By 1998, the U.S. and Canada had put folate (i.e., folic acid or vitamin B9) in the U.S. grain supply: 1.4 mg per kilogram of grain.
Why? To prevent birth defects—specifically, neural tube defects by a whopping 25 percent, it turns out.
It has also helped to prevent death from strokes: 2.9 percent reduction since 1998, versus no change in the U.K. and Wales, which have not put folate in the grain supply.
How does it work?
Folate helps to repair and construct DNA—that’s how it seems to work to prevent neural tube defects.
And folate decreases homocysteine levels, which are probably worsen heart and brain disease. The right amount of folate appears to stop progression of carotid plaque—which stops blood flow to the brain.
Best foods for folate.
Archive for March, 2006
How Did B Vitamins Prevent Deaths from Stroke from 1998-2002? U.S. and Canada vs. U.K.
Thursday, March 30th, 2006Fed Up! Book Review: Winning the War Against Childhood Obesity
Tuesday, March 28th, 2006Fed Up!“>Dr. Susan Okie has the facts at her fingertips to help parents understand the problem, and best of all, do something about it.
*She describes successful
- community programs
, and ones in progress.
*She discusses
- prenatal care
, and what to do to nurture infants who need full fat diets in the first 2 years of life, but less than that afterwards.
*She emphasizes the importance of
- breakfast
(adults who eat 2000 calories at breakfast are more likely to be normal weight than those who eat the same 2000 calories at dinner)…this is food timing, and it works.
*She touches on
- hormones
, including melatonin, which is related to obesity and satiety in adults.
*She notes traffic, crime and of course technology as causes, and also, potentially solutions. And
- solutions
are what we need.
*Read Fed Up!“>Fed UP!

