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Table of contents

Very important to be noted is that Obesity is hitting the world in general and sharply the youth and children from the majority of developed and developing countries.

If we get through this effort to raise people awareness of the problems associated with obesity then we will have achieved the objective reason for us to prepare this research. We thank all the people who encouraged us to publish our work and constantly supported us to achieve our goals. Oscar Zaldana Paredes has been for the last 15 years a Champagne lover. Although it is unusual to put a picture of the author and his family; I also would like to let the world know that the most important thing in my life is my family.

This is why I have decided to put the picture of my kids.

To Roberto and Franchesca. It is through this experience, and after data collection and research about the problem of obesity that he decides to publish a work which includes the basic elements that contributes and are the primary cause of the problem of excess weight and obesity in the world.

It rots your teeth.

Oscar Paredes | Book Depository

It causes cancer. The rats were given cocaine until they became dependent on it. Then, researchers provided them a choice — the rats could continue to have the cocaine or they could switch to sugar. Yup, the sugar. Even when they had to work hard to access the sugar, the rats were more interested in it than they were in the cocaine. Because the sugar had a much more powerful effect on their brains. The same thing can be observed in humans. As a result, those receptors get overloaded by processed foods and make the brain release abnormal amounts of endorphins — happy chemicals.

When a person attempts to cut off their sugar addiction, it can be tough. It can honestly feel impossible.

Public Enemy Number One (part 2,2009 - gr. subs)

Food manufacturers are smart. The misleading labelling and health claims on "low fat" foods that actually have shocking levels of sugar added is a scandal. Worse still, it has created the perfect storm for public health. That would mean fewer calories per person, which according to the UK Department of Health would reverse the obesity epidemic. However, the industry remains in denial. Barbara Gallani , director of regulation at the Food and Drink Federation, made a statement of immediate resistance, denying sugar's role in obesity and failing to acknowledge the multitude of scientific studies to the contrary.

The Protective Role of Subcutaneous Fat, and What That Means for Fat (“Weight”) Loss

We mustn't forget that it took 50 years from when the first scientific studies between smoking and lung cancer were made before any effective legislation was introduced through regulation. Because Big Tobacco very successfully adopted a corporate strategy of denial. By planting doubt, confusing the public, bribing political allies and even buying the loyalty of rogue scientists.

The comparisons with the sugar industry are quite chilling. Leader of the Commons Andrew Lansley's aggressive intervention in parliament on Thursday was thus intriguing. He attempted to rubbish respected public health expert Professor Simon Capewell's statement that sugar is the new tobacco.

Lansley then compounded his errors by ignorantly asserting in the House that "sugar is essential to food". It is not. He would have been more accurate in saying "sugar is essential to food industry profits and lining the pockets of its co-opted partners".

What we do and don’t know about dietary science.

Lansley was a paid director of marketing company Profero to the end of During his unhappy time as health secretary, Lansley promoted his brainchild, the Responsibility Deal. There, he invited fast-food companies in for cosy discussions on how to tackle obesity, cynically generating the impression of progress, but only achieving weak and meaningless voluntary calorie reduction pledges.

The food industry spends billions in junk food and sugary drink advertising, targeting the most vulnerable members of society, including children. Worse, the industry cynically associates fitness and sport with junk food and sugary drinks.