Good Calories, Bad Calories: The Mythology of Obesity, or The Mythology of Gary Taubes?

In my last post on Gary Taubes and his book Good Calories, Bad Calories, I stated that I would do a chapter-by-chapter critique of the book, starting with Chapter 14, "The Mythology of Obesity".  In this chapter, Taubes begins to create a mystery that doesn't actually exist.  He does this through a combination of logical fallacies, selective quotation of out-dated scientific data, and leaving out existing data that conflicts with his statements.

Taubes opens the chapter with this sentence: 

"Critical to the success of any scientific enterprise is the ability to make accurate and unbiased observations."

He then goes on to say:

"...if the initial observations are incorrect or incomplete, then we will distort what it is we're trying to explain."

Taubes is correct in these statements.  Unfortunately he doesn't follow his own advice.  He notes the hypothesis that obesity is due to excess calorie consumption and/or inadequate physical activity, and then says that this hypothesis fails to explain the evidence and observations. 

However, what Taubes fails to realize is that it only fails to explain the evidence and observations when you leave out important information regarding that evidence or those observations.

Taubes's First Big Boo Boo

Taubes makes his first big mistake on the very first page of this chapter.  He writes:

Lean people will often insist that the secret to their success is eating in moderation, but many fat people insist that they eat no more than the lean - surprising as it seems, the evidence backs this up - and yet are fat nonetheless.  As the National Academy of Sciences report Diet and Health phrased it, "Most studies comparing normal and overweight people suggest that those who are overweight eat fewer calories than those of normal weight."  Researchers and public-health officials nonetheless insist that obesity is caused by overeating, without attempting to explain how these two notions can be reconciled.

The last statement in that paragraph is blatantly false.  These two notions have been reconciled over and over again in numerous studies.  It is well established that overweight people underreport their food intake on average.  In fact, there is a huge volume of literature of on this...so huge that it is surprising that Taubes missed it all.  The underreporting is quite severe.  One study comparing obese twins to their non-obese twin counterparts indicated underreporting of 764 calories per day.  Another study indicated obese subjects to be underreporting their calorie intake by over a thousand calories per day.  This is just a fraction of the data that is out there.  Yet, Taubes selectively quotes out-dated research that relied on self-report of food intake.  Taubes's reliance on out-dated and low quality data will be a consistent theme through the remainder of his book.

The phenomena of underreporting is verified when you supply overweight people with the amount of calories they claim to be eating.  In one study, women who claimed to be eating 1200 calories per day were supplied with that actual amount of food intake.  What happened?  They lost 1.7 pounds per week.  George Bray reported on a similar clinical experience.

My own clinical experience also verifies this.  For example, we had one individual who was not losing weight.  She swore to the dietitian that she was following the program.  One day, her husband came into the dietitian session with her.  He ratted her out and said she was eating 8 tablespoons of peanut butter per day and wasn't recording it in her food log.  That's over 800 calories per day of food intake that she wasn't reporting.  It is no wonder why she was not losing weight.  This is not to say that everyone who underreports food intake is blatantly lying about it.  Many people simply do a poor job of estimating their food intake.  But the fact is, people underreport their food intake.

Taubes, through selective cherry-picking, tries to create a mystery where there is no mystery.  He calls the idea of energy imbalance a "hypothesis", yet fails to consider not only the data mentioned above, but all of the controlled studies that demonstrate experimental overfeeding to create weight gain.  Researchers insist that overeating causes obesity because that's exactly what the data shows, despite Taubes's attempts to spin it otherwise.

The "Carbohydrate or Calorie" False Dichotomy

Taubes moves on to discuss data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination (NHANES) survey.  From 1971 to 2000, this data showed an increase in calorie and carbohydrate intake (as a percentage of calories) in the U.S. population, while fat intake decreased.  Taubes then states:

This increase in energy intake...was "attributable primarily to an increase in carbohydrate intake."...The NHANES data suggest that either calorie or carbohydrates could account for the increase in weight...

Taubes creates a false dichotomy here by asserting that either the increased calorie intake, or the increased carbohydrate intake, was responsible for the weight gain.  However, it's not "either/or" because the two are not independent of each other.  The increased carbohydrate intake IS the increased calorie intake, so you cannot separate the two.  Taubes creates a dichotomy where none exists.

Anecdotes and Newspaper Articles are Not Scientific Evidence

Taubes goes on to discuss physical activity.  He talks about the "exercise explosion" of the 1970's and 80's, implying that Americans were more active than ever.  However, what does he cite to support this?  Some anecdotes and newspaper articles from the New York Times and the Washington Post.  He also cites statistics on the revenues of health clubs.

It is absurd to imply that physical activity is high based on some newspaper articles and gym revenues.  For example, many people join gyms but don't go, or go infrequently.  And no matter how many Americans were supposedly partaking in the "fitness revolution", it is not statistical evidence of how truly active Americans were.   Also, formal exercise only represents a small portion of total daily energy expenditure.  When it comes to physical activity, we are concerned with all physical activity throughout the day, not just formal exercise.  Gym memberships and the "fitness revolution" are not indicative of 24-hour energy expenditure.

If you look at the science rather than anecdote, you get a different picture.  While there isn't good survey data regarding physical activity from the 1970's and early 1980's, the CDC does have data on leisure-time physical activity trends from 1988 to 2008:

Now, this is just leisure time physical activity, and not 24-hour activity.  However, you can see that the trend was mostly flat, with a slight downtrend in this decade.  This data indicates that 1/3 of Americans participate in no leisure time physical activity at all.  Taubes's numbers on gym memberships are meaningless, and his claims of a "fitness revolution" do not hold when you look at the data.

There is also data out of the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area between 1980 and 2000.  The percentage of individuals engaging in physical activity for 30 or more minutes, at least 5 times per week, was only 8-12%.  Only 1% participated in 60 minutes daily.  While this is not national data, the results were similar to what has been observed on a national level, and contradict Taubes's implication of an "exercise or sports epidemic" in America.

There is also data estimating the cost of mechanization (dishwashers, elevators, cars, etc.) to our daily energy expenditure.  It is estimated that we expend an average of 111 calories per day less, which, if not compensated by lower food intake, would result in substantial weight gain over many years.

In the usual fashion, Taubes creates a physical activity paradox where none exists.

The Poverty/Obesity Relationship:  Not A Contradiction After All

Taubes moves on to address another apparent contradiction...that obesity rates tend to be higher among the poorest members of society.  Taubes considers this a contradiction for two reasons.  First, he presumes that the poorest members of society are also the hardest-working, have less access to labor-saving devices, and thus are the most physically active.  Second, he presumes that they are undernourished and do not eat very much.

Of course, these are both assumptions.  Interestingly, Taubes criticizes advocates of the thrifty-gene hypothesis for making assumptions.  Perhaps Taubes should take a look at his own assumptions.

When you actually investigate the scientific data, you will find that Taubes's assumptions do not hold.  First, let's look at the presumption of low calorie intake.  There is a wealth of data that shows that the calorie intake of people living in poverty is not low.  In fact, people in poverty are more likely to consume energy-dense foods, because energy-dense foods are much lower in price.  There is an inverse relationship between the energy density of foods and price.  Here is a chart showing food prices from Seattle supermarkets in 2006:

 

You can see that the least expensive foods are both the fats and the refined carbohydrate foods, so one cannot simply point a finger at carbohydrates here.  In fact, there is a several thousand percent difference between the cost of vegetable oils and sugars compared to fresh produce.  It is very easy to overconsume calories when eating energy dense foods.  In fact, the energy density of foods plays a role in regulation of food intake, and high energy-density foods lead to passive overconsumption (meaning you consume more calories without noticing it, or without adequate feelings of fullness).  For a given volume of food, the greater the energy density of your diet, the more calories you will eat.  Thus, you can actually spend less and eat more.

People in poverty are more likely to underreport their food intake.  They are also  more likely to skip breakfast, which can result in appetite dysregulation and greater daily energy intakes (interestingly, adolescent breakfast skippers also have lower carbohydrate intakes).  Also, low-income urban neighborhoods have a high density of small food stores, which carry mostly energy-dense foods.

Let's also look at the presumption of high activity.  This does not hold when one looks at the data.  According to NHANES, leisure time physical inactivity is higher in people below the poverty line compared to people above the line.  This is particularly true among women, where obesity rates also tend to be higher.

On top of all that, Taubes fails to consider that obesity rates for higher socioeconomic classes increased at a higher rate than lower socioeconomic classes from 1976 to 2008.

The bottom line is that poverty does not mean chronic energy deficiency or high physical activity.  In fact, impoverished populations with true chronic energy deficiency have almost no obesity.

Pima Problems

Taubes continues to get it wrong when he moves to discuss the Pima Indians, again relying on old data from the 1800's and eary 1900's, including journals and anecdotes rather than rigorous scientific research.  He discusses how the Pimas went from food abundance to poverty when placed on reservations, along with a corresponding rise in obesity.  He implies that it could not have been due to an increase in energy intake or a decrease in physical activity.  His support for that?  Anecdotes from anthropologists.  Taubes relies heavily on anecdotes from anthropologists Frank Russell and Ales Hrdlicka.  Taubes comments how obesity was most prevalent among the Pima women, who also (supposedly) "worked considerably harder than the men", and mentions how Russell was not particularly confident that the Pima were no longer active (I'm not sure how Taubes can infer Russell's level of confidence from written words).    He mentions the low fat intake of the Pima (24% of calories, according to data from the physician Frank Hesse), and the high intakes of refined flour, sugar, and canned fruits.  The implication, of course, is that it's the carbohydrates causing the obesity, not elevated energy intake and/or reduced energy expenditure.

When one looks at more modern, higher quality scientific data, we get a different story.  There is a group of Pima Indians living in a remote region of the Sierra Madre Mountains in an area only recently accessible by road.  These Pima have experienced little change in environmental conditions, and continue to lead the traditional lifestyle of the Pimas of the 1800's.  A number of studies have compared these Pima Indians to the U.S. Pima Indians living on reservations.  Rates of obesity are dramatically lower among the Mexican Pimas compared to the U.S. Pimas, while physical activity levels are 2.5-7 times higher.  Direct measurements of energy expenditure using doubly-labeled water have shown the energy expenditure of the Mexican Pimas to be 600 calories per day higher than U.S. Pimas.  The Mexican Pima Indians have a diet of over 60% carbohydrate, and around 26% fat.  Estimates of the traditional Pima diet before the influx of the white man place the carbohydrate intake even higher at 70-80% carbohydrate.  So much for carbohydrate causing obesity!

Chapter 14:  Nothing But Mythology

The bottom line is that the vast majority of the information in chapter 14 is misleading and based on very selective reporting of mostly old, low quality data.  Unfortunately this journalistic style of Taubes continues through the rest of the book.  Supposedly Taubes did 6 years of research for this book, yet it took me only a few days of PubMed searches to find better research.  Chapter 14 is more an exercise in confirmation bias than true scientific inquiry.

I will discuss Chapter 15, "Hunger", in a future blog post.


Get the latest science on muscle gain and fat loss every month

Keeping up with the research is tough, so let us do the work for you. Consider signing up for Research Explained in Practical Summaries (REPS). We cover 5 studies per month and break everything down for you, so you don't need a PhD to interpret the data. You also get access to all back content. Click here to learn more.  
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
351 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Dave
Dave
13 years ago

Your first link is to a study from December 2009. I think Taubes can be forgiven for missing this given that Good Calories, Bad Calories was published in 2007 and Taubes presumably doesn’t possess a time machine. Aside from this, I don’t see anything in the Taubes quote or the NAS report that he quotes from that claims that these statements are based on self-reported calorie intake versus more reliable methods. In fact, the sentence in the NAS report immediately before the sentence quoted by Taubes verifies that they were fully aware of the underreporting problem: “The precise measurement of… Read more »

Food For Thought
Food For Thought
12 years ago
Reply to  James Krieger

The energy balance theory is true… but it doesn’t explain WHY… It’s just re-stating the facts, such as saying… If I fill this cup with water too long it will overspill… If the cup overspills I filled the water over the top… It doesn’t explain why I’d be so stupid to do it, even if I WILLINGLY try not to… What other force “makes me overfill the cup” even while I’m TRYING NOT TO FILL IT? What’s wrong? That’s the point………… Get it already! Thermodynamics is all true, but WHY; WHY; WHY,WHY would ANYONE willingly overeats!?!??!?! Nobody argues against it…… Read more »

shandor
shandor
12 years ago

Wrong, wrong, wrong. Less calories ALWAYS means weight loss. Your rant about people would overeat is irrelevant and NOT the issue here at all. The issue is what happens as a result of overeating. You can’t overeat and lose weight. Are you using your own definition here? Weights make no difference to overall weight gain unless you are discussing calorie expenditure. You can’t say, “yes thermodynamics is true but it doesn’t matter” if you want others to see you as a rational intelligent person. Insulin can affect partitioning of calories but it CANNOT, DOES NOT AND WILL NOT cause weight… Read more »

matthk
matthk
12 years ago
Reply to  shandor

Shandor, sending me to a Taubes-debunking page for a guy whose business model REQUIRES people to believe they can’t lose weight on their own without paying* for his assistance is a bit silly don’t you think?

* I’m sure it’s WAY more reasonable than paying for say, a single copy of Taubes book – or just trying Robb Wolf’s plan (which you can get without even buying his book) on your own for a month. 😉

Paul
Paul
11 years ago

What you all seem to overlook or just plain ignore in post after post is that calorie expenditure is not just equal to exercise! BMR is a large part of total energy expenditure and is not a constant. If someone starts with a BMR of 3000 calories and goes on a diet of 2000 calories, that does not mean that person is necessarily burning off 1000 calories a day! Your body COULD burn 1000 calories of fat or muscle each day to maintain the precious balance, your body COULD lower its energy expenditure to match the new intake, or most… Read more »

Russ Stevens
Russ Stevens
10 years ago
Reply to  Paul

Wrong, wrong, wrong Shandor….less calories does not always equal weight loss! Thank you Paul!

Scott
Scott
13 years ago

By the way, I’m curious on what your take is on the argument, which I think Taubes and others present, that questions how people manage to maintain roughly the same weight consistently, even though this would supposedly require a highly accurate and consistent consumption of calories from week to week. Is it that the caloric expenditure tends to adjust based on the weight? Or that you don’t believe people actually are consistent in weight? Or just habitual eating practices? Thanks.

CarbSane
13 years ago
Reply to  Scott

Not James here, but thought I would add a comment on this one: This argument by Taubes is a distraction. And he uses the flip side to say that one can become “obese” in a decade by just overeating like 10 cals/day. Ummm…. gaining 10 lbs in 10 years does not make one obese, but … Yet he presumes that if someone makes a consistent 100 calorie change in their energy balance the body will totally adjust to that so it won’t make a difference. If we think of our fat stores like a bank, nobody maintains the same balance… Read more »

Food For Thought
Food For Thought
12 years ago
Reply to  CarbSane

Well, your insulin sensitivity has gotten better over the last 2 years. A major contributor to the weight loss. Overall, your carb intake must have gone down… He has major good points about insulin being a determining factor… I don’t however agree at all with Taubes about exercise… It does help you lean out, but it matters what kind of exercise. Strengthtraining beats cardio any day for similar reasons as low-carbs beat calorie restriction. You control insulin levels. That’s what it’s all about. You CAN essentially “overeat” on carbs and do some weight training and still lose weight, becauase of… Read more »

shandor
shandor
12 years ago

Your comments are so stupid they about don’t merit a response. HIIT is not magic and no amount of insulin is going to make extra energy appear. Body composition is primarily determined by a) adequate protein and b) resistance training. There is no magic to HIIT and its effects are only negligiblly different than regular cardio. How much fat loss per se is irrelevant when viewed in the wider context of days or weeks. No special “protocol” changes that. You also ignore that HIIT is inappropriate for beginners and the obese AND it demands a much lower frequency as it… Read more »

Robert
Robert
12 years ago
Reply to  CarbSane

Or the “clean up your plate” voice from your mother. There is lots of bad advice out there from both well-meaning people and those that are in it for financial gain. In nature, animals seem to get it right without the “help” of diet book peddlers like Taubes. “Eat when you’re hungy” is better advice and I’ve also found that if I overconsume a bit one day I eat less the next.

Dan
Dan
12 years ago
Reply to  Robert

Eat when you’re hungry very easily goes wrong if you’re eating the incorrect foods. Also animals very easily get fat when they’re no longer having to catch their own food and run from predators.

Scott
Scott
13 years ago
Reply to  James Krieger

I see, that makes sense to me. Thanks.

Scott
Scott
13 years ago

Just did a quick reread of Chapter 15. Hmm, the first half seems to rely completely on a couple extreme cases which actually hurt his point, because the men consume a bunch of carbs and still lose fat, even though they experience side effects from the severe prolonged calorie restriction. It seems that if Taubes’ “carbs = insulin = fat” hypothesis were true, as he purports with the Zucker rat example, these men would have simply slowed down their metabolism and maintained fat. But it sounds like they did lose fat. The fact that they overate when the experiment was… Read more »

CarbSane
13 years ago

To Scott: I agree with James that Taubes seems to make no effort to single out refined carbohydrate in his book. In the famous NYT article, he does mention sugary drinks, and he references these as “maybe 80 or 90% of the problem” (that’s a paraphrase) somewhat under his breath in his lectures. My issue with this man is that he continues to peddle a PROVEABLY false theory on the causes of weight gain (and by extension weight loss). And since the 2007 publication, he has sought to correct few of his errors in his lecture$. Being a formerly obese… Read more »

Scott
Scott
13 years ago

Interesting, I have to admit that after the smashing of the lipid hypothesis in GCBC, which I think was spot on, my critical thinking kind of disappeared and I went into a trance under the sheer volume of material. That and all the paleo recommenders and I never questioned the book from then on. However, after searching for critiques and finding yours, and rereading the chapter closely, I have to agree that all of your points are spot on. It definitely in retrospect looks like he’s trying to weave everything too perfectly into his framework, although I agree with many… Read more »

Scott
Scott
13 years ago
Reply to  James Krieger

“The problem is that Taubes never really makes a strong effort to make this distinction in the book. While he does sometimes mention refined carbohydrate and not just carbohydrate, he muddies the waters when he starts talking about carbohydrate, its effects on insulin, the efficacy of low carbohydrate diets, and the increased carbohydrate consumption and low-fat recommendations in the U.S. The fact that his message is not clear is obvious when you go on low-carbohydrate forums, as well as engage with many Taubes’s followers. Many of these people will implicate too much carbohydrate of any kind, along with insulin. Thus,… Read more »

Elsa
Elsa
13 years ago

1. “What sorts of people would a low carb diet NOT be an effective strategy for losing fat and improving internal health markers? Please give examples. Skip the rare cases like people who are missing their gall bladders?” I looked back and found the comment that I was referring to. (Fred Kahn on June 25th). Thanks very much for your replies CarbSane and James. I just wish I could find the answer. There must be something that would “fix” a broken metabolism like mine but I haven’t found the switch yet. Incidentally I don’t even know why it got broken… Read more »

Elsa
Elsa
13 years ago

Could someone help me please? I have been low ( not very low) carbing for 3 years and feel much better with this way of eating but have failed to lose more than 10 pounds, which went in the first few weeks. I seem to be fixed at a set point of 190 or so pounds. My question is – way back at the beginning of this discussion there was a reference to some of the reasons why someone might not lose on a low carb diet, and the loss of the gall bladder was included. Does anyone know how… Read more »

Elsa
Elsa
13 years ago
Reply to  James Krieger

James, thanks for that link which was very interesting if somewhat depressing for me. From what you say it seems that the metabolism slows with weightloss despite our best efforts. However in my case the amount of weight lost is so trivial and I can assure you that I eat a very high quality diet, not too much of it and I take exercise. I appreciate that this thread is concerned with your critique of GT and GCBC and I don’t want to intrude with my specific problems too much but I was just so intrigued to read that the… Read more »

CarbSane
13 years ago
Reply to  Elsa

I was just so intrigued to read that the lack of a gall bladder might be critical in preventing weight loss. I was really hoping that those with more knowledge and understanding of the science behind metabolism could explain to me if this is so and why, and what if anything could be done about it.  

Actually Elsa, the lack of a gall bladder should probably assist weight loss if anything because low bile acids would mean less fat absorption — think Alli. I don’t recall that the gall bladder is involved in lipid metabolism once the fats are absorbed.

D.D.D.
D.D.D.
13 years ago

The more comments I read from low-carb zealots, expecially Fred, the more I’m convinced that low-carb isn’t healthy for the brain and the less I’m attracted to the idea of following such a diet. You can’t really claim your diet is the healthier when it doesn’t even allow your brain to think straight. I haven’t seen any evidence that you low-carb eaters are the healthiest people around. Just looking at your photos makes it clear you’re nothing special and there’s healthier people on less obsessive diets but then reading your almost pathological faulty reasonings… And you’re telling me that such… Read more »

Vor
Vor
13 years ago

Fascinating discussion. I am a strength coach with 17 years experience coaching natural athetes and bodybuilders. I agree with everything you are saying BUT the fact remains that my clients can drop bodyfat eating lots of protein and fat calories and struggle to drop bodyfat eat very low cal diets which contain carbs. I want to agree with you but meticulous measuring has confirmed this over and over.

I really value your guys input on this. Great discussion. Thanks everyone.

CarbSane
13 years ago

Reply to Lucas (I put this here b/c the nesting was getting really hard to read!) The issue is that the hormonal environment during a high carbohydrate diet isnt optimal for endogenous fat lipolysis and subsequent beta oxidation to take place. You have to consider also the energy wasted (2nd law of thermodynamics) and the increased cost of the digestion of proteins. Finally, you have to consider ketogenesis and the physiological role of ketones. Insulin is just a part of the big picture. Regarding Lipolysis and beta-oxidation are distinct metabolic paths/reactions. Lipolysis takes place all the time, and FWIW, the… Read more »

351
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x