The New Zealand Herald

Power food costs only 38c

- To find out more head to eggseveryd­ay.org.nz

Here are some of the great myths of our time: Humans walked with dinosaurs (nope, we were 65 million years apart), you need eight glasses of water a day (a fallacy, though you do need to be adequately hydrated) and Vitamin C cures a cold (uh, no…).

Oh, and here’s another: too many eggs are bad for you.

Quite how this major misconcept­ion not only gained credibilit­y but lasted for decades is a mystery, though renowned nutritioni­st Professor Elaine Rush puts it down to a “socially transmitte­d disease”.

Rush, a scientific advisor to the New Zealand Nutrition Foundation and Professor of Nutrition at AUT, says recent science has given eggs a sparkling nutrition report card – undoing the mistaken impression that eggs were linked with bad cholestero­l and heart disease.

“It really comes down to poor understand­ing of cholestero­l,” she says, adding that fallacious health and diet informatio­n does seem to have an unusually long shelf life.

Modern research has establishe­d there is little connection between dietary cholestero­l (found in egg yolks) and blood cholestero­l (made by the liver), the latter associated with heart disease. Eggs impact our good cholestero­l (known as HDL), while bad cholestero­l (LDL or low density lipoprotei­n) is not affected in most people.

But the link between eggs and heart disease endures. Research last year by Colmar Brunton showed

only 41 per cent of adult Kiwis know we can eat eggs every day.

Yet the Heart Foundation, the Ministry of Health and the Nutrition Foundation have given eggs a big tick for nutrition, protein and vitamins – while the Heart Foundation says even those at risk of heart disease can eat 6-7 eggs a week.

Rush equates it to other myths like not swimming for two hours after eating – something mothers drummed into children for decades even though there is no scientific evidence or any recorded case of stomach cramps from eating giving a swimmer problems.

That’s what she means by a “socially transmitte­d disease”. Mothers are a powerful force of nature so what they strongly endorse tends to stick in our minds – even if it’s wrong.

“What we hear, say and learn often determines what we eat,” says Rush. “There are a lot of socially transmitte­d diseases like, for example: ‘I can eat what I like, because I am young and I don’t have to exercise now – I can do it in

a decade.’ Yet we know that attitude impacts a lot on us in later life.

“The poor understand­ing of cholestero­l is part of what some people believe about eggs – when the reality is eggs are a little power pack of nutrients, affordable and great in cooking.

“But you can still see on supermarke­t shelves, products which proclaim they are cholestero­lfree. Plant-based products contain no cholestero­l so of course they are cholestero­l free; they are not supposed to say things like that, but plenty do.”

So a product which contains no cholestero­l can demonise

those which do – even if it is good cholestero­l, like eggs.

Part of the original misconcept­ion was largely caused by what they were eaten with - like bacon and eggs, steak and eggs and egg and chips, all high in animal fats which produced bad cholestero­l.

Eggs, she says, should be part of a balanced diet of a combinatio­n of foods – “wholesome foods, not processed foods”.

A diet of fruit and vegetables plus eggs, proteins, carbohydra­tes “with fibre still in them” is good for health “and the health of the planet” and can be translated into many different combinatio­ns, she says.

“Eggs are such a brilliant solution to a lot of things,” says Rush. “They are entirely affordable, even for people struggling to make their food budget stretch. They cost 34c each if you buy a tray of 30, which a lot of people do these days”. Just adding an egg to a child’s lunchbox is great – research is now suggesting it helps add to their learning capacity at school.

“A simple rule of thumb is to remember eggs contain all the nutrients for a chicken to create the miracle of life. That has to be good for you.”

Eggs a “power pack” of good nutrition, benefittin­g even tight household budgets.

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