By Michael Fumento on 8.29.07 @ 12:08AM
To lengthen your life, ignore the Fatophiles.
"To lengthen thy life, lessen thy meals." So observed Benjamin Franklin centuries ago. But
Franklin didn't comment on whether food intake restriction worked
by keeping people thin or by making them thin.
Indeed, it's become a mantra of the "size acceptance" groups that there's no
scientific evidence that losing weight increases longevity. And
it's been true -- until now.
Sure, a mass of published studies show that thinner is better in terms of overall health
and longevity. This is notwithstanding the occasional report like
Katherine Flegal's in 2005 that encouraged the
Center for Consumer Freedom, the notorious food
and beverage industry front group, to practically gloat itself to
death with an obese $600,000 newspaper advertising blitz. Inevitably these studies fail to
account for thinness from smoking or a wasting disease, are then
corrected and, like Flegal's, refuted.
Likewise, the science is overwhelming that losing weight improves markers for
premature death such as vascular inflammation (which causes heart
disease and stroke) and insulin resistance (which causes type 2
diabetes). But finally we have randomized, controlled studies showing a direct
cause-and-effect relationship between eating less and living
longer. Great news? Not, as we shall see, for the "fatophiles."
Obese persons who undergo bariatric surgery (either reducing the size of the
stomach or bypassing it altogether) are far less likely to die
early from diseases as disparate as cancer, heart disease, and
diabetes than matched persons who didn't have the surgery,
according to two studies in the August 23 issue of the New
England Journal of Medicine.
The first study, by Lars
Sjostrom of Goteborg University in Sweden and colleagues,
followed 2,010 obese bariatric surgery patients over 11 years. It
found they were about were about 30 percent less likely on average
to die from any cause than similar persons who didn't undergo the
surgery. The leading causes of death in the non-surgery group was
heart disease, followed by cancer.
The second study, by Ted Adams and others at the University of Utah,
followed 7,925 morbidly obese persons who'd had bariatric surgery.
Initially they had an average Body Mass Index (BMI) of 45,
equivalent to somebody 5'8" weighing 295 pounds. After an average
of just seven years they were about 40 percent less likely to have
died than matched controls. They were 92 percent less likely to die
from diabetes, 60 percent less likely to die of cancer, and 56
percent less like to die of heart disease.
Bariatric surgery is a way of quickly losing large amounts of
weight -- if you have large amounts to lose. But it's also the
most dangerous way. That's why you can't even
qualify for the surgery unless you have a BMI of
40 or one of 35 with extraneous conditions.
Unless drastic measures are called for, the best way to drop
pounds is with improved diet and exercise. Aerobic exercise is good
for the heart, lungs and many other organs. But resistance exercise
(such as weight lifting) not only increases metabolism (and
therefore burns more fat) by increasing muscle mass, it also
strengthens bones and muscles and is continually being found to
have a much greater impact on overall health than was recently
believed.
But losing weight in general, unless you do it by hacking off a
limb, can ward of diseases that are potentially fatal as well as
those causing terrible disabilities such as osteoarthritis.
So this is all wonderful news, right? Not for everybody.
There are those who have found their life's calling in catering
to delusional overweight people, which can be a lucrative market
insofar as two-thirds of adult Americans are overweight or
obese and, according to a new report
released August 27, adult obesity rates rose in 31 states last
year. Most fat people realize they have a problem, but many would
rather believe that the inability to see their shoes is a benign
condition rather than taking the extremely difficult (but hardly impossible)
route of doing something about it.
Fatophile writers prey on the overweight in the same way miracle
diet book authors and miracle diet plans do.
One of these fatophiles is University of Colorado law professor
Paul Campos, who authored The Obesity Myth. Among his
myths are that thinner people die sooner and obesity
doesn't cause heart attacks. "I would hate to see these studies
being used to justify the argument that we should be doing
weight-loss surgery to save lives," he told the Washington Post. "At best,
it's a very, very modest effect," he said of the study results.
Whoa Nellie! Thirty percent reduced mortality over 11 years or
40 percent over seven years isn't just "modest," but "very, very
modest?"
Then there's Sandy Szwarc, nurse and cookbook author, properly
labeled "a bigwig in the fat acceptance
movement." She attacks practically every obesity study that
comes down the pike, insists that excess fat is healthy, and has
even slammed exercise as a means of weight control. She claimed -- I kid you not -- that you'd have to walk
3,920 miles to lose a mere pound of fat. Then she asked why the
public wasn't hearing such things.
Regarding the new studies, she calls it a "leap of logic" to assume that there
is a correlation between the bariatric surgery and subsequent
dramatic weight loss and the "purported improved mortalities."
Granting that the longer survival time may have resulted from
divine intervention or alien abductions, what was so "purported"
about them?
Hippocrates, several centuries before Christ, observed that "Persons who are naturally very fat are
apt to die earlier than those who are slender." Insurance actuaries
in the 19th century made similar observations. In the last few
decades, scores of thousands of published, peer-reviewed studies
have shown that excess body fat kills and cripples, along with
demonstrating how and why. Anyone who says he or she knows better
is being "very, very" dishonest.
topics:
Books, Law