Health News
Cholesterol
(Sent as received)
This is the second such myth demolishing news - the first being
about Chemotherapy mailed to you a few weeks ago - that is great for the
millions but devastating for the pharma industries.
Please share the good news with others also.
Subject: Cholesterol is finally officially removed
from Naughty List/rvs
The US government has finally accepted that cholesterol is not a 'nutrient
of concern’ doing a U-turn on their early warning, In the meanwhile of 40 years
US Drug Industry in connivance with the Health Department made over 1.5
trillion US Dollars by selling cholesterol lowering drugs. This fear probably
caused death of a million gullible citizen who believe the US drug industry.
Cholesterol has been on the "naughty" list of nutrients for
nearly 40 years, with health officials warning us to stay away from
high-cholesterol foods since the 1970s to avoid heart disease and
clogged arteries. "Full-fat dairy products and avocados are high in
good fats." But US officials have finally given the green
light for a U-turn on previous warnings, which means eggs, butter, full-fat
dairy products, nuts, coconut oil and meat have now been classified as
"safe" and have been officially removed from the "nutrients of
concern" list.
The US Department of Agriculture, which is responsible for updating
the guidelines every five years, stated in its findings for 2015:
"Previously, the Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommended that
cholesterol intake be limited to no more than 300 mg/day.
"The 2015 DGAC will not bring forward this recommendation because
available evidence shows no appreciable relationship between consumption
of dietary cholesterol and serum (blood) cholesterol, consistent with the
AHA/ACC (American Heart Association / American
College of Cardiology) report.
"Cholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for over consumption"
"Eggs are no longer on the 'naughty list'."
The Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee will, in response, no longer
warn people against eating high-cholesterol foods and will instead focus
on sugar as the main substance of dietary concern.
The 70s, 80s and 90s were the 'non-fat' years, with the
government warning people to limit the amount of high-cholesterol foods in
their diets to avoid heart disease and strokes.
But nutritionists and scientists have long been campaigning for the
U-turn, which started with introducing "good cholesterol" back
into the 'safe zone'. US cardiologist Dr Steven Nissen said: "It's
the right decision. We got the dietary guidelines wrong. They've been
wrong for decades." He estimated that about 20 per cent of
cholesterol levels in your blood come from your diet, which means the
rest is produced by your liver and is actually needed by the body.
Dr Chris Masterjohn added: “Since we cannot possibly eat enough
cholesterol to use for our bodies’ daily functions, our bodies make
their own. "When we eat more foods rich in this compound, our
bodies make less. If we deprive ourselves of foods high in cholesterol -
such as eggs, butter, and liver - our body revs up its cholesterol
synthesis." "Nuts were previously thought to contain too much
cholesterol."
Sugar has now been identified as the "worst" food culprit for
health problems, with GPs now focusing on weaning patients off the sweet stuff.
Cardiologist Dr Aseem Malhotra, who works with group Action On Sugar, says a
clamp-down on the food industry is next. He said: "It's very clear
that added sugar has absolutely no nutritional value whatsoever and, contrary
to what the food industry want you to believe, the body doesn't require any
carbohydrate for energy from added sugar. "And we know the food industry
have been spiking our food with added sugars. We also know that
carbohydrates and particularly refined carbohydrates - so carbohydrates that
lack fibre, sugar being one of them - have the biggest impact on insulin in
terms of surges of
insulin in our body. And insulin is a fat storing hormone." So, in
summary, ditch your skinny latte for a full-fat latte and get some avocados
down you.
Col. Riaz Jafri (Retd)
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