Food is medicine and medicine is food
Doctors are taught in medical school to do differential diagnoses which almost always end in either a drugs or surgery. So the people, taught to always “ask your doctor,” most often get an answer in the form of a drug they are assured will “cure” them, even though it was never designed to do so.
Drugs only treat ad infinitum. As a result, America is a drug culture and untold millions of Americans are prescription drug addicts as surely as the crack, heroin or meth addict is addicted.
What does addiction in America really look like? According to WebMD, the 10 most prescribed drugs in 2014-2015 were:
- Synthroid (levothyroxine), for hypothyroidism, 21.5 million prescriptions per month.
- Crestor (rosuvastatin), a statin for lowering cholesterol and triglycerides, 21.4 million prescriptions per month.
- Ventolin HFA (albuterol), an inhaler for people with asthma, breathing problems or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), 18.2 million prescriptions per month.
- Nexium (esomeprazole), for acid reflux, 15.2 million prescriptions per month.
- Advair Diskus (fluticasone), for asthma and those with COPD, 13.7 million prescriptions per month.
- Lantus Solostar (insulin glargine), insulin for treatment of diabetes, 10.9 million prescriptions per month.
- Vyvanse (lisdexamfetamine), for treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, 10.4 million prescriptions per month.
- Lyrica (pregabalin), for fibromyalgia, diabetic nerve pain, spinal cord injury and pain after shingles, 10 million prescriptions per month.
- Spiriva Handihaler (tiotropium), for COPD and emphysema, 9.6 million prescriptions per month.
- Januvia (sitagliptin), an oral diabetes medicine that helps control insulin levels, 9.1 million prescriptions per month.
There are around 330 million people in America. The prescriptions above for the most part don’t overlap, meaning there are more than 130 million people taking just these medications each month. How many millions more prescriptions are being written to how many more millions of people? Some estimates put it at 70 percent of all Americans — or somewhere near 223 million.
After years of research and reading, my conjecture is that most of America’s health problems are directly related to diet. The standard American diet is low in nutrition but high in calories. This is a fatal combination for the people, but a boon to the medical establishment that profits off our poor health.
This is the American diet as portrayed by the USDA’s My Plate. The deception is that we are satiated with a lot of calories but starving for nutrition. And even worse is the proliferation of processed foods that make up much of the average American’s diet. This is the perfect formula for the conditions that are so prevalent in America: overweight, obesity, heart disease, cancer and diabetes. This is a situation that I call full-belly starvation.
The U.S. is No. 34 in the world in life expectancy, tied with Nauru, Costa Rica and Qatar. Who is No. 1? Japan.
The Japanese male has a life expectancy of 80. The Japanese female, 87. This compares to the American male’s life expectancy of 76, and 81 for females.
And this difference may be tied directly to diet.
Since the Japanese government adopted its Food Guide Spinning Top in 2005, life expectancy has increased among people who follow the guidelines. The spinning top, an inverted pyramid, calls for a preponderance of grains (five to seven daily servings of rice, bread, noodles and pasta); vegetables (five to six servings); fish, meat, egg and soy bean dishes (three to five servings daily); and no more than two daily servings of fruits and milk and milk products. For beverages it calls for water and teas.
This differs from the U.S.-recommended MyPlate dietary guidelines which call for half of a daily diet to consist of vegetables and fruits (mostly vegetables), and the other half grains and proteins (mostly grains).
Those Japanese who adhere closest to the guidelines showed a drastic reduction in mortality from cardiovascular disease and cancer, according to a study by The BMJ.
The key difference, it seems, is the lack of sugar in the Japanese diet.Sugar is a toxin that leads directly to chronic diseases like diabetes, obesity and heart disease.
So the best medicine we can take is the proper diet.