Food and Nutrition
Re-Married for Consumers' Health
Newswise — It could be
decades before science can accurately measure
the body’s systems to determine which foods, in
what quantities and combinations, will best
combat against disease and illness, experts say.
But when that time comes, expect each diet to be
as individual as the person. That’s the general
consensus among food scientists gathered here
who in some instances can’t even agree on the
current effectiveness of functional foods.
“The informed consumer is a
good consumer,” said Bruce German, a professor
at the University of California at Davis and
consultant for the Nestle food company, speaking
to other food professionals at the Institute of
Food Technologists Annual Meeting & Food Expo.
German addressed designing
diets that fit individuals’ health profiles.
“We have to understand what’s going on tissue to
tissue. We have to understand food in all its
aspects—its structure as well as our personal
preferences about taste,” he said. He described
food and nutrition in the 20th century as
“divorced. In many ways they hated each other.”
Getting enough essential
nutrients—the goal of nutritional health during
the 1900s—has led to obesity, diseases like Type
2 diabetes, and a fundamental ignorance about
the relationship between food and health,
according to German.
“The decision to
separate food and nutrition was a disaster.
We have to put those two fields back
together again.”
While functional food
appears today to be a popular means for
individuals to craft their own healthy diet,
Peter Clifton, Ph.D., a professor at Adelaide
University in Australia and researcher with the
country’s national science agency, called
functional foods “a myth.”
The evidence is patchy that
fish oil could reduce heart disease or dementia
unless taken in large doses, he said. Similarly,
eating lycopene, an antioxidant found in
tomatoes, did not reduce prostate cancer in the
studies he noted. Clifton also illustrated that
beta-carotene consumed in large amounts,
according to one study, was associated with the
increased risk of prostate cancer.
“One needs to be cautious
about recommending willy-nilly to increase these
nutrients,” Clifton said, though he did admit to
eating carrots.
More science is required to
prove these “strongly marketed additives have
any positive effect,” he said.
Clifton did give a nod to probiotics, the
bacteria found in products like yogurt, calling
them beneficial in preventing gastrointestinal
problems. Americans have not quite fallen in
love with yogurt as Europeans have, but when
they do, Clifton said, “there will be a dawning
of more probiotic products.”
The IFT Annual Meeting +
Food Expo is the world’s largest annual
scientific forum and exposition on food. Ranked
among the largest U.S. conventions, the meeting
delivers comprehensive, cutting-edge research
and opinion from food science-, technology-,
marketing- and business-leaders.
Having concluded its 67th
annual session on Tuesday, the IFT Annual
Meeting now directs its attention toward today’s
IFT Global Food Safety & Quality conference, and
the IFT Food Nanoscience conference.
Founded in 1939, and with
world headquarters in Chicago, IFT is a
not-for-profit international scientific society
with 22,000 members working in food science,
technology and related professions in industry,
academia and government. As the society for food
science and technology, IFT brings sound science
to the public discussion of food issues. For
more on IFT, see
http://IFT.org.