The Scoop on Ultra-Processed Foods

Ultra-processed (aka hyper-processed) edible products are a blight on public wellness and society at large. VeryWellHealth.com prefers “ultra-processed,” and it was possible to glean copious information on this food genre from three of the website’s recent articles (authors: Stephanie Brown and Kathleen Ferraro), all listed at the bottom of the post.

Some experts say that these abominations constitute over 70% of the total USA food supply, which if true is pitiful. Others say they make up 50% or even close to 60% of the average American’s diet. All those sources could be correct. Still, large amounts of research on this matter have taken place not only in the U.S., but in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, and the United Kingdom.

Back in 2009, a research team led by Carlos A. Monteiro (M.D., Ph.D.) defined ultra-processed foods as the most extreme of four possible categories, according to the NOVA classification system. This system has been refined somewhat over time, and its creators have put together an online research tool, TrueFood, which extracts data from systems run by the Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The website uses machine learning whose algorithm assigns ultra-rating numbers to more than 50,000 food products, based on how much they have been messed with. In theory, the number indicates the hazard level of the different foods, in terms of their degree of processing. (That web address is not included here because your computer’s security system may issue a danger warning — probably because the site uses Artificial Intelligence to rate the thousands of items, and the results include “margins of error” anyway.)

So, get on with it

Group 1 includes unprocessed or minimally processed foods; Group 2 signifies processed culinary ingredients. In the third group, “processing” is a benign word that does not indicate danger, but just means that the edible item has been washed, chopped, peeled, steamed, or something else that an old-fashioned cook might do — in other words, any basic prep level at all.

With Group 4, however, we are now in ultra-processed land, where the problems dwell. Dr. Monteiro suggested that “[…] the end products of food ultra-processing are products that perhaps we shouldn’t call foods…” His official definition deemed them to be…

[…] industrial formulations made mostly or entirely with substances extracted from foods, often chemically modified, and from additives, with little if any whole food added.

These agglomerations of predominantly harmful (or at best, useless) stuff are likely to contain plenty of fat, sugar, salt, and weird additives. Apparently, if the product is made with any additive, or with even one NOVA Group 4 ingredient, it can be considered ultra-processed.

What these alleged groceries will likely not contain are whole foods or even identifiable elements of food, like fiber, vitamins or minerals. The allegedly edible substances may have been subjected to chemical modification and recombination. Here is a fact with a sinister ring to it:

Sequences of processes are and must be used to obtain, alter, and combine the ingredients and to formulate the final products.

As a definition, that sentence encompasses so much it actually turns out to be meaningless. Because multiple various factors are involved, and because studying the actual habits of people is problematic unless they can be kept in environments equivalent to lab cages, some experts are not convinced of the potential harm.

(To be continued…)

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “What Does ‘Ultra-Processed Food’ Actually Mean?,” VeryWellHealth.com, 07/06/22
Source: “Every Bite of Ultra-Processed Foods May Increase Risk of Early Death, Study Says,”
VeryWellHealth.com, 05/05/25
Source: “What Happens to Your Body When You Eat Fewer Ultra-Processed Foods,” VeryWellHealth.com, 04/11/25
Image by jodiandbrett/Pixabay

Eggs on our Minds

To mention that eggs have been in the news lately would be a laughable understatement. For approximately the past three months they have been on everybody’s mind, and even that is far from being the whole picture. For EatThis.com, Sarah Garone and Olivia Tarantino wrote:

If there’s any food fraught with a tug-of-war over its healthfulness, it’s eggs. Over the years, eggs have been viewed as everything from an example of the perfect whole food to a dreaded harbinger of heart disease.

Too many eggs can bring on an undesirable effect: too much cholesterol. The authors note that nutritional guidelines no longer mention a specific cholesterol limit, but recommend that consumption of it be “as low as possible.” On the other hand, a spectacularly large study (half a million adult Chinese subjects) revealed that “up to one egg per day actually decreased the chances of developing cardiovascular disease.”

But with more, the benefits drop off precipitously. The people of China are known for their per-capita egg consumption, and collectively they account for around 400 billion eggs per year.

A recent article from ScienceDirect.com delved into the effect on obesity of the various nutrients found in eggs. Some of them actually play a role in regulating lipid metabolism in ways that prevent obesity. Apparently, it is not even certain that the consumption of egg cholesterol increases human blood cholesterol. When it comes to diabetes risk, the jury is still out.

As for weight gain, eggs seem to suffer from a certain amount of guilt by association. People like to eat them with bacon, sausage, hash-brown potatoes, and other unwise choices. Some helpful suggestions in this area include studying up on heart-healthy cooking fats, and combining eggs with vegetables.

What is going on, anyway?

A review published at around the same time in the journal Poultry Science looked at a meta-study that had reviewed two decades of nutritional literature and found that most of the nutrients in eggs are not obesogenic but surprisingly appear to “reduce the probability of obesity via lipid metabolism regulation.”

However, there seems to be an exception among “high responders,” or individuals who are particularly prone to significant changes in their cholesterol levels because they metabolize it either more or less effectively. The body of course needs the stuff, but normally our own livers produce enough of it. There seems to be a feeling that more research in this area would be welcome.

Leaving that aside, “[E]ggs are one of the healthiest sources of protein, essential amino acids, and micronutrients beneficial to human health.” Not surprisingly, the cooking method makes a noticeable difference, with soft-boiled eggs being the safest bet.

In “9 Steps to Perfect Health,” Chris Kesser has noted that nutrients in animal products like fish, meat, poultry, dairy, and eggs are highly bioavailable, meaning that we can absorb them easily. Pasture-raised animals are known for their nutrient-dense meat, while pasture-raised hens make eggs that contain as much as 10 times more omega-3 than factory hen eggs, as well as being noticeably higher in B12, folate, vitamin A, protein, and fat-soluble antioxidants like vitamin E.

Can we agree to disagree?

The consensus seems to be that eggs are great for just about everyone, except people troubled by diabetes or cardiovascular disease. But even for folks who do not have to deal with those conditions, there is still such a thing as too many. Agreement seems to have settled on the notion that an average of one egg per day is reasonable, although they can be distributed throughout the week as multiple eggs on some days, and none on others.

Some authorities are even okay with healthy folks eating 10 eggs per week, although cholesterol-sensitive individuals need to tone it down. For those who forego the yolks, two egg whites count as the equivalent of one whole egg.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “ 5 Dangerous Side Effects of Eating Too Many Eggs, According to Science,” EatThis.com, 09/01/24
Source: “Association between egg consumption and risk of obesity: A comprehensive review: Egg Consumption and Obesity,” ScienceDirect.com, February 2025
Source: “Eggs are back on the menu: Study finds no link to obesity with moderate intake,” News-Medical.net, 12/19/24
Source: “9 Steps to Perfect Health,” Chris Kresser, undated
Image by stevepb/Pixabay

The 7th of the 9 Truths

This is Truth #7 in a series that encompasses all nine of them, as proposed several years ago by the Academy for Eating Disorders. By this point, a reader might begin to suspect that not much more is known today, than was back when “Nine Truths about Eating Disorders” first appeared.

Many of the conclusions demonstrate unchanging precepts — like the fact that two things can be true at the same time. In the words of #7’s subtitle, both genes and environment “play important roles in the development of eating disorders.”

Anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and binge eating disorder all run in families. Which exact genes are responsible, is still a mystery. One current source says, “There is a known phenotypic link between AN, growth, and sexual maturation, yet the genetic overlap between these phenotypes remains enigmatic.” So, there we have it.

On the other hand, generalizations apply, and there is one thing we do know. Science did not need to wait for the telescope or the microscope to discover that eating disorders run in families, or to notice that the cultural environment has a lot to do with how individuals (and nations) feel about human bodies and food customs. Still, psychological pressure does not seem to cause as much distress as it would, if not affected by other factors.

Can we ever know anything?

It is interesting that most people who, according to the signs, “should” develop eating disorders, do not. To discover the reasons behind this and so many other mysteries, the authors warned, would require scientists to inspect “very large sample sizes (in the tens of thousands).” But of course, volume is only one facet of discovery. Life, as always, is multifactorial. As the 2017 authors phrased it,

Eating disorders are “complex traits,” meaning that multiple genetic and environmental factors — each of small to moderate effect — act together to increase risk. Genetic and environmental factors may not only act in an additive manner, but may co-act in other ways.

Additionally, little as was known about AN at the time, even less was known about BN and BED. Moving on to Truth #8, we will not even go into why eating disorders do not follow Mendelian transmission patterns. And besides, in many cases, a family with an afflicted child will be at a loss to identify any relative who suffered from one of the conditions. Of course, war, adoption, and other socially unstabilizing vicissitudes can break connections which might have aided logical causation assumptions.

Too much togetherness presents another research problem, called confounding. In a family, there are a lot of shared genes and a lot of shared environmental factors, and how are scientific observers supposed to separate the effects of each influence? For this and many related reasons, “Rigorous studies of gene-environment interaction in eating disorders are sparse.” But basically, Truth #8 goes like this: “Genes alone do not predict who will develop eating disorders”:

[H]undreds (or perhaps thousands) of genes act in concert and are influenced by environmental factors. An individual’s risk is a composite of the cumulative number of genetic and environmental risk and protective factors to which they are exposed.

And then, there is the whole field of epigenetics, with DNA methylation, and the modification of things we never imagined could be modified, and the need to differentiate between epigenetic changes seen in the blood and what might happen in the brain; and how to figure out prevention, which is so much preferable to spending years and billions on cures.

One more, for the road

Truth #9 is short and sweet: “Full recovery from an eating disorder is possible. Early detection and intervention are important.” The authors define physical recovery as “the resumption and maintenance of a healthy body weight and a normalization of all physical parameters affected by the eating disorder”:

[B]ehavioral recovery means the absence of eating-disorder related behaviors such as food restriction, binge eating, and purging. Psychological recovery, including the attainment of normal attitudes toward food and the body, is important yet often overlooked.

Then, it gets complicated again due, for starters, to a “lack of consensus on the exact definition”:

It has been proposed that full recovery is achieved only when patients are indistinguishable from healthy controls on all eating disorder related measures, including psychological aspects.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “The Science Behind the Academy for Eating Disorders’ Nine Truths About Eating Disorders,” NIH.gov, October 2017
Source: “An evolutionary perspective on the genetics of anorexia nervosa,” Nature.com, 02/19/25
Image by Prawny/Pixabay

The Nine Truths and Mortality

Again, the document of interest here is a very inspiring piece of scientific journalism titled “The Science Behind the Academy for Eating Disorders’ Nine Truths About Eating Disorders”, which predicted the directions in which research proceeded after its publication. Among the foundations of this branch of the science, we have reached Truth #6 — and this is major: Eating disorders come along with increased risk for medical complications, as well as suicide, making premature death the most significant outcome in which an eating disorder may result.

A seemingly inexplicable link

Over 20 years ago, researchers who dove more deeply into this found that for females between the ages of 15 and 26 afflicted with anorexia nervosa (AN), “the mortality rate is 12 times higher than the death rate of all other causes of death.” Overall, amid the multitude of psychiatric illnesses, the self-starvation route notoriously claims one of the highest death tolls. Even that statistic is equivocal because “one in five deaths in AN is attributable to suicide.”

In fairness, it would seem that, if any of them are deemed to be suicide, they all should be. It’s just that hanging or shooting oneself takes a lot longer than pure, classic starvation. At any rate, here is a shocker:

A large clinical study found that 35.6% of eating disorder patients had attempted suicide at least once, and patients with binge eating and/or purging behaviors were associated with an elevated risk for suicide attempts compared with patients without such behaviors.

Back then, scientists suspected a genetic basis for the “co-occurrence of eating disorders and suicide,” which is intriguing enough to break off from reviewing the past, to look up some more recent news, and indeed it is very current.

About two months ago, Cambridge University Press published a paper with a remarkably long Conclusions section. Here is an excerpt:

On a phenotypic level, we identified a common latent factor contributing to susceptibility to eating disorders and suicidal ideation, both of which also presented substantial proportions of independent variance. These findings suggest a moderate degree of shared genetic architecture, supporting the hypothesis that these conditions are partially influenced by overlapping genetic factors.

By combining observations from the genetic, neurobiological, and psychological perspectives, researchers identified in patients markers of the shared risk for eating disorders and suicidal ideation. Like never before, it became possible to begin understanding shared neurocognitive deficits. In addition, both eating disorders and suicidal ideation are influenced by environmental factors.

Among many other questions, the exploratory teams wanted to discover if eating disorders lead to suicidal ideation, or vice-versa. If there is nothing resembling a causal relationship either way, that strengthens the possibility that they “emerge concurrently from shared vulnerabilities.”

The interested scientists hoped to find numbers of individuals with “elevated genetic predisposition for the general susceptibility factor” and conduct longitudinal studies which ultimately reveal protective factors that could be used to reduce the risk of both eating disorders and suicidal ideation. This type of knowledge is expected to have powerful ethical, social, and clinical ramifications.

As if that were not enough

The following month (last month, as of this writing) saw the publication of “Genetic links between eating disorder symptoms and suicidal ideation” by Bryony Doughty, which summarizes the latest news on the heritability of eating disorders, in conjunction with suicidal ideation and behavior. Not surprisingly, the newest reports are hardly more informative than the ones a decade old or more. The whole subject has turned out to be an incredibly tough nut to crack. As an action plan, it is suggested…

[…] that mental health professionals should routinely screen for suicidality in patients with any disordered eating symptoms, even if they aren’t showing symptoms of mood disorders… For individuals struggling with an eating disorder, understanding that suicidality may have a genetic root can be validating.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “The Science Behind the Academy for Eating Disorders’ Nine Truths About Eating Disorders,” NIH.gov, October 2017
Source: “Genomic links between symptoms of eating disorders and suicidal ideation,” Cambridge.org, 02/19/25
Source: “Genetic links between eating disorder symptoms and suicidal ideation,” MQMentalHealth.org, 03/17/25
Image by morganharpernichols/Pixabay

The Nine Truths, Again

The final line of the previous post mentioned “biologically-driven maintenance patterns that impede recovery,” which can be quite troublesome. Today’s post continues to examine the sections of a very long and explicit paper about nine distinct areas of concern in the overall subject of eating disorders.

This publication from the Academy for Eating Disorders, titled “Nine Truths about Eating Disorders,” points out that where hazards are concerned, sexual maturity raises the stakes much higher.

Actually, two different and contrary reactions have been observed. In acute cases of anorexia nervosa (AN) and bulimia nervosa (BN), many women have reported that during pregnancy, their illness improved or even temporarily disappeared. But at the same time, anorexic women who had already been in remission have reported that pregnancy brought on relapse.

The gravid state is also one in which binge eating disorder (BED) may present itself for the first time; and even in the absence of pregnancy, BED symptoms may fluctuate according to the menstrual cycle. Less estrogen and more progesterone might increase or even initiate the symptoms of disordered eating. Even more disconcerting for women who just want some peace, menopause can make an eating disorder come back or even start for the first time.

It is all very confusing, and if little is understood about how these processes work in females, the masculine situation is even more mysterious. Males are more elusive to study, partly because they tend to not seek help. If they do start psychological therapy or another sort of healing program, they are more likely than women to drop out.

In both sexes, with the advent of sexual maturity, the chemistry becomes incredibly complicated, and in many cases, each new discovery throws up another question, or several. To get a sense of how convoluted the whole subject is, here are a few ideas the authors proposed for further research:

— examining neuropsychologically-based treatment approaches and outcomes
— treatment matching based on phenotypic psychobiological profiles
— evaluation of childhood behavioral and neurobiological traits
— systematic reviews on altered response to food and exercise in eating disorders and brain function
— additional investigation of neurotransmitter availability and function in eating disorders

Just those few suggestions have subsequently led to deep work in the areas of the measurement and function of cerebrospinal fluid, positron emission tomography (PET scans), magnetic imaging spectroscopy, the role of neural circuitry in eating disorder risk, and postmortem brain analysis. Moving on, what these authors deem Truth #5 is a biggie:

Eating disorders affect people of all genders, ages, races, ethnicities, body shapes and weights, sexual orientations, and socioeconomic statuses.

That’s right, age provides no protection against eating disorders, which impartially strike children, elders, and everyone in between. Not surprisingly, it has been observed that “divorce, loss of family members, or somatic illness could serve as triggers.”

Researchers have meta-analyzed reports from at least 30 different countries and found that eating disorders do not discriminate against people of any particular race and ethnicity, but happily afflict people of every sort. In America, with its lavishly variegated population, some distinctions have been found. In contrast to non-Latino whites, members of ethnic minorities seem to favor binge eating. White people tend slightly more toward AN, and other small irregularities have been found, but on the whole, any eating disorder is an equal-opportunity destroyer.

Eating disorders occur in individuals of all shapes and sizes, although some unexpected oddities in the statistics do occur. Overweight and obese adolescents are prone to BN. On the other hand, “Individuals with BED are commonly overweight or obese… [Y]et a substantial minority of individuals with BED are normal-weight, particularly early in the course of illness.” Again, every answer seems to spawn more questions, some of which get stuck for a long time in the category of appearing unanswerable.

Another area of extreme complication exists in the realm of sexual orientation and gender. Even socioeconomic status insists on being a mystery, with “no consistent association” between fiscal security and eating disorder occurrence. The numbers may be there, but the reasons for them are often obscure. Just when researchers seem to have something figured out, along comes another study to upset the academic applecart.

As research findings shift like the ever-changing patterns inside a kaleidoscope, certainty remains elusive. One thing the authors know for sure is that, in quite a few areas, many more longitudinal studies are needed, and they of course cannot be arbitrarily hurried, so a lot of answers are destined to remain cloudy for quite some time.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “Source: “The Science Behind the Academy for Eating Disorders’ Nine Truths About Eating Disorders,” NIH.gov, October 2017
Image by geralt/Pixabay

The Nine Truths, Continued

Moving on to the third major point made in a very thorough article, first mentioned in the previous post, we need to understand that while an eating disorder may appear to be only a minor personality dysfunction, it might need to be looked at more closely. The issue could either already be — or could have the potential to blossom into — a serious health threat “the effects of which disrupt functioning beyond immediate complications of the eating disorder.”

Especially in uncertain times, it is important to understand that, treated or untreated, an eating disorder will be expensive. When people reach an age where reproductive health becomes an issue, more costs are involved, both financial and otherwise. Still, many negative outcomes can be avoided — which is why, for instance, Childhood Obesity News is interested in alerting parents and professionals to the potential benefits of Brainweighve, because, let’s face it, prevention is so much more efficacious than cure.

Did someone say “multifactorial”?

Truth #4 on the Academy for Eating Disorders list reminds us that no one chooses to suffer from an eating disorder. Even when they themselves may believe they volunteered for it and are consciously running the show, the problem is now understood to be basically organic.

In vulnerable individuals, biological drives towards automaticity can provoke rigid habits to the point where individuals struggle to regain control over their dysregulated eating and physical activity.

We are also reminded that the miraculous human mind can mess with its owner 24 hours a day for years without ever taking a vacation. Still, not everything operates in the psychiatrist’s realm. The authors here state that eating disorders, other habit-related malfunctions, and addiction all are generated by “some shared neurobiology.” Biologically and genetically influenced risk factors are associated with fundamental personality traits and cognitive styles.

Despite how sincerely they might believe they are the captains of their own fate, people affected by these problems are generally kidding themselves, and do not actually have a choice. They may need to pretend to themselves and others that it is all voluntary, because that is less frightening than to acknowledge that all semblance of control has been lost.

In diagnosing and treating these disorders, the authors mention underlying conditions as variations in individual neurobiology, such as “dysregulation in neurotransmitter availability and function.” In other words, an unrecognized factor or factors could be messing with the production of such essential substances as dopamine and serotonin. Here is the problem:

These systems are central in rewarding aspects of food, motivation, executive functions, and the regulation of mood, satiety, and impulse control.

There are differences between people who suffer from active eating disorders, and those who do not. Brain anatomy might be a factor, and so might various aspects of the brain’s operation, affecting emotional processing and cognition, among other functions. This applies especially to teens because:

A maturing brain may be particularly vulnerable to the insults caused by extreme food restriction or excessive exercise resulting in negative energy balance or highly variable energy consumption (binge-fast cycles).

The intellectual workers in this field are comfortable with the idea that the tendency toward eating disorders is biologically influenced, because in animal research subjects it is so obvious. Sure, humans are more complicated than lab rats, but sometimes not by much. Throughout the kingdom of warm-blooded creatures, brain structure and function are responsible for “biologically-driven maintenance patterns that impede recovery.”

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “The Science Behind the Academy for Eating Disorders’ Nine Truths About Eating Disorders,” NIH.gov, October 2017
Image by actaylorjr-6170605/Pixabay

Nine Truths to Build On

A few years back, the Academy for Eating Disorders published a list of nine facts about such ailments. While, of course, plenty of work has been done in the interim, and many discoveries have been made, it is interesting to look back on this document created by 19 authors from three institutions of higher learning, two of them European and one American.

The very first fact mentioned is that many people who suffer from eating disorders may appear healthy, as in “no big deal,” while they are nevertheless quite sick. The problems exist in three different areas: the body, the mind, and the person’s interactions with society in general. To break it down even further, the somatic risks show up in “multiple organ systems including the cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, musculoskeletal, dermatologic, endocrine, hematological, and neurological,” while psychological/psychiatric difficulties present further potential for malfunction.

To complicate matters even more, the affected person’s appearance is not always a clue to the underlying problem. Someone who engages in restrictive eating might look emaciated; on the other hand, their physique might be quite hefty. Neither bulimia nor binge eating can be deduced from an individual’s looks, either. It is important to not make assumptions without evidence.

Another fact is that the majority of people troubled by eating disorders cope on their own, or simply give up, and never even seek treatment. They might keep the problem a secret for years, fooling family members, friends, medical personnel, and even themselves.

Old assumptions die hard

Premise #2 is, no one should leap to the conclusion that family malfunction is the cause. Fault does not always lie with the parents, and, in fact, a child’s eating disorder, especially if it becomes life-threatening, can bring a lot of stress into the family dynamic. Caregivers may be in for a rough ride, especially when the troubled person is anorexic. Parents might suffer “higher levels of distress than individuals caring for patients with psychoses.”

On the other hand, once the “identified patient” is under treatment, attention must also be paid to educating the caregiver/s in self-care, to prevent further erosion of the overall situation. This sounds distressing, but it is very positive news because, in contrast, the historical fact mentioned in a recent post, a “parentectomy” is no longer considered the first, best course of treatment for anorexia.

Start with the positive

In fact, family-based treatment has proven to be very effective, particularly in cases of anorexia. The first step is to help the older members recognize the knowledge and skills they already possess as a strong basis on which to build. When the affected person is an adult, a couple-based intervention can be successful, and might begin with teaching the well partner how to overcome the fear of making the situation worse with inappropriate actions or words.

Up to that point in the history of understanding such illnesses, family-based success had mostly been achieved in cases of anorexia. The study’s authors urged much more research into how BN (bulimia nervosa) and BED (binge eating disorder) could be affected. Still, no matter how good the intentions and how ambitious the family-based treatment may be, the functioning of the family as a whole, in addition to the well-being of individual members, cannot help but be affected.

In particular, there may be an unavoidable financial burden. For teenagers, dealing with these matters as either the identified patient or as a relative can add extra stress to the already multitudinous problems of adolescence. For adults, the more obvious areas of difficulty are intimate relations and reproductive health, as well as adaptation to the theory and practice of new parenting skills.

This should go without saying…

In the realm of family, it ought to be very obvious that prevention is much preferable to intervention. To raise healthy children is such a difficult undertaking, parents ought to have access to comprehensive training — early and often. If for any reason such education is not provided by official entities, perhaps this is a signal that groups of other types need to step up and take responsibility for offering solid advice and practices under which children can flourish.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “The Science Behind the Academy for Eating Disorders’ Nine Truths About Eating Disorders,” NIH.gov, October 2017
Source: “Identified Patient Psychology: Unraveling Family Dynamics and Treatment,” NeuroLaunch.com, 09/15/24
Image by pixelRaw/Pixabay

Around the World With BED

Binge Eating Disorder has made some astonishing strides in the past few years. First, we go back a decade to an article titled, “11 Countries with the Highest Rates of Eating Disorders in the World.”

At that point in time, it was already impossible to ignore the influence of media on the behavior of people, especially young ones. The author noted that about 50% of teen girls and 30% of teen boys were restricting their diets in some way, with weight loss as the goal. Of those dieters, it was estimated that around one-quarter of them eventually wound up with eating disorders. Worse yet, at best guess, most of them never tried to get treatment.

As one of the 11 countries most troubled in this way, the piece surprisingly named Bangladesh, which had in 1974 attracted world attention and aid because of famine conditions that killed as many as a million and a half people. Given that history, it stretches the imagination to picture the inhabitants suffering from any sort of eating problem other than starvation.

Really?

That Vietnam, Pakistan, and Indonesia would be named as prominent eating disorder hotspots is also disconcerting. Another surprise to find in this category at the time was Brazil, with around 37% of its teenagers into binge eating, and almost one-quarter of them being “serial dieters.”

At around the same time, a WHO survey of world mental health noted that very few countries other than the United States even kept track of Binge Eating Disorder (BED), and that fewer than half of either BED or bulimia nervosa sufferers ever received treatment. Apparently, BED was not at the time regarded as a very serious problem, but the authors of the document warned that in terms of public health, it mattered at least as much as bulimia. They added,

Low treatment rates highlight the clinical importance of questioning patients about eating problems even when not included among presenting complaints.

In 2021, a specially-purposed world map designed to indicate the spread of only two disorders, anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa, was published. It showed Australia as the undisputed winner, with about 2% of the country’s population suffering from one or the other.

All over the place

When researchers want to know about the prevalence of binge-eating disorder in various parts of the world, a number of questions immediately present themselves. How should the areas be differentiated? Strictly by national borders? That would be the easiest way, because research tends to be done, if at all, by a particular country’s academic and scientific establishments. Or does it make more sense to categorize unhealthy people by race? By political dogma? By religion? By language? By gender and/or sexual orientation?

A recently published cross-cultural study, with the goal of setting up a standardized framework for assessing Binge Eating Disorder, stated that it…

[…] aimed to evaluate the reliability and validity of the Binge Eating Disorder Screener-7 (BEDS-7) across 42 countries and 26 languages, assessing its reliability and validity […] in diverse cultural contexts.

The researchers note that BED, which is associated with non-trivial risks to psychological and physical health, is ”often underdiagnosed across diverse cultural and clinical settings.” Furthermore, most people who have it do not seek treatment directly for the condition itself, but look first for help with other physical and mental disorders. Along with depression and anxiety, individuals with BED also tend to have histories of substance use (or abuse). The authors note,

When translating and applying questionnaires measuring eating disorders across different cultural contexts, challenges arise due to varying cultural norms related to food, body image, and mental health, which can affect how individuals interpret and respond to questions.

Additionally, there is the fact that many people with disordered eating behaviors do not know it. Women may think it is perfectly normal to obsess over their bodies. Men may believe it is unmasculine to even think about such issues. Researchers also find that, depending on which country information is gathered from, certain groups are under-represented. People with more education and less self-consciousness about their sexuality, for instance, tend to show up for surveys and reply to questionnaires.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “11 Countries with the Highest Rates of Eating Disorders in the World,” InsiderMonkey.com, 06/12/15
Source: “The prevalence and correlates of binge eating disorder in the WHO World Mental Health Surveys,” nih.gov, 05/01/14
Source: “Eating disorders prevalence, 2021,” OurWorldInData.org, 2021
Source: “Cross-Cultural Validation of the Binge Eating Disorder Screener-7 (BEDS-7) Across 42 Countries,” Wiley.com, 03/05/25
Image by Mohamed Hassan/Pixabay

Binge Eating — What’s the Problem, Anyway?

Why is binge-eating disorder such an easy trap to fall into? An argument could be made that this is how humans were naturally trained to eat, far back in antiquity. When hunter-gatherers roamed the earth, there was no other choice. If a large animal could be brought down, sliced up, and cooked, everybody had to gobble up as much of it as possible, right there on the spot.

There were no refrigerators, and even people who never went to college can figure out that after a while, meat goes bad and makes them sick. Gathering, or reaping fruit, vegetables, and grains worked the same way. When some fruit was in season and people found a tree full of it, what else could they do but grab as much of the bounty as possible and keep their systems stoked with it until the next lucky find appeared? When food presented itself, hungry people ate while the eating was good.

It probably should not be surprising that many humans feel the ancestral urge to fill up whenever we can. Some of us are still in the situation of being forced to eat whatever is available, because of uncertainty over when another chance will occur. But millions upon millions of us are not in dire circumstances, and do not have to gorge just in case there is nothing to eat tomorrow. So let’s look at why this habit is so destructive.

Registered dietician Elyse Resch lists seven excellent reasons why anyone embroiled in a binge-eating pattern would do well to get a clue and make the effort to stop the habit. A very valid reason is that it interferes with sleep. First, it might take longer to fall asleep, but then you might wake up feeling thirst, or the jabs of acid reflux, or the simple local discomfort of a distended belly.

The second reason is very important because a condition is created in which we cannot trust the signals sent by our own bodies via the appetite hormone ghrelin or the fullness hormone leptin.

Studies show people who frequently binge-eat have lower levels of ghrelin and have difficulty responding to hormones in general. Binge-eating on a regular basis makes it harder for your body to figure out if you’re still hungry, or satiated.

The third reason is that the postprandial surges of glucose and insulin can interfere with the body’s immune system and make us more vulnerable to colds and other infectious conditions.

Next, the American Psychological Association has determined that, as with alcohol and some drugs, a food overdose can put the brain into a state of oblivion that allows the eater to escape self-awareness. Needless to say, this happens at a time when the brain most needs to be asking, “Hey, what the heck am I doing?”

The binge eater’s goal is to induce a state of peaceful relaxed bliss, but the body knows enough to reach for homeostasis, or balance. It attempts this by producing stress hormones, which in turn speed up the heart rate and produce anxious sweat, along with unpleasant irritability, and lethargy — an emotion qualitatively different from peaceful relaxation.

After consumption of a bunch of simple carbohydrates and sugar, the pancreas leaps into red alert mode trying to compensate by producing enough insulin to cope. This is a further deterrent to the body’s preferred state of homeostasis.

A reasonably balanced meal induces the brain to release dopamine, which is fine, but after overeating becomes habitual, the brain struggles to catch up and needs more and more fat and sugar input to pump out the dopamine reward. Gradually but inevitably, overeating becomes over-overeating and over-over-overeating.

Bonus list

Also from BestHealthMag.ca, here are the warning signals that a person is consuming too much sugar. Does anything strike a familiar note?

1. An acne breakout
2. A mid-day energy slump or headache
3. Dental cavities
4. High blood pressure
5. High cholesterol
6. A post-exercise energy crash from using simple sugars for fuel
7. Clothes that used to fit are too tight
8. Depression caused by systemic inflammation
9. The body doesn’t get the message that food has been taken on board, and doesn’t “feel full.”

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “7 Reasons to Stop Binge-Eating,” BestHealthMag.ca, 07/16/19
Source: “9 Clear Signs You’re Eating Too Much Sugar,” BestHealthMag.ca, 01/03/17
Image by The Digital Artist/Pixabay

Monkey See, Monkey Do

In an earlier post, the question about learning came up. Does someone with an eating disorder discover the lifestyle on their own, spontaneously? Or do they absorb the concept, either covertly or openly, from an older relative, or from a peer, or from the older relative of a peer? Or read about it in a novel, or see a TV show?

Of course these questions are already archaic, because now this dangerous information is easy to pick up from social media and other internet sources. But in the old days, how might someone have stumbled onto the idea of, for example, habitual vomiting as a method of weight control?

In the close confines of the family environment, a child can hardly avoid noticing behaviors associated with eating disorders. The thing about children is, they not only notice things, but assume that what they see at home is how things are supposed to be. By and large, it is helpful to society for children to make this assumption. Babies are born fully prepared to look at and imitate the older humans in their environment who take care of them. Parents, older siblings, and other relatives are expected to be role models, who demonstrate to babies how to form themselves into people.

Children have eyes and ears

In the past, a typical one-family home or apartment would only have one bathroom. What on earth was Aunt Cindy doing, spending so much time in there? How many moms spent extra moments in the basement, next to the wringer washing machine, throwing up into the utility sink?

What other behaviors could be discovered or learned? How many teenage girls have appreciated the convenience of making unwanted food disappear into the mouth of the family dog? And if kids don’t pick up eating disorder behaviors from grownups, how do those notions originate? For instance, is throwing up after meals, like masturbation, a behavior that any child can eventually discover on their own, without witnessing a demonstration?

A bit of history

Bulimia nervosa has been described as “insatiable waves of overeating followed by compensatory methods,” driven by the irresistible urge to overeat that is in constant conflict with the fear of obesity. Once bulimia was formally introduced into the medical literature, many more cases were identified and diagnosed, as might be expected. In successive editions of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, as well as other literature, definitions were characterized according to the frequency with which patients employed compensatory behaviors. This fine-tuning allowed cases to be sorted into the categories of mild, moderate, and extreme.

It appears that bulimia usually kicks in at the age of 16 or 17, and the author mentions the unexpected detail that “the rates are highest among the Hispanic/Latino population, second highest among African-Americans and lowest in non-Latin whites.” (Anorexia, on the other hand, is most prevalent among non-Latin whites.) Elena Bowie writes,

Studies have found that eating disorders are inheritable, in addition to several other parental factors that can influence the susceptibility of developing an eating disorder, like parental mental illness or parents with negative views of weight…

To diagnose bulimia may be difficult because patients “are likely to hide their symptoms and physical signs are usually absent.” Often, the evidence is provided by parents or other people in a position to notice changes in behavior. Some of them notice the signs because they have had personal experience with an eating disorder, and have overcome the urge to make it a lifestyle. The author cautions,

The most important thing to take note of is that recovery from Bulimia is not a one size fits all approach and requires careful planning of the physical, psychological, and social needs to create the best possible chance for recovery.

Your responses and feedback are welcome!

Source: “History of Bulimia nervosa,” Emory.edu, 04/01/21
Image by Shutterbug75

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Profiles: Kids Struggling with Weight

Profiles: Kids Struggling with Obesity top bottom

The Book

OVERWEIGHT: What Kids Say explores the obesity problem from the often-overlooked perspective of children struggling with being overweight.

About Dr. Robert A. Pretlow

Dr. Robert A. Pretlow is a pediatrician and childhood obesity specialist. He has been researching and spreading awareness on the childhood obesity epidemic in the US for more than a decade.
You can contact Dr. Pretlow at:

Presentations

Dr. Pretlow’s invited presentation at the American Society of Animal Science 2020 Conference
What’s Causing Obesity in Companion Animals and What Can We Do About It

Dr. Pretlow’s invited presentation at the World Obesity Federation 2019 Conference:
Food/Eating Addiction and the Displacement Mechanism

Dr. Pretlow’s Multi-Center Clinical Trial Kick-off Speech 2018:
Obesity: Tackling the Root Cause

Dr. Pretlow’s 2017 Workshop on
Treatment of Obesity Using the Addiction Model

Dr. Pretlow’s invited presentation for
TEC and UNC 2016

Dr. Pretlow’s invited presentation at the 2015 Obesity Summit in London, UK.

Dr. Pretlow’s invited keynote at the 2014 European Childhood Obesity Group Congress in Salzburg, Austria.

Dr. Pretlow’s presentation at the 2013 European Congress on Obesity in Liverpool, UK.

Dr. Pretlow’s presentation at the 2011 International Conference on Childhood Obesity in Lisbon, Portugal.

Dr. Pretlow’s presentation at the 2010 Uniting Against Childhood Obesity Conference in Houston, TX.

Food & Health Resources