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When Unhealthy Foods Hijack Overeaters' Brains

When Unhealthy Foods Hijack Overeaters' Brains

Former FDA Commissioner David Kessler holds up a piece of carrot cake at a bakery. Kessler has a new book out on addiction-like overeating. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

LAURAN NEERGAARD, AP Medical Writer

April 22, 2009

WASHINGTON – Food hijacked Dr. David Kessler’s brain. Not apples or carrots. The scientist who once led the government’s attack on addictive cigarettes can’t wander through part of San Francisco without craving a local shop’s chocolate-covered pretzels. Stop at one cookie? Rarely.

It’s not an addiction but it’s similar, and he’s far from alone. Kessler’s research suggests millions share what he calls “conditioned hypereating” — a willpower-sapping drive to eat high-fat, high-sugar foods even when they’re not hungry.

In a book being published next week, the former Food and Drug Administration chief brings to consumers the disturbing conclusion of numerous brain studies: Some people really do have a harder time resisting bad foods. It’s a new way of looking at the obesity epidemic that could help spur fledgling movements to reveal calories on restaurant menus or rein in portion sizes.

“The food industry has figured out what works. They know what drives people to keep on eating,” Kessler tells The Associated Press. “It’s the next great public health campaign, of changing how we view food, and the food industry has to be part of it.”

He calls the culprits foods “layered and loaded” with combinations of fat, sugar and salt — and often so processed that you don’t even have to chew much.

Overeaters must take responsibility, too, and basically retrain their brains to resist the lure, he cautions.

“I have suits in every size,” Kessler writes in “The End of Overeating.” But, “once you know what’s driving your behavior, you can put steps into place” to change it.


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    suriitano

    7 months ago

    4 comments

    I just came from the grocery today . While there, I was drooling over a 99cent super cheesy bag of cheetos. It took a moment to convince myself not to buy it. What made my arms stop from reaching out at the bag of junk was the thought of having to live with the cholesterol, fat, glycation, and other bad things that may result from eating this crap over and over again. If I don't stop it now, I will never stop later. Well, I hope I can do it over and over again, and I hope by "conditioned hypereating" brain will change.

    Thanks for this article!


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