Sourced from: Infinite Health Blog, by Dr. Davis,
originally posted on the Wheat Belly Blog: 2011-08-12
1985: The year
the dough hit the fan
In 1985, the National Cholesterol Education Panel
delivered its Adult Treatment Panel guidelines to Americans, advice to cut
cholesterol intake, reduce saturated fat, and increase “healthy whole
grains.” Congress followed suit with legislation requiring that the
USDA provide dietary advice to the American public.
Per capita wheat consumption increased accordingly.
Wheat consumption today is 26 lbs per year greater than in 1970 and
now totals 133 lbs per person per year, or the equivalent of
approximately 200 loaves of bread per year. Because infants and
children are lumped together with adults, average adult consumption is
likely much greater than 200 lbs per year, or the equivalent of
approximately 300 loaves of bread per year. (Nobody, of course, eats
300 loaves of bread per year; tallying up the pretzels, pizza,
bagels, focaccia, bruschetta, breading, rolls, etc., it all adds up to
approximately 300 loaves-equivalent.)
Another twist: The mid- and late-1980s also marks
the widespread adoption by U.S. farmers of the genetically-altered semi-dwarf
variants of wheat to replace traditional wheat. While in 1980 the loaf of
bread–or bagel, pretzel, pizza, bruschetta, ciabatta, or
roll–likely came from 4½-foot tall traditional wheat, in 1988
it was almost certainly a product made from high-yield semi-dwarf wheat.
No questions were asked about its appropriateness for human consumption,
no questions asked about animal safety testing. Just grown, processed, and sold.
And that’s when the dough hit the fan.
The Centers for Disease Control has been tracking
multiple health conditions, including diabetes. Here is the curve for
diabetes up until 2009:

Mirroring note: Original chart lost.
This replacement chart from a 2017 CDC publication does not
seem to show the described trends (plus that odd unexplained
dip in 2011). The overall trend remains catastrophic.
From 1958 until 1985, the number of diabetics
nationwide was climbing. After 1985, the curve shifted sharply upward
reflecting the explosion in the number of diabetics across the U.S.
The data (not shown) for 2010 are even worse, with the curve now
headed straight upward.
Eat more “healthy whole grains” . . . indeed.
