skip primary navigation
NIEHS NIH health and human services EHP Home Page



Advanced Search
Become a Print Subscriber
Subscribe online today!
Subscriber Services
Buy EHP Publications
View Shopping Cart
Advertising Information
EHP 2004 Children's Health Issue
EHP is now Open Access

www.genelogic.com/toxicogenomicseducation

www.mdbiotechinc.com

www.embitec.com

www.firstgov.gov
The Fat of the Land: Do Agricultural Subsidies Foster Poor Health?
skip secondary navigation

Spheres of Influence


 
The Fat of the Land: Do Agricultural Subsidies Foster Poor Health?

Scott Fields

Abstract
Since the 1920s, American farmers have received various forms of federal support in an effort to keep farmers farming and provide Americans with an affordable, stable food supply. Wheat, soybeans, and especially corn are currently the most highly subsidized crops; products made from these crops, including high-fructose corn syrup and hydrogenated fats, have flooded the market as cheap means for making foods tastier, though not healthier. Now critics are asking whether subsidies for these crops are actually driving the U.S. epidemic of obesity.


You can read this entire article in HTML or PDF.