Liberation Wellness

"For LIFE"

Author Archive

Soy and Sugar Tie to Bee Die Off?

Posted by Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN on May 24, 2011

Honeybees are going missing from their hives and no one knows why. The missing bees are presumed dead though investigators have yet to find bodies to autopsy. The phenomenon—labeled Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD)—has appeared in at least 22 states and Canada, and to a lesser extent in Germany, Switzerland and India. Beekeepers have reported losses as high as 70 percent on the east coast and in Texas, and as high as 60 percent on the west coast. The U.S. beekeeping industry—and the farmers that depend on bees —are in turmoil as bees are desperately needed to pollinate fourteen billion dollars worth of crops, mostly fruits, vegetables and nuts. Major media from the NY Times to the BBC have been abuzz with bad news of future food shortages and economic ramifications that will “sting.”1-7

Here Today, Gone Tomorrow

As the name Colony Collapse Disorder suggests, this is not a slow die off but a rapid collapse—often occurring with no warning in just two or three weeks. As California beekeeper David Bradshaw told the NY Times, “I have never seen anything like it. Box after box after box is just empty. There’s nobody home.” What’s happening is clearly different from the 20 percent die off typically reported by beekeepers during the off season or from disease-related regional losses.8

Although the bees may be falling prey to disease, they aren’t dying in or in front of the beehives. They are either dropping dead from exhaustion in the fields or becoming disoriented and dying from exposure. What’s clear is they aren’t taking off in search of new adventures—or greener pastures; bees are hardwired with strong social ties to their queen bee and offspring.

What’s To Blame?

Pathogens, pesticides, signals from cell phone towers, GM (genetically modified) crops, MSG in plant-growth promoters (see sidebar, page 49)—and combinations of these factors—have all been blamed for Colony Collapse Disorder. But the evidence is inconclusive at best. Pathogens and pesticides have long been implicated in the world’s decliningbee population, which has dropped in half since 1971.9 The Varroa destructor mite, an import from Asia, feeds like a tick and is a known bee killer. Accused—but never proven guilty—of causing the “Vampire Mite Scare” of winter 2004-2005, the mite is blamed for weakening the bees but not killing them off in Colony Collapse Disorder.10,11

The aggressive insecticide usage of commercial agriculture has also led to weakened bees. Poisoning is one problem; acres of monocrops coupled with destroyed native vegetation is another. Without the opportunity to forage for a rich variety of nectars, bees cannot stay healthy and strong.12 The question is whether insecticides are triggering the sudden, catastrophic losses of Colony Collapse Disorder.

Many insecticides kill with neurotoxins which at low doses could impair the bees’ ability to navigate home to their hives. A likely suspect is the neonicotinoid imidacloprid, which has been banned in many European countries but which is widely used in the US. This type of pesticide is applied to the soil and taken up into the plant’s tissues, including pollen and nectar. Imidacloprid can cause symptoms in keeping with CCD. Termites, for example, have suffered immune system breakdowns and disorientation. The problem is proving it. Today’s bees are transported from one crop to another and exposed to so many different insecticides that it’s nearly impossible to establish cause and effect.13,14

Signals from cell phone towers may also be throwing off the bees’ navigation systems. This theory has led to lots of buzz about whether cell phones are wiping out our bees. However, investigators have not found increased beedisappearances near the towers.15,16

Perhaps it’s the GM crops. The Sierra Club’s Genetic Engineering Committee sent a letter to Senator Thomas Harkin expressing serious concerns about the bees’ “exposure to genetically engineered crops and their plant-produced pesticides.”17

German researchers have shown that exposure to corn pollen containing Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) genes may weaken the adult bees’ defense against infectious agents such as Nosema. Add in the fact that the Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group found weakened bees harboring Nosema infections and it’s no wonder people are pointing the finger at GM crops. However, the group found the high levels only in samples of bees from Pennsylvania, not everywhere else. Furthermore, CCD has occurred in areas where no GM crops have been planted.18

Speaking to a reporter for the German publication Der Spiegel, Walter Haefeker of the German Beekeepers Association said: “Besides a number of other factors, the fact that GM insect-resistant plants are now used in 40 percent of cornfields in the US could be playing a role. A research project conducted at the University of Jena from 2001 to 2004 examined the effects of pollen from a maize variant called Bt corn on bees. A gene from a soil bacterium had been inserted into the corn that enabled the plant to produce an agent that is toxic to insect pests. The study concluded that there was no evidence of a toxic effect of Bt corn on healthy honeybee populations. But when, by sheer chance, the bees used in the experiments were infested with a parasite, something eerie happened. According to the Jena study a significantly stronger decline in the number of bees’ occurred among the insects that had been fed a highly concentrated Bt poison feed.”19

Hans Hinrich Kaatz, a professor at the University of Halle and the director of the Jena study, explained that the bacterial toxin in the GM corn may have “altered the surface of the bee’s intestines, sufficiently weakening thebees to allow the parasites to gain entry—or perhaps it was the other way around. We don’t know.” Der Spiegel reported that Kaatz would like to continue his study, but lacks necessary funding. “Those who have the money are not interested in this sort of research and those who are interested don’t have the money,” he said.20

No Type B Bees

What else might be triggering CCD? Stress and weakened immune systems. The Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group—a group of researchers, extension agents and regulatory officials that have teamed up to investigate—found that colonies experienced “extraordinary stress” prior to the collapse and this was the only factor present in all cases. Pesticides, GM crops, cell phone towers, etc. are all sources of stress, and the Working Group also pointed to frequent moving of colonies, poor nutrition (from pollinating commercial crops with little nutritional value) and drought.21

Investigators have found so many infectious agents in surviving adult bees that many have diagnosed “immunosuppression” from an unknown toxic agent. Because this could make bees more susceptible to what ultimately kills them off, Dennis Van Engelsdorp, a bee specialist with the Working Group, warned that it “could be the AIDS of the bee industry.” Autopsies of surviving bees revealed extensive viral and fungal coinfections. Commercial bees could also be suffering immune system depression because of routine and heavy antibiotic and miticide use.22,23

Sugar Blues

In bees, as in humans, diet would play a key role in immunosuppression. Bees transported from one commercial monocrop to another lack access to nourishing nectar and pollen from wild flowers and other natural vegetation. To keep them alive, active and profitable, beekeepers feed commercial bee feeds made primarily out of two ingredients—sugar (usually in the form of high fructose corn syrup) and soy protein. The sugar is used to “stimulate” breeding, pollen collection and “improve the morale of the colonies generally.”24,25 But if sugar affects bees the way it does humans, the initial “sugar high” leads to a low characterized by anxiety and “brain fog.” No wonder so many bees are sick and disoriented!

Sugar is a notorious health destroyer that adversely affects every system in the body, including the immune system. High fructose corn syrup (HFCS) is even worse.

Soy protein—and its estrogenic isoflavones—could also weaken the bees’ immune systems and harm their brains. In mammals, soy has been shown to damage the hippocampus, an area of the brain involved with learning and memory. In the insect brain, mushroom bodies serve similarly and might also be adversely affected by soy.26-28

Animal studies have linked increased phytoestrogen levels to decreased brain calcium-binding protein (needed for protection against neurodegenerative disease) and decreased brain neurotrophic factor (essential for the survival and genesis of brain cells).29,30 Clearly it’s time for some studies on sugar, soy and bee brains and bee health. Many of the bee feeds use soy flour, a low-tech product that is nonetheless high in phytoestrogens. Bee feeds made with textured vegetable protein or other modern soy products are not only high in phytoestrogens but excitotoxins and other neurotoxic residues that are byproducts of fast and cheap modern processing methods.31

Common sense tells us that bees malnourished on sugar and soy have a poor chance of fighting predators such as mites. Likewise, they are ill-equipped to survive poisoning from insecticides whether these are applied to soil or plants or incorporated into the very fabric of GM crops. What’s more, the corn syrup and soy protein ingredients found in these new bee feeds are both likely to come from GM crops, throwing GM toxins, antinutrients and residues into the brew. Unfortunately, the soy-sugar feeding theory is open to challenge—at least as the primary cause of DDC. The Working Group’s investigators claimed that some beekeepers fed their bees, but not all.32

Years ago, Albert Einstein warned: “If the bee disappeared off the surface of the globe then man would only have four years of life left. No more bees, no more pollination, no more plants, no more animals, no more man.”


REFERENCES

  1. Barrioneuva, Alexei. Honeybees, Gone With the Wind, Leave Crops and Keepers in Peril, New York Times, February 27, 2007: http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F10B1FF8355A0C748EDDAB0894DF40448
  2. Bee Vanishing Act Baffles Keepers, BBC News, Feb 27, 2007.
  3. The Case of the Vanishing Bees, CBS Evening News, Feb 13, 2007.
  4. Colony Collapse Disorder, Wikipedia. April 18, 2007. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colony_Collapse_Disorder
  5. Armas, Genaro. Mysterious Ailment Killing Off Honeybees. Feb 14, 2007. Fox Newswww.foxnews.com
  6. Across the U.S., Keepers Say Their Bees Are AWOL. Talk of the Nation, March 9, 2007 National Public Radio, March 9, 2007. www.npr.org.
  7. Bee sickness investigated in California. February 14, 2007. USA Todaywww.usatoday.com
  8. Bee Vanishing Act Baffles Keepers, BBC News, February 27, 2007.
  9. Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group. Preliminary Report.http://maarec.cas.psu.edu/pressreleases/FallDwindleUpdate0107.pdf
  10. Wikipedia
  11. Bee mites suppress bee immunity, open door for viruses and bacteria. May 18, 2005. (Adapted from a press release from Penn State) www.sciencedaily.com
  12. Levy, Sharon. The Vanishing. OnEarth, Natural Resources Defense Council, Summer, 2006.
  13. Wikipedia
  14. Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group.
  15. Winter, Michael. Are Cell Phones killing off honey bee?. USA Today, April 16, 2007. www.usatoday.com
  16. Lean, Geoffrey and Harriet Shawcross. Are mobile phones wiping out our bees? Independent, April 15, 2007. http://independent.co.uk
  17. Sierra Club Genetic Engineering Committee. Laurel Hopwood, Chair. Letter to Senator Thomas Harkin. Published in GE and bee Colony Collapse Disorder – science needed! Environmental Update, Sierra Club,www.sierraclub.org/biotech/whatsnew/whatsnew_2007-03-21.asp. This letter is referenced with 11 journal citations.
  18. Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group.
  19. Latsch, Gunther. Collapsing Colonies: Are GM Crops Killing Bees? March 22, 2007. Spiegel Online http: www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,473166.00.html.
  20. Ibid.
  21. Colony Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group.
  22. Ibid.
  23. Bee mites suppress bee immunity, open door for viruses and bacteria. May 18, 2005. (Story adapted from a press release from Penn State) www.sciencedaily.com
  24. Stevens, Charlie. Your bees are what you feed them. www.honeybee.com.au.
  25. www.honeybeeworld.com
  26. Farris, SM, Robinson GE et al. Larval and pupal development of the mushroom bodies in the honey bee, Apis mellifera. J Comp Neurol, 414 , 97-113.
  27. O’Dell TJ, Kandel EB, Grant SG. Long-term potentiation in the hippocampus is blocked by tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Nature, 1991, 353, 6344, 558-560.
  28. Yakisch JS, Siden A et al. Early effects of protein kinase modulators on DNA synthesis in rat cerebral cortex.Exp Neurol, 1999, 159, 1, 164-176.
  29. Lephart ED et al. Phytoestrogens decrease brain calcium-binding proteins but do not alter hypothalamic androgen metabolizing enzymes in adult male rats. Brain Res, 2000, 17, 859, 1, 123-131.
  30. File SE, Hartley DE et al. Soya phytoestrogens changes cortical and hippocampal expressions of BDNE mRNA in male rats. Neurosci Lett, 2003, 338, 2, 135-138.
  31. Daniel, KT. The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food (New Trends, 2005) 128.
  32. Colony Collapse Disorder Working Group.

This article appeared in Wise Traditions in Food, Farming and the Healing Arts, the quarterly magazine of the Weston A. Price Foundation, Summer 2007.

About the Author

Kaayla T. DanielPhD, CCN, is The Naughty NutritionistTM because of her ability to outrageously and humorously debunk nutritional myths. A popular guest on radio and television, she has appeared on The Dr Oz Show, ABC’s View from the Bay, NPR’s People’s Pharmacy and numerous other shows. Her own radio show, “Naughty Nutrition with Dr. Kaayla Daniel,” launched recently on World of Women (WOW) Radio. Dr Daniel is the author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food, a popular speaker at Wise Traditions and other conferences, a Board Member of the Weston A. Price Foundation and recipient of its 2005 Integrity in Science Award. Her website is www.naughtynutritionist.com and she can be reached at Kaayla@DrKaaylaDaniel.com.

Posted in bees, Dr. Kaayla Daniels, gmo, Kaayla T. Daniel, Naughty Nutritionist, soy, sugar | Tagged: , | 2 Comments »

Atlas Soy-Led: Ayn Rand’s Take on the Soybean

Posted by Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN on April 24, 2011

Atlas Shrugged: Part I opened last week in the movie theaters, leading me to reread Ayn Rand’s epic novel and to think about all that’s being done to our food supply “for our own good.”  Indeed we are already seeing disastrous effects on personal and planetary health from Big Brother’s wasteful and corrupt subsidies of corn, soy, wheat and Big Pfood; from the increasing control over independent farmers through orders, directives, restrictions and police actions; and, ever growing restrictions on what families can choose to eat and feed their children.

Ayn Rand’s 1,168 page novel, first published in 1957, rarely mentions food directly.   Indeed we might think her protagonist Dagny Taggart lives on coffee and cigarettes, except for a single incident in Part II when she eats the best “hamburger sandwich” she ever tasted at a little diner located on the summit of a long, hard climb out of Cheyenne, Wyoming.

That hamburger, of course, was not just a burger, but a product of simple ingredients and of an unusual skill.   It had been prepared with integrity, by a philosopher genius, no less, and was authentic and real with nothing ersatz, tricky or pretentious about it.   In short, an überburger that represented Ayn Rand’s and Dagny Taggart’s highest values.

The food Rand chose to represent the lowest values was soy.   In Part III the author introduces the flabby mystic Emma “Ma” Chambers, whose “progressive” dietary views led to the waste of millions of tax dollars on “Project Soybean.”   Ma had been appointed the nation’s food czar out of pity, not intelligence or ability.   With no objective evidence whatsoever, Ma felt soybeans would make “an excellent substitute for bread, meat, cereals and coffee” and that Americans not only needed to eat more like Asians but should be forced to do so for their own good.   Ma’s feeling that soybeans were of a higher “moral value” than wheat, led to government orders to pull trains out of the midwest, loss of the nation’s wheat crop,  economic collapse and widespread starvation.   As for the soybean crop, it too was lost thanks to the rotters’ incompetence,

Given Hollywood’s current worship of veganism,  I rather doubt “Project Soybean” will enliven Atlas Shrugged Part II or III, should those sequels ever be made.   As for vegetarianism, it was a symbol of silliness, failure and poverty back in Rand’s day.   To say that someone was a “vegetable” meant they were inactive and indeed nearly comatose.  Those Rand admired not only had “meaty” ideas but the motive power to act decisively, effectively, appropriately and imaginatively on them.

*  *  *  *  *

©copyright 2011 Kaayla T. Daniel

Kaayla T. DanielPhD, CCN, is The Naughty Nutritionist™ because of her ability to outrageously and humorously debunk nutritional myths. A popular guest on radio and television, she has appeared on The Dr Oz Show, ABC’s View from the Bay, NPR’s People’s Pharmacy and numerous other shows. Her own radio show, “Naughty Nutrition with Dr. Kaayla Daniel” debuted this spring on World of Women (WOW) Radio. Dr Daniel is the author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food, a popular speaker at Wise Traditions and other conferences, a Board Member of the Weston A. Price Foundation and recipient of its 2005 Integrity in Science Award. Her website is www.naughtynutritionist.com and she can be reached at Kaayla@DrKaaylaDaniel.com.

Posted in Dr. Kaayla Daniels, Kaayla T. Daniel, Naughty Nutritionist, soy | Tagged: , | 2 Comments »

Healthy Soy Shake Powders? Show Me the Evidence!

Posted by Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN on April 6, 2011

Hardly a day goes by when I don’t get a letter from someone somewhere asking me my opinion about some “wonderful soy shake powder.”  I typically  hear that they “love” this particular product, which is “a whole soy-based beverage powder made from organic, not GMO soy.”  I furthermore will be told there are surely no health dangers to their soy because it’s organic,comes from a “rare company that has integrity” and  is manufactured with a “special process” that is “unique and different.”  This “special process” is frequently described as “a gentle process that protects the valuable phytonutrients in soy. “

Nearly all these letter writers assume the dangers of soy to be “the result of the poor processing methods other companies use.”   Many plead with me  to share  the good news that _________ is a good and healthy product that not only tastes delicious but cures cancer, heart disease, depression, leads to weight loss, and improves performance everywhere from the athletic field to the boardroom to the bedroom.  [As the Naughty Nutritionist, I would certainly like that last to be true, but the evidence is sparse indeed!   Indeed soy has a longstanding reputation as being a downer in that department!]

Since The Whole Soy Story was published in 2005 I have received hundreds of such letters, many of which pertain to MLM companies though others refer to the assorted shakes powders sold in supermarkets, health food stores, health clubs and so forth. When people contact any of these companies about the dangers of soy, the responses they get back are virtually interchangeable except for the company name.   Supposedly their products are “processed differently” from the competition, using “a unique and secret process” that makes soybeans both safe and healthy.

My thoughts are this:  organic soybeans are certainly safer than GMO soybeans, as there are serious dangers to all GMO foods, soy, corn or whatever.  GMO soy contains higher and more resistant levels of protease inhibitors, among other toxins.

Whole soybeans are also better than soy protein isolate and other fractionated ingredients as this choice will minimize some harmful processing methods, particularly the use of hexane to split the bean.  It is also possible that some of the other processing methods might be gentler. For example, the process might involve alkaline baths with a lower pH than is used by some commercial companies. Gentler processing methods could conceivably result in lower levels of the toxins lysinalanines and nitrosamines.

That said, I find it highly unlikely that the manufacturers of any of these products have removed the dangerous estrogenic isoflavones. Unless the companies use alcohol extraction, the isoflavones will not be removed. In fact these companies don’t want to remove the isoflavones because they all boast about their “health effects” and claim that their unique product somehow has all the benefits and none of the dangers of isoflavones.  This, of course, is impossible.

Saponins will also be present in any soybean product that has not been alcohol extracted.   Saponins are components found in soybeans that  can bind with cholesterol and damage cell membranes, leading to digestive troubles and other ills. Not surprisingly, these are marketed as healthy “all natural” cholesterol lowerers, bile acid reducers and cancer preventers and curers.

These shake powder products most likely also contain a full complement of protease inhibitors (which interfere with protein digestion), phytates (which inhibit mineral absorption), lectins (which can cause blood cell clumping), and oxalates (linked to a multitude of health problems, including kidney stones and vulvodynia). As far as I know, no modern process yet invented can remove all of these things.   What’s needed to eliminate or deactivate the  majority of them is old-fashioned fermentation, the traditional method used to make miso, natto and tempeh.  Such foods eaten in a richly varied diet are healthy and nutritious. But these are NOT the soy ingredients put into shake powders.

When I inform people of the above, they usually trot out letters from their companies assuring them that said problems are greatly exaggerated and the work of fear-mongering anti soy people.  Or those problems are real, a problem with other products, but uniquely taken care of completely by them.    My  response is:   Please write your company and ask them to send reports from independent laboratories proving that these antinutrients and toxins have been largely eliminated.  This is what will convince me, not claims that their “special, secret, patented and unique process” does this work.

Over the past ten years, I have reviewed numerous soybean processing manuals and seen many patent applications. I have yet to see any evidence that this can be done.  Rather many years of USDA studies show it cannot.   I discuss these processing issues thoroughly in The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food, particularly in Chapters 4-12.  Given the fact that manufacturers cannot get rid of them,  isoflavones, protease inhibitors, phytates, saponins and other antinutrients and toxins have been elevated from devils into angels and are being marketed as health promoting.  They are not.

In conclusion, I cannot recommend  soy shake products based on “claims.”  Show me the evidence.

Kaayla T. Daniel PhD, CCN, is The Naughty NutritionistTM because of her ability to outrageously and humorously debunk nutritional myths. A popular guest on radio and television, she has appeared on The Dr Oz Show, ABC’s View from the Bay, NPR’s People’s Pharmacy and numerous other shows. Her own radio show, “Naughty Nutrition with Dr. Kaayla Daniel,” launches next week on World of Women (WOW) Radio. Dr Daniel is the author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food, a popular speaker at Wise Traditions and other conferences, a Board Member of the Weston A. Price Foundation and recipient of its 2005 Integrity in Science Award.  Her website is www.naughtynutritionist.com and she can be reached at Kaayla@DrKaaylaDaniel.com.


Posted in Dr. Kaayla Daniels, Fermented Foods, Kaayla T. Daniel, MLM, Naughty Nutritionist, processed food, soy | Tagged: , , , , | 2 Comments »

Soy Sad: The New USDA Guidelines

Posted by Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN on March 19, 2011

The USDA’s 2010 Dietary Guidelines came out early this year, and the soy industry is thrilled that “soy made the cut.”

Soy products are cited twice in the executive summary of the report with the recommendation that all Americans increase their intake of soy products and fortified soy beverages.  In the body of the report itself, soy milk appears right up there with low-fat and no-fat milks as good for us and to be drunk two or three times daily while processed soy products are touted as worthy meat equivalents.  Vegetable oils — a code for soy oil in most cases — are recommended to “replace solid fats wherever possible.”   This triple threat to public health can only be the work of the USDA in conjunction with the soy industry and other manufacturers of processed, packaged and junk foods.

Vegans too ought to be happy.  There’s still dread animal flesh and “white blood” in the picture, but the USDA has kowtowed to vegan mythology, buying into their belief that vegan diets, if carefully planned, can be healthful.   USDA even gives vegans their very own appendix, including specific dietary recommendations, including “fortified foods for some nutrients,” especially calcium and B12.  What might those fortified foods be?   Soy milk, energy bars, fake steaks, burgers and other processed, packaged foods tricked out as health foods.

Overall, there’s something for everyone who eats packaged, processed and fast foods, even chocoholics.  The USDA actually considers fat-free chocolate milk to be a “nutrient dense food,”  their phrase, not mine, and, even though I am a Naughty Nutritionist™, this time I am not making any of this up.

So what might adopting soy milk, fake meats and vegetable oils mean to the health of the American public?

Just look around you.

Kaayla T. DanielPhD, CCN, is The Naughty NutritionistTM because of her ability to outrageously and humorously debunk nutritional myths. A popular guest on radio and television, she has appeared on The Dr Oz Show, ABC’s View from the Bay, NPR’s People’s Pharmacy and numerous other shows. Her own radio show, “Naughty Nutrition with Dr. Kaayla Daniel,” launched recently on World of Women (WOW) Radio. Dr Daniel is the author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food, a popular speaker at Wise Traditions and other conferences, a Board Member of the Weston A. Price Foundation and recipient of its 2005 Integrity in Science Award. Her website is www.naughtynutritionist.com and she can be reached at Kaayla@DrKaaylaDaniel.com.

Posted in Dr. Kaayla Daniels, Kaayla T. Daniel, Naughty Nutritionist, soy, USDA, vegans | Tagged: , , , | 1 Comment »

Panda Porn

Posted by Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN on February 8, 2011

Is she is isn’t she? That’s one of the most frequently asked questions at zoos around the world. Pregnancies of pandas in captivity are rare, and live births, even rarer. Of the few pandas born alive, only 40 percent survive the first month and only a third make it into adulthood.

The challenge is great. Even in the wild, pandas are solitary creatures that can be finicky about finding a mate with the perfect smell. With the giant panda nearly extinct, zoo officials have tried everything imaginable to encourage the pandas to mate, including behavioral therapy to improve social skills and marriage counselors to improve relationships. At the Chengdu Giant Panda Breeding and Research Base in China, encouragement even includes showing X-rated “how to” videos of humping pandas. Even so, most zoos resort to artificial insemination.

Clearly it’s time to take a look at the panda diet. According to an article in the Washington Post (9/1/2009), Mei Ziang and Tian Tian the couple at the National Zoo are rewarded with treats, including apple slices and “vitamin-rich soy biscuits.” Yet soy isoflavones have caused infertility, miscarriages, birth defects, decreased libido anxiety, social isolation, aggression and other behavioral disorders in all animal species tested. Anecdotal evidence indicates that soy can even alter one’s scent — and not for the better. Poor pandas!

Kaayla T. DanielPhD, CCN, is The Naughty NutritionistTM because of her ability to outrageously and humorously debunk nutritional myths. A popular guest on radio and television, she has appeared on The Dr Oz Show, ABC’s View from the Bay, NPR’s People’s Pharmacy and numerous other shows. Her own radio show, “Naughty Nutrition with Dr. Kaayla Daniel,” launched recently on World of Women (WOW) Radio. Dr Daniel is the author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food, a popular speaker at Wise Traditions and other conferences, a Board Member of the Weston A. Price Foundation and recipient of its 2005 Integrity in Science Award. Her website is www.naughtynutritionist.com and she can be reached at Kaayla@DrKaaylaDaniel.com.

Posted in Naughty Nutritionist, soy | Tagged: , , , , , | 2 Comments »

Soy to the World: Holiday Wishes from Whole Foods Market

Posted by Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN on December 27, 2010

This holiday season Whole Foods Market is offering gift boxes and certificates brightly printed with the wish “Soy to the World.”

Whole Foods Market, of course, perceives soy foods and soy milk — particularly modern packaged and processed soy products — as a major profit center.   Soy also fits nicely within CEO John Mackey’s vegan agenda and his promotion of soy as the ticket to personal and planetary health.  Sadly, soy to the world will not bring joy to the world this holiday season or any other.

The word “soy,” however, fits Whole Foods Market very well.   I am pleased to report that your  Naughty Nutritionist™ learned something most curious last month.  Seems “soy” is urban slang for something false, of poor value or just not what it seems. That pretty much sums up a whole lot of the phoney baloney, pseudo-organic products Whole Foods sells.   Indeed a whole lot of what this chain preaches is out of integrity with what it practices.

Greenwashing

Heard of whitewashing?  The variant found at Whole Foods is known as “greenwashing.”  The chain put green leaves on its logo,  prominently displays environmentally correct “core values,” and gives mouth service to sustainability yet engages in numerous practices that are environmentally unfriendly.

Bagging It, for example. Whole Foods encourages us to bring our own bags to save the environment and gives bag credits to local charities.   Eco consumers feel good about this, but what about all those highly processed and overly packaged foods toted home in them?   Soy good to know that not one of those pricey crackers or cookies will crack or crumble.   As for those sturdy packages, they’ll survive for years in the landfills.

Soy Local or Soy Loco

Whole Foods talks the good talk about supporting  local farmers.  It’s one of its conspicuously displayed “core values.”   But walk down the aisles and most everything comes from somewhere else.    Where were all those little soybeans milked to produce soymilk?   Where did they catch those tofurkies?   Where did those fruits and vegetables grow?   California, Mexico, Chili, India?   Not soy often in our own backyard.

How do local farmers feel about Whole Foods Market?   Many mutter “soy loco”  (“I am crazy”) under their breath whenever they give in and sell to Whole Foods.   Farmers who expect a fair wage for their hard work rarely sell there given the chain’s aim to buy dirt cheap and sell sky high.

Soy Green

More acres of the Rain Forest are destroyed for soybean crops than for beef cattle yet soy is touted as green for the environment.   Most of the Midwest has been destroyed by the monocropping of three vegan staples — corn, wheat and soy.

Soy Generous

“Soy to the World” means planeloads of soy products given to survivors of famines and natural disasters.   Seems benevolent, but there’s more to this than good PR.Disaster relief builds global business by making the world’s people dependent upon imported soy and other industrially grown, processed and packaged products.  Such “charitable” practices undermine local farmers and cottage industries and wipe out indigenous crops.

Soy Egalitarian

Equal opportunity poor health.   Yuppie vegans at one end of the spectrum pay premium prices for health-destroying soy foods.   Poor people eat donated soy from relief packages.  The results for both are malnutrition, digestive distress, thyroid disorders, reproductive problems, ADD/ADHD, allergies, even heart disease and cancer.   Soy to the world.

Meanwhile, John Mackey, the CEO of Whole Foods, likes to be seen as just a regular Joe.  He earns only fourteen times the salary of his average ”team member,” after all. While other corporate executives doubtless take home far bigger paychecks, Mackey’s “talking tofurky” here.  If he were an executive who “talks turkey,” he would admit to also earning millions  in stock options.    He might also be sensitive to the fact that his store is widely mocked as “Whole Paycheck Market” because its extreme markups make it soy overpriced for the average consumer.

Soy Organic

Whole Foods sells only organic soybeans, right?   That’s what they say, but it took months — and an embarrassing expose by  the Cornucopia Institute  –before just some of the Silk products made with commercial soybeans was removed from the shelves.   Similarly, Whole Foods has sold a whole lot of veggie burgers, energy bars and other “organic” products made with soy protein isolate and other ingredients processed using hexane solvents.  Cornucopia also exposed that, but you read it first in The Whole Soy Story.

Elsewhere in the store, pseudo organic reigns.   Consider factory-farmed “organic” Horizon brand milk and butter.  As for produce, the artful displays conflate organic and commercial.    And if the internet postings of disgruntled Whole Foods “team members” can be trusted, much — if not all —  of it is cleaned with non-organic cleaners.   Seems the  organic cleaners come out, when the inspectors come in.

Shoppers who aren’t careful may go home with commercial produce just like that found at the supermarket down the block but at a substantially higher price    Whole Foods Market carefully crafts the illusion it sells organic, but far more of what it sells is “natural”– whatever that means —  or even commercial.

Soyled Health Claims

Is soy the “miracle bean” that can cure everything from cancer to ingrown toe nails? Whole Foods would certainly like us to think so.    Similarly, consumers who buy baked and deli goods at Whole Foods are almost always con-oiled, though canola is increasingly replaced by soy oil, which if anything is even worse.

Hemp, chocolate, agave anyone?   Health claims for any of these are very “soy” — i.e. not what they seem.  Agave, for instance,  is tricked out high fructose corn syrup. Chocolate-covered soy nuts are surely the  “tofurky” of snacks.   Most sanctimonious of all is Whole Foods’  promotion of  vegan goods with a green smiley face and the words “I’m vegan!”

Stepford Foods

All the onions are exactly the same size.  Big,  round and heavy! All the apples, too.

Never saw anything like that in my own garden or orchard.   Yet Whole Foods gives us row after perfectly presented row of produce.   Bland but pretty-faced, immaculately clean, blemish free, perfectly made up and not one strand of hair out of place, these are the Stepford Wives of the fruit and vegetable kingdom.   Guess Whole Foods thinks Stepford goods provide a stress-free shopping experience.  No need to choose.  Perfect for the shopper in Calvin Klone jeans.

Soy Latte

The Urban Dictionary defines “soy latte” as something overpriced and pretentious, especially something that tastes good initially but leaves a bad taste in one’s mouth. Seems to me that sums up Whole Foods Market awfully well.

Kaayla T. DanielPhD, CCN, is The Naughty NutritionistTM because of her ability to outrageously and humorously debunk nutritional myths. A popular guest on radio and television, she has appeared on The Dr Oz Show, ABC’s View from the Bay, NPR’s People’s Pharmacy and numerous other shows. Her own radio show, “Naughty Nutrition with Dr. Kaayla Daniel,” launched recently on World of Women (WOW) Radio. Dr Daniel is the author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food, a popular speaker at Wise Traditions and other conferences, a Board Member of the Weston A. Price Foundation and recipient of its 2005 Integrity in Science Award. Her website is www.naughtynutritionist.com and she can be reached at Kaayla@DrKaaylaDaniel.com.

Posted in farm fresh, FRESH, fresh and local, Kaayla T. Daniel, Local Foods, Naughty Nutritionist, soy, vegetables | Tagged: , , , , | 7 Comments »

Plants Bite Back

Posted by Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN on December 5, 2010

Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.


That’s Michael Pollan’s response to the question of what we should eat, and few people seem to doubt that answer today. Whether it’s Whole Foods Market’s  decision to downplay animal products or vegan actresses touting “kind diets,”it sometimes seems as though every educated man, woman and child in the United States believes that plant-based diets hold the key to personal and planetary health.

Sorry, folks, but it’s not so simple. Mother Nature put a surprising number of all-natural anti-nutrients and toxins in grains, nuts, seeds and beans.   Phytates, for example, block seeds from sprouting prematurely. Protease inhibitors, saponins, lectins and phytoestrogens harm insects, animals and other predators that would otherwise eat too many of them. If evolutionary theories are correct, wounded plants produce extra inhibitors and other anti-nutrients to save the plant species.

The idea is to cause predators—including plant-eating humans—to experience slowed growth and diminished reproductive ability.  Not having the capacity for flight, the plants fight back with chemical warfare.

Although it might sound like a “rotten idea,” squirrels are smart to bury nuts in the ground, then dig them up and eat them weeks and months later. Similarly, people in traditional cultures all over the world process their grains, nuts, seeds and beans by a process akin to pre-digestion before cooking and eating them.

To read more about it, go to http://www.naughtynutritionist.com/naughtynutritionist.com/plants_bite_article.html to find the full article “Plants Bite Back.”

Kaayla T. DanielPhD, CCN, is The Naughty NutritionistTM because of her ability to outrageously and humorously debunk nutritional myths. A popular guest on radio and television, she has appeared on The Dr Oz Show, ABC’s View from the Bay, NPR’s People’s Pharmacy and numerous other shows. Her own radio show, “Naughty Nutrition with Dr. Kaayla Daniel,” launched recently on World of Women (WOW) Radio. Dr Daniel is the author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food, a popular speaker at Wise Traditions and other conferences, a Board Member of the Weston A. Price Foundation and recipient of its 2005 Integrity in Science Award. Her website is www.naughtynutritionist.com and she can be reached at Kaayla@DrKaaylaDaniel.com.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Posted in Kaayla T. Daniel, Naughty Nutritionist, plant-based diets, soy, vegetables | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments »

Creepy Foods

Posted by Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN on October 28, 2010

It’s Halloween time, and once again our newspapers are spooking readers with stories about “creepy food.”
So what are these creepy foods?   Heart, liver, kidneys,, sweetbread, tripe and other organ meats.   Bones are especially gruesome as can be seen in blood curdling photos of chicken feet “clawing” their way out of bowls of festering broth.
What a grave mistake to consider these nourishing traditional foods too creepy to eat.   Traditionally, families honored the animal by eating all edible parts of it.    It was the frugal thing to do, and people instinctively knew that organ meats fostered good health.   As for bone broth, it’s long been the ticket to healing anything that ails us.   It’s even been called “Jewish penicillin” and in South America said to “resurrect the dead.”
What frightens me is the millions of people caught in the web of the bloodsuckers at Big Pfood and Big Pfarm.   Far too many creepy products to name here.  My motto is “If it’s got a label don’t eat it” because most foods that require labels do have creepy ingredients.
But here’s a few nominations:
1.   Trans fats.    Partially hydrogenated in Transylvania?   No, here in the USA.   But I expect Count Dracula’s blood is now polluted with them.   Could be that’s drained his life force so much that he has only enough energy to drink the “fast food” of people with high blood pressure.
2.   Undead Burgers.    Witness those internet pics of a McDonald’s “Happy Meal” that shows no signs of decomposing after months of sitting out.    Clearly no need to ask, “Want flies with that?”
3.  Caca Crispies.    Proposed name for pet kibble, livestock feed and fish farm rations in which soy protein is mixed with animal doody.   Slogan should be “Snap, Crapple and Poop.”
4.  Count Chocula — and other breakfast cereals from the dark side.  Call them “Cereal Killers.”
5.  Ghoul Aid.   Preferably readymade packaged and instant in Lemon Slime Flavor.
6   EdaMummies.   Chocolate covered green soy beans.  Wrapped up in smug health claims.
7.  SPLBLBLBLBT!   A rude raspberry to raspberry candies.  Dunno which is the creepiest ingredient.  The HFCS and other sugars, the red  die or the castoreum (anal secretions from beavers) ?
8.  Ice Scream.   Pfish sounds, and fish flavors might taste creepy.   But now we have Viagra Ice Cream.  (I am not making this up!)   Sold only to those over 18.   Truly Vice Scream.
Next week I plan to make bone broth with my Halloween skeletons.   Preferably the those of vegetarians since they  insist they  taste better.    Bone Appetit!

Kaayla T. DanielPhD, CCN, is The Naughty NutritionistTM because of her ability to outrageously and humorously debunk nutritional myths. A popular guest on radio and television, she has appeared on The Dr Oz Show, ABC’s View from the Bay, NPR’s People’s Pharmacy and numerous other shows. Her own radio show, “Naughty Nutrition with Dr. Kaayla Daniel,” launched recently on World of Women (WOW) Radio. Dr Daniel is the author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food, a popular speaker at Wise Traditions and other conferences, a Board Member of the Weston A. Price Foundation and recipient of its 2005 Integrity in Science Award. Her website is www.naughtynutritionist.com and she can be reached at Kaayla@DrKaaylaDaniel.com.

Posted in Dr Kaayla Daniel, Naughty Nutritionist | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

Eat Here, Get Gas!

Posted by Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN on October 1, 2010

Many health experts believe that soy burgers, soy hot dogs,, TVP chili and other modern industrially processed soy products provide high octane fuel.   Figures released by the American Oil Chemists’ Association prove them right!

Soy protein isolate — the ingredient that provides the familiar ground meat-like texture in soy lasagna, soy chili and hundreds of other products — contain some 38 petroleum compounds including, but not limited to: butyl, methyl and ethyl esters of fatty acids; phenols, diphenyls and phenyl esters; abietic acid derivatives, diehydroabietinal, hexanal and 2-butyl-2-octenal aldehydes; dehydroabietic acid metyl ester; dehydroabietne and abietatriene.

The American Oil Chemists Association did not provide data on what kid of mileage soy eaters can expect.

Kaayla T. DanielPhD, CCN, is The Naughty NutritionistTM because of her ability to outrageously and humorously debunk nutritional myths. A popular guest on radio and television, she has appeared on The Dr Oz Show, ABC’s View from the Bay, NPR’s People’s Pharmacy and numerous other shows. Her own radio show, “Naughty Nutrition with Dr. Kaayla Daniel,” launched recently on World of Women (WOW) Radio. Dr Daniel is the author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food, a popular speaker at Wise Traditions and other conferences, a Board Member of the Weston A. Price Foundation and recipient of its 2005 Integrity in Science Award. Her website is www.naughtynutritionist.com and she can be reached at Kaayla@DrKaaylaDaniel.com.

Posted in Dr. Kaayla Daniels, Kaayla T. Daniel, Naughty Nutritionist, Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Reply to Dr. Mark Hyman’s Opinion on Soy

Posted by Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN on September 8, 2010

On August 10, 2010, Dr. Mark Hyman posted an article “Soy: Blessing or Curse?” on the Huffington Post blog (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ dr-mark-hyman/soy-blessing-or-curse_b_673912. html). Widely circulated online, it is being widely touted as an example of  “sanity” in the “soy debate.”  Hyman describes himself as “a practicing physician and an internationally recognized authority in the field of Functional Medicine.” He is founder of The UltraWellness Center and author of the best-selling The UltraMind Solution, among other books.

In Hyman’s words, he wishes there were “more convincing science to report” regarding the soy controversy but he has taken “all the available evidence together” to see “what shakes out.” Hyman has long recommended soy as part of what he calls a “whole foods diet” and is disturbed by fear mongering from anti-soy people. Who these “anti-soy” people are exactly, he doesn’t say.

The most prominent group warning about the dangers of modern soy consumption would be the Weston A. Price Foundation. The late Valerie and Richard James of Soy Online Service in New Zealand were also extremely active in warning about excessive consumption of modern processed soy products and the use of soy infant formula for babies. Our concerns revolve around the myth of soy as a “health food” and how the heavy marketing of soy has led people to over consume soy foods and soy milk and to feed their infants soy formula, putting themselves and their children at risk. To say we are “anti soy,” however, would not be entirely accurate as we support the modest consumption of old-fashioned fermented soy products such as miso, natto, tempeh. They are nutritious and delicious foods in the context of a varied omnivorous diet. I would prefer to say we are pro real foods, whole foods and slow foods, prepared in traditional ways, which modern soy foods most assuredly are not.

NUGGET OF WISDOM:   There are indeed some sage and sane observations in Hyman’s article. He advises, for instance, that eating tofu would be wiser than chicken nuggets. Presumably he is referring to fast-food nuggets from factory-farmed chickens (fed soy-based feed) with their meat then “extended” with soy protein isolate and other additives and fried in soy oil. Wise to get the plain tofu, for sure.

Hyman also advises eating old-fashioned fermented whole soybean products. Wise again to avoid industrially processed soy protein isolate, soy protein concentrate, textured vegetable protein and hydrolyzed vegetable protein, and other industrially processed products, all of which contain MSG, hexane and other toxic and carcinogenic residues. All of us so-called   “anti soy” people would agree with that, except the increasing numbers of people who are allergic to soy.  Soy is now widely acknowledged to be one of the top eight allergens, and many experts believe it will soon be in the top four.  These allergic people have a reason to be 100 percent “anti soy.” And they are very angry “anti soy” people because they find it hard to find anything that’s safe to eat.  Their problem is they are trying to find soyfree, packaged, processed and fast foods, which can be well-nigh impossible to find.  Soy ingredients right now are in more than 60 percent of processed and packaged foods and nearly 100 percent of fast foods. The most allergic of these people cannot even tolerate meat, poultry, fish, dairy and/or eggs from animals fed soy feed. Sadly, most of the organic and free range products sold come from animals fed in this unnatural way.

For those who are not allergic, the old-fashioned fermented soy products miso, natto and tempeh are fine, but Hyman reveals his ignorance of processing methods when he claims that tofu and soymilk are fermented. Although they are sometimes fermented in Asia — to remove the “poisons” according to one person interviewed in a National Geographic film — none, if any, of the tofu products widely available in stores are fermented. Even so, a little regular tofu once in awhile — not everyday, and certainly not a whole slab at a time — is not a problem for most individuals.

As for soy milk, few if any brands are fermented.  Of the brands for sale in stores, most have been loaded up with sugar to make them palatable and with supplements to improve their inadequate nutritional profile. Too bad those supplements include cheap, hard-to-absorb forms of calcium, vegetarian Vitamin D2 (instead of the far superior D3) and beta carotene (in lieu of true Vitamin A).

Hyman is smart, too, to advise against genetically modified soybeans. Their risks to personal and planetary health are high, and described vividly and accurately by Jeffrey Smith in his own Huffington Post article (www.newswithviews.com/Smith/jeffrey8.htm).

EVERYTHING IN “MODERATION:   Sadly, Hyman dismisses the idea that excessive soy consumption is a problem. In his words: “First, you should be aware that the amount of soy used in many of these studies was much higher than what we normally consume — the average dose of soy was equivalent to one pound of tofu or three soy protein shakes a day. That’s a lot of soy! Most people just don’t eat like that. So when you read negative things about soy, remember that many of those claims are based on poorly designed studies that don’t apply to real-world consumption.”

Sounds reasonable, but given the current popularity of plant-based diets and the myth of soy as a “health food,” the truth is many people do eat a pound of tofu in a single setting. Add in a daily soy protein shake made with soy milk, a veggie burger washed down with a glass of soymilk and/or soy energy bar snacks and the quantities add up quickly. Vegans who use soy as both meat and dairy replacements are clearly high risk. But so are omnivores who drink soy milk several times a day or snack on soy protein bars and/or nosh on edamame like it’s popcorn. Given the increasing numbers of people who react poorly to ultrapasteurized supermarket and health food store dairy products, a whole lot of people drink soy milk several times a day. That’s excessive consumption, and it alone matches the levels in numerous studies showing the dangers of soy.

Hyman mocks the anti soy contingent with the words, “You could apply that thinking to other studies, too — like those that show that broccoli contains natural pesticides or that celery is high in toxins. Sure, those foods might cause you some problems — but not in the amounts that most of us eat. The same is true for soy.” Well, yes. There are risks to plant foods!  I discuss some of them in my article in the Spring issue “Plants Bite Back: The Surprising All-Natural Toxins in Plant Foods,” which can be read on the Weston A. Price Foundation’s website.   About time someone noted this in the popular press. Not having the “fight or flight” mechanism, plants fight for their lives with phytochemical warfare. The evolutionary reason is so predators will weaken, possibly die, but most importantly, lose their ability to reproduce.  Until plant-based diets became fashionable, most people didn’t eat massive amounts of vegetables. Even now, few people eat, broccoli three times a day every day. And a good thing too, as there are risks to excess consumption of cruciferous vegetables. The supplement industry, however, is doing its best to “improve” on real life consumption patterns by formulating broccoli pills that will concentrate the compounds found naturally in the real vegetables. I predict that such supplements will lead sooner or later to serious health problems. In the meantime, some real life people eat soy for breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacks. One weight lifter and fitness buff I know took in a gallon of soy milk everyday for a year or so. He is now coping with neurological problems, stuttering and other speech defects.

SOY AND BREAST CANCER“   Don’t worry about soy’s effect on breast cancer,” advises Hyman, implying there is consensus in the scientific community. No such consensus exists. Indeed numerous studies link soy to breast cell proliferation, a well-known marker of breast cancer risk. Accordingly, the Israeli Health Ministry, French Food Agency and German Institute as well as Cornell University’s Center for Breast Cancer and Environmental Risk Factors have all warned women who’ve been diagnosed with — or have a family history of breast cancer — to exercise caution when it comes to soy.

If it were true that “real life” people rarely eat too much soy, we could probably relax. But “moderation” means different things to different people, and Hyman recommends both good soy foods like miso and tempeh that are rarely over consumed and bad ones like soy milk that are very easy to overindulge.    Furthermore, Hyman’s assurances that soy isoflavones have beneficial hormonal effects, rarely contribute to endocrine disruption, do not endanger the thyroid and will reduce breast cancer risk will lead some women to purposely increase their consumption of any and all soy products.

Will all those women be at risk? Probably not. A few studies do suggest soy isoflavones could benefit women by reducing their breast cancer risk. But not all women, and not at all stages in the life cycle. Accordingly we need reliable lab tests that will show which women might benefit from soy isoflavones, and which would be harmed.  Those women who could possibly benefit from soy isoflavones could then take them like pharmaceutical drugs with appropriate dosing, monitoring and follow up.   In other words,we need to treat soy isoflavones like a drug. The soy industry’s marketing of soy — of any type eaten in virtually any quantity — as the ticket to an easy menopause and breast cancer prevention is irresponsible.

Hyman’s recommendation that women who want to avoid breast cancer avoid saturated fat is yet another example of how he’s either not done his homework or is pandering to politically correct ideas of nutrition. At least he’s got it right about the dangers of trans fats. They are definitely linked to breast cancer and should be assiduously avoided.

SOY AND THE THYROID   What about the risks of soy to the thyroid? Are the anti soy critics making a “mountain out of molehill?” Are the effects “not significant or relevant unless you are deficient in iodine (which you can easily get from eating fish, seaweed or sea vegetables, or iodized salt). Hyman reaches that conclusion from just one study, a study that does not exonerate soy by the way. In fact, more than 70 years of studies — including a human study from the respected Ishizuki Clinic in Japan — link modest to moderate soy consumption to thyroid disorders. Iodine deficiency is certainly part of the problem, but iodine repletion neither consistently nor reliably solves the problem. As for Hyman’s idea that iodine deficiency is not a problem, the National Center for Health Statistics reports epidemic iodine deficiency, with intakes plummeting by more than 50 percent between surveys taken between 1970-1974 and 1988-1994, and continuing to decrease in the years since.

SOY INFANT FORMULA  As for babies, Hyman jumps on the “breast is best” bandwagon. He would prefer “no one feeds dairy or soy formula to their babies, but if you have to, try not to worry about it” and “don’t beat yourself up about it.” To reassure readers, Hyman cites a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) in August 2001. Let’s take a look a good look at that study.

A team of researchers led by Brian L. Strom, MD, studied the use of soy formula and its long-term impact on reproductive heath, and announced only one adverse finding: longer, more painful menstrual periods among the women who’d been fed soy formula in infancy. The male researchers dismissed this effect — one that has been painful and debilitating for many women — as unimportant and concluded that the overall results were “reassuring.”

In fact, the data in the body of the report were far from reassuring. Mary G. Enig, PhD, President of the Maryland Nutritionists Association; Naomi Baumslag, MD, Clinical Professor of Pediatrics at Georgetown University and President of the Women’s International Public Health Network; Lynn R. Goldman, MD, MPH, Environmental Health Sciences, Johns Hopkins University; Retha Newbold, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, and other experts who analyzed the findings noted numerous flaws in both the design and reporting of this study, including:

  • Failure to include mention of statistically significant, higher incidence of allergies and asthma in the study’s abstract — the only part read by most busy health professionals and media reporters.
  • Glossing over or omitting from the main body of the report gynecological problems such as higher rates of cervical cancer, polycystic ovarian syndrome, blocked fallopian tubes, pelvic inflammatory disease, hormonal disorders and multiple births
  • Manipulation of statistics by not evaluating still births or failure to achieve pregnancy (higher in the soy-fed women) but evaluating miscarriages (slightly higher in the dairy-formula-fed group)
  • Excluding thyroid function as a subject for study (although thyroid damage from soy formula has been the principal concern of critics for decades). Nonetheless, thyroid damage, can be surmised by the fact that the soy-fed females grew up to report higher rates of sedentary activity and use of weight-loss medicines
  • Conducting the entire study by telephone interviews, asking subjective — in some cases highly personal and emotionally painful — questions and performing no medical examinations, laboratory tests or other objective testing. Breast development, for example, was gauged by asking participants at which age they first bought their bras.
  • Providing no information on the ages at which formula feeding ended; the dose length or the quantity of the soy isoflavones (all of which are basic requirements of valid toxicology studies)
  • Using the criteria (trade school, college and post college) as a measure of intelligence, thus rating a graduate of a beauty school at the same level as someone who received a doctorate degree
  • Following up infants who were given soy formula as infants for just 16 weeks (though serious damage can occur for at least the first nine months in boys and the first six months in girls) and failing to obtain any information about whether the subjects in the study took soy formula after the initial 16-week study period or ate soy foods during childhood
  • Using a study group of 282 soy-fed persons that was too small for most of the negative findings to become “statistically significant”

I personally heard scientists at the Fifth and Sixth Symposia on the Role of Soy in Preventing and Treating Chronic Disease held in San Diego and Chicago stand up and speak out about the dismal quality of this “reassuring” study. So who funded it? The National Institutes of Health with the International Formula Council (a trade group that represents formula manufacturers). Even more reassuringly, it was carried out under the auspices of the Fomon Infant Nutrition Unit at the University of Iowa, a group which receives support from the major formula manufacturers, including Abbott, Nestle and Mead Johnson.

Hyman also feels comfortable touting the safety of soy infant formula because of a report issued in December 2009 by the National Toxicology Program (NTP) Center for the Evaluation of Risks to Human Reproduction (CERHR). Its 14-member committee concluded that the health risks of soy infant formula are “minimal” and insufficient human or animal data exist to prove the likelihood of harm to the baby’s developmental or reproductive health.

Before reaching this conclusion, the committee looked at 700 studies. Sounds like a lot, but the committee failed to examine at least as many others, many of which linked soy formula to severe thyroid and gastrointestinal effects especially when fed during the first few months after birth, a key developmental phase for infants. The panel also arbitrarily decided that reproductive damage had to occur during infancy although it is rare for symptoms to show up before puberty. During public proceedings, the 14 members — many of whose work and careers depend on funding from industry or government sources — were pressured by soy industry representatives who made it clear that a vote indicating “some concern” would damage soy’s “healthy” image and jeopardize industry profits.

THOSE LONG LIVED OKINAWANS
So which people are thriving on lots of soy?    According to Hyman, it’s the Okinawans, the world’s longest-lived people, who “for more than five millennia have eaten whole, organic and fermented soy foods like miso, tempeh, tofu, soy milk, and edamame (young soybeans in the pod).” Interesting indeed that the Okinawans have been eating these foods for “five millenia,” when miso and tofu only entered the food supply about three thousand years ago. Tempeh came in to the food supply in Indonesia sometime between 1000 and 1595 AD. As for soy milk, the first historical reference is 1866, and it was first popularized in Asia in the 20th century by Seventh Day Adventist missionaries from America.

Where might Hyman’s careful research on the “healthy Okinawans come from?” Probably from the Bradley and D. Craig Wilcox and their bestselling popular books The Okinawa Program and The Okinawa Diet Plan. That seems to be where vegetarian John Robbins obtained the information he includes in his article about the same topic. Among other major blunders, the Willcox brothers claim that Okinawans who have reached the 100 year mark in good health did so because of ample quantitities of soy foods and canola oil in their diets. Yes, canola oil — the Canadian oil (Can-ola) that didn’t even exist on the planet until a few decades ago! The Willcoxes also show confusion from page to page about just how much soy is eaten. In fact, the amounts vary widely from place to place in Asia, but nowhere is the average very high and everywhere it’s treated as a condiment in the diet and not as a staple food. While it’s certainly true that Okinawans regularly eat some soy, the evidence indicates they also enjoy a lot of pork in their diet. And the primarily monounsaturated fat those centenarians ate over the course of their long lives was not canola oil but good old-fashioned lard. Yes, lard is a primarily monounsaturated fat.

REVIEWING THE RESEARCH  Hyman claims he has “reviewed reams of research” yet lists only three references at the conclusion of his article, the first of which is an review article by soy industry spokesperson Mark Messina, PhD. Hyman winds up by saying he’s “eager to see the studies on soy and health.” The bottom line is thousands of studies have been carried out over the past eighty years, many of which suggest risks and none prove safety.

BETTER SAFE THAN SORRY:    Clearly it would be wise to advance the precautionary principle of “better safe than sorry.” That has led the Israeli Health Ministry, French Food Agency, and German Institute of Risk Assessment to issue warnings to parents and pediatricians.  Warnings have also come from respected independent scientists, including Dan Sheehan, the retired senior toxicologist at FDA’s Laboratory of Toxicological Research in Jefferson, Arkansas, Retha Newbold of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences in Triangle Park, NC, Irvin E. Liener, PhD, professor emeritus at the University of Minnesota and the world’s leading expert on on antinutrients such as protease inhibitors, phytates, lectins, saponins, etc., Lon R. White MD, a neuro-epidemiologist with the Pacific Health Institute in Honolulu; and Mary G. Enig, PhD, the courageous scientist who first exposed the dangers of trans fats in the late 1970s.   Alternative doctors with impressive records of reversing cancer such as the late Max Gerson MD, Nicholas Gonzalez MD and others have also put soy on their “do not eat” lists. Neurosurgeon Russell Blaylock MD, has strongly warned against soy’s adverse effects on the brain and nervous system. None of these groups or individuals have ever been militantly “anti soy.” All have looked long and hard at the research, and have soberly and responsibly concluded that caution is warranted and soy can put infants, children and adults at risk.

Time for Dr. Hyman to do some real homework and not just express his “eagerness” to know more.

Kaayla T. DanielPhD, CCN, is The Naughty NutritionistTM because of her ability to outrageously and humorously debunk nutritional myths. A popular guest on radio and television, she has appeared on The Dr Oz Show, ABC’s View from the Bay, NPR’s People’s Pharmacy and numerous other shows. Her own radio show, “Naughty Nutrition with Dr. Kaayla Daniel,” launched recently on World of Women (WOW) Radio. Dr Daniel is the author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food, a popular speaker at Wise Traditions and other conferences, a Board Member of the Weston A. Price Foundation and recipient of its 2005 Integrity in Science Award. Her website is www.naughtynutritionist.com and she can be reached at Kaayla@DrKaaylaDaniel.com.

Posted in Dr. Kaayla Daniels, Kaayla T. Daniel, Naughty Nutritionist, soy, Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , | 2 Comments »

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 147 other followers