Category Archives: Prevention - Page 2

Illusion and Health

A recent University of Texas study about the gap between perception of adequate exercise and optimal diet and the reality of an individual’s regime sent me googling.

I remembered a similar meme about body image. My memory was that men do not see how fat they are, and women imagine themselves fat when they are not, leading to anorexia.

Here are a few of them, and there are no doubt more:

Those studies raised an important question: how do reality and perception diverge when it comes to health?

So, let’s look at the University of Texas study from the Journal of Women’s Health, entitled Lifestyle and Cancer Prevention in Women: Knowledge, Perceptions, and Compliance with Recommended Guidelines.

Among those who believed that good diet and physical activity prevented cancer, the study found discrepancies (I have color-coded them) between what they believed they were doing and were actually doing as shown in the following table:

Women's Perceptions JWH 20130610

It can be seen that while 85 percent believe they are consuming a healthy diet, only 8.5 percent are eating an adequate amount of fruits and vegetables. While 73.1 percent reported engaging in physical activity to prevent cancer, only 31.5 percent were active enough to have a positive impact.

The study found that the significant predictors of the discrepancy were education, and to a lesser extent race-ethnicity independent of education. While the authors speculate about the reasons for those findings, they are clear and unambiguous about the implications, which I quote at length with the footnotes removed:

This finding has important public health implications. The first implication is that women in the current study reported understanding that engaging in regular physical activity and eating a healthy diet are important behaviors for cancer prevention. Thus, media campaigns and targeted public health messages should focus on the importance of specific frequencies and durations of recommended behaviors (i.e., 5 a Day for Better Health), and place less emphasis on the general importance of health behaviors. This may help attenuate the “underdosing” observed in the current study. Current public health efforts are focusing on making community-wide changes to reduce obesity and improve health.19 These efforts may be enhanced by promoting awareness of potential discrepancies between perceptions of behavior and actual behavior and by highlighting practical ways to integrate specific cancer prevention behaviors into daily life at adequate levels. Furthermore, they should consider the imbalance between educational resources for healthy eating and physical activity and barriers to these behaviors (i.e., society encourages the overconsumption of unhealthy food; low access to fresh produce and places to exercise safely sometimes exists). Given that women often serve as “gatekeepers” of health behavior within their families, efforts to address these discrepancies among women may ultimately have a positive downstream effect on men and children. Because dietary habits are often solidified in childhood, the discrepancies observed in this study could potentially set children up for a lifetime of poor health behaviors. These findings add to the body of existing literature indicating that although health-relevant knowledge and attitudes are generally positively associated with the practice health behaviors, the associations are only modest.

Results further indicated that the observed discrepancies for diet and physical activity were significantly more common among women with less education and among members of racial/ethnic minority groups. This is consistent with a large body of research supporting a social gradient in health (i.e., lower socioeconomic position and minority status are associated with poorer health behaviors and poorer health outcomes). One explanation for this is differential exposure to obesogenic environments. That is, individuals with low socioeconomic status and racial/ethnic minorities have less access to healthier foods such as fruits and vegetables due to higher cost and lower access to grocery stores that carry fresh produce. They also have fewer safe places to engage in physical activity. These women may be particularly vulnerable to perceiving that they are engaging in specific diet and physical activity behaviors to help prevent cancer. However, they may lack the opportunity to fully engage in preventive behaviors, thus failing to engage in such behaviors with sufficient frequency and duration to reduce their cancer risk. Such women may need to be specifically targeted for intervention and may benefit from tailored messages and interventions regarding diet and physical activity.

Do we not all know friends and family and clients who believe they are eating well and exercising adequately, but do not understand why their weight keeps rising, with the attendant complications? Our challenge as a society is not only to find ways of addressing the health problems that are undermining our economy and personal functioning that underpin our nation, but to communicate those findings in a way that is unambiguous and specific. The challenge of communicating the findings of a solution to the public health issues may be even more daunting than isolating those causes.

Obesity confusion

We are agreed that obesity is a problem, for individuals and for society.

We are agreed that dieting alone will not help. The latest popular diet approach is part of the background noise not part of the solution. Here is some noise from my Facebook feed as I was writing this posting.

Obesity diet noise

Exercise and dieting combined would work, but is probably beyond the ability of many if not most people facing obesity. Indeed, starting any exercise program may be a challenge to both will and health of someone morbidly obese.

We know that bariatric surgery can work; however, it is invasive, expensive, and there are debates among specialists about what works sufficiently.

Indeed, after Governor Chris Christie of New Jersey announced that he had had a gastric band implanted, there was considerable debate about whether that was sufficient compared to gastric bypass surgery, particularly given the failure rate of the laparascopic gastric band or “lap band.”

There is open debate about whether obesity prevention measures are cost-effective.

As if the problem were not challenging enough, a study has shown that physicians fail to demonstrate to obese patients the empathy necessary to effect change.

Al Lewis argues that many of our workplace wellness programs are ill-conceived and ineffective.

The seriousness of the problem is underscored by a Metlife study showing that obesity contributes $1,723 per person per year to the Medicare budget, or 8.5 percent of the total.

We are not left with a solid place to make a stand against obesity. My plan is to walk a bit more and eat a bit less as I contemplate next steps. What are your thoughts?

Fast food and slow death

My father returned from a business trip with great enthusiasm for a new food product he had experienced. A company had found the best meat available and mass produced hamburgers, with the mustard, ketchup, and pickle already on the bun. Dad had eaten his first McDonald’s hamburger, more than a half century ago.

He died at age 45 of a massive heart attack, a product not only of McDonald’s and other fast food, but of a sedentary lifestyle, poor heredity, and a 1950’s diet, in which it wasn’t a meal without meat.

He and others who lived through the Second World War had experienced the deprivation of rationing following not long after the Great Depression. Having enough to eat, enough protein to eat, and then seeing opulent food as a sign of material success were all very real to that generation.

The success of feminism led to changes in America’s eating habits. Instead of one partner packing the lunch pail and preparing dinner, both were in the work force, too hurried and harried to spend as much time on meals. Quick meals, whether processed from the grocery store or from a fast food chain, became the norm. In the not too distant future we will learn what the impact has been on gut bacteria that process nutrients and play a role in regulating our weight.

In October 2011 researchers from the University of Michigan, Warsaw School of Social Science and Humanities, and the University of Texas published a study showing significant correlation between national rates of obesity and the density of Subway restaurants in 28 developed nations. Their study ‘Globesization’:
ecological evidence on the relationship between fast food outlets and obesity among 26 advanced
economies
found high rates of obesity in countries such as the United States and Canada with high density of Subway restaurants compared to low rates of obesity in countries such as Japan and Norway with low rates.

We can safely assume that it is not Subway alone, but a propensity to support fast food restaurants that is related to obesity. In the study graphic below, the clustering of values along a rising trend line from lower right to upper left, demonstrates the correlation between obesity on the vertical and subways on the horizontal:

Subway_Obesity

Source: Roberto De Vogli , Anne Kouvonen & David Gimeno (2011): ‘Globesization’: ecological evidence on the relationship between fast food outlets and obesity among 26 advanced economies, Critical Public Health, 21:4, 395-402

My father’s generation died sooner, from fatty diets, cigarettes, and a sedentary lifestyle. If anything, computers have made our lifestyles more sedentary, but we know the dangers of cigarettes and saturated fats. We have statin drugs to stave off early death. Now we live longer, die slower, and endure chronic illnesses, such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes.

One of the singular distinctions between children and adults is the ability of adults to postpone pleasure and even endure discomfort in pursuit of a greater good. That may mean planning healthier meals, lighter meals, walking more and driving less. It means, in short, all the things we know we should do but sometimes do not. A long life need not be accompanied by a slow death–if we are willing to act on the knowledge we already have.

Are we making progress or falling behind?

In health care we don’t need to look far for bad news. In the past week, I have read:

  1. The prevalence of diabetes has increases 75 percent from the early nineties to the late naughts. A more extensive discussion (may require free Medscape subscription registration) is at New Statistics Shed Light on ‘Worrisome’ Diabetes Epidemic
  2. Leapfrog Hospital Safety Scores ‘Depressing’
  3. Study finds jump in ER-related admissions

And certainly we could include partisan bickering in Washington among politicians more focused on the next election than any meaningful policy debate or measures.

However, the simple fact is that none of this matters. We have no choice. If we do not adequately address our health care needs, then we will no survive as individuals or as a society.

If that premise, the premise of this blog, is correct, then we must assure access to healthcare for everyone. We must get the public health epidemics of obesity, diabetes, and gun violence, among others, under control.

On this Memorial Day, as we reflect on how many Americans have given up their lives at a young age to protect the American experiment, let us consider our debt to them: we owe it to them to insure that our society does not fail and that individuals not on battlefields do not give up their lives at a young age because they ate too much or someone bought a gun out of fear.

We are Americans: we do not accept failure in ourselves. The rest is trivial distraction.

The latest in DME: an umbrella

When my wife moved to the States from Singapore, she was amazed to find that the umbrellas sold did not list their UV protection. Singapore is 137 km or 85 miles from the equator, and light skin is valued in Chinese culture. So protection from the aging and darkening effect of the sun’s rays has strong cultural underpinnings–unlike the US where there seems to be a tanning salon in every strip mall.

Normally we don’t think of an umbrella as DME (Durable Medical Equipment). However, if DME is home medical equipment you need for your health, then using an umbrella to prevent melanoma seems to qualify. As reported in JAMA Dermatology The researchers Josette R. McMichael, MD, Emir Veledar, PhD, and Suephy C. Chen, MD, MS of Emory University performed a simple, but well-designed experiment: they invited friends to join them in a parking lot, took 3 ultra-violet radiation (UVR) readings, and then opened umbrellas the friends had brought, taking two UVR readings, 1 cm from the individual, and 1 cm from the edge of the umbrella as shown:

Umbrella_uvr_measurement_20130304

There was wide variety in protection among the 22 umbrellas tested, ranging from a white totes® (77%) to a silver Coolibar® (99%). Fourteen were black in color.

Some of the numbers: Umbrella_findings_20130314

As is apparent in the account, the two readings (close and far) were highly correlated. The following scatterplot shows that as the values of each of the two readings are on the axes. The lowest reading shows the greatest protection, so umbrella 6 is the Coolibar®.

Umbrella_uvr_emory_20130304

As the earth warms, we can expect disturbances in the atmosphere that increase our exposure to UVR. Borrowing the style of the 19th century, carrying umbrellas, especially those designed to screen UVR, may be the best we can do.

Bad News for Boomers: Our Parents Were Healthier

As Americans we believe in progress, in a better tomorrow, sometimes with a bump in the road or a hiccough, but always a better tomorrow.

The data are in (March 4,2013 edition of JAMA Internal Medicine), and it ain’t happening for boomers. Blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes, and obesity–all greater than the previous generation.

Boomer_Parent_Comparison_JAMAinternalmed_20130304
Source: The Status of Baby Boomers’ Health in the United States The Healthiest Generation?
Dana E. King, MD, MS; Eric Matheson, MD, MS; Svetlana Chirina, MPH; Anoop Shankar, MD, PhD, MPH; Jordan Broman-Fulks
JAMA Intern Med. 2013;173(5):385-386

Although longevity has risen during the twenty-year gap between the two groups, every other indicator of health, except smoking, has become less favorable. And the pattern is clear.

At the top of the following chart are general measures of health. Then, we can see that lifestyle factors have declined leading to the trends in the last section: declining indicators of cardiovascular health.

We can’t choose to be healthy or not: what we can do is make healthy choices by changing the lifestyle factors.

We are choosing illness at great expense to ourselves, both financially and in quality of life, while continuing to endure longer and sicker lives instead of enjoying healthier lives.

Boomer_Parent_Extract_Comparison

Salt: Connecting the Dots

Some number of millenia ago our evolutionary forebears crawled out of the sea, carrying its salt flowing through their veins to ours. In the right amount, salt is not only good for us but essential to life.

That is not the same, however, as dumping salt on our food before tasting it or eating processed dinners, from the supermarket or from the nearest fast food franchise.

Most of us have long known that salt increases hypertension among salt-sensitive individuals.

Two sets of studies have come out, one widely publicized, the other well below the radar, that add concerns about excess salt consumption.

Researchers publishing in a recent issue of Nature have linked salt consumption to auto-immune disorders such as multiple sclerosis, psoriasis, ankylosing spondylitis, and rheumatoid arthritis. Unless you have a $200 annual subscription to Nature, you may wish to google “salt autoimmune” to read descriptions of the studies. Or, you may wish to simply click on these links to Medical News Today or The Huffington Post.

So, what are the dots to be connected? That’s where the second study comes in, the one with little publicity.

A presentation at the 2013 American Academy of Dermatology annual meeting in March found that individuals with psoriasis were more likely to have metabolic syndrome. They found that 30 percent of the psoriasis children had metabolic syndrome symptoms compared to the non-psoriasis group. There were not significant differences in Body-Mass Index (BMI), c-reactive protein, or endothelial cells

A 2012 study in South India found a higher incidence of metabolic syndrome among those with psoriasis. In this case:

Patients were diagnosed with MetS for having three or more South Asian Modified National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III criteria: abdominal obesity (waist circumference ≥90 cm for men, ≥80 cm for women); blood pressure, >130/85 mm Hg; fasting blood glucose, ≥100 mg/dL; hypertriglyceridemia, >150 mg/dL; or low HDL (<40 mg/dL for men, <50 mg/dL for women).

Calcium: Friend or foe? Part II

Last time we looked at calcium supplements and cardiovascular risk. The indicators are strong that men should not be taking calcium supplements in the absence of a very clear, unambiguous reason to do so. Women at risk for osteoporosis, for example, need to discuss the relative risks and benefits with their physician. No treatment is without potential risks, so we need to make decisions based on likely outcomes and known risks.

Susanna C. Larsson PhD puts the issue of calcium in perspective:

Larsson_JAMA_Calcium_2013

In addition to the cardiovascular risks we have considered, there are elevated risks of kidney stones (renal calculi). Calcium is intimately related to the development of kidney stones, also called “calcium stones.

The U.S.Preventive Services Task Force has issued recommendations.

Annals of Medicine Calcium 2013

Here is what those recommendations ( I Statement and Grade: D) mean:

UPSTF grades

The best, meaning safest, sources of calcium are not supplements but diet. The Office of Dietary Supplements at NIH has issued a helpful Calcium Fact Sheet/a>

The recommended daily allowances for calcium are:

CalciumRDAs

And some of the best sources to attain that level of daily calcium consumption are:
NIHCalciumsources

Calcium: Friend or foe? Part I

As I approached a certain age, my doctor said, “Oh, are you taking calcium supplements?” And, I asked him, “Isn’t arterial plaque calcified cholesterol? Is it really a good idea to flood my arteries with calcium?” He is a thoughtful person. “Maybe not,” he said, upon reflection.

The main therapeutic use of calcium supplements is to ward off osteoporosis. We are beginning to live longer than our bones were intended, and we are trying to avoid turning into boneless amoebae before we die. Knowing from childhood that “calcium builds strong bones,” we thought calcium supplements made perfect sense.

Calcium Source: news@Jama

I felt really validated when studies came out showing calcium to be a cardiac risk. The most recent was published online a month ago. The NIH AARP Diet and Health Study found a higher risk of cardiovascular events in men taking supplementary calcium. Why the risk did not appear to be elevated for women is a subject for further study.

Similar findings have been reported in the British Medical Journal: Heart and Education in Heart.
Calcium supplements: bad for the heart?
Heart 2012;98:12 895-896

As well as in other European studies:
2011_BMJ_Heart_Calcium

Where are those calories are coming from?

Hint: it’s fast food. A recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) study found that over a 3-year period 11.3 percent of calories came from fast food.

That surprises no one. There were, however, two interesting points made:

First, while adults have decreased their intake of fast food, consumption by youth has increased. As consumption of fast food declines with age, it is not clear to me whether the decline is true progress or related to the aging of the population.

The second takeaway from the study is more intriguing, as shown in the following summary of study findings:

CDC_NatHealthSurveyNutrition_201302

I have highlighted the finding at the bottom of the graphic.

When it comes to fast food: the more you eat, the more you gain; the more you gain, the more you eat.

If someone told you that the more heroin, opium, etc. you consume the more you want, you would not be surprised.

Are you as surprised as I am to find a study that shows the same is true of fast food?

Since we regulate addictive drugs, there is an argument to be made that addictive substances consumed as food could be regulated as well. I do not know what that regulation should consist of, only that we have a tradition of regulating addictive substances, assuming that the individual is incapable of self-regulation in the face of addiction.

As is frequently the case, the questions that arise are more intriguing and clear than the answers.

Source: NCHS Data Brief ■ No. 114 ■ February 2013