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..." The cover photo was a frowning face: a breakfast plate palm with two fried eggs as the eyes and a bacon strip for the mouth. Rifkind was quoted saying palm that their results "strongly indicate that the more you lower cholesterol and fat in your diet, the more you reduce your risk of heart disease," a statement that still lacked direct scientific support. The following December, NIH effectively ended the debate with palm a "Consensus Conference." The idea of such a conference is that an expert panel, ideally unbiased, listens to 2 days of testimony and arrives at a conclusion with which everyone agrees. In this case, Rifkind chaired the planning committee, which chose his LRC co-investigator Steinberg to lead the expert panel. The 20 speakers did include a handful of skeptics --including Ahrens, for instance, and cardiologist Michael Oliver of Imperial College in London--who argued that it was unscientific to equate the effects of a drug with the effects of a diet. Steinberg's panel members, however, as Oliver later complained in The Lancet, "were selected to include only experts who would, predictably, say that all levels of blood cholesterol in the United States are too high and should be lowered.
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