Trans Fat Ban: Watch Saturated Fats And Calories Too
Main Category: Nutrition / DietAlso Included In: Cardiovascular / Cardiology; Cholesterol
Article Date: 26 Dec 2006 - 0:00 PDT
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In December, New York City passed a law to phase out the use of trans fat in restaurants. Other cities, including Boston and Chicago, might follow suit. According to Alice H. Lichtenstein, DSc, Gershoff professor of nutrition science and policy at the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University, the ban is a step in the right direction, but restaurateurs need to replace partially hydrogenated fat with unsaturated fat. If they choose saturated fat it would diminish the health benefits of this new initiative. Another new regulation that requires some restaurants to provide calorie information as prominently as price might be even more important, notes Lichtenstein.
"There is no biological need for trans fat and intake is associated with adverse health outcomes. However, the media attention on the trans fat announcement to the exclusion of the calorie labeling is unfortunate. Two-thirds of Americans are overweight or obese. The New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene has proposed that the calorie content of food items be displayed as prominently as the price, at the point of purchase," says Lichtenstein, also director of the Cardiovascular Nutrition Laboratory at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts.
"That means," Lichtenstein continues, "that if you are wavering between placing an order for a small versus a medium order of French fries, both the price and the number of calories per serving will be displayed. People will become more aware of the caloric cost of the foods they order, and the next step on a public health level would be to educate the consumer on the amount of calories their body needs per day. This way, they will be able to put the numbers they see on the board or menu into perspective. Because the amount of food and beverages we eat that is prepared outside the home is so large, even if this regulation just covers a fraction of food service establishments, it can have a tremendous impact on caloric intake."
"Trans fat," says Lichtenstein, "is a double whammy, because like saturated fat, it raises levels of LDL or ‘bad cholesterol,’ but it also lowers levels of HDL or ‘good’ cholesterol." Most of the trans fats we eat are formed during the partial hydrogenation of oils used in fried foods and commercial baked goods. Partially hydrogenated oils provide processed foods with longer shelf lives and therefore greater economic profitability.
"But, trans fat is just one part of the diet. In general, people are still eating far more saturated fat than trans fat, and both need to be reduced in order to maintain optimal cholesterol levels and promote heart health," says Lichtenstein. "And the big giant �" total calories �" is always looming in the background."
In one study to assess the effects of consuming different types of oils on cholesterol levels, led by Lichtenstein and published earlier this year, fifteen adult volunteers with moderately high LDL cholesterol were fed each of four diets with a different source of primary fat, including partially hydrogenated soybean oil (trans fat), palm oil (50 percent saturated fat), non-hydrogenated soybean oil (only 16 percent saturated fat), and canola oil (only 7 percent saturated fat).
The results, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition (AJCN), reported that after a trial of 35 days on each diet, participants consuming the partially hydrogenated soybean oil and palm oil diets had levels of LDL cholesterol that were 12 and 14 percent higher, respectively, than when consuming the non-hydrogenated soybean oil diet. An even greater difference was observed when the partially hydrogenated soybean oil and palm oil diets were compared to the canola oil diet. While participants were on the partially hydrogenated soybean oil and palm oil diets their LDL levels were 16 and 18 percent higher, respectively, than when on the canola oil diet.
"On the basis of this and other work, it’s clear that phasing out partially hydrogenated oils (trans fats) will improve diet in some ways", says Lichtenstein, corresponding author on the AJCN study. "However, just decreasing trans fat intake without changing other dietary habits, such as minimizing saturated fat intake and controlling total calorie intake, will result in some real disappointments with respect to both heart health and obesity."
Lichtenstein recommends that other cities monitor the successes and challenges of the trans fat ban in New York City before implementing their own regulations, and also advises that the focus on the new regulations shift to the mandate to display calorie labeling in food service establishments, and educating people about their total daily caloric requirements.
Vega-Lopez S, Ausman LM, Jalbert SM, Erkkila AT, Lichtenstein AH. “Palm and partially hydrogenated soybean oils adversely alter lipoprotein profiles compared with soybean and canola oils in moderately hyperlipidemic subjects.” American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 2006 (July);84(1):54-62.
The Gerald J. and Dorothy R. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University is the only independent school of nutrition in the United States. The school’s eight centers, which focus on questions relating to famine, hunger, poverty, and communications, are renowned for the application of scientific research to national and international policy. For two decades, the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University has studied the relationship between good nutrition and good health in aging populations. Tufts research scientists work with federal agencies to establish the USDA Dietary Guidelines, the Dietary Reference Intakes, and other significant public policies.
Tufts University
Medford Somerville, MA
United States
Tufts University
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (8)
Saturated Fats A Health Hazard? I Don't Think So.
posted by David Brown on 31 Dec 2006 at 2:14 pmMy parents live in Florida . About four years ago, during a phone visit, my dad casually mentioned that they were seeing a new physician. Curious, I inquired as to how that came about and learned that the old one had died from heart disease. Actually, he wasnt that old. Further questioning revealed that he was 49 when he died.
Vulnerability to heart disease varies with the genetic makeup. Genes, however, do not cause heart disease. The real culprit is food choices. The peculiar thing is, after a hundred years of nutrition research, theres still controversy as to which sorts of foods are to blame for clogged arteries.
Virtually all of the major health organizations (a very long list indeed) and all schools of public health whose websites I have visited, link saturated (animal) fat intake to clogged arteries. This idea is not limited to US health organizations and educational institutions either; its a global phenomenon. In fact, the World Health Organization embraces this doctrine. Further, mainstream scientific opinion, as expressed in the popular press, continually reinforces this belief. But is it true? And if not, how is a fallacy of this sort perpetuated? More importantly, what can be done to overturn it?
To answer the above in order, the idea that saturated fats clog arteries is a fabrication. The data from scientific research have demonstrated repeatedly that saturated fats are heart healthy. Corporate interests, in particular industrial seed oils companies, the sweeteners industry, food manufacturers, and the agricultural industrial complex, fund the campaign against saturated fats. As for doing something about the problem, there are grass roots organizations, independent researchers, and enlightened individuals dedicated to both helping the public understand the problem and to restoring wholesome animal products and organically grown produce to the food supply.
My personal efforts to encourage responsible eating are often frustrated by a complacent attitude. Everything in moderation, Im told. In an ideal food environment, such wisdom would be sufficient. However, modern methods of food production and fabrication have introduced hazards that soundly defeat the everything-in-moderation approach. As noted above, moderately healthy people sometimes die early.
But do not despair. Many of the hazards have been identified. And there are numerous resources available for those eager to take charge of their own health. To access several excellent articles published on websites, type the phrase Re: Saturated fats and Heart Health into a search engine.
To dispel any confusion as to what actually causes heart disease, try any of the following names in a search engine: Eddie Vos Health-Heart.org, Oliver Tickell tfX:home, Sally Fallon, Richard K. Bernstein, Mary G. Enig, or Chris Masterjohn.
A Conspiracy
posted by Wendy Albright on 1 Jan 2007 at 10:02 amTo say that the anti-saturated fats movements is a conspiracy by oil seed companies, while the likes of biscuit manufacturers, McDonalds, Burger King, Dominoes Pizza, plus hundreds more suffer under their 'immense influence', could only have come from knee-jerk, sound-bite, disney-politics America. The land where everyone lives 8 years less than France, Greece, Spain and Portugal. The land where saturated fats thrive, exercise is non-existent, people never take vacations, genetically modified foods are the norm, 50 million have no healthcare cov er at all, and obesity is the standard.
I printed David Brown's letter and gave it to a few friends in Spain - we all had a good chuckle.
Wendy (Gibralta)
It's Not A Conspiracy; It's Business.
posted by David Brown on 1 Jan 2007 at 1:06 pmThe USA is not the land where saturated fats thrive. We have low fat dairy in the schools and trans fats in the restaurants. We're in big trouble because giant food corporations have seriously degraded the food supply, partly in response to recommendations made by scientists at the highest levels of scientific authority, but mostly to make a profit.
Pull The Other One
posted by Kenji Suma on 1 Jan 2007 at 1:09 pmI am from Japan and have lived in the USA (2005), various European countries, and China. I am sorry, but the USA is the land of saturated fats. There is no getting away from it. Saturated fats are everywhere there. It is famous for this.
Saturated Fats
posted by Francoise Mozelle on 1 Jan 2007 at 1:13 pmIt is pointless talking about saturated, unsaturated, polyunsaturated, etc. if people overeat, don't do exercise, eat badly and just get fatter and fatter. That is the basic problem in the USA. I was there on a student exchange for six months and stayed with a host family. I have never seen such physically inactive bad eaters in my life. Nobody walks anywhere, refined starches are the norm, processed cheese is squeezed onto everything when you eat out - and nobody eats five portions of food or vegetables each day. That is the problem there. Not a question of big business, but a question of big, lazy butts and awful cuisine.
Saturated Fats From Various Sources.
posted by David Brown on 1 Jan 2007 at 1:40 pmSaturated fats of animal origin and saturated fats of vegetable origin (created through the process of hydrogenation) have different metabolic properties as outlined by Mary Enig, PhD and others. McDonalds used to cook french fries beef tallow before they were bullied into switching to partially hydrogenated vegetable oils by the Center for Science in the Public Interest (See March 1988 Nutrition Action Healthletter article by Elaine Blume entitled "The truth about trans: hydrogenated oils aren't guilty as charged").
American Diet Is About Soy
posted by Roel S. on 11 Jan 2007 at 9:29 pmAnimals fed with soybean protein, cooking oil from soybeans, soymilk instead of raw milk, soy protein that are not fermented. That's the staple diet of America for the last few decades and the result. A lot of people are obese. Saturated fat from the animals in the US is not good because it is full of growth hormones and antibiotics. Chicken that are caged and haven't seen the sun also are bad.
But saturated fat from animals that roam and eat natural food free from pestecides are healthy and isn't fattening.
Saturated fat from plants such as coconut oil is the best oil if it is not hydrogenated. Why? Because it is high in Lauric acid, which is similar to mother's milk that protect infants from disease. Because it is saturated, it doesn't turn rancid quickly compared to soybean and canola, which has to be refined and deodorized just to remove the odor of rancidity.
Soybean and Canola, when subjected to high heat becomes very unstable and polymerized so. Why eat plastic food then? It is still your choice, but the smoothness of skin of asians and Pacific islanders can be attributed to one thing, Their diet of natural coconut oil. So, don't blame saturated oil from natural sources to the epidemic of obesity in America. Coconut oil has been removed from American diet 50 years ago.
Inactivity And Gluttony Is 99% Of US Obesity Problem
posted by Giovanni Istanno on 12 Jan 2007 at 8:39 amI am Italian, I live in Florence. I have been to the USA four times in the last three years on business - Atlanta, Houston, Dallas and Indianapolis.
I cannot enjoy food in American restaurants for one simple reason - the portions are not human, they are gigantic. When a dish is placed in front of me, the quantity makes me feel sick. Americans eat incredible amounts of food. I don't know how they do it!!
In all four cities I noticed that nobody walks anywhere. For two reasons: 1. Pulic transport is scarce, and uncomfortable. 2. Everybody drives everwhere. People who cannot drive, children, the blind, those who cannot/won't drive for any reason, have limited opportunity to get about. Those who do drive never walk.
Conclusion: Americans eat too much and do not move their bodies. You can change from soy to natural, to organic, to fast foods, etc. But if your portions remain as they are, and you do not do exercise, this problem will just get worse.
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