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Fast Foods Linked to Asthma, Eczema in Children: Study

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A new study confims the link between bad health and consuming fast foods.

Makiko Kitamura  of Bloomberg reports.

“Eating fast food three or more times a week is linked to a higher risk of severe asthma and eczema in children, researchers found.

Teens who ate three or more weekly servings had a 39 percent increased chance of developing severe asthma, while younger children had a 27 percent higher risk, according to a study of 319,000 teens in 51 countries and 181,000 children ages 6 and 7 in 31 countries. The research, led by scientists at the University of Auckland in New Zealand, was published today in the British medical journal Thorax.

The study didn’t prove that eating more fast food caused the increase in the conditions, which both can be linked to the overreaction of the body’s immune system. Because fast food was the only dietary category shown to have an association with the disorders, the results suggest that such a diet may cause asthma attacks or eczema outbreaks, the authors said. Conversely, eating three or more servings of fruit a week showed reduced risk in developing those conditions, they said.

“What’s clear from this study as that fruits and vegetables turned up as protective factors and fast foods turned up as risk factors,” Gabriele Nagel, a senior researcher at the Institute of Epidemiology and Medical Biometry at Ulm University in Germany, said in a telephone interview. “Our study provides evidence toward giving dietary recommendations in order to prevent asthma and allergies in childhood.”

Trans Fats

The study authors included scientists in New Zealand, Australia, Spain, Germany and the U.K. A smaller previous study came to similar conclusions, said Nagel, one of the authors.
Fast foods contain high levels of trans fatty acids, which are known to affect immune reactions, they said.
The data came from developed countries including Canada as well as developing countriessuch as Nigeria and Brazil.
AstraZeneca Plc (AZN)GlaxoSmithKline Plc (GSK), the BUPA Foundation, the Asthma and Respiratory Foundation of New Zealand, the Auckland Medical Research Foundation and other New Zealand charities contributed funding for the research.
An almost fourfold increase in childhood obesity in the past three decades, twice the asthma rates since the 1980s, and a jump in the number of attention-deficit disorder cases are driving the growth of chronic illnesses, according to a 2007 study by researchers at Harvard University. An association between asthma and obesity supports the theory that sedentary behavior diminishes lung function, they said.”
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