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Food & Behavior: A Natural Connection
 
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Food & Behavior: A Natural Connection (Paperback)

~ Barbara Reed Stitt (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 253 pages
  • Publisher: Natural Press; Revised edition (February 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0939956098
  • ISBN-13: 978-0939956098
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.4 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #158,004 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Food & Behavior: A Natural Connection
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Food & Behavior: A Natural Connection 5.0 out of 5 stars (6)
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30 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Barbara Stitt's Food & Behavior Reviewed, March 22, 2002
By Jay Banks (Palestine, TX United States) - See all my reviews
Barbara Stitt's book, Food and Behavior, is dedicated to the children and adults who have been mis-led and mis-fed. In other words, it is dedicated to America. In fact, even though Barbara became intimately involved with the relationship between food and behavior mainly through her work as a probation officer, most Americans could read this book and relate it to problems of their own or those of some friend or family member -- even though these problems didn't necessarily lead to run-ins with the law.

Despite the fact that most AMA doctors mention diet as an afterthought when dealing with an illness, most people would still be able to make the connection between diet and certain illnesses. We see public service announcements on television for cancer or high blood pressure that remind us that these illnesses are diet related. If you eat cereal for breakfast, chances are your box says that it may help prevent heart disease or lower your cholesterol.

But how many people would relate an emotional or mental problem to diet? In this area, people are given advice ranging from "buck up" or "get it together," to advice to seek professional counseling, to prescriptions for mood-altering drugs. It is now common practice for doctors, in the absence of an obvious physical problem, to evaluate a patient's emotional situation and prescribe antidepressants accordingly.

But could there be another factor overlooked by the majority of Americans? Author Barbara Stitt says yes, and that factor is food.

According to Barbara, the Standard American Diet (SAD diet), loaded with empty calories, overly processed foods -- sweetened, refined, stripped of nutrients, over-cooked, chemically treated, and devoid of any real nutrition -- is affecting people's mental health.

Barbara touches on several dietary related issues that affect the brain, the most important organ of the body.

The first issue covered in depth is reactive hypoglycemia, in which the body's blood sugar levels are too low to meet the brain's needs. Although there are other causes of hypoglycemia, the average 129 pounds of sugar per person eaten each year by Americans is the main cause of the reactive hypoglycemia that sends blood sugar on a wild roller coaster ride from high to low -- accompanied with a craving for sweets that starts the cycle all over again if sugary laden foods are eaten. Amazingly, due to the high amount of processed sugar we now eat, as much as 50 percent of all Americans may be hypoglycemic. The physical and mental results of the hypoglycemic state include: apprehension, trembling, irritability, confusion, amnesia, and hallucinations -- all symptoms the average psychiatrist would diagnose as neurosis, psychosis or schizoprenia. There is also a documented link between hypoglycemia and aggressive or violent behavior.

The next startling topic in the book is sub-clinical pellagra -- a once wide-spread niacin-deficiency disease in the southern United States with symptoms that include dermatitis, disorientation, confusion, memory lapses, depression, anxiety, fatigue, and ultimately, dementia and death.

While pellagra is thought to have been eliminated, Barbara raises the issue of developing some symptoms of the disease without developing full blown pellagra.

The startling part of sub-clinical pellagra, like hypoglycemia, is that the symptoms also mirror those of schizophrenia, a problem so widespread that those who suffer from it occupy one out of every four hospital beds in the United States.

A third topic the author details is vitamin B deficiencies, giving symptoms that could easily be confused with mental disorders. These B vitamins include B1, B2, B6, and B12. B12 deficiencies, for example, are well known for causing mental disturbances, such as paranoia, mental confusion, and dementia. In fact, the included table that compares vitamin B deficiencies to neuropsychiatric disorders is uncanny.

Interestingly enough, Barbara points out that a B-vitamin deficiency can be related to a high sugar intake because, even though sugar contains no nutrients, the body must use stored nutrients to metabolize the sugar into energy. Therefore, meals high in processed foods not only provide little if any nutrition, they compound deficiency-related problems by robbing the body of nutrients in order to convert these non-foods into forms useable by the body.

Other food-related problems covered in some depth in the book as they relate to behavior are: allergic reactions to food; alcohol consumption; the effects of toxic substances such as aluminum, lead, mercury, etc.; man-made chemical additives such as MSG and Nutrasweet; and milk, which is surprisingly high in sugar and causes allergic reactions in a large percentage of the population.

These problems are also related to crime and violence, often with real-life examples pulled from the author's probation files or related studies, with names changed, of course.

Overall, Food & Behavior is well worth taking the time to read. If there was any complaint at all with the book, it would be that the diet information is a little sparse. This is nothing too out of the ordinary, however, since the book was not designed to be a cookbook. And any minor complaints, such as Barbara advocating whole-wheat products, when many of these products are only slightly better than white-flour products health-wise, really are minor when you factor in the success she has had with keeping people out of trouble.

Barbara claims more than 80 percent of probationers who came to her after she started using a food-based treatment were able to go on to live full, productive lives; and analyzing a twelve year study, found that not a single individual who stayed with the program had been back in trouble. While there very well may be other issues involved with crime and violence, it is hard to ignore the results Barbara has had with her program.

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book about how what you eat affects your behavior, December 29, 1998
By A Customer
I found this book very enlightening. I read it after having a lot of problems with depression and anxiety. Barbara R. Stitt focuses on how food allergies, sugar (low and high) problems, etc. can affect our behavior. She used to work as a probation officer where she was able to help some of the people reform by changing their diet. She was amazed how personalities changed as allergic foods were deleted from their diet. Many times cutting out the sugar helped a lot also.

This is not only a book about behavior, but about how anyone can improve their nutritional intake and health.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars food and beavior, January 24, 2000
By eyal - newman (tel-aviv, israel) - See all my reviews
if you looking for a book dealing with criminology and natural orthomolecular approach, you are on the target. this book explaining with acuracy the causes and the solutions together with a lots of case histories that are represent at that book in a very readable and magnatise way. and that author is having real proofs for her highly, and trained-expirience.this is the book for controling, preventing, but most of all-curing the bad boys the natural way,instead of jail that sometimes not realy help.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Proven success against food allergies
Working within a failing juvenile criminal probation system, Barbara Stitt tells how her unconventional program saved lives, futures, and families. Read more
Published 12 months ago by B. Collins

5.0 out of 5 stars From the author of, Raising Our Children, Raising Ourselves; food causes behavior
Food and Behavior is a must read for all parents, educators, psychologists, the FDA and the food industry. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Naomi Aldort

5.0 out of 5 stars Food & Behavior
A really extraordinary book, must reading for our times for families who want their children to grow up normal.
Published on August 21, 2007 by healthysenior

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