THE CHINA STUDY, A FALSE BOOK
by
Lawrence Wilson, MD
©
Dec. 2009, The Center For Development.
The China Study (2006)
caused quite a stir, at least among those interested in vegetarian diets. This book is often cited by proponents
of vegetarian diets as being a definitive study and guide as to the superiority
of vegetarianism. However, upon
careful review of this book, it is no such thing. I would like to comment on the book in this spirit.
The benefits of vegetarian diets. The author of the China Study rightly points out some
advantages of vegetarian diets.
They tend to be higher in fiber and generally higher in fresh fruits and
vegetables. They also tend to be
higher in some vitamins, such as vitamin C and E.
Eating
less fat, junk food and even less meat is also beneficial for some people,
especially those with weak digestion, food allergies, iron toxicity and other
bowel problems. These are the main
benefits of vegetarian regimens, in my experience with thousands of American
and European clients.
PROBLEMS WITH VEGETARIAN
DIETS
The
author of the China Study does not
balance the positive information about vegetarian diets with most of the
disadvantages and serious problems that I find associated with them. Here are just a few:
High in copper.
This may not seem to be important, but it is critically important today
when most people are already extremely toxic with copper.
Low in zinc. This is also a very serious and almost
universal nutritional imbalance already, and vegetarian diets tend to make it
much worse. The main foods that
contain zinc are meats.
Too high in carbohydrates.
This applies especially to vegan diets that do not contain eggs or dairy
products. The remaining foods
available are mainly high in carbohydrates, such as grains and beans. Most people already eat too many of
these foods, so they become even more imbalanced and malnourished, even if the
quality of the food is excellent.
Low in protein.
This is not necessary, but often occurs with vegetarian and especially
vegan diets. There are simply many
fewer protein foods to choose from, so people tend to live on more pasta,
bread, grains, fruits, and other non-protein foods.
Poor quality proteins.
Most vegetarian proteins do not seem to nourish the body nearly as well
as does meat, eggs, and possibly raw dairy products. Most vegetarians, however, exist on more soy protein, nuts
and seeds, and some protein from grains.
This is not as good for oneÕs health and causes low phosphorus readings
on hair tests, telling us that these proteins do not rebuild the body as well.
Very low in the essential sulfur-bearing
amino acids such as taurine, cysteine, carnitine and methionine.
This is a very serious problem with vegetarian diets, perhaps one of the
worst. These amino acids are
essential for liver detoxification of the heavy metals and of all toxic
chemicals as well. No matter how
clean the diet, without them the body cannot remove toxins as well, and this
shortens the lifespan in all cases, in my experience.
Extremely low in vitamin D.
This is another critical problem today. Most vitamin D comes from fish oils, and perhaps a little
from organic, raw dairy products, though not enough for most people. The sun, meanwhile, is not providing
enough vitamin D, even if you sit in it all day long.
Extremely low in omega-3 fatty acids.
This is another critical deficiency, although this can be corrected by
adding at least two tablespoons of ground flax seed to the diet every day.
Often low in B-complex vitamins.
Many people obtain the bulk of their B-complex vitamins from meats,
which are rich sources, along with eggs.
This problem with vegetarian diets is quite harmful and makes them
particularly unsuitable for most people today, especially those of the white or
Caucasian race.
Orientals
such as the Chinese seem to need less B-complex and zinc, for which reason they
have been vegetarian-oriented people for thousands of years.
The
author of the China Study bases a lot
of his work on a study in China.
However, comparing the needs of Chinese peasants to those of Americans
is thus incorrect due to racial differences mentioned above. This is a serious flaw in the China Study, in my view.
A
much better book on this subject is by Weston Price, DDS, titled Nutrition And Physical Degeneration. He investigated not one race, but all
races on planet earth. He found
that meat-eating reduced far better health, especially inter-generationally,
something that Dr. Campbell did not investigate at all, but a most important
subject and a subtle one. In other
words, even if you feel better on a vegetarian regimen, how will your
grandchildren fare on this diet?
The answer was, not well at all.
Dr.
Price found that vegetarian diets lead to more birth defects, for example. This should not be surprising because
zinc, for example, is critical to prevent birth defects, and is very deficient
today in the Western world, in particular, in the soils and in the food supply.
Vegetarians make their bodies too yin. Yin and yang are qualities of matter,
including the human body. The
concept is of primary importance in Chinese medicine, and important as well in
nutritional balancing science because it is a true concept. Yin roughly means cold, more watery and
expanded. Yang roughly refers to
more heat, more contracted and more dry.
Most
bodies are very yin today, and require a more yang type of diet. The foods that are most yang are meat
and eggs, followed by the whole grains and cooked vegetables. This is a major reason why cooked
vegetables are emphasized in nutritional balancing science.
Raw
foods, raw vegetables, nuts, seeds, beans and especially fruits are move yin,
so they are much less desirable foods.
Yin imbalance is a serious problem today, discussed in a separate
article on this website entitled Yin Disease. Yin and yang are discussed in several
article on this website as well.
Very low in etheric energy. This is a much more subtle problem with
all vegetarian diets. It has to do
with a subtle form of energy that is found in some foods, but not others.
The
foods with the highest amounts of this type of energy are meats, eggs and whole
grains, in that order. The foods
with the least of this type of important energy are fruits, nuts, seeds and raw
vegetables.
Cooking
food actually increases its etheric energy. This is discussed in an article entitled Macrobiotics on this website.
The
etheric energy content of a food has a lot to do with yin and yang, above,
although it is more than this.
Unfortunately, vegetarian foods tend to be extremely low in this
energy. What occurs is that the
sodium/potassium ratio tends to invert as a result, as it causes a type of
electrical imbalance in the body.
It
is well-known that meat-eaters tend to have more vitality, in general, and
meat-eating populations tend to live longer, on average, for this reason, along
with the reasons given above.
FACTUAL ERRORS
The China Study is also riddled with factual errors. I will point out just a few of the more
glaring ones that must make one question the authorÕs competence level:
á
ÒÉsimple carbohydrates are found in foods like white breadÉ
crackers and chips made with white flourÓ (p. 98).
These are complex carbohydrates.
Simple carbohydrates are sugars.
á
ÒMost Americans consume voluminous
amounts of simple, refined carbohydrates and paltry amounts of complex
carbohydrates. For example, in
1996, 42% of Americans ate cakes, cookies, pastries or pies on any given day, while
only 10% ate dark green vegetables. (p.
98). First, cakes, cookies and
pies often contain plenty of complex carbohydrates such as wheat flour. Americans do not eat a paltry amount of
them. Most people eat far too many
complex carbohydrates. Secondly,
dark green vegetables such as kale, Swiss chard and spinach do not contain much
complex carbohydrates at all, if they contain any. The author is completely wrong on both counts.
á
ÒThere are virtually no nutrients in
animal-based foods that are not better provided by plantsÓ (p. 213). This is so obviously incorrect that I am surprised it is in
the book. I have mentioned above a
few of the many nutrients that are much easier to get from meats such as zinc,
some B-complex vitamins, some essential amino acids and others.
á
Vitamin D deficiency is caused by eating
dairy products and too much animal protein. (Appendix starting on p. 361). This is not
supported scientifically anywhere that I know of.
á
About vitamin D - ÒThis
ÒvitaminÓ is not a nutrient that we need to consume. Our body can make all that we need simply by being in
sunlight fifteen to thirty minutes every couple of days.(p. 179). This ignores all the newer research on
vitamin D that shows that sunlight is not sufficient, even if one spends a few
hours daily in the sunshine.
á
ÒNutrition that is truly beneficial for
one chronic disease will support health across the board (p. 237). This is not true. Very often, a food or other substance
that is helpful for one malady can cause imbalance or harm in other ways.
á
ÒThe recommendations coming from the
published literature are so simple that I can state them in one sentence: eat a
whole-food, plant-based diet, while minimizing the consumption of refined
foods, added salt and added fatsÓ
(p. 242). This is completely
incorrect, since there are literally millions of pages of scientific literature
that come to different conclusions.
If he were right, all doctors would recommend his diet and they
certainly do not because plenty of evidence supports the idea of a mixed diet
as best.
á
ÒVitamin supplements are not a panacea
for good healthÓ. (P.
228). If panacea means living on
pills, of course it is not a panacea.
But if it means that using supplements can help build health, he is
completely wrong.
á
ÒNutrition can substantially control the
adverse effects of noxious chemicalsÓ.
(p. 235) This is not correct. It
can help a little, but the statement is absolutely wrong. One must avoid all toxic exposures as
much as possible, and one must detoxify the body with supplements and other
methods such as saunas or one will not remove most toxic chemicals and toxic
metals. Food alone, in my
extensive experience, will not do it.
á
ÒGood nutrition creates health in all
areas of our existence.
All parts are interconnected.Ó (p. 238) I wish it were that
easy. Especially on a vegetarian
diet, it does not create health in any area that I have noticed with my clients
and many other doctors have found the same thing. One must also live a healthful lifestyle, detoxify the body,
and perhaps do other therapies such as chiropractic, body work and others to
reach more areas of life. The
author backtracks and states that exercise is also important, but does not want
to endorse all kinds of other holistic methods. So he is obviously confused, himself.
MISSING VITAL INFORMATION
Another
problem with The China Study is very
little discussion of making wise food choices, whether among vegetables or
meats. There is also little or no
discussion of toxic metals, detoxification, metabolic types, retracing,
pesticides, insecticides, drinking water as a health factor and other factors
that are major parts of todayÕs nutrition picture. Instead, the author just focuses on vegetarianism, and with
no balance at all.
For
these reasons, I found the China Study
a very disappointing and deceptive book from a scientific and clinical
perspective. I hope that readers
will look at the book critically, and not just be taken in by its excellent and
persuasive writing style.
CAN VEGETARIANS BENEFIT
FROM A NUTRITIONAL BALANCING PROGRAM?
If
you are vegetarian and want to remain a vegetarian after reading this article,
you can still benefit greatly from a nutritional balancing program. In fact, vegetarians can do very well
on nutritional balancing programs.
The
program must be modified because several supplements contain animal quality
products such as the glandular products.
These are excellent, but can be eliminated. The food choices are limited, but this can be accommodated
as well. So there is no problem in
following a nutritional balancing program as a vegetarian, and we work with
many very successfully.
For
a much more complete article on vegetarianism, read Vegetarianism on this website.
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