Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Here's A Diet That Actually Works, and Has the Science to Prove It
















There is nothing more bizarre than asking for a control group while testing  a conjecture for the one hundredth time.  One such reasonable standard should be ample to indicate and twenty such tests will even lock in a high confidence error range.


The folks calling for such nonsense are all promoting delay in administrative action.  After all there is more than enough direct evidence to ban sugar and trans fats in all processed foods.  

This forces the consumer to make his own trans fat and sugar laden foods if he likes them so much.


More to the point many processed foods will then plausibly need to be upgraded by the consumer in some manner.  Tasteless peas may need a shot of honey or to be mixed with naturally sweet carrots.  It is never impossible but it prevents the obvious short cut which has seen sugar been jacked in a sugar arms race in many foods.
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Here's A Diet That Actually Works, and Has the Science to Prove It


Fat-free fro yo: maybe not the way forward. 

Low-fat dietary dogma—and, by extension, the plethora of processed junk the food industry conjured up to indulge it—has passed its sell-by date. But cutting down on sugary foods can trigger rapid health improvements.

Those are the messages of two studies released last week. For the fat one, a team of Harvard researchers scoured databases looking for randomized, controlled trials—the gold standard of dietary research—comparing the weight-loss effects of low-fat diets to other regimens like low-carb. 

They found 53 studies that met their criteria for rigor.

Lustig is a proponent of the idea that all calories aren't created equal—specifically, that added sugars do more harm than fats, starches, and complex carbohydrates.

The result, published in the British journal The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology: low-carbohydrate diets "led to significantly greater weight loss" than did low-fat ones. People assigned low-fat diets tended to lose a small amount of weight compared to no-change-in-diet control groups, but cutting carbs delivered better results than reducing dietary fat. "The science does not support low-fat diets as the optimal long-term weight loss strategy," lead author Deirdre Tobias of Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School said in a press release.

The study marks the latest indication that your fat-free fro-yo habit is not likely doing you any favors by cutting your fat intake. But its sugary jolt may be doing more harm than you already thought. That's the suggestion of another new study, published in the journal Obesity, by a team led by longtime sugar critic Robert Lustig, a pediatric endocrinologist in at the University of California at San Francisco.

Lustig is a proponent of the idea that all calories aren't created equal—specifically, that added sugars (in sodas, processed foods, etc.) do more harm than calorie-equivalent amounts of fats, starches, and complex carbohydrates. To test this theory, Lustig and his colleagues identified 43 kids diagnosed with obesity and metabolic syndrome—defined as a cluster of conditions associated with the risk cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes—and tweaked their diets.

For 10 days, the kids ate catered meals with caloric amounts equivalent to their previous diets but with all foods with added sugars removed, replaced with starches. Their overall sugar intake went from 28 percent to 10 percent (representing naturally sweet foods like fruit). Lustig summarized the results in an op-ed:

Diastolic blood pressure decreased by five points. Blood fat levels dropped precipitously. Fasting glucose decreased by five points, glucose tolerance improved markedly, insulin levels fell by 50%. In other words we reversed their metabolic disease in just 10 days, even while eating processed food, by just removing the added sugar and substituting starch, and without changing calories or weight. Can you imagine how much healthier they would have been if we hadn't given them the starch?

It's important to note that the results are suggestive, not conclusive. Unlike the studies conglomerated in the low-fat paper, Lustig's project did not include a control group.

But both the Harvard study and Lustig's reinforce an emerging consensus that fat is not necessarily a dietary devil, while quaffing sugar at typical US levels might just be.

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