Statement
February 18, 2004
The Controversy Over Dr.
Atkins' Health
By Neal Barnard, M.D.
The Atkins diet phenomenon has spread like a virus across North
America, Europe, and elsewhere. It has convinced millions of people
to buy into two dangerous notions: that avoiding carbohydrates is
the key to weight loss, and that high-fat, high-cholesterol foods
pose essentially no risk.
Serious health problems and deaths have occurred in individuals
following the diet. For example, the Southern Medical Journal
reported the case of a sixteen-year-old Missouri girl who died while
following a low-carbohydrate diet. In the report, her physicians
described the ways the diet may have contributed to the disordered
cardiac rhythm that killed her. Jody Gorran of Delray Beach, Florida,
went on the diet, only to find that his cholesterol level skyrocketed.
He developed chest pain and needed urgent heart surgery. And in
2001, the American Heart Association issued a warning that low-carbohydrate
diets are likely to contribute to heart and kidney disease.
The principal spokesperson for the diet was Robert C. Atkins himself,
the controversial doctor whose 1972 book described how carbohydrate
avoidance cured his own weight problem. In subsequent years and
even after his death, the Atkins organization has used details of
Dr. Atkins’ health condition as a key part of its marketing
strategy. As the Wall Street Journal put it, “Throughout his
life, Dr. Atkins was the public face of the eating plan he espoused
and often spoke publicly about his own eating habits and health.”
Dr. Atkins discussed his medical history in media interviews, and
Atkins Nutritionals posted details of his cardiac history on its
Web site. In particular, it described his cardiomyopathy—a
diseased heart muscle that he attributed to a viral infection—as
well as a cardiac arrest that apparently occurred as a result.
The Atkins site also described tests of Dr. Atkins’ coronary
arteries, saying he had an angiogram at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital
in April 2001 that showed normal coronary arteries.
Why was the Atkins company providing so much personal detail about
Dr. Atkins’ medical status? Because doctors and health organizations
have cautioned Atkins dieters that high-fat, high-cholesterol foods
can lead to heart disease. In the intense marketing of commercial
diet products, Atkins and his company have tried to convince dieters
to set those concerns aside.
In a statement on April 25, 2002, Dr. Atkins’ personal physician
said this about Dr. Atkins: “Clearly, his own nutritional
protocols have left him, at the age of 71, with an extraordinarily
healthy cardiovascular system.” In other words, not only was
Dr. Atkins in great health, dieters were told, but his diet—which
he had followed for decades—could take the credit for it.
Recently, a physician sent PCRM a copy of some medical examiner’s
notes related to Dr. Atkins’ death. This physician, who is
not a member of PCRM, obtained the notes from the New York City
Medical Examiner’s Office. The notes were not a hospital chart
nor an autopsy—Mrs. Atkins had apparently declined to have
an autopsy done. The medical examiner had simply noted Atkins’
weight at the time of his death, inspected his external surfaces,
and noted a few aspects of his history. However, some notes suggested
that Dr. Atkins had heart problems that went beyond the viral cardiomyopathy
to which he had admitted.
Reporters picked up on the story; they wondered whether the Atkins
organization had distorted Atkins’ health profile in order
to make the diet appear safe. Although PCRM had not requested or
received the report from the medical examiner, we became the principal
media contact about it.
Then, on Tuesday, February 10, 2004, Mrs. Atkins released a statement
clarifying details about her husband’s health. She confirmed
that, in fact, he did have coronary artery disease. In particular,
she said that Dr. Atkins “…did have some progression
of his coronary artery disease in the last three years of his life
including some new blockage of a secondary artery that was remedied
during this admission….” Artery blockages of this type
are typically caused by high-fat, high-cholesterol diets, smoking,
and other lifestyle factors.
It must be emphasized that it is always a matter of concern when
elements of an individual’s medical history become a matter
for public discussion. In this case, the Atkins company—and
Dr. Atkins himself—made a major issue of his health and exploited
his seemingly robust cardiac status as a means of allaying fears
about the fatty diet he espoused.
Many health authorities have been shocked and greatly troubled
by the spread of the Atkins phenomenon. People around the world
have been lulled into complacency about cardiovascular health. Disregarding
cautions about saturated fat and cholesterol, they are digging into
steaks, pork chops, and cheese and shying away from fruits, legumes,
and whole grains, with little regard for their long-term health.
It is disturbing that Dr. Atkins may have been less than honest
with the public in such a way as to spread a message that many doctors
and health organizations say is dangerous.
In the public discussion of this issue, we wish to underscore that
no hospital or clinical medical records were obtained, discussed,
or publicized and that no autopsy was performed on Dr. Atkins. The
new revelations consist only of brief notes from an external inspection
of Atkins’ body by the medical examiner, followed by new revelations
by his widow. Our only goal in discussing these issues is to curtail
a major public health threat.
If the new revelations about Dr. Atkins’ cardiac problems
end the charade that fatty, high-cholesterol foods can give us an
“extraordinarily healthy cardiovascular system” and
have no health consequences—and if the emergence of the truth
can prevent further deaths and illnesses—then the public health
may have been served at last.
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