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By Tom Venuto
Author
of Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle
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A news media feeding frenzy
erupted recently when a new diet study broke in the New England
Journal of Medicine (NEJM). Almost all the reporters got
it wrong, wrong WRONG!
So did most of the gloating
low carb forumites and bloggers. Come to think of it, almost
everyone interpreted this study wrong.
Some valuable insights came
out of this study, but almost everyone missed them because
they were too busy believing what the news said or defending
their own cherished belief systems
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The new study, titled,
Weight Loss With a Low-Carbohydrate, Mediterranean, or Low-Fat
Diet was published in The New England Journal of Medicine
(NEJM) in issue 359, number 3.
I quickly read the full text of the
research paper the day it was published. Then, I shook my head in
dismay as I scanned the news headlines.
I found it amusing that the media
turned this into a three ring circus, putting a misleading low
carb versus high carb, Atkins vindicated or Diet
wars spin on the story. But thats mainstream journalism
for you, right? Gotta sell those papers!
Just look at some of these headlines:
- Study Tips Scales in Atkins
Diets Favor: Low Carb Regimen Better Than Low Fat Diet For Weight
And Cholesterol, Major Study Shows.
- Low-Carb and Low-Fat Diets
Face Off
- The Never-Ending Diet Wars
- Low Carb Beats Low Fat in
Diet Duel.
- Atkins Diet is Safe and Far
More Effective Than a Low-Fat One, Study Says
- Unrestricted Low-Carb Diet
Wins Hands Down
Some of these headlines are hilarious!
I wonder if any of these reporters actually read the whole study.
Geez. Is it too much trouble to read 13 pages before you write a
story that will be read by millions of already confused people suffering
the pain and frustration of obesity?
Heres
a quick look at the study design.
The low fat restricted calorie diet
was based on American Heart Association guidelines. Calorie intake
was set at 1500 for women, 1800 a day for men with 30% of calories
from fat, and only 10% from saturated fat. Participants were instructed
to eat low fat grains, vegetables, fruits and legumes and to limit
their consumption of additional fats, sweets and high fat snacks.
The Mediterranean diet group was placed
on a moderate fat, restricted calorie program rich in vegetables
and low in red meat, with poultry and fish replacing beef and lamb.
Energy intake was restricted to 1500 calories per day for women
and 1800 calories per day for men with a goal of no more than 35%
of calorie from fat. Added fat came mostly from nuts and olive oil.
The low carb diet was a non-restricted
calorie plan aimed at providing 20 grams of carbs per day for the
2 month induction phase with a gradual increase to 120 grams per
day to maintain the weight loss. Intakes of total calories, protein
and fat were not limited. However, the participants were counseled
to choose vegetarian sources of protein (more on that bizarre-twist
shortly).
The study subjects were mostly male
(86%), overweight (BMI 31) and middle age (mean age 52)
Here were the study results:
There were some health improvements
in cholesterol, blood pressure and other parameters in the Mediterranean
and low carb group that bested the high carb group. That was the
focus of many articles and discussions that appeared on the net
this week. However, Id like to focus on the weight loss aspect
as Im not a medical doctor and fat loss is the primary subject
matter of this website.
All three groups lost weight. The
low carb group lost 5.5 kilos, the Mediterranean group lost 4.6
kilos and the low fat group lost 3.3 kilograms
. IN TWO YEARS!
Whoopee!
My conclusion would be that the results
were similar and that none of the diets worked very well over the
long term!
Amanda Gardner of the US News and
World Report Health Day was one of the few reporters who got it
right:
Diet plans produce similar
results: Study finds Mediterranean and low-carb diets work just
as well as low fat ones.
Tara Parker-Pope of the New York Times
also came close with her headline:
Long term diet study suggests
success is hard to come by: In a tightly controlled experiment,
obese people lost an average of just 6 to 10 pounds over two years.
Even this headline wasnt 100%
accurate. The study was HARDLY tightly controlled. Tightly controlled
means metabolic ward studies where the researchers actually count
and control the calorie intake.
The problem is, you cant lock
people in a hospital or research center ward for two years. So in
this study, they used a food frequency questionnaire. Sure, like
we believe what people report about their eating habits at restaurants
and at home behind closed doors! BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
No! I swear Dr. Schwarzfuchs!
I swear I didnt eat those donuts over the weekend! I stayed
on my Mediterranean diet. Honest!
One of the
most firmly established facts in dietetics research is that almost
everyone underreports their food intake BADLY, sometimes by as much
as 50%. Im not saying everyone lies,
they just forget or dont know. In fact, this underreporting
of calorie intake is such a huge problem that it makes obesity research
very difficult to do and conclusions difficult to draw from free-living
studies.
Another blunder in the news reports
is that this study didnt really follow Atkins diet parameters
OR even the traditional low fat diet for that matter, so its
not an Atkins versus Ornish showdown at all.
If you actually take the time to read
the full text of the research paper it doesnt say ANYTHING
like, Atkins is the best after all. Thats the
spin that some of the news media cooked up (and what the Atkins
foundation was hoping for).
It says, The diet was based
on the Atkins diet. However, the sentence right before that
says, The participants were counseled to choose vegetarian
sources of fat and protein. Vegetarian Atkins?
The chart
on page 236 says the low carb diet provided 40% of calories from
carbs at 6, 12 and 24 months. If Im reading that
data properly, then the only low carb period was a brief induction
phase in the very beginning.
Does that sound like Atkins? 40% carb
sounds more like the Zone diet or my own Burn The Fat program to
me.
The Atkins Foundation, which partially
supported this study, told reporters, We feel vindicated.
HA! They should have paid the reporters and told the researchers
they felt ripped off and they wanted a refund for misuse of their
research grant!
After carefully reading the full text
of this study, there are many interesting findings we could talk
about, from the differences in results between men and women to
the improvements in health markers. Heres what the study really
says that stood out to me. Its what I would have talked about
if the newspapers or TV stations had called me:
1. Mediterranean
and low carb diets may be effective alternatives to low-fat diets.
I can agree completely with that statement.
All three diets created a calorie deficit. All three groups lost
weight. Low carb lost a little more, which is the usual finding
because low carb diets often control appetite and calorie intake
automatically (you eat less even if you dont count calories).
Also, if body composition is not indicated, theres an initial
water weight loss that makes low carb diets look more effective
in the very early stages.
2. Personal
preferences and metabolic considerations might inform individualized
tailoring of dietary interventions.
Absolutely! Nutrition should be individualized
based on goals, health status, body type, activity level and numerous
other factors. Different people have different phenotypes. Some
people are more predisposed to thrive on a low carb approach. Others
feel like crap on low carbs and do better with more carbs or a middle
of the road approach. Those who dogmatically follow and defend one
type of diet or the other are only handcuffing themselves by limiting
their options. Iris Shai, a researcher in the study said, We
cant rely on one diet fits all. Hmm, far cry from Atkins
wins hands down, wouldnt you say?
3. The rate
of adherence to a study diet was 95.4% at 1 year and 84.6% at 2
years.
THIS was
the part of most interest to me. When I read this, immediately
I could have cared less about the silly low carb versus high carb
wars that the news reporters were jumping on.
I wanted to know WHY the subjects
were able to stick with it so well. Of course, thats boring
stuff to journalists
adherence? What does that word mean anyway?
Yawn - not interesting enough for prime time, I guess.
But it was interesting to me, and
I hope YOU pay attention to what I found. The authors of the study
wrote:
This trial suggests a model
that might be applied more broadly in the workplace. Using the employer
as a health coach could be an effective way to improve health. The
model of group intervention with the use of dietary group sessions,
spousal support, food labels, and monthly weighing in the workplace
within the framework of a health promotion campaign might yield
weight reduction and long term health benefits.
Hmmmmm, lets see:
- Dietician coaching
- Group meetings
- Motivational phone calls
- Spousal support
- Workplace monitoring (corporate
health program)
- Food labels - calorie monitoring
- Weigh-ins (required and monitored)
Wow, everything helpful to long term
fat loss that sticks. Can you say, ACCOUNTABILITY? These
factors help explain the better adherence.
By the way, the adherence rate for
the low carb group was the lowest.
90.4% in low fat group
85.3% in the Mediterranean group
78% in the low carb group
Heres the bottom line, the way
I see it:
First, please,
please, please learn how to find and read primary research and take
the news media stories with a grain of salt. If you want
to know who died, what burned down or what hurricane is coming,
tune in to the news they do a GREAT job at that. If you want
to know how to lose weight or improve your health, look up the original
research papers instead of taking second hand information at face
value.
Second, those who prefer a low
carb approach; more power to them. Most studies, this one included,
show at the very least that low carb is an option and its
not necessarily an unhealthy one if done intelligently. I also have
no qualms with someone claiming that low carb diets are slightly
more effective for weight loss, especially in the short term, free
living situations. Is low carb superior for fat loss in the long
haul? Thats STILL highly debatable. Its probably superior
for some people, but not for others.
Third, low carb people, listen
up! Even if low carb is superior, that doesnt mean calories
dont count. Deny this at your own peril. In fact, this study
shows the reverse. The low carb group was in a larger negative energy
balance than the high carb and Mediterranean group (according to
the data published in this paper), which easily explains the greater
weight loss. Posting the calories contained in foods in the cafeteria
may have improved the results and helped with compliance in all
groups.
When energy intake is matched calorie
for calorie, the advantage of a low carb diet shrinks or disappears.
For most people, low carb is a hunger management or calorie control
weight loss advantage, not metabolic magic (sorry, no magic folks!)
Fourth, choose the nutrition program
thats most appropriate for your personal preferences,
your current health condition, your genetics (or phenotype) and
most important of all
the one you can stick with. Then tend
your own garden instead of wasting time criticizing how the other
guy is eating. Your results will speak for themselves in the end.
Take your shirt off and show us.
If I were forced to choose only one
approach (and thank god Im not), I would recommend avoiding
the extremes of very low carb or very low fat or very high fat or
very high carbs. Balance makes the most sense to me, and the research
suggests that this helps produce the highest compliance rate. Thats
not rocket science either, its common sense. If you have a
serious fat loss goal, as when I compete in bodybuilding, then a
further reduction in carbs and increase in protein makes perfect
sense to me as a peaking diet.
If an extremely low or extremely high
carb diet worked for you, great. But generalizing your experience
to the entire rest of the world makes no sense. Arguing from extremes
is the weakest form of argument.
The reason I have THREE nutrition
plans (three phases) in my own fat loss program is because programs
with flexibility and room for individualization beat the others
hands down in the long term. In fact, I wrote an entire chapter
in my e-book about unique body types, how to determine yours and
how to individualize your nutrition its THAT important.
If you have more choices, you have
more power. The people who are shackled by dogma and narrow thinking
are stuck. They also risk missing whats really important.
Things like:
- Personalization
- Adherence
- Long-term Maintenance
- Accountability
- Social Support
and
CALORIES!
Train hard and expect success,
Tom Venuto CSCS, NSCA-CPT
Fat Loss Coach
PS. If you want to learn more about
a balanced, flexible and proven approach, which teaches nutritional
individuality and which can produce similar weight loss in one month,
month after month, that the subjects of this study produced in TWO
YEARS, (if you ADHERE to it!), then visit my fat loss website.
CLICK
HERE to learn more about Tom's book
"Burn the Fat, Feed the Muscle"
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In this candid and revealing
interview, David Grisaffi, an in-the-trenches fat loss and
abdominal training expert and author of the best-selling ebook
Firm and Flatten Your Abs, interviews fat loss expert and
best selling author Tom Venuto.
These fat loss pros discuss
what it really takes to uncover your abdominals, and the reasons
why it takes more than hundreds of situps and crunches to
succeed. Some of the facts Tom reveals will surprise you because
you wont hear them from most other experts in the weight
loss and fitness industry.
Why? Because they either dont
know or they have a vested interest in keeping the truth hidden
from you. In this revealing discussion you'll learn top secret
ab training techniques and the truth about diet scams and
rip offs!
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In this interview, Tom Nicoli,
a clinical hypnotherapist who was featured on Dateline NBCs
Ultimate Weight Loss Challenge, meets with fat loss expert
and best selling author Tom Venuto.
The two Toms discuss what it
really takes to increase or even skyrocket your
fat loss success and they uncover the reasons why it takes
more than hard work and physical effort to succeed
it also takes the right mindset. Some of the facts Tom reveals
you will surprise you because you wont hear them from
most other experts in the weight loss and fitness industry.
Why? Because
they either dont know or they have a vested interest
in keeping the truth hidden from you. !
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About
The Author
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Tom Venuto is a natural bodybuilder,
certified personal trainer and freelance fitness writer. Tom
is the author of "Burn
the Fat, Feed The Muscle, which teaches you
how to get lean without drugs or supplements using secrets
of the world's best bodybuilders and fitness models. Learn
how to get rid of stubborn fat and increase your metabolism
by clicking
here.
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