Difference between revisions of "Food/Food and health"

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A shortage of food is not the only problem. Over a billion people are overweight, and 300,000,000 are obese <sup>[http://www.who.int/dietphysicalactivity/publications/facts/obesity/en/]</sup>. A third of all children born in the USA in 2000 are expected to become diabetic <sup>[http://articles.latimes.com/2003/jun/15/nation/na-diabetes15]</sup>. {{wp|Metabolic_syndrome|Metabolic syndrome}} is estimated to affect a quarter of the US population.  
 
A shortage of food is not the only problem. Over a billion people are overweight, and 300,000,000 are obese <sup>[http://www.who.int/dietphysicalactivity/publications/facts/obesity/en/]</sup>. A third of all children born in the USA in 2000 are expected to become diabetic <sup>[http://articles.latimes.com/2003/jun/15/nation/na-diabetes15]</sup>. {{wp|Metabolic_syndrome|Metabolic syndrome}} is estimated to affect a quarter of the US population.  
  
Unfortunately, changing human behaviour is not as straightforward as finding a solution to an engineering problem. But what the suggestions given here can achieve is a change in the food environment. Hopefully, by creating an environment where unprocessed fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts and seeds are readily available locally, we can  mitigate obesity and diabetes as well as hunger.
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Unfortunately, changing human behaviour is not as straightforward as finding a solution to an engineering problem. But what the suggestions given here can achieve is a change in the food environment. Hopefully, by creating an environment where unprocessed fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts, seeds and fish are readily available locally, we can  mitigate obesity and diabetes as well as hunger.
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The high levels of control of the biochemical environment in techniques like aeroponics and in-vitro meat allow for precise control over the nutritional profile of the food produced. It should be possible with these methods to create the most nutritious food that can possibly be grown.

Revision as of 11:36, 30 October 2010

A shortage of food is not the only problem. Over a billion people are overweight, and 300,000,000 are obese [1]. A third of all children born in the USA in 2000 are expected to become diabetic [2]. Metabolic syndrome 11px-Wikipedia_logo.jpg is estimated to affect a quarter of the US population.

Unfortunately, changing human behaviour is not as straightforward as finding a solution to an engineering problem. But what the suggestions given here can achieve is a change in the food environment. Hopefully, by creating an environment where unprocessed fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts, seeds and fish are readily available locally, we can mitigate obesity and diabetes as well as hunger.

The high levels of control of the biochemical environment in techniques like aeroponics and in-vitro meat allow for precise control over the nutritional profile of the food produced. It should be possible with these methods to create the most nutritious food that can possibly be grown.