Posts Tagged ‘fast food restaurants’

Statin Combination

New research published in the American Journal of cardiology claims that fast food restaurants should give out statins to counter the effects of fatty foods. Fast food and statins are the new proposed combination plate.

Statin dangers

The statin pill can be as risky as the cheeseburger. Statins deplete your body of nutrients that you need to help the heart function. Statins have serious side effects. It can damage the liver, pancreas and muscles.

However, the reason some doctors give for not endorsing this idea, is that it would encourage people to lead unhealthy lives. This would mean that they would be at a higher risk for developing Type 2 diabetes.

This is the case of dumb and dumber. The logic from each side can only be understood from a medical perspective. The issue here; treat everything with a pharmaceutical. In other words mask the problem.

When the cholesterol numbers are lower and the diet is the same junk, you wind up without any benefit from the pills. The drugs don’t cut the rate of adverse events; it just makes the numbers look better. The second part of the problem isn’t the fat, but the carbs in the form or processed flour, and sugar. Diabetes risk is manly a processed food problem, not a fat one.

Junk Food Junky

People are hooked on the taste of fast food. Giving them drugs with the meal isn’t going to solve anything. It would compound the problem, there would be two dangers, instead of one. Only the medical community with a drug company’s education could come up with anything this ridiculous.

 

Fast Food Life

Fast food life is more about the way eating habits have shifted, and the way our culture tackles everyday life.

Fast Food

Fast food isn’t only about food, it is about time. This time food is not only bad for your health, but may harm your life in dramatic, but little noticed ways. The idea behind fast food is that time is valuable and if you can quickly order and finish a meal you can move on to more pressing projects.

What was created was a whole new way to keep an active population active. Think again, we are one of the most inactive generations. Exactly what has happened is to disseminate a system for inactivity. Hook line and sinker we buy into the notion that we need more time.

What we bought into is having a greasy fat belly and a membership in the husky club. Eating habits have shifted dramatically over the last few decades, making fast food a multi-billion dollar industry.

Fast Food Nation

Becoming a fast food nation has also seen us become an impatient people. Fast food is instant gratification 

Researchers at the Rotman School of Management have found that the mere exposure to fast food and related symbols can make people impatient, increasing preference for time saving products, and reducing willingness to save.

“Fast food represents a culture of time efficiency and instant gratification,” says Chen-Bo Zhong, who co-wrote the paper with colleague Sanford DeVoe to be published in a forthcoming issue of Psychological Science. “The problem is that the goal of saving time gets activated upon exposure to fast food regardless of whether time is a relevant factor in the context. For example, walking faster is time efficient when one is trying to make a meeting, but it’s a sign of impatience when one is going for a stroll in the park. We’re finding that the mere exposure to fast food is promoting a general sense of haste and impatience regardless of the context.”

Fast Food Restaurants

At first sight the fast food restaurants have the secret ingredients that we want high sugar and sodium for our modern day taste buds, low costs, and instant delivery of our order.

It is a symbol of something different from the restaurant industry on the whole.

Restaurants are hyped as a dinning experience, a place to have a time away from the hectic and into the sanguine. A dinning experience that is both food centered and costly. The patrons don’t want to be rushed, but want time to savor both the food and experience.

“Fast food is one of many technologies that allow us to save time,” says Sanford DeVoe, “But the ironic thing is that by constantly reminding us of time efficiency, these technologies can lead us to feel much more impatience. A fast food culture that extols saving time doesn’t just change the way we eat, but it can also fundamentally alter the way we experience our time. For example, leisure activities that are supposed to be relaxing can come to be experienced through the colored glasses of impatience.”

Summary

The fast food industry has overhauled the American culture. At the same time we as a nation put the emphasis on instant gratification, so it is conceivable that fast food is a consequence of our commitment to saving time. We have put the health and time with family on the back burner, for a perceived need established by both the culture and the fast food industry.

The fast food industry serves up unmatched poor quality food at a record pace.