The Weston A. Price Foundation
Washington, DC |
Contact: Kimberly Hartke, Publicist |
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
PROPOSED 2010 USDA DIETARY GUIDELINES –A RECIPE FOR CHRONIC DISEASE
Weston A. Price Foundation Proposes a Return to Four Basic Groups of Nutrient-Dense Foods
WASHINGTON, DC, June 23, 2010: The proposed 2010 USDA Dietary Guidelines are a recipe for infertility, learning problems in children and increased chronic disease in all age groups according to Sally Fallon Morell, president of the Weston A. Price Foundation.
“The proposed 2010 Dietary Guidelines perpetuate the mistakes of previous guidelines in demonizing saturated fats and animal foods rich in saturated fatty acids such as egg yolks, butter, whole milk, cheese, fatty meats like bacon and animal fats for cooking. The current obesity epidemic emerged as vegetable oils and refined carbohydrates replaced these healthy, nutrient-dense traditional fats. Animal fats supply many essential nutrients that are difficult to obtain from other sources,” explains Fallon Morell.
“The revised Guidelines recommend even more stringent reductions in animal fats and cholesterol than previous versions,” says Fallon Morell, “and are tantamount to rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. While the ship of state sinks under the weight of a crippling health care burden, the Committee members are giving us more of the same disastrous advice. These are unscientific and grossly deficient dietary recommendations.”
The Weston A. Price Foundation is a non-profit nutrition education foundation with no ties to the government or food processing industries. Named for Dr. Weston A. Price, whose pioneering research discovered the vital importance of animal fats in human diets, the Foundation has warned against the dangers of lowfat and plant-based diets.
“Basic biochemistry shows that the human body has a very high requirement for saturated fats in all cell membranes; if we do not eat saturated fats, the body will simply make them from carbohydrates, but excess carbohydrate increases blood levels of triglyceride and small, dense LDL, and compromises blood vessel function,” says Fallon Morell. “Moreover, high-carbohydrate diets do not satisfy the appetite as well as diets rich in traditional fats, leading to higher caloric intakes and often to bingeing and splurging on empty foods, resulting in rapid weight gain and chronic disease.”
The proposed guidelines will perpetuate existing nutrient deficiencies present in all American population groups, including deficiencies in vitamins A and D found in animal fats, vitamins B12 and B6 found in animal foods, as well as minerals like calcium and phosphorus, which require vitamins A and D for assimilation. Moreover, low intakes of vitamin K2, are associated with increased risk of heart disease and cancer. The main sources of vitamin K2 available to Americans are egg yolks and full-fat cheese. Incredibly, the Guidelines single out cheese as an unhealthy food!
Fallon Morell notes that by restricting healthy animal fats in school lunches and diets for pregnant women and growing children, the Guidelines will accelerate the tragic epidemic of learning and behavior disorders. The nutrients found most abundantly in animal fats and organ meats—including choline, cholesterol and arachidonic acid—are critical for the development of the brain and the function of receptors that modulate thinking and behavior. Studies show that choline helps the brain make critical connections and protects against neurotoxins; animal studies suggest that if choline is abundant during developmental years, the individual is protected for life from developmental decline. The National Academy of Sciences recommends 375 mg per day for children nine through thirteen years of age, 450 mg for pregnant women and 550 mg for lactating women and men aged fourteen and older. These amounts are provided by four or five egg yolks per day—but that would entail consuming 800-1000 mg cholesterol, a crime by USDA standards. In their deliberations, the committee referred to this as the “choline problem.” Pregnant women and growing children especially need to eat as many egg yolks as possible—yet the Guidelines demonize this nutrient-dense food.
The Guidelines lump trans fats together with saturated fats—calling them Solid Fats—thereby hiding the difference between unhealthy industrial trans fats and healthy traditional saturated fats. Trans fats contribute to inflammation, depress the immune system, interfere with hormone production, and set up pathological conditions leading to cancer and heart disease, whereas saturated fats fight inflammation, support the immune system, support hormone production and protect against cancer and heart disease.
The vitamins and fatty acids carried uniquely in saturated animal fats are critical to reproduction. The Weston A. Price Foundation warns that the 2010 Guidelines will increase infertility in this country, already at tragically high rates.
“The 2010 proposed Guidelines represent a national scandal, the triumph of industry clout over good science and common sense,” says Fallon Morell. “It must be emphasized that the Guidelines are not based on science but are designed to promote the products of commodity agriculture and—through the back door—encourage the consumption of processed foods. For while the USDA food police pay lip service to reducing our intake of refined sweeteners, trans fats, white flour and salt, this puritanical low-fat prescription ultimately leads to cravings for chips, sweets, sodas, breads, desserts and other empty food-and-beverage-like products just loaded with refined sweeteners, trans fats, white flour and salt.”
The Weston A. Price Foundation proposes alternative Healthy 4 Life Dietary Guidelines, which harkens back to the traditional four basic food groups, but with a renewed emphasis on quality through a return to pasture-based feeding and organic, pesticide-free production methods:
Every day, eat high quality, whole foods to provide an abundance of nutrients, chosen from each of the following four groups:
- Animal foods: meat and organ meats, poultry, and eggs from pastured animals; fish and shellfish; whole raw cheese, milk and other dairy products from pastured animals; and broth made from animal bones.
- Grains, legumes and nuts: whole-grain baked goods, breakfast porridges, whole grain rice; beans and lentils; peanuts, cashews and nuts, properly prepared to improve digestibility.
- Fruits and Vegetables: preferably fresh or frozen, preferably locally grown, either raw, cooked or in soups and stews, and also as lacto-fermented condiments.
- Fats and Oils: unrefined saturated and monounsaturated fats including butter, lard, tallow and other animal fats; palm oil and coconut oil; olive oil; cod liver oil for vitamins A and D.
Avoid: foods containing refined sweeteners such as candies, sodas, cookies, cakes etc.; white flour products such as pasta and white bread; processed foods; modern soy foods; polyunsaturated and partially hydrogenated vegetable oils and fried foods.
The Weston A. Price Foundation is a 501C3 nutrition education foundation with the mission of disseminating accurate, science-based information on diet and health. Named after nutrition pioneer Weston A. Price, DDS, author of Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, the Washington, DC-based Foundation publishes a quarterly journal for its 13,000 members, supports 450 local chapters worldwide and hosts a yearly International conference. The Foundation headquarters phone number is (202) 363-4394, www.westonaprice.org, info@westonaprice.org.
CONTACT: Kimberly Hartke, Publicist
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Marilyn Hayman says
I have osteoporosis and have heard of the benefit of bone broth to strengthen weak bones. How much should be consumed per day to make a difference in improving my bones? Thank you.
Colin says
One Suggestion
I wholeheartedly agree with this. Excellent work, WAPF! How about adding a fifth food group, fermented foods, to the list? Because these foods are so essential for health, I thought it would avail your recommendations to include them in their own category.
shirley Jefferson says
I have 3 eggs, over easy with 3 slices of whole wheat or 9 grain bread with unsalted butter every single day. I either add a glass of freshly made carrot juice or a tall glass of organic milk.. I am 50 years old, 5’6 and weigh 130 with perfect blood work..
Pamela Darnell says
I have been following your recommendations after years of trying to eat a low fat diet to loose weight. I have lost 25 pounds since January! I found an organic dairy farmer not 15 minutes from my home and visit them regularly to purchase their products, including grass fed beef and pastured chickens.
Karen Fenton says
high HDL
I eat loads of good fats, coconut oil, eggs from pastured chickens, raw milk cheese and meat from grass fed beef. My HDL is the highest my doctor has ever seen. 105! My ratio is a 2. My brain and memory recall works so well and I am almost 71!
Mary Masterilli says
hallelujah for common sense.
Mikki Coburn says
Diet not exercise to maintain weight
Diet, not excessive exercising, keeps the weight off. I have been following eating a real foods diet and now WAPF diet, with a little fudging now and then, and have kept both my husband’s and my weight off. I’m 5’7″ and weigh 135 and my husband is 6’1″ and weighs 187. Both of us dropped 10 pounds without even trying. I was concerned several months ago when I had surgery and could not exercise and get my heart rate up for weeks that I would sock on pounds. I was surprised to find that I did not gain an ounce! So, my conclusion: eat real food, not too much, to keep your weight in line. Our blood work is good, our BP is normal and at age 61, neither of us are on prescription drugs. I’m not against exercising, and like to because it makes you feel better, just learned that diet is key to weight loss and maintaining it and good health.
Linda Lara says
For some people (meaning my husband who is a diabetic)even healthy fats can cause a raise in blood sugar. I have been studing nutrition for 40 years and been trying to regulate his blood sugar for 10 years using a low carb diet and using only healthy fats. His blood sugars just keep going up. He finally tried Nutrisystem D. He lost some weight but most important his blood sugars droped from 160 to 110. This diet has many questionable items in it even Corn Surup, but what it did do is to sharply lower ALL his fat intake. What it taught me was that now I need to create a diet for him which is 0 transfat and limits all fats. The low carbs are not as important as I thought. Everybody is different and not one diet fits all. However, vegetables seem to be good for everyone.
Cynthia Rabinowitz says
I find so much confusing but well-researched advice out there about nutrition. For example, Dr. James Dowd of the Arthritis Institute of Michigan as written “The Vitamin D Cure” in which he advises eliminating all cheese and cereal grains (whole or otherwise) from our diets because of the upsetting of the body’s acid-base balance which will lead to all sorts of problems.
This is so totally opposite every other nutritionist’s recommendations and hundreds, if not thousands, of years of human food consumption all over the world.
What are we to think about this? He’s equally qualified with other doctors and his case histories given in the book are compelling. It is all too confusing.
Jenny says
LDL
What main food should I stay away from for high ldl? I can’t take statins, they are horrible. My ldl is 140, everything else is good. I have mild plaque in my carotid arteries with no narrowing. I am 59 yrs old. Wouldn’t you think that many people at that age have some plaque? I try to eat careful, I know I can improve and am tryin to find some answers naturally. thanks
Sheila malry says
I would like to know if goats milk good for cancer