In 1972, a British scientist sounded the alarm that sugar – and not
fat – was the greatest danger to our health. But his findings were
ridiculed and his reputation ruined. How did the world’s top nutrition
scientists get it so wrong for so long?
byIan Leslie
Robert
Lustig is a paediatric endocrinologist at the University of California
who specialises in the treatment of childhood obesity. A 90-minute talk
he gave in 2009, titled Sugar: The Bitter Truth, has now been viewed
more than six million times on YouTube. In it, Lustig argues forcefully
that fructose, a form of sugar ubiquitous in modern diets, is a “poison”
culpable for America’s obesity epidemic.
A year or so before the video was posted, Lustig gave a similar talk
to a conference of biochemists in Adelaide, Australia. Afterwards, a
scientist in the audience approached him. Surely, the man said, you’ve
read Yudkin. Lustig shook his head. John Yudkin, said the scientist, was
a British professor of nutrition who had sounded the alarm on sugar
back in 1972, in a book called Pure, White, and Deadly.
“If only a small fraction of what we know about the effects of sugar
were to be revealed in relation to any other material used as a food
additive,” wrote Yudkin, “that material would promptly be banned.” The
book did well, but Yudkin paid a high price for it. Prominent
nutritionists combined with the food industry to destroy his reputation,
and his career never recovered. He died, in 1995, a disappointed,
largely forgotten man.
Perhaps the Australian scientist intended a friendly warning. Lustig
was certainly putting his academic reputation at risk when he embarked
on a high-profile campaign against sugar. But, unlike Yudkin, Lustig is
backed by a prevailing wind. We read almost every week of new research
into the deleterious effects of sugar on our bodies. In the US, the
latest edition of the government’s official dietary guidelines includes a
cap on sugar consumption. In the UK, the chancellor George Osborne has
announced a new tax on sugary drinks. Sugar has become dietary enemy number one.
This represents a dramatic shift in priority. For at least the last
three decades, the dietary arch-villain has been saturated fat. When
Yudkin was conducting his research into the effects of sugar, in the
1960s, a new nutritional orthodoxy was in the process of asserting
itself. Its central tenet was that a healthy diet is a low-fat diet.
Yudkin led a diminishing band of dissenters who believed that sugar, not
fat, was the more likely cause of maladies such as obesity, heart
disease and diabetes. But by the time he wrote his book, the commanding
heights of the field had been seized by proponents of the fat
hypothesis. Yudkin found himself fighting a rearguard action, and he was
defeated.
Not just defeated, in fact, but buried. When Lustig returned to
California, he searched for Pure, White and Deadly in bookstores and
online, to no avail. Eventually, he tracked down a copy after submitting
a request to his university library. On reading Yudkin’s introduction,
he felt a shock of recognition.
“Holy crap,” Lustig thought. “This guy got there 35 years before me.” In 1980, after long consultation with some of
America’s most senior nutrition scientists, the US government issued its
first Dietary Guidelines. The guidelines shaped the diets of hundreds
of millions of people. Doctors base their advice on them, food companies
develop products to comply with them. Their influence extends beyond
the US. In 1983, the UK government issued advice that closely followed
the American example.
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The
most prominent recommendation of both governments was to cut back on
saturated fats and cholesterol (this was the first time that the public
had been advised to eat less of something, rather than enough of
everything). Consumers dutifully obeyed. We replaced steak and sausages
with pasta and rice, butter with margarine and vegetable oils, eggs with
muesli, and milk with low-fat milk or orange juice. But instead of
becoming healthier, we grew fatter and sicker.
Look at a graph of postwar obesity rates and it becomes clear that
something changed after 1980. In the US, the line rises very gradually
until, in the early 1980s, it takes off like an aeroplane. Just 12% of
Americans were obese in 1950, 15% in 1980, 35% by 2000. In the UK, the
line is flat for decades until the mid-1980s, at which point it also
turns towards the sky. Only 6% of Britons were obese in 1980. In the
next 20 years that figure more than trebled. Today, two thirds of Britons are either obese
or overweight, making this the fattest country in the EU. Type 2
diabetes, closely related to obesity, has risen in tandem in both
countries.
At best, we can conclude that the official guidelines did not achieve
their objective; at worst, they led to a decades-long health
catastrophe. Naturally, then, a search for culprits has ensued.
Scientists are conventionally apolitical figures, but these days,
nutrition researchers write editorials and books that resemble liberal
activist tracts, fizzing with righteous denunciations of “big sugar” and
fast food. Nobody could have predicted, it is said, how the food
manufacturers would respond to the injunction against fat – selling us
low-fat yoghurts bulked up with sugar, and cakes infused with
liver-corroding transfats. Nutrition
scientists are angry with the press for distorting their findings,
politicians for failing to heed them, and the rest of us for overeating
and under-exercising. In short, everyone – business, media, politicians,
consumers – is to blame. Everyone, that is, except scientists.
But it was not impossible to foresee that the vilification of fat
might be an error. Energy from food comes to us in three forms: fat,
carbohydrate, and protein. Since the proportion of energy we get from
protein tends to stay stable, whatever our diet, a low-fat diet
effectively means a high-carbohydrate diet. The most versatile and
palatable carbohydrate is sugar, which John Yudkin had already circled
in red. In 1974, the UK medical journal, the Lancet, sounded a warning
about the possible consequences of recommending reductions in dietary
fat: “The cure should not be worse than the disease.”
Still, it would be reasonable to assume that Yudkin lost this
argument simply because, by 1980, more evidence had accumulated against
fat than against sugar.
After all, that’s how science works, isn’t it? If, as seems increasingly likely, the nutritional
advice on which we have relied for 40 years was profoundly flawed, this
is not a mistake that can be laid at the door of corporate ogres. Nor
can it be passed off as innocuous scientific error. What happened to
John Yudkin belies that interpretation. It suggests instead that this is
something the scientists did to themselves – and, consequently, to us.
We tend to think of heretics as contrarians, individuals with a
compulsion to flout conventional wisdom. But sometimes a heretic is
simply a mainstream thinker who stays facing the same way while everyone
around him turns 180 degrees. When, in 1957, John Yudkin first floated his hypothesis
that sugar was a hazard to public health, it was taken seriously, as
was its proponent. By the time Yudkin retired, 14 years later, both
theory and author had been marginalised and derided. Only now is
Yudkin’s work being returned, posthumously, to the scientific
mainstream.
Illustration by Pete Gamlen
These sharp fluctuations in Yudkin’s stock have had little to do with
the scientific method, and a lot to do with the unscientific way in
which the field of nutrition has conducted itself over the years. This
story, which has begun to emerge in the past decade, has been brought to
public attention largely by sceptical outsiders rather than eminent
nutritionists. In her painstakingly researched book, The Big Fat
Surprise, the journalist Nina Teicholz traces the history of the
proposition that saturated fats cause heart disease, and reveals the
remarkable extent to which its progress from controversial theory to
accepted truth was driven, not by new evidence, but by the influence of a
few powerful personalities, one in particular.
Teicholz’s book also describes how an establishment of senior
nutrition scientists, at once insecure about its medical authority and
vigilant for threats to it, consistently exaggerated the case for
low-fat diets, while turning its guns on those who offered evidence or
argument to the contrary. John Yudkin was only its first and most
eminent victim.
Today, as nutritionists struggle to comprehend a health disaster they
did not predict and may have precipitated, the field is undergoing a
painful period of re-evaluation. It is edging away from prohibitions on
cholesterol and fat, and hardening its warnings on sugar, without going
so far as to perform a reverse turn. But its senior members still retain
a collective instinct to malign those who challenge its tattered
conventional wisdom too loudly, as Teicholz is now discovering. To understand how we arrived at this point, we need to go back almost to the beginning of modern nutrition science.
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On
23 September, 1955, US President Dwight Eisenhower suffered a heart
attack. Rather than pretend it hadn’t happened, Eisenhower insisted on
making details of his illness public. The next day, his chief physician,
Dr Paul Dudley White, gave a press conference at which he instructed
Americans on how to avoid heart disease: stop smoking, and cut down on
fat and cholesterol. In a follow-up article, White cited the research of
a nutritionist at the University of Minnesota, Ancel Keys.
Heart disease, which had been a relative rarity in the 1920s, was now
felling middle-aged men at a frightening rate, and Americans were
casting around for cause and cure. Ancel Keys provided an answer: the
“diet-heart hypothesis” (for simplicity’s sake, I am calling it the “fat
hypothesis”). This is the idea, now familiar, that an excess of
saturated fats in the diet, from red meat, cheese, butter, and eggs,
raises cholesterol, which congeals on the inside of coronary arteries,
causing them to harden and narrow, until the flow of blood is staunched
and the heart seizes up.
Ancel Keys was brilliant, charismatic, and combative. A friendly
colleague at the University of Minnesota described him as, “direct to
the point of bluntness, critical to the point of skewering”; others were
less charitable. He exuded conviction at a time when confidence was
most welcome. The president, the physician and the scientist formed a
reassuring chain of male authority, and the notion that fatty foods were
unhealthy started to take hold with doctors, and the public.
(Eisenhower himself cut saturated fats and cholesterol from his diet
altogether, right up until his death, in 1969, from heart disease.)
Many scientists, especially British ones, remained sceptical. The
most prominent doubter was John Yudkin, then the UK’s leading
nutritionist. When Yudkin looked at the data on heart disease, he was
struck by its correlation with the consumption of sugar, not fat. He
carried out a series of laboratory experiments on animals and humans,
and observed, as others had before him, that sugar is processed in the
liver, where it turns to fat, before entering the bloodstream.
He noted, too, that while humans have always been carnivorous,
carbohydrates only became a major component of their diet 10,000 years
ago, with the advent of mass agriculture. Sugar – a pure carbohydrate,
with all fibre and nutrition stripped out – has been part of western
diets for just 300 years; in evolutionary terms, it is as if we have,
just this second, taken our first dose of it. Saturated fats, by
contrast, are so intimately bound up with our evolution that they are
abundantly present in breast milk. To Yudkin’s thinking, it seemed more
likely to be the recent innovation, rather than the prehistoric staple,
making us sick.
John Yudkin was born in 1910, in the East End of London. His parents
were Russian Jews who settled in England after fleeing the pogroms of
1905. Yudkin’s father died when he was six, and his mother brought up
her five sons in poverty. By way of a scholarship to a local grammar
school in Hackney, Yudkin made it to Cambridge. He studied biochemistry
and physiology, before taking up medicine. After serving in the Royal
Army Medical Corps during the second world war, Yudkin was made a
professor at Queen Elizabeth College in London, where he built a
department of nutrition science with an international reputation.
Ancel Keys was intensely aware that Yudkin’s sugar hypothesis posed
an alternative to his own. If Yudkin published a paper, Keys would
excoriate it, and him. He called Yudkin’s theory “a mountain of
nonsense”, and accused him of issuing “propaganda” for the meat and
dairy industries. “Yudkin and his commercial backers are not deterred by
the facts,” he said. “They continue to sing the same discredited tune.”
Yudkin never responded in kind. He was a mild-mannered man, unskilled
in the art of political combat.
That made him vulnerable to attack, and not just from Keys. The
British Sugar Bureau dismissed Yudkin’s claims about sugar as “emotional
assertions”; the World Sugar Research Organisation called his book
“science fiction”. In his prose, Yudkin is fastidiously precise and
undemonstrative, as he was in person. Only occasionally does he hint at
how it must have felt to have his life’s work besmirched, as when he
asks the reader, “Can you wonder that one sometimes becomes quite
despondent about whether it is worthwhile trying to do scientific
research in matters of health?”
Throughout the 1960s, Keys accumulated institutional power. He
secured places for himself and his allies on the boards of the most
influential bodies in American healthcare, including the American Heart
Association and the National Institutes of Health.
From these strongholds, they directed funds to like-minded researchers,
and issued authoritative advice to the nation. “People should know the
facts,” Keys told Time magazine. “Then if they want to eat themselves to
death, let them.”
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This
apparent certainty was unwarranted: even some supporters of the fat
hypothesis admitted that the evidence for it was still inconclusive. But
Keys held a trump card. From 1958 to 1964, he and his fellow
researchers gathered data on the diets, lifestyles and health of 12,770
middle-aged men, in Italy, Greece, Yugoslavia, Finland, Netherlands,
Japan and the United States. The Seven Countries Study was finally
published as a 211-page monograph in 1970. It showed a correlation
between intake of saturated fats and deaths from heart disease, just as
Keys had predicted. The scientific debate swung decisively behind the
fat hypothesis.
Keys was the original big data guy (a contemporary remarked: “Every
time you question this man Keys, he says, ‘I’ve got 5,000 cases. How
many do you have?’). Despite its monumental stature, however, the Seven
Countries Study, which was the basis for a cascade of subsequent papers
by its original authors, was a rickety construction. There was no
objective basis for the countries chosen by Keys, and it is hard to
avoid the conclusion that he picked only those he suspected would
support his hypothesis. After all, it is quite something to choose seven
nations in Europe and leave out France and what was then West Germany,
but then, Keys already knew that the French and Germans had relatively
low rates of heart disease, despite living on a diet rich in saturated
fats.
The study’s biggest limitation was inherent to its method.
Epidemiological research involves the collection of data on people’s
behaviour and health, and a search for patterns. Originally developed to
study infection, Keys and his successors adapted it to the study of
chronic diseases, which, unlike most infections, take decades to
develop, and are entangled with hundreds of dietary and lifestyle
factors, effectively impossible to separate.
To reliably identify causes, as opposed to correlations, a higher
standard of evidence is required: the controlled trial. In its simplest
form: recruit a group of subjects, and assign half of them a diet for,
say, 15 years. At the end of the trial, assess the health of those in
the intervention group, versus the control group. This method is also
problematic: it is virtually impossible to closely supervise the diets
of large groups of people. But a properly conducted trial is the only
way to conclude with any confidence that X is responsible for Y.
Although Keys had shown a correlation between heart disease and
saturated fat, he had not excluded the possibility that heart disease
was being caused by something else. Years later, the Seven Countries
study’s lead Italian researcher, Alessandro Menotti, went back to the
data, and found that the food that correlated most closely with deaths
from heart disease was not saturated fat, but sugar.
Illustration by Pete Gamlen
By then it was too late. The Seven Countries study had become
canonical, and the fat hypothesis was enshrined in official advice. The
congressional committee responsible for the original Dietary Guidelines
was chaired by Senator George McGovern. It took most of its evidence
from America’s nutritional elite: men from a handful of prestigious
universities, most of whom knew or worked with each other, all of whom
agreed that fat was the problem – an assumption that McGovern and his
fellow senators never seriously questioned. Only occasionally were they
asked to reconsider. In 1973, John Yudkin was called from London to
testify before the committee, and presented his alternative theory of
heart disease.
A bemused McGovern asked Yudkin if he was really suggesting that a
high fat intake was not a problem, and that cholesterol presented no
danger.
“I believe both those things,” replied Yudkin.
“That is exactly the opposite of what my doctor told me,” said McGovern. In a 2015 paper titled Does Science Advance One
Funeral at a Time?, a team of scholars at the National Bureau of
Economic Research sought an empirical basis for a remark made by the
physicist Max Planck: “A new scientific truth does not triumph by
convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather
because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that
is familiar with it.”
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The
researchers identified more than 12,000 “elite” scientists from
different fields. The criteria for elite status included funding, number
of publications, and whether they were members of the National
Academies of Science or the Institute of Medicine. Searching obituaries,
the team found 452 who had died before retirement. They then looked to
see what happened to the fields from which these celebrated scientists
had unexpectedly departed, by analysing publishing patterns.
What they found confirmed the truth of Planck’s maxim. Junior
researchers who had worked closely with the elite scientists, authoring
papers with them, published less. At the same time, there was a marked
increase in papers by newcomers to the field, who were less likely to
cite the work of the deceased eminence. The articles by these newcomers
were substantive and influential, attracting a high number of citations.
They moved the whole field along.
A scientist is part of what the Polish philosopher of science Ludwik
Fleck called a “thought collective”: a group of people exchanging ideas
in a mutually comprehensible idiom. The group, suggested Fleck,
inevitably develops a mind of its own, as the individuals in it converge
on a way of communicating, thinking and feeling.
This makes scientific inquiry prone to the eternal rules of human
social life: deference to the charismatic, herding towards majority
opinion, punishment for deviance, and intense discomfort with admitting
to error. Of course, such tendencies are precisely what the scientific
method was invented to correct for, and over the long run, it does a
good job of it. In the long run, however, we’re all dead, quite possibly
sooner than we would be if we hadn’t been following a diet based on
poor advice. In a series of densely argued articles and books, including Why We Get Fat
(2010), the science writer Gary Taubes has assembled a critique of
contemporary nutrition science, powerful enough to compel the field to
listen. One of his contributions has been to uncover a body of research
conducted by German and Austrian scientists before the second world war,
which had been overlooked by the Americans who reinvented the field in
the 1950s. The Europeans were practising physicians and experts in the
metabolic system. The Americans were more likely to be epidemiologists,
labouring in relative ignorance of biochemistry and endocrinology (the
study of hormones). This led to some of the foundational mistakes of
modern nutrition.
The rise and slow fall of cholesterol’s infamy is a case in point.
After it was discovered inside the arteries of men who had suffered
heart attacks, public health officials, advised by scientists, put eggs,
whose yolks are rich in cholesterol, on the danger list. But it is a
biological error to confuse what a person puts in their mouth with what
it becomes after it is swallowed. The human body, far from being a
passive vessel for whatever we choose to fill it with, is a busy
chemical plant, transforming and redistributing the energy it receives.
Its governing principle is homeostasis, or the maintenance of energy
equilibrium (when exercise heats us up, sweat cools us down).
Cholesterol, present in all of our cells, is created by the liver.
Biochemists had long known that the more cholesterol you eat, the less
your liver produces.
Unsurprisingly, then, repeated attempts to prove a correlation
between dietary cholesterol and blood cholesterol failed. For the vast
majority of people, eating two or three, or 25 eggs a day, does not
significantly raise cholesterol levels. One of the most nutrient-dense,
versatile and delicious foods we have was needlessly stigmatised. The
health authorities have spent the last few years slowly backing away
from this mistake, presumably in the hope that if no sudden movements
are made, nobody will notice. In a sense, they have succeeded: a survey
carried out in 2014 by Credit Suisse found that 54% of US doctors believe that dietary cholesterol raises blood cholesterol.
To his credit, Ancel Keys realised early on that dietary cholesterol
was not a problem. But in order to sustain his assertion that
cholesterol causes heart attacks, he needed to identify an agent that
raises its levels in the blood – he landed on saturated fats. In the 30
years after Eisenhower’s heart attack, trial after trial failed to
conclusively bear out the association he claimed to have identified in
the Seven Countries study.
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The
nutritional establishment wasn’t greatly discomfited by the absence of
definitive proof, but by 1993 it found that it couldn’t evade another
criticism: while a low-fat diet had been recommended to women, it had
never been tested on them (a fact that is astonishing only if you are
not a nutrition scientist). The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute
decided to go all in, commissioning the largest controlled trial of
diets ever undertaken. As well as addressing the other half of the
population, the Women’s Health Initiative was expected to obliterate any
lingering doubts about the ill-effects of fat.
It did nothing of the sort. At the end of the trial, it was found
that women on the low-fat diet were no less likely than the control
group to contract cancer or heart disease. This caused much
consternation. The study’s principal researcher, unwilling to accept the
implications of his own findings, remarked: “We are scratching our
heads over some of these results.” A consensus quickly formed that the
study – meticulously planned, lavishly funded, overseen by impressively
credentialed researchers – must have been so flawed as to be
meaningless. The field moved on, or rather did not.
In 2008, researchers from Oxford University undertook a Europe-wide
study of the causes of heart disease. Its data shows an inverse
correlation between saturated fat and heart disease, across the
continent. France, the country with the highest intake of saturated fat,
has the lowest rate of heart disease; Ukraine, the country with the
lowest intake of saturated fat, has the highest. When the British
obesity researcher Zoë Harcombe
performed an analysis of the data on cholesterol levels for 192
countries around the world, she found that lower cholesterol correlated
with higher rates of death from heart disease.
In the last 10 years, a theory that had somehow held up unsupported
for nearly half a century has been rejected by several comprehensive
evidence reviews, even as it staggers on, zombie-like, in our dietary
guidelines and medical advice.
The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation, in a 2008 analysis
of all studies of the low-fat diet, found “no probable or convincing
evidence” that a high level of dietary fat causes heart disease or
cancer. Another landmark review, published in 2010, in the American
Society for Nutrition, and authored by, among others, Ronald Krauss, a
highly respected researcher and physician at the University of
California, stated “there is no significant evidence for concluding that dietary saturated fat is associated with an increased risk of CHD or CVD [coronary heart disease and cardiovascular disease]”.
Many nutritionists refused to accept these conclusions. The journal
that published Krauss’s review, wary of outrage among its readers,
prefaced it with a rebuttal by a former right-hand man of Ancel Keys,
which implied that since Krauss’s findings contradicted every national
and international dietary recommendation, they must be flawed. The
circular logic is symptomatic of a field with an unusually high
propensity for ignoring evidence that does not fit its conventional
wisdom.
Gary Taubes is a physicist by background. “In physics,” he told me,
“You look for the anomalous result. Then you have something to explain.
In nutrition, the game is to confirm what you and your predecessors have
always believed.” As one nutritionist explained to Nina Teicholz, with
delicate understatement: “Scientists believe that saturated fat is bad
for you, and there is a good deal of reluctance toward accepting
evidence to the contrary.”
Illustration by Pete Gamlen
When obesity started to become recognised as a
problem in western societies, it too was blamed on saturated fats. It
was not difficult to persuade the public that if we eat fat, we will be
fat (this is a trick of the language: we call an overweight person
“fat”; we don’t describe a person with a muscular body as “proteiny”).
The scientific rationale was also pleasingly simple: a gramme of fat has
twice as many calories as a gramme of protein or carbohydrate, and we
can all grasp the idea that if a person takes in more calories than she
expends in physical activity, the surplus ends up as fat.
Simple does not mean right, of course. It’s difficult to square this
theory with the dramatic rise in obesity since 1980, or with much other
evidence. In America, average calorific intake increased by just a sixth
over that period. In the UK, it actually fell. There has been no
commensurate decline in physical activity, in either country – in the
UK, exercise levels have increased over the last 20 years. Obesity is a
problem in some of the poorest parts of the world, even among
communities in which food is scarce. Controlled trials have repeatedly
failed to show that people lose weight on low-fat or low-calorie diets,
over the long-term.
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Those
prewar European researchers would have regarded the idea that obesity
results from “excess calories” as laughably simplistic. Biochemists and
endocrinologists are more likely to think of obesity as a hormonal
disorder, triggered by the kinds of foods we started eating a lot more
of when we cut back on fat: easily digestible starches and sugars. In
his new book, Always Hungry, David Ludwig,
an endocrinologist and professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical
School, calls this the “Insulin-Carbohydrate” model of obesity.
According to this model, an excess of refined carbohydrates interferes
with the self-balancing equilibrium of the metabolic system.
Far from being an inert dumping ground for excess calories, fat
tissue operates as a reserve energy supply for the body. Its calories
are called upon when glucose is running low – that is, between meals, or
during fasts and famines. Fat takes instruction from insulin, the
hormone responsible for regulating blood sugar. Refined carbohydrates
break down at speed into glucose in the blood, prompting the pancreas to
produce insulin. When insulin levels rise, fat tissue gets a signal to
suck energy out of the blood, and to stop releasing it. So when insulin
stays high for unnaturally long, a person gains weight, gets hungrier,
and feels fatigued. Then we blame them for it. But, as Gary Taubes puts
it, obese people are not fat because they are overeating and sedentary –
they are overeating and sedentary because they are fat, or getting
fatter.
Ludwig makes clear, as Taubes does, that this is not a new theory –
John Yudkin would have recognised it – but an old one that has been
galvanised by new evidence. What he does not mention is the role that
supporters of the fat hypothesis have played, historically, in
demolishing the credibility of those who proposed it. In 1972, the same year Yudkin published Pure, White and Deadly, a Cornell-trained cardiologist called Robert Atkins
published Dr Atkins’ Diet Revolution. Their arguments shared a premise –
that carbohydrates are more dangerous to our health than fat – though
they differed in particulars. Yudkin focused on the evils of one
carbohydrate in particular, and didn’t explicitly recommend a high-fat
diet. Atkins argued that a high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet was the only viable route to weight loss.
Perhaps the most important difference between the two books was tone.
Yudkin’s was cool, polite and reasonable, which reflected his
temperament, and the fact that he saw himself as a scientist first and a
clinician second. Atkins, resolutely a practitioner rather than an
academic, was unbound by gentlemanly conventions. He declared himself
furious that he had been “duped” by medical scientists. Unsurprisingly,
this attack enraged the nutritional establishment, which hit back hard.
Atkins was labelled a fraud, and his diet a “fad”. It was a successful
campaign: even today, Atkins’s name brings with it the odour of
quackery.
A “fad” implies something new-fangled. But low-carbohydrate, high-fat
diets had been popular for well over a century before Atkins, and were,
until the 1960s, a method of weight loss endorsed by mainstream
science. By the start of the 1970s, that had changed. Researchers
interested in the effects of sugar and complex carbohydrates on obesity
only had to look at what had happened to the most senior nutritionist in
the UK to see that pursuing such a line of inquiry was a terrible
career move.
John Yudkin’s scientific reputation had been all but sunk. He found
himself uninvited from international conferences on nutrition. Research
journals refused his papers. He was talked about by fellow scientists as
an eccentric, a lone obsessive. Eventually, he became a scare story.
Sheldon Reiser, one of the few researchers to continue working on the
effects of refined carbohydrates and sugar through the 1970s, told Gary
Taubes in 2011: “Yudkin was so discredited. He was ridiculed in a way.
And anybody else who said something bad about sucrose [sugar], they’d
say, ‘He’s just like Yudkin.’”
If Yudkin was ridiculed, Atkins was a hate figure. Only in the last
few years has it become acceptable to study the effects of Atkins-type
diets. In 2014, in a trial
funded by the US National Institutes of Health, 150 men and women were
assigned a diet for one year which limited either the amount of fat or
carbs they could eat, but not the calories. By the end of the year, the
people on the low carbohydrate, high fat diet had lost about 8lb more on
average than the low-fat group. They were also more likely to lose
weight from fat tissue; the low-fat group lost some weight too, but it
came from the muscles. The NIH study is the latest of more than 50
similar studies, which together suggest that low-carbohydrate diets are
better than low-fat diets for achieving weight loss and controlling type
2 diabetes. As a body of evidence, it is far from conclusive, but it is
as consistent as any in the literature.
Illustration by Pete Gamlen
The 2015 edition of the US Dietary Guidelines (they are revised every
five years) makes no reference to any of this new research, because the
scientists who advised the committee – the most eminent and
well-connected nutritionists in the country – neglected to include a
discussion of it in their report. It is a gaping omission, inexplicable
in scientific terms, but entirely explicable in terms of the politics of
nutrition science. If you are seeking to protect your authority, why
draw attention to evidence that seems to contradict the assertions on
which that authority is founded? Allow a thread like that to be pulled,
and a great unravelling might begin.
It may already have done. Last December, the scientists responsible
for the report received a humiliating rebuke from Congress, which passed
a measure proposing a review of the way the advice informing the
guidelines is compiled. It referred to “questions … about the scientific
integrity of the process”. The scientists reacted angrily, accusing the
politicians of being in thrall to the meat and dairy industries (given
how many of the scientists depend on research funding from food and
pharmaceutical companies, this might be characterised as audacious).
Some scientists agree with the politicians. David McCarron, a
research associate at the Department of Nutrition at the University of
California-Davis, told the Washington Post:
“There’s a lot of stuff in the guidelines that was right 40 years ago
but that has been disproved. Unfortunately, sometimes, the scientific
community doesn’t like to backtrack.” Steven Nissen, chairman of
cardiovascular medicine at the Cleveland Clinic, was blunter, calling
the new guidelines “an evidence-free zone”.
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The
congressional review has come about partly because of Nina Teicholz.
Since her book was published, in 2014, Teicholz has become an advocate
for better dietary guidelines. She is on the board of the Nutrition
Coalition, a body funded by the philanthropists John and Laura Arnold,
the stated purpose of which is to help ensure that nutrition policy is
grounded in good science.
In September last year she wrote an article for the BMJ
(formerly the British Medical Journal), which makes the case for the
inadequacy of the scientific advice that underpins the Dietary
Guidelines. The response of the nutrition establishment was ferocious:
173 scientists – some of whom were on the advisory panel, and many of
whose work had been critiqued in Teicholz’s book – signed a letter to
the BMJ, demanding it retract the piece.
Publishing a rejoinder to an article is one thing; requesting its
erasure is another, conventionally reserved for cases involving
fraudulent data. As a consultant oncologist for the NHS, Santhanam
Sundar, pointed out in a response to the letter on the BMJ website:
“Scientific discussion helps to advance science. Calls for retraction,
particularly from those in eminent positions, are unscientific and
frankly disturbing.”
The letter lists “11 errors”, which on close reading turn out to
range from the trivial to the entirely specious. I spoke to several of
the scientists who signed the letter. They were happy to condemn the
article in general terms, but when I asked them to name just one of the
supposed errors in it, not one of them was able to. One admitted he had
not read it. Another told me she had signed the letter because the BMJ
should not have published an article that was not peer reviewed (it was
peer reviewed). Meir Stampfer, a Harvard epidemiologist, asserted that
Teicholz’s work is “riddled with errors”, while declining to discuss
them with me.
Reticent as they were to discuss the substance of the piece, the
scientists were noticeably keener to comment on its author. I was
frequently and insistently reminded that Teicholz is a journalist, and
not a scientist, and that she had a book to sell, as if this settled the
argument. David Katz, of Yale, one of the members of the advisory
panel, and an indefatigable defender of the orthodoxies, told me that
Teicholz’s work “reeks of conflict of interest” without specifying what
those conflicts were. (Dr Katz is the author of four diet books.)
Dr Katz does not pretend that his field has been right on everything –
he admitted to changing his own mind, for example, on dietary
cholesterol. But he returned again and again to the subject of
Teicholz’s character. “Nina is shockingly unprofessional … I have been
in rooms filled with the who’s who of nutrition and I have never seen
such unanimous revulsion as when Miss Teicholz’s name comes up. She is
an animal unlike anything I’ve ever seen before.” Despite requests, he
cited no examples of her unprofessional behaviour. (The vitriol poured
over Teicholz is rarely dispensed to Gary Taubes, though they make
fundamentally similar arguments.)
In March this year, Teicholz was invited to participate in a panel
discussion on nutrition science at the National Food Policy conference,
in Washington DC, only to be promptly disinvited, after her fellow
panelists made it clear that they would not share a platform with her.
The organisers replaced her with the CEO of the Alliance for Potato
Research and Education. One of the scientists who called for the retraction of
Nina Teicholz’s BMJ article, who requested that our conversation be off
the record, complained that the rise of social media has created a
“problem of authority” for nutrition science. “Any voice, however mad,
can gain ground,” he told me.
It is a familiar complaint. By opening the gates of publishing to
all, the internet has flattened hierarchies everywhere they exist. We no
longer live in a world in which elites of accredited experts are able
to dominate conversations about complex or contested matters.
Politicians cannot rely on the aura of office to persuade, newspapers
struggle to assert the superior integrity of their stories. It is not
clear that this change is, overall, a boon for the public realm. But in
areas where experts have a track record of getting it wrong, it is hard
to see how it could be worse. If ever there was a case that an
information democracy, even a very messy one, is preferable to an
information oligarchy, then the history of nutrition advice is it.
In the past, we only had two sources of nutritional authority: our
doctor and government officials. It was a system that worked well as
long as the doctors and officials were informed by good science. But
what happens if that cannot be relied on?
The nutritional establishment has proved itself, over the years,
skilled at ad hominem takedowns, but it is harder for them to do to
Robert Lustig or Nina Teicholz what they once did to John Yudkin.
Harder, too, to deflect or smother the charge that the promotion of
low-fat diets was a 40-year fad, with disastrous outcomes, conceived of,
authorised, and policed by nutritionists.
Professor John Yudkin retired from his post at Queen Elizabeth
College in 1971, to write Pure, White and Deadly. The college reneged on
a promise to allow him to continue to use its research facilities. It
had hired a fully committed supporter of the fat hypothesis to replace
him, and it was no longer deemed politic to have a prominent opponent of
it on the premises. The man who had built the college’s nutrition
department from scratch was forced to ask a solicitor to intervene.
Eventually, a small room in a separate building was found for Yudkin.
When I asked Lustig why he was the first researcher in years to focus
on the dangers of sugar, he answered: “John Yudkin. They took him down
so severely – so severely – that nobody wanted to attempt it on their
own.” Ian Leslie, the author of Curious: the Desire to Know and Why
Your Future Depends On It, is a regular contributor to the Long Read.
Twitter: @mrianleslie • Follow the Long Read on Twitter at @gdnlongread, or sign up to the long read weekly email here.
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