Less meat, more plants: top US heart body’s diet advice at odds with MahaAmerican Heart Association bucks Trump administration line to suggest prioritizing plant-based protein over meat In contrast to the federal government’s recommendation of use of beef tallow and consumption of red meat, the AHA pushed for plant-based proteins such as legumes, nuts and seeds. Photograph: Allen J Schaben/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images The American Heart Association’s new nutrition guidance, released on Tuesday, emphasizes a dietary pattern rich in vegetables, fruits and whole grains, prioritizing plant-based protein over meat. It also suggests limiting the use of sugar, salt and ultra-processed foods and replacing full fat dairy with non-fat and low-fat dairy. Donald Trump earlier this year announced a new slate of dietary guidelines that recommended Americans eat more protein from both animal and plant sources, and encouraged the consumption of full-fat dairy. In contrast to the federal government’s recommendation of use of beef tallow and consumption of red meat, the AHA is pushing for plant-based proteins such as legumes, nuts and seeds, choosing low-fat or fat-free dairy, and, when consuming red meat, selecting lean cuts, avoiding processed forms and keeping portions small. The Trump administration and health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr’s push to “Make America healthy again” has focused on the removal of synthetic dyes, other chemical ingredients, ultra-processed foods, consumption of less sugar and seed oils. The AHA also suggests Americans choose sources of unsaturated fats, avoid ultraprocessed foods and minimize intake of added sugars in beverages and foods. The organization recommended Americans to prepare foods with minimal or no salt, and limit the intake of alcohol. The guidance also recommended children can and should begin following a heart-healthy dietary pattern starting at one year old. The AHA’s guidance was aligned with the US Food and Drug Administration’s dietary guidelines on major issues, a spokesperson from the FDA said, adding they looked forward to working collaboratively with AHA. The AHA, which is the nation’s oldest and largest voluntary organization dedicated to fighting heart disease and stroke, releases dietary guidance about every five years to promote cardiovascular health. ARTICLE SOURCE: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/apr/01/american-heart-association-dietary-guidelines-maha
Hi I've been doing carnivore almost 6 month and got worse triglycerides,,
I'm 36F, 5'4. Before carnivore, I was doing keto (barely no meat, keto bread/keto dessert/daily/nuts/avocado/olive oil and vegetable based) and Triglyceride was perfect like around 50-60, HDL 80, ldl 180
After carnivore, fatty beef/lamb 1lb, butter and sometimes salmon or sardine (my macro 70/30, fat 130g protein 100-110g). After 4 month, I gained 10lb even I was normal weight but now little got fatty, Triglyceride sky high 165, HDL decreased to 70 and ldl 400 (15hr fasted)
I heard coffee can affect on triglyceride so ditched coffee and butter (I thought I'm eating too much fat) and worse blood work month after.. HDL dropped to 60, Triglycerides 210 and LDL 500..
So I saw keto doctor, he said I might eating too much protein, which could be cause, so I switched to 80/20 macro (fat 150g/protein 70-80g). No weightloss, waiting another blood work in a month.
I'm really concerned about the increasing triglyceride/dropping HDL even though I'm not eating any carb. FYI, my fasting glucose is 74, Hba1c 5.1, hscrp 0.5 and no insulin resistance.
Don't really know what am i doing wrong. Any comment would be appreciated. Thanks