Articles
The Truth About Fats,
part 2/ Articles
| by Mary Enig, PhD, and Sally Fallon |
|
Part 2
Enig speaks out
When Mary Enig, a graduate student at the University of Maryland,
read the McGovern committee report, she was puzzled. Enig was familiar
with Kummerow’s research and she knew that the consumption of
animal fats in America was not on the increase—quite the contrary,
use of animal fats had been declining steadily since the turn of the
century. A report in the Journal of American Oil Chemists—which
the McGovern Committee did not use—showed that animal fat consumption
had declined from 104 grams per person per day in 1909 to 97 grams
per day in 1972, while vegetable fat intake had increased from a mere
21 grams to almost 60.14 Total per capita fat consumption had increased
over the period, but this increase was mostly due to an increase in
unsaturated fats from vegetable oils—with 50 percent of the
increase coming from liquid vegetable oils and about 41 percent from
margarines made from vegetable oils. She noted a number of studies
that directly contradicted the McGovern Committee’s conclusions
that “there is . . . a strong correlation between dietary fat
intake and the incidence of breast cancer and colon cancer,”
two of the most common cancers in America. Greece, for example, had
less than one-fourth the rate of breast cancer compared to Israel
but the same dietary fat intake. Spain had only one-third the breast
cancer mortality of France and Italy but the total dietary fat intake
was slightly greater. Puerto Rico, with a high animal fat intake,
had a very low rate of breast and colon cancer. The Netherlands and
Finland both used approximately 100 grams of animal fat per capita
per day but breast and colon cancer rates were almost twice in the
Netherlands what they are in Finland. The Netherlands consumed 53
grams of vegetable fat per person compared to 13 in Finland. A study
from Cali, Columbia found a fourfold excess risk for colon cancer
in the higher economic classes, which used less animal fat than the
lower economic classes. A study on Seventh-Day Adventist physicians,
who avoid meat, especially red meat, found they had a significantly
higher rate of colon cancer than non-Seventh Day Adventist physicians.
Enig analyzed the USDA data that the McGovern Committee had used and
concluded that it showed a strong positive correlation with total
fat and vegetable fat and an essentially strong negative correlation
or no correlation with animal fat to total cancer deaths, breast and
colon cancer mortality and breast and colon cancer incidence—in
other words, use of vegetable oils seemed to predispose to cancer
and animal fats seemed to protect against cancer. She noted that the
analysts for the committee had manipulated the data in inappropriate
ways in order to obtain mendacious results.
Enig submitted her findings to the Journal of the Federation of American
Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB), in May, 1978, and her
article was published in the FASEB’s Federation Proceedings15
in July of the same year—an unusually quick turnaround. The
assistant editor, responsible for accepting the article, died of a
heart attack shortly thereafter. Enig’s paper noted that the
correlations pointed a finger at the trans fatty acids and called
for further investigation. Only two years earlier, the Life Sciences
Research office, which is the arm of FASEB that does scientific investigations,
had published the whitewash that had ushered partially hydrogenated
soybean oil onto the GRAS list and removed any lingering constraints
against the number one ingredient in factory-produced food.
The food giants fight back
Enig’s paper sent alarm bells through the industry. In early
1979, she received a visit from S. F. Reipma of the National Association
of Margarine Manufacturers. Reipma was visibly annoyed. He explained
that both his association and the Institute for Shortening and Edible
Oils (ISEO) kept careful watch to prevent articles like Enig’s
from appearing in the literature. Enig’s paper should never
have been published, he said. He thought that ISEO was “watching
out.”
“We left the barn door open,” he said, “and the
horse got out.”
Reipma also challenged Enig’s use of the USDA data, claiming
that it was in error. He knew it was in error, he said, “because
we give it to them.”
A few weeks later, Reipma paid a second visit, this time in the company
of Thomas Applewhite, an advisor to the ISEO and representative of
Kraft Foods, Ronald Simpson with Central Soya and an unnamed representative
from Lever Brothers. They carried with them—in fact, waved them
in the air in indignation—a two-inch stack of newspaper articles,
including one that appeared in the National Enquirer, reporting on
Enig’s Federation Proceedings article. Applewhite’s face
flushed red with anger when Enig repeated Reipma’s statement
that “they had left the barn door open and a horse got out,”
and his admission that Department of Agriculture food data had been
sabotaged by the margarine lobby.
The other thing Reipma told Enig during his unguarded visit was that
he had called in on the FASEB offices in an attempt to coerce them
into publishing letters to refute her paper, without allowing Enig
to submit any counter refutation as was normally customary in scientific
journals. He told Enig that he was “thrown out of the office”—an
admission later confirmed by one of the FASEB editors. Nevertheless,
a series of letters did follow the July 1978 article.16 On behalf
of the ISEO, Applewhite and Walter Meyer of Procter and Gamble criticized
Enig’s use of the data; Applewhite accused Enig of extrapolating
from two data points, when in fact she had used seven. In the same
issue, John Bailar, Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of the National
Cancer Institute, pointed out that the correlations between vegetable
oil consumption and cancer were not the same as evidence of causation
and warned against changing current dietary components in the hopes
of preventing cancer in the future—which is of course exactly
what the McGovern Committee did.
In reply, Enig and her colleagues noted that although the NCI had
provided them with faulty cancer data, this had no bearing on the
statistics relating to trans consumption, and did not affect the gist
of their argument—that the correlation between vegetable fat
consumption, especially trans fat consumption, was sufficient to warrant
a more thorough investigation. The problem was that very little investigation
was being done.
University of Maryland researchers recognized the need for more research
in two areas. One concerned the effects of trans fats on cellular
processes once they are built into the cell membrane. Studies with
rats, including one conducted by Fred Mattson in 1960, indicated that
the trans fatty acids were built into the cell membrane in proportion
to their presence in the diet, and that the turnover of trans in the
cells was similar to that of other fatty acids. These studies, according
to J. Edward Hunter of the ISEO, were proof that “trans fatty
acids do not pose any hazard to man in a normal diet.” Enig
and her associates were not so sure. Kummerow’s research indicated
that the trans fats contributed to heart disease, and Kritchevsky—whose
early experiments with vegetarian rabbits were now seen to be totally
irrelevant to the human model—had found that trans fatty acids
raise cholesterol in humans.17 Enig’s own research, published
in her 1984 doctoral dissertation, indicated that trans fats interfered
with enzyme systems that neutralized carcinogens and increased enzymes
that potentiated carcinogens.18
How much trans fat is "normal"?
The other area needing further investigation concerned just how much
trans fat there was in a “normal diet” of the typical
American. What had hampered any thorough research into the correlation
of trans fatty acid consumption and disease was the fact that these
altered fats were not considered as a separate category in any of
the data bases then available to researchers. A 1970 FDA internal
memo stated that a market basket survey was needed to determine trans
levels in commonly used foods. The memo remained buried in the FDA
files. The massive Health and Human Services NHANES II (National Health
and Nutrition Examination Survey) survey, conducted during the years
1976 to 1980, noted the increasing US consumption of margarine, french
fried potatoes, cookies and snack chips—all made with vegetable
shortenings—without listing the proportion of trans.
Enig first looked at the NHANES II data base in 1987 and when she
did, she had a sinking feeling. Not only were trans fats conspicuously
absent from the fatty acid analyses, data on other lipids made no
sense at all. Even foods containing no trans fats were listed with
faulty fatty acid profiles. For example, safflower oil was listed
as containing 14% linoleic acid (a double bond fatty acid of the omega-6
family) when in fact it contained 80%; a sample of butter crackers
was listed as containing 34% saturated fat when in fact it contained
78%. In general, the NHANES II data base tended to minimize the amount
of saturated fats in common foods.
Over the years, Joseph Sampagna and Mark Keeney, both highly qualified
lipid biochemists at the University of Maryland, applied to the National
Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, the US Department
of Agriculture, the National Dairy Council and the National Livestock
and Meat Board for funds to look into the trans content of common
American foods. Only the National Livestock and Meat Board came through
with a small grant for equipment; the others turned them down. The
pink slip from National Institutes of Health criticized items that
weren’t even relevant to the proposal. The turndown by the National
Dairy Council was not a surprise. Enig had earlier learned that Phil
Lofgren, then head of research at the Dairy Council, had philosophical
ties to the lipid hypothesis. Enig tried to alert Senator Mettzanbaum
from Ohio, who was involved in the dietary recommendations debate,
but got nowhere.
A USDA official confided to the Maryland research group that they
“would never get money as long as they pursued the trans work.”
Nevertheless they did pursue it. Sampagna, Keeney and a few graduate
students, funded jointly by the USDA and the university, spend thousands
of hours in the laboratory analyzing the trans fat content of hundreds
of commercially available foods. Enig worked as a graduate student,
at times with a small stipend, at times without pay, to help direct
the process of tedious analysis. The long arm of the food industry
did its best to put a stop to the group’s work by pressuring
the USDA to pull its financial support of the graduates students doing
the lipid analyses, which the University of Maryland received due
to its status as a land grant college.
In December of 1982, Food Processing carried a brief preview of the
University of Maryland research19 and five months later the same journal
printed a blistering letter from Edward Hunter on behalf of the Institute
of Shortening and Edible Oils.20 The University of Maryland studies
on trans fat content in common foods had obviously struck a nerve.
Hunter stated that the Bailar, Applewhite and Meyer letters that had
appeared in Federation Proceedings five years earlier, “severely
criticized and discredited” the conclusions reached by Enig
and her colleagues. Hunter was concerned that Enig’s group would
exaggerate the amount of trans found in common foods. He cited ISEO
data indicating that most margarines and shortenings contain no more
than 35% and 25% trans respectively, and that most contain considerably
less.
What Enig and her colleagues actually found was that many margarines
indeed contained about 31% trans fat—later surveys by others
revealed that Parkay margarine contained up to 45% trans—while
many shortenings found ubiquitously in cookies, chips and baked goods
contained more than 35%. She also discovered that many baked goods
and processed foods contained considerably more fat from partially
hydrogenated vegetable oils than was listed on the label. The finding
of higher levels of fat in products made with partially hydrogenated
oils was confirmed by Canadian government researchers many years later,
in 1993.21
Final results of Enig’s ground-breaking compilation were published
in the October 1983 edition of the Journal of the American Oil Chemists
Society.22 Her analyses of more than 220 food items, coupled with
food disappearance data, allowed University of Maryland researchers
to confirm earlier estimates that the average American consumed at
least 12 grams of trans fat per day, directly contradicting ISEO assertions
that most Americans consumed no more that six to eight grams of trans
fat per day. Those who consciously avoided animal fats typically consumed
far more than 12 grams of trans fat per day.
Cat and mouse games in the journals
The ensuing debate between Enig and her colleagues at the University
of Maryland, and Hunter and Applewhite of the ISEO, took the form
of a cat and mouse game running through several scientific journals.
Food Processing declined to publish Enig’s reply to Hunter’s
attack. Science Magazine published another critical letter by Hunter
in 1984,23 in which he misquoted Enig, but refused to print her rebuttal.
Hunter continued to object to assertions that average consumption
of trans fat in partially hydrogenated margarines and shortenings
could exceed six to eight grams per day, a concern that Enig found
puzzling when coupled with the official ISEO position that trans fatty
acids were innocuous and posed no threat to public health.
The ISEO did not want the American public to hear about the debate
on hydrogenated vegetable oils—for Enig this translated into
the sound of doors closing. A poster presentation she organized for
a campus health fair caught the eye of the dietetics department chairman
who suggested she submit an abstract to the Society for Nutrition
Education, many of whose members are registered dietitians. Her abstract
concluded that “. . . meal plans and recipes developed for nutritionists
and dieticians to use when designing diets to meet the Dietary Guidelines,
the dietary recommendation of the American Heart Association or the
Prudent Diet have been examined for trans fatty acid content. Some
diet plans are found to contain approximately 7% or more of calories
as trans fatty acids.” The Abstract Review Committee rejected
the submission, calling it “of limited interest.”
Early in 1985 the Federation of American Societies for Experimental
Biology (FASEB) heard more testimony on the trans fat issue. Enig
alone represented the alarmist point of view, while Hunter and Applewhite
of the ISEO, and Ronald Simpson, then with the National Association
of Margarine Manufacturers, assured the panel that trans fats in the
food supply posed no danger. Enig reported on University of Maryland
research that delineated the differences in small amounts of naturally
occurring trans fats in butter, which do not inhibit enzyme function
at the cellular level, and man-made trans fats in margarines and vegetable
shortenings which do. She also noted a 1981 feeding trial in which
swine fed trans fatty acid developed higher parameters for heart disease
than those fed saturated fats, especially when trans fatty acids were
combined with added polyunsaturates.24 Her testimony was omitted from
the final report, although her name in the bibliography created the
impression that her research supported the FASEB whitewash.25
In the following year, 1986, Hunter and Applewhite published an article
exonerating trans fats as a cause of atherosclerosis in the prestigious
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition26, whose sponsors, by the way,
include companies like Procter and Gamble, General Foods, General
Mills, Nabisco and Quaker Oats. The authors once again stressed that
the average per capita consumption of trans fatty acids did not exceed
six to eight grams. Many subsequent government and quasi government
reports minimizing the dangers of trans fats used the 1986 Hunter
and Applewhite article as a reference.
Enig testified again in 1988 before the Expert Panel on the National
Nutrition Monitoring System (NNMS). In fact she was the only witness
before a panel, which began its meeting by confirming that the cause
of America’s health problems was the overconsumption of “fat,
saturated fatty acids, cholesterol and sodium.” Her testimony
pointed out that the 1985 FASEB report exonerating trans fatty acids
as safe was based on flawed data.
Behind the scenes, in a private letter to Dr. Kenneth Fischer, Director
of the Life Sciences Research Office (LSRO), Hunter and Applewhite
charged that “the University of Maryland group continues to
raise unwarranted and unsubstantiated concerns about the intake of
and imagined physiological effects of trans fatty acids and . . .
they continue to overestimate greatly the intake of trans acids by
typical Americans.” “No one other than Enig,” they
said, “has raised questions about the validity of the food fatty
acid composition data used in NHANES II and. . . she has not presented
sufficiently compelling arguments to justify a major reevaluating.”
The letter contained numerous innuendos that Enig had mischaracterized
the work of other researchers and had been less than scientific in
her research. It was widely circulated among National Nutrition Monitoring
System agencies. John Weihrauch, a USDA scientist, not an industry
representative, slipped it surreptitiously to Dr. Enig. She and her
colleagues replied by asking, “If the trade association truly
believes ‘that trans fatty acids do not pose any harm to humans
and animals’. . . why are they so concerned about any levels
of consumption and why do they so vehemently and so frequently attack
researchers whose finding suggest that the consumption of trans fatty
acids is greater than the values the industry reports?”
Maryland researchers argued that trans fats should be included in
food nutrition labels; the Hunter and Applewhite letter asserted that
“there is no documented justification for including trans acids
. . . as part of nutrition labeling.”
During her testimony Enig also brought up her concerns about other
national food databases, citing their lack of information on trans.
The Food Consumption Survey contained glaring errors—reporting,
for example, consumption of butter in amounts nearly twice as great
as what exists in the US food supply, and of margarine in quantities
nearly half those known to exist in the food supply. “The fact
that the data base is in error should compel the Congress to require
correction of the data base and reevaluation of policy flowing from
erroneous data,” she argued, “especially since the congressional
charter for NHANES was to compare dietary intake and health status
and since this data base is widely used to do just that.” Rather
than “correction of the data base,” [The] National Nutritional
Monitoring System officials responded to Enig’s criticism by
dropping the whole section pertaining to butter and margarine from
the 1980 tables.
Enig’s testimony was not totally left out of the National Nutritional
Monitoring System final report, as it had been from the FASEB report
three years earlier. A summary of the proceedings and listing of panelists
released in July of 1989 by Director Kenneth Fischer announced that
a transcript of Enig’s testimony could be obtained from Ace
Federal Reporter in Washington DC.27 Unfortunately, his report wrongly
listed the date of her testimony as January 20, 1988, rather than
January 21, making her comments more difficult to retrieve.
The Enig-ISEO debate was covered by the prestigious Food Chemical
News and Nutrition Week 28—both widely read by Congress and
the food industry, but virtually unknown to the general public. National
media coverage of dietary fat issues focused on the proceedings of
the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute as this enormous bureaucracy
plowed relentlessly forward with the lipid hypothesis. In June of
1984, for example, the press diligently reported on the proceedings
of the NHLBI’s Lipid Research Clinics Conference, which was
organized to wrap up almost 40 years of research on lipids, cholesterol
and heart disease.
The problem with the 40 years of NHLBI-sponsored research on lipids,
cholesterol and heart disease was that it had not produced many answers—at
least not many answers that the NHLBI was pleased with. The ongoing
Framingham Study found that there was virtually no difference in coronary
heart disease “events” for individuals with cholesterol
levels between 205 mg/dL and 294 mg/dL—the vast majority of
the US population. Even for those with extremely high cholesterol
levels—up to almost 1200 mg/dL, the difference in CHD events
compared to those in the normal range was trivial.29 This did not
prevent Dr. William Kannel, then Framingham Study Director, from making
claims about the Framingham results. “Total plasma cholesterol”
he said, “is a powerful predictor of death related to CHD.”
It wasn’t until more than a decade later that the real findings
at Framingham were published—without fanfare—in the Archives
of Internal Medicine, an obscure journal. “In Framingham, Massachusetts,”
admitted Dr. William Castelli, Kannel’s successor “the
more saturated fat one ate, the more cholesterol one ate, the more
calories one ate, the lower people’s serum cholesterol. . .
we found that the people who ate the most cholesterol, ate the most
saturated fat, ate the most calories weighed the least and were the
most physically active.”30
NHLBI’s Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial (MRFIT) studied
the relationship between heart disease and serum cholesterol levels
in 362,000 men and found that annual deaths from CHD varied from slightly
less than one per thousand at serum cholesterol levels below 140 mg/dL,
to about two per thousand for serum cholesterol levels above 300 mg/dL,
once again a trivial difference. Dr. John LaRosa of the American Heart
Association claimed that the curve for CHD deaths began to “inflect”
after 200 mg/dL, when in fact the “curve” was a very gradually
sloping straight line that could not be used to predict whether serum
cholesterol above certain levels posed a significantly greater risk
for heart disease. One unexpected MRFIT finding the media did not
report was that deaths from all causes—cancer, heart disease,
accidents, infectious disease, kidney failure, etc.—were substantially
greater for those men with cholesterol levels below 160 mg/dL.31
Lipid Research Clinics Trial
What was needed to resolve the validity of the lipid hypothesis once
and for all was a well-designed, long-term diet study that compared
coronary heart disease events in those on traditional foods with those
whose diets contained high levels of vegetable oils—but the
proposed Diet-Heart study designed to test just that had been cancelled
without fanfare years earlier. In view of the fact that orthodox medical
agencies were united in their promotion of margarine and vegetable
oils over animal foods containing cholesterol and animal fats, it
is surprising that the official literature can cite only a handful
of experiments indicating that dietary cholesterol has “a major
role in determining blood cholesterol levels.” One of these
was a study involving 70 male prisoners directed by Fred Mattson32—the
same Fred Mattson who had pressured the American Heart Association
into removing any reference to hydrogenated fats from their diet-heart
statement a decade earlier. Funded in part by Procter and Gamble,
the research contained a number of serious flaws: selection of subjects
for the four groups studied was not randomized; the experiment inexcusably
eliminated “an equal number of subjects with the highest and
lowest cholesterol values;” twelve additional subjects dropped
out, leaving some of the groups too small to provide valid conclusions;
and statistical manipulation of the results was shoddy. But the biggest
flaw was that the subjects receiving cholesterol did so in the form
of reconstituted powder—a totally artificial diet. Mattson’s
discussion did not even address the possibility that the liquid formula
diet he used might affect blood cholesterol differently than would
a whole foods diet when, in fact, many other studies indicated that
this is the case. The culprit, in fact, in liquid protein diets appears
to be oxidized cholesterol, formed during the high-temperature drying
process, which seems to initiate the buildup of plaque in the arteries.33
Powdered milk containing oxidized cholesterol is added to reduced
fat milk—to give it body—which the American public has
accepted as a healthier choice than whole milk. It was purified, oxidized
cholesterol that Kritchevsky and others used in their experiments
on vegetarian rabbits.
The NHLBI argued that a diet study using whole foods and involving
the whole population would be too difficult to design and too expensive
to carry out. But the NHLBI did have funds available to sponsor the
massive Lipid Research Clinics Coronary Primary Prevention Trial in
which all subjects were placed on a diet low in cholesterol and saturated
fat. Subjects were divided into two groups, one of which took a cholesterol-lowering
drug and the other a placebo. Working behind the scenes, but playing
a key role in both the design and implementation of the trials, was
Dr. Fred Mattson, formerly of Procter and Gamble.
An interesting feature of the study was the fact that a good part
of the trial’s one-hundred-and-fifty-million-dollar budget was
devoted to group sessions in which trained dieticians taught both
groups of study participants how to choose “heart-friendly”
foods—margarine, egg replacements, processed cheese, baked goods
made with vegetable shortenings, in short the vast array of manufactured
foods awaiting consumer acceptance. As both groups received dietary
indoctrination, study results could support no claims about the relation
of diet to heart disease. Nevertheless, when the results were released,
both the popular press and medical journals portrayed the Lipid Research
Clinics trials as the long-sought proof that animal fats were the
cause of heart disease. Rarely mentioned in the press was the ominous
fact that the group taking the cholesterol-lowering drugs had an increase
in deaths from cancer, stroke, violence and suicide.34
LRC researchers claimed that the group taking the cholesterol-lowering
drug had a 17% reduction in the rate of CHD, with an average cholesterol
reduction of 8.5%. This allowed LRC trials Director Basil Rifkind
to claim that “for each 1% reduction in cholesterol, we can
expect a 2% reduction in CHD events.” The statement was widely
circulated even though it represented a completely invalid representation
of the data, especially in light of the fact that when the lipid group
at the University of Maryland analyzed the LRC data, they found no
difference in CHD events between the group taking the drug and those
on the placebo.
A number of clinicians and statisticians participating in a 1984
Lipid Research Clinics Conference workshop, including Michael Oliver
and Richard Krommel, were highly critical of the manner in which the
LRC results had been tabulated and manipulated. The conference, in
fact, went very badly for the NHLBI, with critics of the lipid hypothesis
almost outnumbering supporters. One participant, Dr. Beverly Teter
of the University of Maryland’s lipid group, was delighted with
the state of affairs. “It’s wonderful’” she
remarked to Basil Rifkind, study coordinator, “to finally hear
both sides of the debate. We need more meetings like this” His
reply was terse and sour: “No we don’t.”
National Cholesterol Consensus Conference
Dissenters were again invited to speak briefly at the NHLBI-sponsored
National Cholesterol Consensus Conference held later that year, but
their views were not included in the panel’s report, for the
simple reason that the report was generated by NHLBI staff before
the conference convened. Dr. Teter discovered this when she picked
up some papers by mistake just before the conference began, and found
they contained the consensus report, already written, with just a
few numbers left blank. Kritchevsky represented the lipid hypothesis
camp with a humorous five-minute presentation, full of ditties. Edward
Ahrens, a respected researcher, raised strenuous objections about
the “consensus,” only to be told that he had misinterpreted
his own data, and that if he wanted a conference to come up with different
conclusions, he should pay for it himself.
The 1984 Cholesterol Consensus Conference final report was a whitewash,
containing no mention of the large body of evidence that conflicted
with the lipid hypothesis. One of the blanks was filled with the number
200. The document defined all those with cholesterol levels above
200 mg/dL as “at risk” and called for mass cholesterol
screening, even though the most ardent supporters of the lipid hypothesis
had surmised in print that 240 should be the magic cutoff point. Such
screening would, in fact, need to be carried out on a massive scale
as the federal medical bureaucracy, by picking the number 200, had
defined the vast majority of the American adult population as “at
risk.” The report resurrected the ghost of Norman Jolliffe and
his Prudent Diet by suggesting the avoidance of saturated fat and
cholesterol for all Americans now defined as “at risk,”
and specifically advised the replacement of butter with margarine.
The Consensus Conference also provided a launching pad for the nationwide
National Cholesterol Education Program, which had the stated goal
of “changing physicians’ attitudes.” NHLBI-funded
studies had determined that while the general population had bought
into the lipid hypotheses, and was dutifully using margarine and buying
low-cholesterol foods, the medical profession remained skeptical.
A large “Physicians Kit” was sent to all doctors in America,
compiled in part by the American Pharmaceutical Association, whose
representatives served on the NCEP coordinating committee. Doctors
were taught the importance of cholesterol screening, the advantages
of cholesterol-lowering drugs and the unique benefits of the Prudent
Diet. NCEP materials told every doctor in America to recommend the
use of margarine rather than butter.
Part 1,
2,
3,
4,
References