ZOE Science & Nutrition - Saturated fat: Monstrous or misunderstood?
Episode Date: July 14, 2022If you're confused about the health effects of fats, you are not alone. You've probably read the headlines - fats are killing us! Then found claims they’re actually healthy in the same publication t...he following week. Saturated fats have been touted as the worst of all. While there’s ambiguity around other fat sources, saturated fats are universally demonized. But are they really the super villain we've been led to believe?  Find out in this week’s episode. Follow ZOE on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zoe/ Download our FREE guide — Top 10 Tips to Live Healthier: https://zoe.com/freeguide This podcast was produced by Fascinate Productions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Zoe Shorts, the Bite Size podcast where we discuss one topic around science and nutrition.
I'm Jonathan Wolfe and as always I'm joined by Dr. Sarah Berry and today's subject is saturated fats.
So if you're confused about the health effects of fats, you're not alone.
You've probably read headlines in the paper claiming that fats are killing us all,
only to find another week later claiming actually they're really healthy for us.
So no surprise, we're all confused. And saturated fats seem to be chief among the villains, right?
Everything else, we're like, maybe it's good, maybe it's bad. No one ever says anything good
about saturated fats. But are they really the supervillain that we've all been led to believe?
Yeah. So let's try and clear this up, Jonathan.
Luckily, we have an expert with us.
So Sarah, we know that our bodies need fat, right?
It's a key energy source.
It helps absorb vitamins and minerals.
It's involved in building cells.
In fact, is it safe to say that we would die without eating fats?
Absolutely.
So dietary fats are a really important part of our diet.
They provide us with energy. Really importantly, they make our food taste great. And most importantly, they provide us with the essential fatty acids, which we call the omega-3 and the omega-6 fatty acids, which our bodies actually can't produce, but they're essential for a whole vast range of biological functions. And so Sarah, there's a bunch of different fats. And before this, you said,
well, I need to explain all of that. And I said that my challenge to you is, can you explain the
different fats in a way that doesn't confuse me or make me just switch off and decide it's time
for a cup of tea? Okay, that's a tough challenge for me to achieve. Okay, so I think the simplest
way to say is that fats can differ in many respects, but the key things that they can differ in is the length of their molecules
and the number of double bonds.
And it's these differences that determine their properties.
They determine their functionality in food, so whether they're oils or solids,
but also their impacts on our health.
So monounsaturated fats, which, for example, are found in olive oil and most vegetable oils,
have just one double bond, hence why they're called monounsaturated fats, which, for example, are found in olive oil and most vegetable oils, have just one double bond, hence why they're called monounsaturated fats.
Got it. And we generally like those.
Yeah, yeah. They're linked to low cholesterol levels and lower levels of many chronic diseases.
Now, the other types of fats are polyunsaturated fats, and these are the omega-3 and the omega-6
fats, and they have more than one double bond, hence the term poly. And these are the omega-3 and the omega-6 fats and they have more than one double bond hence the term
poly and these are found in most vegetable oils in many nuts and in oily fish and as I mentioned
earlier your body doesn't actually produce these fats so you need to consume them in your diet
hence why they're also sometimes called the essential fats. Now the last type of what we're
going to talk about today which are our saturated fats and they're called saturated fats because they have no double bonds. Now it's important to
mention Jonathan before I bore you and you go off to get your cup of tea that there are different
types of saturated fat. Sarah teaches a whole undergraduate course on this right Sarah so we'll
maybe compress to something a little shorter today. I've taught on fats for the last 20 something
years so this is a real challenge but it's important to say there are different types of saturated fats and that different types of
saturated fats have slightly different health effects depending on how long they are. Typical
examples of food sources that are rich in saturated fats include butter, the kind of
fats that come off your meats like your beef, your lamb, your chicken, and other meats.
Got it. And so saturated fats is interesting because butter is a byproduct of animals.
Then you're talking about animals also. So is that general rule of thumb that when we talk
about saturated fats, we're talking about a lot of things that are coming from animal and animal
products and that when you're talking about these other monounsaturated, for example, those are
tending to come from plants? Yeah. So as a rule of thumb,
most animal-based fats tend to be high
in saturated fats. Most plant-based fats tend to be high in unsaturated fats, the mono and the
polyunsaturated fats. And tropical oils are the exception, your palm oil, your coconut oil,
for example, where they tend to also be high in saturated fats. So why don't we dig a bit into
the science and see why have
saturated fats been so demonized over the last 50 years? And then let's come around to what you
think now today, Sarah. Firstly, there's lots of population studies. So these are the studies in
thousands of people who have followed over a period of time that show that when high levels
of saturated fat are consumed in the populations, there's an increased
risk of many diseases, an increased mortality and an increase in morbidity. So that sounds pretty bad,
right? So saturated fat should be out the window. Why do we, because you're just following people
there, right? You're not actually intervening. Why do we think that's happening? Okay, so there's
also been hundreds of randomized controlled trials. So these are the kind of trials where we'll have people in our units, for example,
where we give them very specific saturated fats and we monitor them under tightly controlled conditions.
And what we find from these kind of tightly controlled clinical trials is that feeding people a diet high in saturated fats
leads to an increase in blood lipids.
They also lead to an increase in various clotting
factors in the blood and increase in inflammation and a whole host of other unfavorable metabolic
effects, which we know are linked to an increased risk of many chronic diseases.
So I think at this point, anyone listening is right, okay, all the saturated fats are getting
out of the fridge, never to be touched again. However, as so often with science, there's also
a whole bunch of studies showing that full
fat dairy products might actually reduce the risk of developing heart disease, reduce the risk of
type 2 diabetes, poor bone health, despite the fact they have this high saturated fat content.
So how do you explain that on the other hand? Okay, so that is true. And that's because,
as I know, I'm often saying when we talk, Jonathan,
that it's more nuanced, that food is really complex and more complex than the nutrients it's made up of. And dairy, I think, is a really great example of how the structure of food,
which as nutritionists, we call the food matrix, can actually modulate the effect of a nutrient.
So in the case of dairy, the structure of dairy can modulate the effect of the saturated fat
that's contained within it. But also, aside from these kind of nuances, the structure of dairy can modulate the effect of the saturated fat that's contained
within it. But also aside from these kind of nuances, a high saturated fat intake in a population
is also a really good marker of an overall unhealthy diet. So for example, in the UK and the US,
the majority of the saturated fat we consume comes from ultra processed foods. So it's saturated fat
that's added back into foods like pies and processed meats, and very
little comes from kind of natural sources like dairy, for example. And Jonathan, just to mention
the dairy products that you were talking about that have favourable effects include live yoghurts
and cheese. Got it. So what you're saying is you've got to be really careful when you look
at these big studies, because people don't just eat one thing, they're eating all of this stuff together. And people generally who are eating these high saturated fat diets are eating
just much less healthy diets with lots of these highly processed foods, foods we know are poor.
And so we've got to be careful not to say it's all saturated fat. And indeed, when you then dig
out, it sounds like into dairy, actually, once it's had this magic bacterial effect, then maybe
actually it starts becoming good
for you imagine you take a regular yogurt right you take all the fat out of it you stuff it full
of sugar instead and it's a low-fat product how do we how do we feel about that product
yeah so real problem is is like you said you know in the 80s there was this big drive to reduce fat
because fat was considered as you said at the beginning, the villain of our foods. So we had all of these low-fat products on the market and the evidence overall would show that
there's no favourable effect of ever selecting low-fat products.
So what's the verdict on saturated fats then, Sarah?
It's important to say, Jonathan, that whilst we've talked about dairy and we've talked about
how not all saturated fat is equal and that there might be some favourable effects of foods that are
rich in saturated fat, overall, I think we should all be endeavouring to reduce our saturated fat
intake. If we try and reduce our saturated fat intake, a by-product of that is typically we're
going to be reducing our intake of these
really ultra processed foods that are really poor sources of saturated fat. But I think it's
important to think about the kind of food it's in. So I would really avoid looking at necessarily
the back of pack labeling and think about what's the food source because someone could look at
cheese and think, oh my gosh, look at the proportion that saturated fat but we know because dairy or fermented dairy and cheese for example
is a good source of saturated fat then i think we should disregard the the food label in that
instance got it so this is a pretty radical change right it's basically saying don't think about
things in terms of saturated fats or not think about about what is the food. You know, if it's incredibly processed,
then frankly, whatever it is,
it's probably not very good for you.
If it is closer to nature,
then you're saying, look, there are these foods.
And so I think that includes a lot of red meats
and things like this
where all the evidence is not really great.
But interestingly, you're talking about things,
particularly fermented dairy products, right?
Like cheese or yogurt or yogurt
for those on the other side of the
pond that actually seem surprisingly healthy.
And it's one of the shocks for me over the last few years is just actually how much sort
of cutting edge nutritional scientists have sort of agreed about this and like the general
view in the populations.
Well, these are saturated fats.
They're high in calories.
They must be bad for me.
And so we need to be much more thinking about like the food and a lot less about like the
particular label.
Would that be a sort of fair summary of where the science really is today?
Yeah, I think that's a fair summary.
A couple of points to pick up on is, yes, I think cheese is a good source of saturated
fat, but in moderation.
I don't want listeners going out there and gorging endlessly on cheese.
It's all about moderation. You know, the heart of a good diet is about diversity. It's about
balance and it's about moderation. And I know people want, you know, to have, you know, a super
food, which I know we've talked about previously, or, you know, a kind of wonder cure all food or
something or a food to totally demonize, it's actually just not a simpler set the other
thing just to mention as well a point that you said is not to assume because the saturated fat
is from what people perceive to be a natural source so I can mention maybe the tropical oils
here so palm oil and coconut oil people think oh that's a natural source particularly when it comes
to coconut oil and therefore it's a good source, a healthy source of saturated fat.
But the evidence doesn't support that.
There's a lot of noise out there about the wonders of coconut oil, for example,
and it's perceived to be this wonderful natural source of fat.
But actually, the sum of the evidence currently would not support it as being a healthy fat.
However, there's lots more to be done in this area.
And so it might be in a year's's lots more to be done in this area. And so
it might be in a year's time, we have to revisit this.
Got it. And I think final thing to talk about is when if you are swapping, so let's say you have
been eating a lot of meat, a lot of coconut oil, and you're thinking about what to swap for,
then I think one of the key things is you don't want to swap that for a lot of refined carbohydrate,
right? And I think this is where we went horribly wrong, you know, from the 80s onwards,
where suddenly people were giving up all of this fat and eating bread and pasta
and all these other sorts of things.
And we've seen this explosion in heart disease and diabetes.
So in general, you're wanting them to swap towards other foods with healthy fats in, right, Sarah,
rather than switching to these refined carbohydrates.
Yeah, absolutely. And this is where there's really clear evidence. There's some great
population studies, again, that have looked at if we swap saturated fats for refined carbohydrates,
you actually see zero favorable effect on lots of health outcomes. If anything, you actually see
that the people swapping saturated fats for refined carbohydrates do worse.
Which is amazing, right? Because they were like saturated fat is the ultimate killer
and people were swapping that for, you know, bread and jam or whatever, and they're actually doing
worse. Yep, refined carbs. And Jonathan, this is a great example of these mixed messages that
we talked about. Let me just finish telling you about these population studies and then you can
see how we can give totally mixed messages. So for for example there was a great analysis of a number of population studies
and they showed in this analysis of thousands and thousands of people if you swapped saturated fat
with refined carbohydrates so you removed some saturated fat from your diet changed it for
refined carbohydrates you actually did worse okay so you had unfavorable effects on your
health. If you swap saturated fat with your mono or your polyunsaturated fats, you actually did
loads better once you swap them. So that's like olive oil and nuts and all these sorts of things.
Olive oil, nuts, oily fish, all the things that we talked about earlier. Now that means there could
have been two headlines if you
think about that. So imagine some of our tabloid papers could say, you know, and this has actually
happened. This is true. So nutritionists have got it all wrong. Saturated fats aren't killing us.
Refined carbohydrates are killing us. Okay. And that's a true statement, isn't it? Because when
we swap saturated fats with refined carbohydrates, then they're causing greater unfavorable health effects or at the same time there could have been
a dissimilar headline from the same study showing again nutritionists have got it all wrong
saturated fats are the villain of our food if you know they're killing us compared to these
unsaturated fats and so either way they're giving mixed messages. And I think
that's a great example to finish on. That's brilliant. So final conclusion,
most saturated fats are not very good for you. You need to think about the food. There are some
exceptions. And you really need to think about what you swap for. Because if you suddenly go
from saturated fats and just say, oh, I don't like fat, actually going to be in a lot worse place
than where you were before. And so, you know, as often we find the science is a bit more complicated than the headline
messages. But I think the good news is like our understanding has come on a long way, right,
from all of this stuff 30 or 40 years ago. Absolutely. Great summary, Jonathan.
This research is continuing. And as and when there is more interesting research,
I am sure this is a topic we'll come back to.
Well, that was a lot of fun.
We'll post links to all the papers cited,
which you can find at joinzoe.com slash podcast.
And if you'd like to try Zoe's personalized nutrition program to understand your own responses to fat
and understand how you might choose
to adjust your diet for yourself
in order to improve your health and manage your weight,
you can also get 10% off from that link.
I'm Sarah Berry.
And I'm Jonathan Wolfe.
And join us next week for another Zoe podcast.
Bye-bye.