In 1968–69, for a year after she left school, she was a teacher at the Convent of Nazareth, Haifa, Israel, living with Arab families. In 1973–75 she worked as an editor at
Elsevier Scientific Publishing in Amsterdam. In the period immediately before and during the
1973 October War she went back to Israel and became committed to the
Palestinian cause. Back in Britain as from the mid-1970s her commitment became and remained focused on the
politics of food, as she associated with the
Agricapital group, which examined food production and health, for example producing a critique of the UK bread industry, alongside the
Politics of Health Group. Both groups researched and debated the science and politics of food, nutrition, health, production and consumption. They were shaped by the
British Society for Social Responsibility in Science (BSSRS), set up in the late 1960s by distinguished scientists. BSSRS was based, as was Friends of the Earth (FoE), in
Joseph Rowntree Foundation funded offices at 9 Poland Street, near Soho, London. She maintained links with BSSRS and FoE friends and colleagues for the rest of her life. Thus, she became a board member of the London Food Commission (LFC), a think-tank on food, health, society and economy created by the Greater London Council (1984–90), on which she remained until her death. A number of people from Agricapital and the Politics of Health Group were on the 15 person staff of the LFC or its 50-person board, such as Eric Brunner, Michael Joffé, Tim Lang, Tim Lobstein, and Aubrey Sheiham. From 1978 to 1980, she worked at the
Medical Research Council (MRC) Epidemiology Unit in Cardiff, working to Peter Elwood, then in 1981–1982 moved to the Dunn Clinical Nutrition Centre in Cambridge, working to Philip James. Her work at the Dunn Centre included a field study designed to see whether high blood pressure was linked with
high salt consumption, for which she experimented on herself, adding
sodium chloride and
lithium to her diet. She then made a critical review of the state of the scientific literature on diet and major chronic diseases in Europe, starting with heart disease. She corresponded directly with researchers in 26 countries. From 1983 to 1985 she worked as a community nutritionist for City and Hackney Health Authority, working to Ken Grant, in charge of the heart and stroke prevention programme. "The national diet" and "The new British diet". She became a pithy and pointed broadcaster, author and journalist, publicising the effects of good diet on well-being and good health, and poor diet on disagreeable, debilitating and deadly conditions and diseases. She was a regular contributor to BBC Radio 4's
The Food Programme. Presenter Derek Cooper recalled in 1995 ‘She cried out against the debasement of our diet with such wit that even her victims must have thought she was rather wonderful’. ==
The Food Scandal ==