Food and
Health
What Does Science Say You Should Eat?
Most diets
aren't realistic or advisable, including the U.S. agriculture
department's famous food pyramid. Instead, a Harvard scientist
recommends a new way of eating based on the world's largest and
longest food study.By
Brad Lemley
Photography by Dan Winters DISCOVER
Vol. 25 No. 02 | February 2004 | Biology & Medicine
America
clearly needs dietary guidance.
More than 44 million people are clinically obese compared with
30 million a decade ago, putting them at increased risk for
heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes, and breast, prostate,
and colon cancers. In the meantime, the noun diet seems
to attract a different adjective every week, including Atkins,
Ornish, Cooper, grapefruit, rice, protein, Scarsdale, South
Beach, Beverly Hills, Best Chance, Eat Smart, and Miracle, not
to mention Help, I'm Southern and I Can't Stop Eating. While
some of these plans overlap, others seem to specifically contradict
each other, notably the meat-intensive regime of the late Robert
Atkins versus the near-vegetarian program of Dean Ornish.
No wonder Americans
are tempted to follow Mark Twain's admonition to "eat what you
like and let the food fight it out inside." But still, we wonder:
Is there really an optimum way to eat?
Although
debate rages, academic nutrition researchers have begun to form
a consensus around a plan with an important advantage-it is
based on a preponderance of sound science. The regime does not
as yet have a name, but it might well be called the Willett
diet, after its leading proponent, Walter Willett, chairman
of the department of nutrition at the Harvard School of Public
Health.
Featuring
abundant fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and vegetable oils,
as well as optional portions of fish and chicken, Willett's
plan resembles the much-touted Mediterranean diet shown in several
studies to reduce the risk of heart disease. Nonetheless, Willett
resists the comparison. "The Mediterranean diet is specific
to a certain climate and culture," he says, adding that by focusing
on healthy ingredients rather than specific dishes, "anyone
can adapt this plan to his own tastes." The results: stable
blood-sugar levels, easier weight control, clearer arteries,
and overall better health.
In
this case it's hard science, not just opinion. Willett's plan
is based on the largest long-term dietary survey ever undertaken:
the 121,700-participant Nurses' Health Study, begun in 1976
by Harvard Medical School professor Frank Speizer, with dietary
assessments supervised by Willett since 1980. The study isn't
just big: Willett carefully crafted it so that he and others
could extract specific recommendations about food intake. Participants
even surrender blood and toenail samples so that Willett can
track absorption of trace elements and other nutrients. If a
participant reports a major illness, such as heart attack or
cancer, "we write for permission to obtain medical records for
further details," says Willett. To ensure that the data include
both sexes and two generations, Willett and several colleagues
also launched the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study, which
includes 52,000 men, and the Nurses' Health Study II, a survey
of 116,000 younger women.
In
the past, nutritional scientists have largely relied on studies
of animals, small groups of people, and/or petri-dish biochemistry
that may not reflect the vagaries of human metabolism, although
Willett uses such studies when he deems it appropriate. His
access to a
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Adding
a small bag of French fries (26 grams of carbohydrates)
to your lunch is the equivalent of ingesting 6.5 teaspoons
of refined sugar. The glycemic index is 67 (medium). The
glycemic load is about 17 (medium). Potatoes put glucose
into the bloodstream as fast as or faster than refined
sugar. (To understand glycemic load and glycemic index,
see "Good Carbs/Bad Carbs" on page 49.)
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unique quarter-million-person
pool of humans who carefully track both their diets and their
health lends added credibility to his research. "When you put
animal, metabolic, and epidemiological studies together and they
all point in the same direction, you can be pretty confident about
your conclusions," Willett says.
While
soft-spoken and self-effacing in person, Willett isn't shy about
using this formidable database to take on the federal establishment.
His Healthy Eating Pyramid differs radically from the Food Guide
Pyramid pushed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. "At best,
the USDA pyramid offers wishy-washy, scientifically unfounded
advice," Willett argues in his book, Eat, Drink, and Be Healthy:
The Harvard Medical School Guide to Healthy Eating.
At worst, he adds, "the misinformation contributes to overweight,
poor health, and unnecessary early deaths."
The
numbers back him up. Men and women in Willett's studies whose
diets most closely paralleled the Healthy Eating Pyramid's guidelines
lowered their risk of major chronic disease by 20 percent and
11 percent respectively, according to an article published in
the December 2002 issue of The American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition. That compares with reduced risks of 11 percent
and 3 percent for those whose diets most closely mirrored the
USDA pyramid's guidelines.
"Nutrition
used to be like religion. Everyone said, 'I have the truth,
everyone else is wrong,' and there wasn't much data to refute
that," says Willett. "Now we're starting to have a real scientific
basis for understanding what you should eat."
Just inside
the door of Willett's office at the Harvard School of Public
Health in Boston sits his bicycle, mud-spattered from his daily
commute over the Charles River from his home in Cambridge .
Past that, on top of a pile of medical journals, perches a plastic
bag full of
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Three
four-inch pancakes (33 grams of carbohydrates) for breakfast
with a quarter cup of syrup (52 grams of carbohydrates)
is equivalent to eating 21 teaspoons of refined sugar.
The glycemic index of the meal is about 65 (medium). The
glycemic load for the pancakes is 27 (high) and 28 (high)
for the syrup.
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plump, homegrown
cherry tomatoes, a late-season-harvest gift from his administrative
assistant. Willett knows good tomatoes. As a member of a fifth-generation
Michigan farming family, he paid his undergraduate tuition at
Michigan State by raising vegetables, and today he grows "as much
as possible" in his tiny urban backyard.
Behind the
cluttered desk sits Willett himself, trim, toned, and turned
out in a sharp gray suit. "All you have to do is take a look
at Walter to see the value of his research. The proof is in
the pudding," says David Jenkins, a nutrition researcher at
the University of Toronto. Willett vigorously follows his own
plan and at age 58 reports that his weight, cholesterol, and
triglycerides are all where they should be. He is, in short,
the picture of where applied nutritional science might deliver
us all, if we had the proper information.
That's
the problem. In recent years, Willett says, the American public
has been victimized by dodgy advice. Not only has obesity skyrocketed
but "the incidence of heart disease is also not going down anymore.
It has really stalled."
What
happened? In Willett's view, things began to go awry in the
mid-1980s, when a National Institutes of Health conference decreed
that to prevent heart disease, all Americans except children
under 2 years old should reduce their fat intake from 40 percent
to 30 percent of their total daily calories. The press touted
the recommendation as revealed truth, and the USDA's Food Guide
Pyramid, released in 1992, reflects this view, calling for 6
to 11 servings of bread, cereal, rice, and pasta daily, while
fats and oils are to be used "sparingly."
Too
bad, says Willett. "The low-fat mantra has contributed to obesity.
The nutrition community told people they had to worry only about
counting fat grams. That encouraged the creation of thousands
of low-fat products. I call it 'the SnackWell revolution.'"
Blithely consuming low-fat foods full of carbohydrates is a
prescription for portliness, says Willett, adding that any farmer
knows this. "If you pen up an animal and feed it grain, it will
get fat. People are no different."
The
problem with overeating refined carbohydrates such as white
flour and sucrose (table sugar) is that amylase, an enzyme,
quickly converts them into the simple sugar called glucose.
That goads the pancreas to overproduce insulin, the substance
that conducts glucose into the cells. But excessive sugar is
toxic to cells, so after years of glucose and insulin overload,
the cells can become insulin resistant and may no longer allow
insulin to easily push glucose inside them. That keeps blood
glucose levels high, forcing the pancreas to make even more
insulin in a desperate attempt to jam the stuff through cell
membranes. Willett likens the effect to an overworked, undermaintained
pump that eventually wears out. Type 2 diabetes can be one result,
but Willett contends that insulin-resistant people who don't
develop full-blown diabetes still face significant health risks.
Other
researchers agree. Stanford endocrinologist Gerald Reaven coined
the term Syndrome X to describe the constellation of health
problems that spring from insulin resistance. Until the late
1980s, Reaven says, "the common scientific view was that insulin
resistance only mattered if it led all the way to type 2 diabetes.
Looking at the data, it's clear that most people who are insulin
resistant don't get diabetes but are greatly at risk for coronary
heart disease, hypertension, non-alcoholic-type liver disease,
polycystic ovary syndrome, and several kinds of cancer."
| WILLETT
VS. ORNISH VS. ATKINS
Walter
Willett's dietary recommendations are similar in many
ways to those advanced by another doctor-nutritionist,
Dean Ornish, who pioneered an ultralow-fat, near-vegetarian
regime that has been shown to halt or reduce coronary
blockage in most heart patients. Both Willett and
Ornish emphasize whole grains, fruits, and vegetables,
and both minimize animal proteins. But they part ways
on fats: Willett recommends replacing saturated fats in
the American diet with unsaturated ones, while Ornish
suggests sharply cutting fat intake altogether, especially
for those at risk for heart disease. "No one has shown
that the kind of diet that Walter Willett recommends can
reverse heart disease," says Ornish.
For
his part, Willett insists that "replacing saturated fats
with unsaturated fats is a safe, proven, and delicious
way to cut the rates of heart disease." He says the Lyon
Diet Heart study, a French trial that tracked heart-attack
survivors on an oil-rich Mediterranean diet versus those
on the low-fat American Heart Association diet, showed
a significant drop in second attacks for the Lyon group.
Ornish responds that the drop in deaths in that study
was most likely due to increasing heart-healthy omega-3
fats and decreasing intake of omega-6 fats, saturated
fats, animal protein, and cholesterol, not to high overall
consumption of fat. Ornish recommends that everyone consume
three grams of omega-3 fats daily, either through eating
fish or taking supplements.
In
contrast with both Willett and Ornish, the late Robert
Atkins recommended a meat-intensive, protein-rich regime.
"Studies at Duke University, the University of Cincinnati,
and the University of Pennsylvania all show that people
can lose significant weight, lower their triglycerides,
and improve their HDL [high-density lipoprotein] cholesterol
levels by consuming protein and limiting carbohydrates,"
says Stuart Trager, an orthopedic surgeon who assumed
the spokesman's mantle for the diet after Atkins's death
in April 2003. Trager believes the real strength of the
Atkins diet is that "it is something people are willing
and able to do."
Willett
concedes that Atkins "was really onto something. He believed,
correctly, that most people can better control their weight
by reducing the glycemic load of the diet than by other
means. But there is evidence that the traditional Atkins
diet, which is high in animal fat, is not optimal. There
are benefits to having cereal in one's diet. There is
relief from constipation, and we do see [in the Nurses'
Health Study] some benefit for heart disease and diabetes.
This is probably partially from the fiber in whole grains,
and also partly from the other minerals and vitamins that
come along with whole grains that are in short supply
in many people's diets."
While
at first blush the three approaches seem sharply divergent,
Trager sounds a conciliatory note. "No one has ever bothered
to point out that we are compatriots on many points,"
he says. All three nutritionists share an emphasis on
reducing blood-sugar spikes by reducing the glycemic load.
Moreover, all three condemn trans fats, white flour, and
sugar. "There really is universal agreement that you should
cut those things out of your diet," Trager says. -Brad
Lemley
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In
the case of heart disease, Reaven says that high blood concentrations
of insulin and glucose can damage the endothelium that lines
coronary arteries and set the stage for the formation of plaques.
"A big problem is the lack of drugs to treat this problem,"
he adds. "A lot of doctors' education comes from drug companies.
They know about cholesterol because everyone is pushing their
statin. They know about hypertension because there are multiple
hypertensive drugs. But they know a lot less about insulin resistance
and its consequences, and that's unfortunate."
Syndrome
X, also known as metabolic syndrome or insulin-resistance syndrome,
is largely unknown to the public as well. While many people
avoid cholesterol and fat-laden foods, few understand the threat
posed by carbohydrate excess. That needs to change, says Willett.
"Cholesterol is relevant, but the danger is overblown," he says.
"Syndrome X is the global public-health problem of the 21st
century. Almost certainly the vast majority of Americans have
a higher degree of insulin resistance than is optimal."
The Willett
plan aims to even out the glucose roller coaster through an
emphasis on foods with low glycemic loads-foods that convert
to glucose slowly-like whole grains, plant oils, and vegetables.
This keeps blood glucose levels relatively constant, sparing
the pancreas overwork. Steady blood glucose also helps keep
the appetite in check, which makes maintaining a healthy weight
easier, says Willett. So instead of high carb, low fat, one
might summarize the Willett plan's directive as good carb, good
fat.
"People
are being told to reduce fat and eat more carbohydrates. For
many people, particularly overweight people with a high degree
of insulin resistance, that produces exactly the opposite of
what they need," says Willett. Randomized trials, he says, show
that people on low-fat diets generally lose two to four pounds
after several weeks but then gain back the weight even while
continuing the diet. "Most of them would be better off reducing
carbs, switching to better carbs, and increasing their intake
of healthy fats."
Willett,
like virtually every other nutrition researcher, advises eating
vegetables in abundance, consuming alcohol in moderation, and
taking a daily multivitamin to cover nutritional gaps. He also
touts fish as a source of protein and heart-protective n-3 fatty
acids, which are also known as omega-3 acids. (Those who worry
about mercury contamination in fish got some good news recently:
In one study conducted in the Seychelles, a group of islands
in the Indian Ocean, scientists from the University of Rochester
Medical Center tracked pregnant women who ate an average of
12 fish meals a week, about 10 times the quantity of fish eaten
by the average American. "We've found no evidence that the low
levels of mercury in seafood are harmful," said lead author
Gary Myers. Moreover, various tests indicated that the women's
children suffered no adverse cognitive, behavioral, or neurological
effects.)
High on
the list of food ingredients Willett counsels avoiding are hydrogenated
fats, often referred to as trans fats, which are found in shortening,
margarine, deep-fried foods, and packaged baked goods. That
advice was controversial when Willett published a groundbreaking
paper on the subject in 1991, but it has since become close
to dogma. "Both controlled-feeding studies that have examined
the effects of trans fat on blood cholesterol and epidemiological
studies of trans-fat intake in relation to the risk of heart
disease and diabetes indicate they are considerably worse than
saturated fats," he says.
Daily exercise
is essential, Willett adds, and he confirms the often-cited
advice that walking is the best choice for many people. The
Nurses' Health Study revealed a "very strong link" between walking
and protection against heart disease: Women who walked an average
of three hours a week were 35 percent less likely to have a
heart attack over an eight-year period than those who walked
less. It may seem odd that Willett includes exercise in his
Healthy Eating Pyramid, but he is adamant that exercise and
diet cannot be teased apart. "It doesn't have to be extreme.
I run along the Charles for 25 minutes most mornings." A half
hour daily of moderate activity offers "impressive health benefits,"
he says, but there is "added benefit for greater intensity for
longer times."
Willett's
more iconoclastic conclusions include the heretical notion that
soy-touted as a miracle food that fights cancer, obesity, and
virtually every other human ill-may have "a dark side." He points
to a British study in which 48 women with suspicious breast
lumps were randomly assigned to receive either no supplement
or one containing soy isoflavones (a compound in soybeans molecularly
similar to estrogen) for 14 days. Those taking the supplement
showed substantially more cell growth in the tissue removed
than the women who were not taking the soy. Another troubling
study showed memory loss and other cognitive declines in elderly
Japanese men in Hawaii who stuck to their traditional soy-based
diet, as opposed to those who switched to a more of a Western
diet. "In moderation, soy is fine," says Willett. "Stuffed into
everything, you could get into trouble." And soy isoflavone
supplements, he counsels, should be regarded as "totally untested
new drugs."
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Walter
Willett finds it useful to present dietary information
in pyramid form, with the broad base representing exercise
and foods to emphasize and the small tip showing foods
to avoid. "It's simple," he says. "It gives you a sense
of priorities." But he argues that the federally sanctioned
USDA Food Guide Pyramid is deeply flawed. "The thing to
keep in mind about the USDA pyramid is that it comes from
the Department of Agriculture, the agency responsible
for promoting American agriculture, not from agencies
established to monitor and protect our health," he says.
Willett's alternative Healthy Eating Pyramid draws a distinction
between good and bad fats, between whole-grain and refined
carbohydrates, and between healthy and problematic sources
of protein. It also moves potatoes out of the vegetable
category altogether. "Potatoes should be counted as starches.
They are converted to glucose as fast or faster than pure
table sugar," he says. -B. L.
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Having
one-third of a 12-inch pepperoni pizza for dinner on the
run? The cheese and crust amount to about 84 grams of
carbohydrates, or the equivalent of wolfing down 21 teaspoons
of sugar. The glycemic index of that meal is 60 (medium).
The glycemic load is 51 (high).
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Willett also
counsels that dairy products-which supply concentrated calories
and saturated fat-are not the best way to get calcium and that
the recommended daily intake of 1,200 milligrams daily for adults
over 50 appears to be more than what's needed. His advice: Eat
calcium-bearing vegetables, including leafy greens, take calcium
supplements if you're a woman, and exercise. "The evidence for
physical activity being protective against fractures is huge,"
he says.
And he defends
eggs. Although cholesterol fears have caused American per capita
egg consumption to drop from 400 to 250 per year, "no research
has ever shown that people who eat more eggs have more heart
attacks than people who eat fewer eggs," Willett says. A 2001
Kansas State University study identified a type of lecithin
called phosphatidylcholine in eggs that interferes with cholesterol
absorption, which may explain why many studies have found no
association between egg intake and blood cholesterol level.
If the breakfast menu option is a white-flour bagel or an egg
fried in vegetable oil, says Willett, "the egg is the better
choice."
Perhaps
the most comprehensive studies Willett has assembled compare
the health consequences of eating saturated versus unsaturated
fat. The term saturated means that every available site
along each fat molecule's carbon chain is filled with a hydrogen
atom; such fats-including butter and animal fat-are solids at
room temperature. There are two types of unsaturated fats: monounsaturated
fats such as olive oil, which are missing one pair of hydrogen
atoms, and polyunsaturated fats such as soy, corn, and canola
oils, which lack more than one pair. Both sorts are liquid at
room temperature.
Some researchers
have questioned whether saturated fat is dangerous. In his book,
The Cholesterol Myths: Exposing the Fallacy That Saturated
Fat and Cholesterol Cause Heart Disease, Swedish physician
Uffe Ravnskov asserts that as of 1998, 27 studies on diet and
heart disease had been published regarding 34 groups of patients;
in 30 of those groups investigators found no difference in animal
fat consumption between those who had heart disease and those
who did not. "Anyone who reads the literature in this field
with an open mind soon discovers that the emperor has no clothes,"
Ravnskov writes.
Willett
turns to his Nurses' Health mega-study for the definitive word.
"The amounts of specific fats did make a difference," he says.
"Women who ate more unsaturated fat instead of saturated fat
had fewer heart problems." Willett calculated that replacing
5 percent of saturated fat calories with unsaturated would cut
the risk of heart attack or death from heart disease by 40 percent.
Other studies-notably the French Lyon Diet Heart study, begun
in 1988-show a similar correlation.
A healthy
diet plan is worthless if people won't stick to it, and Susan
Roberts, director of the energy metabolism laboratory at Tufts
University, contends that Willett's regimen is too severe. "Most
people would say his recommendations are healthy but that other,
less difficult diets are healthy too," she says.
Difficult
is in the palate of the eater. The last half of Willett's book
aims to dispel any taint of Calvinism with recipes that verge
on the sybaritic, including pork tenderloin with pistachio-gremolata
crust, chicken enchilada casserole, and grilled salmon steaks
with papaya-mint salsa. On the other hand, some resolve might
be required to soldier through a few of the other dishes listed
there, including hearty oat-wheat berry bread or the onion-crusted
tofu-steak sandwich. But most people, Willett believes, can
summon the willpower to substitute whole-wheat flour for white
and plant oils for shortening or lard, and eat less sugar overall.
"I think what I suggest is not severely restrictive, because
it can be achieved mainly by substitution," rather than slavishly
following recipes, Willett says. In any case, "it does not mean
you cannot eat any of those foods but rather that they should
be de-emphasized."
So take
heart. Even Willett has a little chocolate now and then.
| GOOD
CARBS/BAD CARBS
The
glycemic index (GI) is a way of measuring how quickly
the carbohydrate in a given food raises the level of blood
sugar. So eating a low-GI food causes a slow, mild rise,
while the same quantity of carbohydrate in a high-GI food
will trigger a faster, bigger rise. A GI of 55 or less
is considered low, 56 to 69 is medium, and 70 or more
is high.
But
the GI is of limited use in the real world of pears, pork,
and pudding because it ignores how much of that food a
person eats. A few years ago, Walter Willett pioneered
the concept of the glycemic load (GL), a measurement that
factors in the quantity of carbohydrates eaten in a single
serving of a particular food. The carbohydrates in parsnips,
for example, are quickly converted to glucose, so parsnips
have a rather high index of 97, plus or minus 19 (the
numbers are sometimes imprecise because they are based
on feeding foods to test subjects and monitoring their
blood-sugar response, which can vary for many reasons).
But parsnips have a GL of just 12, because a single 80-gram
serving contains a relatively small amount of carbohydrate.
A GL of 10 or less is considered low, 11 to 19 is medium,
and 20 or more is high. Consistently eating low-GL foods
evens out blood-sugar peaks and valleys, which Willett
says helps keep appetite and weight under control. Eating
low-GL foods also reduces the risk of developing type
2 diabetes. When Willett says "good carbs," he is essentially
referring to fiber-rich, low-GL foods.
Generally,
whole grains have lower glycemic loads than refined grains.
For example, a 150-gram serving of brown rice has a GL
of 18, while the same serving of quick-cooking white rice
has a GL of 29. Although the photographs in this story
tally the "sugar equivalence" of the carbohydrates in
various American foods, the glycemic index and glycemic
load of each of these foods needs to be considered as
well. The glycemic numbers accompanying the photographs
in this article are from Janette Brand-Miller of the University
of Sydney, based on a table published in the July 2002
issue of The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
An adaptation of that table can be seen at diabetes.about.com/library/mendosagi/ngilists.htm.
-B. L.
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