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Pitfalls Remain Despite New Trans-Fat Labeling Rules |
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February 21, 2006
As welcome as those changes are, consumers shouldn't assume that all food manufacturers have gotten rid of trans, nor should they assume that all foods with "zero grams trans" are zero threat to the arteries, according to an article published in the forthcoming issue of Nutrition Action Healthletter, which is published by the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI). "Many companies have taken the trans out of their foods, but the harmful fat may still lurk in some pies, microwave popcorns, doughnuts, cake frostings, biscuits, stick margarines, frozen French fries, and other trans traps," said CSPI nutrition director Bonnie Liebman. "If the trans fat line on Nutrition Facts labels is anything but zero, shop for alternatives. But steer clear of foods with more than a gram or two of saturated fat, which is also bad for your heart," Liebman said. Some of the "Trans Traps" identified in Nutrition Action include:
"Don't assume that a food with '0 grams trans' is a gift to your arteries," said Liebman. "Those claims are misleading on foods that aren't also low in saturated fat." Nutrition Action is urging its 900,000 subscribers to ask Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt to take action on several of CSPI's trans-fat policy recommendations. CSPI wants the FDA (which is under HHS) to:
Although small amounts of trans fat occur naturally in beef and dairy foods, about 80 percent of the trans fat in Americans' diets comes from factory-produced partially hydrogenated vegetable oil. Partially hydrogenated oils were once thought to be harmless, but in the last 15 years, medical research has proven that trans fat is even more harmful than saturated fat. While both saturated and trans fat raise LDL, or "bad" cholesterol, thereby raising risk of heart disease, only trans fat lowers HDL, the "good" cholesterol that helps guard against heart disease. Report Your Experience
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