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Dr. Berg’s Healthy Keto and Intermittent Fasting Podcast

Why Are We Doing This to Our Kids?

Dr. Berg’s Healthy Keto and Intermittent Fasting Podcast

Dr. Eric Berg

Health & Fitness

4.61.6K Ratings

🗓️ 25 January 2025

⏱️ 8 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Why are we feeding our kids ultra-processed foods? In 1948, the childhood obesity rate was less than 1%, and food allergies, asthma, and autism were virtually non-existent. Discover the detrimental health consequences of the ultra-processed food diet in this podcast.


When my father was a child in 1948, he recalls a different way of life. Sugary cereals like Fruit Loops, Captain Crunch, and Fruity Pebbles did not line the aisles of the grocery store. Children did not have mid-morning snacks at school and were told not to spoil their appetites by eating before dinner.


Saturated fats were not demonized as they are today. Lard and tallow were found in every kitchen, and red meat was a dietary staple. Most people had gardens and relied on the skill of canning to get them through the winter.


Obesity and chronic disease in childhood were uncommon, while childhood obesity, food allergies, asthma, and autism plague the children of today!


The largest category of ultra-processed foods are snack foods. The problem with snacking is that you spike insulin every time you eat. Carbohydrates create the most significant spike in insulin. Not only are we snacking, but we’re snacking on the worst foods!


The pancreas is constantly working to pump out insulin to remove sugar from the blood. This eventually leads to insulin resistance, which is behind almost every chronic illness, including a fatty liver, high blood pressure, diabetes, obesity, inflammatory diseases, mood disorders, dementia, and more.


In 1948, we did not have not have ultra-processed food calories. Today, 65% of the teenage diet comes from ultra-processed food calories. This number is around 50% for adults and 45% for toddlers.


Seed oils, such as soy, corn, cottonseed, and canola, are the worst ultra-processed food ingredients. Around 25% to 30% of all our calories come from seed oils.


Grain-based starches generate 220 billion dollars per year! Highly processed industrial starches such as modified food starch, modified cornstarch, and maltodextrin spike blood sugar—often higher than consuming sugar does!

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Today, we're going to call my dad and actually ask him some questions about what people ate in

0:08.3

1948.

0:09.7

Hey! Hi, is dad there?

0:12.8

Yep, he's right here. He's ready.

0:15.6

Great. Hi, Dad.

0:16.5

Hi, Snook.

0:17.6

So now everyone knows my name you called me, other than Dr. Berg, they'll call me Snooks.

0:25.5

So great. Thanks for that.

0:28.0

How much, how much, geez you?

0:29.0

Oh, no, no, anything but that.

0:31.8

Some people are going to probably say, well, why are you asking your 87-year-old dad about what they ate back in 1948 when people

0:41.0

don't realize you remember every single name of every single kid in your class in fifth grade?

0:47.9

Question I have is, did you see a lot of overweight people back in 1948 in your class, were there a lot of obese kids?

0:57.0

In 48, no, no, not really at all.

1:01.6

Was diabetes common among children?

1:04.7

I only know one. I had one friend that had diabetes, but other than that, no.

1:12.1

What about like food allergies or autism?

1:15.9

Was that popular back then?

1:17.8

No, no, it wasn't.

1:19.6

Yeah.

1:19.9

When you walked to the grocery store and you looked for cereals,

1:24.0

did they have things like Fruit Loops and Captain Crunch and Flintstone Pebbles?

...

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