Good News on Saturated Fat from the New York Times
Posted Jul 30 2008 4:03pm
I stumbled acrossthis linkin the New York times that refers to a report in the New England Journal of Medicine that came to the conclusion that - hey, maybe saturated fat ain’t that bad for you after all.
Read the comments that follow the posting - most react with an almost religious fervor against something that contradicts their world view - oh well, I’m not out to change the world - just myself.
I especially liked the one comment that said that the health impact of saturated fats wasn’t valid because it did so without the ‘normal’ amounts of carbohydrates - if carbohydrates were also in the diet, the health effect would be radically different.
Duh. Everyone who has done any research into low carb has probably come to a similar conclusion to the one I have:
Excessive carbohydrates cause a malabsorption of dietary fat
I happened to work briefly with a nutritionist who had written a number of books and mentioned this to him - his eyes widened, like no one had ever explained it to him in this way before.
“That’s an interesting way of stating it.” He said.
I stumbled acrossthis linkin the New York times that refers to a report in the New England Journal of Medicine that came to the conclusion that - hey, maybe saturated fat ain’t that bad for you after all.
Read the comments that follow the posting - most react with an almost religious fervor against something that contradicts their world view - oh well, I’m not out to change the world - just myself.
I especially liked the one comment that said that the health impact of saturated fats wasn’t valid because it did so without the ‘normal’ amounts of carbohydrates - if carbohydrates were also in the diet, the health effect would be radically different.
Duh. Everyone who has done any research into low carb has probably come to a similar conclusion to the one I have:
Excessive carbohydrates cause a malabsorption of dietary fat
I happened to work briefly with a nutritionist who had written a number of books and mentioned this to him - his eyes widened, like no one had ever explained it to him in this way before.
“That’s an interesting way of stating it.” He said.
Interesting indeed.