Lying About What We Eat, & How It Messes Up Science
We all do it – when someone asks you about your nutrition, you reply: “Oh yeah, I eat clean”… No, you don’t. We tend to overstimate our exercies and underreport our calories – and it is dramatically affecting scientific reports.
And yet, for decades, researchers who want to amass large quantities of data about how much Americans eat and exercise have had to rely on individuals to self-report this information.
These self-reported data on diet and exercise have long been called flawed. But a paperpublished Tuesday in the International Journal of Obesity goes one step further. The authors, led by David Allison, director of the Nutrition Obesity Research Center at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, write, “[The data] are so poor as measures of actual [energy intake] and [physical activity energy expenditure] that they no longer have a justifiable place in scientific research.”
That’s some strong language, considering that these data have been used in hundreds of major studies to inform hundreds of public health policies and clinical recommendations.
The underlying message here? A lot of these policies and recommendations are wrong and are misleading people in their decisions about their health.
The big problem, the paper’s authors note, is that these data may be used to make dietary recommendations for diseases such as cancer, heart disease and diabetes. In particular, studies based on flawed data have led to “spurious associations and effects” — like telling patients that a certain way of eating might protect them against developing Alzheimer’s disease, the authors argue.
It also makes it hard for anyone to draw any significant conclusions about national trends in obesity, they say. That became clear when studies in recent years reported a decrease in energy intake, suggesting Americans were eating less. The problem? Obesity prevalence hadn’t dropped, so those findings seemed unlikely.
So what are obesity researchers to do if they follow the authors’ suggestion and stop using self-reported diet and exercise data?
What’s needed instead, the authors write, are new, more objective measures of energy balance. New techniques using digital photography — that’s right, photographing subjects while they eat — and chewing and swallowing monitors show promise. The authors also note that short-term, though expensive, techniques of measuring energy balance in a metabolic ward also give more accurate results.
Original Article by: ELIZA BARCLAY at NPR.org