The Dr. Hyman Show - How Diet Is Driving COVID-19 Outcomes with Dr. Aseem Malhotra
Episode Date: May 4, 2020As we continue to learn more about COVID-19, we continue to see a pattern in those more at risk. People who aren’t metabolically healthy (think obesity, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and ...hypertension) are much more likely to experience severe complications if they are to get the virus. And to put that in perspective, only 1 in 8 Americans are considered metabolically healthy. That means a lot of us are at risk during this already alarming time. We can start changing that today, though, and create a newfound health baseline while creating a greater level of resilience when it comes to chronic disease and future situations like this. The US isn’t the only place dealing with an epidemic of obesity and other metabolic diseases. The UK and other parts of the world are also struggling, thanks to the spread of the ultra-processed food and a sedentary lifestyle. On this episode of The Doctor’s Farmacy, I’m joined by Dr. Aseem Malhotra to talk about the impact COVID-19 is having on the UK, the risks that metabolic diseases pose with the virus, and much more. Dr. Aseem Malhotra is a founding member of Action on Sugar and was the lead campaigner highlighting the harm caused by excess sugar consumption in the United Kingdom, particularly its role in type 2 diabetes and obesity. His first book, co-authored with Donal O' Neill, The Pioppi Diet, has become an international bestseller. *For context, this episode was recorded on April 24, 2020 Here are more of the details from our interview: Metabolic disease, excess body fat, and chronic inflammation lead to worse outcomes from COVID-19, as well as from the flu (5:13) Dr. Aseem’s personal experience with belly fat and excessive sugar intake (13:53) Five markers to assess metabolic health (17:49) Risks associated with sarcopenic obesity and loss of muscle mass, especially among older people (21:30) Health disparities and COVID-19 outcomes (25:24) Why the idea of personal responsibility is fundamentally flawed when it comes to our current food environment, including the food environment in hospitals (27:51) The role of public health interventions in improving life expectancy (34:11) What is ultra processed food? (40:56) Dr. Malhotra’s diet recommendations for combating inflammation and preventing insulin resistance (43:30) Eating healthier on a budget, how policy can make healthier foods more affordable, and the Environmental Working Group’s Good Food On A Tight Budget Shopping Guide (48:04) Learn more about Dr. Aseem Malhotra at http://doctoraseem.com/. Follow him on Facebook @aseem.malhotra.98, on Instagram @lifestylemedicinedoctor, and on Twitter @draseemmalhotra.
Transcript
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
If you go into the grocery store, the supermarket, whatever, and you're thinking about what to buy,
pick up even bread, modern packaged bread.
If you pick it up and you can count five or more ingredients and you can't recognize some of them,
their preservative additives, don't eat it.
Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy.
I'm Dr. Mark Hyman, and that's pharmacy with an F,
a place for conversations that matter. And if you're wondering how to prevent COVID-19 in
yourself and in communities and why we're really seeing this staggering impact of COVID-19 on our
economy, on our healthcare system, then this podcast is going to matter to you because it's
with one of the leading
thinkers in the space of chronic disease, obesity, and health, Dr. Asim Malhotra, who's
a good friend of mine coming to you from the United Kingdom, where he's recently published
an article that caught my attention called COVID-19 and the elephant in the room.
And we're going to talk about that elephant today, which is a perfect metaphor because elephants are big and the problem we have is big and it's because we're all big.
Dr. Malhotra is an honorary consultant cardiologist at Lister Hospital in Stevenson, UK.
He's a visiting professor of evidence-based medicine at the Bahiana School of Medicine and Public Health in Salvador, Brazil. He's a founding member of Action on Sugar and was a
lead campaigner highlighting the harm caused by excess sugar consumption in the United Kingdom,
especially its role in type 2 diabetes and obesity. In 2015, he coordinated the Choosing
Wisely campaign by the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges as a lead author in the British Medical
Journal or BMJ paper to highlight
the risk of the overuse of medical treatments. He also became the youngest advisor in that same year
to be appointed to the Board of Trustees of the UK Health Think Tank, the King's Fund that advises
government on health policy. He's all over the media. He's published dozens and dozens of
medical articles and journals like JAMA Internal Medicine,
Open Heart, British Medical Journal, and many more. So I'm so happy to have Dr. Malhotra Asim on my podcast today. Welcome all the way from the UK.
Mark, it's a pleasure to see you.
It's great to see you too. So are you staying safe over there in the UK?
Yes, staying safe, luckily, at the moment, and more importantly, trying to keep sane,
I think, like everybody. Are you on lockdown over there? You're hiding out in your bedroom?
Yeah, completely on lockdown, completely on lockdown. Yeah, so it's all focusing on all the
important stuff right now. You know, it's good food, sleep, getting some exercise in there,
and trying to keep the stress levels down. Yeah, well, you've been also active in thinking about
how we deal with this big issue of coronavirus and why we're really struggling, because I don't think most people realize that the reason that we're sheltering in place, the reason we're in lockdown, the reason businesses are shut, the reason we can't go to sports games or university or schools, it's not actually because of coronavirus. It's because of us and how we're
susceptible host to the virus. And if we were all super healthy, this would be a bad flu and we'd
all be going about our business and we protect the very vulnerable and sick and old, but most of us
would be okay. So the UK went into lockdown on March 23rd. There's been about 133,000 coronavirus cases and 18,000 deaths,
and it's changing every day. So by the time this podcast airs, it's going to be far more. And a lot
of the focus is on ramping up testing and vaccine development and medical treatments. But you're
actually helping us focus on something different, what you call the elephant in the room, the link between obesity and the health outcomes from COVID-19. So here in the United States, it's 75% of us are overweight,
and I think in the UK it's 63%. How are they related? How is obesity and COVID-19 related?
Yeah, Mark, so I think you've definitely hit the nail on the head. The real pandemic
is a pandemic of metabolic disease that we have in the UK and in the US.
And just to give you some perspective, there's some very good data from the United States,
which I referenced in my article in European Scientist.
Only one in eight adult Americans are metabolically healthy.
I mean, that is extraordinary.
Seven out of eight are not.
And we'll define that shortly.
But what that means is we are more susceptible,
not just to all these diseases that have been putting so much stress
on our healthcare systems, but what is particularly interesting
or what we found from the data that we've analyzed and looked at
with COVID-19 and what the CDC has been talking about,
is that if you have metabolic syndrome, if you have obesity,
if you have type 2 diabetes, your risk of mortality is up to 10 times more than somebody that doesn't have it.
Now, you mentioned earlier on that if we had a better healthcare system and we were, you
know, a less stressed healthcare system and we were a healthier population, we may not
need a lockdown.
And that's something I concluded with in the article.
And I think you're absolutely right there, Mark. Just to give some perspective to the viewers and the listeners on how lethal
this virus is. So flu in itself, the overall mortality rate from the flu is about 0.1%,
or one in a thousand. And the best estimates now suggest that for COVID-19, for coronavirus, it's probably somewhere between 0.5 and maybe 0.7 percent.
So even seven times more deadly, if you like, than the flu.
And certainly as it's a new virus, it's more contagious.
You combine that with a health care system already, which is under stress because we haven't been dealing with the very diseases that you and I have been challenging and talking about for years, then it's a recipe
for a public health crisis.
And that's what we've got.
The reason why COVID-19 seems to be more lethal in people with a metabolic disease and obesity
appears to be linked to essentially excess body fat and chronic inflammation.
So we have very good data from previous, from the flu, from other respiratory viruses, which are similar in many ways to
coronavirus, which shows that people with obesity had higher mortality rates. So for example, in
2009. So in other words, if you're overweight, you're more likely to die from just a regular flu.
Yes, absolutely. Absolutely. And data, for example, in California showed in 2009, there was a flu pandemic then, and they found that 61% of people who died from that flu epidemic,regulated immune system, a dysregulated immune response
to the virus, which then causes the cytokine storm that leads to ARDS or adult respiratory
distress syndrome, which causes death.
That seems to be the mechanism.
Of course, there are other mechanisms as well.
People who have obesity have more restricted lung capacity,
and this could also play a factor. And of course, the people with underlying conditions
are probably also more likely to suffer things like heart attacks. We talk about all these risk
factors ultimately are big risk factors for heart disease. So you combine it all together,
it's really the perfect storm. But the good news, Mark, and that's something I think we need to talk about, is there are things you can do which can rapidly reduce one's risk and really reverse the metabolic syndrome.
I think maybe it's a good opportunity for us to really talk about what those five metabolic markers are, because it's not something that is part of conventional practice in medicine. You know that when you go to the doctor, you know, they've got the standard,
you know, what's the blood pressure? Are you a diabetic? What's your cholesterol? And then we
treat those individual so-called risk factors with separate medications. But the overlying
theme is metabolic disease. You're right. And I want to, before we get into the assessment of how we look at that and what we can do,
I want to dig a little bit more into the data on how obesity is linked and overweight, not
just obesity, and even what we call metabolically obese normal weight, which I refer to as skinny
fat.
You look thin on the outside, but you're fat on the inside.
You're metabolically unhealthy.
And that is up to 20% to 40% of thin people who are metabolically unhealthy and that that is up to 20 to 40 percent of thin people who are
metabolically unhealthy so when you think 75 percent overweight and then 30 to 40 percent of
the rest of the 25 percent of people unless the core population is not great you're talking about
like 90 mark you're right and i think that the most severe metabolic disease can affect absolutely
20 to 40 percent of people with normal BMI,
but in a more sensitive way and on sort of the latest definitions. And that, again, is a very
interesting paper that shows, you know, looks at American data over several years. The most recent
data shows that less than one in three people, less than one in three people with a normal body
mass index between 18 and 25 are metabolically
healthy. That means two-thirds of people of a normal weight are metabolically unhealthy,
which basically means, as I've said before, there's no such thing as a healthy weight,
only a healthy person. Well, that's a good point. So let's get back to how weight and obesity affect
your immune system, because you mentioned that it increases inflammation in the cytokine storm.
We know that's true because I've been saying you become pre-inflamed.
If you're pre-inflamed, when the virus hits, it's like throwing gasoline on a fire.
And when you look at the data, 94% to 97% of deaths are in people who are either overweight,
obese, or have a chronic illness, which is related to being in poor metabolic health, diabetes, heart disease, and so forth.
Even cancer is a sign of often poor metabolic health.
So we know that these are all conditions that are resulting in pre-inflammation or inflammation.
But there's some other interesting data that I didn't really realize about viral infections
and obesity.
For example,
it suppresses the white blood cell function. It actually increases viral shedding so that if you're overweight, you're more likely to spread the disease because your body keeps shedding and
you shed more virus. And then you're, like you wrote in your article, your susceptibility to
responding to vaccines is decreased. So when you get a vaccination,
it may not work if you're overweight or obese,
and we're depending on this vaccination to save us.
But what you said is that 90% of the population essentially is metabolically unhealthy,
and the vaccines aren't going to work as well.
Is that true?
Yeah, that's true, Mark.
Certainly with the flu, we've seen that.
That's the case.
And I think that's a really important message
also moving forward, because that's what's happening at the moment. A lot of
resources are being directed to waiting for the vaccine. But actually, even for the vaccines to
work, you need to maximize your chances by improving your metabolic health. And in terms
of the viral shedding, yes, certainly with the flu, it appears that if you're obese, you have the virus for, on average, 42% longer than people who are not obese.
And it's an observation.
Of course, you know, anecdote isn't the highest quality of evidence, but it's an interesting observation with what we know.
Over here in this country, several members of our government ministers, cabinet, if you like, including the prime minister, got afflicted with coronavirus. The chief medical officer, the chief executive of the NHS, the secretary for
health, and Boris Johnson, the prime minister. Now, Boris Johnson got the sickest. He got admitted
to hospital. And he's overweight. In fact, I would say he's probably obese. I worked for several
years as an advisor to the London Food Board when Boris Johnson was mayor of London.
And I won't name this person, but someone very senior said to me, you know, even the fact that
Boris used to cycle a lot. When you see Boris on TV, he's, you know, pushing the fitness thing
and he's cycling everywhere, but he's considerably overweight. And this individual said to me,
Asim, you know, you're a doctor. I'm very concerned about Boris. He doesn't look well.
He is obese. And I think that also brings us onto the discussion briefly. I think that there is
still a bit of a misperception or misunderstanding there that you can be fat and fit. Sorry, you
can't. The data shows that even if you exercise, if you've got excess body fat, you are at higher
risk. And I think that message also needs to get out to the public, because there still seems to be a lot of misinformation that, you know,
you can outrun a bad diet. And as long as you're working out, I'm sure you see in America's
probably lots of people who are overweight or obese, who are exercising now, we're not saying
don't exercise, of course, it's a good thing to do for you. But actually, you'd be doing a lot
better if you also change your diet and got your weight down.
Yeah, I mean, I would say you can't exercise your way out of a bad diet.
That is far more an impact.
And yes, if you clean up your diet and you exercise, that's ideal.
And I do both.
But if you see so many people who are very overweight who exercise a lot, it's because their diet is not right.
So that's the key.
And what's interesting, it's not just any fat, it's a certain type of fat and a certain location of fat. So can you
talk about this uniqueness of this type of belly fat that's causing the problem?
Yeah, it's a visceral fat, isn't it? It's a fat that really surrounds the vital organs,
the liver, the pancreas. That is what causes also the dysfunction, if you like, of those organs that
link to, you know, dysregulated metabolic control of glucose, insulin resistance. And over time,
this is what causes all these, or is at the root of all these chronic diseases, heart disease,
high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, probably also cancer and Alzheimer's disease
as well.
Yeah.
So, that's really the root of the problem.
I mean, just a slightly, you know, interesting anecdote, Mark, for you.
You know, I like to follow my own advice.
For many years, we've discussed this before, you know, this isn't about being preachy.
We have been through situations in life where, before we became better informed, we had our
own issues with
adverse health because of that diet. You know, I was still very active, but I was getting through
40 teaspoons of sugar a day. This is what I did for many years until I read the science, you know,
and I thought, what am I doing to myself? So it's the fat, right?
I was a trainee doctor. I wasn wasn't a specialist cardiology at that
point but once i looked at the science i you know and i had this belly fat i wasn't particularly
overweight but i had this belly fat and as soon as i cut sugar from my diet i lost about a stone
all around my belly okay what's the stone because most americans don't know what a stone is
um a stone is probably it's about six kilos it's about 12 to 12 pounds 12 to 15 pounds
oh really it's okay fine
so yeah it's quite a lot quite a lot of weight and it was all on my belly um and the reason i'm
telling you this is obviously you know i've been trying to walk the talk following my own advice
for several years now and um just before the lockdown happened they have this very uh interesting
exhibition in london which is probably i think it's around the world because my relatives in San Francisco have seen it as well. Body World. So have you heard of Body World's
exhibition? So basically they take cadavers, human cadavers that are preserved and they
educate the public and you can see organs and the body. And it's fascinating. It's really
interesting, very educational, even for a doctor. But in this exhibition, they also have one of the
highest type of body scans that look at your muscle mass, your body fat percentage, bone mass, all that kind of stuff.
And I didn't know this, but it gives you a metabolic age at the end of it all.
So I thought, okay, I'm going to get this done.
Let's just see what it is.
I'm 42.
I'm not afraid to admit that.
I'm 42 years old.
My metabolic age on this scan came back at 29.
So I'm pretty happy about that. I'm apparently 13 years younger in terms of physically than my,
my true age. So, you know, uh, I think maybe that should be an incentive for people.
That's right. I, well, I got my telomeres done. I'm 39, I'm 60 years old, but I'm 39 on my belly. Yeah, exactly.
That's great. So getting back to this belly fat, because it's not just there holding up your pants,
this inert blob of fats around your belly. It's an alive organ. And this is really what's driving
the crisis of COVID-19, because this organ is producing what we call inflammatory cytokines. These are the
messenger molecules of your immune system. And you basically have a belly on fire. And it also
produced all sorts of hormones and appetite dysregulating signals and all kinds of things
that make you hungry and gain weight. It's really bad news. So it's not just the average kind of fat.
So what are the ways in which, you mentioned,
you know, 12% of Americans are metabolically healthy. That's pretty shameful. What are the
types of things you would measure to look to see if you're metabolically healthy or not?
Yeah, Mark. So really, really good question.
They're at risk for COVID-19 because they're metabolically unhealthy. How would they know?
Yeah, absolutely. Very good question. And before I answer that, I think the other thing also,
just from a personal perspective of my interest as a cardiologist, and this is something that,
you know, I wrote about in the BMJ many years ago, that our focus should be metabolic syndrome,
the three of the five that we're going to talk about, is that two-thirds of people who suffer
heart attacks have metabolic syndrome. You know, most of them have a normal cholesterol. So this
is really the other elephant in the room, is this is what we should be focusing on
if we're going to reduce heart disease as well, as well as improve people's health.
Yeah, people think about blood pressure and cholesterol.
People don't realize that most heart attacks are caused by sugar, not fat and starch.
Absolutely. Absolutely. Absolutely, Mark. Absolutely.
And now we're trying to wind back these harms, you know, of years of people getting the wrong dietary advice. But to answer the specific question
about what are the five factors? So the normal blood pressure means less than 120 millimeters
systolic of mercury and less than 80 diastolic. Waist circumference for a man of less than 102
centimeters. And for a woman, less than 102 centimeters and for a woman less than 88 centimeters what's
that in inches uh in inches is uh i think that's 40 inches for a man and uh and and 35 inches for
a woman you'll have to you have to just check that but it's i mean i think that might be a
2.5 inches so maybe it's a bit less sorry 2.5 inches to a i think it's 37 for a man and like 34 for
women or something maybe yeah yeah i think we'll have to yeah yeah so just convert those centimeters
to inches if you've got calculated there and whoever's listening and and watching um and then
in terms of the you might have to help me with the the units for triglycerides over here we say
triglycerides greater than 1.7 millimoles per liter and HDL cholesterol should be greater
than 1 millimole. So triglycerides should be less than 1.7 and HDL should be greater than 1 millimole,
I think. I mean, here they talk about triglycerides less than 150, although I think ideal is less than
70 and HDL, you know, over under 50 if you're a woman, I think under 40 if you're a woman i think under 40 if you're a man but but again those are
those are not optimal numbers those are you know just for this specific definition of metabolic
health i agree absolutely and then finally last but not least is your hba1c you want to be not
pre-diabetic so less than 5.7 percent um you want your hemoglobin hba1c again i think you use millimoles over there in
the united states that's the average blood sugar over the last six weeks basically it should be
less than 5.7 but again ideal is probably less than five and a half yeah absolutely so if you're
in all of those parameters and you're metabolically healthy and of course if you have one then you
then come out of the optimal metabolic health if you have any three abnormalities of those five
you've got metabolic syndrome and that is associated with the worst outcomes in terms of
all sorts of health problems, but also with COVID-19.
And I think also they talk about a blood sugar over 100 in this country. And the other thing
that people don't measure, which I've been measuring for 25 years, and is probably the
most important measure, is fasting insulin, which is something
that nobody looks at, which is very strange because your insulin goes way up before your
blood sugar goes up. So getting your insulin measured is one of the most important things
you can do. And if it's normal, you may not be out of the woods, even if your sugar is normal,
because the best test is actually a glucose tolerance test where you take a load of sugar, the equivalent of two Coca-Cola's and you see what happens over one and two
hours in fasting.
And that will tell you, and I've seen this one woman in my practice, she just stuck out
like a sore thumb.
She was very overweight.
She had that big round apple belly and she had normal blood pressure.
Her cholesterol was normal, but, and her blood sugar was normal.
So I'm like, what is going on here?
So I did a glucose tolerance test.
Her blood sugar fasting was under 100.
It never went over 110 after the glucose tolerance test,
which is normal, which is great.
Her insulin fasting was like 30 or 40.
It should be less than five.
Wow. Ideally it was two. And at one in two hours, it was over 200. Wow. is great her insulin fasting was like 30 or 40 it should be less than five wow ideally is two
and at one in two hours it was over 200 wow there's a ticking bomb basically she was she
was wearing out her insulin and so it taught me a lesson that you can't just rely on blood sugar
or even fasting insulin or any of these other biomarkers that that the they're all surrogates
for the the hyper insulinemia or insulin resistance that we're seeing with these patients.
Absolutely. Absolutely.
So let's talk more about this other parameter that we look at called metabolically obese normal weight.
And what is it? And you talk about something called sarcopenic obesity.
So what are the dangers of not picking this up, particularly in the elderly
who have a normal weight, but are also really metabolically healthy? Because we see a lot of
the elderly having risks and it's not because they're old, it's because they're metabolically
unhealthy because of what you call sarcopenic obesity. Yeah. So essentially, as you get older,
Mark, certainly after 50 into
your sixties, people tend to lose as part of the aging process. Muscle masters tend to decline.
You can't stop it, but you can slow it down. I'm reversing it. I'm working out now. I'm at
home with COVID-19 and I, it's the first time I'm not on the road in 25 years and I'm doing
weights at least three times a week and I can see massive improvements
in my muscle. Yeah, you're in great shape, Mark. You're a great role model actually for that,
you know, although I know you're 39. I was like, what's going on with your shoulders?
No, but I mean, that's a really good point. And of course, what's really important as well is to
get enough protein because there is a big issue, certainly in the Western world as well, with
protein deficiency. A lot of older adults aren't eating enough protein.
Of course, the best sources come from animal products, but you can obviously get it slightly
harder from vegetable products as well, and pulses and things like that.
But you need to be eating a lot of protein, and of course, combining it, you're right,
with some strength and resistance training is really important for older people.
And that will then reduce the chances and probably stop sarcopenic obesity happening
where essentially what happens is you lose some muscle mass and you gain excess body fat certainly
around the midriff which is again part of the aging process seems to be that people do develop
more insulin resistance with time so actually as you get older i think it's more important
to be actually more strict about what you're eating and thinking about it and again it's never
too late to change.
As you've probably seen with your patients, as I've seen with my patients,
even as they're older, they're 60s, they're 70s, even 80-year-olds,
even from changing their diet dramatically
and just making some changes to their exercise levels,
they can improve their health markers.
And also, you know, for them, their sense of well-being,
they just feel mentally and physically better.
Yeah, and I sort of, I think, and I think the way we think about
aging is just all wrong. It's really, we should be calling it inflammation, which is an inflammatory
condition driven by our diet and our lack of exercise and lifestyle choices, which are something
that we have control over. And I've seen patients at any age, whether they're 60, 70, 80, get better as they get older.
And I see this with myself. My numbers are all better. My fitness is better. My strength is
better. My muscle mass is bigger. I'm not saying that to brag. I'm just saying that, you know,
I was so busy changing the world for the last 20 years that I kind of neglected some things. I ate
pretty well, but I didn't do the kind of exercise that I really wanted to do and needed to do. And I wasn't as diligent about sleep or meditation. And now I'm really good. And
I just noticed that I am actually healthier at 60 than I was at 50. So I think, you know,
there's a point at which that might not be true when I'm 90 or 100. But I think it's more true
than we think. And I think the reason we're seeing people in the
hospital dying is either because they're overweight or obese or because they're older and they're
very connected it's not like they're two separate problems so yeah and I just talked to a friend
who's a ICU nurse and said they said there isn anybody, and this may just be the one hospital,
I don't know how universally true this is, but there isn't anybody in the ICU under 250 pounds.
Wow. Which is an incredible, incredible observation. Now, that may not be true in
all hospitals, but that caught my attention. It's like, wow. Yeah. I think, Mark, as well,
what we should also just briefly mention as well, there seems to be a disproportionate effect for people who come from, we describe here as BAME backgrounds, so black and ethnic minority backgrounds.
I know that there's some similar statistics over in the United States. it may be related to social inequalities, but it seems certainly from people from South
Asian origin, India, Pakistan, for example, Bangladesh, there is a much higher proportion
amongst NHS staff of those people dying. In fact, 70% of the people who have died who
are National Health Service workers are from BAME backgrounds, and only 14% of the population
are from BAME backgrounds. So, it's hugely disproportion population are from BAME backgrounds. So it's hugely disproportionate.
And the likelihood is ethnic minorities, so from Indians or South Asian origin.
And it's probably because metabolic syndrome or metabolic diseases have a much higher prevalence
in these communities, not because of genetics.
It's a complex, different factors, but it's mainly lifestyle.
And even when we talk about social inequalities, and you'll hear a lot of that discussion,
the question is, on a biological level, it's still metabolic syndrome. And there are obviously
lots of factors playing into it. But as you know, Mark, people in America who come from the poorer
backgrounds also tend to have worse diets. They tend to, you know, and for lots of different
reasons, they may be struggling to make two ends meet, and they will go for the cheapest available food, and often that's high sugary, starchy, ultra-processed junk.
So this is probably the big factor that's driving this, and I'm sure we're obviously going to talk about food shortly, but this is another big problem that we need to think about.
I think you're right. I mean, I think, you know, there are certain populations genetically that are susceptible, you know, Native Americans, Pacific Islanders,
Asians, Indians from India and Pakistan and so forth. And, and, and of course, African Americans,
they're all more susceptible. But that doesn't mean that they're predestined, they're just
predisposed. And when they put it in a food environment that is harmful to them, which is our current food environment in the world, that's what triggers it. And, you know,
it's pretty shocking in Chicago and Louisiana, where they have good data, 30% of the population
is African American. And 70% of the deaths are in African Americans. And there are white counties
and black counties are compared and black counties have six-fold higher risk of death. Now,
people say, well, you know, it's their poor diet, they should take care of
themselves, they don't pay attention. But you've written a lot about how this
whole idea of blaming the victim, personal responsibility, is fundamentally
flawed. Can you really talk about why we shouldn't be blaming the people
who are eating the bad food?
Yeah, Mark, I think, yeah.
So personal responsibility, I think we have to define it first.
To exercise personal responsibility, two basic things you need is knowledge.
You need the right information, and you need choice.
You need to have access.
It needs to be affordable. You need to have access. It needs to be affordable.
You need to have access.
So ultimately, because the food environment is really what drives our behavior
more than anything else in terms of what we eat,
and ultra-processed foods have become unavoidable, it's very difficult.
It's much more difficult to exercise personal responsibility.
And one great example of this, Mark, and something I've campaigned heavily on in the UK,
and there's still a controversy going on over here at the moment,
is around junk food in hospitals.
So in the UK, the most recent…
Well, we shouldn't have McDonald's and Krispy Kreme
and Domino's pizza in the hospital?
What's wrong with that?
It's really quite shocking, Mark, isn't it, though?
I mean, we're supposed to be promoting good health
and be temples of health. Yet we are selling the very foods and promoting
the very foods in our own hospital environments that are responsible for the chronic diseases
driving the people into the hospital in the first place. I mean, you really couldn't make it up.
In the UK, 75% of food purchased is unhealthy.
And more than 50% of National Health Service employees, doctors and nurses, are overweight or obese,
which is a clear example that, you know, education is ineffective when the food environment is working against you.
Having all that food in the hospital is good for business, right?
You just keep the patients and their family. Well, it sounds that way, but I don't think that's the real reason.
I think they do get money from, you know, in the short term,
but they're not thinking outside the box.
Of course they do.
They have contracts.
You know, at Cleveland Clinic, the CEO, when he was hired,
the last CEO, he decided to get McDonald's out of the hospital,
and he was just skewered by the media because
they they it was it was owned by an African-American and and they're like how can you do
that it's racist and he got so um in trouble and he had to wait till the contract expired which was
a 20-year contract and it was interesting the day the contract, they brought a crew in, worked overnight,
and literally shut the whole thing off.
And then they had a new restaurant in there very quickly.
He got rid of all the sugar-sweetened beverages, all the junk food,
gone from the hospital.
Amazing.
It still needs a lot of work.
It does.
And I think, Mark, the point as well is, you know,
is if you do change the food environment, it has an impact.
Alyssa Apple from the University of California, San Francisco, did a study in one of the hospitals where they removed, just removed all sugary sodas, basically.
And then they repeated and, you know, they took a sample of people that worked at the hospital.
And then they looked at their markers of metabolic disease one year later.
And there were significant improvements in things like fasting insulin,
waist circumference went down.
You know, this stuff works.
It happens.
And this is just by getting out of the, you know,
we're not saying people can't have these as treats if they really wanted.
They can buy them, but they shouldn't be literally, you know,
they've become unavoidable.
You can't, and it basically also means that you displace healthier foods.
It's not going to be good for you, right?
So I think it's a no-brainer.
And if people want to argue that choice, you should ask them also,
do they also think that we should bring back, you know, smoking in public places?
Should we be smoking in hospitals?
You know, one cigarette won't kill you.
Neither will one donor.
But over time, you know, they cause significant damage to health.
And right now, the big issue of our time, you know, they cause significant damage to health. And right now, the big issue of our time, you know, what's responsible for more disease and death globally than physical inactivity, smoking and alcohol combined is poor diet.
And ultra processed foods really are the low hanging fruit that we need to concentrate on.
More than 50% of what we consume in the UK, and I'm sure that it's similar in the US, is ultra-processed junk
food, Mark. More than 50% of our calories is junk. Yeah, it's not a competition we want to win,
but it says 60%. Yeah, it's pretty terrible. You know, and I think what's striking looking
at the data is that over 70% of deaths worldwide are not from infectious disease. They're not from malaria or TB or AIDS or viral pandemics.
They're from lifestyle preventable, mostly diet preventable chronic disease.
Something people don't realize.
And yet most of our resources are focused on infectious pandemics, malaria, TB, AIDS,
viral things.
I mean, these are good things to support and deal with.
But when you look at
the Gates Foundation, they're the most influential foundation in health out there. And they're not
paying much attention to this. They're starting to, but this has not been a focus. And I think
this has just come on like a juggernaut over the last 40 years. And people just haven't been aware
that this is happening. And now COVID-19 is what we call an acute on chronic problem in medicine.
If someone is basically healthy, they'll get sick.
It may not be too bad.
They'll be fine.
But if someone's metabolically unhealthy, like your prime minister, it's going to hit
them hard.
And they're already a sitting duck.
And that's what we call acute on chronic.
If someone has emphysema and they get pneumonia, they're in trouble.
If an average person gets pneumonia, they'll sort of have aphysema and they get pneumonia, they're in trouble. If an
average person gets pneumonia, they'll sort of have a few uncomfortable weeks and they'll be
fine. But this is really where we need to address this problem globally.
Sure. And Mark, actually on that note, you know, you started at the beginning talking about the
focus being all about vaccines and treatments and, you know, all of that stuff. And I think
that leads into another area of discussion, which is
there is a cultural problem, a misperception about what modern medicine can achieve. We know,
for example, you and I know that the effects of all these drugs that people take for type 2
diabetes and blood pressure and cholesterol are very marginal at best. But there was a very
interesting study, which I published off for effectiveness,
but they create great profit margins for the pharmaceutical industry.
Huge, huge. But there's a very interesting paper I found, which looked at and took educated people
in the United States and asked them, since the mid 1800s in the United States to now,
there's been an average increase in life expectancy of 40 years. And they asked these
people in this survey, a lot of the way, some of them were public health students, how much of that do you think was because of modern
medicine? 80% of the people replied, most of them thought it was 32 years. 32 out of 40 years
increase in life expectancy in the United States since the mid 1800s was because of modern medicine.
Nothing could be further from the truth. At best, three and a half years you can attribute to modern medicine,
three and a half years or 40 years, and most of that, Mark,
is because of acute care, vaccinations, certain, you know,
that's antibiotics for infection.
These are the things, the big kind of things that have helped
modern medicine more than anything else.
Most of the other stuff has been public health interventions, you know,
safe drinking water, seatbelts in cars, buildings, better working environments,
safe working environments. This is what has contributed most to people's longevity.
So there's a perception issue that we need to challenge because this sort of stuff also
influences how people behave, what politicians do, what policies we have, where the money gets
distributed. It needs to go all the
way into prevention now. And everyone needs to be educated this all, all the way to the highest
level politicians. You know, these are the kinds of people that need to really understand this stuff.
And then we can change the system. You know, I agree. I think we need sweeping policy changes.
And I've written in my book about this food fix, but you're featured in, and I, and I, you know,
and I began to understand why we have the situation we have.
You know, it became very clear this is not an accident.
It's not just, you know, a bunch of bad decisions that happen
and that are going on with nobody really sort of being accountable.
You know, there may have been early on a desire to feed a growing world
and a hungry population by using industrial agriculture to produce an abundance of cheap starchy calories, which we thought at the time was a good thing.
But now we understand the consequences of that.
And when you look at the way in which the food industry acts, for the most part, it's a deliberate way to subvert the truth and promote their products. One, they fund billions of dollars of research,
quote, research, that candy, for example,
is a healthy way for kids to lose weight.
No kidding, that's an actual study.
They fund $12 billion compared to $1 billion
from the National Institute of Health,
which confuses the science and confuses the public.
They co-op professional associations,
and you've talked about this,
like the American Heart Association, American Diabetes Association, Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, where they fund their work, which is why, for example, the American Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, they actually created a sponsorship for Kraft Singles as a healthy snack.
Well, they can't even call it cheese because it's not 51% cheese.
And they got called out for that and had to pull it out.
Then they co-opt social groups like Feeding America
and the food policy and other groups
that are trying to do good work around hunger,
but they sit on their boards, they fund them.
They fund groups like the NAACP, which is the African American group, or Hispanic Federation,
which is why they oppose soda taxes.
They create friend groups that create propaganda, like the American Council on Science and Health
that says that pesticides, trans fats, smoking are not bad for you.
And so are GMOs, right?
And they're all funded by the usual cast of characters like
Monsanto and the big food companies. So it's a deliberate attempt to cross a wide range of
sectors of society and science and government, not to mention the amount of lobbying they do
in Washington. So you've got all these factors that are impeding our ability to create proper
information, proper access to the right food, and to actually support
the growing of the right food. So we're in this sort of real crisis at this moment where even if
we want to, it's not easy for people to do the right thing. Yeah, Mark, I couldn't agree more.
I think, you know, I would sum that all up as we have the corporate capture of public health,
essentially. You know, Marcia Angel, who I interviewed for an article on The Guardian, the former
editor of New England Journal of Medicine, said the real battle we have in health care
is one of truth versus money.
But, you know, if you ask the public, I believe in democracy, Mark.
This is about, you know, informed decision making.
And if people were aware of it, if people were really what is a gross injustice being
committed on them, they would find it unacceptable.
Doesn't matter what your political, you know.
And everybody should read my book, Food Fix, because that's what I'm talking about.
Have you got a copy? I got to get you a copy. I look forward to reading it. So yeah, this is
really what we need to, you know, get that information out there, make people aware,
and then we can change the system. Because ultimately, you know, what I think the COVID-19
also outbreak has highlighted is that we're all interconnected, you know, and think the cover 19 also outbreak has has um has highlighted is that we're all
interconnected you know and this sort of you know nothing this is really unprecedented this whole
lockdown situation where people are really seriously everybody is so worried about their
future what's going to happen next um you know if a deadly virus was to come along would we as
would we as a society as a as a population would the world survive it? And I think this is
hopefully a wake-up call for people to realize, actually, we have to all, you know, we have to
look after ourselves, Mark. We have to look after other people, too. You know, even if from a purely
selfish perspective, we have to, we're all interconnected. And that means thinking about
all these social inequalities. You know, the people that, you know, there was a very good point made by one economist.
I think it was Nam Chomsky, but basically saying that, you know,
that we can survive,
that the world can survive without a few billionaires,
but it can't survive without the people that, you know,
dry take the public, you know, that look after public transport,
they look after the garbage, you know, healthcare staff, you know, the garbage collectors,
you know, we're all dependent on them. So we have to really help each other as well through this.
I agree. I think it's really an interesting moment in history where we're going to
have an opportunity to sort of uplevel our humanity and our, our mutual interdependence and sort of reshape the way we've been going,
which is in a sort of a narcissistic individualistic sort of totalitarian
pathway that I think is sort of got to stop.
And it's not bringing us a happiness mark either. You know,
there's increasing depression as well because of the way we live.
Yeah. You know, so, you know, I think we just need more compassion to help ourselves, compassion for others to help ourselves.
Absolutely. I want to come back to this question of what the heck is ultra processed food.
You've used that term a number of times. I don't know if you will know what it is.
What is ultra processedprocessed food?
Let's define it.
So it comes from something called the NOVA classification, which came from Brazil.
It's an internationally recognized classification of different types of foods from minimally processed to ultra-processed.
And group four is the ultra-processed, the worst type of foods.
It's really linked to chronic metabolic disease, heart disease, cancer, you know, obesity, type 2 diabetes.
And before I define it, what's really interesting about it, it appears these sorts of foods also encourage overconsumption. So, Kevin Hall, a scientist in the States last year did a very
interesting, what was described as a randomized controlled trial, that just within two weeks
of people eating ultra-processed versus
millinery-processed foods, there was a two-kilogram difference. So they were just encouraged to eat
till fullness, and people who had the ultra-processed food end up consuming more and end up gaining more
weight. What is ultra-processed food? Well, overall general term is usually mass-packaged food that is
deficient of nutrients and fiber and is high in sugar, in starch,
in unhealthy oils, additives and preservatives.
And most of the time, quite often, it's five or more ingredients.
So what I tell my patients in very simple terms, I say, I'm not going to pack it and
it has five or more ingredients.
It's ultra processed. Don't eat very simple very simple so if you go to the into the grocery store the supermarket whatever
and you're thinking about what to buy pick up you know even bread modern packaged bread if you pick
it up and you can count five or more ingredients and you can't recognize some of them you know
they're preservative additives don't eat it yeah i've been making indian food at home using all
the spices i might use like 20 different ingredients in my indian cooking well that's i think that's
different though isn't it because you're using all natural ingredients to cook at home this is
specifically packaged food with preserves i'm making my own tikka masala and rogan josh and
it's so fun i'm making i'm not even buying the mixes because i have time i'm using all these
incredible spices toasting them it's so much better yeah'm not even buying the mixes because I have time. I'm using all these incredible spices, toasting them. It's so much better. Yeah, I agree.
So yeah, ultra-processed food is better. It's both the abundance of ultra-processed foods, which are nutrient-poor, mostly starchy and sugary, but also the absence of protective foods.
So can you talk a little bit about what that is?
Yeah, absolutely. So, you know, this is something I've seen, I wrote a book about, but looking at
all the evidence, so we talk about chronic inflammation. So the way I look at it is two
things going on. How do you combat chronic inflammation from food? And how do you reduce
the risk of you getting insulin resistance? So, you know, those are sort of the twins,
the terrible twins, you know, they are sort of the twins, the terrible twins, you
know, they're going to be damaging to your, to your body. So anti-inflammatory foods, I think
about that. I think about good nutrition. So in particular, what I recommend people to have is
something which is a low refined carbohydrate Mediterranean inspired diet. So that means lots of whole vegetables, ideally low-sugar fruits,
nuts and seeds, meat that's grass-fed, oily fish, eggs, full-fat dairy, and one that is
devoid of certainly less of the starch and sugary stuff, so bread, pasta, rice, and potatoes.
Now, if you're metabolically healthy, you can get away with more of that.
If you're working out and doing a lot of resistance training, then you can have more of those foods.
But the real issue in America and many of these Western countries is that we're consuming too many low-quality carbohydrates,
which come from ultra processed foods. The statistics in the U S from the most recent data suggests 42% of all the
calories being consumed in the United States comes from low quality
carbohydrates. In particular, carbohydrates, you know,
are basically refined sugary carbohydrates and carbohydrates are like fiber
basically.
Yeah. Flour and sugar, which is basically what we eat in America.
Yeah, exactly. like fiber basically yeah flour and sugar which is basically what we eat in america yeah yeah exactly i think if people get that right you know even if 80 of the time mark you know i would say
depends what you're at if you're overweight or obese you got type 2 diabetes go cold turkey go
extreme you know for the first month or two i mean you may have a different approach and then you
know things when things settle down doesn't mean you can't ever have a pizza ever again. But really what I would say is that 80% of the time and
people get conditioned that they're able to do it. You practice this 80% of the time and the
other 20% have your treats. I'm a little tougher than you. I'm like a 90 guy. I'm like,
here's the thing. It's so, it's so dependent on your metabolic health, right? So my goal as a
functional medicine doctor is to make my patients more metabolically resilient, right? If you have
diabetes, you are not metabolically resilient and you don't have many degrees of freedom in that.
But if you, like you said, if you're doing exercise and you're eating healthy most of the time
and you want to have a little pasta or a piece of bread, it's not going to kill you.
And you'll be fine.
You'll be able to handle it.
But if you look at my patients who have severe metabolic disease and diabetes, they need aggressive treatment.
And some of our colleagues and friends are using ketogenic diets, which basically eliminate all the carbohydrates from the diet, which is 5% carbohydrates.
It's very, very low.
And they're seeing reversal of diabetes, which is not something we learned about in medical school.
You can't reverse type 2 diabetes, but it actually can be reversed. But it requires an extraordinary
and often heroic change in diet, which is not easy for people. But if you've spent your life
getting there in, you know,
decades and decades of ruining your metabolism,
it actually doesn't take that long within six months to a year,
you're going to be really good if you do that.
Yeah. I mean, even within some of my patients, Mark,
I'm sure you've seen it as well, even within a few weeks, you know,
I've seen people send their type two diabetes into remission in 28 days.
Oh yeah.
And I think that's a really important message with COVID is
that if people do these changes now, they are going to be metabolically more resilient,
their immune system is going to be more resilient, you know, within the space of a month.
Or less. I mean, I had a patient who I talked about in the book, Janice, who was diabetic,
you know, her BMI was 43, which was very, very overweight. She was on insulin. And within three
days of changing her diet, she was off insulin. Within three months, she reversed her heart
failure, her diabetes, her kidney failure, got off all her drugs. I see this very often. And
when you look at people who are getting bariatric surgery, you know, gastric bypass surgery,
within literally days to a week or so, if they're diabetic, their blood sugars are normal.
And they're still very overweight, which is fascinating to me because it means that it's not
the fat. Yes. The food. Yeah, no, absolutely. It's not the fat, it's the food. And if you
focus on that. There are benefits independent of the weight loss. Absolutely right, Mark.
Yeah. For sure. The food is that powerful. And we always talk about how food is medicine. So
that's great. Now, the problem for people and everybody's at home and trying to figure out what to eat and cooking is that, you know, the refrain we often hear, it's expensive, it's difficult, it takes too much time. Well, we have more time now. But the cost factor of eating whole foods is a big hurdle for people. Can you talk about that? Is it true? Is it a myth?
And why are we buying into that? Yeah, I think to some degree, it's more difficult to, I mean, the junk food tends to be a lot cheaper. That's for sure. But
you can, you know, if you try on a budget, eat healthier foods. So for example, you know, an apple costs less than a candy bar,
certainly in the UK, but it is more difficult because a lot of these sorts of junk foods are very
heavily promoted and marketed and more unavoidable and highly addictive.
So I think that it is possible, but it's hard.
And that's why I think, again, government needs to act. So we, you know,
we had over here, we've introduced over here we've introduced a soda tax,
and it's definitely reduced consumption of sodas, of sugary drinks.
We know that the most important factor which resulted in the decline
of cigarette consumption in the United States and other countries
was the taxation of cigarettes specifically, so increasing the price.
That's what needs to be done is that these sorts of foods need to be made more expensive and then simultaneously you need to make healthier foods
more affordable yeah and if you do that on a population level then we'd see much you know
we'd see differences very quickly i mean darius mozaffarian and simon capewell who's a professor
of public health here in the uk and darius obviously is over there in the u.s he's a big
nutrition scientist and it's done a lot of research
on dietary population and public policy on diet for years. Yeah. In fact, we just recently published
an article in the Boston Globe about how COVID-19 is a diet-related illness and how millions will
die unnecessarily. Absolutely. Absolutely. He pointed, you know, he, he pointed out that, you know, 11 million deaths a year are attributed just to poor diet,
but actually with policy changes that just included slight improvements in
people having more vegetables, more omega threes,
cutting out the sodas within a year, say if that happened globally, you know,
his estimates is that you could half,
literally half the deaths from heart disease,
you know, from 10 million to 5 million just within one year of people eating more whole fruit and vegetables and, you know,
oily fish and nuts and seeds and cutting out the junk.
So that's pretty extraordinary.
Now, of course, some of this data is not, you know,
can be questioned in terms of how reliable it is
because we haven't got randomized controlled trials.
But, you know, it's still in the ball it is. It because we haven't got randomized controlled trials, but you know,
it's still in the ballpark. I'm sure. I've no doubt across the world.
If people change their diet even slightly on a healthier side,
then globally we would be, you know, in a much better place.
I think there is a myth about the expensive nature of, of good food. And I,
I I've had personal experience with this. I mean,
the data is really clear that it may be maybe 50 cents or more a day to eat well, but maybe not. And that it may be the equivalent if you pick foods smartly. You know, beans and whole grains are cheap foods and a lot of vegetables can be cheap foods. Cabbage isn't very expensive. You know, there's a lot of food that is cheap. And there's a guide called Good Food and a Tight Budget from the Environmental Working Group, which I'm on the board of, which explains how to eat well for less. Good for you, good for
your wallet, good for the planet. And I did this with a family of five living in a trailer in
South Carolina who was very overweight and sick and diabetic on kidney dialysis at 42,
one of the father was terrible from diabetes. And they actually lived in one of the father, it was terrible from diabetes. And they actually lived in one of the worst food
deserts in America. And I showed him how to cook a simple meal from scratch. And I gave them this
guide on how to eat well for less and a cookbook. And I said, you can do this. And I was like,
I don't know if they're going to do it. Can they do it? Together, they lost 200 pounds in the year.
The father lost enough weight so he could get a new kidney. The son lost 50, but gained it back because he went to work at Bojangles, which is a fast food
restaurant. And then he eventually got sorted out and he lost 138 pounds and asked me to write a
letter of recommendation for medical school. And they didn't have a lot of money and they didn't
know how to, they didn't know how to cook. They didn't know what to shop. They didn't have the
skills. They didn't have the information. They didn't have the knowledge. And I think that is really the problem.
It's not, it's not a lack of money. It's a lack of awareness, education, and skill that is really
something that can be addressed effectively. And the other problem is that the real cost of our food
is not the price we pay at the checkout counter. So what is the cost of Twinkie when you buy it?
Very little. What is the cost to human health? What is the cost to the environment by how we
grow the food using industrial methods? You know, what is the cost of the effect on our
healthcare system, on our federal tax, you know, collections that we have to spend the most of it on healthcare.
I mean, there's so many costs that are not in the price that if we actually paid the real price,
maybe, you know, a Twinkie would be $20 and, you know, a grass fed steak with vegetables would be
like $5, right? Yeah, sure. Very different. Absolutely, Mark. And also, I think the cost
down the line, isn't it, to your health? I think people also need to think that, you know, even if they end up spending a little bit more now, they're going to be saving money later.
So how is this effort going in the UK? You're probably the most vocal advocate of dietary change and the link between our diet and chronic disease and the burden on our healthcare system in the UK. How is it going over there? Are you getting traction? Are people listening?
Yeah, Mark, I think there is traction, certainly with the low-carb movement in terms of types of
diabetes. It seems to be improving, but I think there's still a big cultural problem amongst the
medical profession. And the reason I say that is even today, there was a news story based upon a
tweet that I did yesterday. And the tweet was my response to the fact that one of the hospital trusts in
the UK had endorsed and pushed out and congratulated Krispy Kreme donuts for
donating for free 1500 donuts to one hospital for the staff,
1500 donuts. And it was a big, you know um issue around it so i tweeted
said this is disgraceful that in the middle of an obesity epidemic when the staff are overweight or
obese this is why are you endorsing this stuff and it wasn't just me speaking out from a personal
perspective you know i've campaigned to make sure that policies change where the british medical
association many years ago actually passed a motion to make it part of their policy through
a cause i had made that um we should ban the self-junk food in
hospitals so it's a marketing opportunity for these for these companies
as you know big tobacco did the same thing they used to use doctors to
advertise cigarettes in the 50s you know this is something I actually I actually
as even I have in my office an original ad that I got on eBay of a camel cigarette ad,
which said 113,000 doctors from coast to coast recommend camel cigarettes more than any other cigarette.
And it shows a doctor smoking at his desk with a white coat on.
And I have it framed in my office.
Wow.
That's extraordinary.
It is extraordinary, isn't it, when you think about it?
And the parallels are quite, you know, they're very chilling. They're office. Wow. That's extraordinary. It is extraordinary, isn't it, when you think about it? And the parallels are quite, you know,
they're very chilling, they're similar.
Yeah.
Parallels with what the food industry do,
because for them it's a marketing opportunity,
it's a branding opportunity, you know,
everybody's looking at the health heroes right now
in the National Health Service,
and clapping for the people.
Every week we have, the whole country basically stops
for a minute on a Thursday evening,
for several minutes actually, at 8 p.m., to come out of the house it's amazing it's very moving I had
goosebumps when I when I experienced it and literally there are people clapping
the streets which is just a morale boost for for healthcare workers so that the
country is behind them and there's these companies are exploiting that our health
heroes by basically using as a branding opportunity by saying we're giving all
this for free we're being generous but, it's for them to make money out of it
and increase their brand later on down the line.
That's exactly what they're doing.
That's what I'll do.
And the reason I talk about this, Mark,
is that it caused this huge Twitter storm.
I mean, go and have a look later on.
Huge Twitter storm.
My tweet got retweeted.
Loads of doctors piled in.
How can you tell us what to eat?
There's nothing wrong with a donut.
There was a diabetes and endocrine consultant.
Oh, yeah, you're the food police, Dr. Mahal.
Look at this scene.
I'm really happy having a GIF of a giant donut biting into it.
And it was pretty extraordinary.
But what was good in a way is it really exposed the fact that there's a couple of things,
you know, there are a few things there highlights.
One is doctors still have very poor training and lack of understanding in nutrition. It's just part not medical training
and it's still perpetuating itself. So, you know, we're part of a vocal minority and maybe we're
involved in a bit of an echo chamber in terms of how we're helping our patients. But how many
diabetes specialists, Mark, out there do you think in the United States, what percentage of them are regularly sending their type 2 diabetes patients into remission with dietary prescriptions?
And for those not watching the video, I have my fingers up as a zero.
It is absolutely, I mean, it is extraordinary.
There's a few out there.
There's still work to do.
I think there's progress.
I think there's progress.
We know a few of them. But, you know, but yeah, we still need to do. I think there's progress. I think there's progress. We know a few of them.
But, you know, but, yeah, we still need to keep working on it.
And I've been involved in writing letters with other doctors saying we need to take a compulsory nutrition education in medical schools.
They've got publicity.
The chair of the General Medical Council, the chair of the Medical Schools Committee all replied back saying yes.
Things are starting.
And the younger generation and younger doctors have been contacting me and they are saying asim you are saying what a lot of people are afraid to say
this is just scandalous so i think we just need to keep talking about it we need to keep
being advocates for it um i then did a a tweet a twitter poll based upon an article i wrote um
in in uh for the king's fund i'm a trustee of this of this health think tank called the cream
king's fund i did a blog for them highlighting the issue about doctors need to not just be advocates
or looking after the individual patient in their consultation room.
They need to think about population health.
If you're a cardiologist, care about cardiovascular disease of your community too.
What are you doing about that to stop people coming in in the first place,
to improve the overall health of the population?
And one of the things I wrote, Mark i said in my view doctors who stay silent who stay silent
about the sale of the very junk foods that are driving chronic disease uh in the first place
are in my view in neglect of their duty to patients i wrote this in the blog so i put it
out as a tweet and i said listen um this is what i think this is this is a blog. So I put it out as a tweet and I said, listen, this is what I think.
This is a blog.
So I'm making a case here.
Please read my blog and then vote.
And about 1,500 people voted.
And I was still pleasantly surprised.
We got a majority in favor.
People, 58% agreed with me, 42% didn't.
You know, and that is the most provocative thing one could say.
I'm saying that you're a neglect of your duty to patients by not speaking out against junk food i agree doctors and health care providers need to be on the front lines talking about this i think you know i hope
this covet 19 pandemic however awful it is has a silver lining that allows us to recognize this
pandemic of obesity and metabolic disease that is really underlying this health crisis and figure
out a way collectively to address this. It's what I've made my life's work. I know it's your life's
work. And it's just so, it's so great to hear you doing this work over there across the pond.
Yeah, Mark. No, absolutely. And I think one thing I would like to say, you know, just before we
finish is in England, we have something called the Seven Nolan Principles, which was actually
created by the government in response to a
scandal that happened in the mid-90s, where it was exposed that, for you, maybe it's normal
in America, but basically, members of parliament were being given cash by vested interests
to ask questions in parliament.
That's not allowed.
And that was exposed.
And then the government got a body together that looked at the ethics of all of it,
and they came out with recommendations.
In fact, these are what's supposed to be followed
by all those in public life,
which include members of parliament,
so politicians, and people whose duty
is to serve the public,
including doctors, police officers, teachers.
And those seven principles are these.
And I read them, and I thought,
how can anyone argue with this?
But it made me think, how many people are following these seven Nolan principles?
And these are selflessness, integrity, accountability, honesty, openness, and leadership.
And leadership also means being able to speak out against bad practice and behavior wherever
it occurs.
And it says that we're all supposed to adhere to these principles.
But actually, when I gave a talk in LA a few months ago, I said, just ask yourself, if
you're a member of the public or you're a doctor, are you following these principles
in your practice?
And the reality is, and this isn't blaming individual or finger pointing, the system
has failed doctors and
patients because of all these corporate interests do not allow people, it becomes very difficult
for people to actually even follow noble principles in their duty to serve the public.
Yeah, crazy. Well, this has been an incredible conversation. I hope it's been a line for people
to understand the connection between COVID-19 and the underlying metabolic problems we have as a society. You're such a thought leader and advocate and a rebel rouser
trying to change the system. I feel like you're a kindred soul and I'm happy to have you on the
team. Always a pleasure, Mark. Absolutely. A lovely team effort. And thank you for all your work and
inspiration. I think we need to just keep shouting, banging the drum, and things are changing and they
will continue to change, but hopefully sooner rather than later.
I don't think we can afford to let this carry on for another five or ten years.
Maybe this will be the catalyst.
So thank you so much for being on The Doctor's Pharmacy.
If you want to find out more about Dr. Asim Malhotra, go to doctor.com.
Check out his book, The Piopi Diet, which is fantastic.
I think I gave him a quote for it.
And just enjoy his brilliant writings.
He's been published in so many medical journals and newspaper articles.
So check him out.
And I think you should share this podcast with everybody because it will help save your
family, your friends, and your community
by taking action on what we talked about today. Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts,
leave a comment. We'd love to hear from you. And we'll see you next time on The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Hi, everyone. It's Dr. Mark Hyman. So two quick things.
Number one, thanks so much for listening to this week's podcast.
It really means a lot to me.
If you love the podcast, I'd really appreciate you sharing with your friends and family.
Second, I want to tell you about a brand new newsletter I started called Mark's Picks.
Every week, I'm going to send out a list of a few things
that I've been using to take my own health to the next level.
This could be books, podcasts, research that I found,
supplement recommendations, recipes, or even gadgets.
I use a few of those.
And if you'd like to get access to this free weekly list,
all you have to do is visit drhyman.com forward slash picks.
That's drhyman.com forward slash pics. That's drhyman.com forward slash pics.
I'll only email you once a week, I promise.
And I'll never send you anything else
besides my own recommendations.
So just go to drhyman.com forward slash pics.
That's P-I-C-K-S to sign up free today.
Hi, everyone.
I hope you enjoyed this week's episode.
Just a reminder that this podcast is
for educational purposes only. This podcast is not a substitute for professional care by a doctor or
other qualified medical professional. This podcast is provided on the understanding that it does not
constitute medical or other professional advice or services. If you're looking for help in your
journey, seek out a qualified medical practitioner. If you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner, you can visit ifm.org and search their find a practitioner
database. It's important that you have someone in your corner who's trained, who's a licensed
healthcare practitioner, and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to your health.