Are butter,
cheese and steak really bad for you? The dubious science behind the anti-fat
crusade
The Wall
Street Journal
By NINA
TEICHOLZ
Updated May
6, 2014 10:25 a.m. ET
"Saturated
fat does not cause heart disease"—or so concluded a big study published in
March in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine. How could this be? The very
cornerstone of dietary advice for generations has been that the saturated fats
in butter, cheese and red meat should be avoided because they clog our
arteries. For many diet-conscious Americans, it is simply second nature to opt
for chicken over sirloin, canola oil over butter.
The new
study's conclusion shouldn't surprise anyone familiar with modern nutritional
science, however. The fact is, there has never been solid evidence for the idea
that these fats cause disease. We only believe this to be the case because
nutrition policy has been derailed over the past half-century by a mixture of
personal ambition, bad science, politics and bias.
Our
distrust of saturated fat can be traced back to the 1950s, to a man named Ancel
Benjamin Keys, a scientist at the University
of Minnesota . Dr. Keys
was formidably persuasive and, through sheer force of will, rose to the top of
the nutrition world—even gracing the cover of Time magazine—for relentlessly
championing the idea that saturated fats raise cholesterol and, as a result,
cause heart attacks.
This idea
fell on receptive ears because, at the time, Americans faced a fast-growing
epidemic. Heart disease, a rarity only three decades earlier, had quickly
become the nation's No. 1 killer. Even President Dwight D. Eisenhower suffered
a heart attack in 1955. Researchers were desperate for answers.
As the
director of the largest nutrition study to date, Dr. Keys was in an excellent
position to promote his idea. The "Seven Countries" study that he
conducted on nearly 13,000 men in the U.S. ,
Japan and Europe
ostensibly demonstrated that heart disease wasn't the inevitable result of aging
but could be linked to poor nutrition.
Critics
have pointed out that Dr. Keys violated several basic scientific norms in his
study. For one, he didn't choose countries randomly but instead selected only
those likely to prove his beliefs, including Yugoslavia ,
Finland and Italy . Excluded
were France , land of the
famously healthy omelet eater, as well as other countries where people consumed
a lot of fat yet didn't suffer from high rates of heart disease, such as Switzerland , Sweden
and West Germany .
The study's star subjects—upon whom much of our current understanding of the
Mediterranean diet is based—were peasants from Crete, islanders who tilled
their fields well into old age and who appeared to eat very little meat or
cheese.
As it turns
out, Dr. Keys visited Crete during an
unrepresentative period of extreme hardship after World War II. Furthermore, he
made the mistake of measuring the islanders' diet partly during Lent, when they
were forgoing meat and cheese. Dr. Keys therefore undercounted their
consumption of saturated fat. Also, due to problems with the surveys, he ended
up relying on data from just a few dozen men—far from the representative sample
of 655 that he had initially selected. These flaws weren't revealed until much
later, in a 2002 paper by scientists investigating the work on Crete —but by then, the misimpression left by his
erroneous data had become international dogma.
In 1961,
Dr. Keys sealed saturated fat's fate by landing a position on the nutrition
committee of the American Heart Association, whose dietary guidelines are
considered the gold standard. Although the committee had originally been
skeptical of his hypothesis, it issued, in that year, the country's first-ever
guidelines targeting saturated fats. The U.S. Department of Agriculture
followed in 1980.
Other
studies ensued. A half-dozen large, important trials pitted a diet high in
vegetable oil—usually corn or soybean, but not olive oil—against one with more
animal fats. But these trials, mainly from the 1970s, also had serious
methodological problems. Some didn't control for smoking, for instance, or
allowed men to wander in and out of the research group over the course of the
experiment. The results were unreliable at best.
But there
was no turning back: Too much institutional energy and research money had
already been spent trying to prove Dr. Keys's hypothesis. A bias in its favor
had grown so strong that the idea just started to seem like common sense. As
Harvard nutrition professor Mark Hegsted said in 1977, after successfully
persuading the U.S. Senate to recommend Dr. Keys's diet for the entire nation,
the question wasn't whether Americans should change their diets, but why not?
Important benefits could be expected, he argued. And the risks? "None can
be identified," he said.
In fact,
even back then, other scientists were warning about the diet's potential
unintended consequences. Today, we are dealing with the reality that these have
come to pass.
One
consequence is that in cutting back on fats, we are now eating a lot more
carbohydrates—at least 25% more since the early 1970s. Consumption of saturated
fat, meanwhile, has dropped by 11%, according to the best available government
data. Translation: Instead of meat, eggs and cheese, we're eating more pasta,
grains, fruit and starchy vegetables such as potatoes. Even seemingly healthy
low-fat foods, such as yogurt, are stealth carb-delivery systems, since
removing the fat often requires the addition of fillers to make up for lost
texture—and these are usually carbohydrate-based.
The problem
is that carbohydrates break down into glucose, which causes the body to release
insulin—a hormone that is fantastically efficient at storing fat. Meanwhile,
fructose, the main sugar in fruit, causes the liver to generate triglycerides
and other lipids in the blood that are altogether bad news. Excessive
carbohydrates lead not only to obesity but also, over time, to Type 2 diabetes
and, very likely, heart disease.
The real
surprise is that, according to the best science to date, people put themselves
at higher risk for these conditions no matter what kind of carbohydrates they
eat. Yes, even unrefined carbs. Too much whole-grain oatmeal for breakfast and
whole-grain pasta for dinner, with fruit snacks in between, add up to a less healthy
diet than one of eggs and bacon, followed by fish. The reality is that fat
doesn't make you fat or diabetic. Scientific investigations going back to the
1950s suggest that actually, carbs do.
The second
big unintended consequence of our shift away from animal fats is that we're now
consuming more vegetable oils. Butter and lard had long been staples of the
American pantry until Crisco, introduced in 1911, became the first
vegetable-based fat to win wide acceptance in U.S. kitchens. Then came margarines
made from vegetable oil and then just plain vegetable oil in bottles.
All of
these got a boost from the American Heart Association—which Procter &
Gamble, the maker of Crisco oil, coincidentally helped launch as a national
organization. In 1948, P&G made the AHA the beneficiary of the popular
"Walking Man" radio contest, which the company sponsored. The show
raised $1.7 million for the group and transformed it (according to the AHA's
official history) from a small, underfunded professional society into the
powerhouse that it remains today.
After the
AHA advised the public to eat less saturated fat and switch to vegetable oils
for a "healthy heart" in 1961, Americans changed their diets. Now
these oils represent 7% to 8% of all calories in our diet, up from nearly zero
in 1900, the biggest increase in consumption of any type of food over the past
century.
This shift
seemed like a good idea at the time, but it brought many potential health
problems in its wake. In those early clinical trials, people on diets high in
vegetable oil were found to suffer higher rates not only of cancer but also of
gallstones. And, strikingly, they were more likely to die from violent
accidents and suicides. Alarmed by these findings, the National Institutes of
Health convened researchers several times in the early 1980s to try to explain
these "side effects," but they couldn't. (Experts now speculate that
certain psychological problems might be related to changes in brain chemistry
caused by diet, such as fatty-acid imbalances or the depletion of cholesterol.)
We've also
known since the 1940s that when heated, vegetable oils create oxidation
products that, in experiments on animals, lead to cirrhosis of the liver and
early death. For these reasons, some midcentury chemists warned against the
consumption of these oils, but their concerns were allayed by a chemical fix:
Oils could be rendered more stable through a process called hydrogenation,
which used a catalyst to turn them from oils into solids.
From the
1950s on, these hardened oils became the backbone of the entire food industry,
used in cakes, cookies, chips, breads, frostings, fillings, and frozen and
fried food. Unfortunately, hydrogenation also produced trans fats, which since
the 1970s have been suspected of interfering with basic cellular functioning
and were recently condemned by the Food and Drug Administration for their
ability to raise our levels of "bad" LDL cholesterol.
Yet
paradoxically, the drive to get rid of trans fats has led some restaurants and
food manufacturers to return to using regular liquid oils—with the same
long-standing oxidation problems. These dangers are especially acute in
restaurant fryers, where the oils are heated to high temperatures over long
periods.
The past
decade of research on these oxidation products has produced a sizable body of
evidence showing their dramatic inflammatory and oxidative effects, which
implicates them in heart disease and other illnesses such as Alzheimer's. Other
newly discovered potential toxins in vegetable oils, called monochloropropane
diols and glycidol esters, are now causing concern among health authorities in Europe .
In short,
the track record of vegetable oils is highly worrisome—and not remotely what
Americans bargained for when they gave up butter and lard.
Cutting
back on saturated fat has had especially harmful consequences for women, who,
due to hormonal differences, contract heart disease later in life and in a way
that is distinct from men. If anything, high total cholesterol levels in women
over 50 were found early on to be associated with longer life. This
counterintuitive result was first discovered by the famous Framingham study on heart-disease risk
factors in 1971 and has since been confirmed by other research.
Since women
under 50 rarely get heart disease, the implication is that women of all ages
have been worrying about their cholesterol levels needlessly. Yet the Framingham study's
findings on women were omitted from the study's conclusions. And less than a
decade later, government health officials pushed their advice about fat and
cholesterol on all Americans over age 2—based exclusively on data from
middle-aged men.
Sticking to
these guidelines has meant ignoring growing evidence that women on diets low in
saturated fat actually increase their risk of having a heart attack. The
"good" HDL cholesterol drops precipitously for women on this diet (it
drops for men too, but less so). The sad irony is that women have been
especially rigorous about ramping up on their fruits, vegetables and grains,
but they now suffer from higher obesity rates than men, and their death rates
from heart disease have reached parity.
Seeing the U.S. population
grow sicker and fatter while adhering to official dietary guidelines has put
nutrition authorities in an awkward position. Recently, the response of many
researchers has been to blame "Big Food" for bombarding Americans
with sugar-laden products. No doubt these are bad for us, but it is also fair
to say that the food industry has simply been responding to the dietary
guidelines issued by the AHA and USDA, which have encouraged high-carbohydrate
diets and until quite recently said next to nothing about the need to limit
sugar.
Indeed, up
until 1999, the AHA was still advising Americans to reach for "soft drinks,"
and in 2001, the group was still recommending snacks of "gum-drops"
and "hard candies made primarily with sugar" to avoid fatty foods.
Our
half-century effort to cut back on the consumption of meat, eggs and whole-fat
dairy has a tragic quality. More than a billion dollars have been spent trying
to prove Ancel Keys's hypothesis, but evidence of its benefits has never been
produced. It is time to put the saturated-fat hypothesis to bed and to move on
to test other possible culprits for our nation's health woes.
Ms.
Teicholz has been researching dietary fat and disease for nearly a decade. Her
book, "The Big Fat Surprise: Why Butter, Meat and Cheese Belong in a
Healthy Diet," will be published by Simon & Schuster on May 13.
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