Breast Cancer Prevention with Walnuts
This Popular Nut Slashed Breast Cancer Risk in Mice by 50%
By Dr. Mercola
As unbelievable as it sounds, current law makes it illegal for food
producers to share certain types of scientific information with you.
So when Diamond Food relayed health information about the omega-3
fats in walnuts on product packaging and also on their Web site, the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) attacked.
Even though the information was entirely true, and backed by peer-reviewed scientific research.
If a Food Can Prevent a Disease, it Must be a Drug
This is the backward thinking that goes on at the FDA, where
regulations currently prohibit manufacturers of dietary supplements or
producers of food from referring to any scientific study documenting the
potential effect of the substance on a health condition, punishable by
large fines and even jail.
Disclosure about the benefits of a dietary supplement or food, no
matter how credible, places the food in the category of an "unapproved
drug."
In other words, if a product makes a medical claim, it's automatically classified as a drug.
This is how the FDA got away with sending Diamond Food a warning letter1, stating:
"… we have determined that your walnut products are promoted for
conditions that cause them to be drugs because these products are
intended for use in the prevention, mitigation, and treatment of
disease.
The following are examples of the claims made on your firm's
website under the heading of a web page stating "OMEGA-3s... Every time
you munch a few walnuts, you're doing your body a big favor … "
These claims are backed by science2,
but it doesn't matter under FDA rules, which are so counter to
rationality and logic that it boggles the mind. The FDA letter goes on
to list several health claims made by Diamond Foods regarding omega-3
fats, claims such as:
- "Studies indicate that the omega-3 fatty acids found in walnuts
may help lower cholesterol; protect against heart disease, stroke and
some cancers; ease arthritis and other inflammatory diseases; and even
fight depression and other mental illnesses."
- "[O]mega-3 fatty acids inhibit the tumor growth that is promoted by the acids found in other fats... "
- "[I]n treating major depression, for example, omega-3s seem to
work by making it easier for brain cell receptors to process
mood-related signals from neighboring neurons."
- "The omega-3s found in fish oil are thought to be responsible
for the significantly lower incidence of breast cancer in Japanese women
as compared to women in the United States."
Walnuts are "New Drugs"
Because Diamond Food dared to let consumers know that natural
substances in a natural food may offer some health benefits and
protections, the FDA views this as a new drug. In their eyes, only
FDA-approved drugs are capable of offering such protections …
The FDA stated in the warning letter3:
"Because of these intended uses, your walnut products are drugs…
Your walnut products are also new drugs … because they are not generally
recognized as safe and effective for the above referenced conditions.
Therefore … they may not be legally marketed with the above claims in
the United States without an approved new drug application.
Additionally, your walnut products are offered for conditions
that are not amenable to self-diagnosis and treatment by individuals who
are not medical practitioners; therefore, adequate directions for use
cannot be written so that a layperson can use these drugs safely for
their intended purposes. Thus, your walnut products are also misbranded…
in that the labeling for these drugs fails to bear adequate directions
for use… "
The FDA's current position is that foods such as walnuts, cherries,
broccoli, turmeric, green tea and the like should be subjected to the
full FDA approval process. But obtaining a new drug application, as the
FDA suggested, can cost billions of dollars. And let's face it -- walnut
growers cannot come close to affording that!
Is it Not a Constitutional Right to Share Truthful, Scientific Information?
This is so ridiculous, as censoring a food producer's right to inform
others about scientific research is in violation of the first
amendment. The American Association for Health Freedom (AAHF) states:
"The FDA ignores first amendment protections and censors the
communication of valid scientific information. The agency seems to have
lost sight of its mandate to protect the public and has instead come to
see itself as the guardian of corporate interests."
Can you imagine the drug companies not being permitted to tell you
what their products could do for you... do you think they would roll
over for that? Not a chance, but they don't have to simply because they
are the ones who can afford the FDA's approval process. With few
exceptions, it's impossible for food producers to assume such costs for
natural and therefore non-patentable products.
It's ludicrous for the FDA to require natural products to be "vetted"
the same way as drugs. In nearly every case, natural products are safer
and more effective than synthetic drugs, as science has shown, time and
time again. Not to mention that natural agents are much less expensive
than pharmaceuticals, and can even be grown in your backyard!
It's unfortunate that the FDA is so beholden to the drug industry
that it would waste it's time to attack a walnut manufacturer for citing
scientific research while allowing Frito Lay to claim that its Lay's potato chips are "heart healthy."
And walnut producers are not alone. Cherry growers have also been
threatened by the FDA with jail time if their websites even contain
links to scientific studies from Harvard and elsewhere, outlining the
health benefits of cherries for gout or arthritis pain.4 Green tea growers have received similar threats. As I said, it truly boggles the mind…
What Should You Know About Walnuts?
The FDA was sure worried that you might get wind of the truth -- that
a food might confer health benefits that drugs currently lay exclusive
claim to. Walnuts are good sources of plant-based omega-3 fats, natural
phytosterols and antioxidants that are so powerful at free-radical
scavenging that researchers called them "remarkable."5 Plus, walnuts may help reduce not only the risk of prostate cancer, but breast cancer as well.
In one study, mice that ate the human equivalent of 2.4 ounces of
whole walnuts for 18 weeks had significantly smaller and slower-growing
prostate tumors compared to the control group that consumed the same
amount of fat but from other sources. Overall the whole walnut
diet reduced prostate cancer growth by 30 to 40 percent. According to
another study on mice, the human equivalent of just two handfuls of
walnuts a day cut breast cancer risk in half, and slowed tumor growth by
50 percent as well6. Other research has shown walnuts may:
Now this is the type of information that we need to hear more of as,
no doubt, if people were made aware of these potential benefits, and
similar ones in other whole foods, they may be tempted to snack on a
handful of whole walnuts instead of a bag of potato chips or pretzels.
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