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COULD FISH MAKE MY CHILD SMART
FENLEY: - Omega 3 oils are found
in fatty fish like tuna sardines and salmons. It is known that
it can reduce the risk of heart diseases but there is now
tantalizing new research that suggest that Omega 3 oils could
help depression and could even make our children smarter
UPS: - VOICER - Some say it’s
brain food. Others say it oils the joints. Research has shown
that fish contains a special kind of fat called omega 3. It
seems to have an extraordinary property. Is this the key
ingredient currently missing from our diet which could keep
our hearts healthy? A tenth of the brain is composed of omega
3. Some scientists are now projecting that a host of brain
disorders, including depression, could be treated with omega
3.A brand new scientific trial asks whether omega 3 could even
make our children smarter. Could omega 3 be the new miracle
cure for our generation?
PRE-TITLE: COULD FISH MAKE MY
CHILD SMART
UPS: - VOICER – Our
understanding of omega 3 began in the early part of the 20th
century. It was here at Magdalen College, Oxford University,
that one man began to investigate this strange fact.
PROF JOHN STEIN; OXFORD
UNIVERSITY - He was a remarkable man. He was one of the
brightest scientists of his generation.
UPS: - VOICER – As an
undergraduate at Oxford, Professor John Stein was befriended
by a somewhat eccentric scientist, Hugh Sinclair. Back in the
1940s, it was thought that all fats were unhealthy. Yet
Sinclair noticed something odd about the diet of the Inuit, a
group of people living in one of the harshest regions on
earth.
UPS: - PROF JOHN STEIN; OXFORD
UNIVERSITY - He studied the Inuit because he was aware that
they subsisted almost entirely on a diet of fish and in
particular seal blubber, and that nevertheless they had very
low rates of heart attacks and therefore there was a
probability that fish oils that they were consuming were
somehow protecting them from heart problem.
UPS: - VOICER - But Sinclair’s
idea was so controversial he was ridiculed and subsequently
lost his post at Oxford. Undeterred, Sinclair set up a
research lab in his house, selling some of the family silver
to fund his studies. For a hundred days, he ate nothing but
oily fish and minced seal. Whilst he was on this diet,
Sinclair carried out an unusual experiment. He cut himself
and timed how long it took to stop bleeding. Initially, he
bled for two minutes. But after several weeks it took fifty
minutes for his blood to stop flowing. He had become like an
Inuit who bleed copiously when cut. Sinclair believed he had
finally found the answer. Omega 3 could help reduce the risk
of a heart attack by preventing blood from clotting. Tom
Sanders, like Hugh Sinclair, took high doses of omega 3 to see
if it would help protect us against heart disease. Unlike
Sinclair, he stuck to capsules rather than seal blubber.
UPS: - PROF TOM SANDERS; KING’S
COLLEGE, LONDON - At one stage I was consuming forty mls of
fish oil a day. Now that’s a lot of fish oil, that’s about
four tablespoons of fish oil. I didn’t suffer any
particularly bad effects except I tended to belch up the fish
oil every so often and it was a rather nasty smell and the
other thing that my wife noticed is I smelt like a fish which
wasn’t very pleasant.
UPS: - VOICER - Tom’s work as
well as other research has shown that taking at least a gram
of omega 3 a day can prevent people who’ve already had a heart
attack from having another one.
UPS: - PROF TOM SANDERS; KING’S
COLLEGE, LONDON - I think we’re pretty confident now that in
populations who are at high risk of heart disease, that
consuming oily fish once or twice a week does reduce the risk
of sudden death.
UPS: - VOICER - Today using
omega 3 to treat heart disease is acceptable practice in
mainstream medicine
UPS: -JULIAN HALCOX; UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE, LONDON - There are very good data from epidemiologic
studies that suggest that people who have more fish in their
diet and have high levels of omega 3 fatty acids within their
blood stream or in their blood cells are at actually lower
risk of having heart attacks and strokes.
UPS: - VOICER - Dr Julian Halcox
is a cardiologist from University College London. He uses
omega 3 to treat patients who’ve already suffered from
cardiovascular disease, as well as those who could be at risk
from a heart attack.
UPS: -JULIAN HALCOX; UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE, LONDON - The current recommendations for treatment of
patients who’ve already had a heart attack include taking
aspirin to reduce the tendency for blood to clot again.
There’s also increasing evidence that supplementing the diet
with omega 3 fatty acids is sensible and can improve the
future outcome.
AD BREAK 1
UPS: - VOICER - Tantalising
evidence suggests that omega 3 could also help the mind. In
the 1980s, Dr Joseph Hibbeln, a psychiatrist from the National
Institute of Health near Washington, was examining a brain.
UPS: - DR JOSEPH HIBBELN;
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF HEALTH - When I was a medical student, I
was in the autopsy room, I remember holding a brain and
looking at this marvellous organ, looking at this beautiful
thing and thinking this appears to be made of fat. This
wonderful lovely delicate organ appears to be mostly composed
of fat.
UPS: - VOICER - In fact, the
brain is almost 80% fat and is very rich in omega 3. About a
tenth of the brain is made up of this fatty acid. Joseph then
wondered what would happen to our brains if we didn’t eat
enough Omega 3. Joseph followed a hunch and looked at how
much fish people ate around the world. South Africa for
instance ate the least amount of fish. The UK ate an average
amount. And the Japanese had the most. He then looked at the
rate of depression in these countries. Amazingly, he found a
correlation.
UPS: - DR JOSEPH HIBBELN;
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF HEALTH - There was a fifty-fold
difference in the risk of depression predicted by how much
fish people consumed. I was ecstatic when I got these
results, I’d been looking for more than five years for
reliable data of depression across countries and fish across
countries, and it all came together in an hour.
UPS: - VOICER - In countries
where small amounts of fish were eaten, people were fifty
times more likely to suffer from depression. For instance,
the Germans ate less than ten kilos of fish each, and five out
of a hundred were depressed. In contrast, fewer than 1% of
the Japanese were depressed but they ate around sixty-five
kilos of fish each. However Tom Sanders thinks there could be
a fundamental flaw in all the research carried out on Omega 3.
It’s so serious it could undermine any findings on the
benefits of Omega 3.
UPS: - PROF TOM SANDERS; HEAD:
NUTRITIONAL RESEARCH KING’S COLLEGE, LONDON - I would regard
myself as an enthusiast for omega 3 fatty acids. But what I
read in, in the media and the literature, I think takes it
much further than the science actually warrants.
UPS: - VOICER - The problem is
that those who advocate omega 3 say we should get it from oily
fish. Yet many people don’t eat fish. In India, there are
almost a billion vegetarians for instance. Vegetarians seem
to be fine, but could their health be at risk?
UPS: - VOICER - Omega 3 is an
essential fatty acid. This means that we must have it but our
bodies can’t make it. Another kind of omega 3 does exist in
some food apart from fish, such as green leafy vegetables,
nuts and seeds like pumpkin seeds and tofu. But these sources
are not easy for the body to use. Omega 3 has to be converted
to another fatty acid, called EPA, which is then converted to
DHA. These are the forms that our bodies need so although
vegetarians do have omega 3 in their diet, it is inefficiently
converted. This is why some believe it’s better to get these
fatty acids directly. Yet the only food that contains high
amounts of EPA and DHA is oily fish. Even more worrying for
vegetarians and those who don’t eat much fish is a landmark
study called the Children of the 90s carried out by Bristol
University. The researchers showed that omega 3 from oily
fish may be important for children.
UPS: - DR CATHY WILLIAMS;
BRISTOL UNIVERSITY - The Children of the 90s is a study
that’s followed the health and development of nearly all the
children born in the area that was Avon over a twenty-one
month period between early 1991 and 1992.
UPS: - VOICER - Fourteen
thousand women and children have been followed since before
the children were born to the present day. One of the topics
the researchers looked at was how much oily fish the women ate
whilst they were pregnant and breast-feeding. The researchers
claim the impact on the children was dramatic.
UPS: - DR CATHY WILLIAMS;
BRISTOL UNIVERSITY - What we found was that mothers who hadn’t
eaten oily fish when they were pregnant had children whose
vision was slightly less developed at the age of about three
than mothers who had eaten oily fish when they were pregnant.
And similar results were found looking at the child’s language
development in early childhood. Women who hadn’t eaten oily
fish in pregnancy had children who were using slightly fewer
words than women who had eaten oily fish.
UPS: - VOICER - Mothers who ate
oily fish four or more times a week had children who scored
slightly higher in comprehension tests when they were a year
and a half, and had better vision at age three and a half than
mothers who had not eaten fish. Studies have revealed that
omega 3 is vital for the foetus to develop its brain. This
could explain the scientists’ findings that oily fish is
important for pregnant women. But in spite of the huge numbers
of women and children involved in this study, some disagree
with the suggestion that vegetarian mothers have disadvantaged
children. Tom Sanders has questioned the methodology and the
validity of the results.
I UPS: - PROF TOM SANDERS; HEAD:
NUTRITIONAL RESEARCH KING’S COLLEGE, LONDON - I’ve spent much
of my working life trying to find things wrong with vegans and
vegetarians in relation to their low levels of omega 3 fatty
acids. They have low rates of heart disease which is one
thing omega 3 is thought to protect against, and we’ve looked
at sort of behaviour and development of the children and all I
can say is they’ve grown up to be perfectly normal adults so I
don’t think there’s anything particularly to worry about
there.
UPS: - VOICER - However, Tom
agrees that the foetus does need omega 3 to develop its
brain. So should pregnant women eat extra omega 3?
UPS: - PROF TOM SANDERS; HEAD:
NUTRITIONAL RESEARCH KING’S COLLEGE, LONDON -Women who are
pregnant should not feel pressurised to take additional
sources of omega 3 fatty acids. A woman going into pregnancy
will have accumulated significant body stores of fat and her
body stores of fat will contain the omega 3 fatty acid which
can be mobilised during pregnancy to help meet the needs of
the growing infant.
UPS: -VOICER - As for those who
do eat fish, it’s packed with protein and nutrients like
vitamin A, zinc and iodine as well as omega 3.
AD BREAK 2
UPS: -VOICER - Not only do we
not eat enough Omega 3, we consume too much of another
essential fatty acid which in some cases has devastating
effects. It’s called omega 6. Like omega 3, omega 6 is
essential for brain function. It’s found in many foods. But
oils and hydrogenated fat contain a particular form which
seems to prevent omega 3 from working properly in the brain. A
hundred years ago, our diet used to consist of roughly equal
amounts of omega 3 and omega 6. Now we’re eating less omega 3
and about a thousand times more omega 6. One group of people
who rarely eat enough Omega 3 and have too much omega 6 are
children.
UPS: - VOICER - A study on what
over a thousand children ate in a day showed that 40% had
chips at lunchtime, more than half hadn’t eaten a vegetable or
a piece of fruit for twenty-four hours, and the majority had
eaten something sweet.
UPS: - CHILD 1 - I never eat
fish.
UPS: - CHILD 2 - I don’t eat
fish that much.
UPS: - CHILD 3 - I never eat
fish.
UPS: - VOICER - Nearly all, 86%,
had not eaten fish. If having a balanced diet is so important,
could high amounts of omega 3 re-address this imbalance and
boost brain function?
UPS: - PROF TOM SANDERS; HEAD:
NUTRITIONAL RESEARCH KING’S COLLEGE, LONDON - I find it hard
to believe that taking fish oil will suddenly transform a
child’s reading ability. I can understand that deprivation of
fatty acids during a critical period of brain development may
have a lasting effect but once the brain is formed, it really
hangs onto its fatty acids. I think it’s very unlikely that
one would see an improvement of behaviour. There is no proper
physiological basis to expect such a change to occur.
UPS: - DR MADELEINE PORTWOOD;
DURHAM LEA - We are going to make this pattern
UPS: - VOICER - To find out
whether omega 3 could benefit normal school children, Dr
Madeleine Portwood from Durham LEA carried out a trial on
nearly three hundred children. She assessed the children’s
reading, writing and ability to concentrate. The trial lasted
for six months. Half the children took a supplement containing
omega 3, and the other half had a fishy tasting placebo made
from palm oil. No one knew which child had which supplement.
When Madeleine re-assessed them, she observed that the
children who had taken omega 3, like Matthew, paid more
attention in class.
UPS: - MATTHEW - Foot. Strap on
the watch.
UPS: - DR MADELEINE PORTWOOD;
DURHAM LEA - Yeah well spotted, because you struggled with
that last time. If you think what you were like before you
started taking the capsules, what were you doing in school?
UPS: - MATTHEW - Well, I wasn’t
like getting much work finished.
UPS: - DR MADELEINE PORTWOOD;
DURHAM LEA - And is that any different now?
UPS: - MATTHEW - Yeah.
UPS: - DR MADELEINE PORTWOOD;
DURHAM LEA - So you like doing your work?
UPS: - MATTHEW - I just want to
get it all finished, all my thinking’s just like popping into
my head.
UPS: - DR MADELEINE PORTWOOD;
DURHAM LEA - What sort of things pop into your head?
UPS: - MATTHEW - Like good ideas
of what I could do.
UPS: - DR MADELEINE PORTWOOD;
DURHAM LEA - Before the trial started, Matthew described
himself as a child who had problems concentrating, didn’t
finish his work and was generally in trouble most of the
time. That was in school and at home. Since he’s been taking
supplements, he describes himself as being very different.
He’s able to finish work, his concentration has improved, his
attention to detail is greater, and certainly we’ve seen
improvements in his reading and spelling abilities.
UPS: - VOICER - The most
striking difference according to Madeleine was in the
children’s reading and spelling. Some like Harry who also
took omega 3 showed improvements in their handwriting. This
is Harry’s handwriting before. And after.
UPS: - DR MADELEINE PORTWOOD;
DURHAM LEA - The results are now in and they have exceeded my
expectations. Children who were already functioning well
above their ages, for example an eight year old child who was
reading at the thirteen and a half year level, three months
into the trial he was reading at the seventeen year level.
Certainly the trend is suggesting that children of all
abilities are achieving their full potential.
UPS: - VOICER - Madeleine’s
analysis of the trial suggests that those children who took
omega 3 showed a significant improvement in their school work,
but only 40% of those who had the supplements did respond.
Tom thinks there are other reasons why these children might
have improved.
UPS: - PROF TOM SANDERS; HEAD:
NUTRITIONAL RESEARCH KING’S COLLEGE, LONDON - We know that
when people are being observed, they change their, their
behaviour. It’s very difficult to actually do a
well-controlled dietary experiment, and certainly when it gets
the attraction of the media in the papers, it will cause all
sorts of biases in the result.
UPS: - VOICER - Although
Madeleine Portwood claims that it can enable some children to
reach their true potential, more trials are needed before the
effects of omega 3 can be proven. However, even if this fatty
acid does not live up to the hype, our natural diet once
contained a balance of omega 3 and omega 6. For many people,
fish can be a good source of nutrients as well as these fatty
acids.
UPS: - VOICER - The scientific
consensus is that we should have a healthy diet which includes
some omega 3 and less Omega 6. And we could achieve that by
doing what we know we should be doing eating fresh food and
cutting out processed food and oils laden with omega 6.