The case for mass public education campaigns

Nurses COVID

Published

Step One: The case for mass public education campaigns

“We are seeing this pandemic because it's been fueled by a slower pandemic of chronic illness that makes people at high risk, and we have not had the emphasis on disease prevention in our society that we all need and deserve.” -Dr Howard Koh on Yahoo Finance, July 5, 2020

As we now know, embedded structural inequities like redlining, underfunding of public schools, public sector/frontline employment, inability to afford healthy food, food swamps and the built environment, have contributed to disproportionate Covid-19 rates of infection, complications, and death among much of the country’s minority populations. But it’s important also to realize that, regardless of race or ethnicity, much of the destruction that SARS CoV-2 leaves behind clearly reveals the effects of diets high in processed food. As addictive as nicotine and heroin, processed food is a huge driver of hypertension, obesity, and diabetes – comorbidities one, two and three in Covid-19.

I am a clinic nurse, and I say this as someone who has dedicated hundreds of hours to education: It is not your fault or my fault or our fault that we have the current burden of chronic disease that we do, and it’s not our fault that processed food caused it, but though we as healthcare workers are nominally part of the solution, at times it seems like we are asked to be the entire solution.

A system whereby you ask doctors and nurses to one by one by one educate thousands of food-addicted, undernourished people could not be more inefficiently designed.

It is beyond time to seek ways to launch massive public education campaigns, definitively linking diets high in ultra-processed food directly to poor health outcomes.

Diet has been the kindling that has allowed this pandemic to blaze through. If all public health agencies and companies do is fall back on the assumption that stress and poverty lead to a poor diet, and leave it to a few doctors and nurses to talk to a handful of residents, the ramifications of a poor diet are not addressed at a mass level, and we have no hope of slowing the rate of severe chronic disease. I believe that people, even people under stress, presented with information vital to their health in a way that grabs their attention can (and have been shown to) adjust, to both make and demand better food choices.

Such a campaign is not meant to be unsympathetic to those forced to sustain themselves on unhealthy food, but rather a tool in the larger struggle for health equality.

And it is only step one in better health equity – making the case. While it does not preclude weaving in other strategies, illustrating the link between processed food consumption and chronic disease is fundamental to firmly situating health as a key driver and indicator of equality.

Specializes in Psych, Addictions, SOL (Student of Life).

In my 57 years on this planet I have seen that we have plenty of mass education. Way before the internet there were govt mandated labels on processed food designed to inform people on healthier options. You can lead a horse to water, tell it how deliciously refreashing that water is, However you cannot make that horse drink, even if it is thirsty. Same goes with food and healthy choices. You can tell people where they are going wrong, show them how it could be so much better, even get them to vebally agree. When push comes to shove you can't force change on them.

I don't often agree with A Hit with the ladies but in this case He makes a point. There was a time when I was homeless and living off of handouts though back door of fastfood restuarants at closing time. I knew it wasn't good for me but food is food. I am in a much better position now.

Why would you change the MY plate to half vegetables and exclude fruit. May it's changed lately but the latest info from the FDA is five servings of fruits and vegatables a day. Fruit provides much needed soluable fiber as well as carbohydrates that you body knows how to process and utilize.

I totally get what you are saying but may be barking up the wrong tree.

Hppy

Specializes in clinic nurse.
On 8/6/2020 at 6:28 PM, hppygr8ful said:

Inm my 57 years on this planet I have seen that we have plenty of mass education. Way before the internet there were govt mandated label on processed food from fact food to better healthier option. But you can lead a horse to water, tell them how deliciously refreashing that water is, However you cannot make that horse drink, even if it is thirsty. Same goes with food and healthy choices. You can tell people where they are going wrong, show them how it should be so much better, even get them to vebally agree. When push comes to shove you can't force chang on them.

I don't often agree with A Hit with the ladies but in this case He makes a point. There was atime when I was homeless and living off of handout though back door of fastfood restuarants at closing time. I knew it wasn't good for me but food is food. I am in a much better position now.

Why would you change the MY plate to half vegetables and exclude fruit. May it's changed lately but the latest info from the FDA is five servings of fruits and vegatables a day. Fruit provides much needed soluable fiber as well as carbohydrates that you body knows how to process and utilize.

I totally get what you are saying but may be barking up the wrong tree.

Hppy

I posted (barked) on this site (tree) because nurses are in a good position to push for change. The central point is that doing one by one education while potentially effective in individual cases will do nothing to stem the flood of patients with metabolic conditions. We need an overlaid message in the same vein as the smoking campaign of the 90s and early 2000s. As far as My Plate is concerned, a plate of half vegetables is a vast improvement over the foundation that fast-acting carbs held at the base of the pyramid. Sure, fruit is not a villain, most people know that. But emphasizing vegetables over fruit in a nation where the obesity and diabetes rate is extremely high is on balance a good thing. People with diabetes can eat fruit in moderation of course. They can, alternatively, and realistically speaking eat all the vegetables they want.

Can we start by getting rid of Monsanto and their products in our food? Our food supplies has been hijacked by cancer and obesity causing agents. My grandparents and great grandparents ate whatever they wanted and were healthy. The older I get the more unhealthy generations are becoming. Yes, video games and pedophiles on every block, etc have contributed but I don't recall child obesity in record numbers when we were little. Children nowadays have just as many health issues as adults and it's not just the types of food eaten, it's what's in the food itself.

If round-up causes cancer, we know this and a multimillion-dollar case has been won against Monsanto, why do we eat the foods coated in round-up or other similar Monsanto products? And what the hell are they feeding our livestock? The food source is tainted from the root!

Specializes in clinic nurse.

From Mexico:

Oaxaca Congress approves law prohibiting sale of junk food to minors

Thirty-one lawmakers voted in favor of the so-called ley antichatarra, or anti-junk food law, while just one voted against it.

Oaxaca becomes the first state in the country to prohibit the sale of items such as chips, candy, soda and other sugary drinks to children under 18.

The enactment of the law comes as health authorities blame Mexico’s high coronavirus death toll on the high prevalence of diet-related diseases such as diabetes and obesity. Deputy Health Ministry Hugo López-Gatell last month described soft drinks as “bottled poison.”

Specializes in Psych, Addictions, SOL (Student of Life).
13 hours ago, JVBT said:

I posted (barked) on this site (tree) because nurses are in a good position to push for change. The central point is that doing one by one education while potentially effective in individual cases will do nothing to stem the flood of patients with metabolic conditions. We need an overlaid message in the same vein as the smoking campaign of the 90s and early 2000s. As far as My Plate is concerned, a plate of half vegetables is a vast improvement over the foundation that fast-acting carbs held at the base of the pyramid. Sure, fruit is not a villain, most people know that. But emphasizing vegetables over fruit in a nation where the obesity and diabetes rate is extremely high is on balance a good thing. People with diabetes can eat fruit in moderation of course. They can, alternatively, and realistically speaking eat all the vegetables they want.

Well I didn't go there but I am an insulin dependant diabetic and I work closely with my endcrinologist on a strict program to keep my blood sugars well balanced. My food list includes all green leafy vegetables, unlimted fruits very low carbohydrates and meat that is lean. It's also 10%fat. Fat and the carbohydrate in fruit help to balance blood sugars and prevent spikes while processed carbs will cause blood sugar to spike. I don't eat bread at all and my carbs are mostly whole grains such a Farro, Barly, millet, Kamut, Teff and Frekeh. In doing my own research I have discovered that fruit does not in any way influence the developement of diabetes, nor does it cause the disease to worsen. The Mayo Clinic supports this:

https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/diabetes/expert-answers/diabetes/faq-20057835

The American Diabetes Association aslo concurs:

https://www.diabetes.org/nutrition

While I am allowed to eat unlimited fruit with the exception of watermelon and mango. I am only allowed to eat non-starchy vegetables. I don't get to eat any member of the potato family except for sweet potatoes which I am slowly learning to love. Oh and my endocrinologist allows me to eat refined sugar because artifical sugars and so very bad for the colon and brain health and he wants me to eat butter but no margarine. He gave me this whole speil on "Mirror Image isomers" and fake food and how these fake foods contribute to diabetes, heart disease and dementia.

The very best thing I have done is start to grow most of the fruit and vegetables we (my family) eat.

I am not disagreeing with you on the need for mass education I just saying there's a lot of information out there. Here in California there are comercials every day on healthy eating and better food choices. So such mass education is being done, but again I say "You can lead a horse to water....."

Hppy

Specializes in Psych, Addictions, SOL (Student of Life).
On 8/9/2020 at 4:26 PM, JVBT said:

From Mexico:

Oaxaca Congress approves law prohibiting sale of junk food to minors

Thirty-one lawmakers voted in favor of the so-called ley antichatarra, or anti-junk food law, while just one voted against it.

Oaxaca becomes the first state in the country to prohibit the sale of items such as chips, candy, soda and other sugary drinks to children under 18.

The enactment of the law comes as health authorities blame Mexico’s high coronavirus death toll on the high prevalence of diet-related diseases such as diabetes and obesity. Deputy Health Ministry Hugo López-Gatell last month described soft drinks as “bottled poison.”

legislating what people can buy/eat is not education it's facism. While I eat a very healthy diet there are occasions when a bucket of greasy, hot, salty chicken parts satisfies a craving and no law maker should be able to come between me and my KFC.

2 minutes ago, hppygr8ful said:

legislating what people can buy/eat is not education it's facism. While I eat a very healthy diet there are occasions when a bucket of greasy, hot, salty chicken parts satisfies a craving and no law maker should be able to come between me and my KFC.

I agree. Me and this brownie thing I have going. Somewhere in the future I picture myself in junk food group therapy saying "Hi, I'm NurseBlaq, and I'm addicted to brownies." ?

Specializes in NICU, PICU, Transport, L&D, Hospice.

Did VP Pence claim that the Biden/Harris administration would limit the amount of meat we could have? I hope not, that might really hurt God.

Specializes in clinic nurse.

It looks like sound, low-cost public health policies including measures like regulating sugar, known to be one of the most highly addictive substances on earth, and the development and promotion of common sense PSAs will lose out yet again to big pharma.

This linked article is over one year old. The drug is actually now in stage three trials.

https://www.biopharmadive.com/news/pfizer-nash-fructose-phase-2-data/551543/

Pfizer's drug inhibits an enzyme that helps metabolize fruit sugar. Excess consumption of that sugar can promote insulin resistance and the development of a fatty liver, according to Pfizer scientists. In an abstract, those scientists concluded the Phase 2 study's findings warrant further investigation of the drug in NASH and the broader area of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.

On 8/14/2020 at 3:19 PM, hppygr8ful said:

legislating what people can buy/eat is not education it's facism. While I eat a very healthy diet there are occasions when a bucket of greasy, hot, salty chicken parts satisfies a craving and no law maker should be able to come between me and my KFC.

What about the 17-year-old who’d really like to be able to buy beer? Or the methamphetamine or heroin user who.. Well, you catch my drift. Do you think it’s fascism that society has decided to make those things illegal? If you do and support legalizing alcohol for everyone under 21 and drugs for all, then you’re consistent. If you don’t, what’s your rationale for thinking that junk food that we know causes significant morbidity and mortality, should be treated differently?

Specializes in Psych, Addictions, SOL (Student of Life).
2 hours ago, macawake said:

What about the 17-year-old who’d really like to be able to buy beer? Or the methamphetamine or heroin user who.. Well, you catch my drift. Do you think it’s fascism that society has decided to make those things illegal? If you do and support legalizing alcohol for everyone under 21 and drugs for all, then you’re consistent. If you don’t, what’s your rationale for thinking that junk food that we know causes significant morbidity and mortality, should be treated differently?

Your comparing apples to oranges -I work with at risk teenagers and one thing I have learned is that especially with drugs and alcohol legislation does not work. If it did I would lose half my patien population overnight. There are lots of societal reasons for this and I have my theories but there's a big difference between Heroine and a Happy Meal which my own son ate a lot of when I was going through a significantly rough time in my life and I had to turn the feeding of my child over to my husband who does not cook. Once I got back on track and the garden growing we went back to healthy eating. My point is that while unlimited access to junk food is terrible for you (No argument there) legislation that does not allow the occasional indulgence simply does not work. It doesn't work with drugs of abuse, alchohol or sitting and streaming endless hours of televised entertainment instead of getting out and exercising.

I am going to take a big angry hit here but in my opinion the breakdown in nutrition education started with the invention of the TV Dinner. Once families moved away from gathering at the table for an evening meal society started to breakdown. Sure some families absolutely require a two income revenue stream but some do not and when children are left to their own devices on what to eat they will invariably turn to junk food in the same way that unsuprvised teens will turn to alcohol and drugs.

My point is that things like drugs and alocohol are things that the body can do without but the body must have food and if there is no one around at mealtime to supervise nutrition kids will turn to junk food/fast food. Also people who live in food deserts and lack well stocked grocery stores have limited options especially when adults in charge are both working just to make ends meet.

In my own home we do not keep soda pop of fruit juice. Nor we we have things like chips or a lot of sweets like cookies and cake unless I make them so I know that the ingredients are what I want my family to eat (no-trans fats or sneaky cancer provoking chemicals) and before you say that's easy for you understand that I work an average of 60 hours a week and still make time to feed my family correctly. It can be done without legislating what people can and cannot eat. People who want to make bad choices will. In 2013 Mayor Bloomberg (New York Cuty) tried to pass a city ordinance to outlaw the sale of the big gulp sized soda sold at 7/11 stores across the country. People responded by buying two smaller sizes and the ACLU went to court to protect the people's contitutional right to free choice. In 2014 the Nanny State suffered a blow when the New York court appeals ruled against the ordinance. Law makers in the Netherlands have tried to legislate everything parents do for their Children since 2013 or so. I will try to find the links that list food choices, mandatory exercise guidlines and even state mandated bedtimes.

There is no law that is going to protect people from their own ignorance. The information of healthy food choices is there for all to take advantage of( especially with the internet) if people actually stopped using the internet to gossip on social media and actually looked for the information on how to make healthy food choices on any budget the problem would solve itself.

Hppy

Specializes in NICU, PICU, Transport, L&D, Hospice.

The working poor will always require 2+ incomes to maintain status quo in this capitalist society, if we continue our current path. Junk and processed food is much more available and cheaper than fresh foods to the working poor. The kleptocrats are cool with that...they have all the access they need to healthy fresh foods and the time to prepare them. Like housing, education and health care...the wealthiest are all set.

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