06 Feb “Carbo is really a no-no” says Prof Tim Noakes
World-renowned sports scientist, Tim Noakes, has caused something of a stir in health circles by refuting his own nutritional advice, widely espoused as athletics gospel. In an about-turn, Noakes is blaming food containing carbohydrates for the rise in obesity, diabetes and heart disease.
The sports physician, affiliated to the University of Cape Town and the Sports Science Institute of South Africa, won worldwide acclaim for his book Lore of Running, described as the “Runner’s Bible”, with the fourth edition published in 2003.
Parts of the book, which advocates the benefits of “carbo-loading” and a high-carbohydrate diet, will now be rewritten.
“I used to say ‘carbo-load every day, as much as you can’. Yes, this is a turnaround. Absolutely,” he says, smiling.
The 62-year-old will turn conventional feeding wisdom on its head with claims that fruit juice contains “hidden dangers” and that cereal is one of the worst things parents could feed their children.
That is if you are carbohydrate-resistant, a condition many people suffer from unknowingly, says Noakes.
He says he would like to change the world – one meal at a time.
“The people who have tried everything to lose weight, but cannot, are more than likely carbohydrate-resistant.”
Noakes himself tested positive for carbohydrate resistance a year ago. The condition derives from defective insulin in the body. “Some people, like me, are carb-resistant. We cannot metabolise carbs, so it is changed into fat and can lead to obesity and diabetes if one does not change to a low-carbohydrate diet.”
Noakes lost 15kg since adopting a new diet a year ago. Now his meals are high in protein and fat.
He says his new anti-carbohydrate arguments are based on theories put forward by Gary Taubes in Good Calories, Bad Calories and Why We Get Fat and What to Do About It.
“The results have been incredible. One of my patients lost 30kg over three months.”
But local food health expert Dr Harris Steinman says dieticians had some concerns, including whether the revised diet was applicable to everyone.
Source: TimesLive
Additional Reading
Dairy’s new dawn: too early for real change?
… the dairy industry is concentrating its efforts on “low hanging fruit” such as sodium-reduction to polish its health credentials. Science writer Gary Taubes meticulous examination of the science around …
… and publicity, thanks to the interest around Gary Taubes’s new book, Why We Get Fat And What To Do About It. The author himself has penned this excellent, and lengthy, article in The New York Times. ON …
… not because they lack the motivation. It’s because the advice these anti-obesity initiatives give isn’t going to help, and the science they’re based on is misguided, argues Gary Taubes (left), author …
It isn’t the sin of sloth that makes people fat
Gary Taubes’ fascinating new book, “Why We Get Fat, and What To Do About It” cuts through the scaremongering about an ‘obesity epidemic’ and searches for more rational explanations as to why we’re getting …