The Dr. Hyman Show - The Cardiologist Who Stopped Prescribing Statins Explains the Real Cause of Heart Attacks | Dr. Aseem Malhotra - ENCORE
Episode Date: December 24, 2025This week, in a special holiday edition of The Dr. Hyman Show, I’m revisiting a powerful conversation with Dr. Aseem Malhotra, a leading cardiologist and advocate for ethical, evidence-based medicin...e, where we unpacked the uncomfortable truths about cholesterol, statins, and what really drives heart disease. Wishing you a peaceful holiday week. We unpack: • Why LDL cholesterol isn’t the whole story when it comes to heart disease • How reducing inflammation and insulin resistance can better protect your heart • What statins can—and can’t—do to improve real cardiovascular outcomes • How industry influence shapes the prescriptions patients receive Better heart health starts with better information and real progress begins when we stop treating numbers and start treating what’s actually causing disease. Hope you have a peaceful holiday week. I look forward to continuing this journey together in the new year. View Show Notes From This Episode Get Free Weekly Health Tips from Dr. Hyman https://drhyman.com/pages/picks?utm_campaign=shownotes&utm_medium=banner&utm_source=podcast Sign Up for Dr. Hyman’s Weekly Longevity Journal https://drhyman.com/pages/longevity?utm_campaign=shownotes&utm_medium=banner&utm_source=podcast Join the 10-Day Detox to Reset Your Health https://drhyman.com/pages/10-day-detox Join the Hyman Hive for Expert Support and Real Results https://drhyman.com/pages/hyman-hive This episode is brought to you by Big Bold Health, Sunlighten, Function Health and Pique. Get 20% off HTB Immune Energy Chews at bigboldhealth.com and use code DRMARK20. Head over to sunlighten.com and save up to $1400 or more this holiday season with code HYMAN. Join today at functionhealth.com/mark and use code MARK2026 to get $50 OFF toward your membership. Receive 20% off FOR LIFE + a free Starter Kit with a rechargeable frother and glass beaker at piquelife com/hym
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So today we're revisiting one of our most popular episodes of 2025.
My conversation with esteemed UK cardiologist Dr. Asim Malhotra,
a physician who went from being a top prescriber of statins to one of their most vocal
and well-informed critics, a stance that ultimately cost him his job and led to a major legal
battle with the media.
In this eye-opening conversation, Dr. Malhotra pulls back the curtain on the commercial
distortions of scientific evidence that have shaped our understanding of cholesterol and heart
disease. He explains the statistical sleight of hand often used in clinical trials, the data
pharmaceutical companies don't want the public to see, and why are decades-long obsession with
lowering LDL cholesterol they have done more harm than good. This conversation sparks so much
engagement, reflection, and change within our community, and it deserves another spotlight.
Whether you're revisiting the conversation or hearing it for the first time, we hope it brings
you inspiration, insight, and nourishment in this holiday season. So thanks for being part of our podcast
family. We'll be back in the new year with brand new episodes we can't wait to share with you.
The fall into winter seasons is when our immune systems need the most support. It's colder,
stress ramps up, and we're exposed to more challenges. That's why I turn to HDB immune energy
chews from Big Bold Health. They're made with 1,000 milligrams of sprouted Himalayan Tartary
Buckwheat, one of nature's richest sources of immune-active polyphenols like quersetin and rootin.
These compounds help support balance at the cellular level and may play a role in long-term health. On
top of that every chew is fortified with vitamin c vitamin d magnesium and zinc the immune
essentials most people don't get enough of and the best part they taste great with real cocoa and
are easy to take on the go this season don't just react strengthen your foundation try htb immune
energy chews today you can visit big boldhealth dot com and use code d r mark 20 for 20% off your
first order this time a year can be overwhelming with holidays work deadlines even the shorter
days can take a toll on your body and mind that's where sunlight and come in unlike traditional
saunas, Sunlighten uses patented infrared technology to gently heat your body from the inside
out. You can relax, detoxify, improve circulation, and even support your heart health all from the
comfort of your home. It's not just about sweating. It's about creating a space to recharge, restore,
and truly feel your best during a season that can be overwhelming. And right now, there's no better time to
start. Set yourself up for a healthier, happier, new year. Sunlighten makes it simple, safe, and
incredibly soothing. Experience the sauna everyone's talking about. Your body and mind will thank you.
Get over to sunlighten.com and save up to $1,400 on your purchase with Code Hyman.
So welcome back to the podcast.
It seems great to have you back in person here in Austin, Texas, in my new studio.
Yeah.
It's so nice to see you again, Mark.
I think, yeah, we did.
It's been about, what, six years since I've been a podcast.
That's right.
Yeah.
Got a lot of interest.
So I think, yeah, let's.
We did.
So as you heard from the introduction, it seems an esteemed cardiologist from the UK, who's been a vocal
critic of a lot of the mainstream ways of thinking about cardiovascular.
risk of cardiovascular health and the use of statins as our primary therapy for reducing
cardiovascular disease, which is, after all, the number one killer in the world. We're going to
dive deep into the issues around these drugs, around what we need to actually be looking at
for cardiovascular disease. And I think your opinion is going to be a little bit jarring for people
because it goes against the conventional wisdom, which isn't necessarily always wise. And I think
it's a much more nuanced conversation
that people need to be having around
cardiovascular C's than high LDL
cholesterol, bad cholesterol,
take a statin, end of story.
Yeah. Essentially what we all do
in medicine, if we're trained
in traditional medicine, high cholesterol
equals statin. And if
statin causes side effects, you can
play with a bunch of other drugs like PCSK9
inhibitors. But we're going to
start out at the end, which is
this lawsuit that was filed by two of your
colleagues that you were going to be a part of but decided not to be for various reasons
because you couldn't actually talk about the issues that you care about, which I guess has a lot
of integrity. But the case was brought by Zoe Harcombe and Dr. Malcolm Kedrick against
Associated Newspapers, which is the publisher of the mail on Sunday. And there were a series
of articles published in March of 2019. They were part of a campaign called Fight Fake Health News.
This was even before COVID and the whole misinformation. And in these articles, they
named the claimants and statin deniers, including you, which isn't actually true, and they accused
you among and your colleagues of spreading misinformation about statins, which they described
as, quote, deadly propaganda. The newspaper's articles suggested that their statements led
people to avoid taking statins, which was a big public health risk. In response to these
articles, your colleagues filed a defamation lawsuit, arguing that these articles falsely portrayed
them as deliberately spreading lies about statins.
Now, the High Court has seen multiple legal arguments,
particularly around the public interest defense
under the Defamation Act of 2013 in the UK.
But in 2024, just recently,
the case was ruled in favor of your colleagues
against the newspaper.
So in some ways, you've been vindicated by the legal system
that what you're raising in terms of
concerns about Stentz, and I'm kind of quoting from you at this point, which is their
data is flawed on Stantz, it's over-emphasized, it's over-prescribed, it has risks, and there are other
factors that need to be considered that are often being missed. And, you know, it's a more nuanced
view that you have. It's not just drugs are bad, you know, food is good or drugs are bad and,
you know, sweet grass is good. It's basically looking at very nuanced
science to help unpack what we know and we don't know about cholesterol and cardiovascular risk.
So walk us through what happened with that case and what the findings were and how you,
how you have all been vindicated as a result of the legal decision around this, this court case
that was basically defending you, essentially, not you were directly involved in the final suit,
but you were kind of part of the whole thing, you said.
And first of all, to clarify, Mark, the reason I.
did not decide. I mean, it was something I thought about to sue the mail on Sunday. I think I was
at the time, there was a lot going on. My mum had just died. You know, for me, as an activist in a
campaigner, I made the decision that I'm going to keep talking about this issue and carry on and
just take it on the chin. I've been in the situation before, which we'll talk about later.
So I decided that I wasn't going to sue them, but I'm so pleased and happy for Zoe and Malcolm
because, you know, these sorts of things, they do have an impact on you.
I, before I tell you what happened in the case specifically, because of that newspaper
article, about a month later, because my hospital was named in the article, and obviously
they got a bit panicky, I was told that my services were no longer required.
So I lost my NHS job.
And by the way, I have an impeccable track record in terms of my clinical care, getting
all with my colleagues.
You know, I'm probably an unusual doctor and probably lucky as well, because, you know,
Because throughout my whole career, 23-year career as a doctor,
I've never had a single patient complaint, which is unusual.
Because, you know, that can happen for any reason.
It doesn't mean the doctor's done something wrong.
So with all of that background, that's what happened.
And then I wasn't able to get a job back in the NHS.
I applied and got...
You got blacklisted.
Basically, yeah.
And it doesn't mean that all cardiologists were kind of against me,
but the situation arises in hospitals, teaching hospitals.
And I know a lot of cardiologists in London because I trained in, you know,
some of these hospitals and had good relationships with cardiologists there who respect my opinion
and it would be the case where say in a cardiology department of eight people if seven of the sort
would be great let's have a seem here to do clinics and when working for a bit just one of them would
object no chance you can't get in and and it was always it came back to when I asked the reason
it was you know there are antibodies that have been developed against you because of your statins
essentially right people are allergic to you because you've your opinion on statin exactly
So, but also that, so what happened in the case is that, you know, this was a front page news story.
What made the new story, and this is the really interesting bit around the evidence of what happened during the case that I submitted because I was asked to, is that the front page linked article said essentially got the Secretary of Health at the time called Matt Hancock, you may have heard of him, to say that there was no place in the NHS for these sites of doctors who are spreading misinformation on statins.
now interestingly and of course one of the most extraordinary bits in the actual newspaper
the editorial from the health editor headline was there is a special place in hell for doctors
who say statins don't work okay and then imagine a picture of me Zoe Arkham and Harkham right
you have your corner in hell all picked out oh exactly right I mean it's I mean I find it funny
to be honest I mean of course a lot of other people were more upset than I was in fact
The former Queen of England's doctor and the past president of Royal College of Physicians,
Sir Richard Thompson, who I'm friends with.
I mean, he called me up and he was so upset.
It's like, this is unbelievable.
How can they say?
This is not what you say, blah, blah, blah.
Right.
And I was calming down and saying, Richard, you know, we take this as a backhanded compliment.
You're over the target.
You get one of the most powerful influential newspapers in the world to go for you like
this, you know, and I'm someone that.
And who's their advertisers?
Well, I don't.
Well, that's a fair point.
But I think ultimately what came out in the case as well, Mark.
And there's also, again, I'll mention.
this crucial bit of evidence which is extraordinary and helped, I think, shift the case and win it,
is that the people who are fueling the health editor to write the article and the people who are
commenting on it were all connected or part of something called the CTT, the cholesterol trialist
collaboration in Oxford. These are the most powerful statin promoters and some of the most
powerful doctors in the world in medical research. But, again, which wasn't declared, is that
their institution has received hundreds of millions of dollars from drug companies that
manufacture statins or new cholesterol lowering drugs.
Okay?
So listen.
I want to double click on that for a second.
Just so people understand, we think academic institutions are squeaky clean, they're
neutral, their objective, they're scientific, medical schools, researchers.
But the truth is that a lot of their funding comes from pharma who are funding,
trials that they're executing.
And I remember Peter Libby, who you might have heard of, who was basically the editor-in-chief
of the main cardiology textbook that all fellows take called Brunwell's Cardiology, he is,
you know, a chairman of cardiovascular disease at Harvard.
And I said, Peter, why don't you study lifestyle interventions for cardiovascular disease
versus just studying medication?
He says, Mark, I know lifestyle works.
But I can't get $5 to study lifestyle.
I can get $150 million to study a drug.
And that's funding my department, that's funding my staff, that's funding me, and it's the
reality of how the system is set up.
So you have to understand that, you know, there's an inherent bias in a lot of how we think
about things in medicine because of the money.
If you follow the money, you understand where things are driven from.
Yeah, absolutely right, Mark.
And that reminds me actually of somebody who I cite quite regularly.
Professor John I need this I refer to Stanford yeah in Stanford I refer to him as a Stephen Hawking in medicine he's the most cited medical researcher in the world he is a professor of medicine and epidemiology and statistics as Stanford he's a mathematical genius and he published a paper in 2006 that we've talked about before I think which is called why most published research findings are false and one of the risk factors for false research is this the greater the financial and other prejudices in a given
field, the less likely the research findings are to be true. Think about that. So when you start
with statins, you're talking about one of the most lucrative drugs in the history of medicine. It's a
trillion dollar industry. So everyone's selling drug in the world. So start from that kind of overview
to try and help explain what's going on and why these sort of this confusion's happening and where
the battle's happening. And then you can make your own decision who you trust more, but also the most
important thing is to try and give people information the way that you can understand. We'll get there
in a second. So what happened in the case? So we have this kind of defamatory, you know, attack on
us, but what made the story was the Secretary of State for Health getting involved. Now, interestingly,
one week earlier, just before this new story broke, I was speaking in Parliament about type 2 diabetes
reversal and the benefits of, for example, of a low carbohydrate in a real food diet for that
purpose. Matt Hancock had agreed to meet me. He had, was aware of my work because of another
politician who had lost 94 pounds from following my diet plan. This is the one who said you need
you have a special place in hell?
No, that was the editor of the actual, of the, of the, of the newspaper.
So Hancock, all Hancock was involved in the story because he had basically said he'd been
contacted by the mail on Sunday and said, there were these doctors saying this,
do you have a, can you give us a comment?
And he gave a generic comment saying there's no place for this misinformation, right?
And that, it looked as if he knew who we were and we were.
So I met Matt Hancock a week before.
I gave him a copy in my book.
He was very respectful, very appreciative of what I'm doing and like.
lifestyle and gave my lecture in parliament, which got a lot of attention, by the way,
as well, which may have been the reason why they decided to suddenly do this, you know,
the news story is like, okay, we're getting something that's challenging our views on cholesterol,
on low fat diets or whatever. So that was probably the peg because that was getting all
of attention to then come back and have a go at me and two other people. I think that's probably
what happened. That's why it happened at that particular time. So I texted Matt through Twitter,
DMed him. Yeah. I was like, Matt. Really?
And he replied, Assam, I had no idea they were referring to you or Zoe Harkham.
And I was like, okay, this is very interesting.
So I kept that, obviously.
When the case then evolved and went to court, the lawyers for Zoe and Malcolm contacted me.
And I gave them that evidence.
And apparently during the case and Malcolm fed this back to me, Malcolm Kendrick, he said, this turned the judge.
Because they put Barney Calman, who was the health editor on the stand, and essentially made him admit that, you know, that in a
way that they had misled Matt Hancock because they hadn't told him because if if Matt
knew because I'm I'm a you know for instance of purposes so probably so this is what really
changed a case and I think that that is yeah that well it is what so what were you actually
saying and what was Zoe and Dr. Kendrick saying that raised that concern and that why was why
was the the May on Sunday so vocal about criticizing what were they coming after so this is
basically based upon probably both Malcolm and Zoe
and my public advocacy on the over-prescription of statins, the lack of informed consent,
the lack of access to the raw data, which is still an ongoing problem, going over a decade or so.
So I think because this story and the statin saga had been getting more and more of an airing,
and Mark, I've been publishing in medical journals on informed consent, and I've been publishing
a lot about the prescription of statins and the conflicts of interest and not knowing the true benefits
in arms, right? Because as you've said already, a lot of the data that we get from drug
industry sponsored trials, if not most of it, is never independently evaluated. Most people
don't know this, right? Yeah, and the only thing people don't know the seem is that,
is that when studies are done, they don't have to be published. So if studies come out that
are showing not a positive benefit for a particular drug, there has to be submitted to the FDA
or whatever the equivalent is in the UK, but they don't actually have to be published in a medical journal.
No.
So you're not seeing the full spectrum of what the data show.
You're just saying cherry-picked data that shows.
Absolutely.
It's massage and twisted.
You know, I think was Mark Twain said there's liars.
There's damn liars and they're statisticians.
Yeah.
You know, and so it's part of the problem with the Staten research is that it's not
that they're bad or good.
Every drug has a role.
It's a tool.
Yeah.
You know, it's like saying water, is water good or bad?
Well, if you drink too much water, you can dive seizures, but you need water to survive, right?
Everything has a role.
But how it's used, how frequent it's used, too, it's prescribed, how often it's prescribed,
the manipulation of the medical system, the manipulation of the scientific research and the lack of
transparency about the data, the lack of publication of all the data, gives us a war view of
how great these drugs are. And they're the number one class of drugs sold in the world globally.
Absolutely. I mean, it's estimated between 200 million and 1 billion people have prescribed
this drug. So it's a big deal. And especially for me as a cardiologist, whose primary purpose is to
help my patients and also with my special interest to really understand the root cause of heart
disease and how we can reverse it in the population. We hadn't done that. That's how my journey
started. I was somebody that believed in statins. I was one of the biggest prescribers. I was giving
it in the ER. So a patient coming with a heart attack and telling the nurse to give it in them
in the ER before they've even gone to the cardiac capital for them to have a step. I have a cardiologist
saying you should serve it at McDonald's with your, you know, fixed jack and a prize or have it over the
counter. I mean, there, there was a, in 20, 21 globally, it was $15 billion spent on statins. It's projected
to, it was $22 billion by 2032. I mean, this is a staggering amount of money on one drug.
Absolutely. And it's, it's so, there's a lot at stake here. 100%. 100%. So understanding that
there's a barrier to the truth, which is essentially a financial barrier because of there's so much
a stake, as you say, not just with statins alone, but the cholesterol lowering industry, the low fat food
movement, the fear of cholesterol is a trillion dollar industry, right? So I think people need to
understand that. So how have we got here and what is the truth? Or what is the greater truth? Okay. And the
reason I say, what is the greater truth? This is another myth that we need to bust for people listening
to kind of try and get cut through the confusion. The first thing is we have to understand the
public needs to know. Doctors even need to know this. Medicine is not an exact science. It's not even
close. It's an applied science. It's a science of human beings. It's a social science. It's constantly
evolving, right? We were also taught a medical school by the founding father of the evidence-based
medicine movement. Half of what you learn will turn out to be either outdated or dead wrong within
five years of your graduation. We can't tell you which half. You can't say which half. So you have
to learn to learn in your own, right? But how many doctors have got the time or the skill to try and
cut through, you know, all the stuff that they're getting through medical journals, looking at
independent evidence, and then being able to try and get to something that, a level of
information that they can utilize for really benefiting on helping their patients. So it comes down
to informed consent. And for me, one thing that, you know, I think it was Mark Twain that said
that truth often lies in simplicity. And the most elegant analytical framework we have
for teaching and practicing medicine is called the evidence-based medicine triad, right? Publishers
a BMJ in 1996. I love this. It's beautiful. I put it up in my talks. It's one of the first
slides and I say, listen, this is the most important side of my talk. If you get this, you can
probably not only understand why our health is going in the wrong direction, but you can
probably explain most problems in the world as well, right? So what does that mean? Okay, in the middle
of the triad, our role as healthcare practitioners, as doctors, is to improve patient outcomes.
Manage risks, treat illness, relief suffering. How do we do that? There are three inputs.
Our clinical experience, our knowledge, our, you know, intuition as doctors over many, many years.
The best available evidence on a drug, on a lifestyle, on a surgical intervention on ordering a test.
And last but not least, David Sackett said, taking it into consideration individual patient preferences and values, right?
That's where the informed consent comes in.
So what's the problem?
What are the limitations?
Why have we not really advanced evidence basements?
Well, well, you know, what that's really, I just want to double click on that, too, because
when we hear evidence-based medicine, what it usually is interpreted as is only what the
science is, not what the patient is experiencing or what the clinician expert understands from
their decades of experience, which are part of the evidence-based trial.
100%.
And that's really the failure here.
And evidence-based medicine is held up as this wholly kind of idle, in a sense, that we bow to,
but often we kind of think misinterpret what it means.
And I think your explanation of it is really important because it's not just what the data show.
And it's also which data and who funded the data and what wasn't study.
And the absence of evidence isn't the evidence of absence.
So there's a whole bunch of stuff that's going on.
So then the next stage is, okay, so if you accept this is a pretty solid framework for improving patient outcomes,
it doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that if there's anything wrong with one or all of these,
at best you're going to get suboptimal outcomes.
and at worst you're going to do harm.
So in terms of these inputs, right?
So if we just take the best available evidence,
and I've just said already, John, I need this, okay,
most published research are finding their faults, etc.
You know, you've got Richard Horton editor of The Lancet
in 2015 writing an editorial saying that
possibly half the published literature is simply untrue.
It's not just John I need is saying this.
So you've got all these facts.
So what happens ultimately is doctors invariably
are making clinical decisions for patients on biased,
not saying completely false, biased and corrupted information.
which invariably will exaggerate
the benefit and safety of those drugs
because that's in the interest of the drug industry
who want to get as many people taking them
because their only interest is profit.
They're not here to give you the best treatment.
So once you acknowledge all of that,
then for me, as a cardiologist
and as an expert who has spent a decade,
I would challenge you.
I think a lot of people, it's like the Truman Show.
People in the system, it's like the Truman Show.
They think they're in this perfect world
and that they're doing good.
And I think they're good people.
and they're trying to do good.
They're not deliberately trying to harm people.
Yeah.
But they can't see what they don't see.
Exactly.
Because they're in this sort of almost.
You know, a really good point.
And actually, you know, the way I would just summarize that is medical knowledge is under commercial control, but most doctors don't know that.
Right.
That's right.
And that's what we're trying to sort of get them to think outside the box because, again, I 100% agree with you.
Most healthcare professionals, most doctors, genuinely.
genuinely want to help their patients and are well-intentioned.
And actually, you know, I'm very proud of being a doctor because I think of all the
professions, I know things are changing and we have to protect our profession.
I think we are people that actually have some of the strongest ethical principles, right,
when it comes to how we, you know, it would do our jobs and we have to.
And we're held in that esteem because of that reason.
So for me, trying to break out of that conventional paradigm happened because I came
came to realize that the information that I believed as being gospel truth as a medical student
as a junior doctor it's published in a medical journal it's science right didn't question it
I then came to realize that hold on a minute there's a lot more to this and I used of course the
you know the heart disease paradigms to understanding why we hadn't curbed heart disease
even though it was predicted by Nobel Prize winners brown and goldstein I think in the late
90s who discovered the LDL receptor was involved in you know coroni artery disease they predicted the end
The eradication of heart disease may completely end by the early 2000s.
Didn't happen.
Still the number one killer on the planet.
Despite a mass prescription of statins.
More and more people are getting heart disease, but less people are dying from it.
Is that accurate?
Correct.
Because we'd be a better management.
We can deal with risks.
Three reasons I can tell you, big low-hanging fruit.
Why have we got less death rates from heart disease?
If you were a smoker, your mortality rate increased 50%.
with smoking reductions played a big role.
Emergency treatment in specifically in the acute setting of an acute heart attack stenting or thrombolytics, which we used to use, right?
Cloudbusters.
But the third one, which the Bernard Lown, pioneering cardio, just got the Nobel Prize for, was the defibrillator.
Right?
So what used to happen in patients would be admitted to hospital with a heart attack.
In the first 20 to 4, 24 to 48 hours after having heart attack, you're most vulnerable to having a cardiac arrhythmia that causes you to have a cardiac arrest, right?
and patients would die.
They could develop cardiovascular.
Or better at saving people after they've had a problem.
Completely.
And that's kind of why there's less deaths.
100%.
It hasn't.
Well, so the next question is people think, oh, it must be statins as well.
Well, paper in the BMJ, a few years ago, looked at millions more people taking statins in
Europe over a 10-year period to see, was there any reduction in cardiovascular mortality
in Europe because millions more people were taking statins?
They found there was none, none.
Zero. No change. But you can actually explain that, Mark, because one way of looking at the statistics, looking at industry sponsor trials, which we've already alluded to, should be taken with a grain of salt because they are best case scenario. They're curated information. Or a tab of butter, maybe.
Well, yeah, actually, absolutely. Butter would be better. We remind me to come back about a butter story and me being hauled into a medical director's office to talk about butter, by the way. When I busted the myth of saturated fat and heart disease, you know, when you look at the data from industry specifically,
sponsored trials and you look at the statistics that looks at the average or median increase in
life expectancy over five years right in the highest risk groups where there is a greater benefit
the median increase in life expectancy over a five year period in the person that's had a heart
attack right in saying their 50s just over four days now so wait we just to back that up for
people so there's two kinds of treatments for for cholesterol that are happening one is we call primary
prevention you've never had a heart attack but your cholesterol's high your doctor if you a drug
like a statin.
Yeah.
Then there's secondary prevention means you already had an event and it's trying to
prevent a second event.
And that's what you're just talking about.
If you already had a heart attack and you take a statin, it shows that you'll only live
an extra four days.
Yeah.
If you look at the median increase in life effects in that group, another way that we use in
medicine when I talk about informed consent or I call it ethical, very controversial topic,
ethical evidence-based medical practice, which means true informed consent, which means
telling patients the numbers needed to treat or their absolute individual.
or benefit. And you look at the totality of evidence. I know there are lots of studies we can talk
about, but for me, it's about what does the totality of evidence tell us, right? And there's a great
website, which is independently evaluated by doctors, and it goes for peer review in one of the
family physician journals in the US called the NNT.com, numbers need to treat. People look it up
is great. And what that means, everybody, is how many people you need to treat with a certain drug to get a
benefit? Yes. If you have a bladder infection or strep throat, and I give you an antibiotic, it's, you know,
Pretty much 100%.
It's like you need to treat one person to get one person better.
Or maybe if they have a resistant antibiotic, it's two.
Or you take paracetamol for a headache.
It's like one in two.
So it's like two.
Two people, one will get their headache completely resolved.
But with a staten you have to treat 89 people for five years to prevent one heart attack?
Yeah.
So it's actually, so I know this stuff inside out.
So if you've had a heart attack already, let's take the high risk group, you have to treat 83 people over five years for one to have their life saved or life.
prolonged, right? Okay. And for preventing a further heart attack, 1 in 39. Now, most people around the
world mark who prescribed statins are not in that group. They are in the either low risk. 75%, right?
Yeah, exactly, low risk or what we call high risk primary prevention. Now, the benefits of a statin
over a five-year period in that group, at best, is 1% in preventing a non-fatal heart attack,
a non-disabling stroke, okay, but without prolonging a life by one day.
I don't know about you, but I'm not interested in just living longer.
I want to live better.
I want to be that 75, 80, or 90-year-old who's still traveling, still sharp, still strong, still
fully engaged in life.
And here's what I've learned.
The people who age well don't get lucky.
They get informed.
They know their numbers.
They track their biomarkers.
They catch problems when they're still reversible and optimize their health year after year.
That's the whole idea behind function.
Function was designed by doctors and is true.
trusted by the world's top doctors and hundreds of thousands of members,
you get access to the most critical 100 lab test measuring everything from your heart
to your metabolism, your hormones, inflammation, nutrients, toxins, and lots more.
Much more than your typical annual physical, because if you really want a healthy, vibrant life
for decades to come, you have to know what's happening inside your body right now.
So get your data.
Make the changes.
That's how you get to 100 and actually enjoy it.
Go to function.com slash mark, and if you're one of the first 1,000 people,
this week. Use the code Mark 2026 for a $50 credit toward your $365 membership. It's time to stop guessing.
Start testing with function. You know those cooler mornings when you want to feel centered,
calm, and energized, but not wired? That's why my fall and winter daily rituals start with
Peek's sun goddess, macha. Peak is a wellness brand I've trusted for years, creating science-backed
tea crystals and superfood blends with clean ingredients. The products make it effortless to support
gut health, skin, energy, and immunity while keeping wellness simple.
When it comes to Macha, Peake's sun goddess macha is ceremonial grade from Japan.
It's shaded longer than typical macha, boosting L-Pheonine and chlorophyll for calm, focused energy that lasts.
Without the crash of coffee, I love how one simple ritual keeps me centered, boosts my metabolism, and even nourishes my skin from within with detoxifying antioxidants.
Transform your wellness from the inside out and get up to 20% off for life plus a complimentary gift.
Explore Peaks Radiant Wellness Products at PeekLive.com slash Hyman.
That's P-I-Q-U-E-Live.com slash Hyman.
So essentially, if you've never had heart attack and you're my cholesterol and you take a statin,
it won't prevent you from, it won't prevent one single death.
It may prevent a heart attack.
Yes.
If 100 people take it.
One.
It'll prevent one heart attack.
So 99 people taking it for five years will have no benefit.
Yeah.
So this again comes back to now.
This is just my opinion.
It's like, oh, is a Seymohotra just cherry-picking statistics here?
2009, Gerdh Gigerenza, the director of the Max Planck Institute for Health Literacy in Berlin.
This is the same institution that Einstein taught and trained in.
Brilliant guy.
He wrote in a WHO bulletin 2009, it is an ethical imperative for every doctor to understand the difference between absolute risk reduction, numbers need to treat, and relative risk reduction.
And he said, to protect pay.
from unnecessary anxiety and manipulation.
So in other words, I paraphrase this.
If you have that information, and again, most doctors are not trained this way,
this is a problem.
You should use it and tell patients this.
This is what I do.
And a patient comes in, it's like, should I take a start or not?
I say, well, let me empower you the information and tell me what you think.
Most patients with the 1% thing, think, hold on a minute.
I don't think that's that great, doc.
And then they'll say, well, is there anything else I can do?
And of course, you and I are empowered with an understanding lifestyle, right?
So this is how we should be practicing medicine.
But Mark, one quick thing is that I didn't just talk about this.
I wrote about it.
And I even got this in front of every Royal College president in the UK saying that the British
Medical Journal, we're doing this campaign against too much medicine.
They're talking about informed consent by use of N&Ts.
We need to daunch a campaign because overprescription is a big problem.
We know there's a big problem with side effects.
We know that one estimate suggests that prescribed medications is a third most common cause
of death after heart disease and cancer globally because of side effects.
it didn't take long for me to convince the Royal College Presidents.
I was an ambassador for the overall Academy of Royal Colleges at the time
and to say that we should have a joint campaign with the BMJ.
So I then wrote a paper.
I was a lead author, had the chairman of the General Medical Medical College's
on that co-author paper to say, okay, this is a campaign we can get
and change medical education, change postgraduate medical training,
and we got that it's in the media.
It was a big news story, BBC, all over the news, front page of British newspapers.
Campaigns obviously need to be sustained.
what happened is, of course, if you engage in true informed consent with patients, most patients
will choose less treatments. Now, who's going to suffer from that? The drug industry.
They, in my view, it's very clear. It's not a conspiracy. This is clearly how they do business and
this is what they want to do is they want to, they engage in a tactic called opposition fragmentation.
Anyone that threatens their bottom line, they will do smearing, they will do all these things
behind the scenes. There's a whole documented history of the tobacco did it for a long time.
If you Google me, you'll find many groups that are attacking me.
like the American Council on Science and Health, which sounds great,
but it's actually a front group for pharma, big food and big ag,
that think trans fats, pesticides, smoking, and, you know, glyphosate are all healthy for you.
I'm like, okay.
And if they come up to town, very, you know, erudite and smart.
So you've experienced them, Mark, right?
Mobile got, right?
Science-based medicine, American Health and Science and Health.
I mean, quack busters, quack watch.
I mean, I've been there all, all through it.
You get it.
I totally get it.
And I actually, I find a badge of honor, you know.
It is.
Well, no.
So actually, you know,
way it is, although you've got to grow a thick skin, right? Because, you know, one of the lessons
in public health advocacy done by written, a great paper written by Simon Chapman who took on
big tobacco in Australia and talks about his third-year-year career and taking on big tobacco,
he says, as soon as your work threatens an industry or an ideological cabal, because it's also about
mind, it's not just about money, it's about indoctrination in the brain, right? As soon as your work
threatens an industry or an ideological cabal, you will be attacked, sometimes unrelentingly
and viciously, so you have to grow a rhinoceros hide.
So for me, what happened after that is there was, I kept pushing this message,
but they then, behind the scenes, Royal College of Physicians, I think, funded by pharma,
some scientists funded by pharma, started making complaints to the Academy of Medical
Royal Colleges where I was one of their ambassadors for seven years, right, to say,
this guy's got his own agenda, he's exploiting people for his own agenda, he's trying to make
money off, all nonsense. And that was so relentless that they then,
in 2018, I got an email from the new chair of the Royal Colleges saying that the campaign
that I had started or was that they had took on and instigated, that I was no longer part
of that because of stuff that I apparently said publicly on statins, even though everything
in the newspapers that was written about statins for me was coming from medical journals
and a very strong advocate for informed consent. But again, this is what...
Don't confuse me with the facts. My mind is made up.
Well, exactly. So this is what they do. And of course, it does have his personal
And then it culminated, coming back to where we started, is that because we were having
an effect, Mark, and of course, you're absolutely doing the same thing.
One of my inspirations, right, revolutionaries, Mahatma Gandhi.
And one of his quotes, which I love is, you know, and he took on the system.
I mean, he got British colonialists out of India.
I mean, it almost single-handedly.
And he says, first they ignore you.
I think Britain was bigger than the pharma companies, too.
Oh, it was. Absolutely.
I mean, America was founded on anti-corporate sentiment taking on the British East India.
a company, right? It was a big corporate tyrannical system and now we've come back to the same
problem right now. But what he said was first they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they
fight you, then you win. So when you're getting attacked, you're getting, you're over the target
and you're closer to winning. But you have to, it's tough. It's tough. So essentially this is this
interesting legal case that we started out with has sort of vindicated that you and your colleagues were
speaking truth to power. Yeah. So let's get into the details here. Because
everybody's listening, I'm going, yeah, well, my doctor affect my cholesterol, and my
al-a-l is high, and they recommend a statin.
And like we said, it's the number one prescribed drug in the world.
Yeah.
75% of the prescriptions are for preventing heart attacks if you've never had one.
It's called primary prevention.
It's very weak data to show that that actually works, especially for women, especially
for over a certain age.
Yeah.
There is benefit for people who have had a heart attack, no doubt.
it's not like taking an antibiotic for a strip throat,
but there is a benefit.
And I'd let me sort of unpack how you came to go from being a trained
cardiologist who basically swallowed the gospel
to one who understands and has looked at the literature
and has come to a different conclusion.
Because it's not just that you're anti-drug or your anti-medical care,
anti-the-system, you're for the truth and for science
and for an objective look at the facts.
So the question I have is,
how did you go from being a trained cardiologist
who believed in statins to one who started to question statins,
to one who's come to understand
that our approach to cardiovascularies
might be a little bit misguided,
and we'll talk about what the right approach should be later,
but I kind of want to start with unpack the science for us
because everybody listening has no one's heard
if their cholesterol is high to take a statin.
Sure.
Statens cause side effects,
which they do for a lot of people,
probably 20% get some muscle damage or some symptoms or increase the risk of diabetes.
You know, we'll talk about that data.
There's still a huge drive in our society for prescribing these and globally.
Yeah, absolutely.
So my interest in this came from really looking at the initially the obesity epidemic.
So 2004, WHO announced it as an epidemic.
You know, by 2010, I was in nine years qualified as a doctor.
I was a specialist registrar in my cardiology training.
I was seeing more people viscerally.
I'm very sensitive to, how to put it, suffering around me, if you like,
but also seeing my colleagues under more stress in the system.
And I was like, hold on a minute.
If we carry on down this trajectory, the whole healthcare system is going to collapse.
We want to even manage people acutely if they are ill, right?
I never thought that would happen.
And ultimately, that two of my own parents basically died because of the failures in the system
because the system's under so much stress, right?
Never predicted that would happen.
But that's where I started from. And when I looked into the issue of obesity, you know, I
concluded that one of the root causes, Mark, if not the main root cause, was this flawed
hypothesis that we should have low fat diets to prevent heart disease. Food industry exploited that,
increasing sugar intake, increasing refined carbohydrate intake. It became quite clear. There was a clear
correlation between that change in guidance in the late 70s in the US and early 80s in the UK.
when the obesity epidemic started to then, you know, take its trajectory down the wrong way.
Yeah, and I covered a lot of this in my book, Eat Fat, Yet Thin, which we sort of unpacked
the whole history of how we got this low-fat craze, led to this high-sugar-starch craze that then led
to this dramatic rise in obesity, which now, of course, we're treating another drug, the GOPI one agonist
and, you know, just appetite and some glutide or Zempic and Majaro. It's kind of crazy, right?
It's just kind of flipped it upside. Oh, absolutely. So when I looked at that, it's like looking at
data and spending years and months and years looking at it and looking at different bits of data,
I was able to put it all together and I wrote a piece in the BMJ in 2013 called saturated fat
is not the major issue. I read it. That's how I first came across. Yeah. And that got a lot of
attention, right? It was international news and British news and CNN international and whatever.
You know, because obviously suddenly you've got a cardiologist busting this myth that we think
butter has been bad for our cholesterol. But when I did that, okay, so what I looked at the data and
it was very clear, there was no clear association with saturated fat consumption and heart disease.
So if that's true, then, and we know saturated fat raises LDL cholesterol, that means LDL
cholesterol can't be that important.
So, and if LDL cholesterol, the total cholesterol isn't that important as a risk factor, how does statins
work?
But I knew statins had a separate effect to low in cholesterol, which is their anti-inflammatory
and they're anti-clotting.
And I knew this even, it's well known within cardiology circles.
You know, I trained as an interventional cardiologist, and that means keel heart surgery,
stents, for example.
Patient comes in, we didn't even check their cholesterol.
Maybe some of the thinking was the lower the best.
better, which will come on to as well.
So it doesn't matter what their cholesterol starting from, the lower your cholesterol,
the better.
In fact, 2011, our cardiologist, one of the editors, I think, of the American Journal of Cardiology,
wrote an article, which I mentioned in my book of Staten Free Life, which was entitled,
It's the Cholesterol Stupid, right?
And what did he say in that?
He said, you can be an obese diabetic smoker that doesn't exercise.
Sounds crazy.
But as long as your cholesterol is low enough, you're not going to get a heart check.
You're not going to get heart disease.
That's crazy.
Like, really?
So, okay, I had to unpick that.
And what I also then did moving forward from 2013.
So that's how I got down this track, realizing that our obsession with LDL lowering has been a problem.
So you looked at the saturated fat literature and you weren't impressed.
And data showed that it didn't seem to be.
Both observational data and randomized control trials.
No benefit, like in lowering it, no association, nothing.
Right.
Right.
And when you look at all the data, so that was the first sort of bit that I was, okay.
And some might even be protective, like some of the dairy fat.
Well, we know now, yes, there is some suggestion that dairy fat could be protective, absolutely.
So there's all that.
And then coming back to the LDL hypothesis.
By the way, you're not alone on this.
I mean, there was a major paper published by Darius Mazafarian from Tufts and others looking at butter and actually showing that there really wasn't evidence that it wasn't.
So, Mark, this is what's interesting.
That article I wrote, because creates such a, you know, a lot of headlines and a backlash or whatever else, that's when people like Darius started looking at this again.
So it was all really from the back of that BMJ piece.
It all came together.
So then everybody's like, you know, and at the time, I was writing just a commentary,
which was peer reviewed, but I could have got it wrong.
I could have.
But I was like, you know what, there's enough here for me to provoke the thoughts.
Right.
And then it all got proven that, you know, what I had written had validity, right?
Which is good.
But the other aspect of this, if we go back and you mentioned cholesterol,
so is cholesterol, so is high cholesterol a risk factor for heart disease?
And is LDL cholesterol risk factor?
So you have to go back to square one, right? So these are the Framingham studies that, you know,
started in Massachusetts in 9 in 48 and went over decades looking at thousands of people where
a lot of risk factors emerge for heart disease, whether it's diabetes, high blood pressure,
smoking, for example. And high cholesterol, right? So you go and look back at the Framingham
studies. And just to summarize it, without complicating the situation too much, William Castelli is a
cardiologist, and he published, he was a co-director of Framingham, and in 1996, he published
in one of the cardiology, major cardiology journey, he's a summary of Framingham, specifically looking
at LDL cholesterol. Let's just look at LDL because that is the so-called bad cholesterol.
And he said, from Framingham, unless your LDL was above 7.8 millimoles, which, by the way,
I think in your units is probably 250 or 300, 250 probably, I think. Maybe we can look it up in
but let's just say for argument's sake around 250 which is very very high by the way it absolutely
had no it was useless as a predictor for coronary artery LDL now why is that when you correct for
triglycerides and HDL okay which by the way is a more important predictor of heart disease
LDL loses its significance completely so then if that's true and I'm saying that means
LDL isn't really a risk factor of heart disease and I believe with everything I know now that
to be the case. Okay, let's unpick every part of it. Does lowering LDL cholesterol from
diet or drugs, but more specifically drugs, because they're the most potent ways of lowering
LDL cholesterol, whether it's PCK9 inhibitors, whether it's statins, whatever, is there a clear
correlation? Is this dogma true that the lower the better? So myself and two cardiologists
did a systematic review of the totality of drug industry sponsored trials, by the way, and some
diet trials, but many drug industry sponsored trials, all of the randomized control trials,
on cholesterol lowering drugs, statins, BCC-9, blah, blah, was there a clear relationship as you lowered
LDL in low-risk and high-risk patients, Mark? Okay? Over 30 studies. Yeah. Was there a relationship
with lowering LDL and preventing cardiovascular events? No. Even in high-risk patients? Even in high-risk.
It's nonsense. It's nonsense. So the question then is... Why do we all so...
No. So does that mean... But then I said, well, of course, statins have a role. They do have a
benefit from the RCT data, which is small, because I knew already they're anti-inflammatory
and anti-clotting. So it's nothing, in my view, listen, I could be proven wrong here, but the
evidence at the moment looks very clear that there is no consistent relationship, right? It's
definitely not a clear relationship. So even if it's a weak relationship, Mark, let's just argument
say, let's say there is a weak benefit in learning LDL. What else is going on and what else are
you ignoring, right? Yeah. What else does statins do? They cause interresistance. Say one in a
hundred people get type two diabetes because of statins. One in two. One in a hundred.
One in a hundred. Yeah, one in hundred. So about one to two percent, but one in hundred. Some
studies say one in 50, right? We'll get type two diabetes because of the statin. Probably reversible still,
but not ideal, right, if you're on the standard. The second thing is, look at the whole patient
coming in. We have the illusion of protection. We have patients I used to see coming in and they
thought, my cholesterol is low, I can go and eat at McDonald's. It's fine. And they're getting
more and more of a weight, more insurresistant. They're increasing their cardiovascular risk.
They're not told the statin is going to give them a 1% benefit, i.e. more likely than not,
they're not going to benefit. So you could imagine that concept that the overall net effect of the
way that statins are prescribed and the dogma around them, in my view, has been negative and has
actually been one of the main reasons why we have got this pandemic of chronic disease.
because we over-emphasized an index on LDL cholesterol
and forgotten everything else.
Absolutely, right.
Because there's a drug for it.
It was interesting to me,
if there was a drug for insulin resistance that worked really well,
and we haven't metformin, but it's, eh.
And it fixed insulin resistance, you know,
everybody be prescribing it.
But we don't even diagnose it in most people
because we don't have a drug for it.
And it's stunning to me that, you know,
I was talking to the lab director at Quest,
laboratories. I said, what percent of your tests you get to come in are measuring insulin,
which is, I think, one of the most important things you need to know about your biomarkers.
And he was like less than 1%. And it's part of why I co-founded this company Function Health to really
look at a deep biomarker set around cardiometabolic risk factors, including insulin, including
LP-L-A, including something called APOB, which I want to talk to you about. Not just your total LDL-HDL
and triglyceride levels, but also particle number, particle size,
inflammation markers, all the things that are often missed, but that are much better at giving you a holistic picture of your cardiovascular risk. And then you know where to intervene. And in one of the studies that it was so interesting to me was actually from, I think, Scotland or Ireland was where they looked basically at a series of patients who came into an emergency room with a heart attack. And they did glucose tolerance tests on everybody who came in with a heart attack. And they found that two-thirds either had diabetes or pre-diabetes who had a heart attack. Yeah. That that was really
the big driver. Now, there's a subset of people have familial lipid disorders, you know, inherited
genetic lipid disorders. And not those people probably need to be treated more directly. But,
but for the majority of people out there who are obese or have pre-diabetes or metabolic dysfunction,
which is basically in America, 93% of Americans, that's what's driving probably most of the heart
disease, not. 100% butter or saturated fat or LDL elevations. Well, something else to throw
into the picture, right? So you can make the argument, okay, Dr. Mahhotra,
You're saying there's no consistent relationship.
There may be a benefit.
Why not just lower your LDL?
Okay.
So, 2016, and the reason we did this, me and a number of international scientists looked at,
we decided to a systematic review of observational data looking at people over 60.
Was there a relationship with LDL cholesterol and heart disease?
And the reason we did this, by the way, is another thing that was interesting from framing
in which wasn't well publicized, is that when, after people hit 50 years old, as their
cholesterol dropped, their mortality increased.
So we thought, okay, is there something,
You know, because for it to be a risk factor for heart disease, it should be consistent,
really, it costs all age groups and both sexes, right?
Or mortality.
For mortality, yeah.
But even for heart disease as well, right?
That's a good point.
So we looked at, was there, first of all, any association, if you're over 60, with LDL
cholesterol and heart disease, right?
We found none.
Okay.
Interesting.
But what was surprising was there was an inverse association with LDL cholesterol and all-cause
mortality.
In other way, statistically, if you're over-stall cholesterol, you're over-sacrestal.
60, the higher LDL, the less likely you are to die.
So what's the reasoning for that well?
Something that's been forgotten or missed or not discussed, cholesterol has a very vital
role in many functions in the body, including the brain, hormone production, but also
the immune system.
And it's likely that that's where the protective benefit comes because older people
are more vulnerable to dying from infections.
And we also know there is an association, I'll use this word, an association, right?
Can't say it's definitely causal, between low cholesterol and cancer.
Again, it's probably related to the immune system.
I mean, I think the problem in this data, though, is,
I'll just push back a little bit, is it's observational data.
And the data, like, from the Hawaii studies show that, you know,
you're older and you had higher cholesterol, you know,
you're more likely to live longer than if your cholesterol is lower.
But it may be because the people have low cholesterol are malnourished,
have cancer and other reasons.
So let me push back on that.
So we counted for that.
And we found actually, no, when you count like time lag,
you go back five or ten years.
No, it's not.
It's not.
That does happen.
But it, no, it's independent.
it does seem to be an issue.
Okay, so you sort of looked at all the data and you came up with this very kind of contrary opinion,
which is that LDL isn't all it's cracked up to me, that statins work a little, but not for
the reasons we think, meaning they lower inflammation and they may have other properties
that may benefit.
So we don't even know what called
this pleatropic effects.
So they, for example,
they induce nitric oxide synthase,
which dilates your blood vessels
and reduces inflammation
and helps your lining of your blood vessels.
All that's protective.
And so it may be a stabilizes plaque.
It may help in those ways,
but it may not be the LDA lowering effect.
In fact, Paul Rittker from Harvard,
I remember he published a trial,
I think it was the Jupiter trial,
where they showed that if you had a high LDL,
but didn't have any inflammation,
you didn't have that significant
of risk of having heart disease.
But if you had a high level of inflammation, high LDL, you had a much higher risk.
So it was the inflammation that was really driving the heart disease.
And that was really the seminal paper was in the New England Journal of Medicine over 20 years ago.
I remember reading it by Paul Richter and his crew that really laid out how heart disease is not a plumbing problem.
It's an immune problem.
It's a chronic inflammatory process exacerbated by metabolic risk factors or interresistance.
And I wrote a metabolic risk factors by that you mean problems of your blood, sugar, and insulin.
Interresistance.
And pre-diabetes, 100%.
And actually we published an editorial with two cardiologists I did in British Jones Sports Medicine in 2017, which was a very long title, but it got a lot of publicity in that were more than a million downloads, which was saturated fat does not clog the arteries.
Chrony artery disease is a chronic inflammatory condition, which can be effectively managed with lifestyle changes.
That was the title of this thing.
But it's all there.
It's free access.
People look it up and read it.
But we talk that we've overdone the thing.
And it wasn't just Dr. Malhotra, his opinion, being controversial.
The two, my two co-authors were both editors of medical journals and cardiologists.
Lerita Redberg, editor of Jarmatel Medicine and Pascal Meyer, editor of BMJ open art.
So why is this not getting more play?
Why is still the dogma and the orthodoxy that if you have a high LDL, you take a statin?
Do you want my honest answer, Mark?
Yeah.
I mean, not all, I mean, I know doctors are usually very good-hearted, very smart, well-intentioned, don't want to hurt their patients,
try to do what's in the best interest of their patients and follow the science.
So why are they not hearing about this?
Okay.
So let's go to the root cause of the problem, even in society today.
What's the big issue in health?
We have commercial distortions of the scientific evidence.
Who is behind that and who has more power and control over medical education,
medical training, the media than ever before, big corporations, in this case,
big pharma.
and the level of this control and power mark has got to a level where it can be very easily
and rationally, not in an inflammatory way or overplaying it as being tyrannical.
What also happens with these big corporations in the way they exert their power is that
they want to avoid conflict, right?
They want to avoid the truth coming out.
So there's a debate and discussion because ultimately people like myself, like you,
who are obsessed with the truth, who want to get it out to help people.
when we speak and act from a place of of integrity and truth, it has a very powerful resonance
with people. And it can very quickly destroy all these other dogmas that people have created
because of that power that the truth has. They want that conflict to remain latent,
to remain hidden. So that, you know, Noam Chomsky says the general public doesn't know what's
happening and they don't even know that they don't know. That's right. Right. So a lot of these
doctors, and I agree, are well-intentioned, but they don't, they're living, you know, in many ways,
they're climbing up the wrong wall to success when it comes to helping patients because it's a drug
companies that are really calling the shots. So we are under a situation of tyranny. And the reason
I call it tyrannical is because there are doctors that know this, Mark, there are a few doctors
that kind of know this, but then they're afraid to speak out. And only a minority of the doctors
that know what's going on will then speak out. That's hard. I mean, listen, you know, I practice
medicine. I've seen patients. You're busy. Like, I literally had to lock myself in a room, you know,
download every paper on this, read it carefully myself,
synthesize it all, try to make sense of it.
And it's still confusing.
And I wrote a whole book about it.
And I think it's still hard.
So the average doctor doesn't have time to kind of do that.
They kind of take it at face value and they get taught in their training.
And they try to look at the evidence the best they can.
But also they're looking at sort of biased evidence that is published.
Completely. Absolutely.
And then, of course, there's a psychological side of it as well because as human beings,
you know, they say changing one's mind is one of the most, you know,
emotionally traumatic things that human being can go through, right? And that's where you need
humility, right? John Kenneth Carl Braith, the Canadian American economist said, face with the choice
between changing one's mind and proving there's no reason to do so, almost everybody gets busy on the
proof. Yeah. So for the medical profession, we need to have also more humility. I mean,
one of the interesting, like, there's a great, there's a great YouTube channel called Afterschool,
which I watch a few times, it's brilliant. It goes through like ancient wisdom and philosophy,
psychology. And it says, one of their titles, you should look at this up, Mark, you love it.
Why do intelligent people believe stupid things? And the answer is? And well, because our intelligence
evolved, not for seeking objective truth, but more about belonging to a tribe, you know, for personal
gain, whatever else. So what is, what do we need to break out of that? There are two characteristics
in the human being that are most important for you to think outside.
the box and be willing to change your mind and not being afraid of it. One is humility and the other
one is curiosity. It also comes down to character and we've got a system over the years that has
become more and more corporatized, right? You have in America sadly, you know, and I consider this
my, honestly, I'm, you know, I consider America in my second home. So I have a lot of love for
America and the American people because I've relatives here and I've been here a lot. But you have
now the highest health care expenditure in the developed world over four trillion.
with the worst health outcomes.
Oops, right?
So, so, so, so what's happened is, you know,
because of all of this situation around corporate capture.
So, you know, the counter, of course,
from a philosophical point of view is that living a life in darkness has no meaning.
Yeah.
And we need to get people out of this darkness to understand the root of the problem.
And then we can then start making solutions.
And you have to think about it.
You have to take time to think and learn.
I mean, John F. Kennedy said, we enjoy the comfort,
of opinion without the discomfort
of thought. And I think
it's hard to kind of sort through it all. I mean, I found
it very hard. You know, I just sort of reflect back on
some of the data that I uncovered as I was
sort of researching this. And it was
just one very large study showing that
it was, I think, 231,000
people in 541 hospitals that had had a heart attack.
And it was looked at over a six-year period. And they looked at
cholesterol lipid levels for everybody.
They found that 75% of,
of people who had a heart attack had, quote,
a normal LDL under 130, which is what's considered normal.
50% had optimal levels.
Yeah.
Under 100.
17% had super optimal levels under 70.
But what they did found was really interesting.
And again, it confirms this whole metabolic hypothesis of heart disease
that it's really related to mostly insulin resistance.
That those with low HDL and high triglycerides,
which goes along with small, dense cholesterol,
particles were much at a high risk of having a heart attack.
And so, in fact, the average HDL in that group was 39, which should be ideally over 50.
And the average triglystoride was 160, should be probably under 100, ideally under 70.
And it didn't really seem that LVL was really the driver.
It was the triglystery to HDL ratio.
It was the triglystriads and the HDL.
and it was what is what we generally call
an atherogenic lipid profile,
which is not just about the total number of cholesterol
or the LDL number.
It's about the quality of your cholesterol,
which is the size and number of the particles.
And the smaller, dense particles
are the ones that are more putting you at risk.
And those are the ones that are caused by sugar and starch,
not fat.
Fat actually improves the size of your lipid particles.
Yeah.
No, fascinating.
And it makes sense,
but also interesting,
something else that I came across in last few years,
which you'll find fascinating.
Mark, and I don't know if you know this. David Diamond, who's a cholesterol research,
I published a paper. I can't remember which journal it was in very recently. And they looked
at the primary prevention randomized control trials done by, obviously by the drug companies
and secondary prevention trials. And subgroup analysis found, so these are people with statins
who had either were high risk of heart attack or had a heart attack. In the patients in the trials
that had normal triglysis rise in HDL, no benefit at all from statins. Think about that.
You're triglycerizer, inertia, we're good.
Even people who've had a heart attack.
There was no benefit from the statin at all, which fits with what you just said.
And it's kind of interesting because, you know, you get the benefit in some ways of inflammation
protection, but you also get increased insulin resistance.
You do.
And of course, we haven't you talked about side effects, and that's another issue, right?
So if you look at, you know, to try and explain why there's no reduction in cardiovascular mortality,
even if we accept the four-day increase over five years in high-risk patients, one of the, my
explanations is this. In the real world, at least 50% of patients prescribe statins, even in high-risk
groups, will stop taking it within a couple of years. And when you do surveys, most of them say
they felt they got side effects. Muscle fatigue, muscle pain, brain fog, erectile dysfunction,
and how prevalent is that? And you look at the data and it's mixed, but anything from,
in my experience, anything from 20 to 50% of patients, at some point, I've had patients who took
statins for 20 years and then get side effects for 20 years and then it got side effects and
it gets better when you stop the statin. So they're very prevalent. I wouldn't say they were
serious or life-threatening. But, you know, the question I ask the patient always, does this interfere
with your quality of life? Right. And it's very simple. You know that as a person. It's a very
subjective answer. Yes or no. If it does, we need to do something about it. Because, listen,
we're all going to die at some point. What we want to live our lives in the best health we can for
as long as possible, right?
That's the most, in many ways, that's probably more important than longevity, right?
It's having good quality of life.
So that is something that I address with patients as well.
So if you're going to sort of see I'm in the argument and to argue the other side,
how would you argue against yourself for this?
Because, you know, I've had these conversations with cardiologists, with experts,
and they're like, listen, the data is just so strong about statins.
And there's no question that they lower risk.
And there's no question their benefit.
And yes, there are side effects that can cause mitochondrial injury, it can cause muscle pain, it can cause insulin resistance, but the tradeoff is worth the risk.
And the data is so prevalent, so strong, and so clear that we should all be taking sense.
I think, I think, you know, the arguments to be made on interpretations of the evidence, trust in the evidence, and different bits of evidence.
So all I can say, Mark, for me, is that we all have our biases.
And you could argue that I have a bias because I have an obsession with lifestyle and
I'm a foodie and I started cooking when I was 16.
I was taught by my dad.
And, you know, one of the reasons I got annoyed or pissed off in the hospital and got
into this whole, my campaigning started about hospital and just, you know, why are we
giving junk food to patients?
Because I also, as a doctor, was like, frustrated and I can't get any healthy food anywhere.
That could be my bias.
Fine.
But, and I accept that.
One of the things I do myself, and I think the reason I've been through a process why I've
had to change my mind several times on saturated fat, on sugar, on low fat diets, on statin
prescriptions, on cholesterol, on something more recent and more controversial, which you're not
talking about, is you have to have an element of humility. But when I do that, my analysis
myself, I try and counter my own arguments and then try and find a way of a nuance. I can't
really see a strong counter argument. And I'm not saying this from a place of hubris, because
okay let me give you one argument so so if and this is a hypothetical if statins didn't have
side effects or there were almost non-existent i could actually say put them in the water supply
because even if you know there is a concept in medicine you've got to treat them many to benefit a few
so let's just say that they save lives in i don't know on average say one in 300 people are going to
live longer because of statins right it's a public health yeah for public health so you know
put in the water supply
you know um give to three billion people we're gonna gonna have you know you're gonna save
one in 300 of those three billion you know whatever that is a lot of people it's a lot of people
it's it's tens of millions of people at least not hundreds of millions so um you could make that
case but that isn't true though that's just simply not true yeah if there were no side of it so so so i am
very four you know and that and that is an argument that has been put forward and the issue about
there's marginal benefit yeah but i'm saying that if you
it's a public health intervention that doesn't have any downside.
But if it doesn't have any downside, that's fine.
Then go for it.
Put it in the water supply.
But unfortunately it does.
And that's simply just not true.
So therefore, you then have to then talk about, you know, and some of the doctors
come from a mindset mark where they don't even, they, and this is a different school of thought,
but I don't agree with it.
It's not about agreement.
I mean, okay, maybe it says it's my opinion, is that they think that there should be
an old school paternalistic practice of medicine.
Doctor knows best patient do what I say.
That's not working so good anymore.
I'm about shared decision making.
I'm about explaining patients a way that it's, you know,
that empowers them that it's a more equal relationship.
You know, and that's fine.
That's a, maybe it's a philosophical disagreement,
but that's a stance I'm going to take,
and I'm prepared to die on that hill.
I think that's right.
I mean, I think, you know, we have to sort of look at this at a high level.
Like any tool, there is a use for statins.
There's a use for the PCS Connect.
There's a use for the new CETP drugs that are coming out.
There are people who benefit.
And I don't think it's heterogeneous.
I think we have to sort of, and I've noticed this as sort of the doctor's been doing
this for 40 years, not everybody's the same.
Saturated fat is fine for most people, but not for some people.
Yeah, right?
Sugar can be tolerated more by some people, but not by others.
I just came back from Utah and was in the Native American Reservation, the Nabo Reservation.
It was just staggering to see the amount of obesity.
And when you look at, you know, 150 years ago, there wasn't.
a single overweight Native American, period.
And why is because
the metabolically, they're genetically, they're different.
So I think, I'd love to sort of explore
who might benefit from these drugs,
because there's a class of people we refer to them
as lean mass hyper responders who are people like you and I,
maybe who are athletic, who are fit,
who may actually have an adverse response
to increase saturated fat and diet,
or who might have a family history
of lipid disorders
and actually have some genetic issues
which I do in my family.
So how do you sort of handle those?
Yeah, so I deal with those actually quite regularly.
So interestingly about the saturated fat,
I think you're right, Mark.
There are definitely a subgroup of people
who have more, who have very high saturated fat intake
actually does affect their interresistance
or make their triglycerides go up.
And in fact, there was a paper done by,
I think his name's Ronald Kraft, if I'm not Ron.
Ron Krause.
Ron Krause, sorry, Krause, you're right.
And he showed there was an abnormal effect.
And he showed there was an abnormal effect on lipids
if your saturated fat consumption
in this, obviously certain groups of it was more than 18%
of your total calories, right?
So it's still very, very high.
But again, you're absolutely right.
That might happen with a certain subgroup of people.
I've seen, for example, a patient on a carnivore diet
who actually had something like that.
And when they reduce their saturated fat intake,
their lipid profile got better.
That's all they changed.
So I agree with you.
There are going to be a subset of people.
What do you do with FH, the people with the familiar hypolipidemia?
So let's just lay it out for the,
people, right? And I think there's more than just that one subtype. There's many different types
of genetic lipid disorders that I think we're just starting to figure out. There are, but you know,
you talk about APOB and lipoprotein little A, which are all these other extra markers of risk that are
added in. Basic teaching in medical school, certainly why teach medical students and junior doctors,
right? Don't organize a test unless it's going to change your management plan. Right? Because what's
a point. So you create unnecessary anxiety, for example, for some people. Now, I get it. People may
want to know, and if that's what they want to know, that's fine. And we'll come onto management as
well, if you're not going to add in a stat in or whatever else, and okay, maybe those people need
to be more extreme in the lifestyle. Maybe that's a reason to do it, saying you need to be like,
instead of meditating for 30 minutes a day, I want you to meditate for an hour, right? No, fine. I mean,
maybe that's the best we're going to offer them, right? Yeah, yeah. To keep the wrist down. So we've got to just
be a little bit careful about how we about ordering these tests and then but but thinking a little bit more
about okay is it going to change anything and am i just going to give this patient unnecessary extra
anxiety and i'm listen i'm a doctor doctors are the worst patients i probably have uh partly because my dad
was the same i i have moments of being a hypochondriac and i know on the receiving end like you know
tests that are done that didn't need to be done and now i'm like okay what does this mean and you go down
a rabbit hole. So we've got to think about that as well, right, in terms of if you haven't
got a clear solution, then don't order the test. I'm not saying don't do the test, but I just
want us to think about that a little bit. I mean, it's true. We learned that medicine. I'm not sure
I have the same view because I think that the more data you have, the better you can make sense
of what's going on. And I think there's a movement towards this deep phenomics. I've had Jeremy
Nicholson in my podcast, Leibera hood of my podcast, and they're about more data and dense, dynamic
data clouds of information from your biomarkers, your metabolism, or biome, your genome,
your transcriptome, that all teach you about sort of subtle changes that may not represent a disease
today, or they don't have a drug treatment today, but that if you left intended, would ultimately
lead to a disease or...
But it may not.
Or may not.
But I'd rather know if my insulin is going up over 10 way before I get diabetes.
No, I agree.
So 100%.
I agree. There are definitely certain, yeah, so I think there's a nuance there again.
There are certain things where we know, okay, there's a very likely benefit here of you getting
your insulin down, et cetera. I think some of the other biomarkers is still in a certain, you know,
you know, area. But again, Mark, you've said that, okay, you're a guy, and this is, if I was having
conversation with you and is your preference of values, you want to know more and more and more,
and that's fine, Mark, I'm going to help you and let's do all these tests for you.
Somebody else comes in, you know, and then suddenly they come back. And the thing is, I see this,
this is what happens with the whole cholesterol hypothesis, right? I've got patients coming to me
for a second opinion as a cardiologist. I do, you know, international consults and virtual and
whatever else all around the world. And they, and I talk to them and I just started to tell me
what's been going on. And they've been living in absolute fear of death for months. And some of
them break down in tears when I just say to them, listen, I've just done a cardiovascular risk here,
your LDL cholesterol is so-called high, but it's not an issue and you're fine and your risk is only
and you can just see a sigh of relief and say, Dr. Thank God. I've been going on thinking that
I'm, then that's again misuse, not good use of maybe numbers or statistics. I mean going
on thinking that I've got in the next five years as an 80% chance I'm going to die of a heart
attack. I'm like, no, it's 2% in 10 years. Right, right. So there's also that as well. So
I do think we just to think a little bit carefully on it. But coming back to FH, FH affects familiar
hypolipidemia, genetically very high cholesterol, okay? 50% of men and 70% of women, right,
with FH untreated, big numbers, will not develop
pretty much a heart disease, but 30% of women will
and 5% which is a lot, even before maybe 50 or 60,
will get heart disease.
So I did it actually a review paper with a number
of international scientists as well, and we published it in BMGA
evidence-based medicine, and we thought, okay,
that's interesting, 50% of men with FH,
familiar health of epidemia, very high LDL, don't get heart disease
and 5% do.
Is there anything we can find that's different between them
that highlights the subgroup?
Like, what is the difference between them?
First thing, was it the LDL?
Is the LDL higher in those ones that get heart disease
versus the ones that don't?
No difference at all.
Ah, that's interesting.
It can't be the LDL then.
What is it?
Well, we found, and this is a mark you're going to like this,
one of the lipoprotein little A was higher
than the one that dropped the heart disease.
So FH, you should look at a lipotin little A, definitely.
That gives them a high risk.
But what's most promising and interesting is
when you correct for insulin resistance,
yeah, right?
Their level of risk of heart disease,
for ph-h patients almost comes back to someone who's completely healthy it's only slightly higher so
what were the two two markers normal waist circumference and low insulin yeah now how do you get there
diet right cutting out the sugar processed foods refined carbs that's right and it rapidly so this is
amazing so i could so what i do with those patients is i go through that with them now if i think
they're actually the high low propritin l a and they're probably at high risk i say listen the statin benefit is
there it's small but why don't we do a halfway house high dose statins are more like to give you
side effects let's do a low dose statin let's do the lifestyle the lifestyle is most important for you
and i go really hard on that with them including the diet the excise and actually the the one that i
think isn't discussed enough and you know it comes out in my my documentary film um which is called
first do no farm pharm not f a rm oh and how do you how do you find that um we it's released
online at the moment and you can download it for for ten dollars um and it's
the website is no farm film.com and the reviews have been you know pretty extraordinary no farm
no farm film.com p h arm okay yeah yeah yeah no farm film dot com we screened it in in the lesser
square odian in london which is the most famous cinema on the world 790 people came it was invite
only but sir britties really good feedback screen it to doctors a integrated mental health conference in
washington dc really amazing feedback there and so far you know we're getting reviews that are giving it sort of
point seven out ten which is great I'm proud of that but most importantly mark it is a it is in my view
this film uncovers um literally how we have got this pandemic of chronic disease both with big
farmer and big food capturing we've got you know medical knowledge we've got very credible experts
for meds of the BMJ we're going to some dark stuff in there just how many people have been
killed by research fraud but we also give people hope with the lifestyle stuff and one of the most
interesting things I discovered in the in the film or in my research is that
that for me, pushing the boundaries on heart disease is also the next phase is, can you
reverse the blockages of coronary artery disease? And the only, there's not a lot of research
out there. We know, of course, Dean Ornish did his trial many years ago, but the reversal was
very, very, very, at least it stabilized coronary disease, but it was like one or two percent
in terms of the blockages. Cardioles in India for 20 years has been reversing heart disease
to the level where, you know, one of his papers that he published showed a 20 percent reduction
within two years of the narrowing of the artery 70% became 50, 50 became 30.
So he did it through this healthy life cell program.
It was a, there were devout Hindus, hundreds of patients, right?
High fibre vegetarian diet, because they were devout Hindus, fine.
Two 30-minute brisk walks a day, okay?
And then something called Raj yoga meditation.
And when he did a deep dive analysis into what caused a reversal,
the only independent factor for reversal of heart disease was 40 minutes of Raj yoga meditation a day.
So I went to India and I thought, let me just, is this true? Is this real? Let me look at the angiograms of myself. I trained in this stuff. I know this stuff inside out. It was unbelievable what I was seeing. I've seen those patients. I've seen the angiogram reports. There was clear reversal. In some patients, there was a complete 100% occlusion that then opened up. Wow. Right. So I think it's because you've turned down the chronic inflammation by getting on top of the stress. But it wasn't just about breathwork and meditation. This comes into something that we are dealing with right now in society, which is a crisis of morality.
okay it was a spiritual transformation these people changed their mindset that became less
materialistic they became more spiritual they thought how to reduce their anger they were you know
he got them into the ashrum with their wives for example the men and and vice versa to talk about
why were they getting more angry like how is your relationship what's going on with your work
it was a real spiritual transformation that reduced probably the stress and I think that probably
has a scientific basis because we know chronic stress increases chronic low grade information
we've talked about heart disease being a chronic inflammatory process you turn down the inflammation
and the body can heal the body has a capacity to heal itself so kind of in wrapping up uh you know kind
of what i'm hearing is it stands have a role but they're not all they're correct up to be yeah just
know just know are they right for you are you being told the absolute benefit is and then what do you
think like you know do you want to take it or not and that you have critiques of the way the research was
done and how the studies sort and sit through the statistics to show that
the benefit, how it's reported as relative risk versus absolute risk.
So if you get a risk reduction from 3% to 2%, that's a 30% risk reduction.
Sounds great, but it's really a 3% to 2%, right?
It's 1%.
Yeah, 1%.
And, and, you know, there are, there are flaws in the ways in which a lot of these
studies are done.
So could you just sort of, for some of the big data that you kind of critique,
can you sort of unpack that a little bit?
Because I think we didn't dive deep enough into that.
I want to understand.
This is not just sort of a heretical opinion,
but this is after looking at the way these studies were designed,
the way they were done, what the data actually show.
So when they do the randomized trials
where you're trying to compare two groups,
which are the same,
and you're trying to show a benefit of an intervention,
what's reported in the results often underestimates
massively underreports the side effects
because what the drug companies do,
who control how the trials are designed
or how they're conducted, think about that.
They're only interested in profit,
not looking after you,
So they will try and design the trials to maximize ultimately the sales of the drugs.
They have what we call a pre-randomization running phase where they get these volunteers
who are interested in being in the trial.
And for six weeks, for example, one of the trials, the heart protection study, a third of
the patients, thousands of patients were removed before the trial began because of so-called
non-compliance.
In other words, they got side effects.
So imagine they take the people out with side effects at the beginning and then they
only start the trial once they've taken the people out with side effects who get them
early on and then report.
And that's probably one of the reasons they're massively underreported, the side effects.
It's, I'm sorry, Mark, you know, it's fraud.
I'm sorry, it's fraud.
And that would be definitive about how I describe that.
What's the definition of fraud?
Deliberate deception in order to make money.
I'm sorry, that's the way I interpret it.
This is fraudulent, right?
The system is fraudulent.
Some of the independent studies also show benefit?
Yeah.
Well, the independent studies that have been done have shown very little benefit.
But I agree that I think there is a small benefit, but the question then is,
is the side effects issue.
And the independent studies have never been able to get hold of the raw data as well on statins.
A totality of evidence around statins, the raw data has never been independently evaluated for side
effects.
So we still don't know the true side effect profile.
What we know is what's published, not what's actually been tracked, because pharmaceutical companies
don't have to release that data and they hold it.
They hold it.
And then the reg you think the regulators are going to be able to ask for it and look for it.
They rarely do that.
Well, they have it, but they don't publish it.
it, which is interesting to me, the FDA does this because, you know, if you probably
dig far enough and deep enough, you can find it online or through the FDA databases,
but it's not in the literature because they're not published. But the pharmaceutical company
has to report all that data before drug is approved. They can't cherry pick what they provide
the FDA, but it's not published. And the FDA doesn't do a good job of saying, hey, yeah,
this is what they published, but you know, all those other stuff shows that it really didn't
work that way. Well, what they often give the FDA, Mark, is curated information.
from 10 to thousands of pages of clinical study reports on patients in the trial.
So the FDA normally doesn't go and then reanalyze it.
They just trust what the drug industry, the summary results.
And then the other issue is, of course, the financial conflicts of interest.
65% of the funding of the FDA in the U.S. comes from Big Pharma.
86% of the funding in the UK of the MHRA comes from big pharma.
They don't want to back the hand that feeds him.
So this is a huge conflict.
Why it seems that the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association
still recommend statins for people with high LDL for primary prevention,
meaning if you've never had a heart attack, which is 75% of the prescriptions,
you know, is it because they're captured too?
I think it's a combination of factors, but yes, I think at the root of it is
flawed science, dogma, and money.
And then even if people know there's an issue, they're afraid to speak out because
they're worried about their jobs.
But if we're all doing this collectively, it's going to be a complete,
part of my language, a shit show for healthcare.
And that's why we are where we are in America right now.
So it's time to, you know, I think I love this phrase.
I know this is not a political podcast, and it shouldn't be, but, you know, a good friend of mine and good friend of yours of Robert Kennedy Jr.
And I love the fact that he's come out with this make America healthy again. I think we should all get behind that.
Yeah, it's been co-opted, unfortunately. And you can't, and you can't make America healthy again until you remove commercial distortions of the scientific evidence. And that, unless that is a dress head on, we're not going anywhere.
Okay, I want to re-say that again, commercial distortions of the scientific evidence.
Unless you correct that, you won't fix health. There's actually a paper. I'm going to link to it in the show-notes.
called the commercial determinants of health talking about the data on how multinational corporations
like pharma food and ag companies subvert public health and privatized profits. And it's a WHA report
that's sort of partly published but also coming out a much, much bigger report. And it's going
to be interesting when that hits because we talk about the social determinants of help, but this is
really how the industry is driving. And just the American Heart Association alone receives
$192 million a year from food and pharma companies, right?
Crazy.
So, mind-blowing.
It's mind-blowing.
How can we trust that they're being independent with their information?
Come on.
I mean, it's people need to just, you know, wake up, wake up.
And you're not telling everybody who's on a staten to stop it.
You're not telling them anybody.
Let's get better informed.
Get better informed.
Yeah.
Read the data.
I wrote an article years ago called Sat, what I got wrong, what I got right, which
goes through a lot of this data.
It was published about eight years ago, but still I think there's more and more data coming
out all the time.
And I think they can check your books.
Where do they learn more about your work and what you're doing?
How do they understand how to dig in a little bit more?
But it's very quickly on that.
I love the fact you've brought up commercial determinants of health.
There's a definition in public health, because I talk about this as well.
So just so people in assemble, that means strategies and approaches adopted by the private sector
to promote products and choices that are detrimental to health.
That's the definition of commercial determines of health.
I have evolved that, and in fact, referenced in the Lancet, because Richard Horton, the editor, came to one of my lectures, and I've said that the way that drug companies, big corporations conduct business, not individuals within it, I'm not pointing at individuals who work for them, as legal entities, the way they conduct their business actually fulfills the criteria for psychopath.
No, but this comes from Robert Hare.
They're immoral, not immoral, right?
Forensic psychologist Robert Hare behind the original DSM criteria of psychopathy define them in the book corporation.
And he said, so what does that mean?
Callous and concern for the safety of others, incapacity to experience guilt, repeated lying
and conning others for profit.
So there's another one to throw in there.
Maybe next time, psychopathic determinants of health is my new term.
So this is what the root of the problem, right?
And of course, downstream effects, we know what's going on.
So, yeah, people can, I've got a website, Dr.esim.com.
I think, to be honest, if they want to get an overview of this, it's a one hour 50 minutes,
it's an educational tool.
Please go and download first do no farm from no farm film.com.
And if you want to read about statins in particular, but we cover this in the film a little bit,
the whole drama of statins, which is quite interesting.
My third book is called The Statin Free Life.
And I think that really breaks down all the cholesterol stuff and the statin stuff and the lifestyle stuff as well.
Yeah.
So in summer, you're not anti-science or anti-drug or anti-farmia.
You're just for...
Pro health.
Real health.
Real health.
I'm pro-ethical evidence-based medical practice.
There you go.
So it's really been an amazing conversation.
I could talk to you for hours, unfortunately, we have stuff to do.
And I encourage people to dig deep into the scientific work you published,
which is where I first came across your work in the British Medical Journal, or BMJ, as they call it now,
and your books, your films,
and you're kind of a tireless advocate for a contrary opinion that is really advocating
for a better approach to understanding nutrition, health,
and making informed choices, as opposed to just swallowing, hook, lung, and sink.
or the dogma that we're all taught in this society,
which is that the only path that success in medicine
is through pharma.
And I am not anti-pharma.
I prescribe drugs regularly.
However, I want to prescribe the right treatment for the problem.
Yes.
And because all we have in our toolkit is physicians
as a prescription pad, that's all we know how to use.
Yeah.
Or diet and lifestyle work far better
and are far more effective at achieving the same
or even better results than drugs.
And if there was a job,
drug that could, you know, instantly reverse diabetes or fix insulin resistance or prevent
heart attacks. With no side effects. Yeah. I would do it. But, you know, I, I've never seen
anything work as well as food. When applied in the right dose. Yeah. The right medicine. Yeah.
For the right duration. 100%. And I think people don't understand that about food. It's not like,
oh, food is medicine. It's something like hippie-dippy term. Yeah. It's actually very precise. Just like you
need to know the drug. You need to know the pharmacology. You need to know the dose. You need to know the frequency. You need
the duration of a drug that you're prescribing for a particular condition, you need to know
the same about food. That's how nuance and detail it is because food is full of tens of thousands
of molecules that regulate every single aspect of your biology. And understanding how to leverage
that tool for healing is profound. 100%. And Mark, another point before we finish is that, you know,
which you've just raised, is that these pills for chronic disease rarely improve your quality
of life. They may affect a blood marker. They may reduce your risk to some degree in the long term.
but lifestyle changes come without side effects by and large and they improve your quality of life.
Well, there are a lot of side effects. You feel better, you have more energy, you sleep better,
better sex drive, less depression, you know. So all the side effects are good ones.
Fair point. Fair point. Positive side effects. If you love this podcast, please share it with someone else
you think would also enjoy it. You can find me on all social media channels at Dr. Mark Hyman.
Please reach out. I'd love to hear your comments and questions. Don't forget to rate,
review and subscribe to the Dr. Hyman Show wherever you get your podcasts. And don't forget to check out my
YouTube channel at Dr. Mark Hyman for video versions of this podcast and more. Thank you so much again for
tuning in. We'll see you next time on the Dr. Hyman Show. This podcast is separate from my clinical
practice at the Ultra Wellness Center, my work at Cleveland Clinic, and Function Health, where I am
chief medical officer. This podcast represents my opinions and my guest's opinions. Neither myself nor
the podcast endorses the views or statements of my guests. This podcast is for educational purposes only and is
not a substitute for professional care by a doctor or other qualified medical professional.
This podcast is provided with the understanding that it does not constitute medical or other
professional advice or services. If you're looking for help in your journey, please seek
out a qualified medical practitioner. And if you're looking for a functional medicine
practitioner, visit my clinic, the Ultra Wellness Center at Ultra Wellness Center.com, and request
to become a patient. It's important to have someone in your corner who is a trained, licensed
health care practitioner and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to your health.
This podcast is free as part of my mission to bring practical ways of improving health to the
public, so I'd like to express gratitude to sponsors that made today's podcast possible.
Thanks so much again for listening.
