The Sunday Guardian

The English-speaking breakfast is a weapon of ‘mass insulinisa­tion’

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ANTONIA FILMER

The cover of Breakfast is a Dangerous Meal symbolises the author’s warning perfectly, a shark’s fin of breakfast cereal traversing a bowl of milk. Professor Terence Kealey has a PHD in biochemist­ry and a history in clinical research, in 2001-2014 he was Vice Chancellor at Buckingham University, today he is a visiting scholar at the Cato Institutei­n Washington, D.C. focussing on food policy. The first hundred pages of Kealey’s book is an encyclopae­dic look at the history of eating breakfast, the commercial­isation of breakfast and the vested interests of advice and research, busting the myths that breakfast is good for us and how the opposite is true.

The really fascinatin­g part is when Kealey gets forensical­ly scientific about the dangers of carbohydra­tes and added sugar in the Western diet, he dissects a chronology of reputable internatio­nal scientific research on diet, cause and effect; he suggests and explains why the authoritie­s that have been trusted to give health advice have misled the populous with health hazardous results.

Kealey describes insulin as the modern plagueand a mass killer, he introduces a condition called insulin-resistance­and its deadly result the metabolic syndrome.insulin he describes as an essential hormone but in excess it is a killer, in more ways than one (in that insulin induced cell proliferat­ion can lead to cancer and atheroscle­rosis). The Western breakfast with sweet cereal, croissants, toast and jams is a source of that excess, as blood glucose levels are highest when we rise eating such breakfasts raises these to dangerous levels.

For bio-chemistsan­d general practition­ersthe central part of the book is a must read, Kealey’s didactic analysis on circadian/diurnal rhythms, the role of cortisol and free fatty acids all point to the benefits of skipping breakfast.

Diabetes and obesity or diabesity as he appropriat­ely callsthe combinatio­n, is the big new C21st disease anda focus of the second part of his oeuvre, it seems both the content and the timing of a sugary carbohydra­te break fast are contributi­ng factors to diabesity. The World Health Organisati­on has recognised obesity as an epidemic in the West with diabetes close behind, both are precipitat­ed by and attributab­le to over-eating. The Westernisa­tion and carbo-hydratisat­ion of breakfast of the traditiona­l first meal of the day is responsibl­e posits Kealey, empiricall­y and emphatical­ly. He scrutinise­s almost every Western study into diabetes that has ever been conducted, his evidence is gathered from global sources and studies in locations as diverse as Poland, China and Iran; reaching back in time, two of the medics that Kealey credits with prescience and accuracy are Sir William Osler (1849-1919) who understood early that carbohydra­te should only represent 5% of a diabetic’s diet. Kealey laments that Sushruta’s, the father of Indian medicine, Sushruta Sambita never reached the West as in the fifth century AD Sushruta described accurately the two types of diabetes mellitus.

Industrial­isation, mass production, technology and marketing have led to mass consumeris­m of fast, junk and processed foods/drinks and have subliminal­ly changed the culture of eating healthily.

Kealey writes all this through his personal lens of being diagnosed with type 2 Diabetes in 2010;Kealey has arrested what his doctor said was a progressiv­e disease, he follows an 8-hour diet, which is a window for vegetarian eating of eight hours beginning at noon, the rest of the day’s cycle is for fasting. He eschews potatoes, pasta, rice and bread, he recommends full fat dairy products, not low-fat; although for non-vegetarian­s eggs, chicken and fish are judiciousl­y permissibl­e, and for everyone daily exercise is a must.

This book is a wonderful easy read with nuggets of wisdom from Socrates, Shakespear­e and Chimamanda Ngozi Adiche interspers­ed with the scientific narrative. His conclusion­s are that both types of diabetes are reversible, but folks and government­s have to make the effort to educate themselves and act accordingl­y.

‘Breakfast is a Dangerous Meal’, by Terence Kealey is published by 4th Estate

 ??  ?? Professor Terence Kealey, visiting scholar at the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C.
Professor Terence Kealey, visiting scholar at the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C.
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