*11 A second randomized double-blind controlled trial—the Heart and Estrogen/Progestin Replacement Study—tested hormone replacement in twenty-three hundred women who had already had heart disease. It also found no benefit from the hormones and suggested an increased risk of heart disease, at least for the first few years of taking hormone-replacement therapy.
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*12 Frantz’s Minnesota Coronary Survey was technically a pilot project for the National Diet-Heart Study.
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*13 The investigative reporter William Broad suggested another version of this story in
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*14 As
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*15 It also affirmed the suspicion that polyunsaturated fats might be dangerous, and so further diminished the role of margarines and corn oils in dietary recommendations.
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*16 The Honolulu Heart Program offered an extreme example of this conflict in 1985. The study revealed that high-fat diets were significantly associated with a
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*17 In 1997, the MRFIT investigators also reported that the men in the treatment group subsequently had
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*18 The fourth author was Henry McGill, a pathologist who studied atherosclerosis in humans and in baboons, who says he had agreed unconditionally with the American Heart Association position on dietary fat since the early 1960s.
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*19 Though women were clearly meant to adhere to the low-fat guidelines, they had not been included in any of the clinical trials. The evidence suggested that high cholesterol in women is not associated with more heart disease, as it might be in men, with the possible exception of women under fifty, in whom heart disease is exceedingly rare.
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*20 Browner’s analysis also assumed that restricting dietary fat would reduce cancer deaths, which was speculative then and is even more speculative now.
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*21 William Taylor, the Harvard physician who had done the first of the three analyses on the questionable benefits of eating less fat, was unimpressed with this argument. “Most patients don’t come into my office saying I really want to contribute to the public health statistics in this country,” he said. “If they did, I’d know what to do for them.”
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*22 Melvin Konner has doubts about the conclusions. “Boyd and I probably did underestimate the amount of meat in the Paleolithic diet based on our extrapolations for hunter-gatherers,” he said. “I just don’t think it’s nearly as extreme as this paper claims.”
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*23 They did not, however, lose any weight because of this, which is paradoxical, and an issue we will discuss later.
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*24 This paradox could also include Switzerland. In 1979, Swiss public-health authories reported that cardiovascular mortality had undergone a “suprising decline” in Switzerland between 1951 and 1976, during a period in which the Swiss increased their consumption of animal fats by 20 percent.
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