Alexandra100
Well-Known Member
I think the current recommendation is to consume 2 portions of oily fish weekly, so that's perfect!That's what I do now, i buy one tin of salmon. But is it worth it for two meals a week?
I think the current recommendation is to consume 2 portions of oily fish weekly, so that's perfect!That's what I do now, i buy one tin of salmon. But is it worth it for two meals a week?
Not really... there are plenty of studies based on food questionnaires and observations as to what people eat for a few days. To do "proper" nutritional studies you have to lock people up and feed them exact ratio of foods so they can't "cheat". This will never happen so there will never be "scientific" trials of nutrition or diet because these days they are simply unethical. Once you realise that every study and report probably reflects the bias of whoever is writing the report then you start to see why there are studies that support every type of way of eating. I have even seen the Virta studies criticised because there isn't a "control group" who are presumably supposed to get more ill with Type 2 whilst those on the program get better..I don't think this is true at all. There are plenty of nutritional studies
I thought we didn't agree with the dietary recommendations.I think the current recommendation is to consume 2 portions of oily fish weekly, so that's perfect!
So what was the PURE study that people were enthusiastic about then?Not really... there are plenty of studies based on food questionnaires and observations as to what people eat for a few days. To do "proper" nutritional studies you have to lock people up and feed them exact ratio of foods so they can't "cheat". This will never happen so there will never be "scientific" trials of nutrition or diet because these days they are simply unethical. Once you realise that every study and report probably reflects the bias of whoever is writing the report then you start to see why there are studies that support every type of way of eating. I have even seen the Virta studies criticised because there isn't a "control group" who are presumably supposed to get more ill with Type 2 whilst those on the program get better..
That is why I am far happier to look at anecdotal evidence in this field where real people get real results rather than someone pontificating in a scientific journal and credit doctors helping people to get better over "theoreticians" saying it can't be proven because there has been no RCT.. but hey that's just me..
It was another epidemiological study looking at associations, not causes: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(17)32252-3/abstractSo what was the PURE study that people were enthusiastic about then?
My understanding of epidemiological studies is that they are a starting point for figuring out causation. If something is associated with a health problem, then you need to do more work to figure out if that something is a cause and what the mechanism is. It may turn out that the association observed can't be confirmed as a cause or is even disprove as a cause with additional workAnd it was touted by many sites, including this one iirc, as pretty solid evidence venerating saturated fats
Right, but it's frustrating when you hear people in the community critical of epidemiological studies who then tout the same kind of studies themselves.
How can we ever make sense of this when you get no clear answers
Amen to that!You are looking for black and white answers where there are only shades of grey, and individual shades at that.
According to John Ioannidis, nutrition isn't even close to being science at all:
You can apply science to nutrition. A claim as to whether X food does Y is an empirical claim that science can investigate. That's triue of any claim made in the physical world. I don't think it matters whether nutrition is per se claimed a scientific disciplineAccording to John Ioannidis, nutrition isn't even close to being science at all:
You can apply science to nutrition. A claim as to whether X food does Y is an empirical claim that science can investigate. That's triue of any claim made in the physical world. I don't think it matters whether nutrition is per se claimed a scientific discipline
This is exactly what was done recently with cornflakes where it was shown that even "normal" people have fairly dramatically elevated blood sugar after eating cornflakes and milk.With the use of continuous blood glucose sensors fitted to 'normal' people , they should be able to devise trails on how foods effect people at different stages of their lives. It would be interesting to take a healthy pregnant mum and see how blood glucose response changes over pregnancy.
If we could find markers before prediabetes is even indicated and what are the triggers, which could be excess or certain types of carbs, action could be taken far earlier.
This is interesting.
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/322614.php?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_country=US&utm_hcp=no&utm_campaign=MNT Weekly Full (non-HCP US) - OLD STYLE 2018-08-01&utm_term=MNT Weekly News (non-HCP US)