good lord, sheilbh. this article is horribly political
QuoteLast week it fell to a floundering professor, Jeremy Pearson, from the British Heart Foundation to explain why it still adheres to the nutrition establishment's anti-saturated fat doctrine when evidence is stacking up to refute it.
After examining 72 academic studies involving more than 600,000 participants, the study, funded by the foundation, found that saturated fat consumption was not associated with coronary disease risk. This assessment echoed a review in 2010 that concluded "there is no convincing evidence that saturated fat causes heart disease".
Neither could the foundation's research team find any evidence for the familiar assertion that trips off the tongue of margarine manufacturers and apostles of government health advice, that eating polyunsaturated fat offers heart protection. In fact, lead researcher Dr Rajiv Chowdhury spoke of the need for an urgent health check on the standard healthy eating script. "These are interesting results that potentially stimulate new lines of scientific inquiry and encourage careful reappraisal of our current nutritional guidelines," he said.
:rolleyes:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/behindtheheadlines/news/2014-03-18-saturated-fats-and-heart-disease-link-unproven/
QuoteYet the researchers say that despite their results, further research is necessary, especially in people who are initially healthy. Until the picture becomes clearer, it is recommended people stick to the current UK guidelines on fat consumption.
Concentrating on a single food source to protect your health is never a good idea. The most important thing is to eat a healthy and balanced diet, which should include at least five portions of fruit and vegetables.
QuoteChowdhury went on to warn that replacing saturated fats with excess carbohydrates – such as white bread, white rice and potatoes – or with refined sugar and salts in processed foods, should be discouraged.
potatoes? potatoes are healthy. author being dumb here
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23674809
chowdhury is referring to low-fat, high-carb (LFHC) diets in general. there is some evidence that high-fat, low-carb diets (HFLC) are better than LFHC, but not by a large margin. in general it's best to keep it even
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24075505
in fact, in some cases it (might) be better to do LFHC: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3389330
QuoteCurrent healthy eating advice is to "base your meals on starchy foods", so if you have been diligently following that dietetic gospel, then the professor's advice is troubling.
um, so, i looked up NHS website on what this "base your meals on starchy foods" means, here's what it says:
QuoteStarchy foods should make up around one third of the foods you eat.
this is perfectly reasonable. it's saying that it's recommended that carbs be a proportionate amount of your diet, essentially, and not at all what chowdhury was saying above (i.e., don't let starchy foods overtake your diet)
QuoteConfused? Even borderline frustrated and beginning to run out of patience? So was the BBC presenter tasked with getting clarity from the British Heart Foundation. Yes, Pearson conceded, "there is not enough evidence to be firm about [healthy eating] guidelines", but no, the findings "did not change the advice that eating too much fat is harmful for the heart". Saturated fat reduction, he said, was just one factor we should consider as part of a balanced diet and a healthy lifestyle. Can you hear a drip, drip in the background as officially endorsed diet advice goes into meltdown?
author is quite condescending and reveals bias, and distorts what's been reported. see above quote. there's no discrepancy here at all. people shouldn't rush out and gobble down as much saturated fats as possible because a study shows there could be no statistical link to heart disease. furthermore, the study looked at how it relates to the heart. there is loads of evidence that polyunsaturated fats (omega-3/omega-6) are healthy in other ways
QuoteOf course, we have already had a bitter taste of how hopelessly misleading nutritional orthodoxy can...
[7 paragraphs of pure rant later]
...In line with the contention that foods containing animal fats are harmful, we have also been instructed to restrict our intake of red meat. But crucial facts have been lost in this simplistic red-hazed debate. The weak epidemiological evidence that appears to implicate red meat does not separate well-reared, unprocessed meat from the factory farmed, heavily processed equivalent that contains a cocktail of chemical additives, preservatives and so on. Meanwhile, no government authority has bothered to tell us that lamb, beef and game from free-range, grass-fed animals is a top source of conjugated linoleic acid, the micronutrient that reduces our risk of cancer, obesity and diabetes.
"processed meat" means frankfurters, sausage, salami, and luncheon meats. those meats are bad. "processed meats"
do not refer to meat that come from animals pumped full of additives. it's widely considered that "processed meats" are bad for you, yes. but the difference between grass fed and grain fed is really overstated (at least nutritionally)
as to the part in bold... high in conjugated linoleic acid? so, a polyunsaturated fat? :lol: the author here attacked polyunsaturated fats earlier for not protecting the heart, yet she praises them here? also, you can pop a pill once/twice a day to get your omega-6 ("conjugated linoleic acid")
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2846864/
QuoteGovernment diet gurus and health charities have long been engaged on a salt reduction crusade, but what has been missing from this noble effort is the awareness that excessive salt is a problem of processed food.
[more ranting]
..."avoid processed food" appears nowhere in government nutritional guidelines, yet this is the most concise way to sum up in practical terms what is wholesome and healthy to eat.
um, first.
http://www.nhs.uk/change4life/Pages/food-exercise-mythbuster.aspx
QuoteMyth 6 : The salt we add at the table is most of the salt we eat
You may think so, but actually 75% of the salt in our diet comes from processed foods. Just 10-15% comes from the salt we add when we're cooking or at the table.
for a british author writing for british news, she really overlooked all the warnings the british national health service has against processed foods - a quick google search reveals multiple articles. imagine that
QuoteJoanna Blythman is the author of Bad Food Britain and What to Eat
so she wanted to sell a book
QuoteEggs
We were once told to eat no more than two a week. Now eggs look like the most all-round nutritious food you can eat, so there's no need to limit them.
this is twisting the studies. eggs are fine to eat in moderation, roughly 1 egg a day. over-consumption of eggs, however, is not encouraged
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/eggs/
(article it links to - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18195171?dopt=Citation)
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23295181 (updated article)
QuoteRed meat
Processed red meat that's stiff with additives is to be avoided, but meat from free-range, grass-fed cattle is a rich source of conjugated linoleic acid, which reduces our risk of cancer, obesity, and diabetes.
this isn't backed by science. the best argument is that grass fed is marginally healthier, but that does not mean grain fed / with additives is
unhealthy. again the author tries to lump those meats with the awful processed salamis, sausage, etc.
---
well, to sum up that article: she took a recent study that said two things (saturated fats might not be as bad to the heart previously thought; polyunsaturated fats might not protect the heart as much as previously thought) and tried to shoehorn in seemingly every single bullshit belief she had that was backed by pseudoscience, fear, and misconception. and yeah, i know, long post etc. etc. but these health fads (ironically mocked by the author) are a pet peeve