People who avoid carbohydrates and eat more fat, even saturated
fat, lose more body fat and have few cardiovascular risks than people who
follow the low-fat diet that health authorities have favored for decades, a
major new study shows. The study was financed by the National Institutes of
Health and published in the Annals of Internal Medicine. It included a racially
diverse group of 150 men and women — a rarity in clinical nutrition studies —
who were assigned to follow diets for one year that limited either the amount
of carbs or fat that they could eat, but not overall calories.
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