For
decades food scientists have been telling us that saturated fat in
food is bad for your heart. You can read the same story being
pitched on current web sites of some of our leading authorities. For
example, a page on the site of the American Heart Association tells
us that saturated fat is bad for your heart. It says:
Eating
foods that contain saturated fats raises the level of cholesterol in
your blood. High levels of LDL cholesterol in your blood increase
your risk of heart disease and stroke.
Later
the same page makes a recommendation:
How
much is that 13 grams? You would exceed that 13 gram limit by
having three slices of pizza, or a cheese danish. For decades Americans have been told such limits are necessary
for healthy eating. But a major new study suggests we have long been
given a great big “bum steer” on this topic.
The
new study was published in the British medical journal The Lancet,
and is entitled Associations of fats and carbohydrate
intake with cardiovascular disease and mortality in 18 countries from
five continents (PURE): a prospective cohort study. The
study looked into the dietary intake of 135,335 individuals (a very large sample size for studies like this).
The
study reached these startling conclusions:
Intake
of total fat and each type of fat was associated with lower risk of
total mortality...Higher saturated fat intake was associated
with lower risk of stroke...Total fat and saturated and unsaturated
fats were not significantly associated with risk of myocardial
infarction or cardiovascular disease mortality.
Such
conclusions are in complete opposition to what we have been told
about saturated fat for forty years. The study finds that eating
more of any type of fat (including saturated fat) results in a lower
risk of you dying. The study finds that eating more saturated fat
decreases your risk of having a stroke, by 21%. The study finds that
eating more saturated fat does not increase your chance of dying of a
heart attack.
It
seems that our food experts have been giving us faulty advice for
the past 40 years. During this time, while people have been looking
for foods marked “low fat” in the supermarket, people have been
shoveling in more and more carbohydrates, leading to an obesity
epidemic. Carbohydrate intake was the one thing the Lancet study
finds is associated with total mortality.
Will
the new study cause the American Heart Association to update its page
on saturated fats, by giving a contrite admission of error like the
one below?
No,
that will never happen. It might be that the American Heart
Association will cling stubbornly to its dubious recommendation, or
perhaps it will change its recommendation. But if the recommendation
is changed, you can be sure that the page will not tell people how a
very different recommendation was given for several decades recently. Our
scientific bureaus don't want the people's confidence in them to be
shaken.
No comments:
Post a Comment