My subject’s photo, below the
sub-header “Helped America Eat Better,” stares me in the face every day when I
sit at my laptop. My computer shares a table covered with a NYT’s obituary page and a harpsichord
keyboard I am fine tuning. It is both prophetic, and motivational; I am
inspired to unload a little on “the state of things.”
My parents taught me to “never
speak ill of the dead” so, while I’m going to violate that aphorism with this
piece, I will not be hurtful to the
departed personally. Before you say, “Bless your heart,” know that my feelings
– my enmity, really – toward the myopic vision of my subject, heralded by the NYT with an 18-column-inch obit, is that
society still viewed him in such an exalted status as late as 2017. This man,
like so many of his colleagues, actually failed to lead us to “eat better.”
But the NYT piece was an obituary,
not an op-ed.
I am reminded of one of my favorite
last lines in a movie. It is Joey Brown’s in “Some Like It Hot” (see
this YouTube video excerpt). Brown proposes marriage to Jack Lemmon,
cross-dressing to avoid a mafia hit squad. Lemmon replies in exasperation that
he’s in fact a man, to which Brown replies, “Well, nobody’s perfect.”
From the obit: This doctor, a
“surgeon, clinician, researcher, teacher and author, was pre-eminent in the
study of obesity and nutrition.” Besides his medical degree, he held a
doctorate in nutritional biochemistry from MIT and “largely spent his career at
Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.” He
was professor of nutrition at Harvard, and at Beth Israel was the chief of
Nutrition/Metabolism Laboratory and Director of the Center of Nutrition
Medicine. He was at the apex of the “nutrition establishment.”
Yet, “what really put him and his
colleagues on the world map were publications highlighting inadequate
nutritional management of people in the hospital – so-called ‘hospital
malnutrition,’” said a former colleague. How did he do that? “He helped develop
nutritious liquid diets (Ensure, and others), supplementing them with
protein…” In other words, he and Harvard profited handsomely from this
misguided commercial collaboration.
He also correlated poor nutrition
with obesity – a no-brainer there, but note again this habitual dependency of
Harvard nutrition “experts” on epidemiology, or “correlation,” rather than a
scientific interest in “causation.” His solution: “Advocate lower-fat diets and
help develop gastric by-pass surgery and nutritional liquid diets.”
I’m not suggesting that this good
doctor had a Mephistophelean streak; I’m sure he intended well, but like Ancel Keys before him, and others still in
positions of influence (e.g. Walter Willett at Harvard), he rose to power in
the politics of the academy by buying into the “eat-less, exercise-more, a
calorie-is-a-calorie” meme that is only now beginning to show wear at the edges
because of the weakness of the scientific evidence.
His obituary writer noted that
“weight loss benefitted patients with type 2 diabetes.” Now, there’s a
scientific breakthrough! His obituary also described five strategies the good doctor
“developed during four decades of encouraging patients to shed pounds: 1) Make
time to prepare healthy meals, 2) Eat slowly, 3) Consume evenly sized meals,
beginning with breakfast, 4) Do not skimp on sleep, and 5) Weigh yourself
often.” Not bad advice, but pretty banal accomplishments, if you ask me. Forty
years of “encouragement…to shed pounds.”
I also think that evenly sized
meals sounds too much like “balanced” to me. And nutritious liquid diets like Ensure, even
if supplemented to 15% protein, are still 60% highly processed carbohydrates.
“Carbohydrates” are not mentioned even once
in the entire 2-columned obituary. The emphasis instead is on calorie intake: “Even a small decrease
in caloric intake could result in
healthier weight,” he is quoted as saying. He summed it up: “Sustained weight
loss requires a three-pronged approach: Cut the calories, eat quality food and exercise.”
As Max
Planck, the German Nobel-prize winning physicist said in 1906, “Truth
never triumphs; its opponents just die out.” Another paraphrased variant is,
“Science advances one funeral at a time.” May he rest in peace.
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