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HEALTHY EATING 'CAN CUT CRIME' Encouraging healthier eating could be the government's secret weapon in the fight against crime, according to experts. A study by researchers at the University of Oxford has found that adding vitamins and other vital nutrients to young people's diets can cut crime. They found that improving the diets of young offenders at a maximum security institution in Buckinghamshire cut offences by 25%. The study - one of the first to show a scientific link between healthy eating and crime - has now been extended to see if the findings can be applied to the population in general. Bernard Gesch and colleagues at the University of Oxford enrolled 230 young offenders from HM Young Offenders Institution Aylesbury in their study. Half of the young men received pills containing vitamins, minerals and essential fatty acids. The other half received placebo or dummy pills. The researchers recorded the number and type of offences each of the prisoners committed in the nine months before they received the pills and in the nine months during the trial. They found that the group which received the supplements committed 25% fewer offences than those who had been given the placebo. The greatest reduction was for serious offences, including violence which fell by 40%. There was no such reduction for those on the dummy pills. HUGE DIFFERENCE The study was organised by Natural Justice, a research charity set up in 1991 to investigate the social and physical causes of crime. Its chairman Bishop Hugh Montefiore of Birmingham, said: "The study is of great importance not only to those who work inside prisons but also more widely in the community." He added: "There are many causes of anti-social behaviour. But our project has shown that an important factor is the lack of proper nutrition. The reduction of disciplinary offences by 25% among those who took the supplements cannot be shrugged off as insignificant." STRONG EVIDENCE Ron Blackburn, professor of clinical psychology at
the University of Liverpool, said: "Efforts to reduce offending
usually require major resources. This research programme promises to have
an impact on antisocial behaviour with minimal intervention and deserves
full support." PHILLIP DAY COMMENT: Hot to trot on the heels
of Oxford University then remarking that 'vitamin pills are useless' comes
Bernard Gesch's excellent work on nutrition and behaviour. This is one
of the many fascinating subjects we analyse in detail in my new book The
Mind Game. In the meantime, do not be spooked by the intellectual inconsistency
that often comes out of Oxford and Cambridge, as well as other universities,
whose researchers often financially prostitute themselves to the highest
bidder. It's all about grant money and the continuation of the slush-funded
researcher species, after all. But the real scientists are in there and
doing great work. The rest of the pack need the heat turned up under their
expanding backsides and named and shamed for the intellectually inconsistent
parasites they have become. |
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