The Dr. Hyman Show - Dr. Dariush Mozaffarian on How Poor Health is Swallowing Our Economy Whole
Episode Date: August 29, 2018My guest in this episode of The Doctor’s Farmacy is Dr. Dariush Mozaffarian, the Dean of the Friedman School of Nutrition Science & Policy at Tufts University, which is regarded as the oldest and mo...st renowned graduate school of nutrition in North America. In addition to serving as the school’s Dean, he also teaches as the Jean Mayer Professor of Nutrition and Medicine and is a trained cardiologist. Dr. Mozaffarian has served in numerous advisory roles in his career, including for the U.S. and Canadian governments, American Heart Association, Global Burden of Diseases study, World Health Organization, and United Nations. His work has been featured in the New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, National Public Radio, Time Magazine, and many other outlets. In 2016, Thomson Reuters named him as one of the World's Most Influential Scientific Minds. Dr. Mozaffarian received his BS in biological sciences from Stanford, MD from Columbia, and clinical training in internal medicine and cardiovascular medicine from Stanford and U. Washington. He also holds an MPH from U. Washington and a Doctorate in Public Health from Harvard. Before being appointed as Dean at Tufts in 2014, Dr. Mozaffarian was at Harvard Medical School and Harvard School of Public Health for a decade and clinically active in cardiology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. Tune into this brand new episode of The Doctor’s Farmacy for more!
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Coming up next on The Doctor's Pharmacy is a powerful conversation with one of the world's
leading scientific thinkers in nutrition, the head of the Tufts School of Nutrition,
Health Science and Policy, Dr. Darsh Mazzafarian. Stay tuned for this enlightening conversation. Welcome to the doctor's pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman and that's pharmacy F-A-R-M-A-C-Y,
a place for conversations that matter. And today I'm honored to have an extraordinary scientist,
leader, and thinker in the field of food and health, nutrition and policy, Dr. Dariush
Mazzafarian from Tufts. He's currently the John Mayer Professor of Nutrition and Policy, Dr. Dariush Mazzafarian from Tufts. He's currently the John Mayer Professor
of Nutrition and Medicine and the Dean of the Friedman School of Nutrition Science
and Policy at Tufts University. He's authored more than 300 scientific publications
on the dietary priorities to reduce cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and obesity
in the U.S. and globally. He's served in numerous advisory roles, including the U.S. and Canadian
governments, American Heart Association, the Global Burden Disease Study, the World Health
Organization, and the United Nations. He's been featured in the New York Times, the Washington
Post, Wall Street Journal, NPR, Time Magazine, and many, many other news outlets. In 2016,
Thomson Reuters named him one of the world's most influential scientific minds, and I agree.
Dr. Mazzafarian received his BA in Biological Science from Stanford Phi Beta Kappa and Columbia
Alpha Omega Alpha, and his clinical training in internal medicine and cardiovascular medicine
from Stanford and University of Washington. He holds an MPH from the University of Washington
and a doctorate in public health from Harvard. He's married, has three wonderful children, and actively trains as a black belt, second degree, in Taekwondo.
And he's a huge inspiration to me because he's one of the few physicians and leaders in health care
that connect the dots between what we eat, our social justice issues, the economy, chronic disease, climate, and much, much more.
Welcome, Dr. Mazzafarian.
Thank you, Mark. Great to be here.
So you're kind of an interesting researcher, scientist, cardiologist who sort of took a left turn somewhere.
Or a right turn somewhere.
Or maybe it was the right turn. You're a cardiologist from Harvard. You had, obviously, extensive education in public health.
But somehow, at some point in your life, you realized that food was important.
And you began to focus your career on researching food.
And you became one of the leading scientific investigators of what we should be eating.
And also now run the Tufts School of Nutrition, Science, and Policy, which is an interesting school because there's very few
schools of nutrition and policy. And so how did that happen? What was the inspiration,
the shift in your life personally that led you to sort of go right? Well, you know, I went to
medical school to try to heal people and save lives. And in medical school and then in internal
medicine residency and cardiology fellowship, throughout that journey, it was so obvious to me that food was the biggest issue
facing my patients. And yet, you know, we didn't learn very much about nutrition or prevention
other than sort of chemistry and some enzymes. And so that was the first kind of, you know,
incredible irony and paradox that struck me.
But every other doctor goes through medical school and doesn't have that insight, right?
It's like food, that doesn't have much to do with disease.
Well, I think a lot of them, yeah, I think a lot of them realize it.
But, you know, you're so busy and there's so much going on.
You know, who knows?
Lots of more casts to do.
Yeah, lots of things to do.
Yeah.
And then the second thing that I realized, which really struck me was, you know who knows lots of more cats to do yeah lots of things to do yeah and then
the second thing that i realized which really struck me was you know so i said well i need to
learn about this myself and so i started reading and diving into literature and reading everything
i could find and this was in the in the 90s and i realized that you know even the current dietary
guidelines then which were all about low fat, low saturated fat diets,
didn't match the evidence even 20 years ago. So that was the second huge, you know, kind of wake
up for me was that, you know, this is how to maybe between what we're told is the party line of what
we should eat and what the science actually said was different. Exactly. So, you know, the, the,
you know, lack of training in medicine for what's the most important issue in medicine and
then the lack of a match between the science and the what's sort of being being told to people and
so I said you know if I want to make a difference if I want to help people this is the area I need
to focus on and I haven't been disappointed and you so what did you do? I take a remedial course nutrition or
like night school? Yeah, well, I started with a master's of public health, a two year degree. And
then I went on to do a doctorate in public health at Harvard and continued with many more courses
and then doing my own research and reading and, you know, teaching myself and learning from
incredible mentors and scholars and, and gaining from, you know, all the sources of information I could.
And, you know, the things that I learned were amazingly interesting about what we should eat or not eat, with my own focus being on, you know, heart disease, stroke, obesity, diabetes, what I call cardiometabolic diseases. And then as you mentioned policy,
interestingly, as I started to do more research on things like omega-3s and trans fats and healthy
carbohydrates or unhealthy carbohydrates, I started getting more and more involved in policy
discussions, working with major advocacy organizations like the American Heart Association
or international groups like the United Nations or advising parts of the U.S. government or Canadian government. And that was
about 10 years later when I was deep in the research. And then I realized that that same
disconnect that I had seen for nutrition and guidance was there for policy and practice. And so,
you know, the best policy science wasn't filtering to policymakers.
And science wasn't being turned into policy.
Not only that, but there's science on policy.
There's science on what should be effectively done to change behavior.
And that wasn't filtering to.
So this disconnect between, you know, nutrition science and policy science and actual practice and translation was kind of translation was kind of the second thing that struck me.
And so that led my own research and my own work and my interest
to expand not only to understanding what we should eat,
but how we should get people there,
how we should actually change the systems to get people to healthier diets.
That's so powerful.
We're going to dig into policy in a minute,
but I want to sort of point out a couple of things about you that
are really unusual. As a cardiologist from Harvard, you suggest two things that are
significant heresy. One is that saturated fats may not be the boogeyman that we thought they were.
Maybe they're neutral. They're probably made out of health food, but they're not terrible. And you wrote that review of what was it? Butter is butter back six and a half million
patient years. I think 600,000 patients over many years. And there was no link between heart disease
and butter. And there was an inverse correlation with diabetes. And the second, you know, kind of
heresy is that all calories are not the same, that weight loss isn't about eating less and exercising more. And those ideas are pretty fringe. And you're yet in the center of
academia and one of the most respected scientists in the world. So how does that all sync up?
Well, you know, I think that what I try to do, you know, what all good scientists try to do is
let the science lead me where it will. I didn't start out with any
beliefs or notions about what would or wouldn't be good for us. And in fact,
you'll find this funny. My first NIH grant, which was a K award, which is an award to support young
investigators who are developing their careers. My first K award, the topic of that award was,
we know saturated fat is bad for us. And so what should
it be replaced with? Should it be replaced with protein or monos or polys or carbs? And this is
something that I wrote when I was a cardiology fellow. And then when I started doing the research
and I started really going deep into the data, I realized that saturated fat is actually not
bad for us. And so my own hypothesis and my own notion
changed based on the evidence. I started out intending to understand that saturated fat was
bad and what it should be replaced with, and that's not what I found. And as you said, I think
it's really important to point out that, you know, butter and bacon are not health foods, right?
I've never written... I wouldn't put butter and bacon in the same category though, right?
Exactly. I wouldn't even put them in the same category, but many people do. And that's usually
what's on the cover of magazine articles, you know, and hamburgers and from fast food restaurants. So
I think that, you know, the work that we've done on saturated fat suggests not that saturated fat's,
you know, inert, but that it's complicated and that you need to think about the types of saturated
fat and the food sources. And there's a thing as saturated, but there are saturated fats and
they all have different properties. And exactly, you know, the, the concept of saturated fat is a
chemistry categorization, which makes a lot of sense for chemistry class, but it doesn't make
sense for biology class where all of the different saturated fats have different effects and the
foods that contain them have different effects. And so yogurt is not cheese is not butter is not meat
is not nuts is not olive oil all of those contain saturated fat yeah you told me about this
fascinating study that was done i think in the uk where they looked at milk products that were
homogenized versus non-homogenized calorie for for calorie, gram per gram, they had profoundly different
effects, right?
Yeah, that's a very recent study done by a colleague, Ulf Rizrus, and he showed that
milk-fat globule membrane, which is a natural membrane that's supposed to be encapsulating
the globules of fat in milk, and that's why in raw milk, the fat rises to the top, and
that's why homogenization
is done to break up those membrane phospholipids and have the fat and the water mix.
That milk fat globular membrane seems to be pretty important to countering any negative
harmful effects of milk fat on cholesterol levels.
There's only been one trial done in humans, about 80 people that
Ulf worked on, but it's just remarkable that that hasn't been replicated and there's not more
study. It's just another... To the point is that the one that was the sort of original milk we
used to get with the cream separating had no adverse effects on cholesterol, whereas the
homogenized milk turned out to be not so great.
Yeah, they compared butter, about 15% of calories from butter every morning,
and about 15% of calories from whipping cream, unsweetened whipped cream every morning.
They gave it to people with scones and jam and said, have this for breakfast.
And so, of course, both groups did it, right?
You either had butter with scones or you got whipped cream.
So 15% of calories from high-fat dairy,
the same fat, the same saturated fat, the same cholesterol.
The butter group had all the predicted changes in cholesterol
that we've seen many times with people who eat butter.
And the whipped cream group had no change in cholesterol at all,
which is sort of shocking, right?
And it just, again, shows you how beautiful and intricate the interrelationships and complexities of food
and diets are. And it gets to kind of a major theme of, I think, the evidence and my own work
is that this kind of reductionist approach of trying to break down foods into one or two or
three things and then make recommendations based on just those reductionist
nutrient X and nutrient Y and nutrient Z
doesn't work that well most of the time.
It also speaks to the nature of the quality of food
and what happens when you start tinkering it
and create processed food that we seem to think is good,
like trans fats, and then we kind of messed up.
We thought vegetable is vegetables good so let's
throw some hydrogen there and make it look like butter better than butter and turned out it was
a lot worse well i think one of the truths in food and nutrition is is complexity um and so
that complexity uh even extends to processing and so there's no simple golden rule and so even just
to say processed foods are bad is probably also,
although it gets you a lot of the way there, is simplistic because we need to process most food to eat it.
Cooking is processing.
Taking the hull off a grain is processing.
Fermentation is processing.
So I think we need to think about optimal processing
and learn optimal processing for health.
And I think we're just scratching
the surface of that yeah i mean it was fascinating i had a conversation with alessio fasano who's a
celiac expert at harvard and i was saying how do you explain the paradox when people eat gluten
and wheat in america they feel sick when they go to italy or europe they don't and he said well
it's the fermentation process they actually instead of this two-hour rapid accelerated
fermentation process in the United States it's like a 12-hour overnight process I went to a
restaurant in Chicago the other day and they had like a 60-hour fermentation process and it changes
the structure the nature the composition the biology of the food you're eating so yeah you
know the reason that when one of the earliest labor protection laws several centuries old was
the earliest I think was in France the earliest that bakers could be asked to come into work in the morning.
They said no earlier than 4 a.m. because it took hours and hours for the yeast to break down the gluten and make bread rise.
That's what the yeast were actually doing.
The rising of the bread was breaking down the gluten.
So it's a labor law that made us all sick.
No, no, but that was that.
But what happened in really I think the mid-20th century was industry figured out,
well, we don't want to wait six hours, eight hours to make bread every time.
So let's put the bread in a heated crucible and mix it up and do it faster.
And we can do this all in about an hour.
And so then you still got the bread to rise, you didn't break down the gluten yeah passing so i
want to dive into the second part of that question which is about calories because i think it segues
into the policy question and the basic idea here in america is that if you eat too much and you
don't exercise enough you're going to gain weight and if you can't control your behavior and stop
eating and exercise more then there's something wrong with you and you challenge't exercise enough, you're going to gain weight. And if you can't control your behavior and stop eating and exercise more, then there's something wrong with you. And you challenge that
notion that it's not really our fault we're fat, that there's something else going on in the
biology of this, that all calories are not the same, and that has implications for policy,
food environments, and other things. So let's dig into that one. Yeah, well, you know, I think that,
you know, blaming individual people for obesity and saying that we just have to, everybody has to have better willpower and eat less and move more
would have been like, you know, looking at the incredible deaths from car accidents in the 30s
and 40s and 50s and saying, we just have to tell the drivers to drive better, right? We don't need
to change the car. We don't need to change the road. We don't need to change drunk driving.
Yeah. Let's just keep the
cars the way they are let's keep the roads the way they are let's keep the speed limits or lack
of speed limits the way they are let's let people drink and drive and then just blame it on the
individual driver so so what we did for car safety was we changed the product we changed the
environment the road and we changed the culture around drunk driving that's the road map to
a healthier food system it's not focusing focusing on the consumer, but change the environment, the grocery stores, the restaurants,
the supermarkets, the cafeterias, change the products, the foods themselves, and change the
culture in this case around healthier or unhealthy eating. But I think to get back to calories,
the reason it's so clear that this isn't about individual willpower is when we start to see
four-year-olds and five-year-olds and six-year-olds overweight and obese now, not only in our
country but worldwide.
Three-year-olds with type 2 diabetes in some Native American communities.
Shocking, you know.
You can't say willpower has changed in 20 years in these young kids and it's their fault,
right?
There's systematic problems.
Every country in the world has systematic problems. Every country in
the world has increasing obesity, every country in the world. So there's clearly systematic global
problems going on with our food system. So I think that, you know, while the saturated fat being more
or less as a class neutral and having variation depending on the food is more and more accepted,
I think that's less fringe and actually more widely accepted.
I think that the calorie hypothesis is still, you know,
going full steam ahead in terms of science and policy.
And, you know, the calorie hypothesis is that it doesn't matter what you eat,
all calories are the same.
And that's promoted not only by scientists who believe it,
but also by industry because that means if you...
It's all about moderation.
There's no good or bad calories, right?
If you have a colon smile and it's within your, quote, balanced diet, you're fine.
If you have a donut or a cracker or white bread or white rice, right, you're fine.
And so I think that that's false.
It's not a math problem.
It's not a math problem, yeah.
And so I think telling someone that their obesity is due to calorie imbalance is like telling a patient with a fever that, well, all you have
is temperature imbalance, you know, fix your temperature imbalance rather than saying, well,
what's the underlying cause of the fever? Yeah, let's treat it. And so, of course, in a test tube,
calories matter. And I'm not saying that foods and people break the laws of thermodynamics. Calories do
matter. By the way, the definition of the first law of thermodynamics is that energy is conserved
in a system, meaning a closed system, and the body is not a closed system.
Well, you know, there's the microbiome, there's metabolic expenditure, there's all kinds of
other effects going on. Of course, at the end of the day, all calories have to go somewhere. I mean, that's true. But the key point is that calorie balance is a downstream effect of poor diet
quality, that it's really long-term, long-term, over months to years, the quality of the diet,
the composition of the diet, is really what drives long-term energy imbalance. And so,
focusing on counting calories is a circular argument.
Instead, we should be focusing on diet quality.
And in particular, you know, I think, and hopefully we'll talk about this,
there are really key foods that seem to be linked to relative weight loss.
The more you eat, there are foods that you should eat more to keep your weight under control.
There's foods that, whether you eat them or or not doesn't seem to affect weight that much.
And there's foods that the more you eat, the more weight you gain.
And again, none of those foods are violating, you know, physics.
But we have, again, the idea that eating is all about our conscious brain and willpower
is false.
We have multiple redundant, you know, pathways in the
body that help us long-term balance our foods and control our weight. So you overeat one day,
the next day, you probably don't eat quite as much. The next week, you don't eat as much. We're
always subconsciously kind of balancing ourselves. And the last 30 years, the food system has tipped
that balance in a harmful way just a little bit
the average person in the united states gains about a pound per year for 30 years that's a lot
exactly so so i think different foods help or hurt those pathways for weight control and and of course
in the end calories matter but you know it's it's better for long-term weight control to eat a
thousand calories of good food and 800 calories of bad food let's talk about what the good mess
because i you know yesterday we were at the food for thought conference in switzerland uh science
and politics of food and one of the experts got up and gave a very convincing lecture about how
all calories are the same doesn't matter where they come from and at the end his conclusion was
that we should all be eating a low glycemic, low diet, which completely contradicts his prior thesis. And I was like,
well, how does that sync up? If it doesn't matter what you eat, as long as you don't eat too many
calories, it should be fine. So the consensus literally on the panel of the low fat versus
high fat diets was that everybody should be eating a low glycemic, low diet. So tell us how that
connects in with this whole calorie issue and what's been called the carbohydrate insulin hypothesis,
as opposed to the energy balance hypothesis. Yeah. So I think, you know, I noticed that too,
that there was this discussion about energy balance being the most important thing. And then
when all the panelists were asked about consensus, they all said we should be eating low glycemic load diets.
It was a little bit of like, what?
And I think, again, it gets to what we just talked about,
that in a test tube, and even in the human body, ultimately calories matter.
I think that's what the scientist was trying to say, and we all agree with that,
but that different foods influence our body's pathways, our brains,
our livers. There was a lot of talk about liver fat, which is really crucial, our fat cells,
our microbiome differently. And so, you know, I think the foods that seem to help most with
long-term weight control, you know, short-term, it doesn't matter, right? If you want to lose weight
for a wedding, fit in that tuxedo, and you want to go on a diet for three months
and lose a lot of weight, you can go on any diet you want and count your calories and
you will lose weight.
And that's why fad diet books sell, right?
Because you can go on a-
Well, you'd be hungry and miserable if you did that.
Exactly.
You can go on a paleo diet, an Atkins diet, a gummy bear diet.
You can go on any diet you want and you'll lose weight short term.
But the body fights back.
And so here's where food quality matters.
Some foods help the body maintain that drive to weight loss. Some foods hurt the body. And I think
the evidence is pretty strong that the foods that help the body are generally, you know, less
processed, more fiber rich, slower digesting, and rich in phenolics and flavanols and other
bioactives, which probably help our
microbiomes and our cells. That's foods like fruits, seeds, nuts, beans, minimally processed
whole grains, vegetables, and I'll pause and say most vegetables are actually fruits. So they're
really rich in phenolics and seeds. And then also yogurt, which is rich in probiotics. Those
foods all seem to help.
And then there's a bunch of foods which seem kind of neutral.
Our bodies pretty much accurately account for the calories.
They don't really tip our balance one way or the other.
Cheese, whole fat milk, low fat milk.
Are those things made of low fat milk, makes you hungry and eat more and gain weight?
Well, again, in the long-term studies we've looked at observationally,
in adults they seem to be pretty balanced, neutral, low-fat and whole-fat milk. And then the foods that seem
to be the worst for tipping us over are mostly starches and sugars. And I say mostly because
there's an important exception, but mostly starches and sugars. So white bread, white rice,
potatoes, sugar-sweetened beverages. And what's interesting in long-term observational studies we've looked at,
the weight gain linked to eating candy is exactly the same
as the weight gain linked to eating cereal or white bread or crackers.
Yeah.
My friend David Ludwig said, you know, below the neck, your body,
I mean above the neck, your body can't tell the difference between,
no, no, below the neck, your body can't tell the difference
between a bowl of cereal and a bowl of sugar.
Yeah, that's true. And then the exception in addition beyond starch and sugars is meats.
So both processed and unprocessed red meats, not fish, not chicken, but both red meats and
unprocessed red meats are also linked to weight gain. And so that goes against the paleo theory,
again, that it's about eating lots of meats is good for you yeah cutting out starch and sugar is great and that's where paleo
most people don't know that if you overeat meat you it turns to sugar yeah
well a protein protein and carbohydrate both get turned into sugar in the liver
yeah and fat excuse me trick is turning the fat in the liver yeah hmm so
essentially what you're saying is that certain foods act differently in the body
that have different hormonal metabolic microbiome brain chemistry effects and functional medicine
we call that you know food is not just calories that it's information so it provides like code
that you can upgrade or downgrade your biological software with what you eat and this is essentially
what you're talking about yeah and it's even stuff that's not caloric like the flavonoids and
phenolics which are these phytochemicals in food that have properties
that affect us and beneficially most of the time yeah and and you know then it gets even more
interesting if you move beyond weight because we're just talking about body weight yeah but
different foods differently alter whether you gain muscle you gain fat and whether the fat is
subcutaneous which is still a problem, it's not
okay, but it's less of a problem, versus what we call visceral or belly fat, which is especially
problematic in the liver, organ fat, right, in the liver, and so, you know, that's also important.
Dairy foods, for example, in randomized trials, they don't change weight a lot, but they lead to
more lean muscle mass and less body fat. And that's important.
Are those studies funded by the Dairy Council?
I'm sure some are and some aren't,
and that's another topic which we're happy to talk about.
Which diets can you trust?
You know, I want to come back to what you said earlier
was an idea that is often termed nutritionism,
which is breaking down food in its component parts,
its vitamins, its parts, its vitamins,
its minerals, its protein, fat, different types. And that allows the food industry to dial up or
down different ingredients to say they're healthy and put health claims on the label like lean or
low fat or high fiber, heart healthy, right? But what you're suggesting is that's kind of
meaningless, that we should be focusing on whole foods, that we should be focusing on
foods in as natural state as possible,
and that it's more about dietary patterns and the overall quality of your diet than these monkeying with these various nutrients. Yeah, I don't know that overall it's meaningless.
It certainly has importance for science. Well, it's reductionism, and then you've got to put
the story together. Yeah, we need to be reductionists to try to understand what's going on. And I think it's also good to be reductionists for additives.
So added sugar, salt, and trans fat, and many other additives,
harmful emulsifiers or harmful food colorants or other things.
There you can take them away or put them back to the same food.
And so there it is important to be reductionist for additives.
But once you get to the natural constituents of the food,
we do need to think more about the whole food matrix
and how that food and the meal and your overall diet affects health.
And it's complicated.
Again, you can't do a simple one-liner story about what to eat
because just saying something's local or something's organic or something's natural,
you know, if you get a local non-GMO organic fries and a Coke,
it's still a fries and a Coke.
And so it's vegan, right?
Fries and a Coke are vegan too.
So you can't use any of these simple buzzwords to get to really what's good for us.
I think we have to
think about, you know, and I guess a shorthand is kind of a traditional high-fat Mediterranean
diet. That's kind of a shorthand I use, but again, that's a bunch of words. It's not one word.
Yeah, and there are a bazillion Mediterranean diets, right? So you touched on something I
just want to dig into for a sec, which is salt. Now, we were at this conference, and this is
Professor McMaster Sami Youssef, who was chatting with us and said, you know, I got this
whole new data on salt and it turns out it's not as bad as we thought it was. And yet I've heard
you say you think it's as bad as we think it is. And there are initiatives like Tom Frieden and
his new initiative to end sort of hypertension about a low salt diet around the world. So what's your take on that?
Well, again, with maybe the exception of fish and omega-3s,
because that was the very, very first thing I studied,
so I probably still have a little bit of a soft spot for it.
I really don't have any preconceived notions about what should or shouldn't be good for us.
And so 10 years ago, I was also kind of a salt skeptic.
I really thought the data was mixed and not that strong.
And about 10 years ago, I was asked to review all the evidence for how food and nutrition
might affect chronic diseases for a series of projects, including working with the Global
Burden of Diseases Study, because they wanted to model and estimate what was going on in
the world with diet and disease.
And so I went and I looked with my
research team and a lot of colleagues at multiple dietary factors one by one, and we systematically
reviewed all the evidence. We did meta-analyses. We looked for concordance between experimental
studies and observational studies and trials. And when we did that for salt, I actually became a
believer in the harms of salt. And so while I never hold any belief
as 100% accurate, if more data comes, I will change my mind.
I mean, couldn't it be confounded by the fact that, you know, when you're looking at salt and
populations and their consumption of it, that it's often associated with processed food that
has other adverse effects. It's hard to sort of separate that out? Well, so I mean, I... Because if those processed
foods usually are starchy and they often drive insulin resistance, which drives hypertension. So
how do you sort that out? Well, so, you know, again, I think it's important to look at all
the evidence. And so I think if, again, I look at all the evidence right now, I think that high
salt is harmful. And in randomized controlled feeding studies where they keep the rest of the
diet the same and just add or take away salt and don't change anything else and they keep the diets
the same salt clearly raises blood pressure and we know from a range of studies that raising blood
pressure raises stroke and causes heart disease we know that to be true so so so those effects
are convincing and i think everybody agrees i eat a of salt. My blood pressure is like 90 over 70.
Right.
Well, the effects are fairly small for any one person,
so a few millimeters of mercury.
So you wouldn't notice the difference.
Yeah.
But across the whole population, across generations, it makes a difference.
And so regions of the world that have the highest salt intake
is actually not the U.S. or Europe.
It's actually Africa and China and Asia.
They have huge
um you know rates of high blood pressure and stroke so yeah so you know stroke exceeds heart
disease by a long shot in those countries my advice to people is always don't it's not the
sugar salt you add to your food it's the salt that's added in packaged food which is where we
get most of it well that's 100 true in outside asian countries where they use a lot of a lot of soy sauce and salt for cooking that's 100 true about 80 85 percent of the salt
in in our diets in the u.s or in europe come from packaged and processed foods if you just cook
yourself and you add salt to your food it's just not doing anything i learned something really cool
from chefs that if you just put the salt on after and it's like mere crystal salt it tastes just as salty with far less salt yeah but i said you know to finish the the story about salt i think
that everyone agrees and all the evidence is clear that if you get above a certain amount it's harmful
above 4 000 milligrams per day let's say everybody agrees it's harmful and then it's like two
teaspoons uh no no that's quite a lot 4 000 milligrams is a is a lot the average u.s intake
is about 3 500 milligrams of total salt.
But in teaspoons, what is that?
I don't know how many is in teaspoons.
I thought it was like 2 grams or something in a teaspoon, but maybe not.
Well, it's about just sodium, not salt.
It's about 4 grams of sodium.
If you, it's very interesting, we you know go in the kitchen and see how much
yeah but but if um the real question is if you get down too low is there higher risk and i think
that's the uncertainty and the debate and um there's some you know potential truth truth to
that but personally i think you'd have to get really low less than two thousand milligrams
and i don't know what's the Goldilocks level of salt?
Exactly.
And I personally don't think we're close to that harmful level yet.
But it's controversial.
So you're one of the few scientists, physicians who've come to the insight that we can't just treat patients in the office and tell them what to eat.
That we have to fix the food environment, that healthcare fix is not just about better care coordination or better efficiencies or improving payment systems or
prevention in some vague way, but it has to do with changing the context in which we eat,
the foods that we have access to, and the policies that promote the consumption of more and more of the bad stuff and we're sort of
incentivizing the wrong things so um one how did you kind of have the aha and two let's talk about
this because it seems like you know one one in five dollars is for health care and about 80
percent of that is for chronic disease and most of that is from diet that if we go upstream unless
we go upstream we're not going to fix the problem.
Yeah, I just want to highlight and repeat what you said. You know, one in five dollars in the
entire U.S. economy is spent on health care. One in four dollars in the entire federal budget is
spent on Medicare and Medicaid. And that's projected to go up exponentially. This is swallowing
the economics of our country. It's swallowing our government budgets.
It's swallowing competitiveness of business.
It's pretty shocking if you think about food, how big of a part of our lives it is, how big of a part of the economy it is.
I can't think of any other part of our economy, any other products that we interact with every day where safety is left up to the
consumer. You know, imagine if you went to toy stores and... I love this analogy. You know,
just imagine you went to toy stores and everybody knew there was lots of toys that were unsafe for
the kids. There were lots of toys that were okay, not, you know, a little bit unsafe, but not fully
safe. And there were some toys that were really safe. Or you walked into a building and, or you
went to buy a house
and some houses met earthquake standards and fire standards and electrical standards and plumbing
standards. Others didn't at all, not even close. And some houses were kind of in between, some
things were met or other things were not met. Or teachers in school, some teachers, you know, were
safe, you know, and were good for the teachers and others were known. Everyone knew
the teachers were dangerous for the children in different ways. We would never leave it up to,
you know, the individual family or the individual person to deal with that mess, right? We would say
this is outrageous, right? We want safe toys, safe cars, safe homes, some minimum standards,
right? And yet in food, it's the only system where we sort of say, well, it's up to the individual
person.
We need education.
We need labeling.
We need dietary guidelines.
You know, we just need to leave it up to the person and just not do anything else.
And I think, you know, again, that's to me kind of the, you know, kind of the craziest
thing about our policy approach so far is that it's all up to the
individual consumer. And so, of course, we need to keep choice and there's a range of foods that
people should be able to choose from, but all of them should be reasonably safe. Yeah. All of them.
Well, the challenge with that is that the food industry has polluted the science with studies
that confound the truth, that challenge notions that they're unsafe.
You know, American Beverage Association
funds studies that soda doesn't cause obesity
and kind of muddies the waters.
And so their argument is,
well, who's going to be the judge
and determine whether or not
this is safe or not safe, right?
Some people think, well, Twinkie's fine
if you eat it once a week,
but maybe not.
Well, yeah, I get asked about, you know, what my thoughts on the role of the food industry a lot.
And it's like everything else. It's complicated. It's not straightforward.
So first, I have to say that the food industry has followed and continues to follow a lot of the really harmful and, you know, unwelcome playbook of tobacco, where it's about deception, denial, attacking the
scientists, you know, hardball lobbying, softball, buying of influence, a lot of the same tactics.
But I think at the end of the day, you know, the analogy to tobacco only goes so far. And many of
those examples are actually around soda and big soda. There are still present for other foods,
but it's really about big soda but
i think the analogy with the big with tobacco only goes so far for a few reasons you know first the
food company is incredibly diverse and heterogeneous there's there's thousands of companies with
thousands of products compared to tobacco yeah um you know second um i think that um with tobacco
it's a fight to the death whereas with with food, we need the food industry.
We need their scale.
We need their expertise.
We need their technology.
We need their distribution systems.
And when I say big food, I mean from agribusiness to large supermarket,
international supermarkets to restaurants to manufacturers.
People think of the manufacturers, but there's four pieces to big food.
And I think third, and I think, you know, maybe most importantly, we shouldn't forget is the food industry mostly
for the last 50 years did what we as public health experts and scientists told them to do.
And now in the last 20 years, it hasn't been that long as we've really gotten to new science.
We're saying, wait a minute, you know, while you did what we asked you to do, slow down and,
and change and refresh. And this is where the problem is that some food companies are
slowly trying to do the right thing and trying to pick that up mostly because they're being pushed
by their losses and sales. Some because they believe in doing the right thing. Others are
fighting and drug, you know, digging in every step of the way. So there's a lot of heterogeneity,
but, but I think what's interesting is that, you know, it was interesting. There was a guy who was, was at the
Milken conference who was the head of a big food company. He was like, I feel like a frightened
dinosaur. Yeah. Yeah. I, I, all, all the people I speak to and I've heard from, they see that the
food revolution is coming. There's absolutely the food in 10 years is not going to look like the food it does now.
And so I think what keeps me up at night is not that there's not going to be change.
There's going to be change.
But that the change isn't going to be informed by evidence.
And so, you know, we need innovation in the food system.
We need investment in the food system.
But going from Doritos to Cool Ranch Doritos is not innovation.
Going from gummy bears to non-GMO gummy bears is not innovation.
We need real innovation.
Making an Oreo 90 calories instead of 100 calories.
Exactly.
Cut 6 trillion calories out of the food supply.
There's a major food company who wanted to reduce the calories in their ice cream,
so they added air.
Yeah.
Right?
So that per cup, there'd be fewer calories.
But adding air to food
is not going to improve its health. Right. So, so, so I think that, you know, that's the kind
of thing that, that I worry about. The same. Sure. Yeah. Yeah. So, so we need to, we need to,
but, but the, but the public, I think the biggest thing the public is demanding from their food
right now is trust and big food is not trusted.
And that's a wake-up call.
And that's good that that's a wake-up call.
And so I think that we don't want to demonize the entire food industry.
There's a lot of folks trying to do the right thing.
A lot of graduates from our school at Tufts in the industry trying to help them do the right thing.
But we also want to work with industry and also work against
industry when we need to give them carrots give them sticks help them and uh you know sell healthier
more equitable more sustainable food and i think that's happening i think that's i think i've seen
these big companies like nestle and pepsi just struggling to sort of reinvent themselves uh but
it's tough because they've got you know i mean i talked to the head of nestle and he's like yeah we have lean cuisine which is
mostly carbs because it's low fat and because we call it lean the fda says we can't change the
composition of it so we can't make it healthier even though we want to and i'm like it's an 800
million dollar business i get it these are like big issues for them but and this is where mark
government has a key role, right?
Because if you leave it up to every individual food company to try to fight the system,
they're going to go under. If they innovate and the other companies don't, they'll go under. So
this is where government has really a role to play to even out the playing field and help these food
companies do the right thing. So let's talk about what those policies are, because there's a lot of
things we've written about. And I want to get into some of them. You
talk about your best buy policy changes that are going to be not one thing, but a series of things
that attack multiple sectors, whether it's issues, whether it's policy schools, whether it's quality
issues, whether it's labeling, whether it's research, all these things are needed in concert
to actually shift the whole dynamic from what we have now. But one of the articles wrote was called the
real cost of food. Uh, can taxes and subsidies improve public health in JAMA a few years ago?
And one of the challenges that, uh, you know, we, we sort of don't want a nanny state, but in,
in essence, we are creating a nanny state in
reverse because we're being a nanny to the big food companies by subsidizing commodities
that are wheat, corn, and soy that are almost 60% of our calories.
And the people who consume the most of them are the sickest.
And of course, we then fund food stamps, which is predominantly, I think it's 70 plus percent
of it goes to junk food,
and 7 billion, almost 10 percent goes just to soda. So we've created this system where we're
having price supports for the bad food, but not for the good food. You talk about flipping that
upside down. Well, so you said a lot. There's a lot of points there. And just what's really interesting,
and again, sort of wonderful from a point of view of wanting to study this, is that just like
there's no single magic bullet to eating, and nutrition science shows us that you can't just
pick one piece of the diet and fix it and everything's fine, the same is true for policy.
There's going to be no magic bullet. There's a range of solutions that are needed. I think that taxes and subsidies are pretty crucial,
and I'll talk about that in a minute. But I would go back to your comment about subsidies. There's
been this sort of popular myth that's, you know, kind of urban legend that's spread through the
media that somehow there's subsidies to commodities that's making the prices
cheaper. And I just want to really say clearly that's totally false, that all U.S. policy for
commodities keeps the prices high. The reason, you know, what farmer in the U.S. wants their prices
low, right? They all want their prices high. And so sugar is a great example. People say, well,
there's subsidies, you know. And first, most of the subsidies have turned to crop insurance.
Crop insurance gives farmers insurance so that if they have a really bad season because of drought or something, they don't go under.
And so most subsidies now are actually crop insurance for those commodities, not direct cash subsidies.
That's still a form of a subsidy, but it's not direct.
But corn is a great example. We
actually keep the price of sugar high in this country because natural Brazilian sugar is much
cheaper than corn syrup, much, much cheaper sugar from Brazilian farms than U.S. corn farmers.
It's interesting because I talked to the vice chair of Pepsi. He's like, Mark, I said, why do
you use high fructose corn syrup in your drinks? He says, because the government makes it too cheap
for us not to. Well, they make it than um natural sugar by putting tariffs on the brazilian cane sugar to protect
corn farmers right right so if we took away all the price supports which actually keep the price
high corn farmers would go out of business but the market would be flooded with cheap sugar from
other countries so that's just one example example of this kind of conventional notion.
Somehow, I don't know, you know, I don't know, Michael Pollan, someone wrote about this and
it's just entered the commercialism, but it's just not true. But it doesn't allow for the production
of more and more of the food. In other words, they pay for them to produce food, even if they,
for example, in bad soils or in ditches, and then they fail and they pay for this money. I mean,
I've heard all these stories. The great majority of commodity crops in our country aren't eaten by humans. So the great
majority of commodity crops in our country go to livestock or go to energy. I thought that's what
Nixon's policies on Earl Butts were designed to do, which is to drive the prices of milk and meat
down because they were consuming these commodity crops and he
was worried about the prices going too high not getting elected and he got Earl
Butts to change the policies I thought that's what the whole thing was about I
I would have to go and look at that history I don't know that history I know
about Earl Butts and his kind of you know Green Revolution but the farm bill
and kind of the subsidy approach has been oversimplified there's actually a
lot of things in the newer farm bills to promote specialty crops that are called specialty crops like fruits and
vegetables to start to promote them. A better approach would be to go to the retail level,
right? A better approach would be to go directly to the consumer. And I think we should do that
because right now the price we pay for foods doesn't reflect the true societal cost of the
food and health care and
lost productivity and suffering all the externalities all the external how we grow the
food how it affects soils and water and climate absolutely and so it's really not a punitive or
approach or a favoritism approach it's just bringing true market prices to food, right? Food should reflect the true market cost and benefit to people. And so
if we taxed most foods, most packaged and processed foods with a flat tax, 10%, 20%, 30%, whatever we
could do, and then we used all of that money, crucially, we used all of that money to heavily
subsidize at the retail level, at the consumer purchase level,
or at the farm cost level if you invest in, you know, farmer training, new equipment,
you know, other things. Then you would use all that money to invest in and reduce the price of
minimally processed healthy foods like fruits and vegetables and nuts and seeds and plant oils and
fish and yogurt and
things like that, you would turn the prices upside down or at least more normal, right?
Where you couldn't buy a soda, a 36-ounce soda for 99 cents anymore. And you wouldn't have to pay
50 cents or 70 cents for an apple. You'd pay 25 cents, 20 cents for an apple you'd pay 25 cents 20 cents for an apple you'd pay a dollar
for a serving of salmon right you'd pay a dollar 30 for soda instead yeah that would change all
the incentives for farmers for retailers for restaurants for manufacturers and for the
consumer and so you know what's happened over the last 40 years is the price of
soda and has gone down 40 percent and the price of fruits and vegetables
have gone up 40%. Well, fruits and vegetables in season are still quite affordable. The FDA,
excuse me, the USDA did a nice analysis of that. So fruits and vegetables in season are quite
affordable, but there's a lot of fruits and vegetables out of season now. And those are,
of course, are really expensive because they're getting shipped around the world. So that's
another challenge.
But I think that price is clearly one tool that the government needs to use to help address healthier food.
And it sounds sort of pie in the sky, like this will never happen,
but there's now at least a dozen countries around the world
that have passed soda taxes.
Mexico has passed a junk food tax. Yeah.
Unfortunately, none of that money is being used, to my knowledge, for subsidizing healthy foods.
And so that makes the taxes only regressive in terms of finances for the poor. Although it's
progressive for health for the poor, it's regressive for finances. We should use the
revenue from those taxes to create incentives and systems for making healthy food less expensive while helping farmers.
We don't want to just make the food less expensive by putting farmers out of business.
So I think price is just an absolutely crucial tool.
And we've learned from tobacco, for example, how important price is.
So what are your best buy policies if you were willing to sort of be in charge for a little bit and could just do what you wanted?
I think you're in North Korea, just make a decision.
Yeah, well, there's a lot of challenges in North Korea for sure that maybe food wouldn't be the first thing I'd address, but it would be up there.
So I think that, you know, there's probably six or seven categories of policies that I think are really crucial.
One is fiscal economic incentives.
So like we talked about direct-to-consumer incentives or taxes, industry incentives, you know, fiscal incentives.
Give them incentives for marketing and advertising and developing of healthy foods and give them disincentives for the opposite.
No, but we shouldn't give them a tax break for spending billions of dollars advertising
junk food to kids.
Yeah, that's actually been proposed in Congress.
It hasn't, you know, gained steam or gotten out of committee, but it's been proposed to
take away the tax breaks that companies now get for marketing junk food, right?
Fiscal incentives through SNAP, the food stamps program. Fiscal
incentives is one category. You know, two other categories are crucial is to change the environments
in schools and work sites. Their kids spend much of their day in schools. Adults spend much of their
day at work sites. There's a lot of ways, wellness programming, environmental standards, procurement
policies to make schools and work sites, places where you, and hospitals, you know,
places where you can only really get healthy food, food that tastes good and is healthy.
Well, our school lunch policy now doesn't exactly do that, right? Pizzas are vegetable and French
fries are vegetable. Well, the 2010 Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act was actually a pretty
enormous advance. And so school lunch is much, much better than it was before that.
There are still holes, but it's actually probably one of the best policies,
food policies we have nationally is the school lunch policy.
Although 50% of schools, you go in and get brand name food on different days.
Monday, it's McDonald's.
Tuesday, it's Burger King.
Wednesday, it's Domino's.
That's 50% of schools and 80% have contracts with soda companies.
Well, soda is not allowed in public schools anymore.
No, but all the sports drinks, which are extremely high in sugar.
No, no, soda is not allowed in schools, including sports drinks.
Competitive foods, there's smart snack standards,
and they're pretty much out of public schools.
There's no sugar-sweetened beverages in schools?
Yeah, that's pretty much 100% juice is okay,
but sugar-sweet stream beverages are out of schools
with healthy hunger free kids are pretty pretty landmark actually um there are again some holes
but but it's pretty landmark but but more can be done i agree um so i think schools work sites
fiscal incentives those are three categories um health care reform there's a lot to do in health
care and and we can that's a whole nother podcast but you know getting food in the electronic health
record the number one cause of health isn't tracked in the electronic health record that
tells you everything right right about our health but you got to train the doctors and
yeah fruit and vegetable prescriptions medical education medically tailored meals changing
quality guidelines changing reimbursement guidelines there's a lot to do in health care
reform research and innovation is just before you jump on there just to show you how powerful that is what you just said
that if you if you get food prescriptions the impact can be powerful why would the government
want to pay for food it seems like a waste of money they people have to eat anyway but
geisinger did a study where they actually took very treatment resistant type 2 diabetics who
were poorly controlled the most food insecure.
They were costing an average of $248,000 a year, and they gave them $2,400 of food and some support,
social support, and help to use the food and learn what they're doing. And they reduced their cost to
$48,000, an 80% cost reduction, while improving dramatically the health of the people.
And so it's a no-brainer, but you can't get Medicare to cover a fruit and vegetable prescription.
Well, so yeah, you're describing medically tailored meals, and what you say is really crucial.
About 5% of the population costs about 50% of health care costs.
All the patients with really complex chronic diseases, you know,
kidney disease, cancer, heart failure, AIDS, a range of really severe conditions. And several
interventional studies now have shown that if you actually give those people food, give them three
meals a day, which costs about $20 a day, it's much, much cheaper. You save money because they
don't go to the hospital, they don't get admitted, they don't go to the emergency room.
And because of that, things are changing so quickly, Mark.
Because of that, California has just launched a $6 million pilot
to do medically tailored meals in eight counties in California this year.
And if it works and they see the same results,
they're going to extend it to all of California.
So change is coming.
Change is a coming. Change is a coming yeah and so you know health care is a fourth bucket another a fifth bucket which i think is crucial for policy is research and innovation
there's a lot we know but there's so much left to learn there's so much left to learn about how
foods affect our brains our microbiomes the differences between different processing methods
that we've talked about i mean we could we could go on and on and on.
And we don't focus on,
you wrote that we spend about a billion and a half
on nutrition research and about 60 billion
on all the drug and other research.
So it's like.
Yeah, the numbers are really telling.
The federal government itself estimated
that all of its nutrition research
is about one and a half billion dollars a year.
And that sounds like a lot,
but again, all of the country's drug industry research, pharmaceutical research is about5 billion a year. And that sounds like a lot, but again, all of the country's drug industry research,
pharmaceutical research is about $60 billion a year.
Advertising on candy in the U.S. is about $5 billion a year
compared to $1.5 billion on nutrition research.
So advertising on candy is $5 billion a year,
and just purchasing of candy is $50 billion a year in the U.S.
And so that $1.5 billion is just nothing compared to
you know what the the true issues going on anyway i heard some scary thing we spend more on animal
pet care and food than we do on education for our kids i have not seen that but that's really
would be sad if that were true i have amazing So, so we really need research and innovation. We need, I think we
need a new national Institute of nutrition at the NIH. The NIH has a national cancer Institute,
a national heart, lung, and blood Institute. All these institutes focus on diseases. We need a
national Institute of nutrition. It's the national Institute of health. Food is the biggest challenge
to health. Let's create a new national Institute Nutrition. And again, that sounds impossible, but the National Cancer Institute was added to NIH, you know, not that long ago because of just
the concerted acts of a few people going to Congress and saying, hey, we need a war on cancer.
We need a war on bad food and a victory for healthy food. We need a National Institute of
Nutrition. We need public-private partnerships and guardrails so
industry can fund nutrition research. I think industry has a role to fund nutrition research,
but we really have to figure out how to do that transparently and carefully and independently.
I mean, it's tough. You've got 40% of the Academy of Nutrition Dietetics, which is our dietetic
group in America, being funded by the food industry. It's a challenge. You know, again,
the food industry... The Trix is a heart-healthy cereal with seven teaspoons of sugar.
That makes you want to quit the American Heart Association.
It's challenging.
It's challenging.
I mean, the food industry has expertise that we need,
and they also have negative influence that we don't need.
And so how can we use the expertise and minimize the negative?
And then I think the last area.
Create transparency around all that.
And have transparency around food in general.
And I think the last policy area,
we talked about economic incentives,
schools, work sites, research and innovation,
the health care system.
The last area is sort of quality standards.
There are some basic things,
the same way we have quality standards for toys
or for cars or for houses.
We need some minimum quality standards.
And the easiest places to start are additives.
So we need some quality standards.
Basically, the government's saying you shouldn't have too much of these things in food.
It's just a minimum standard.
We already have done that for trans fat.
That's a huge win for the U.S.
It took 50 years.
Yeah, it took a long time, but we've done it.
We need to do that for salt and for added sugar, additives.
And then we need marketing restrictions on marketing of unhealthy foods to young kids,
you know, kids less than, you know, eight or nine.
I think we're one of the few countries in the world that has unrestricted marketing.
Well, we have the First Amendment, which most European countries don't have.
And the First Amendment makes business speech protected, including advertising. And it's really, really hard to, to, um, do something legally that, that fights
against the first amendment. So they only allow cigarettes to be advertised everywhere. Well,
but, but several lawyers have told me that if the tobacco companies wanted to fight that and take it
to the Supreme court, which they never did, they'd probably win. But they just don't need to because they advertise in video games,
they advertise in movies, they advertise in all these ways.
They just don't care about that anymore.
It's not a fight they care about.
But probably they would win because, again, the First Amendment is so sweeping.
But where the First Amendment can step aside
because of a more important concern is where something is misleading.
And so you have the right to free speech, but you don't have the right to say something that's untrue yeah and so um misleading purposely misleading and so to kids i think we can make a
strong case that advertising is misleading because they don't understand no advertising yeah i know
my my daughter when she was eight we were taking a walk and she said daddy how come like in real life
nothing actually seems like the commercials you see on tv it always seems way better
your real life isn't like commercials mark and i was like this is a very astute young lady she's
got it well what i what i tell my kids i have a five-year-old a seven-year-old and a nine-year-old and like most parents they're the you know delight of my my life with with my my lovely wife and
and what i tell my kids is you know as one example i say you know if if um food comes with a free toy
right you that you know how bad it is right right to give you a free toy to get you to think the
food is is is good enough to eat well there's one other really cool thing that's happening that you recently went to washington dc with our friend
congressman tim ryan and you met with the general accounting office and uh it's sort of a stunning
to me that that there are so many different agencies often with competing agendas and
competing policies that are at odds with each other, that don't make sense, that are contributing to disease and economic burden. And for the first
time that I know of, there's maybe going to be an inquiry into what those policies do,
what their impact is, and how they might be changed to improve our overall coordination
of our government's food policies. Yeah, there's, you know, again, changes are
coming. There's a new working group in the U.S. House called the Food is Medicine Working Group,
and it's co-chaired by Jim McGovern from Massachusetts, Shelley Pingree from Maine,
and Roger Marshall and Lynn Jenkins from Kansas. It's a bipartisan working group that, again,
has the title Food is Medicine, right? It's all about... I just get laughed at for
saying that. Yeah, it's incredible, right? And it's all about specific policies like medically
tailored meals or fruit and vegetable prescriptions that Congress can pass to recognize the importance
of food. And then Tim Ryan, as you mentioned, and Rosa DeLauro from Ohio and Connecticut,
respectively, have always been champions of kind of public
health and good eating, and Congressman Ryan also mindfulness and meditation. And they recently sent
a letter to the Government Accountability Office, just released, I think, June 7th.
The Government Accountability Office is kind of the government watchdog, which not only can look for fraud and abuse, but can do deep dives to see where are things going right
and where do things need fixing.
And the letter they sent to the government accountability office
instructing them to review all the policies
the government has around nutrition is incredible.
The letter's incredible.
It was amazing to me.
The breadth and depth of the connections that were being made
that I'd never seen before on a piece of paper. Yeah, and not from the House. And so Congress
has asked the Government Accountability Office to review all of the policies and procedures the
federal government has across all of its agencies and understand how the government could influence nutrition to make
obesity and diabetes and heart disease and stroke and cancers less common, what challenges there
are, who should they coordinate with, what's working, what's not working, and to give clear
recommendations for action. So it's pretty amazing. The government's checking itself to say, what are
we doing right and what are we doing wrong? And it'll take a couple years for all of that to be finished, but that's just in time for a new election and a new administration.
And those reports will be incredibly powerful.
And what's amazing is that people think they can't make a difference.
And you and I just sat with Congressman Tim Ryan and said, here, this is a problem.
Can you help us?
And out of that coffee we had here, this is a problem. Can you help us? And out of that,
you know, coffee we had together, something great might happen. Yeah. I think that, you know,
it's, it's, it's, I don't remember the exact quote, but there's, you know, wonderful quotes about,
um, you know, uh, a small number of, uh, you know, never doubt the ability of a small
number of people to change the world. And that's the only thing that ever has exactly thank you for for uh for for filling that in so i think that
that's true and that's been true i've seen that again and again in in kind of the world of food
it's so great all right so last and i and i should say that you are one of those people who
you know have had uh controversy or negative things said about you because not everyone agrees with
everything you say. But, but I think Mark, you've from the beginning sort of recognize that, that
we need to look at the body holistically. Um, we need to think about the foods that go into our
bodies and how they influence us. And, and I think, you know, you've been saying that for 20
years. It's all one big, great problem. Yeah. And so I think that's, you were really quite ahead of the curve in doing that. And I, and I love that you want to talk to scientists,
you want to talk to people in policy, you want to bring these views together to make a difference.
I think that's really important. Yeah. Yeah. We have to have these conversations about things
that matter. And I think, you know, Martin Luther King's quote that inspired that was,
you know, um, our lives begin to that inspired that was you know um our lives
begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter and people like you speaking up from
your position is just is remarkable um all right one last question okay so you're king for a day
uh or maybe a year uh and you could change anything in our food system policy you you
named a whole bunch of stuff but if you could sort of focus
in on what would be your number one agenda. I think, I think price. I think, you know,
price has very, very strong evidence for making a difference. I would pass a single policy that,
again, you know, raises the price of most packaged and processed foods and uses all of the revenues
to make, you know, healthier foods less
expensive. And, you know, that's something that food industry could then shift because they could
go to their stakeholders and say, hey, look, you know, the customers are demanding healthier food
and now we have a financial incentive to do it. We're going to reduce our products that are
unhealthy and we're going to increase our products that are healthy and we're going to take advantage
of this. And it would be price neutral for the government.
You could balance the taxes and the subsidies
so that it's kind of neutral.
The government doesn't have to pay a dime for it.
It doesn't raise taxes at all for overall income taxes for the government.
And it would be pretty transformative, I think.
And it's actually equitable because what's not happening right now is all the
externalities of our food system are not in the price so you're actually kind of fixing that right
what is the effect on chronic disease and the burden of chronic disease what does the effect
on kids ability to learn focus and lost productivity on climate even you know what
is the effect on climate change and the loss of our soils and depletion of our water resources and
even behavior
change violence and poverty all connected to what we're eating and so those those price prices of
those things consequences those things are not embedded in the price of the food we eat yeah
that's right yeah so maybe you know a can of coke should be a hundred dollars yeah well we'd have to
do the math but certainly much much more than it is now well i, I think that's one of the efforts we're working on here.
They're trying to figure out how do we do the math on all that stuff?
How do we actually make it transparent?
And so that there's really an authentic free market as opposed to right now,
which is a very weird, strange free market.
So thank you, Dr. Mazzafarian, for joining us on The Doctor's Pharmacy,
a place for conversations that matter.
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