The
Nutrition Action Healthletter, a regular publication of The Center for Science in the Public Interest (
CSPI), is the largest-circulation health newsletter in North America. Every month, on its back page is a very entertaining and enlightening section titled "Food Porn" - and with a provocative picture to boot! Well, it just so happens that on more than one occasion the not so very coveted Food Porn of the Month Award has gone to Starbucks. One monthly winner, the Coconut
Crème and Vanilla
Crème Frappuccinos, were found to pack 870 calories and an entire day’s worth of saturated fat into a 20-ounce
venti drink, and depending on how you configure your Starbucks drink, 40 to 60g of sugar. I point out Starbucks here since all our children school kids seem to be finding the local
barrista a popular hangout but there are a number of such award winners.
Now, with an average daily calorie intake of 1900 or so recommended for women and 2500 or so for men and with a recommended daily sugar intake of 40 grams, one can see where with a
frappuccino here, a donut there, and something somewhere else, one might be headed for trouble. I see a great deal of diabetic
retinopathy in my practice. Diabetes is becoming quite the epidemic in this country. Of course, many of us can conveniently blame a genetic predisposition, but a lot of it has to do with our tendency to eat a lot and exercise very little. Certainly, the sugar-loaded
frappuccinos, sodas and processed drinks we consume in lieu of water don't help either. In the
premodern era, we were forced to walk everywhere and there were many times we as humans weren't getting more than a meal a day, much less Starbucks, so we weren't as apt to develop diabetes.
Broadly classified, there are two types of diabetes.
Type I is what some folks get at a young age because they can't produce insulin, the hormone that control our body wide sugar metabolism.
Type II is what some of us get later in life, due to a dysfunction of whatever insulin we have. Take your typical American living somewhere where he doesn't have - or want - easy access to a gym, takes a car everywhere, spends all day sitting in the office, and then comes home and glues him self to his TV or
Tivo, all the while eating high calorie foods. There you have it, the perfect setup for developing Type II diabetes. Basically, the lack of muscle and excess fat mass effectively decrease his insulin sensitivity and ability to metabolize sugars and his chronic overeating of the wrong foods burns out his
pancreas, the organ that produces insulin. Early on, those of us who seem to be at risk of or have developed the early signs of diabetes can avoid progression of the disease and the need for medications by changing lifestyle habits, exercising and developing muscle mass, but I rarely see this happen. I read somewhere that most doctors figure patients won't follow exercise and lifestyle/diet advice and hence they go straight to diabetes medications. I also read a study somewhere that they were right. Personal experience as a physician who advocates lifestyle choices confirms this observation - patients generally don't want to make such changes.
Now, as children are drinking sodas at school we're seeing diabetes develop earlier. In either case, Type I or Type II, controlling our blood sugars (and for those of us who are older, our blood pressure and lipid levels) are important in slowing the progression of diabetes. Diabetes generally attacks and damages the small blood vessels in our body, hence patients with diabetes tend to develop problems with their nerves, kidneys, heart, brain, reproductive systems, and retinas - everywhere where small blood vessels are important.
If you have diabetes in your family, or you're overweight, or you may have just developed diabetes, you should be watching what you eat and exercising. That way, you can save yourself a lot of grief. The
CSPI,
www.cspinet.org, has been an advocate for nutrition and health, food safety, alcohol policy, and sound science. Check out the newsletter and this month's food porn at
www.cspinet.org/nah/index.htm. My advice readers, exercise daily and watch what you eat, especially if you have diabetes.