The $50,000 Secret: How the Sugar Industry Paid Harvard to Blame Fat
UCSF researchers revealed that the sugar industry paid Harvard scientists in the 1960s to blame fat for heart disease, hiding the dangers of sugar for decades.
They shook hands, but one side held a hidden agenda. It's now clear that the global diet was shaped not just by science, but by a $50,000 payoff. In the 1960s, the sugar industry bribed Harvard scientists to divert the blame for heart disease away from sugar and toward fat.
Sugar Industry Influence on Harvard Research
According to UCSF researchers who uncovered internal industry documents, the Sugar Research Foundation paid three Harvard scientists the equivalent of $50,000 today. Their mission? Publish a literature review that downplayed the link between sugar consumption and heart health. They pointed the finger at cholesterol and saturated fat instead.
The funding and the industry's direct involvement weren't disclosed in the final paper. For decades, this biased research influenced national nutrition guidelines and public perception, leading to a worldwide surge in sugar consumption while fat was demonized.
Uncovering the Legacy of Misinformation
This discovery highlights a dark chapter in the history of corporate social responsibility. By hand-picking the data, the industry managed to stall the conversation about sugar's risks for nearly half a century. UCSF's report emphasizes that current nutrition policies are still grappling with the fallout from these manipulated studies.
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