Could salt be contributing to the rising rates of obesity?

Could salt be contributing to the rising rates of obesity?

I think the salt is somewhat over-emphasised as an unhealthy food constituent, though the likelihood is that most of us eat more of it than is strictly good for us. Personally, I don

Print This Post Print This Post

AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Comments

RSS Comments - TrackBack

  1. Paul Anderson says:

    I have examined foods that I am prone to overeat and, invariably, they include either salt or sugar. Having eliminated most sources of sugar from my diet my main weaknesses are nuts and cheese. I am much less inclined to overeat unsalted nuts – but I really do struggle when I open a packet of salted cashews or peanuts. I can show more restraint with some almonds or walnuts.

    My suspicion is that sugar and salt were once hard to come by, and that we are programmed to consume them when available – like in season for fruits, to maybe help us through the winter. Unfortunately that doesn’t fit well with the modern environment where sugar and salt are to be found everywhere, particularly, but not exclusively, in processed foods.

    There is much less tendancy to overeat unprocessed foods – which generally come in well balanced forms – Meat (fat, protein, b-vitmins), fruit (sugar and vitamin C), vegeatbles, fish (fat, some with fat and vitmain D), nuts, etc.

    I think a tendancy to crave any food is a warning sign that you don’t need it. Its ironic that people often tend to crave the very foods that they are alergic to.

    Paul anderson.

    March 21, 2008 @ 12:34 pm

  2. Nancy M. says:

    The logical thing to me is, drink non-caloric drinks like coffee, tea, water, etc. I love salt but I tend to only add it after I’m done cooking and I don’t eat packaged foods that have added sodium. So I suspect the salt I add to my food doesn’t amount to all that much. Salt makes the flavors in food come to life.

    March 21, 2008 @ 3:39 pm

  3. A says:

    The sweet/salty combination is especially hard to resist/tasty for many people. That combo is very frequent in snack foods, in both sensations in one food or in food pairs, for example, salty fast food washed down with soda, peanut butter & jelly, salty nut candy bars, honey-baked ham, etc. Even foods we don’t think of as sweet, but actually do have significant sugar content or break down into glucose, are often salted or salty: tomatoes, fried potatoes with catsup, deli cold cuts with mayo, for example.

    I do cook and season food with some unrefined sea salt, as well as prepare fermented veggies such as sauerkraut and brine meat with sea salt, but with very little commercially prepared foods and beverages in our home, our sodium intake is probably not as high as in homes with lots of processed, high sodium foods. I use a fairly course grind, which means less is used to achieve the desired saltiness.

    March 21, 2008 @ 5:18 pm

  4. Norma says:

    There’s more to it than that, I think. Salty and spicy food create a craving for sweet things (and the opposite is true,too) – think of the sugary sweets that are eaten in Indian cooking. Macrobiotics – I’m going by memory here – talk about expansive and contractive food and how if you eat one in any great quantity then you crave its opposite.

    March 21, 2008 @ 9:06 pm

  5. Dave says:

    Certainly if the drink of choice is high calorie, salt will contribute to consumption, but it is unreasonable to then leap to a rising rate of obesity because ultimately the diets of those drinking lots of soft drinks tend to also include plenty of other low nutrient, essentially empty calories.

    We could more fairly say salt has nothing to do with obesity, that uneducated people do, in not recognizing they have to fit the total calories consumed into their diet plan or by preferring to eat and drink whatever they like regardless of the consequences.

    However, there is a quite large mitigating factor when looking at only one study, presumably closing around the cited 2008 date, that this is post-information-age data about children with cable TV, video games, the internet. Their activity level is likely to be far lower than with earlier generations, and let’s face it that processed foods and soft drinks are not new inventions, they should not today account for rising obesity and lest we forget, there once was a time when most meat was cured with salt.

    Essentially, I say no. Salt is not contributing very directly, when one consumes salted food then woudl tend to have a beverage even if it were unsalted food (maybe even moreso tending to, to swallow unsalted ungreasy food can be a chore sometimes without a beverage), it’s potentially only a side effect of a culture, of humans that are becoming less physical and more mental creatures. Fortunately there is a positive outlook, if this continues even children will become more conscious of their caloric intake but the mind cannot be healthy without the body so exercise is still required.

    March 28, 2009 @ 10:31 am

Write Comment









Store
Audio BooksBooksE-books
recent posts
Dr Briffa Facebook
Dr Briffa Twitter
Dr Briffa