The Dr. Hyman Show - Why All Meat Is Not Created Equal
Episode Date: June 4, 2021Why All Meat Is Not Created Equal | This episode is brought to you by InsideTracker There is a lot of controversy around whether meat is good or bad for our health but what if this is the wrong questi...on to be asking? For example, grass-fed beef is extremely different from conventionally raised beef, and people buying grass-fed beef often have many other healthy habits that those buying Big Macs may not. Yet, nutrition research doesn’t take many of these variables into account. This is why when it comes to eating meat, like with all other foods, focusing on quality more than quantity is key to creating good health. In this mini-episode, Dr. Hyman talks with Chris Kresser about how the type of meat being eaten is an important focus missing from many big dietary studies and they break down the myths and stigmas around red meat consumption. Dr. Hyman also speaks with Fred Provenza about how the way we eat meat, along with what the animal eats, can make such a difference when it comes to our health. Chris Kresser is the CEO of Kresser Institute for Functional & Evolutionary Medicine, the co-director of the California Center for Functional Medicine, the creator of ChrisKresser.com, and the New York Times best-selling author of The Paleo Cure. He is known for his in-depth research uncovering myths and misconceptions in modern medicine and providing natural health solutions with proven results. Chris was named one of the 100 most influential people in health and fitness by Greatist.com, and his blog is one of the top-ranked natural health websites in the world. He recently launched Kresser Institute, an organization dedicated to reinventing healthcare and reversing chronic disease by training healthcare practitioners in functional and evolutionary medicine. Chris lives in Berkeley, California, with his wife and daughter. Fred grew up in Salida, Colorado, working on a ranch and attending school in Wildlife Biology at Colorado State University. He is professor emeritus of Behavioral Ecology in the Department of Wildland Resources at Utah State University where he worked for 35 years, directing an award-winning research group that pioneered an understanding of how learning influences foraging behavior and how behavior links soil, plants, herbivores, and humans. He is the author of three books, including Nourishment: What Animals Can Teach Us About Rediscovering Our Nutritional Wisdom; Foraging Behavior: Managing to Survive in a World of Change; and The Art & Science of Shepherding: Tapping the Wisdom of French Herders (co-authored with Michel Meuret). He has also published over 300 research papers in a wide variety of scientific journals. This episode is brought to you by InsideTracker. If you’re curious about getting your own health program dialed-in to your unique needs, check out InsideTracker. Right now they’re offering Doctor’s Farmacy listeners 25% off at insidetracker.com/drhyman. Find Dr. Hyman’s full-length conversation with Chris Kresser, “Is Meat As Bad As We Think: Breaking Down Nutrition Myths” here: https://DrMarkHyman.lnk.to/ChrisKresser Find Dr. Hyman’s full-length conversation with Fred Provenza, “Meat That Is Good For You And The Planet” here: https://DrMarkHyman.lnk.to/FredProvenza
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
You can't talk about how healthy red meat is completely out of the context in which it's eaten.
Right.
You know, if someone's eating red meat in the context of Big Macs and fast food and hot dogs
and things like that, do we really think that that's going to have the same impact as someone
eating a paleo diet where two-thirds or three-quarters of their plate is vegetables and plants?
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Now let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Hi, I'm Kea Perowit, one of the producers of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
The question of whether or not eating meat is good for our health has become incredibly
controversial.
But as with all other foods, focusing on quality more than quantity is the key to creating good health. Yet this is a focus missing from many big dietary studies. Dr. Hyman recently discussed this
topic as well as how grass-fed beef is different from conventionally raised beef with functional
medicine practitioner Chris Kresser. We're so obsessed with food quantity and the quantity of macronutrients and the quantity
of specific foods like red meat or saturated fat or cholesterol. It comes from our reductionist
paradigm. And you're a functional medicine guy. I'm a functional medicine guy. We understand the
importance of looking at things from a systems approach. So, what if we instead focused on food quality instead of food
quantity? You can't talk about how healthy red meat is completely out of the context in which
it's eaten. You know, if someone's eating red meat in the context of Big Macs and fast food
and hot dogs and things like that, do we really think that that's going to have the same impact
as someone eating a paleo diet
where two-thirds or three-quarters of their plate
is vegetables and plants,
and then they have a steak?
Right.
It's absolutely not the same.
And yet in the research, it shows up as the same.
And then, Andrew, I'd say years ago,
they looked at vegetarians and meat eaters
who shopped at health food stores,
presumably ate a healthy diet in the context of having meat or no meat.
And both of those groups had their risk of death reduced in half.
Yeah.
And, you know, I...
But no difference between the meat eaters and the vegetarians.
There was no difference.
No, there was no difference.
Yeah.
And there's so many studies that, you know, you can argue on both sides, which is why the debate gets so confusing because there's epidemiology on both sides.
But the randomized trials are really hard to do.
Let me just address that because that's an interesting point.
So the only studies that have shown a lifespan difference for vegetarians were the Seventh
Day Adventist studies.
Now, talk about healthy user bias.
And Seventh Day Advents don't drink.
They don't smoke.
They're advised to exercise as part of their religion.
They have deep community with purpose and meaning.
Which actually, there was a study that came out recently that was showing if you don't have purpose, you die.
That's right.
So they have purpose.
You cannot compare that population with people on a standard American diet eating meat.
That's comparing apples to oranges. If you want to compare them, you got to compare them with another healthy reference
population, which I call like neutrovores, let's say. So, like the health food study was one.
There are three other studies. I like that, neutrovor. I'm a neutrovor. I'm a heat-seeking
missile for nutrients in my food. I like that. Yeah, I get nutrients from lots of different foods.
So, yeah, there have been three other studies that, aside from the health food study,
shopper's study that you're talking about, Epic was one of them.
There was a study out of Germany.
And I'm not remembering the fourth right now.
But they all looked at people who were making healthier
choices. And one, they looked at people who subscribed to health magazines and fitness
magazines. So, it was kind of another way of getting at the health food store.
People who subscribe to Chris Kresser's podcast.
We don't have that yet, but I'd like to see that study. And then there was a study called
the 45 and up in Australia. And they didn't select a healthy reference population, but they controlled for just about every potential confounding
factor that you can imagine.
Yeah.
And all of these studies showed exactly what the health food shopper study showed is that
neutrovores or people who are conscious about their health live longer and don't have as
much early death as people who are not,
but there was no difference in lifespan
with vegetarians and omnivores, omnivorous and neutrovores.
Right, so it so depends on the population.
So in terms of meat, you know,
there's arguments around the meat from various studies
that one, it increases inflammation,
that two, it screws up your microbiome
and increases something called TMAO,
which is a cause of heart attack.
We, this is being studied at Cleveland Clinic
with Stan Hazen who we've had on the podcast.
That it has saturated fat that's harmful.
That it promotes, you know, all these harmful effects.
How do you counter that?
It would take five podcasts to counter all of those. Let's just give us the Reader's Digest and i have readers okay so because i've written a lot about each of these and by the way what is
the what is the short link go to kresser.co slash rogan and the reason it's rogan is because i put
this all together dot co slash rogan r-o-g--N. And I should have created one that's slash Hyman.
But this came from, as you know, Joe Rogan invited me on his show to debate Dr. Joel Kahn,
who is representing the vegan perspective.
He's a vegan cardiologist.
Vegan cardiologist.
And I was representing the neutrovor perspective.
Not the eat a Big Mac perspective, but like eat healthy food that could include meat
and inflammation it is again a matter of context i'm not aware of any study that convincingly shows
that eating red meat in the context of a whole foods diet with plenty of plant foods as well
significantly contributes to inflammation that that research just hasn't been
done there was once today so i was fascinated it was a feedlot beef versus kangaroo meat
and it was done in australia yeah and and there's something called cytokines in your
blood which are markers of inflammation when they eat you know ounce for ounce the feedlot meat, it actually caused inflammation.
When they ate the kangaroo meat, wild meat, it reduced inflammation.
Exactly.
Because of the different fatty acid profiles.
So that's what I mean about context.
Someone who is buying pasture-raised beef, for example, from a local farmer or a meat CSA, that's going to have a different impact than
someone who is eating commodity CAFO beef. It's confined animal feeding operations,
factory farm beef, right? Right.
So factory farm beef versus grass finished beef, different animals, literally.
Yeah. The TMAO thing I've written at least three articles about. It's a very interesting hypothesis. I think
it does bear further research, but one of the most troubling aspects of it is that fish is by far the
highest source of TMAO in the diet. Then, you know, red meat doesn't even register on the scale
if you put fish next to it. And fish and seafood are consistently ranked, you know,
again, this is, you know, nutritional epidemiology, but they're inversely correlated with the risk of
heart disease. And it looks like they're protective, eating fish. They're protective. So,
I haven't heard a reasonable explanation yet for why, how that could be the case if TMAO in the diet is problematic.
The other issue is that the TMAO production of
the production of TMAO from carnitine in the in the meat, which is how it happens,
is highly dependent on the state of the microbiome.
Yeah.
So if somebody is eating plant foods
and other things that are helping their microbiome,
they're going to be less likely to produce large amounts of TAMO versus someone who is
eating a highly processed and refined diet, which we know is antithetical to the health
of the microbiome.
Not to me, it's what you eat with it, right?
So, let's talk about like feedlot versus grass-fed beef.
Because if you had to choose between like a diet that was, let's say, a pure vegan diet
or a diet that also included feedlot beef, if you couldn't afford the grass-fed beef,
what's the deal?
I wouldn't do a pure vegan diet.
I think there are a lot of ways that you can get.
So the real question is nutrient density.
If a vegetarian or vegan comes to me and they're
anemic and they have a lot of the other deficiencies that can sometimes happen on those diets and they say that they're willing to eat some animal foods, but they want to restrict
it as much as possible, then we'll talk about maybe just strategically adding some organ meats
and shellfish into the diet. But going you know, going back to your original question,
I think there are also ways that you can work in pasture-raised animal foods into your diet that
don't have to be that costly. So, this is like the nose-to-tail eating that has become, you know,
in big cities, there are lots of nose-to restaurants now, you know, eating the more affordable cuts like the shanks or the oxtail or the chuck roast, like those are actually very rich
in collagen, which I'm sure most people have heard by now is really important. Other side of the
protein equation or equation, it's good for our joints, it's good for our soft tissues. And you
can go to the butcher and you can often get
these cuts, even if they're pasture raised pretty affordably. I read also fascinating as I'm sort of
researching my new book, Food Fix, that there are farmers who plant different types of forage
grasses and plants that have different properties. So just as a blueberry has a different phytonutrient profile than sort of
broccoli, so do the plants that they forage on. And that has different qualitative effects on the
meat. So it's fascinating. So you actually can get your conversion of these phytochemicals into
animal foods that can actually improve your health. Yeah.
Phytonutrients or phytochemicals are the compounds from plants that form their defense and communication systems. They serve an important purpose for plants,
but what's really cool is that they boost our biology as well. They do this in a range of ways,
from boosting detoxification to decreasing inflammation. Dr. Hyman recently dove into
this topic with his guest, Fred Provenza. In their conversation, they discuss why what our meat eats
can make such a difference when it comes to our health. They also discuss how and what we eat with
our meat influence its effects on us. And so one, there's the phytochemicals and protective compounds
in animal products that eat a certain almost natural diet of wild plants. And two, there's the cultural habits of certain cultures
that actually introduce various compounds in the cooking of meat so that it diminishes any
adverse effects. For example, in Morocco, they have much lower risk of cancer and it's all the
spices they use. The Maasai, who eat only meat and milk, use 28 spices in their meat cooking and 12 spices in their milk.
How does that impact the effects on human health? And should we be having a big array of spices
that we consume? And first, I have a giant spice drawer that's literally this big. And I literally,
like it's huge, probably like three, four feet across by two feet deep
and it's completely full and I use it all the time. So how does that impact what happens to
human health and the meat and some of the adverse effects? Absolutely the case, what you're talking
about. And that's such a fascinating area to think about. So we think about process,
we often think about meat in general as
being not good for our health, not good for the health of climate, as we've been saying. And then
we think of processed meat as even worse, right? You have all these carcinogenic kind of compounds
that are in there to nitrates, nitrites, and so forth. And then here's this study comes out of
Morocco, this case control study, where they're taking people recently diagnosed
with colorectal or cholinergic cancer,
and then they're comparing them with people that are not,
and looking at diet and lifestyle kinds of things.
And they reviewed many, many factors
and considered many factors in their analysis related to lifestyle and then, of course, to diet.
But one of the really important findings was that there was a strong inverse association between processed meat and colorectal and colon cancer.
Wow.
Which kind of blows you off.
Meaning the more processed meat you ate, the lower your risk of cancer.
Right, right.
How does that make sense?
But then they said, okay, but look, they don't process meat the way that we process meat in Western countries.
But they're starting to do that, and they're seeing an increase then in these countries.
And they're saying historically, they use olive oil, they use this diverse array of herbs and spices, and that that's probably very,
very important. They have the association there that's strong and highly significant,
and then they're trying to think from a mechanistic standpoint, why could that be the
case? And they're talking about these rich array of herbs and spices, and all their anti-carcinogenic,
immunomodulatory, and on and on kind of responses and saying that's probably playing a really important role in this.
And then that winds us back.
In that review paper we did, we were trying to – it's a hypothesis paper, right?
We're really waving our arms and trying to pull together circumstantial evidence to say this is worth studying.
That's all.
And one of the ways we did that was to say, look,
when herbs and spices are added to meat, it counters these effects.
And there's a literature on that.
Why do I like drinking red wine with meat?
And polyphenols in that red wine are countering alleged adverse effects
in the meat.
And I like that combination.
And what I'm saying, saying you know this is a good
cell and organ systems is how i would do it are reading back to say this is a good combination
of things to do and so and the science on that just to stop you for a sec is really interesting
because there's something called malondialdehyde which is a marker of oxidative stress or you know
basically oxidation which is what hurts people and causes aging.
And you can reduce by having meat with red wine, you can reduce that malon dialdihyde or MDA by 75%.
And also, I think the other thing people don't realize is that when we're looking at the typical American diet,
people are eating meat with lots of junk, with lots of starch and sugar. They're not eating
meat as part of a diet that's full of an array of vegetables and fruit and phytochemicals and
herbs and spices, which totally changes its impact on our health. So a lot of the studies we have are
epidemiological studies, and they're not so reliable because they don't really distinguish
these factors. And they look at, you know, meat as an independent factor and not considering what you
ate the meat with. And my favorite study is when I looked at meat eaters and vegetarians who
shopped at health food stores, meaning they both probably had a better quality diet, their risk of
death for both groups reduced in half. And it was the same because of what they were eating
with the meat or not. Absolutely the case. and beautifully said, Mark, by the way,
that's it. And that's where earlier when I was saying, you know, when we launch into some of
these clinical trials, assuming we can get some funding to do that, I think the basal diet becomes
very, very important in terms of looking at the response. You know, if you're on a highly processed
Western diet, that's setting you up, if you're on a highly processed Western diet,
that's setting you up,
that's a certain kind of basal diet, right?
That generalizes across so much that's happening not only in our country,
but now worldwide,
versus a really wholesome diet.
You can get to expect
two totally different kinds of responses.
So that's just fundamental to the whole works as far
as I'm concerned. While there's no question that factory farming should be illegal, there are good
scientific, environmental, and health-minded reasons to eat high quality, grass-fed,
sustainably raised meat as part of an overall healthy diet. Not only is meat the single best
source of protein, it also provides us with many important minerals and vitamins.
And though plant foods contain many of these nutrients as well, they are more bioavailable in meat.
This being said, Dr. Hyman still recommends that the majority of your plate be made up of plants.
He uses the term condom meat, or a small amount of meat that is added to meals that are mostly vegetables.
If you'd like to learn more about anything you heard today, I encourage you to check out Dr. Hyman's full-length conversations with Chris Kresser and Fred Provenza.
If you enjoyed this episode, please consider sharing it and leaving us a review below.
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