Synopses & Reviews
You can never have too many vitamins, until they kill you. Eat meat, but avoid beef, chicken, turkey, and pork. Packaged foods are more efficiently preserved than they were 100 years ago—but should we actually eat the stuff? Consumers are besieged with conflicting messages about food and nutrition, making it difficult for the average customer to know what to believe. Is anything safe at McDonald's? Do carbohydrates cause obesity? This provocative new resource explores 15 common controversies in the field of food and nutrition.
The authors explain the varying opinions and underlying issues that surround these debates, shedding new light on tensions over popular diets, fast food, and vegetarianism. Readers will gain a better understanding of these arguments and learn of the controversies surrounding lesser known topics as well, such as food irradiation, organic and imported food, vitamin supplementation, animal growth hormones, and more. Hot topics such as mad cow disease, high-protein diets, food allergies, and genetic modifications are clearly presented. This resource is perfect for high school and college students, as well as the general public.
Review
For anyone confused about the barrage of messages we get every day about nutrition, this is an excellent book. Each chapter includes a list of references and Internet sites with additional information. Thoroughly enjoyable to read, the book is designed as a high school or college reference text, but it would also interest the general public. Highly recommended. General readers; lower- and upper-division undergraduates; faculty.Choice
Review
[a] smoothly written introduction to the current state of knowledge on fifteen issues related to food and nutrition which have been the subjects of extensive discussion and debate in the popular press and media....Given the swiftly changing nature of information on all of the subjects surveyed, the volume can be used as a quick reference in high school, public, and university reference collections serving undergraduate students....suited for use as a supplemental book of readings or secondary textbook in lower division courses on food and nutrition.E-STREAMS Vol. 6,No. 6
Synopsis
You can never have too many vitamins, until they kill you. Eat meat, but avoid beef, chicken, turkey, and pork. Packaged foods are more efficiently preserved than they were 100 years ago--but should we actually eat the stuff? Consumers are besieged with conflicting messages about food and nutrition, making it difficult for the average customer to know what to believe. Is anything safe at McDonald's? Do carbohydrates cause obesity? This provocative new resource explores 15 common controversies in the field of food and nutrition.
Synopsis
This provocative new resource explores 15 common controversies in the field of food and nutrition.
About the Author
MYRNA CHANDLER GOLDSTEIN is a correspondent with Community Newspaper Company and an independent scholar. She is also a frequent contributor to a number of national magazines.MARK A. GOLDSTEIN, M.D. is Chief of Pediatrics and Student Health Services at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. with Chandler Goldstein, he is the co-author of Controversies in the Practice of Medicine (Greenwood, 2001) and Boys into Men: Staying Healthy Through the Teen Years (Greenwood, 2000).
Table of Contents
Introduction
Food Additives
Food Irradiation
Vegetarian/Vegan Diets
Animal Growth Hormones
Imported Food
Life Enhancing/Life Threatening
Food Labeling
Hidden Ingredients in Food
Large Doses of Vitamins
Fast Foods
Antioxidants
Organic Foods
High-Protein Diets
Popular Diets
Genetically Modified Foods
Index