This study will once and for all, answer all of your questions regarding how much fat you should consume and more importantly the specific types of fats you should consume.
For immediate release:
July 5, 2016
Boston, MA – Consuming higher amounts of unsaturated fats
was associated with lower mortality, according to a study from Harvard T.H.
Chan School of Public Health. In a large study population followed for more
than three decades, researchers found that higher consumption of saturated and
trans fats was linked with higher mortality compared with the same number of
calories from carbohydrates. Most importantly, replacing saturated fats with
unsaturated fats conferred substantial health benefits. This study provides
further support for the 2015-2020 Dietary Guidelines for Americans that
emphasize the types of fat rather than total amount of fat in the diet.
The study is the most detailed and powerful examination
to date on how dietary fats impact health. It suggests that replacing saturated
fats like butter, lard, and fat in red meat with unsaturated fats from
plant-based foods—like olive oil, canola oil, and soybean oil—can confer
substantial health benefits and should continue to be a key message in dietary recommendations.
The study was published online July 5, 2016 in JAMA
Internal Medicine.
“There has been widespread confusion in the biomedical
community and the general public in the last couple of years about the health
effects of specific types of fat in the diet,” said Dong Wang, a doctoral
candidate, SD ’16, in the Departments of Nutrition and Epidemiology at Harvard
Chan School and lead author of the study. “This study documents important
benefits of unsaturated fats, especially when they replace saturated and trans
fats.” Read a Q&A with Wang about the study on the Nutrition Source.
The study included 126,233 participants from two large
long-term studies—the Nurses’ Health Study and the Health Professionals
Follow-Up Study—who answered survey questions every 2-4 years about their diet,
lifestyle, and health for up to 32 years. During the follow-up, 33,304 deaths
were documented. Researchers from Harvard Chan School and Brigham and Women’s
Hospital examined the relationship between types of fats in the participants’
diets and overall deaths among the group during the study period, as well as
deaths due to cardiovascular disease (CVD), cancer, neurodegenerative disease,
and respiratory disease.
Different types of dietary fat had different associations
with mortality, the researchers found. Trans fats—on their way to being largely
phased out of food—had the most significant adverse impact on health. Every 2%
higher intake of trans fat was associated with a 16% higher chance of premature
death during the study period. Higher consumption of saturated fats was also
linked with greater mortality risk. When compared with the same number of
calories from carbohydrate, every 5% ncrease in saturated fat intake was
associated with an 8% higher risk of overall mortality.
Conversely, intake of high amounts of unsaturated
fats—both polyunsaturated and monounsaturated—was associated with between 11%
and 19% lower overall mortality compared with the same number of calories from
carbohydrates. Among the polyunsaturated fats, both omega-6, found in most
plant oils, and omega-3 fatty acids, found in fish and soy and canola oils,
were associated with lower risk of premature death.
The health effects of specific types of fats depended on
what people were replacing them with, the researchers found. For example,
people who replaced saturated fats with unsaturated fats—especially
polyunsaturated fats—had significantly lower risk of death overall during the
study period, as well as lower risk of death from CVD, cancer, neurodegenerative
disease, and respiratory disease, compared with those who maintained high
intakes of saturated fats. The findings for cardiovascular disease are
consistent with many earlier studies showing reduced total and LDL (“bad”)
cholesterol when unsaturated fats replace trans or saturated fats.
People who replaced saturated fats with carbohydrates had
only slightly lower mortality risk. In addition, replacing total fat with
carbohydrates was associated with modestly higher mortality. This was not
surprising, the authors said, because carbohydrates in the American diet tend
to be primarily refined starch and sugar, which have a similar influence on
mortality risk as saturated fats.
“Our study shows the importance of eliminating trans fat
and replacing saturated fat with unsaturated fats, including both omega-6 and
omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids. In practice, this can be achieved by
replacing animal fats with a variety of liquid vegetable oils,” said senior
author Frank Hu, professor of nutrition and epidemiology at Harvard Chan School
and professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School.
Bottom Line : Don't eliminate fat from your diet,just the bad fats. Getting rid of all the fat can create its own set of serious problems.
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