and death in animals “downstream.”

* “Dominion: The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy” by Matthew Scully, former presidential speechwriter shed light on the cruelties imposed on farmed animals.

The “Making Change “ section of the book offers steps that individual consumers can take that will make a difference.

Such as changing your own diet. The authors explain how what you choose to eat makes ripples throughout the economy.

They present various dietary guidelines from health organizations. The takeaway from the pyramids and professionals: Eat more vegetables and fruits, and nuts and whole grains, cut the amount of fatty sugary foods, and minimize intake of animal-derived foods.

The Mediterranean diet food pyramid now being adopted worldwide suggests reducing meat consumption to monthly; sweets, eggs, poultry, fish weekly; cheese, yogurt, and more olive oil, fruits, beans legumes and nuts, vegetables, whole grains – and exercise – daily. Alternatives include the DASH (hypertension) and the Vegetarian food pyramids.

If continuing to eat animal-derived foods, buy ones that cause the least misery for the animals: eggs from uncaged hens, beef from cattle not raised on a feedlot/factory farm, pork and poultry from pigs and birds who could roam about, and milk from cows allowed to graze on pastures. Look for labels such as “humanely raised,” [note: not always accurate, but the system is a start....] and at farmer’s markets, where you can ask farmers about their practices. Note that some “organically raised” animals are not necessarily “humanely raised.” The book includes a helpful appendix.

When changing your diet for health, environmental or ethical reasons, remember that avoiding fatty meat and dairy products is only half the solution. The other half is choosing healthy plat-based foods. Most bread, pasta, rice and other grain foods Americans consume are made from reined/processed grains. Soft drinks and candy are made with empty-calorie sugar and high-fructose corn syrup. And too much once-healthy vegetable oil has been partially hydrogenated and contains artery-clogging trans fat (though this is one area in which marketers and merchants have wised up about relatively quickly).

You can make changes meal by meal. Each time you have a choice to make, you can try to make a healthy and hopefully more humane one.
and a Diet Scorecard with ratings in the categories of health, environmental impact and animal welfare.

Changing government policies:

“Consumer demand is the most important factor in changing what people eat, what food marketers offer, and what farmers grow. But nutrition- and environment-based food and farm policies could improve diets indirectly.”

Try to buy foods from companies and farmers who are producing healthier foods, minimizing negative impact on the environment, and raising animals humanely. If they succeed, other companies and farmers will emulate them.

Actually changing your diet is not radical comparing with some other proposals for government leg, such as levying a tax on higher-fat cattle, assessed at the slaughterhouse.

Ban routine feeding of antibiotics to livestock, a practice used to ineffectively (window-dressing) to compensate for overcrowded and unsanitary conditions at factory farms and slaughterhouse and transportation.

Livestock industry ideas include adding canola seeds or other sources of unsaturated oil t cows’ feed to lower the saturated fat and increase the unsaturated fat content by 20% each. Add conjugated linoleic acid to the cows’ feed or change feed in other ways to lower the total fat content of milk by approximately 25%.

Improve nutritional info labeling on beef, poultry and other animal-derived food. Reduce feed grain usage; the authors suggest the USDA or FDA set standards to limit the grain content of the feed and the length of time cattle can be fed grain. But, can the government enforce such a regulation? It’s understandable to doubt businesses’ willingness or commitment to voluntarily make changes but perhaps the market, and consumers, could offer incentives ... with the help of the media, which has largely been asleep at the wheel on food and animal treatment issues, and still behind on the environment despite the popular new appeal of “green.”

Stop the indirect subsidy to livestock producers – cheap corn. Better to convert some of the acreage devoted to corn to growing switchgrass for alternative fuel.

Water pollution could best be mitigated by raising fewer animals for food and limiting the size of CAFOs – concentrated animal feeding operation. Also, required upgrading manure lagoons to reduce the chance of breaches.

Expand the tiny Fruit and Vegetable Snack program that provides free daily snacks to children in a couple hundred schools.

Pursue a federal Humane Farming Act, proposed by Matthew Scully, that “would explicitly recognize animals as sentient beings and not as mere commodities or merchandise.” It has been easy to ignore the inhumanity since most Americans are shielded from it due to powerful meat, poultry and other trade groups that profit from the flesh and product of animals, and the animals can’t speak for themselves. As noted by many journalists, even those writing for Gourmet magazine, the agribusiness concerns won’t allow visits let alone tours of their massed-animal facilities.

Require husbandry and cleanliness standards to reduce use of antibiotics. Require ID by ear tags or devices other than hot-iron branding. Establish a reliable, better labeling scheme to encourage consumers who buy animal-derived products to choose those from humanely raised animals and to inform consumers which come from animals raised on factory farms. Slow slaughterhouse lines to help ensure that animals are stunned properly before slaughter. Also, see Temple Grandin’s recommendations in her book, “Animals in Translation: Using the Mysteries of Autism to Decode Animal Behavior.”

“Such measures would modestly raise the price of animal products, but any society that considers itself civilized should ensure that farm animals are treated humanely.”

Resources:

www.EatingGreen.org

Order "Six Arguments for a Greener Diet"
http://www.cspinet.org/EatingGreen

“Animals in Translation: Using the Mysteries of Autism to Decode Animal Behavior” by Temple Grandin

“Dominion: The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy” by Matthew Scully, former presidential speechwriter shed light on the cruelties imposed on farmed animals.

“The Omnivore’s Dilemma” by Michael Pollan

Gourmet article June 2007 issue: A View to a Kill
http://getactive.peta.org/PETA/devarticle.html

factoryfarm.org

thematrix2.com

sierraclub.org/factoryfarmx

Vegetarian diets

vrg.org

vegsource.com

meatlessmonday.org

Physicians Committee for Social Responsibility
pcrm.org

Nutrition for disease prevention and treatment

aicr.org

Animal welfare

Compassion in World Farming
ciwf.org.uk

Compassion Over Killing
cok.org

Farm Sanctuary
farmsanctuary.org

factoryfarming.com

Humane Society of the United States
hsus.org

peta.org

GoVeg.com

meat.org

Community-Supported Agriculture
localharvest.org/csa

Humane Farm Animal Care
CertifiedHumane.org

American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR) free quarterly newsletter explains current cancer research, provides recipes and menu ideas for healthy eating, and offers practical advice to lower cancer risk. Currently more than 1.6 million subscribers.

http://www.aicr.org/site/PageServer?pagename=pub_news_2

Friday, June 8, 2007

Chicken Mistreatment and Alternatives

Chicken Treatment: The June 2007 issue of GOURMET
magazine features “A View to a Kill,” which shines
needed light on the realities of mass market chicken
production, in which animals are treated inhumanely in
the quest to maximize profits. The article also
examines a viable, practical and relatively humane
alternative method of slaughter that is in use in
several countries, including Norway and parts of the
U.S. Think about how you vote with your grocery
dollars.

http://getactive.peta.org/PETA/devarticle.html

Friday, June 1, 2007

Sustainable Design: New Directions for Affordable Housing

National Building Museum
http://www.nbm.org
May 30
Washington, DC
 
Note: I’ll have a cover story in a leading vertical industry publication coming out later this summer. In the interim, here is a detailed report on a conference that revealed the benefits of integrating green materials and techniques into affordable housing. Green’s not just for the elite.

In America, the demand for affordable housing has grown along with the green wave. So how do you design energy-efficient and sustainably designed residences? Finance them? Convince influencers, community leaders and residents that green can and should be a component of affordable housing? And how to make sure green dreams turn into reality, when too often good intentions unravel with the inevitable pull of mediocrity, competing interests, missteps and plain old time pressures?

This day-long symposium focused on three of the mixed-income projects now popping up coast to coast, from cosmopolitan centers to small markets. Nationally recognized experts and developer-architect teams shared lessons learned in: Facets examined: Design process and technologies; costs and benefits of green design elements; and realistic strategies for financing.

The feature projects:

* Maverick Landing in East Boston: 396 mixed-income rental units replacement an existing housing development

Maverick Landing also offered jobs to local construction workers. This Hope VI project contains 396 mixed-income rental units constructed in four phases, the first completed in late 2004 and the last two years later. Using technology such as photovoltaics, the project has earned architectural awards and was named Best Overall Project in 2006 by readers of Affordable Housing Finance. Budget: $135 million.

* Faison Mews in Camden, NJ, which mixed new construction and rehabilitation of a historic building

This mix of new construction and rehabilitation of a historic building provides 51 rental units for seniors. The project earned the 2006 New Jersey Governor's Excellence in Housing Award for outstanding green/sustainable design. Budget: $8.9 million.

This redevelopment project involved demolition of 413 housing units. The team members transformed a monolithic super-block with hardly any permeable surfaces to a new design with open space, private backyards, 13 extra units – exceeding the Healthy Homes standard. One mid-rise used its Massachusetts Technology collaborative grant to install photovoltaic panels and a cogeneration system to reduce dependence on outside energy sources. Most of the units reserved to local workers with households earning less than 60% of the area median income.

* Prospect Terrace in Asheville, NC: a project first completed under the North Carolina Healthy Built Homes Initiative, with 17 cottage homes and condos sold at affordable and market rates.
Budget: $2.6 million.

Prospect Terrace turned kudzu infill into housing, much of it research for lower income local workers. One goal was to demonstrate that green housing can also be the best affordable housing solution in an age when most workers in many US cities have been priced out of their local housing markets, with housing choices requiring far more than the recommended limit for housing expenses of 30% of household income.

One speaker noted how the future holds very few single-family affordable houses.

Lessons learned included: start with a Dream Green Team: active supportive community members, green-committed architects and developers, people who know where to get funding assistance to offset green premiums, LEED AP designers, government support.

Worth noting: Communities with active housing advocates ten to have more land use regulations. But more land use regulates contribute to higher building costs, thus pushing “affordable” further out of reach.

* Issues:

Why are photovoltaics (PV) affordable in Europe? Because they have been in wide use there. PV is a key to self-sustaining energy production. In the U.S., it’s still considered a bling thing. A consideration: 80% of energy in the U.S. is consumed by buildings.

Another question: should individual consumers’ self-sustaining generation systems be stressed, or the empowerment of utility companies to engineer the PV and wind energy systems, centralizing the advancements, installation, maintenance and savings?

One expert’s first recommendation to clients: Get your HVAC under control. Smaller buildings are shell-dominated, meaning you can make gains with practical changes to the enclosure. With larger buildings, “much of the magic is in the systems,”so focusing on systems yields great gains.

Increasingly, the leading architects and designers are integrating building science approaches as part of their artistic palettes. They turn the advances into buildable details.

How do you get builders to do it right? Home Energy Rating System HERS can do a software analysis on the plans. They overlay the requirements on the contractors’ plans so the homes will meet green specifications.

* The Greening Affordable Housing – Why Do It? Building green affordable housing has many societal, economic, and environmental benefits: financial benefits for residents, owners, developers, and investors. Indirect benefits to the community, region and world. Some positive effects are tangible and measurable, while others – such as improved health, comfort, well-being, and
feelings of pride – can be difficult to measure.

Resident benefits: Lower energy and water bills; healthy environment, reduced transportation costs, more employment opportunities, and a healthier lifestyle (when housing is built in walkable communities that are near mass transit, jobs, and services)

Developer/Owner Benefits: Competitive advantage by receiving low-income housing tax credits; green rebates; community good will; operating cost savings (utilities, maintenance and replacement costs); reduced liability risk from building-related health problems that result from chemical and
biological contaminants

Investor benefits: Recognition for environmental leadership and stewardship; positive public relations; long-term returns; increased building value

Community benefits: Reduced burden on municipal infrastructure, such as landfills, water
supply and treatment, and storm water management systems; reduced air and water pollution; reduced sprawl; healthier citizens; healthier work environments for construction, maintenance and manufacturing workers

Environmental benefits: Water conservation; protection of air and water quality; reduced greenhouse gas emissions, reduced contribution to climate change; habitat protection; natural
resource conservation (e.g., more sustainable forest management); reduced waste.

Strategies:

* All team members work collaboratively instead of in a vacuum, and they share a green commitment.

* Smart land use and site development: Selecting a site that is close to services, public transportation, jobs, schools, and infrastructure (smart growth); redeveloping previously developed land, reusing buildings; designing walkable neighborhoods; minimizing site disturbance; reducing light pollution; reducing storm water runoff from the site.

* Water efficiency: Using high-efficiency fixtures, appliances, and irrigation systems, as well as
climate-appropriate, drought-tolerant plantings.

* Energy efficiency: Light fixtures, appliances, roof; passive design (e.g., leveraging passive solar heating, cooling, and light) through proper orientation; using renewable energy sources.

* Resource-efficient materials: Recycled-content, renewable-resource-based, durable materials; using sustainably harvested wood or engineered wood; recycling construction waste; providing recycling bins (and administering a recycling program) for residents.

* Indoor environmental health: Low-emitting, less-toxic materials and finishes (paint, floor coverings, adhesives and sealants, and composite wood); using design and construction methods to prevent moisture infiltration and mold growth; reducing carbon monoxide risk; providing ample ventilation and exhaust fans; using nontoxic cleaning chemicals; reducing use of toxic pesticides; designing for ample daylight.

Comparing Costs, Justifying Green Investments:

Builder surveys cite green premiums from 6 to 10 %. However, a Habitat for Humanity project in VA built a green house for less money than a comparable size conventional house.

Said one expert: We get a lot of pushback that green is nice but the developer “can’t “ do it without HUD and other government subsidies. Which sounds like excuses, not reasons. these businesspeople are looking for handouts to change their old and outdated standard operating procedures. They want to use their same old supplies, subcontractors, services, systems ... they can practically do that in their sleep.

Energy budgets are 25% of operation budgets and climbing.

Mitigate risks of rising operating costs: energy and water, maintenance, turnover expenses, owner costs. Green choices can save, such as choosing green alternatives over cheaper-upfront carpeting.

Green building makes economic sense. To prove it, work up life cycle costs of green building features vs. comparable features for total development costs. Include OPERATING COSTS such as utilities and maintenance; and REPLACEMENT COSTS (carpet to roofs to wood choices).

Traditionally neglected when costing out projects: Materials, systems and techniques that lower utility bills and maintenance costs!

Collect data from: contractors, estimators, energy model, project experience and vendors.

Energy costs are inflating faster than the consumer price index, so you need to estimate the stream of costs over time.

Increasing market penetration of LEED, Energy Star and other certifications will increase the perceived as well as real value of a home over time, thus accelerating the accumulation of equity. This will affect consumers’ as well as financers’ valuation of homes.

”To make something work, you need more than numbers,” said one speaker. But, he continued, in this society, having the numbers – the performance data – is vital to kickstarting good green projects across the nation. Also realize that many projects are now being dubbed green in order to gain support or even credits, but they don’t meet enough true measures of green building.

Getting a mortgage of $5,000 more to cover the costs of truly greening a new home will pay off in 5 years. Changing out standard and old appliances for Energy Star-rated counterparts will save energy costs month after month.

Granted a tighter home, recycled decking, Hardi siding, Marmoleum (a natural linoleum) and other green upgrades or swaps add to costs. But they also add to a home’s comfort, health, durability, operating efficiency, ease of maintenance and most likely appreciation in value. Also consider that using green techniques won’t in themselves add to the cost of a home.

* Sun-centered:

The Prospect Terrace project was designed to leverage sun exposure. HVAC forms the core of one of its designer’s plans. Examine the position of the sun in each room, she said. Passive solar increases comfort, efficiency and savings; it can even be harnessed for the water heater. Cost benefits are long-term.

Prospect Terrace strategies showed creative thinking and vision. For example, stream restoration, transit oriented, no-VOC paint and building materials for improved indoor air quality, and an energy analysis – done late but that’s better than never. The sooner an analysis is done, the more you can leverage the findings.

* Resources:

healthybuilthomes.org

advancedenergy.org

designadvisor.org (features 30 case studies of green affordable housing from photovoltaics to passive ventilation to cool use of recycled materials to daylighting)

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Digestive Disease Week 2007

May 19-24
Washington Convention Center
www.ddw.org

Signs of DDW: Prevacid-pink buses and purple backpacks!

Topic: The gut – arguably the most dramatic organ in the body.

Attendees: 16,000 physicians, researchers and academics from around the world seeking to boost their GI IQ. Minimum Daily Pun: People with guts.

Fields: Gastroenterology, hepatology, endoscopy and gastrointestinal surgery; prevention, diagnosis and treatment of digestive disorders. DDW is jointly sponsored by four societies: American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD), American Gastroenterological Association (AGA), American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ASGE), and the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract (SSAT)

INSIGHTS:

* Vegetarian Diet Shown to Prevent Risk of Colon Cancer:
Mammas, don’t let your babies grow up to be carnivores. Okay, Willie Nelson’s version referred to cowboys. But eating healthy vegetarian diet from an early age virtually prevents the risk of colon cancer, as shown in what some top docs called a “stand-out study.”

The average person’s lifetime risk of developing colorectal cancer is 7 percent, and diet appears to play a key role. Colon cancer is the second leading cancer in the U.S., but has very low incidence in the Far East. Why such a difference? Diet? Environment?

To see if a vegetarian diet (no animal flesh) started early in life could help prevent colorectal cancer (CRC), researchers from Tata Memorial Hospital in Mumbai, India, conducted a study of 8,877 people managed in a clinical nutrition service from January 1, 2000 through December 31, 2005. The people were middle-aged. Researcher team member Dr. Yogesh Shastri, MD presented the results of the study, which was conducted in India, where more than one-quarter of residents are lifelong vegetarians due to spiritual tradition.

The Hindu believe cows are sacred. There are even some old-age homes for geriatric cattle in India. Dietary practices forbid eating animal flesh and eggs, but it is not a vegan diet since consumption of milk and milk products is allowed.

Study results:

* Colorectal cancer (CRC) appeared more frequently in the elderly and in males.

* CRC was inversely associated with vegetarian diet, lower weight and economic deprivation. This means that these folks didn’t have colorectal cancer. The inverse association of CRC and lifelong vegetarianism was observed with all the three control groups.

“A well-planned vegetarian diet is a healthy way to meet your nutritional needs,” said Dr. Shastri, currently with Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Hospital, Frankfurt, Germany. Vegetarianism starting early life appears to be a smart idea for avoiding this kind of cancer.

Dr. Shastri would like to conduct the same study in Western populations, but it is hard to find a large cohort of lifelong vegetarians in the U.S. and other western nations. Next steps, he said, will involve investigating the possible protective benefits of components common to Indian vegetarian diets such as garlic and the spice curcumin (which is not the same as cumin).

* Snack Study – Bowel Wow:
Diverticulosis is a common disease of the large intestine characterized by pouches in the colon that bulge outward through weak spots. These pouches can become inflamed, a complication called diverticulitis. Or they can bleed, sometimes profusely.

One-third of people develop diverticulitis by age 60 (most asymptomatic) and two-thirds by age 85. While most are asymptomatic, many suffer from such problems as bleeding.

Patients are typically advised to avoid nuts and seeds, even though little evidence pointed to these foods as villains. And it’s not uncommon for doctors to ask if a patient ate popcorn – and then blame the patient for such sinister snacking if and when symptoms flare.

Dr. Lisa Strate reported on a study of 47,454 men in the U.S. aged 40-75 at baseline, which was 1986, and free of diverticular disease, GI (gastrointestinal) cancer and IBD (inflammatory bowel disease) in 1986. Strate had questioned the conventional wisdom that “rough” foods would aggravate digestive disorders and diseases. “On the flip side, patients have been told to eat a high-fiber diet, but in being advised to stay away from nuts and popcorn, this gives them a mixed message.”

Data from 18 years of follow-up of this large cohort indicate that nut and corn consumption do not increase the risk of diverticular complications. In fact, those frequently consuming popcorn had a reduced risk of diverticulitis. For example, men with the highest popcorn intake – at least twice a week – had a 28% decrease in the risk of diverticulitis compared to men with the lowest intake – less than once per month.

Nuts have anti-inflammatory properties, and popcorn provides helpful fiber. It’s healthy unless slathered in butter and studded with salt.

This study’s results, once peer reviewed and published, should lead to revised practice guidelines to update medical literature. Then the dietary messages could be simplified.
“We are finding non-pharmacological solutions, more and more, are helping patients. This is such an important finding since pharma solutions have side-effects and expenses,” said Dr. Maria Abrau of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine.

* Fatty Soup Curbs Appetite:
University of Texas/Galveston researchers hypothesized that an appetizer determines your overall appetite, since absorption of fat in the small intestine induces the feeling of being full (satiety) and slows down gastric emptying. Dr. Xiaohong Xu reported that 12 lean and 12 obese healthy subjects spent two sessions at the lab eating both fatty soup and protein soup, each with the same number of calories and volume. Each session consisted of a 30-minute baseline of soup consumption, a 20-minute post-soup period, an “all you can eat” pizza meal, and a 60-minute post-meal period.

Electrogastrogram – a test recording the electrical activity of the stomach – and electrocardiogram – recording electrical activity of the heart – were recorded and food intake assessed by the caloric count of the consumed pizza.

In a second study, subjects were given the soup appetizer and then taken to an “all-you-can-eat” pizza buffet together in a social setting.

Compared with the protein soup, the fatty soup reduced the amount of caloric intake by 20% at the following meal in both lean (962.0 vs. 1,188.5 calories) and obese (1,331.9 vs. 1,544.6 calories) subjects. A similar reduction in calorie intake was noted when lean test subjects ate in the social setting (1,555 vs. 1,825 calories). Also noted: significantly more food was consumed in social sessions than in the lab.

* Chronic Constipation Update and Fecal Factoids:

The breakthrough laxative PEG 3350 is newly available over the counter.

There’s a little brain that controls our bowels since our mainframe brain is usually preoccupied.

Many people “mislearn ineffective rectal emptying,” so they strain instead of contract the appropriate muscles. 50% of these folks experience chronic slow motility or transit (evacuation).

Among those for whom pelvic floor dyssynergia accounts for chronic constipation, more than half in studies have reported biofeedback the most effective solution.

Downward Motility: A problem common among many young women these days is infrequent bowel movement – once a week or less.

Chronic constipation and IBS-C (with constipation) are overlapping multisymptom disorders. Effective therapeutic options include: psyllium (an over-the-counter/OTC bulking agent); Lactulose (Rx), PEG 3350 (newly OTC), Lubiprostone (Rx), Tegaserod (Rx pending FDA review), pelvic floor retraining in patients with abnormal anorectal testing ... and for an unfortunate few, colectomy in a few patients.

* Obesity News:
Obesity in America has been increasing by 1% per year since 1980. More than 60% of U.S. adults are deemed overweight. Overweight and obesity prevalence levels in black women are somewhat higher than Mexican women, and about 25% higher than white women.

Medical complications of obesity: heart disease, pancreatitis, lung disease, hypoventilation syndrome, many kinds of cancer, cataracts, hypertension, osteoarthritis, fertility and menstruation disorders, and phlebitis.

* High Impact Economics:
Obesity generates extra loads of prescriptions: Polypharmacy, defined as more than 4 drugs prescribed during an 18-month period, shoots up along with BMI, as well as age. The direct medical costs of obesity in the U.S. have been estimated as more than $92 billion in 2002.

* Say Not Yet to Drugs:
Studies showed (as have previous studies), lifestyle modification such as much healthful eating reduce diabetes incidence and mortality rates. That’s the first line of defense, before pharmotherapy (drugs) and surgery, such as bariatric surgery. Speaking of which, advances in bariatic surgery include the Lap Band, vertical banded gastroplasty, gastric bypass, and biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch, with effects spanning restriction and malabsorption.

* Small Loss, Big Gain:
Modest weight loss of 5 to 7 percent reduces selected morbidities such as type 2 diabetes. One behavior modification study indicated a 5 to 10% loss of body weight can lower total cholesterol, triglycerides, LDL “bad cholesterol,” blood pressure, lower back pain, reflux, lower extremity arthralgias, and sleep apnea.

* Common Sense Bite:
Which is the best diet? One study indicated (drumroll, please) it’s the one you’ll adhere to.

* 10 Behavioral Strategies to Improve Weight Management – from the Pros:

1. Self-monitoring: Record “what, where and when” of eating and physical activity – a diary.

2. Goal setting: Set specific short-term targets in eating and exercise. Too often we just fantasize about the long-term, seemingly elusive goals.

3. Stimulus control: Identify triggers associated wit poor eating and physical activity, and design strategies to break the link.

4. Cognitive restructuring: Change perceptions, thoughts and beliefs that undermine weight control efforts, and develop realistic personal expectations about weight loss.

5. Problem solving: Analyze situations preventing maintenance of a healthier lifestyle and identify possible solutions. Planning, not willpower, is the key to weight management. It’s a philosophy, folks.

6. Relapse prevention. Anticipate and “develop skills” to prevent lapses (such as during travel, celebrations, bad mood, and other vulnerable states).

7. Stress management: Avoid things that trigger dysfunctional eating. (Time for a job change?)

8. Contingency management: Use tangible and verbal rewards to increase performance of specific behaviors or when specified goals are reached. Not food, we presume.

9. Social support: Get friends and family to support, not sabotage.

10. Ongoing contact: Visits, phone calls, e-mail with doctors, office staff and others who help you pursue recommended lifestyle changes.

Adapted from American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology Foundation literature.

* More Aphorisms:
1. Less food, less illness. 2 Better food, better health. 3. More exercise, more out of life. From “Diet, Exercise, and Behavior Modification” presented by Harvard Med School’s Dr. George Blackburn during the “Brain or Gut” session.

* Healthy Stuff:
Whole grains, plant oils, vegetables and fruits, nuts, legumes. How much is enough: Peanut butter’s OK – in a ping pong ball dose, not by the jar.

* Magic Belly Bullets? Adapted from “Gut Hormones and Appetite Control” by Drs. A.M. Wren and S.R. Bloom in the May 2007 issue of Gastroenterology) Orlistat inhibits dietary fat absorption, resulting in losses of up to 4% of body weight over diet alone in a two-year period. It also results in deficiency of fat-souble vitamins and GI side effects that can make life uncomfortable. Then there’s sibutramine, a serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (say that 3 times fast) that acts in the central nervous system to reduce energy intake and increase energy expensiture ... while boosting incidence of hypertensio and tacycardia (not good for the heart). The new rimonabant, a cannabinoid (no, not cannabis) CB1 receptor antagonist, has demo’d effectiveness but many drop out due to anxiety and depression.

So how about a better way to regulate appetite? Satiety signals offers promise. Ghrelin, the hunger hormone, appears to regulate preprandial (pre-meal) hunger. It also influences long-term eenergy balance. Ghrelin levels are low in obese people and higher in lean folks. It’s hoped that ghrelin will be a method, or a model for a method, for altering gut hormones to send “fullness” signals.

Ghrelin is currently a “drug target,” meaning that you can bet companies are working to harness it for weight control pharma and thus monetize it.

Back to the article. An interesting exerpt near the end: “It has been suggested that a cause of the current obesity epidemic may be that modern processed foods bypass our natural satiety mechanisms. Low-fat diets are the most well-established means of dietary weight loss. It has been reported that weight loss in resonse to a low-fat diet does not produce the expected elevation in plasma ghrelin. This may be due to an increase in the proportion of calories consumed as carbohydrate that more potently suppresses ghrelin per calorie consumed than does fat. High-protein diets have also become popular in reent years as a means to promote satiety and weight loss. Diets high in protein have recently been reported to...enhance satiety more effectively than other macronutrients.... It is an intriguing possibility that designer diets may help promote the mmost favorable gut hormone profile to allow sustained weight loss.

* The Pediatric Obesity Crisis:

Obesity in children is increasing almost as fast as in adults. In 2000, 14% of adolescents were found to be obese. There is great regional variation. For example, the average prevalence for the state is higher than the national average. Within Texas, is also significant variation, with the highest levels near the Mexico border, suggesting increased susceptibility of Mexican Hispanic obesity.

Obesity, deemed by the medical establishment as a disease, is associated with a myriad of life-threatening and life-altering co-morbidities, which are causing a crisis in the the health system. The problem is worsening. Up to 25% of obese children show evidence of impaired glucose intolerance implying they are developing type 2 diabetes. Some 22% of children in Texas are obese. With Houston having 1 million children, a conservative estimate of 55,000 children in this single city are developing diabetes. This will weight heavily on the health care system.

Another serious co-morbidity of obesity is nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). In one study, 15.7% of child tested at an obesity clinic in Texas had aminotransferases levels greater than 1.5 times normal. 87.5% of this test group showed evidence of fibrosis, and two children already had early cirrhosis. Hypertension, hypoventilation, and sleep apnea are other associated diseases.

* Diarrhea is No Joke:

Inadequate water and sanitation is a “Silent Humanitarian Crisis.” 42% of the world’s population lack even pit latrines, and 17% have no source of safe drinking water.

Diarrhea’s dire consequences include stunting growth in children aged 2-7; cognitive impairment in ages 6 to 12. While deaths due to diarrhea in terms of years of life lost has been decreasing, morbidity (years lost to disability) is on the upswing. There are genetic factors to diarrhea.

Traveler’s Diarrhea: By far, the most cases occur in Latin America, Africa, and Southern Asia. Per one public service campaign: “Diarrhea is no laughing matter.”

* The Runs?

In the 1960s and 1970s, the British Olympic Team took oral sulfonamides plus streptomycin during competition in high-risk regions. The U.S. and Australian teams took only a sulfa drug. They ”experienced diarrhea vastly in excess of the British team.” However, this advantage didn’t translate for medals for the British.

* New IBS (Irritable Bowel Syndrome) Therapies:

Two 12-week, independent studies involving more than 1,100 adults showed patients who received lubiprostone were nearly twice as likely as those who did not receive the treatment to report moderate or significant relief of IBS symptoms. Endpoints included abdominal discomfort, stool consistency, straining and others.

In another study, patients who received linaclotide experienced a significant acceleration of ascending colon emptying and overall colonic transit as well as a significant improvement in stool consistency, stool frequency, ease of passage and time to first bowel movement.

* Hypnotherapy Helps Kids with Digestive Disorders: Hypnotherapy has been effective for adults with IBS, but can it work with kids? To find out, researchers conducted a randomized controlled trial with 53 patients between eight and 18 years old with functional abdominal pain (FAP) or irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). The regimen: six half-hour hypnotherapy sessions over 3 months. Endpoints were pain intensity, pain frequency and other symptoms, such as nausea, headache and appetite, which were recorded at baseline, one, two, and three months after randomization and 6 and 12 months after therapy. Researchers defined “cure” as those who experienced greater than 80% improvement in pain. Children were instructed to “go to your favorite place” and engage in other exercises.

Hypnotherapy cured 59% of the patients, vs. 12% who received conventional therapy. After one year, the figures were 85% and 25%, respectively. Patients who received hypnotherapy also experienced less pain after treatment, per researcher Arine Vlieger, M.D. Among benefits, she noted, hypotherapy is more kid-friendly than medication.

* Perianal Milestone: A recent study used adipose-derived stem cells to treat painful perianal fistulas in patients with and without Crohn’s disease. A fistula is like a boil near the anus, and these holes are very hard to close; this disease has great morbidity. 70% of patients experienced healing with this new technique vs. 16% with the traditional therapy using fibrin glue,.

* Inflammatory bowel disease – IBD – is an umbrella term referring to a group of disorders that cause inflammation of the intestines, including ulcerative colitis, diverticular disease and perianal fistula. Nearly one million Americans experience recurring or chronic IBD each year (so you are not alone).

* Cancer-Busting Berries: Researchers are studying black raspberries for chemopreventive effects – in this case, for their potential prevent carcinogen-induced cancer in the esophagus and colon.

* Breakthroughs in Endoscopic Imaging: Small bowel imaging has undergone a dramatic revolution, now with full endoscopic access a reality. Capsule endoscopy is now the method of choice for evaluating the small bowel in patients with obscure GI bleeding. Those around the corner include new endoscopic imaging systems such as narrow band and multiband imaging, capsules used in the esophagus and double balloon enteroscopy. Other coming technologies: a new breed of self-advancing or assisted endoscopes that may fundamentally change with gastrointestinal endoscopy is performed.

* Insides Exposed! Introducing the new PillCam SB2 Video Capsule – the new capsule has a 25% wider view, the upshot: it doubles the viewable small bowel surface area. It’s about the size of one of those Mexican jumping beans that were given out as party favors in the olden days. A new study indicated that the camera could be adapted for use in very young children – an important finding that may help youngsters who have internal bleeding.

* Question of the Week: Constipation gets no respect. Clearly, the GI medical establishment regards such disorders as constipation more seriously than those outside the specialty – and the public. Why do some diseases win more serious attention and attract a greater cash infusion than others? Marketing plays a major role, as it does in just about everything in society.

* Breathe! Abdominal breathing exercise can help prevent and treat gastroesophageal reflux disease. The lower esophageal sphincter and diaphragm play a key role in preventing gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). In a recent study, professional vocalists were recruited to test an exercise regimen focusing shifting from chest to abdominally-driven breathing.

* It’s where you live and who you are:

Prevalence of adenomas (usually benign or precancerous polyps), and advanced neoplasms, was significantly lower in normal weight women then in overweight and obese women, and in men of any size.

Racial and geographic disparities are glaringly evident in opportunities for life-saving surgerical treatment for liver cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma), said Dr. C.J. Sonnenday. “We’ve seen a three-fold increase in liver cancer, believed to be due to the increasing incidence of Hepatitis C.” There are few effective therapies; most die from the disease. Ablation for small tumors and liver transplantation for those whose cancer is caught early.
Significant racial and regional disparities exist in using surgery to fight HCC. People tend to stay in their own area for medical care.

Blacks and Hispanics are 30% less likely to be treated. These populations tend to go to the doctor and go for screenings less often. However, it may be that many are not offered therapy by their physicians. Younger tend to go in more often. White Americans are twice as likely to get a liver transplant than blacks. As the procedure gets more complex , the disparities broaden.

Why? Don’t know; more “grassroots studies” are needed.

Incidence of proximal colon cancer is on the rise for Af-Americans, black men in particular. Needed: more screening opportunities ... and, we believe, diet education.

As for age: elderly patients are more likely to die from colorectal cancer than their younger counterparts, many have relatively good life expectancy following surgery.

* GI Screening: Racing Time or Wasting Time?

Dr. Herbert Chen spoke on new imaging techniques. His team’s study involved appendicitis, one of the most common operations. Diagnosis pre-surgery is very difficult. Consequently, half the time when an appendectomy is performed,the appendix is found to be normal. This wastes dollars, time and compromises the patient’s health. And surgical complications can be as high as 6%.

However, delays often have dire consequences. Computerized tomography – the CT scan – became popular for routine use in the late 1990s as an imaging modality. It has 98% accuracy in diagnosing appendicitis.

His team conducted a study in which 62% of test subjects had CT scans prior to surgery. The finding: the potential delay in getting to the OR adversely affected the outcome. The delay is usually due to the need for the patient to first drink the oral contrast fluid.

* Hole-istic Medicine: NOTES – Natural Orific Translumenal Endoscopic Surgery – is a new technology expected to revolutionize endoscopy as well as surgery. It’s minimally invasive, like laparoscopic surgery in the abdominal cavity, except that NOTES requires NO incisions in the abdominal wall. It uses a transgastric, transcolonic, transvaginal or transurethral approach to enter the peritoneal cavity. Where it’s at now: gastroenterolosists are teaming up with laparoscopic surgeons to develop lab protocols.

* Colon Screening Resource:

Colon Cancer Screening: Preparing for a Better Outcome. Vital information for patients preparing for a colonoscopy on DVD from TriLyte and Schwarz Pharma. www.TriLyte.com. This short video educate patients on the colonoscopy procedure and tips for preparing for the big event.

* Show Floor Digest:

Exhibit booths offered an eclectic combination of laxatives, pharma representatives dispensing claims and in some cases, beach towels and coffee mugs bearing images of colons (healthy ones, I think), and all manner of colon-clogging candy, corn-syrupy sodas, and frozen dairy snacks. And remarkable internal surveillance devices for technicolor tracking the roller-coasting snake of the human intestinal tract.

Psyllium and probiotics samples ran amok at this high-fiber event. You can now eat your candy and void it too. Consider the Attune line of candy bars formulated with live active cultures that claim to balance the digestive system and boost the immune system. These beneficial cultures are probiotics. They help you absorb nutrients from your food. “It’s like yoga for your insides,” claims the marketing brochure, which adds that its Chocolate Wellness Bar tunes up your digestive system, enabling it to hit on all 5 cylinders. Clearly, the marketing team understands America’s obsession with all things automotive.

* Pro Probiotics: If you’re interested in probiotics – “good” bacteria – check out Natren products at www.natren.com. Founded more than a quarter-century ago by Natasha Trenev, this probiotic pioneer makes its products, many nondairy, in California.

Natren products include supplements packed with the superstrains Bifidonate (B. bifidum, discussed during some presentations at the conference) and Bulgaricum to aid digestion and health, skin exfoliates, and CanineDophilus, FelineDophilus and EquiFlora. Natren micro-enrobes bacteria in oxygen-free sunflower oil, which separates the beneficial bacteria, keeping them strong and shielding them from stomach acid. These probiotics have tested effective against Helicobacter pylori, yeast overgrowth and urinary tract infections ... also inhibits E.coli, clostridium difficile, salmonella, staph, aspergillus ochraceus, diarrhea, cramping and farting (oops, flatulence).

* Battle of the Bugs: Antibiotics kill all bacteria, good and bad, which is why the body is so often knocked out of whack after antibiotic treatment ... and also why we now face increasing strains of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. (Too complex to explain here; there’s plenty about that on the web.) An unbalanced GI tract is vulnerable to illness, bloating, gas, chronic diarrhea and constipation, and vaginitis.

* It’s Alimentary: The portion of the alimentary canal extending from the stomach to the anus and, in humans and other mammals, consisting of two segments, the small intestine and the large intestine.The small intestine consists of the duodenum, the jejunum and the ileum. The duodenum, about a foot long, begins at the pyloric sphincter of the stomach and curves around the pancreas on the right side of the anterior part of the abdomen. It receives the ducts of the biliary system and the pancreas. The jejunum and ileum are nearly 20 feet long and form a much-coiled tube that empties at right angles into the large intestine through the ileocolic valve (see illustration). The large intestine, or colon, consists of the ascending, transverse, descending, and sigmoid regions, and the terminal rectum, empties into the anal canal.

* Look for Experience When Getting a Colonosopy: Suck-Ho Lee presented study results indicating that technical competence in colonoscopy screening requiires the experience of at least 150 screenings.

* Improving Colon Cancer Detection Rates: Roy Soetikno discussed an effort to decrease the 22% miss rate. Study conclusions: Using currently available colonoscopy with wide-angle view (170 degrees) and high resolution, they established a 0% miss rate for colorectal neoplasm/sign adenoma and 11% for overall adenoma. Narrow band imaging did not significantly improve the miss rate compared to white light.

* Watch Out:
The recent China food adulteration exposés sounded a wake-up call to those listening. Think about the source of things that you stick in your body. Be advised that many food companies merely market and merchandise from the U.S. and source out their food processing (and folks, that goes for more than pet food). This is not to say that U.S.-made products are always safe, since news reports have shown otherwise ... and today’s pop-culture obsessed and corporation-controlled media outlets barely skim the tip of the iceberg.