Tuesday, October 28, 2014

The Big Fat Surprise by Nina Teicholz



Nina Teicholz’s book is nearly 500 pages and has at least that many references; it is, indeed, a fat book. And the conclusions that she reaches after a decade of research and reading might be a bit of a surprise to some. 

“Every reliable indicator of good health is worsened by a low fat diet.” That’s it in a nutshell.

Teicholz looks at over one hundred years of research and clinical practice and what she exposes is science at its most shabby. Under investigation are influence peddling, professional jealousy and corporate greed and cover up. The science around food is just as bad, if not worse, than you always suspected it was.

Granted, nutrition studies are difficult to do because they involve humans and there are limitations, but that hardly justifies influential scientists jettisoning whole collections of data because the information does not agree with the hypothesis. There are undoubtedly elementary school science fairs where the experimenters are held to more stringent practices than some of those described by Teicholz.

This book is a 2014 publication, which makes it as current as you can get. If you have already read Grain Brain, Wheat Belly, and The Great Cholesterol Myth, these findings will not shock you, but you will be horrified by the commercial interests that dominate the information highway in our country. You will want to erect monuments to those battle weary individuals who dare to contradict the power brokers in the scientific and business communities.

Now go eat some cheese, or bacon, or a steak.

A Conversation with Nina Teicholz 


No comments:

Post a Comment