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MEDIA RELEASE -- Sunday
22 April 2007
Less Seafood = More Mental
Health, Heart Problems
International nutrition expert
says: Eat more seafood
ONE of the worlds
most highly respected experts in human nutrition has linked
a drop in seafood consumption with increases in mental health
problems and heart disease.
Professor Michael Crawford has told a UK conference
there is a direct link between the decrease of seafood in
the diet in Scotland and the rise in mental ill health and
heart disease.
Addressing delegates at Aquaculture Today
2007 in Edinburgh last week, Dr Crawford said marine
fats played a key role in brain development in evolutionary
terms.
The brain still depends on the same marine
nutrients today for growth and development, Dr Crawford
said. The marine food chain is by far the richest source
of these nutrients.
Referring to the fact that, during the 1800s,
large sectors of the Scottish population ate a diet rich in
herring or salmon, he said: My interpretation of the
demise of herring is that, having lost this tradition, I would
certainly say from the evidence we have today that this has
been a major factor in the rise in mental ill health.
Scotland is now also one of the worst
countries for cardio-vascular disease.
Dr Crawford said he also supported international
research findings that contradict advice from the UK Food
Standards Agency and the US Food & Drug Administration
that pregnant women should eat seafood no more than twice
a week.
His said this advice was counter-productive
rather than beneficial.
Dr Crawford agreed with the findings in reports
published by the international medical journal, The Lancet*,
where researchers said that higher maternal fish consumption
during pregnancy benefits a child's neurological development.
Summarising their results, the researchers
said: Maternal seafood consumption of less than 340
grams per week in pregnancy did not protect children from
adverse outcomes. Rather, we recorded beneficial effects on
child development with maternal seafood intakes of more than
340 grams per week, suggesting that advice to limit seafood
consumption could actually be detrimental. These results show
that risks from the loss of nutrients were greater than risks
of harm from exposure to trace contaminants in 340 grams of
seafood eaten weekly.
Statement welcomed
In Australia, Dr Crawfords statement has been welcomed
and endorsed by Seafood Services Australia (SSA) Managing
Director Mr Ted Loveday.
Mr Loveday said SSA, a national industry-government
body working to highlight the health benefits of seafood,
welcomed this further confirmation of the important role of
seafood in reducing the risk of illness, including mental
illness.
Community-wide consumption of seafood,
particularly oily fish, three or more times a week would prevent
thousands of premature deaths and save hundreds of millions
of dollars in health costs every year, Mr Loveday said.
For example, in adults, the risk of serious illness
involving heart attack, stroke, diabetes and bowel cancer,
as well as depression and other mood disorders, can be reduced
by seafood, and it also plays a very positive role in the
health of infants.
Australias National Health &
Medical Research Council (NHMRC) has already recommended replacing
high-calorie, low-nutrient food and drink with foods rich
in fats called long-chain Omega-3s, mainly fish such as tuna,
salmon, mackerel and mullet.
Although they do not say how many times
a week seafood should be eaten to achieve the recommended
Omega-3 levels, it has been suggested by Australian researchers
previously that four to five meals a week should be based
on seafood, and a recommendation from the prestigious American
Academy for the Advancement of Science was for four to seven
seafood meals every week.
Mr Loveday said seafood was by far the most
abundant source of long-chain Omega-3 oils, with 100 grams
of the average fish containing 210mg, oysters 150mg, prawns
120mg and lobster 105mg compared with just 22mg (twenty-two)
in beef, 19mg in chicken, 18mg in lamb and virtually none
in pork.
Seafood is also the prime source of iodine,
an essential element actually deficient in the average diet
in some parts of Australia, the most abundant source of selenium,
another essential element, and a rich source of the essential
vitamins D and E plus, in fish like canned tuna and salmon
with bones, a source of quality calcium, he said.
Beyond that, seafood is a terrific source
of prime lean protein, very low in bad fat like
saturated fat but high in the Omega-3 good oils,
and with a high protein-to-calorie ratio, important for everyone
wanting quality protein but conscious of low-fat, low-calorie
eating.
Mr Loveday added that SSA had established a
website where further information about the health benefits
of seafood was available: http://www.seafood.net.au/health/
FURTHER INFORMATION: Mr Ted Loveday, 0427 323
663
Note: Posts held by Professor Michael Crawford include: Director,
Institute of Brain Chemistry & Human Nutrition, Faculty
of Science, Computing & Engineering, University of North
London; The Millennium Danone Chair at the University of Ghent;
Honorary Professor of the Albert Schweitzer University; and
Consultant to the World Health Organisation.
* The Lancet, 17 February, 2007: Hibbeln, JR,
et al "Maternal seafood consumption in pregnancy and
neurodevelopmental outcome in childhood (ALSPAC study): an
observational cohort study" Lancet 2007; 369: 578-585;
and Myers, GJ, Davidson PW "Maternal fish consumption
benefits children's development" Lancet 2007; 369: 537-539.
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