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    Study: Healthy eating is privilege of the rich

    SEATTLE (AP) — A healthy diet is expensive and could make it difficult for Americans to meet new U.S. nutritional guidelines, according to a study published Thursday that says the government should do more to help consumers eat healthier.

    An update of what used to be known as a food pyramid in 2010 had called on Americans to eat more foods containing potassium, dietary fiber, vitamin D and calcium. But if they did that, the journal Health Affairs said, they would add hundreds more dollars to their annual grocery bill.

    Inexpensive ways to add these nutrients to a person's diet include potatoes and beans for potassium and dietary fiber. But the study found introducing more potassium in a diet is likely to add $380 per year to the average consumer's food costs, said lead researcher Pablo Monsivais, an assistant professor in the Department of Epidemiology and the School of Public Health at the University of Washington.

    "We know more than ever about the science of nutrition, and yet we have not yet been able to move the needle on healthful eating," he said. The government should provide help for meeting the nutritional guidelines in an affordable way.

    He criticized some of the marketing for a healthy diet — for example, the image of a plate of salmon, leafy greens and maybe some rice pilaf — and said a meal like that is not affordable for many Americans.

    Food-assistance programs are helping people make healthier choices by providing coupons to buy fruits and vegetables, Monsivais said, but some also put stumbling blocks in front of the poor.

    He mentioned, as an example, a Washington state policy making it difficult to buy potatoes with food assistance coupons for women with children, even though potatoes are one of the least expensive ways to add potassium to a diet.

    The study was based on a random telephone survey of about 2,000 adults in King County, Wash., followed by a printed questionnaire that was returned by about 1,300 people. They note what food they ate, which was analyzed for nutrient content and estimated cost.

    People who spend the most on food tend to get the closest to meeting the federal guidelines for potassium, dietary fiber, vitamin D and calcium, the study found. Those who spend the least have the lowest intakes of the four recommended nutrients and the highest consumption of saturated fat and added sugar.

    Hilary Seligman, assistant professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, said Monsivais' research is an interesting addition to the debate about healthy eating and food insecurity, her area of expertise.

    A lot of people assume the poor eat cheap food because it tastes good, but they would make better choices if they could afford to, said Seligman, who was not involved in the Health Affairs study.

    "Almost 15 percent of households in America say they don't have enough money to eat the way they want to eat," Seligman said. Recent estimates show 49 million Americans make food decisions based on cost, she added.

    "Right now, a huge chunk of America just isn't able to adhere to these guidelines," she said.

    But Monsivais may have oversimplified the problem, according to another professor who does research in this area. Parke Wilde, associated professor at the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University, said it's not expensive to get all the nutrients a body needs to meet the federal guidelines.

    What is expensive, in Wilde's opinion, are the choices Americans make while getting those nutrients.

    He said diets get more and more expensive depending on how many rules a person applies to himself, such as eating organic or seeking local sources for food or eating vegetables out of season.

    "The longer your list gets, the more expensive your list will be," he said.

    Seligman said her list can get longer than Wilde's, but not everything is a choice. Adding to the cost of buying healthful food could be how far away from home a person needs to travel to get to a grocery store that sells a variety of fresh fruits and vegetables.

    The government also affects food prices through the subsidies offered to farmers growing certain crops, she added.

     
     
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    3,125 comments

    • RobertM  •  9 mths ago
      How about eating a Banana, instead of buying lotto tickets.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 mths ago
      It's ironic that in a country like the Philippines, organic fruits and veggies are growing almost wild right in poor people's back yards. The processed junk food is too expensive for most of them to afford. They're forced to eat healthy. Go figure.
      • John 9 mths ago
        Did you know in the wild villages in Africa, people drink healthy raw milk and eat organic produce. They have excellent strength and low cholesterol, and are expected to live to 44! Go figure.
      • oneofmany 9 mths ago
        John, methinks you are being sarcastic.

        Marty, it is an interesting thing that happens sometimes. When the Irish were dominated by the wealthy Brits back before the potato famine, the landlords ate sumptuous meals. The poor Irish ate potato stew, dark bread, and dairy products from the cow they were allowed to have. Up until the potato famine, they were healthier than their overlords.
      • Samuel F 9 mths ago
        the life exptancy in those third world countries is like 100 if they avoid all the war, disease, etc.. their diets are insane.. my grandmother is an ancient mexican woman been around the beginning of time.. their food makes them live long.. what lowers the average life expectancy is childbirth .. not heart attacks.
    • mikeh  •  9 mths ago
      I am so sick of hearing about how the small local producer or the small organic producer is more expensive than the mega corporate producer via thier grocey stores. I am So sick of hearing that the beef, pork, chicken and goats I produce are unhealthy to eat.
      I want to set some of these misconceptions straight. The pork I produce after sold direct to a consumer has a total cost of $2.02 per pound it is lean or fat depending on the individual customers request. Chicken works out to .80cents per pound for broilers and .50 cents per pound for stew hens. My eggs bring in $1.75-$2.50 per dozen depending on size and grade. My beef pans out to $3.45 per pound. The goats sold direct bring in $4.25 per pound.
      There are no chemicals via feed, there are no antibiotics, there are no feedlots or confinments, my product is simply the best possible it is affordable, ot is lean, ot is healthy. Oh and it has flavor unlike the store junk. My animals do not stand knee deep in manure with their head stick in a feed line eating corn 24/7 putting on fat. My prices almost always beat Walmart or the other grocery stores.
      No I am not advertising my Ranch, I difficulty meeting my current customers needs as it is and will only expand so much. The point is we (us small producers) will not sacrafice quality for a little more profit. We eat the same meat, and produce we sell.
      When we have excess it more often than not is donated to a food bank or homeless shelter or a local community kitchen.
      I will also share a dirty little seceret we have. A lot of us have two prices for our products. The little old lady or man scraping by on social security as their only income, or the parents who have been laid off and can't find work, or the working single parent that can barely make ends meet gets a signifigant break on the prices. My customers who make a good income are well aware of this and don't feel cheated that someone less fortunate gets a better deal or throws a fit because I take a truck load of packaged meat to the food pantry or community kitchen once or twice a year.
      Next most of us small producers do not take Government subsidies. The only Government money that has ever came into this Ranch is $3000 in CRP money when I bought another 40 acres and 18 of those acres were enrolled in CRP and only had 2 years for the contract to expire. I was not about to pay the FSA the payments made to the previous owner plus a 20% penatly based on the total amount of the CRP contract to remove the 18 acres from the program early at a cost of $16,264. The money it did pay me during those 2 years was donated to a propane fund for the PineRidge Indian reservation.
      At the end of the day I make a honest living, doing what I love and treating my neighbors/Customers right. Just like thousands of other small producers that don't have a corporate master. Sure I hit the farmers market and charge comparable to vendors with like products and have built my direct from the farm customer base from those markets. What can I say its a good way to keep public exposure in the community you serve and add loyal customers outside the market.
      I will NOT get a organic certification and pay the Government and their private contractor extortion to sell a product that already exceeds their minimum organic standards by light years. Organic certifications and standards are simply a way to knock the little guy out of the market with prohibitive certification cost, while allowing corporate farms to enter the organic market with minimal standards that allow easy compliance and profits using a the organic brand that they could care less about.
      Sorry about the long post but I am sick of hearing about how eating healthy cost a fortune. It does when you are supporting the international corporation, it DOES NOT when you are supporting you local Ranch or Farm.
      • Joan 9 mths ago
        Too bad you arent in our neck of the woods, we have nothing like that around here. Sad , very sad.
      • mikeh 9 mths ago
        Where are you at? Just about everywhere there is some small operation hiding off the beaten path. I might be able to track one of them down for you near you.
      • Kathy 9 mths ago
        I'm on a very lean budget but when I can afford it, I only by the best Amish chicken and always buy the eggs with better feed. You are right. Get the government out of the way because they just manipulate things in the most unproductive and unfair ways. That is why I am a Republican. Those who have families would do well to find a local farmer to buy from.
    • Hollow Point  •  9 mths ago
      The next thing you know.....a study will show the rich live in better homes.
    • Chris  •  9 mths ago
      I like to see a survey on how many Americans are going with little or no food.
      • d 9 mths ago
        I want to know where the people have gone? 1.6 million empty homes in US?
      • barblil9 9 mths ago
        It will certainly be a lot more, if these Tea Party "Patriots" have their way!
      • Caffeine 1 9 mths ago
        You want to know where the people have gone? 1.6 million empty homes in US?
        They are living in wooded areas so the government won"t take their children away.
        The banks are starting to bulldoze their houses so they cannot move back in either.
    • Liberal Pillow Biter  •  9 mths ago
      $18 for an annual fishing license. I've been eating the hell out of crappie and sunfish.
      • i can see you 9 mths ago
        you eat sunfish?
      • Johnelle Warren 9 mths ago
        For those of us who live anywhere there has ever been gold mining, we can't do that. Due to the mercury in our rivers & lakes, the most that is recommended to eat is 3 fish a month, less for children.
      • Yingling Samson 9 mths ago
        Bravo for you and I will pray you don't get poisoned by the ifected water.......but good for you and happy fishing
    • MsNoNonsense  •  9 mths ago
      I was raised poor, real poor and we ate healthily. Here's the budget menu. Milk, cheese, eggs, peanut butter, cheerios, "day old" whole grain bread on sale, oatmeal, sardines, canned salmon (TOO much mercury in tuna), frozen spinach, fresh carrots, apples, any fresh fruit in season, vegetables grown in your own garden, pasta with canned tomato sauce with half a pound of ground beef browned and added, baked potatoes with some cheese, whatever parts of chicken that's on sale cheap that you cook yourself then make soup from the bones and leftovers. We were healthy and stayed fit and trim. Lazy is what makes you fat. It's easier to snag a bag of 5 for $5 fatburgers than to boil a $4 chicken with $1 worth of potatoes and carrots.
    • TRADE REDD NOW  •  9 mths ago
      Drive through any central city area. Try to find a supermarket.

      Especially in Detroit, Cleveland, or Milwaukee. Glad I don't have to pay 1.69 for an apple at Speedway.

      America needs to look at Cuba in how to solve our food crisis. Cuban urban agriculture is unrivaled in terms of yield and health for the space provided. How many weed filled lots could be turned into community gardens? How many empty spaces could be filled with healthy treats to soak up rain water that would normally cause the sewers to overflow?
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 mths ago
      the NWO wants a certain segment of the population to be stupid, to act as the workers, the grunts in society...so they push an agenda via the dept of education to cut funding on nutrition programs. This keeps kids brain development at a minimum, cause they eat crap all their life growing up. When they get older, they serve as our cleaners, cooks, drivers, soldiers...they don't ask questions, they work, pay their taxes and serve. Meanwhile, the elite go to the best schools with the best food, have maximum brain and IQ growth and in turn become our politicians, CEOs, generals, Pentagon elite, Wall Street execs.....these people are greedy. They don't want YOU to grow up eating the best, getting the best, cause yo will turn out to be their competition and they need you to be a quiet worker and tax payer. Its a scam people.......
    • Dian  •  9 mths ago
      12 oz bag of store brand potato chips=2.00....that's more than 2.25 per pound.
      4 POUNDS of bananas=2.40...that's only .60 per pound
      Bag of dry beans......75 cents
      Box of unflavored oatmeal...1.75
      whole chicken....89 cents a pound
      frozen tilapia fish fillets.....2.89 per pound
      bag of fresh carrots ....75 cents
      head of lettuce.....1.19
      bag of frozen store brand broccoli....1.49
      So for about 18.00 we can PREPARE dinner and breakfast for a family of 4 for 2 days...with some leftovers!!!!
      So maybe if people would stop being lazy and learn to shop for and prepare meals, this article wouldn't be needed. Stop taking responsibility away from the people. This country needs to be made respnsible for their actions....period!!!!
    • DAD  •  9 mths ago
      No this is where SMALL FARMERS can make money -- it is called a Niche in the Market.
      They can grow tons of Greens and Veggies to sell at road side stands.
      But wait Road Side Stands must now be licensed, Insured, zoned and Inspected !!!!!!
    • Sammyjo  •  9 mths ago
      I grew up poor in the 70's. I'm sure our family would have qualified for food stamps, but my parents were very proud and would not accept any "charity". Except, if a deer was hit by a car in our town, and was in decent shape, it would be brought to us. Venison was a treat! The only processed food I remember eating was Kraft Mac & Cheese. Our staples were beans, pasta, oatmeal bought in bulk, tuna, peanut butter, cheese, canned or frozen veggies, rice, occasional hamburg and chicken and popcorn as a snack. We drank water! This "study" is just another way to make low income people feel like they are victims, that they cannot improve their situation on their own, and need to depend on the government more. This is actually a disservice to the poor as it makes them feel that they have no control over their own destiny, and discourages personal responsibility. I'm in a much better financial position now, but no thanks to any government "program". Did it on my own and am proud of it! But I still get a hankering for venison now and then... :-)
    • Langusta  •  9 mths ago
      So the moral of the story is that rich people can eat better than poor people?

      ...and HOW MUCH did this "breakthrough"cost?
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 mths ago
      Fresh fruit has gotten pretty expensive lately. Apples nearly $2.00 a pound, ridiculous.
    • Adev  •  9 mths ago
      What about bananas for potassium? They're cheap as dirt.
    • mamadof3  •  9 mths ago
      We significantly changed up our family eating habits back in January because of health reasons - we were constantly coming down sick as a family! I thought this would markedly increase our grocery bill. It didn't. When we stopped buying junk processed, prepackaged foods entirely, lessened impulse buying (candy, cookies, ice cream etc.) and concentrated on fresh, simple whole foods, our bill stayed almost exactly the same. The benefits have been extraordinary! Effortless weight loss, better overall health and energy, less allergies, clearer thinking - Don't let anyone tell you that eating healthy is way more expensive because it just isn't. A friend once told me, "Just buy better food and eat less of it!" Those words are so true. Eating better does take a bit more time though. There is a bit of a learning curve - You have to re-learn how to eat and think ahead a bit and plan ahead a bit, but once you train yourself to reach for healthy whole foods, your body will be nourished and not be hungry. You do not need special books or to purchase lots of special diet materials - just get rid of the junk and watch your grocery bill remain the same but your health improve substantially! :) Best of luck!
    • Mr. Red  •  9 mths ago
      What a stupid headline. Eating poorly is, by and large, a personal choice.
    • Randolph  •  9 mths ago
      It's funny how pretty much every American thinks he can afford a car and an iPod, but not food.
    • Hugh_G_Rekshun  •  9 mths ago
      Here's the solution: Stop buying chips and soda. Take that money and buy vegetables and fruit. Problem solved.
    • Yrag  •  9 mths ago
      This is bull and anyone with more than a sixth grade education knows it.
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