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Friday, 4 October, 2024
HomeTalking PointsAcademics who were challenged by Noakes' respond in SAMJ

Academics who were challenged by Noakes' respond in SAMJ

NoakesAcademics from the universities of Cape Town and Stellenbosch who were criticised by low carb-high fat champion Prof Tim Noakes for advocating a balanced diet, have responded in the SA Medical Journal.

The researchers say they stand by their analysis and results, reports The Times. They also criticise the approach used by Noakes and British public health nutritionist Zoe Harcombe.

Noakes and Harcombe said they had found 14 errors in research conducted at Stellenbosch University and University of Cape Town‚ which was published in the journal PLOS One. They said the researchers did not abide by their own research criteria. “When these 14 material errors are corrected‚ the conclusion of the paper is reversed and the low-carb diet outperforms the high-carb diets for weight loss‚” said Noakes.

But the researchers said Noakes and Harcombe had got it wrong except in one respect. And even when they adjusted their analysis to account for this‚ the outcome remained the same: a balanced diet delivers the same results as a low-carbohydrate diet. In their letter to the medical journal‚ the researchers say criticisms by Noakes and Harcombe “show lack of understanding of current methods in evidence synthesis” and make a “common mistake”.

According to the report, they add: “Our results show that the estimated average weight loss after three to six months in overweight and obese non-diabetics in 13 individual trials ranged from a loss of 2.65kg-10.2kg in people randomised to low-carbohydrate diets‚ and 2.65kg-9.4kg with isoenergetic balanced diets.

“The average difference in weight loss between the dietary groups was 780g‚ a clinically unimportant difference‚ as was the average difference of 480g after one to two years.”

[link url="http://www.timeslive.co.za/sundaytimes/lifestyle/2017/02/28/Noakes-gets-a-fat-lip-in-Banting-wars-latest-battle"]The Times report[/link]
[link url="http://www.samj.org.za/index.php/samj/article/view/11832/7991"]SA Medical Journal full correspondence[/link]

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