Cookies help us run our site more efficiently.

By clicking “Accept”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyze site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts. View our Privacy Policy for more information or to customize your cookie preferences.

DNA test says it can predict opioid addiction risk. Skeptics aren’t so sure.

News Feed
Monday, March 25, 2024

Using a swab inside the cheek and a sophisticated computer algorithm, a DNA test recently approved by federal regulators promises to assess genetic risk of opioid addiction. The test’s maker says results give doctors and patients a crucial tool when considering use of the very pain pills that ignited the nation’s opioid crisis.But as the company, SOLVD Health, prepares to roll out AvertD in coming months, skeptics remain unconvinced. They worry that patients shown to have a low risk of addiction may feel emboldened to pop pain pills — then get hooked. Or that doctors will deny painkillers to patients errantly deemed at elevated risk.Above all, some geneticists and public health experts say AvertD relies on unsound science. The Food and Drug Administration approved the AvertD cheek-swab test in December, despite an agency committee of experts voting overwhelmingly, 11-2, against recommending approval.Andrew Kolodny, an opioid researcher at Brandeis University, blasted the test as a “sham.”“You’ve got an alignment: profiteering by industry and federal agencies that feel they’re under the gun to do something about the problem, even if that something is counterproductive,” said Kolodny, president of Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing, which aims to educate prescribers and patients.The FDA says it approved the test because the severity of the opioid crisis “calls for innovative measures” to prevent addiction and save lives. The agency said it worked with SOLVD Health to address concerns raised by the advisory committee.The company and the FDA stress that AvertD does not predict whether a person will develop opioid use disorder. They say doctors should use the test — which is available by prescription — only as part of an in-depth evaluation of adults who may experience pain or will undergo surgery and have no history of using opioids, not those already grappling with addiction. Patients identified by AvertD as having an elevated risk are 18 times more likely to develop an addiction after taking an opioid compared with people who take the test and are shown not to have an elevated risk, according to research cited by the company.“We are extremely focused on informing and empowering a patient to understand their risk prior to taking that medication,” said Keri Donaldson, CEO of SOLVD Health, based in Carlsbad, Calif.To use the test, a doctor swabs the inside of a patient’s cheek, then sends the sample overnight to the company. Its lab analyzes DNA for 15 genetic markers it says are associated with opioid use disorders. The data is run through an algorithm trained on genetic data from more than 7,000 people, some of whom were diagnosed with opioid use disorder. The computer generates a score of between zero and one. Someone who scores 0.33 or higher is considered at elevated genetic risk of getting hooked on an opioid medication.“We felt that was important information that providers and patients should have access to,” William Maisel, director of the office of product evaluation and quality at the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, said in an interview.“You could argue that it’s unethical to withhold that type of product and that type of information from people. … We recognize the potential shortcomings of the test. But there are also great benefits,” Maisel said.The FDA has long been criticized for approving certain drugs despite concerns about their safety or effectiveness. The agency has also come under scrutiny for not doing enough to regulate increasingly popular lab tests.AvertD was developed by SOLVD subsidiary AutoGenomics. The company has yet to set prices for the test, which could be covered by Medicare and Medicaid.The FDA advisory committee that reviewed AvertD was composed of independent experts who raised questions about the validity of the test during an Oct. 20, 2022, meeting. While their vote was not binding, committee members cited worries about algorithm bias, uncertainty about how much of a role the genetic variations play in addiction and the design of the clinical trial.The committee and speakers such as Kolodny and patient representative Elizabeth Joniak-Grant were troubled by how AvertD might be used in the real world — and how results will be understood by consumers.Patient advocates wonder if time-strapped doctors, despite FDA-mandated labeling, will lean too heavily on results instead of asking probing questions of patients. Will doctors prescribe the test off-label? Could a test indicating a risk for addiction be memorialized in medical records and used against a patient years later — in a custody dispute in court, or by an employer? Will someone with an elevated test come to believe they are prone to addictions of all sorts?Joniak-Grant, a North Carolina sociologist, worries about all of those questions — and whether pain patients might be treated unfairly if they decline to use AvertD. “Refusing the test could be interpreted by clinicians as a patient being drug-seeking,” she said.FDA officials approved the test with conditions. The agency added a “black-box” label warning patients about the test’s limitations. Such warnings are rare for products newly approved by the FDA, said Michael Abrams, a senior researcher at Public Citizen, a nonprofit consumer advocacy group.“Somehow, they justified approval based on putting on these warnings,” Abrams said. He said he fears that despite the warnings, the test could provide “very high cover for irresponsible opioid prescribing.”In response to concerns raised by the advisory committee, the company also changed the wording of test results — patients now have an elevated, not “high,” risk of developing an opioid use disorder. Patients and doctors will need to undergo education programs such as videos, online classes or reading materials. The FDA is requiring the company to study how patients and doctors use the test. Donaldson, the company’s CEO, said SOLVD is committed to educating clinicians and patients about how the test results should be viewed responsibly.“This type of information should be empowering, not fear inducing, and it should not be misinterpreted,” Donaldson said.Products such as AvertD reflect hope that cutting-edge science can ease a drug epidemic killing more than 100,000 people in the United States each year, mostly from opioids. The crisis was kick-started by the proliferation of legal — and highly addictive — prescription pain pills in the late 1990s. Regulators and law enforcement cracked down on unscrupulous prescribers. Doctors began writing fewer prescriptions. Users switched to cheaper street heroin, now largely replaced by dangerous illicit fentanyl. Opioid use disorder affects at least 6 million Americans.Genetic testing is playing an increasing role in identifying health risks. Tests for general wellness and low-risk medical purposes do not require FDA approval. In 2017, the FDA authorized 23andMe to market the first agency-approved direct-to-consumer genetics test that examines predisposition to diseases such as Parkinson’s and blood clotting disorders; the agency has approved several others since.AvertD is the first FDA-authorized polygenic risk test. Such genetic tests analyze small variations in an array of genes to predict risk for chronic diseases or other traits. While insignificant on their own, these genetic variations combined may influence susceptibility to certain diseases.Such testing isn’t supposed to be a definitive prediction of heart disease, diabetes or hypertension. Rather, the tests provide a risk score that can guide patients into changing their lifestyles, implementing preventive care and testing for diseases earlier. In most cases, genetics alone doesn’t determine likelihood of illness. Environmental and social factors such as poverty, clean air and access to healthy food play a significant role.Well-known companies such as Ancestry and 23andMe offer direct-to-consumer reports that rely on polygenic risk scores and predict the probability of inheriting or passing down a certain disease, developing insomnia or even having an aversion to cilantro.AvertD is intended for use in a medical setting, but critics fear that the imprimatur of the doctor’s office may lead patients and clinicians to assign too much weight to test results.They note that substance use disorders are complex to ascertain through such testing because tiny genetic variations — say, ones affecting the reward center in the brain — may overlap with ones affecting other behavioral health disorders. Several researchers said they are concerned that AvertD’s analysis of 15 genetic mutations and the sample size of 7,000 people used to develop the test aren’t large enough to deliver meaningful information about risk for addiction to opioids.“There should be hundreds or thousands of genetic variants going in that risk score, not 15,” said Danielle M. Dick, director of the Rutgers Addiction Research Center, who is part of a team developing a genetics test that would examine the broader risk of addiction by analyzing genetic data from more than 1.5 million people compiled by researchers during many years.White people of European ancestry are overrepresented in most genetic data. Even algorithms using smaller, more diverse data sets primed to predict for opioid use disorders may be confounded by ancestry, potentially skewing results for African Americans and people of mixed heritage from different parts of the world, researchers say.In a 2021 study, algorithms attempting to predict opioid addiction using 16 genetic markers performed “no better than a coin flip” after correcting for geographic ancestry, said lead author Alexander S. Hatoum, a researcher at Washington University in St. Louis. Hatoum said genetic testing remains less effective than a clinician asking simple questions about family history of drug use.“It’s just an underdeveloped technology at this point,” Hatoum said.Donaldson, of SOLVD Health, said about 30 percent of the people whose information shapes the algorithm identified as Black or African American, and that most volunteers hailed from the United States. He said the data was “purposely very diverse” and pointed to a clinical trial he asserts backs up the test’s validity.Initially, AvertD won’t be available nationwide. Instead, the company will partner with institutions in five to 10 locations.The test has drawn attention from families touched by the opioid crisis.Ken Daniels, a play-by-play announcer for the Detroit Red Wings, lent his support to the test at the advisory committee meeting. His 23-year-old son, Jamie Daniels, died of an overdose in 2016 after a long struggle with addiction that started with prescription pills. In an interview, Ken Daniels said his son might have avoided taking that medication had he been able to access a test such as AvertD.“If there is anything out there than can be done to give people more knowledge, I’m all for it,” said Daniels, who started an advocacy foundation in his son’s name.

The Food and Drug Administration approved the test despite an agency committee of experts voting overwhelmingly against recommending approval.

Using a swab inside the cheek and a sophisticated computer algorithm, a DNA test recently approved by federal regulators promises to assess genetic risk of opioid addiction. The test’s maker says results give doctors and patients a crucial tool when considering use of the very pain pills that ignited the nation’s opioid crisis.

But as the company, SOLVD Health, prepares to roll out AvertD in coming months, skeptics remain unconvinced. They worry that patients shown to have a low risk of addiction may feel emboldened to pop pain pills — then get hooked. Or that doctors will deny painkillers to patients errantly deemed at elevated risk.

Above all, some geneticists and public health experts say AvertD relies on unsound science. The Food and Drug Administration approved the AvertD cheek-swab test in December, despite an agency committee of experts voting overwhelmingly, 11-2, against recommending approval.

Andrew Kolodny, an opioid researcher at Brandeis University, blasted the test as a “sham.”

“You’ve got an alignment: profiteering by industry and federal agencies that feel they’re under the gun to do something about the problem, even if that something is counterproductive,” said Kolodny, president of Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing, which aims to educate prescribers and patients.

The FDA says it approved the test because the severity of the opioid crisis “calls for innovative measures” to prevent addiction and save lives. The agency said it worked with SOLVD Health to address concerns raised by the advisory committee.

The company and the FDA stress that AvertD does not predict whether a person will develop opioid use disorder. They say doctors should use the test — which is available by prescription only as part of an in-depth evaluation of adults who may experience pain or will undergo surgery and have no history of using opioids, not those already grappling with addiction. Patients identified by AvertD as having an elevated risk are 18 times more likely to develop an addiction after taking an opioid compared with people who take the test and are shown not to have an elevated risk, according to research cited by the company.

“We are extremely focused on informing and empowering a patient to understand their risk prior to taking that medication,” said Keri Donaldson, CEO of SOLVD Health, based in Carlsbad, Calif.

To use the test, a doctor swabs the inside of a patient’s cheek, then sends the sample overnight to the company. Its lab analyzes DNA for 15 genetic markers it says are associated with opioid use disorders. The data is run through an algorithm trained on genetic data from more than 7,000 people, some of whom were diagnosed with opioid use disorder. The computer generates a score of between zero and one. Someone who scores 0.33 or higher is considered at elevated genetic risk of getting hooked on an opioid medication.

“We felt that was important information that providers and patients should have access to,” William Maisel, director of the office of product evaluation and quality at the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, said in an interview.

“You could argue that it’s unethical to withhold that type of product and that type of information from people. … We recognize the potential shortcomings of the test. But there are also great benefits,” Maisel said.

The FDA has long been criticized for approving certain drugs despite concerns about their safety or effectiveness. The agency has also come under scrutiny for not doing enough to regulate increasingly popular lab tests.

AvertD was developed by SOLVD subsidiary AutoGenomics. The company has yet to set prices for the test, which could be covered by Medicare and Medicaid.

The FDA advisory committee that reviewed AvertD was composed of independent experts who raised questions about the validity of the test during an Oct. 20, 2022, meeting. While their vote was not binding, committee members cited worries about algorithm bias, uncertainty about how much of a role the genetic variations play in addiction and the design of the clinical trial.

The committee and speakers such as Kolodny and patient representative Elizabeth Joniak-Grant were troubled by how AvertD might be used in the real world — and how results will be understood by consumers.

Patient advocates wonder if time-strapped doctors, despite FDA-mandated labeling, will lean too heavily on results instead of asking probing questions of patients. Will doctors prescribe the test off-label? Could a test indicating a risk for addiction be memorialized in medical records and used against a patient years later — in a custody dispute in court, or by an employer? Will someone with an elevated test come to believe they are prone to addictions of all sorts?

Joniak-Grant, a North Carolina sociologist, worries about all of those questions — and whether pain patients might be treated unfairly if they decline to use AvertD. “Refusing the test could be interpreted by clinicians as a patient being drug-seeking,” she said.

FDA officials approved the test with conditions. The agency added a “black-box” label warning patients about the test’s limitations. Such warnings are rare for products newly approved by the FDA, said Michael Abrams, a senior researcher at Public Citizen, a nonprofit consumer advocacy group.

“Somehow, they justified approval based on putting on these warnings,” Abrams said. He said he fears that despite the warnings, the test could provide “very high cover for irresponsible opioid prescribing.”

In response to concerns raised by the advisory committee, the company also changed the wording of test results — patients now have an elevated, not “high,” risk of developing an opioid use disorder. Patients and doctors will need to undergo education programs such as videos, online classes or reading materials. The FDA is requiring the company to study how patients and doctors use the test. Donaldson, the company’s CEO, said SOLVD is committed to educating clinicians and patients about how the test results should be viewed responsibly.

“This type of information should be empowering, not fear inducing, and it should not be misinterpreted,” Donaldson said.

Products such as AvertD reflect hope that cutting-edge science can ease a drug epidemic killing more than 100,000 people in the United States each year, mostly from opioids. The crisis was kick-started by the proliferation of legal — and highly addictive — prescription pain pills in the late 1990s. Regulators and law enforcement cracked down on unscrupulous prescribers. Doctors began writing fewer prescriptions. Users switched to cheaper street heroin, now largely replaced by dangerous illicit fentanyl. Opioid use disorder affects at least 6 million Americans.

Genetic testing is playing an increasing role in identifying health risks. Tests for general wellness and low-risk medical purposes do not require FDA approval. In 2017, the FDA authorized 23andMe to market the first agency-approved direct-to-consumer genetics test that examines predisposition to diseases such as Parkinson’s and blood clotting disorders; the agency has approved several others since.

AvertD is the first FDA-authorized polygenic risk test. Such genetic tests analyze small variations in an array of genes to predict risk for chronic diseases or other traits. While insignificant on their own, these genetic variations combined may influence susceptibility to certain diseases.

Such testing isn’t supposed to be a definitive prediction of heart disease, diabetes or hypertension. Rather, the tests provide a risk score that can guide patients into changing their lifestyles, implementing preventive care and testing for diseases earlier. In most cases, genetics alone doesn’t determine likelihood of illness. Environmental and social factors such as poverty, clean air and access to healthy food play a significant role.

Well-known companies such as Ancestry and 23andMe offer direct-to-consumer reports that rely on polygenic risk scores and predict the probability of inheriting or passing down a certain disease, developing insomnia or even having an aversion to cilantro.

AvertD is intended for use in a medical setting, but critics fear that the imprimatur of the doctor’s office may lead patients and clinicians to assign too much weight to test results.

They note that substance use disorders are complex to ascertain through such testing because tiny genetic variations — say, ones affecting the reward center in the brain — may overlap with ones affecting other behavioral health disorders. Several researchers said they are concerned that AvertD’s analysis of 15 genetic mutations and the sample size of 7,000 people used to develop the test aren’t large enough to deliver meaningful information about risk for addiction to opioids.

“There should be hundreds or thousands of genetic variants going in that risk score, not 15,” said Danielle M. Dick, director of the Rutgers Addiction Research Center, who is part of a team developing a genetics test that would examine the broader risk of addiction by analyzing genetic data from more than 1.5 million people compiled by researchers during many years.

White people of European ancestry are overrepresented in most genetic data. Even algorithms using smaller, more diverse data sets primed to predict for opioid use disorders may be confounded by ancestry, potentially skewing results for African Americans and people of mixed heritage from different parts of the world, researchers say.

In a 2021 study, algorithms attempting to predict opioid addiction using 16 genetic markers performed “no better than a coin flip” after correcting for geographic ancestry, said lead author Alexander S. Hatoum, a researcher at Washington University in St. Louis. Hatoum said genetic testing remains less effective than a clinician asking simple questions about family history of drug use.

“It’s just an underdeveloped technology at this point,” Hatoum said.

Donaldson, of SOLVD Health, said about 30 percent of the people whose information shapes the algorithm identified as Black or African American, and that most volunteers hailed from the United States. He said the data was “purposely very diverse” and pointed to a clinical trial he asserts backs up the test’s validity.

Initially, AvertD won’t be available nationwide. Instead, the company will partner with institutions in five to 10 locations.

The test has drawn attention from families touched by the opioid crisis.

Ken Daniels, a play-by-play announcer for the Detroit Red Wings, lent his support to the test at the advisory committee meeting. His 23-year-old son, Jamie Daniels, died of an overdose in 2016 after a long struggle with addiction that started with prescription pills. In an interview, Ken Daniels said his son might have avoided taking that medication had he been able to access a test such as AvertD.

“If there is anything out there than can be done to give people more knowledge, I’m all for it,” said Daniels, who started an advocacy foundation in his son’s name.

Read the full story here.
Photos courtesy of

Americans will throw out 316 million pounds of food on Thanksgiving. Here's how it fuels climate change

The United Nation estimates that up to 10% of all human-produced greenhouse gases are generated by food loss and waste. That's nearly five times the emissions from the aviation industry.

Mexico City —  Each day, an army of trucks delivers tens of thousands of pounds of fresh fruit and vegetables to Mexico City’s Central de Abasto, one of the world’s largest wholesale food markets. Most of the produce finds its way to people’s kitchens, and eventually their stomachs. But around 420 tons goes bad each day before it can be sold. It ends up, like so much food around the world, in a landfill.Globally, a staggering one third of all food that is produced is never eaten. That waste — more than 1 billion tons annually — fuels climate change. As organic matter decomposes, it releases methane, a greenhouse gas that is much more potent than carbon dioxide when it comes to warming the planet.The United Nation estimates that up to 10% of all human-produced greenhouse gases are generated by food loss and waste. That’s nearly five times the emissions from the aviation industry. For many years, scientists and policy makers have been largely focused on addressing other drivers of climate change, especially the burning of fossil fuels, which is by far the largest contributor to global emissions. But food waste has recently been drawing more international attention.The issue was on the agenda at this month’s United Nations climate summit in Azerbaijan, where for the first time, leaders signed a declaration calling for countries to set concrete targets to reduce methane emissions caused by organic waste. Discarded produce is piled in a dumpster at Mexico City’s Central de Abasto, a giant wholesale market. (Kate Linthicum / Los Angeles Times) Only a handful of the 196 countries that have signed the Paris Agreement on climate change have incorporated food waste commitments into their national climate plans, according to the UK-based nonprofit Waste & Resources Action Program.Many more nations are like Mexico, which is just beginning to assess how it can reduce the 20 million tons of food wasted annually here.A recent report by the World Bank identified several waste hotspots in the country, including the Central de Abasato, which stretches across 800 acres on the south side of the capital. In the dense warren of stalls, the best-looking produce is displayed prominently: ripe bananas, glistening limes and orderly rows of broccoli and asparagus. In the back are fruits and veggies that no longer look perfect: mushy papayas, wilting spinach and bruised tomatoes. A few years ago, market organizers launched an initiative to collect the produce that looks too old to sell but is still perfectly usable. They donate it to food banks and soup kitchens. Organizers say they’ve reduced the amount of food that is thrown out by about a quarter since 2020 — and have provided meals to tens of thousands of hungry people. “It’s much better to donate,” said Fernando Bringas Torres, who has sold bananas at the market for more than four decades. “This food still has value.” Environmental activists say reducing food waste is one of the most attainable climate solutions, in part because its not politicized. Asking companies and consumers to cut back on the food they send to landfills is far less charged than urging a reduction in meat consumption, energy use or the number of gas-fueled cars on the road. “People on the left and the right both have a gut reaction to it because it is a waste of resources,” said Christian Reynolds, a researcher at the Center for Food Policy at City University in London. Reducing waste “is not a silver bullet” to stop global warming, Reynolds said. “But it’s up there with the things you’ve got to solve, and it’s a useful way to open doors around climate change.”Scientists say cutting back on waste is valuable because methane traps heat at a much higher rate than carbon dioxide. An average of 420 tons of produce goes bad each day before it can be sold from Mexico City’s Central de Abasto. (Kate Linthicum / Los Angeles Times) Methane emissions are to blame for about 30% of the recent rise in global temperatures. U.N. climate leaders say slashing them is a vital “emergency brake” that will help curb the extreme weather already seen across the world today. About 20% of methane emissions come from food loss and waste, an umbrella term that describes all food that is produced but not eaten. It includes crops destroyed by pests or extreme weather, produce or meat that spoils in transport because of faulty packaging and food that goes bad at market before it can be sold. It also includes all food purchased by individuals or served at restaurants that ends up in the trash. A vendor holds peppers at the Central de Abasto market. (Kate Linthicum / Los Angeles Times) The data on food waste are stunning: It takes an area the size of China to grow the food that is thrown away each year.Globally, around 13% of food produced is lost between harvest and market, while another 19% is thrown out by households, restaurants or stores.Food waste takes up about half the space in the world’s landfills.An estimated 316 million pounds of food will be wasted in the United States on Thanksgiving alone, according to the Chicago-based nonprofit ReFED. That’s the equivalent to half a billion dollars worth of groceries thrown away in a single day.Experts say some food waste in inevitable. Humans need food to survive and it degrades quickly. Modern food systems are built around the transport of products across long distances, increasing the likelihood that some things will spoil. But they say there are relatively pain-free ways to reduce waste at all stages — from producer to consumer. The simplest thing is to reduce the amount of extra food being produced in the first place. Many vendors at Mexico City’s Central de Abasto donate their produce to food banks. (Kate Linthicum / Los Angeles Times) But other solutions include fixing inefficient machinery that makes it hard to harvest all of a crop, bettering poor roads that prevent food from making it from farm to table and improving packaging, so food stays good for longer.At the end of the chain, restaurant workers can be better trained to prepare food in a way that avoids waste. Retailers can be encouraged to avoid over-buying and to stop the practice of stocking only perfect-looking produce and discarding the rest. And consumers can be encouraged to eat all of what they buy and lower the temperatures on their refrigerators to delay food from going bad. There has also been a major push to get retailers to change how they label foods, given that many consumers throw out products if they are past their sell-by date. “We should be making sure that our food safety policies are not getting in the way of our climate goals,” Reynolds said. California Gov. Gavin Newsom recently signed a bill, AB 660, that would bar food-sellers from using the term “sell by” on packages, requiring them to switch to “use by” or “best if used by.” Advocates say it would dissuade Californians from throwing away food that is still good. Each day, an army of trucks delivers fresh fruit and vegetables to Mexico City’s Central de Abasto, one of the largest wholesale food markets in the world. (Kate Linthicum / Los Angeles Times) Other efforts are focused on recovery and redistribution — getting food that is about to spoil into the hands of hungry people. Each year 783 million people around the world go hungry, with a third of the global population facing food insecurity.World leaders “are starting to make the connection between the the climate impact and social impact,” said Ana Catalina Suárez Peña, an advocate with the Global FoodBanking Network, which works with food banks in more than 50 countries. Her organization recently developed a calculator for food banks and businesses that allows them to measure the volume of methane avoided by curbing food waste. The group found that six community-led food banks in Mexico and Ecuador prevented a total of 816 metric tons of methane over a year by redistributing food that would otherwise have gone to landfill. That is the equivalent of keeping 5,436 cars off the road for a year. Tools to measure food waste — and the savings generated from avoiding it — are an important part of tackling the problem, said Oliver Camp, a food systems adviser at the COP summit.Though he was heartened by the summit declaration calling on countries to set targets for avoiding food waste in their climate plans, he said there was still much progress to be made. Countries need to implement a “comprehensive, costed national strategy based on data as to where food loss and waste is occurring, and evidence-based interventions to avoid it,” he said. The World Bank analysis of Mexico found that most of the country’s emissions come from the energy and transportation sectors, but that the food wasted here is the fifth biggest contributor. “There is an overproduction by farmers,” said Adriana Martínez, 48, who runs a stall at the Central de Abastos that she inherited from her late father. She said customers “only want food that looks perfect.” Each week, about 30% of her product begins to go bad. In the past, she would have sent it to the overflowing dumpsters that sit behind the market. But now she calls up a market organizer who connects her with a local food bank. Martínez said her father, who grew up poor, would be happy knowing that food from the stand is helping other people instead of decomposing in a dump. “He knew hunger,” she said. “And he hated waste.” Mexico City’s Central de Abasto is filled with rows after row of fruits and vegetables imported from 20 countries. (Kate Linthicum / Los Angeles Times)

Meds Like Ozempic Are Causing Folks to Waste More Food

By Ernie Mundell HealthDay ReporterFRIDAY, Nov. 22, 2024 (HealthDay News) -- America's kitchen trash bins are receiving more unwanted food as...

By Ernie Mundell HealthDay ReporterFRIDAY, Nov. 22, 2024 (HealthDay News) -- America's kitchen trash bins are receiving more unwanted food as appetites falter among people taking GLP-1 weight-loss meds, a new study shows.GLP-1s like Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro and Zepbound all work by making food less desirable, and it's showing up in more food wasted at dinner tables, said a team led by Brian Roe, of Ohio State University.The study surveyed 505 new GLP-1 users. It found 25% agreeing that they had wasted more food since taking the drugs, compared to 61% who disagreed. There was some good news, however: Food wastage appears to decline as people adjust to their GLP-1 medication.“The fact that food waste appears to decrease as patients acclimate to the medication suggests there may be a fairly simple remedy -- advising patients new to these medications about the possibility of discarding food as their diets change, which could reduce food waste and lower their spending," said Roe, a professor in the department of agricultural, environmental and development economics.According to the researchers, 6% of all U.S. adults were taking a GLP-1 medications as of spring of 2024. The medicines act on a hormone in the small intestine to help lower blood sugar, slow stomach emptying and signal fullness in the brain.In this study, almost 70% of respondents were taking semaglutide (Ozempic, Rybelsus, Wegovy) and nearly a quarter were taking tirzepatide (Mounjaro, Zepbound).Many were relatively new to the drugs: Only a quarter had been using them for more than a year.Everyone was asked to agree or disagree with the statement, "Since beginning this medication, I have found I waste more of the food that I purchase."About a quarter agreed that they were wasting more food, and that rate rose to 30% among people who'd only been taking the medication for 90 days or less.Nausea was a leading cause of folks tossing out food, the study found. However, it also appeared that certain food types were looked on less favorably once people commenced GLP-1 therapy.According to the research, people tended to shy away from alcohol, pasta and other carbohydrates, fried foods, sweets and dairy once they began taking a GLP-1, added more produce, protein, fish and healthy fats to their diets instead.Once vegetable consumption began to rise, food wastage started to fall, the study found. According to the researchers, veggies have long been the most commonly wasted food group in the United States.People who'd been taking a GLP-1 for at least one year lost an average 20% of their starting body weight, the study found.The new study was published recently in the journal Nutrients.Will changing food habits also shrink grocery bills for people taking Ozempic and its kin?Maybe, said Roe, and a study looking at the household finances of GLP-1 users is planned.“People taking these medications in all likelihood will be spending less on food, but whether there is a chance to offset the cost of the drug through reduction in food spending remains to be seen,” he said in a university news release.SOURCE: The Ohio State University, news release, Nov. 21, 2024Copyright © 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

Give Beans a Chance

The unglamorous food has the potential to remake American diets, but it has an image problem.

This is an edition of Time-Travel Thursdays, a journey through The Atlantic’s archives to contextualize the present, surface delightful treasures, and examine the American idea.I love a good bean: tossed with vinaigrette in a salad, spooned over pasta, served on a plate with rice and corn. The bean is a powerful little food, all the more for its shapeshifting capacities. Many people can appreciate that these legumes are cheap and healthy, but they still fall short of widespread adoration or even respect.Yet, over the decades, Atlantic writers have turned to the bean’s revolutionary potential again and again. The humble bean, small, unglamorous, packed with protein, has been a source of inspiration for those seeking to remake the food system, fight climate change, and add some better flavors into American homes. In a 1975 article loftily titled “A Bean to Feed the World?” the historian Richard Rhodes made the case for centering the soybean in the American diet. “We continue to sing of amber waves of grain, not dusty pods of beans,” he bemoans in the opening line.Noting that the soybean was, at the time, the No. 1 cash crop in the country, Rhodes argues that Americans should be eating it as a source of protein on its own, rather than feeding it to the farm animals that then became dinner. “Conversion of soybeans to food for humans is worth looking at,” he writes. (The soybean, a cousin of the lentil and black bean, has about 30 grams of protein per cup.) Alas, soybeans remain primarily the provenance of livestock today, with the exception of the small percentage used to make popular foods such as tofu.In 2017, James Hamblin made the urgent climate case for replacing beef with legumes in Americans’ diets, given that cows are among the top agricultural sources of greenhouse gasses worldwide and take up great swaths of arable land. Hamblin explained that by swapping beans for beef, the U.S. could “achieve somewhere between 46 and 74 percent of the reductions needed” to meet the 2020 greenhouse-gas-emission goals set out by President Barack Obama in 2009. (Americans have not wholesale rejected beef in favor of beans, but, in large part because the pandemic slowed travel and economic activity, we did end up meeting those climate goals.)Part of the problem with beans is that they are not that attractive a food. In a 1992 article, the food writer Corby Kummer acknowledges the “insipid” nature of beans before walking readers through some ways to prepare tasty—and easily digestible—bean-based dishes. But for the horticultural writer Richardson Wright, the bean’s humility is what makes it heroic. During World War II, he wrote that “the coincidence of Saturday night and baked beans was of divine provenance, and with the ardor of the freshly converted, I insisted that we practice.” In a time of loss, a pot of beans—which he calls “farinaceous catechumens,” likening them to starchy bodies readied for baptism—can mean everything. The quasi-religious tone of his Proustian meditation on beans is moving; still, his dietary choice was borne out of desperation and limited rations.The image of beans as a backup when you don’t have, or can’t afford, anything better has proven hard to shake. Even as vegetarian diets are on the rise and Americans recognize the environmental impact of beef, eating meat remains an intractable part of American life. For all the trendiness of brothy beans and Rancho Gordo subscriptions in recent years, many Americans still haven’t made legumes central to their diets. One estimate found that, as of 2019, the average American ate approximately 55 pounds of chicken a year compared with roughly 2.5 pounds of cooked black beans (American bean consumption is low compared to many other countries). Still, there are reasons to hope: Americans have embraced hummus, which is made of chickpeas. Chic New York restaurants are serving bean-based dishes. And a climate campaign with ties to the United Nations is pushing to double global bean consumption by 2028. Though the bean may not be the flashiest ingredient, it is persistent—and it may even shape a better world in its image.

Are Americans more obese than ever?

Obesity affects more Americans than ever. Fast food is one of the main culprits.

Fast food occupies a unique spot in the proverbial gut of America. It’s irresistibly convenient when the fridge is empty —and even when it’s full — it seduces us with consistency, incredible flavors and decent prices.While it all comes with a generous serving of guilt since we kinda know it’s bad for us, Americans can’t help themselves. Americans spent a record $490 billion on fast food in 2023, up from post-pandemic levels. Despite this, surveys consistently show that many harbor deep concerns about its nutritional value, environmental impact and the ethics of its production.This love-hate tension is all part of fast food’s complex place in our lives. A report published Thursday in the journal The Lancet revealed that 75% of Americans are now overweight or obese. While fast food is not solely to blame for that, it does raise questions about the wide availability and nutritional value of ultra-processed foods.But solving an obesity crisis is not as simple as telling people to avoid it. Not everyone who consumes fast food does it because they want to. Many Americans face challenges accessing fresh fruits and vegetables, while an increase in sedentary lifestyles due to modern working practices is not yet fully understood, according to the report. Then there are social factors that limit food choices, like food insecurity, transportation, income, employment, race, educational level and whether you’re a single parent.Attempts to address the issue are not working, noted the report’s authors.“Existing policies have failed to address overweight and obesity,” they wrote. “Without major reform, the forecasted trends will be devastating at the individual and population level, and the associated disease burden and economic costs will continue to escalate.”Obesity will result in up to $9.1 trillion in excess medical expenditures over the next 10 years, according to a June 2024 report by Republicans on the Joint Economic Committee.It’s unclear if this crisis is a priority for the Trump administration, given the incoming president’s well-known love of, and brief employment at, McDonald’s. He’s also a fan of deregulation.While that chaos shakes out, let’s look at some of the leading fast-food ingredients and who let them be there.Sodium overloadThe average fast-food meal contains an alarming amount of sodium. For example, a single serving of McDonald’s fries has 230 milligrams, while a Burger King Whopper packs 911 milligrams, nearly half the recommended daily intake for adults. Consuming this much salt not only raises blood pressure but also puts us at higher risk for heart disease and stroke.Sugar and high fructose corn syrupSugary drinks and desserts dominate fast food menus. A small Wendy’s Frosty cup contains 46 grams of sugar, well above the 25-37 grams per day suggested by the American Heart Association. High-fructose corn syrup, a cheaper alternative to cane sugar, appears in sodas, sauces, and even burger buns. This ingredient has been linked to obesity and metabolic disorders.Questionable meatsWhen fast food chains claim their burgers are made with 100% beef, they’re technically correct. But that label often masks the use of unsellable cuts of meat—trimmings, connective tissue, and fat—ground together into patties. Chicken nuggets, another fast food staple, often contain a mixture of mechanically separated meat, starches, sugar, preservatives, hydrogenated oils and artificial flavorings.Artificial colorings and additivesEver wondered why fast food looks so vibrant? That’s often thanks to chemical colorings like Red 40 and Yellow 5, which have been linked to behavioral issues in children. Even “natural” options like Subway’s multigrain bread once included preservatives like azodicarbonamide—a chemical also used in yoga mats. Subway removed it after public pressure.Who Let This Happen?The fast food industry didn’t become a dietary minefield by accident. Decades of lobbying have shaped policy and regulations that some groups say prioritize corporate profits over public health.The corn lobby and high-fructose corn syrupHigh-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) owes its success to U.S. government subsidies for corn production. The Farm Bill, influenced heavily by agribusiness lobbyists, has ensured corn remains one of the most heavily subsidized crops. Between 1995 and 2020, corn subsidies amounted to over $116 billion in the U.S.This surplus of cheap corn made HFCS a low-cost alternative to sugar, leading to its widespread use in sodas, snacks, and fast food sauces. Despite links to obesity, type 2 diabetes, and metabolic disorders, HFCS remains, thanks in part to powerful lobbying by groups like the Corn Refiners Association.Meat industry lobbyistsThe meat industry has consistently pushed back against stricter regulations on safety and labeling. One infamous example is pink slime, a finely textured beef filler treated with ammonia to kill bacteria. This filler, made from low-quality trimmings squished together, sparked public outrage when first exposed in 2012.After lobbying efforts by meat processors like Cargill and Beef Products Inc., pink slime was reclassified by the USDA as ground beef, meaning it could be more widespread than before.But “pink slime” is fattier and more likely to contain pathogens than ground beef from quality cuts.FDA and additivesFood manufacturers have fought to keep artificial preservatives and additives legal despite evidence of potential health risks. For instance, Butylated Hydroxyanisole (BHA) and Butylated Hydroxytoluene (BHT) are preservatives used in fast food and processed goods to prevent fat from spoiling.Both are listed as “reasonably anticipated to be human carcinogens” by the National Toxicology Program, yet lobbying by food industry groups has ensured they remain approved by the FDA.

What to know about HHS and how RFK Jr. could lead it

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. could radically reshape the Department of Health and Human Services if he is confirmed as secretary of the agency under President-elect Trump. Why it matters: The onetime independent presidential candidate has been one of the country's most prominent vaccine skeptics for years, alarming public health experts about his nomination to lead to HHS.His appointment to HHS would also come 16 years after he was considered for a cabinet appointment by former President Obama. Obama had weighed appointing Kennedy — then an environmental lawyer — to the head of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).Kennedy's views range from cracking down on food additives to conspiracy-tinged ideas about fluoride in water.State of play: Kennedy's nomination to HHS Thursday came after weeks of speculation over what role he would play in the incoming administration.Trump promised in October he'd let Kennedy — who endorsed him after dropping his own presidential bid — "go wild" on federal oversight of food and medicine.Experts have warned that he could help erode key parts of the health care system and lead to an increase in preventable disease. Between the lines: Kennedy's selection has divided Republicans on Capitol Hill, though some in the GOP remain optimistic Kennedy will secure the requisite number of votes to be confirmed by the Senate.What is the HHS?The Department of Health and Human Services is a nearly $2 trillion agency is in charge of dispensing nearly 25% of the federal budget and employs more than 80,000 federal workers.HHS encompasses other departments that approve new medications, conduct infectious disease research and contribute to other public health services.It includes departments whose work touch on immigration, child support and adults with disabilities.HHS also processes Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, allowing journalists and other members of the public to request records from the federal government.What departments fall under HHS?HHS encompasses 13 operating divisions. Americans may be familiar with the FDA, CDC and NIH — particularly after the COVID pandemic — but other lesser known divisions can still impact their everyday lives.The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is tasked with regulating new drugs and medical devices, approves new vaccines, and ensures the safety of the food supply. After the 2022 Dobbs decision, the FDA has also helped make medication abortion more accessible. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) helps respond to infectious disease outbreaks like the bird flu and the COVID-19 pandemic. It also tracks food-borne illnesses like E. coli and listeria.The Centers of Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) overseas health insurance programs that benefit millions of Americans nationwide.The Office of Refugee Resettlement helps support refugees, unaccompanied minors and asylum seekers who are in the U.S. The National Institutes of Health oversees vaccine and other biomedical research, like cancer research. It includes the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) which was headed by Anthony Fauci during the COVID-19 pandemic.The Administration for Children and Families helps fund foster care and Head Start child care programs across the country.What could Kennedy's appointment mean for Americans?As head of a large and influential agency, Kennedy could begin implementing some elements of his "Make America Healthy Again" agenda.Kennedy has previously outlined plans to clear out entire departments from health care agencies, such as the FDA's nutrition department, in a bid to root out unspecified "corruption." He also said he would advise water districts against using fluoride, a mineral that occurs naturally in water but is often added to the water supply to help prevent tooth decay.He has also expressed interest in pausing drug development and infectious disease research at NIH for eight years, in favor of studying chronic disease. Zoom in: Kennedy has repeatedly denied that he is anti-vaccine and said he won't take away any vaccines from Americans. But he's continued to promote unbacked claims about vaccines causing various illnesses.He is also a proponent of drinking raw, unpasteurized milk, which both the FDA and CDC warn come with serious health risks. As the head of HHS, Kennedy would be able to initiate the roll back of the FDA's raw milk regulations.Go deeper:What to know about RFK Jr.'s positions on vaccines, drugs and health careHow RFK Jr.'s MAHA movement could shake up public healthWhat a Trump-empowered RFK Jr. could do on health care

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. could radically reshape the Department of Health and Human Services if he is confirmed as secretary of the agency under President-elect Trump. Why it matters: The onetime independent presidential candidate has been one of the country's most prominent vaccine skeptics for years, alarming public health experts about his nomination to lead to HHS.His appointment to HHS would also come 16 years after he was considered for a cabinet appointment by former President Obama. Obama had weighed appointing Kennedy — then an environmental lawyer — to the head of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).Kennedy's views range from cracking down on food additives to conspiracy-tinged ideas about fluoride in water.State of play: Kennedy's nomination to HHS Thursday came after weeks of speculation over what role he would play in the incoming administration.Trump promised in October he'd let Kennedy — who endorsed him after dropping his own presidential bid — "go wild" on federal oversight of food and medicine.Experts have warned that he could help erode key parts of the health care system and lead to an increase in preventable disease. Between the lines: Kennedy's selection has divided Republicans on Capitol Hill, though some in the GOP remain optimistic Kennedy will secure the requisite number of votes to be confirmed by the Senate.What is the HHS?The Department of Health and Human Services is a nearly $2 trillion agency is in charge of dispensing nearly 25% of the federal budget and employs more than 80,000 federal workers.HHS encompasses other departments that approve new medications, conduct infectious disease research and contribute to other public health services.It includes departments whose work touch on immigration, child support and adults with disabilities.HHS also processes Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, allowing journalists and other members of the public to request records from the federal government.What departments fall under HHS?HHS encompasses 13 operating divisions. Americans may be familiar with the FDA, CDC and NIH — particularly after the COVID pandemic — but other lesser known divisions can still impact their everyday lives.The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is tasked with regulating new drugs and medical devices, approves new vaccines, and ensures the safety of the food supply. After the 2022 Dobbs decision, the FDA has also helped make medication abortion more accessible. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) helps respond to infectious disease outbreaks like the bird flu and the COVID-19 pandemic. It also tracks food-borne illnesses like E. coli and listeria.The Centers of Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) overseas health insurance programs that benefit millions of Americans nationwide.The Office of Refugee Resettlement helps support refugees, unaccompanied minors and asylum seekers who are in the U.S. The National Institutes of Health oversees vaccine and other biomedical research, like cancer research. It includes the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) which was headed by Anthony Fauci during the COVID-19 pandemic.The Administration for Children and Families helps fund foster care and Head Start child care programs across the country.What could Kennedy's appointment mean for Americans?As head of a large and influential agency, Kennedy could begin implementing some elements of his "Make America Healthy Again" agenda.Kennedy has previously outlined plans to clear out entire departments from health care agencies, such as the FDA's nutrition department, in a bid to root out unspecified "corruption." He also said he would advise water districts against using fluoride, a mineral that occurs naturally in water but is often added to the water supply to help prevent tooth decay.He has also expressed interest in pausing drug development and infectious disease research at NIH for eight years, in favor of studying chronic disease. Zoom in: Kennedy has repeatedly denied that he is anti-vaccine and said he won't take away any vaccines from Americans. But he's continued to promote unbacked claims about vaccines causing various illnesses.He is also a proponent of drinking raw, unpasteurized milk, which both the FDA and CDC warn come with serious health risks. As the head of HHS, Kennedy would be able to initiate the roll back of the FDA's raw milk regulations.Go deeper:What to know about RFK Jr.'s positions on vaccines, drugs and health careHow RFK Jr.'s MAHA movement could shake up public healthWhat a Trump-empowered RFK Jr. could do on health care

Suggested Viewing

Join us to forge
a sustainable future

Our team is always growing.
Become a partner, volunteer, sponsor, or intern today.
Let us know how you would like to get involved!

CONTACT US

sign up for our mailing list to stay informed on the latest films and environmental headlines.

Subscribers receive a free day pass for streaming Cinema Verde.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.