Has a causal relationship been demonstrated from nuts to health, or is this only a correlation? Couldn't it be that health-conscious people are healthier on average, and they usually choose to snack on nuts instead of snacking on something unhealthy?
The line "individuals who ate more nuts were leaner, less likely to smoke, and more likely to exercise, use multivitamin supplements, consume more fruits and vegetables, and drink more alcohol" further reinforces my belief that there's just a confounder here, e.g. maybe being affluent and educated explains all of those. (Yes, including alcohol consumption: http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/gnxp/2010/05/people-of-cla...)
Reverse causality is another possible explanation for our findings, because people with chronic disease and poor health might abstain from nut consumption. However, we excluded participants with a history of cancer, heart disease, or stroke at baseline, and we suspended further updating of all dietary variables when participants reported a diagnosis of stroke, heart disease, angina, or cancer. Moreover, the results remained significant when we excluded the first 2 years of follow-up and added a 2-year lag period between nut-intake assessment and each follow-up period.
Indeed, clinical trials have shown that nut consumption has beneficial effects on some intermediate markers of chronic diseases, such as high cholesterol levels,3 oxidation,6,7 endothelial dysfunction,13 hyperglycemia,6,10 and insulin resistance.11,12
The above quotes from the NEJM article imply more than simple correlation, but the conclusion of that article stops short of stating that, specifically, "Nonetheless, epidemiologic observations establish associations, not causality, and not all findings from observational studies have been confirmed in controlled, randomized clinical trials."
This study sounds like a waste of time. How you could ever follow up and prove that nuts have all those protective effects is beyond me -- as is why you would even think they do in the first place.
However, we excluded participants with a history of cancer, heart disease, or stroke at baseline...
Sounds like multiple regression, which is used to make insignificant statistics sound more plausible, by reducing the effect of a handful of confounding variables that the researchers happened to think of. That leaves behind any significant correlations plus the infinite number of confounding variables they didn't think of.
I wouldn't be so categorical. Regarding assessing causality, with an appropriate choice of instruments (food prices, tax on specific food categories) one could use instrumental variable regression to disambiguate the relationship. I'm not sure if this is standard practice in this field but a quick search seems to indicate this has been done before.
As to why one would think nuts have protective effects at all -- I'm not a nutritionist, but from what I gather nuts do seem to have some desirable nutritional properties (high on unsaturated fats, protein and minerals), so that assertion doesn't seem that far-fetched to me.
Observational studies like this could conceivably be useful under different circumstances. I think the chances of distinguishing meaningful from meaningless correlations would probably be higher if the variable being studied wasn't as ubiquitous as eating nuts and the causes of death weren't ordinary diseases of aging. For instance, an observational study could help determine the risk of disease from living in a specific area that was contaminated with a specific toxic substance. In order to make a very convincing case that the toxin had caused the diseases, you'd want to support it with stronger kinds of studies, that, say, demonstrated that that chemical was capable of causing the diseases that were observed.
nuts do seem to have some desirable nutritional properties (high on unsaturated fats, protein and minerals)
The problem is that none of those other components of food have been shown to prevent death, either, except in weak studies like this one. It's all very circular.
"Because we lacked data on how nuts were prepared (e.g., salted, spiced, roasted, or raw), we were unable to examine the influence of preparation method on mortality."
Acrylamide forms on almonds when they are roasted ... not sure about other nuts. Its probably a safer bet that raw nuts are healthiest.
The real issue with advice on foods is that it requires a great deal of judgement. Definitive statements that are actionable are relatively rare, and even then with a few years more research the advice can be turned completely on it's head, low-fat diets being the canonical example.
The title is a joke, again. "Nuts consumption reduces risk of death" hinting at direct causation, and later in the article "The authors noted that this large study cannot definitively prove cause and effect". Can journalists stop linkbait titles ?
I always wonder how much substitution benefit plays into studies of this sort. That is, does just not eating really unhealthy foods get you 85% of the way there (with little doubt that the healthy fat in eg almonds, and the protein benefit, add positive value).
OK, ok, a non-falsifiable claim (which cannot be tested) of a assumed correlation (probably due to statistical error) instead of causation, without a proper cross-cultural validation.
Tomorrow: "Nut consumption linked to obesity and depression"
Please, just let me live and die without reading another <some food> linked to <some health or disease> article. I don't mind stuff like "tuna shows elevated and unsafe mercury levels", but this constant stream of weakly correlated, never conclusive, always contradictory shit is mind numbing.
I don't understand why this is on HN front page...and getting upvotes!
If you pick a small enough sample from a large enough population, you can link anything to anything. I'm pretty sure I could find that eating veggie foods is linked with mass shootings if I try hard enough.
According to data from five western countries, increased consumption of linoleic acid from vegetable oils is correlated with increased violence.[0] That's a great first step in proving that too many veggies are linked to mass shootings. I think you're likely correct that a carefully crafted study can find any link it seeks.
I think it was when I read that eggs will both kill you and prolong your life in the same day in two different newspapers that I stopped reading any "food health" articles. You can find contradictory articles for each and every claim, often based upon the same study!
> "Is everything we eat associated with cancer? A systematic cookbook review"
Most ingredients they studied had studies saying they increased the risk of cancer, along with other studies saying they decreased the risk of cancer. Combining studies, the overall evidence was basically zero.
Socio-economic status was not used as a covariate in this study. They report that this issue is smaller than in other studies because only health-professionals were in the study. Well at least for the economic part, there are pretty huge disparities within healthcare.
And then my other remark. In the appendix. Table S4: most of the confidence intervals overlap all the way from the 'no nuts'-group to the 'daily nuts'-group. I know you shouldn't focus overly on those intervals. But those splines don't look that convincing to me.
So considering you have a measured effect that is not that clear, where you really expect the "true" effect to be orders smaller than the reported 20% reduction in mortality, without proper controls in the studies for one of the largest effects (higher income >> longer life) and with lots of overlapping confidence intervals, I wouldn't bet my nuts on this study.
Given all that I don't find: The researchers also accepted a grant from the International Tree Nut Council Nutrition Research and Education Foundation to cover the cost of analyzing the data. to be a surprise either.
As much as I love the findings since I replaced nearly all my junk food with eating nuts I get at the bulk food store near me, you don't have to look into any detail to challenge the report. The funding would seem to indicate bias. From the article: "The study was supported by National Institutes of Health and a research grant from the International Tree Nut Council Nutrition Research & Education Foundation."
That said, if you eat chips, pretzels, candy and such and want to cut down, nuts work great. You can get them bulk online if no stores near you have them. At first they don't have the intense flavors and crunch of typical junk, but the more you eat them the more you find the subtleties in their flavors and textures, much richer and complex than chips and candy. http://joshuaspodek.com/variety-choice-manufactured-illusion
This fall I noticed the nuts I normally got tasted a lot more flavorful. I checked and it turns out nuts are seasonal, so they'll taste different at different times of the year, depending on where you source them. I should have known that, but I enjoyed learning it by noticing the taste. I wouldn't have noticed such subtlety without stopping eating junk food and I find catching those subtle complexities more pleasing than the intensities of junk food.
Testing whether confidence intervals overlap is a poor test for statistical significance -- confidence intervals can overlap and still represent a statistically significant difference between groups.
Although this study was done on US population, nuts are costly here in India so a large section of population cannot afford to eat it on a regular basis. Could it be remotely possible that poverty lead to diseases, improper or no treatments, more accidents etc. lower life expectancy rather than "not eating enough nuts".
Mr. Gates would surely start a Nuts for India campaign to increase life expectancy.
Nuts are expensive in the USA too. The same goes for anything grown here that isn't frozen.
I can get a big pizza from the freezer for six bucks. It is double that for individual ingredients to make a salad. And we wonder why healthcare costs are absurd.
According to Joel Fuhrman, MD, it is not nuts that are healthy, but seeds that are eaten raw. This includes things like sunflower, sesame and chia seeds. Peanuts is a bit different because it is a legume, but Fuhrman does include beans and lentils on his healthy list.
He even promotes healthy eating using the acronym GOMBBS: Greens, Onions, Mushrooms, Berries, Beans, and Seeds which you should eat every day.
But roasted peanuts, like any roasted nuts, have acrylamides which are bad. Better to boil the raw peanuts in a stew.
Are nuts (about 40% protein) expensive? Compared to what? I don't know about prices in the US but in Europe I would say they're a cheaper source of protein than meat (turkey breast around 30% protein, for example).
Google Scholar lists numerous published papers indicate benefits from eating nuts though there doesn't seem to be a coherent story as to why this should be so - yet - though I may have missed it.
It's interesting that the population seems to be very critical of any food-health articles, presumably from over-saturation of poor science reporting. (Best example of this I know of - http://kill-or-cure.herokuapp.com/ - a study of things the UK's "Daily Mail" "newspaper" has claimed cause or cure cancer, many are in both categories).
But it is also clear that what and how we eat has a significant effect on our health, which is interesting and relevant to us.
How to sort the wheat from the chaff?
A "truth database" or factchecking site might be pretty useful. Or would it just boil down to "eat your vegetables and do a bit of exercise"?
Don't forget: Eat not too much, and not too little. Sulfuric acid is not healthy.
Yes, it's mostly that. When I started reading around in preparation of living vegan, I was slightly surprised how well people can live from different diets. From almost pure meat-based, to pure plant-based, much fat, little fat, one meal a day, five meals a day, much carbs, few carbs...
It seems that the modern US-European food-style is one of the few diets which mixed and matched together stuff in a really bad way.
50 comments
[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 96.7 ms ] threadThe line "individuals who ate more nuts were leaner, less likely to smoke, and more likely to exercise, use multivitamin supplements, consume more fruits and vegetables, and drink more alcohol" further reinforces my belief that there's just a confounder here, e.g. maybe being affluent and educated explains all of those. (Yes, including alcohol consumption: http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/gnxp/2010/05/people-of-cla...)
Indeed, clinical trials have shown that nut consumption has beneficial effects on some intermediate markers of chronic diseases, such as high cholesterol levels,3 oxidation,6,7 endothelial dysfunction,13 hyperglycemia,6,10 and insulin resistance.11,12
The above quotes from the NEJM article imply more than simple correlation, but the conclusion of that article stops short of stating that, specifically, "Nonetheless, epidemiologic observations establish associations, not causality, and not all findings from observational studies have been confirmed in controlled, randomized clinical trials."
Source: http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1307352#t=article
However, we excluded participants with a history of cancer, heart disease, or stroke at baseline...
Sounds like multiple regression, which is used to make insignificant statistics sound more plausible, by reducing the effect of a handful of confounding variables that the researchers happened to think of. That leaves behind any significant correlations plus the infinite number of confounding variables they didn't think of.
As to why one would think nuts have protective effects at all -- I'm not a nutritionist, but from what I gather nuts do seem to have some desirable nutritional properties (high on unsaturated fats, protein and minerals), so that assertion doesn't seem that far-fetched to me.
nuts do seem to have some desirable nutritional properties (high on unsaturated fats, protein and minerals)
The problem is that none of those other components of food have been shown to prevent death, either, except in weak studies like this one. It's all very circular.
Acrylamide forms on almonds when they are roasted ... not sure about other nuts. Its probably a safer bet that raw nuts are healthiest.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aflatoxin
http://www.foodproductiondaily.com/Processing/Extrusion-cook...
The real issue with advice on foods is that it requires a great deal of judgement. Definitive statements that are actionable are relatively rare, and even then with a few years more research the advice can be turned completely on it's head, low-fat diets being the canonical example.
Tibetans who never saw a tree in a whole life must be died away long ago without a proper nut supply.)
Yet another example of a meme-based science.
Please, just let me live and die without reading another <some food> linked to <some health or disease> article. I don't mind stuff like "tuna shows elevated and unsafe mercury levels", but this constant stream of weakly correlated, never conclusive, always contradictory shit is mind numbing.
I don't understand why this is on HN front page...and getting upvotes!
[EDIT] ah, pg posted this.
[0]http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15736917
> "Is everything we eat associated with cancer? A systematic cookbook review"
Most ingredients they studied had studies saying they increased the risk of cancer, along with other studies saying they decreased the risk of cancer. Combining studies, the overall evidence was basically zero.
http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/97/1/127.abstract
And then my other remark. In the appendix. Table S4: most of the confidence intervals overlap all the way from the 'no nuts'-group to the 'daily nuts'-group. I know you shouldn't focus overly on those intervals. But those splines don't look that convincing to me.
So considering you have a measured effect that is not that clear, where you really expect the "true" effect to be orders smaller than the reported 20% reduction in mortality, without proper controls in the studies for one of the largest effects (higher income >> longer life) and with lots of overlapping confidence intervals, I wouldn't bet my nuts on this study.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2013/11/21/246549388/nuts-f...
That said, if you eat chips, pretzels, candy and such and want to cut down, nuts work great. You can get them bulk online if no stores near you have them. At first they don't have the intense flavors and crunch of typical junk, but the more you eat them the more you find the subtleties in their flavors and textures, much richer and complex than chips and candy. http://joshuaspodek.com/variety-choice-manufactured-illusion
This fall I noticed the nuts I normally got tasted a lot more flavorful. I checked and it turns out nuts are seasonal, so they'll taste different at different times of the year, depending on where you source them. I should have known that, but I enjoyed learning it by noticing the taste. I wouldn't have noticed such subtlety without stopping eating junk food and I find catching those subtle complexities more pleasing than the intensities of junk food.
I throw a bunch on my oatmeal with chopped fruit and chia seeds for a great breakfast that takes less than a minute to prepare. http://joshuaspodek.com/fitness-beliefs-habits-part-2
The mix I get has cashews, almonds, hazelnuts, brazil nuts, and pecans. So much better than pretzels, chips, or candy.
The pecans I don't put in the cereal or eat with the rest. They taste so much better to me. I eat them one at a time so I can savor them specially.
http://www.refsmmat.com/statistics/significant-differences.h...
Skimming through the paper, it appears they did not correct for making multiple comparisons. That will raise their false positive rate. Oh well...
Mr. Gates would surely start a Nuts for India campaign to increase life expectancy.
I can get a big pizza from the freezer for six bucks. It is double that for individual ingredients to make a salad. And we wonder why healthcare costs are absurd.
He even promotes healthy eating using the acronym GOMBBS: Greens, Onions, Mushrooms, Berries, Beans, and Seeds which you should eat every day.
But roasted peanuts, like any roasted nuts, have acrylamides which are bad. Better to boil the raw peanuts in a stew.
Google Scholar lists numerous published papers indicate benefits from eating nuts though there doesn't seem to be a coherent story as to why this should be so - yet - though I may have missed it.
But it is also clear that what and how we eat has a significant effect on our health, which is interesting and relevant to us.
How to sort the wheat from the chaff?
A "truth database" or factchecking site might be pretty useful. Or would it just boil down to "eat your vegetables and do a bit of exercise"?
Barley, Garlic, Oats, Olive Oil.
Yes, it's mostly that. When I started reading around in preparation of living vegan, I was slightly surprised how well people can live from different diets. From almost pure meat-based, to pure plant-based, much fat, little fat, one meal a day, five meals a day, much carbs, few carbs...
It seems that the modern US-European food-style is one of the few diets which mixed and matched together stuff in a really bad way.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Correlation_does_not_imply_caus...