Here at the Moss Reports...Price Break!
We have just lowered the price of our Moss Report service
by $50...from $297 to $247. Each Report is a comprehensive
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This reduced price will last through Labor Day. If you
were considering ordering a Report for yourself or a loved one,
now is a good time to do so. To order, go to our website, www.cancerdecisions.com,
or call .
Rates of Cancer Vary Widely
Even today, we find huge disparities in the incidence of cancer
worldwide, with increased rates seemingly tied to the adoption
of a refined diet and other harmful habits. Hungary, for instance,
has a cancer death rate of 272.2 per 100,000 (men) and 138.4
per 100,000 (women). Contrast this with Mexico, where the death
rate among men is 85.0 and among women 78.9 per 100,000.
"Civilization" is not only a chauvinistic
term but is such an all-encompassing concept that it is difficult
to pinpoint exactly what aspects of it have contributed to the
dramatic rise of cancer in the last century. Certainly tobacco
has been a major culprit. Hungary has the highest rate of lung
cancer in the world. I have visited that country four times
and always came away shocked at the amount of smoking. On one
trip I visited a number of famous medical facilities and never
did my hosts fail to offer me cigarettes. When I met with one
of the country's highest ranking scientists, he nonchalantly
chain-smoked throughout the entire meeting. After the fall of
Communism, downtown Budapest became plastered with ads for American
cigarettes. Philip Morris, makers of Marlboro, sponsored televised
rock concerts and young women in Marlboro suits dispensed free
samples of Marlboro cigarettes. Concertgoers who agreed to smoke
the cigarettes received a complimentary pair of "designer
Marlboro sunglasses." There is no doubt that smoking
has played a role in the rising rates of cancer.
However, an overwhelming body of evidence points to drastic
changes in diet as the primary explanation for the increase
in cancer. Indigenous people of regions across the globe seem
protected so long as they eat the diet that their ancestors
ate for millennia. But once they adopt Western dietary habits,
cancer appears and then begins its inexorable climb towards
the same astronomical heights as are seen in the societies they
emulate.
Some scholars who studied vegetarian cultures have concluded
that it was the high fruit and vegetable content that kept these
native peoples from getting cancer. Conversely, some researchers
who focused on northern populations in which meat was prominent
have advocated a meat-based diet for cancer protection. Others
have ascribed the healthfulness, longevity and lack of cancer
in indigenous populations to the intake of specific nutrients
(such as the "laetrile" found in such abundance
in apricot kernels, a staple of the Hunza diet).
But no single, simplistic answer will fit these tremendously
varied cultures. In my opinion, what these diverse populations
ate is much less important than what they did not eat (at least
until recently): "white" foods, specifically
white sugar, white flour, and salt. The addition of these foods
to their diet was disastrous to their health, as it has been
to ours. White sugar and white flour are especially harmful,
because these "high glycemic" foods are quickly absorbed
into the bloodstream, where they wreak havoc with the regulation
of insulin and blood sugar levels. This is a major factor in
increasing rates of type 2 diabetes and obesity.
Unfortunately, white sugar, white flour, and refined sweeteners
are ubiquitous in the Western diet. They are found in sodas
and other sweet drinks, breads and snack foods, beer and ice
cream, you name it. But even "natural" forms
of carbohydrates may not be as innocent as once thought. Whole
wheat flour, potatoes, and other seemingly healthy foods also
have a high glycemic index and may not be safe to consume in
anything except small quantities.
Atkins Vindicated
Robert Atkins, MD, has been preaching against a high-carbohydrate
diet for 30 years, much to the chagrin of the medical establishment.
A recent cover story in the New York Times Magazine (7/7/02)
vindicated the low-carbohydrate, high-protein and high-fat diet
advocated by Atkins, citing a growing body of research which
suggests that a diet of carbohydrate-rich foods is no guarantee
of good health, let alone weight loss. In fact, as the American
public has increased its consumption of carbohydrates and decreased
its consumption of fatty meat, obesity rates have skyrocketed.
In 1998, more than 50 percent of adults in the US were overweight.
Obesity and type II diabetes among American children have also
increased. At the same time, levels of physical activity have
declined, further contributing to soaring rates of obesity and
obesity-related illnesses in the US.
The list of diseases linked to obesity is a lengthy one. According
to the American Cancer Society, obesity contributes to
hypertension, lipid disorders, type 2 diabetes, coronary heart
disease, stroke, gallbladder disease, osteoarthritis, sleep
apnea and respiratory problems. And as body mass index goes
up, rates of cancer also increase, by as much as 80 percent
in women.
The Key to Cancer Prevention
It seems clear to me that cancer was not a major medical problem
in recorded history until the last 150 years. And even today,
populations that eat an indigenous diet rarely, if ever, get
cancer. (Unfortunately, such populations are exceedingly scarce
in this century.) However, in reviewing the evidence from these
cultures as well as our own, the key issue for cancer prevention
does not seem to be whether the diet is vegetarian or meat-eating,
or whether it contains high quantities of fat and protein. The
single most drastic change in the Western diet, which has occurred
simultaneously with rising rates of cancer among those who consume
it, has been the cheap availability of white flour, white sugar,
and refined sweeteners such as corn syrup, as well as their
inclusion in just about every food in the marketplace. The key
to cancer prevention may turn out to be avoidance of the same
foods that make your blood sugar run wild and that cause a plethora
of other illnesses.
--Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D.

References:
American Cancer Society. Cancer Facts and Figures
2001, p. 25.
Atkins RC. Dr. Atkins'
New Diet Revolution. NY: Avon, 2002.
Taubes G. "What if it's
all been a big fat lie?". New York Times Magazine,
July 7, 2002.
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IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER
The news and other items in this newsletter are intended
for informational purposes only. Nothing in this newsletter
is intended to be a substitute for professional medical
advice.
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