Talk:Dietary Guidelines for Americans/Archive 1

Restriction of dietary fat and cholesterol edit

This section concludes "A review of reviews also confirmed that egg consumption is associated with adverse effects regarding Heart failure and type 2 diabetes.[36]". While looking at the referenced study, the conclusions section states "Recent evidence-based reviews conclude that increased egg consumption is not associated with CVD risk in the general population. More research is needed on the positive associations between egg consumption and heart failure and T2DM risk, as well as CVD risk in diabetics, before firm conclusions can be made."

I advise that this source be either replaced with one that supports the statement being made or (more ideally) the statement be revised to reflect the evidence.

I have removed that sentence. It was false information. The umbrella review suggests the opposite [1] Psychologist Guy (talk) 20:24, 26 November 2020 (UTC)Reply

Article needs updating for 2020–2025 version edit

The 2020–2025 version of the Guidelines is out: https://www.dietaryguidelines.gov/sites/default/files/2021-03/Dietary_Guidelines_for_Americans-2020-2025.pdf

I am sure this article needs major updating. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 216.36.27.133 (talk) 16:51, 25 March 2021 (UTC)Reply

I just read the 2020-2025 Guidelines. I was very disappointed to discover that they still encourage people to reduce their consumption of saturated fats in favor of vegetable oils (polyunsaturated fats). This flies in the face of the latest scientific evidence, and represents a huge lost opportunity to educate the public. Lets hope that just as the 2020-2025 Guidelines have ditched trans fats, the 2025-2030 Guidelines will ditch unhealthy polyunsaturated fats (for example, margarine) in favor of healthy saturated fats (for example, butter). Unfortunately, the ghost of long-discredited Ancel Keys continues to cast a long shadow. Piedmont (talk) 13:43, 30 April 2021 (UTC)Reply
I understand that there will be high-quality secondary sources coming out over the next few months that will provide us with material we can use to build the "current" 2020-2025 section. I'll make some cosmetic changes in preparation for that. sbelknap (talk) 19:04, 3 May 2021 (UTC)Reply
You are claiming that the 2020-2025 Guidelines are wrong so you are arguing from a fringe position, see WP:Fringe. Trans fats are briefly mentioned on page 44 The USDA Dietary Patterns are limited in trans fats and low in dietary cholesterol. Cholesterol and a small amount of trans fat occur naturally in some animal source foods. As of June 2018, partially hydrogenated oils (PHOs), the major source of artificial trans fat in the food supply, are no longer Generally Recognized as Safe (GRAS). Therefore, PHOs are no longer added to foods." There are small amounts of trans fat found in meat and dairy products such as butter. In regard to Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids it is not only the DGA advising their consumption. The American Heart Foundation recommends people eat Polyunsaturated Fat (PUFAS) food and cut down on Saturated Fat (SFAS) food [2] and so does the American Diabetes Association [3]. So does practically every other professional health or medical agency.
Can you be more specific on your claim that Polyunsaturated Fats (PUFAS) are "unhealthy". Or do you mean specific PUFAS (not all)? There are Polyunsaturated Fat foods that have proven to lower bad LDL and increase good HDL. There are a lot of PUFA foods out there walnuts, sunflower seeds, flax seeds, salmon, herring, corn oil, soybean oil and safflower oil. I am guessing you are saying Omega 6 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids are "unhealthy" but not Omega 3? Or is your issue just with oxidized PUFA or the Omega-6 to Omega-3 Ratio? As far as I know the DGA are not telling people to load up on highly-processed corn oil and nothing else, they are advising a balanced diet with PUFAS from a wide range of sources including nuts, seafood, oils and seeds. In regard to Omega 6 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids there was a recent review on this "Despite the concern that omega-6 fatty acids increase inflammation, current evidence from studies in humans does not support this view. In conclusion, these findings support current recommendations to emphasize consumption of ω-6 PUFAs as a replacement of SFAs [4]. The mainstream scientific consensus is to use PUFAS as a replacement for saturated fat foods. There is no conspiracy because you will find that the DGA, American Heart Foundation, American Diabetes Association and practically every other health agency is saying this. This is obviously a complex topic but it is clearly not accurate to describe Polyunsaturated Fats as unhealthy nor is this the place to promote conspiracy theories that the scientific consensus is wrong. Psychologist Guy (talk) 21:33, 3 May 2021 (UTC)Reply
Fringe position? Perhaps for the last 50 years, since the purely epidemiological "7 Countries Study" - but not now. A 2017 meta analysis of randomised control trials found that "available evidence from adequately controlled randomised controlled trials (RCTs) suggest replacing saturated fatty acids with mostly n-6 PUFA is unlikely to reduce chronic heart disease (CHD) events, CHD mortality or total mortality. The suggestion of benefits reported in earlier meta-analyses is due to the inclusion of inadequately controlled trials." [5] In other words, earlier meta-analyses have given undue weight to epidemiological studies, and not enough weight to RCTs, which are the gold standard of science-based medical research. However, other meta-analyses of RCTs go further: one concludes that "advice to specifically increase n-6 PUFA intake, based on mixed n-3/n-6 RCT data, is unlikely to provide the intended benefits, and may actually increase the risks of CHD and death." [6] So, the tide is turning - but so many reputations are on the line that it is turning very, very slowly. As the old saying goes - science advances one funeral at a time. Piedmont (talk) 15:51, 7 May 2021 (UTC)Reply

Piedmont,

The 2017 meta-analysis by Steven Hamley (a university student) is deeply flawed. It had no medical impact. The only people who have taken it seriously are a few low-carb bloggers which you can Google. It has not been mentioned anywhere else.

Did you read all of Hamley's meta analysis you linked to? Many of the RCTs that he used in his meta analysis were very old from the 1960s based on "free-living" at home. That was his objective to look at them but some of them are unreliable yet he bizarrely includes those ones in his list of adequately controlled trials . You can go and look at these 1960s trials and rip the methodology apart he admits many of them are flawed - we have come along way since the 1960s. You can see that the trials have small sample sizes.

His meta-analyses of 11 chosen "diet heart trials" categorised the following inadequately controlled trials ODHS, NDHS, LAVAT, FMHS, HDAT, and STARS (6 trials). So he dismisses those. The adequately controlled trials which he categorised were RCOT, MRCT, SDHS, MCS, and DART (5). So six he considered unreliable by his selected criteria yet when you look at his chosen 5 they are unreliable. I don't have space to go over them all but let's look at RCOT in a minute. Remember he admits that "the pooled results from all trials, including the inadequately controlled trials, suggested that replacing SFA with mostly n-6 PUFA would significantly reduce the risk of total CHD events". His issue with the other meta-analyses is his claim that they have not included the adequate controlled trials.

The first thing to say about Hamley's meta-analysis was that is was based mostly on males with pre-existing CHD so that's an obvious bias from the start we are not looking at a broad population sample. He admits this "many of the diet heart trials only included males with pre-existing CHD", this is problematic and is not representing both sexes either. His meta-analysis is flawed due cherry picked biased data like this. 8 of the 11 trials he chose were "free-living". This means the patients were living at home. Do you find that reliable? How do you know what they were really eating? 4 of Hamley's chosen "adequately controlled trials" were "free-living". No surprise really.

The first trial he used in his meta-analysis was this one from 1965 [7] titled "Corn Oil in Treatment of Ischaemic Heart Disease" which he dubs "RCOT". The trial looked at 3 groups of patients with ischaemic heart disease.

There was a control group, a group taking 80g corn oil daily and a different group taking olive oil 80g daily. Both groups were told to cut down on saturated fat foods and limit their animal protein. There is no mention what foods the patients were eating! What were they putting the oil on? The authors of the 1965 trial admit "many found the treatment burdensome: distaste, nausea, and diarrhoea were the commonest complaints. An attempt was made to assess how much oil each patient actually took, based on the number of cans issued, the amounts left in the returned cans, and the patient's own statements." This is clearly not a reliable method to obtain accurate data. The paper then lists "estimates" in a table. This is not a good way to get results. Indeed, they also obtained estimates from a "self-administered questionary". Yet Hamley includes this unreliable trial in his reliable trial list.

We can see that patients were consuming less oil as time went on. They were consuming less oil so it is likely they were eating saturated fat foods again. During 18-24 months into the trial there were only 13 patients in each group and it was estimated they were consuming 51g daily. Is 13 patients a lot? These old trials had such small sample sizes. The results found that the corn oil group suffered worse than the control or olive oil group with infarction or death occurring in 1/4 or more of the group. The conclusion was the corn-oil is not a safe food for those with ischaemic heart disease. There are so many flaws with this trial it is embarrassing. We have come along way since the 1960s with scientific controls and methodology. I have literally just shot that one down. I could easily do the same to his other chosen 4 but you get the idea. It's unlikely the patients were eating fruits and vegetables, we do not know what they were putting their oil on. Remember this trial was used by Hamley to prove "Available evidence from adequately controlled randomised controlled trials suggest replacing SFA with mostly n-6 PUFA is unlikely to reduce CHD events, CHD mortality or total mortality". It has done no such thing. It's always best to read more than just an abstract conclusion. The Hamley meta-analysis does not hold up under scrutiny. Psychologist Guy (talk) 22:24, 7 May 2021 (UTC)Reply

I would also point out the obvious that The Dietary Guidelines for Americans are advising a balanced diet.

The core elements that make up a healthy dietary pattern include:

  • Vegetables of all types—dark green; red and orange; beans, peas, and lentils; starchy; and other vegetables
  • Fruits, especially whole fruit
  • Grains, at least half of which are whole grain
  • Dairy, including fat-free or low-fat milk, yogurt, and cheese, and/or lactose-free versions and fortified soy beverages and yogurt as alternatives
  • Protein foods, including lean meats, poultry, and eggs; seafood; beans, peas, and lentils; and nuts, seeds, and soy products
  • Oils, including vegetable oils and oils in food, such as seafood and nuts

Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2020-2025. p. 18

As you can see there is fruits, vegetables, grains, dairy, meat, poultry, eggs seafood and legumes on their list. If you search for "polyunsaturated fat" in their recent published guidelines there is only 5 mentions out of 148 pages. The idea to completely remove polyunsaturated fat from the diet is a fringe position and impossible for most people because most accessible foods consumed contain a mixture of polyunsaturated, monounsaturated or saturated fat. All PUFA is "unhealthy" etc is clearly a pseudoscientific opinion not supported by nutritional science. Psychologist Guy (talk) 22:36, 7 May 2021 (UTC)Reply

You say that "the idea to completely remove polyunsaturated fat from the diet is a fringe position and impossible for most people because most accessible foods consumed contain a mixture of polyunsaturated, monounsaturated or saturated fat. All PUFA is "unhealthy" etc is clearly a pseudoscientific opinion not supported by nutritional science." I never said these things. This is a classic straw man attack: you are misrepresenting my position by deliberately widening the scope of what I said. My concern is with the high ω-6/ω-3 ratio implied by the Dietary Guidelines, and with the modern explosion in seed oil consumption in particular, not with PUFAs in general. Of course, the idea of completely removing polyunsaturated fat from the diet, and the idea that all PUFAs are unhealthy, are both stupid ideas, on both theoretical and practical grounds. I know that, you know that, and I think you know that I know that. Piedmont (talk) 09:58, 8 May 2021 (UTC)Reply
In your first comment you said that you hoped "the 2025-2030 Guidelines will ditch unhealthy polyunsaturated fats". It was not clear if you were claiming all PUFAS are unhealthy I already mentioned that in my first reply. You were not specific but yes I suspected you were thinking of seed oils. You have now made it clear PUFAS are actually healthy and your only problem is with processed seed oils which are high in omega 6. Agreed the ω-6/ω-3 ratio is wrong for most Americans. If you eat a junk food diet with seed oils that is not a good thing and your ratio will be wrong. But The Dietary Guidelines for Americans is not promoting a diet high in just seed oils or a junk food diet. They are advising people to consume a wide range of PUFAS and MUFAS. It is promoting a balanced diet. I look for seed oils in their guidelines and it is mentioned only twice. They tell people they can cook with seed oils but also olive oil and other oils. The conspiracy theories about PUFA have been promoted by Nina Teicholz but they do not hold weight. Teicholz also promotes that unreliable meta-analysis from Steven Hamley.
There is no mention of the ω-6/ω-3 ratio in the guidelines but you can see that MUFA foods are also encouraged. They are telling people to eat a wide range of foods - poultry, lean meat, eggs, seafood, fruit, vegetables, legumes and nuts. In many places it looks like what they are encouraging is close to a Mediterranean diet. This is mainstream nutritional advice offering a well-balanced diet. I don't know why the low-carb crowd (including a banned IP) who keeps spamming this talk-page have such an issue with this. If future reliable references criticise the dietary guidelines regarding PUFAS then yes they can be added to the article but I cannot find any of those at the moment but I suspect if these sources do pop up they will not be from nutritionists but from low-carb blogs which are not considered reliable sources. Psychologist Guy (talk) 10:28, 8 May 2021 (UTC)Reply
Then I think our positions are not really very far apart. You say that there is no mention of the ω-6/ω-3 ratio in the guidelines, and of course you are right. However, in my view it is there by implication. The advice to eat fat-free or low-fat milk, yogurt, and cheese, taken together with the advice to consume vegetable oils, implies (to my mind at least) the endorsement of a diet with a high ω-6/ω-3 ratio. I see this implied endorsement; apparently you do not. However, we agree that "the ω-6/ω-3 ratio is wrong for most Americans", which is probably the most important point here. If consensus can be achieved on that, there is much to hope for in the future. Piedmont (talk) 16:53, 8 May 2021 (UTC)Reply

Removal of fringe and unreliable sources edit

Nina Teicholz, James DiNicolantonio [8], Gary Taubes, Zoe Harcombe are not reliable sources for Wikipedia. Psychologist Guy (talk) 17:07, 20 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

The nutritioncoalition website [9] owned by Nina Teicholz with Mark Hyman as a director [10] is not a reliable source. I have removed it from the lead. Psychologist Guy (talk) 18:48, 20 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
This editor makes assertions about certain persons being unreliable but cites no source nor any wikipedia policy. It appears that this editor is making decisions about wikipedia content based on his own original research as to what is reliable and what is not. I encourage him to review https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Reliable_source
Here is one relevant quote: "Wikipedia articles should be based on reliable, published sources, making sure that all majority and significant minority views that have appeared in those sources are covered (see Wikipedia:Neutral point of view)."sbelknap (talk) 22:43, 20 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
C'mon you are being stupid here. Nina Teicholz, James DiNicolantonio, Gary Taubes, Mark Hyman are well known low-carb conspiracy theorists who write books advocating keto/carnivore/low-carb diets. These are not scientists and their views have never been taking seriously by the medical community. Their views do not represent evidence-based medicine and they are not considered reliable sources on Wikipedia. Elsewhere you claim to have written this article, but that is not quite true. You wrote this poorly sourced stub [11] and from the very beginning you cited Nina Teicholz. Per conflict of interest, you should disclose if you have any involvement with these low-carb authors because you have been citing such people on multiple articles. This is clearly a violation of WP:FRINGE, equal weight should not be given to fringe views yet you added all these authors to the lead. Psychologist Guy (talk) 23:03, 20 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
Nina Teicholz is a journalist. She earned a degree in American Studies at Stanford University, and completed her master's in Latin American Studies at Oxford University. She has published useful work in medical journals. This, for example: https://www.bmj.com/content/351/bmj.h4962
James DiNicolantonio is an academic scientist. He has published in medical journals and has written books. For example, this: https://www.jacc.org/doi/abs/10.1016/j.jacc.2013.06.035
Gary Taubes Taubes earned a Bachelors of Science (Physics), a Masters of Science in Aerospace engineering at Stanford University, and a Masters in Journalism at Columbia.
It serves little purpose to sling around ad hominem terms such as "conspiracy theorist." Having seen these three in action, I expect that they would each welcome substantive critiques of their work. That is not the behavior of a conspiracy theorist.
If you look through the history of the Dietary Guidelines article, I did more than initiate the stub. I also wrote most of the content for this article.
If you would stop with the ad hominem attacks and instead focus on improving wikipedia, that would be great. It would also be helpful if you would work harder to get your facts straight. sbelknap (talk) 05:26, 21 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

These sources represent opinions. Teicholz, Taubes and the other can convince the scientific community and then, only then their opinions gain relevance for Wikipedia. They use the Guidelines as soapbox for their opinions. Clearly WP:SOAP applies here, too. CarlFromVienna (talk) 07:43, 21 December 2022 (UTC)Reply

"Having seen these three in action", notable conflict of interest which explains why you are citing these low-carbers as sources on Wikipedia articles. Just a word about James DiNicolantonio, the man is clearly a conspiracy theorist [12]. But yes, the claim he has written books and papers is true. He has co-written a book with Joseph Mercola an anti-vaxxer. This is not a reliable source to be adding to Wikipedia. You are not improving Wikipedia by adding people like DiNicolantonio, Teicholz or Taubes they are completely unreliable sources. In no way shape or form do they qualify as WP:RS nor WP:MEDRS. Psychologist Guy (talk) 09:31, 21 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
I don't know any of these people personally and have not met them. I have read their published work. I have no COI. On wikipedia, editors are asked to set aside their personal prejudices and conduct themselves in an objective manner. There is no place for ad hominem attacks here. I note that you have not addressed my question as to whether you have ideologic POV w/r/t veganism that is impairing your ability to dispassionately edit wikipedia articles about animal-based foods. Perhaps you might best direct your energies toward topics where you lack bias. sbelknap (talk) 17:33, 21 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
Actually you have already admitted on Wikipedia a few years ago that you have a COI. You have been taken to the admin board and your account was requested to be banned [13]. You have openly posted your name after you were adding your own papers to Wikipedia articles and your account was unblocked after you confirmed your identity [14]. I decided to type your name onto Google and add Nina Teicholz. You have extensive interaction with Nina Teicholz on Twitter. After this I type your Twitter handle and the word "vegan" in the Twitter search-bar. Almost daily you have been attacking and harassing vegans on Twitter for the last 2 years. It seems you can't go a single day on Twitter without attacking veganism it is an obsession of yours. You are also active on grass-fed beef websites and you are an active hunter on hunting websites. So no, the COI of interest is not coming from me. BTW I also searched your name and "DiNicolantonio" and see you have had years interaction with James DiNicolantonio and you both talk about hunting elk. You also have hundreds of posts on Twitter supporting the carnivore diet. Yet on this talk-page you pretend to be neutral. I don't think you should deny you have a anti-vegan/vegetarian obsession and a carnivore diet bias. Nothing about your editing is neutral, there is massive conflict of interest here and its now spilling out over on the red meat article. Psychologist Guy (talk) 19:07, 21 December 2022 (UTC)Reply