Barbara
Stitt's Food & Behavior
Reviewed by
Jay Banks
Barbara Stitt's book, Food and Behavior, is dedicated
to the children and adults who have been mis-led and mis-fed.
In other words, it is dedicated to America. In fact, even
though Barbara became intimately involved with the
relationship between food and behavior mainly through her work
as a probation officer, most Americans could read this book
and relate it to problems of their own or those of some friend
or family member — even though these problems didn't
necessarily lead to run-ins with the law.
The
American way of eating is precisely the sort of diet which
will cause brain malfunction.
— Barbara Reed Stitt |
Despite the fact that most AMA doctors mention diet as an
afterthought when dealing with an illness, most people would
still be able to make the connection between diet and certain
illnesses. We see public service announcements on television
for cancer or high blood pressure that remind us that these
illnesses are diet related. If you eat cereal for breakfast,
chances are your box says that it may help prevent heart
disease or lower your cholesterol.
But how many people would relate an emotional or mental
problem to diet? In this area, people are given advice
ranging from "buck up" or "get it together," to advice to seek
professional counseling, to prescriptions for mood-altering
drugs. It is now common practice for doctors, in the absence
of an obvious physical problem, to evaluate a patient's
emotional situation and prescribe antidepressants accordingly.
But could there be another factor overlooked by the
majority of Americans? Author Barbara Stitt says yes, and that
factor is food.
According to Barbara, the Standard American Diet (SAD
diet), loaded with empty calories, overly processed foods —
sweetened, refined, stripped of nutrients, over-cooked,
chemically treated, and devoid of any real nutrition — is
affecting people's mental health.
Barbara touches on several dietary related issues that
affect the brain, the most important organ of the body.
The
connection between food and behavior is so basic that it
is being overlooked by parents, the school system,
counselors and most of the medical professionals. |
The first issue covered in depth is reactive
hypoglycemia, in which the body's blood sugar levels are
too low to meet the brain's needs. Although there are other
causes of hypoglycemia, the average 129 pounds of sugar per
person eaten each year by Americans1
is the main cause of the reactive hypoglycemia that
sends blood sugar on a wild roller coaster ride from high to
low — accompanied with a craving for sweets that starts the
cycle all over again if sugary laden foods are eaten.
Amazingly, due to the high amount of processed sugar we now
eat, as much as 50 percent of all Americans may be
hypoglycemic2. The physical and mental results of
the hypoglycemic state include: apprehension, trembling,
irritability, confusion, amnesia, and hallucinations — all
symptoms the average psychiatrist would diagnose as neurosis,
psychosis or schizoprenia3. There is also a
documented link between hypoglycemia and aggressive or violent
behavior.
The next startling topic in the book is sub-clinical
pellagra — a once wide-spread niacin-deficiency disease in
the southern United States with symptoms that include
dermatitis, disorientation, confusion, memory lapses,
depression, anxiety, fatigue, and ultimately, dementia and
death.
While pellagra is thought to have been eliminated, Barbara
raises the issue of developing some symptoms of the disease
without developing full blown pellagra:
Although "enrichment" of many processed foods has
guaranteed that few people in this country die of advanced
pellagra, doctors are beginning to question whether the
people with niacin deficiencies which aren't severe enough
to cause the more visible symptoms of pellagra. Such a
disease is called sub-clinical pellagra.4
The startling part of sub-clinical pellagra, like
hypoglycemia, is that the symptoms also mirror those of
schizophrenia, a problem so widespread that those who suffer
from it occupy one out of every four hospital beds in the
United States.5
A third topic the author details is vitamin B
deficiencies, giving symptoms that could easily be
confused with mental disorders. These B vitamins include B1,
B2, B6, and B12. B12 deficiencies, for example, are well known
for causing mental disturbances, such as paranoia, mental
confusion, and dementia. In fact, the included table that
compares vitamin B deficiencies to neuropsychiatric disorders
is uncanny:
Symptoms of
Vitamin B Deficiency |
Symptoms of
Neuropsychiatric Disorders |
|
fears |
|
morbid fears |
|
fatigue |
|
severe fatigue |
|
depression |
|
depression |
|
paranoia |
|
paranoia |
|
confusion |
|
confusion |
|
hostility |
|
anger |
|
rage |
|
suicidal tendencies |
|
anxiety |
|
anxiety6 |
Interestingly enough, Barbara points out that a B-vitamin
deficiency can be related to a high sugar intake because, even
though sugar contains no nutrients, the body must use stored
nutrients to metabolize the sugar into energy. Therefore,
meals high in processed foods not only provide little if any
nutrition, they compound deficiency-related problems by
robbing the body of nutrients in order to convert these
non-foods into forms useable by the body.
Ask any
hyperactive child, depressed, angry teenager, violent
adult or criminal what they eat and you'll find they
"live" on junk food — sweetened boxed cereals, candy,
carbonated drinks, potato chips, fast foods. |
Other food-related problems covered in some depth in the
book as they relate to behavior are: allergic reactions to
food; alcohol consumption; the effects of toxic substances
such as aluminum, lead, mercury, etc.; man-made chemical
additives such as MSG and Nutrasweet; and milk, which is
surprisingly high in sugar and causes allergic reactions in a
large percentage of the population.
These problems are also related to crime and violence,
often with real-life examples pulled from the author's
probation files or related studies, with names changed, of
course. These case studies help to put a face to the problems.
A good example here is the case of a 14-year-old with
atrocious eating habits and a penchant for
vandalism and
burglaries:
A
14-year-old male observed by Dr. Alex Schauss and Dr.
Clifford E. Simonsen vividly illustrates the junk food
addiction of many adolescents who get into trouble with the
law. This boy had been arrested for vandalism, but it was
not his first offense; he had committed two second-degree
burglaries in two years. The composite of this young man's
diet, which Schauss and Simonsen present, defies belief and
turns the stomach. For breakfast he often ate five cups
of Sugar Smacks with 1/2 teaspoon added sugar, a glazed
donut and 20 ounces of milk. For lunch he ate two
hamburgers, french fries, two slices of white bread, 24
ounces of chocolate milk, and topped it off with two
foot-long ropes of red licorice; he might even eat a small
serving of green beans. Supper consisted of a peanut butter
and jelly sandwich on white bread, a can of tomato soup and
ten ounces of Kool-Aid. Throughout the day he snacked on
high-sugar foods, and foods with plenty of preservatives and
other additives: more red licorice, three beef jerky sticks,
a large bowl of ice cream and a very large candy bar.
No
one could eat this way and stay sane and healthy. Little
wonder, then, that this young man complained of
sleeplessness, headaches, nightmares, fainting spells,
restlessness, indecision, nervousness, explosive temper and
crying spells. Computer analysis confirmed what anybody
could have guessed: even though the food he was eating had
too many calories and refined carbohydrates, it was woefully
deficient in vitamins E, C, B1, B2, B5, B6, B12,
para-aminobenzoic acid, biotin, bioflavinoids, selenium and
vanadium.7
Overall, Food & Behavior is well worth taking the time to
read. If there was any complaint at all with the book, it
would be that the diet information is a little sparse. This is
nothing too out of the ordinary, however, since the book was
not designed to be a cookbook. And any minor complaints, such
as Barbara advocating whole-wheat products, when many of these
products are only slightly better than white-flour products
health-wise, really are minor when you factor in the success
she has had with keeping people out of trouble.
Barbara claims more than 80 percent of probationers who
came to her after she started using a food-based treatment
were able to go on to live full, productive lives; and
analyzing a twelve year study, found that not a single
individual who stayed with the program had been back in
trouble8. While there very well
may be other issues involved with crime and violence, it is
hard to ignore the results Barbara has had with her program.
BAD NUTRITION
STARTS IN THE WOMB
This [lack of
nutrition] isn't a process that begins when teenagers
start snacking on sodas, chips, and ice cream. Rather,
this nutrition deprivation starts in the womb: mom doesn't
get the right nutrition (essential fatty acids,
high-quality protein, unrefined carbohydrates, vitamins,
minerals, and water), so baby is born already
brain-nutrient deficient. Infant formulas, processed baby
food, and sugared cereals exacerbate the problem through
the stages of childhood, with kids not getting the
nutrition their growing brains need.
Footnotes:
1William Dufty, Sugar Blues
(New York: Warner Books, 1976).
2Duffy, p. 21
3Barbara Reed Stitt, Food &
Behavior, (Natural Press), p. 41
4Barbara Reed Stitt, Food &
Behavior, (Natural Press), p. 52
5Pressman, "Neurochemistry,"
op. cit.
6Barbara Reed Stitt, Food &
Behavior, (Natural Press), p. 81
7Barbara Reed Stitt, Food &
Behavior, (Natural Press), pp. 88 - 89
8Barbara Reed Stitt, Food &
Behavior, (Natural Press), p. 161
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