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Food Fight : The Inside Story of the Food Industry, America's Obesity Crisis, and What We Can Do About It
 
 

Food Fight : The Inside Story of the Food Industry, America's Obesity Crisis, and What We Can Do About It (Hardcover)

de Kelly Brownell (Author), Katherine Battle Horgen (Author) "It came quickly, with little fanfare, and was out of control before the nation noticed ..." En savoir plus
3.9étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (9 évaluations de client)

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From Publishers Weekly

The war against obesity must go beyond personal responsibility and will power to encompass a Gandhian mass movement against a food industry and a social order intent on fattening us, argues this fact-filled but ferocious manifesto. The authors, academics with the Yale Center for Eating and Weight Disorders, contend that our abundant, super-sized meals and our modern, sedentary lifestyles have formed a "toxic environment" that indulges our genetic fat-storage proclivities to a pathological degree. The result is an "epidemic" of obesity, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and low self-esteem. Brownell and Horgen blame these side effects on a car-centric culture that has virtually criminalized walking (27% of adult Americans, they report, get "no physical activity at all") while parking kids in front of television, video games and computers and eliminating gym classes from cash-strapped schools. But the worst villain of the book is the politically powerful food industry, which, the authors say, plies us with cheap fat and sugar while keeping healthier foods scarce and expensive, bribes schools to sell children soft drinks, and bombards children with junk-food ads from the moment they leave the womb. The authors recast the usual diet-and-exercise discourse in the rhetoric of social justice, calling for a grass-roots mobilization to fight Big Food, a "national strategic plan," and specific measures like junk-food taxes and banning ads that target children. Libertarians may consider this the worst kind of victimology. But the evergreen subject of American gluttony and sloth brings out the best in scientist-advocates, and the authors, while drawing on a mountain of statistics and studies, make their indictment both funny and appalling.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.


Product Description

Advance Praise for Food Fight

"This is a fascinating, empowering book must-read filled with practical ways to take action" -- Shape Magazine

Food Fight is a blueprint for the nation taking action on the obesity crisis. In his analysis, Brownell is balanced but bold, courageous and creative. A public health landmark.” --David A. Kessler, M.D., Dean, Yale School of Medicine, Former Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration

“We are indeed involved in a food fight. It is a fight for the health of America---especially our children. This book provides much of the necessary ammunition to win this fight.” --David Satcher, M.D., Ph.D., former Surgeon General, Director of the National Center for Primary Care, Morehouse School of Medicine

“Provides a compelling approach to reverse the obesity epidemic now gripping our nation. Anyone concerned about this crisis, and that should include all Americans, will find this book enlightening.” --Walter C. Willett, M.D., Dr.P.H., Chair, Department of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health

“Food Fight is a very informative, provocative, and well-written account of the role of food in the growing public health problem of obesity. I highly recommend it.” --Steven N. Blair, P.E.D., President and CEO, the Cooper Institute

Food Fight rings the alarm to enlist Americans in an effort to protect children from the ‘toxic environment’ that is leading to skyrocketing rates of obesity and other health problems.” --Michael F. Jacobson, Ph.D., Executive Director, Center for Science in the Public Interest

“Kelly Brownell and colleagues were among the first to sound the alarm, that an increasingly "toxic environment" puts everyone, and especially children, at risk for obesity. Food Fight enters the front lines in the battle between public health and private profit.” --David S. Ludwig, M.D., Ph.D., Director, Obesity Program, Children’s Hospital Boston, Harvard Medical School

How America is eating itself into a national health crisis and what we can do about it

In Food Fight, one of the world's best-known and most respected experts on nutrition, obesity, and eating disorders delivers the sobering message that America is quickly succumbing to a "toxic" food environment guaranteed to produce obesity, disability, and death.

Dr. Kelly D. Brownell goes beyond the bestselling Fast Food Nation to explore the roots of the obesity epidemic and the enormous toll it is taking on the nation's health, vitality, and productivity. And he offers an unflinching assessment of a culture that feeds its pets better than its children, that targets the poor and children as a market for high-calorie, low-nutrition junk food and manipulates children into poor eating habits with toy giveaways and in-school promotions.

But Food Fight isn't all bad news. It is also an inspiring call to action from one of the nation's most effective public health advocates. Dr. Brownell suggests bold public policy initiatives for stemming the rising tide of obesity, diabetes, and heart disease, such as imposing taxes on junk food and using the proceeds to make healthy foods more affordable and available. He describes steps individuals can take to help safeguard their and their families' health, including pressuring schools to remove junk food vending machines. And he offers a workable plan for improving individual and family eating and exercise habits.


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3.9étoiles sur 5 (9 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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1 internautes sur 1 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
4.0étoiles sur 5 Bite-Sized Solutions to a Big Problem, Janv. 7 2004
After reading the first few chapters of Food Fight, I thought "same old stuff." Americans are too fat, eat a poor diet, don't get enough exercise, what else is new.

After a few more chapters, I became overwhelmed with the magnitude of the problem. The fast food companies and agribusiness corporations are too powerful, health care organizations are not really interested in solving the problem, and even the schools are inundated with Channel One advertising and contracts from soft drink companies. How on earth can we even begin to address this problem? Is there any hope?

Then Brownell gets into solutions. Of course the individual needs to take responsibility and eat less, eat better, and exercise more. But communities need to demand changes, such as limits on what kind of advertising the kids see while they are in school, classes (for kids and adults) on nutrition and exercise, neighborhood walking and bicycle paths in safe places. And governments should be involved as well, providing national ad spots about health and fitness, perhaps using the anti-tobacco campaigns as a guideline.

Brownell discusses the solutions in the last part of the book, then ends with a handy summary of recommended actions. What starts as a rather depressing book turns out to be a positive, optimistic look at what we can do at different levels to tackle a growing problem.

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3.0étoiles sur 5 What About the Diet Industry?, Avril 30 2004
Par Un client
Do any of these people live in California?!! Is this being done in some Mc Donalds heavy midwestern back water? Because this is not my reality! I literally cannot turn on the t.v. without hearing about how fat Americans are intercut by endless lengthly ads for designer drugs for weight control (if not others ethereally and cheerfully explaining why ritalin is such an uplifiting and caring solution for grade schoolers!), Jenny Craig, "Carb Options" what have you. If we have learned anything in the 80s and 90s it's that obsessing about food causes eating disorders-be it anorexia or binge eating-they are opposite sides of the same coin! I would hope the diet industry is receiving just as much consternation from the author as the soda industry. Many an average weight, moderate eating american has gone on a diet-fitness rutine- (Your Dean Ornish-ish eating less, moving more, hit the unrepentent fat americans over the head rutine) simply becuase in recent years, for example a 22 year old sadly, self-rejectingly and almost mysteriously feels she's fat and wishes she could get down to the 90 lbs. she weighed at 12-only to ultimately down the road actually become overweight, in absolutely worse shape, AND uncontrollably obsessed with food. A lot of shortsighted Amercans are to blame-if not out of greed, certainly out of being inadequately informed-not just the politically incorrect ones.
We're only now seeing the disasterous results of the low fat high carb craze-yes a craze believe it or not where people were eating less (maybe a desciplined once a day binge -and the periodic rejoicing at contracting an appetite surpressing flu. Throwing bitter recriminations at themselves for ever actually needing to eat at all! A way of life where one desperately tries to survive on fake food and cut back on meat-anything with fat-who knew there were good and bad fats- struggling through workouts with-surprise!-no energy or motivation. This is what so many Americans do because they feel bad about eating at all-esp. the previously filling staples that now induce guilt-like red meat, thinking they are failures for not being able to fill up on those unsustaining but politically correct "grains." Where-oh where-has this anorexic thinking author been?! AND yes I am in walking distance from gyms, juice bars, and of course every 3 blocks Starbucks-b/c now they are finding that completely cutting out fat causes stimant dependence. (Anyone notice the rise in Starbucks coincides with the low-fat eat less-eat more cheap earth sustaining carbs craze?!!)
Yes I should read the book-but I can't avoid hearing the same old clueless crap regardless-so is there truly a need? Time to move my fat @$$ off the computer and walk-yes I walk-to Jamba Juice (who knew the fructose in healthy juice was fattening?). Hopefully I won't be killed by an SUV along the way. No I will see few soda vendor machines along the way either-kinda went the way of cigarette machines. But hight strung joggers who act like there on speed and make me feel fat and high in body fat percentages regardless of how I look-there are always plenty of those.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Passionate Crusader, Excellent Book, Fév 9 2004
Par David Spero "David Spero RN" (San Francisco, CA United States) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
Dr. Kelly Brownell has spent much of his career fighting the food industry's attempts to make us all fat. He brings a crusader's passion and a scientist's accuracy and thoroughness to "Food Fight". He and co-author Katherine Horgen see obesity as a public health crisis like smoking or drunk driving. They take the social movement against smoking as a model and call on us all to get involved, for our own sake and our children's.

This book is extremely well-referenced, drawing on scientific articles, popular journalism and books like Fast Food Nation. Brownell and Horgen reveal the huge scope of America's problem with weight and tell how the problem is spreading all over the world. They show how the food industry has penetrated schools, government agencies, and entertainment media to market sugary, fatty foods to adults and children.

Brownell is especially concerned about children, who lack the power to defend themselves against food advertising and easily available sweets. He demolishes the "personal responsibility" argument used by the calorie pushers. How can children be expected to say "no" to food that tastes good, is readily available in their schools and communities, is recommended by their favorite media characters or sports stars, and which nobody is warning them against?

The authors give dozens of suggestions for social changes that could increase physical activity (ex. bike paths), reduce soft drink consumption (ex a small tax that would go to fund nutrition education and provision of healthy school lunches), and make healthy food more available (a problem for a very large number of people in America.) They also have lots of good suggestions for political activism.

What "Food Fight" does not include is strategies for individuals and families to protect themselves and live healthier lives. That's not what the book is about - it's about the politics of food, and how we can change the environment so that healthy living becomes easier.

The writing style is clear, although not especially entertaining. But there is some humor, such as a subheading on the huge size of restaurant portions: "Nelson, party of four: your muffin is ready."

Food Fight is a political manifesto by a crusader who has already been attacked repeatedly by the food industry. He makes a strong case, one I will use in my upcoming book, "The Politics of Diabetes." I encourage readers to support Dr. Brownell and Horgen's cause.

David Spero RN, author of The Art of Getting Well: Maximizing Health When You Have a Chronic Illness (Hunter House 2002) www.DavidSperoRN.com

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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 Read this book before your next trip to the grocery store!
After reading Kelly Brownell's factual, rational and well-balanced book about the food industry and the American obesity crisis, I came away with the realization that basically... Read more
Publié le Janv. 5 2004 par Robert Adler

3.0étoiles sur 5 An Important Message - Again
For those of you who have been living in a cave on Pluto for the past half century and still haven't heard, Americans are fat (two thirds are overweight) and getting fatter. Read more
Publié le Nov. 27 2003 par William R. Franklin

5.0étoiles sur 5 It's Not Just The Individual
It's interesting to read the comment left by a reviewer telling author Kelly Brownell to "grow up. Read more
Publié le Sep 19 2003

1.0étoiles sur 5 Please Kelly Brownell GROW UP!
What a pile of garbage. This book is looking for an excuse. "Its not my fault I'm overweight. I'm overweight because of ..... Read more
Publié le Sep 18 2003

4.0étoiles sur 5 Good work on a crucial topic.
A very good book: easy to read, cogent and worth reading, but not as good as Marion Nestle's "Food Politics" which is more incisive, detailed and analytical. Read more
Publié le Sep 2 2003

5.0étoiles sur 5 Fighting for our children -- this book is an inspiration!
I am the mother of three small children and I loved this book! Any parent who has gone to the grocery store with a preschooler knows the challenge of simply getting down the... Read more
Publié le Aoû 25 2003 par bethbabbin

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