Scientific American Last month, an op–ed in The New York Times argued
that high-protein and high-fat diets are to blame for America’s
ever-growing waistline and incidence of chronic disease. The author,
Dean Ornish, founder of the nonprofit Preventive Medicine Research
Institute, is no newcomer to these nutrition debates. For 37 years
he has been touting the benefits of very low-fat, high-carbohydrate,
vegetarian diets for preventing and reversing heart disease. But the
research he cites to back up his op–ed claims is tenuous at best.
Nutrition is complex but there is little evidence our country’s
worsening metabolic ills are the fault of protein or fat. If anything,
our attempts to eat less fat in recent decades have made things worse.
Ornish begins his piece with a misleading statistic. Despite being told
to eat less fat, he says, Americans have been doing the opposite: They
have “actually consumed 67 percent more added fat, 39 percent more sugar
and 41 percent more meat in 2000 than they had in 1950 and 24.5 percent
more calories than they had in 1970.” Yes, Americans have been eating
more fat, sugar and meat, but we have also been eating more vegetables
and fruits (pdf)—because we have been eating more of everything.
What’s more relevant to the discussion is this fact: During the time
in which the prevalence of obesity in the U.S. nearly tripled, the
percentage of calories Americans consumed from protein and fat actually dropped
whereas the percentage of calories Americans ingested from
carbohydrates—one of the nutrient groups Ornish says we should eat more
of—increased.
Could it be that our attempts to reduce fat have in fact been part of
the problem? Some scientists think so. “I believe the low-fat message
promoted the obesity epidemic,” says Lyn Steffen, a nutritional
epidemiologist at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health.
That’s in part because when we cut out fat, we began eating foods that
were worse for us.[...]
The point here is not that Ornish’s diet—a low-fat, whole food,
plant-based approach—is necessarily bad. It’s almost certainly healthier
than the highly processed, refined-carbohydrate-rich diet most
Americans consume today. But Ornish’s arguments against protein and fat
are weak, simplistic and, in a way, irrelevant. A food or nutrient can
be healthy without requiring that all other foods or nutrients be
unhealthy. And categorizing entire nutrient groups as “good” or “bad” is
facile. “It’s hard to move the science forward when there are so many
stakeholders who say ‘this is the right diet and no other one could
possibly be right,’” Bazzano says. Plus, discouraging the intake of
entire macronutrient groups can backfire. When people dutifully cut down
on fat in the 1980s and 1990s, they replaced much of it with high-sugar
and high-calorie processed foods (think: Snackwell’s). If we start
fearing protein, too, what will we fill our plates with instead? History
tells us it’s not going to be spinach.
Required reading on this topic is Gary Taubes's "Good Calories, Bad Calories," an exhaustive study of the current science, and a debunking of the conventional low-fat, low-calorie idea of weight loss, for which there is zero scientific proof. He goes into the sad history of why this idea came to be accepted -- it is eye-opening to say the least.
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