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Two experts show that today's biggest health problem may be the
consumption of too much unreliable information about nutrition.
Using up-to-date information and basing their approach on sound
scientific principles and legitimate studies, the authors help the
reader sort fact from fiction, and, equally important, fact from
"maybe". Illustrations.
This important new book is a guide to understanding cancer and its
causes. Dr. Elizabeth Whelan, a nationally known consumer health
advocate, explains in layperson's terms what the average consumer
can do to reduce the risks of contracting this most feared of
diseases. For decades, Americans have assumed that cancer strikes
in wholly unpredictable ways and that it is simply a matter of fate
that one person is afflicted with the disease while another is not.
Yet Whelan points to research showing that when it comes to cancer
risks, we largely determine our own fates. Science has made great
strides in recent years toward understanding the causes of this
complex illness. As a result Whelan believes that we now have the
knowledge to significantly reduce the incidence of cancer
nationwide. But how does the average person interpret the confusing
array of warnings and suspicions regarding cancer risks, which are
reported almost daily in the news media? Whelan goes to great
lengths to separate the unproven hypothetical causes of cancer from
reliable scientific findings. Above all, tobacco in all its forms
and uses is the main culprit: estimates now attribute some 40
percent of cancer incidence to exposure to tobacco. Whelan also
discusses other contributing factors such as diet, alcohol,
radioactivity, sunlight, drugs, sexual behavior, environmental
factors, and occupational risks. The Complete Guide to Preventing
Cancer presents the most recent state-of-the-art information on
cancer risk and prevention in nontechnical language and a
user-friendly format.
"Panic in the Pantry" was written to help consumers become fully
aware of the real facts behind news about the safety of our food
supply. Whelan and Stare examine the power wielded by health food
lobbyists who band together and exert political pressure to protect
their profitable ventures. They discuss the concept of "relative
risk" and why it should be used to place information about food
additives and preservatives into proper perspective, as well as why
the Delaney Clause - a law intended to protect us from cancer
causing chemicals in our food - cannot fulfil the noble purpose for
which it was drafted and therefore should be repealed. Also
examined is the research behind the banning of cyclomates and the
attacks on saccharin and aspartame that left many Americans
wondering whether they are doomed to be chubby or develop cancer.A
lengthy discussion of California's Proposition 65 provides insight
into the chaos that can result when fearmongers are able to secure
legislation based on panic about food supply. The authors also
address the flight to "natural" products, which may lead to serious
health problems as well as added consumer expense. The contemporary
back-to-nature mania is rejected as a hoax perpetuated by
opportunists intent on taking advantage of frightened and
impressionable consumers.
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