
A New Food Pyramid For A Metabolically Unwell Nation
In a peer-reviewed paper published in Nutrients, the authors contend that the traditional carb-heavy diet has not only failed to safeguard public health but may be contributing to rising rates of obesity and Type 2 diabetes. They propose a new low-carbohydrate food pyramid designed for the vast majority of American adults showing signs of metabolic dysfunction.
Their model—built on protein, full-fat dairy, and healthy fats—challenges decades of federal guidance and reignites a long-simmering debate about dietary fat's role in chronic disease.
The original food pyramid, introduced by the U.S. Department of Agriculture in 1992, stacked grains at the base, fruits and vegetables in the middle, and fats and oils at the top.
Though replaced in 2011 by MyPlate—a graphic that uses a dinner plate divided into five food groups (fruits, vegetables, grains, protein foods, and dairy)—the original pyramid's grain-centric emphasis still lingers in public messaging and perception.
The paper calls that framework outdated and potentially harmful. Its 24 authors, including physicians, dietitians, and metabolic researchers, say the traditional model overlooks growing evidence linking high carbohydrate intake to obesity, diabetes, and other chronic illnesses.
In its place, they introduce a striking alternative: the first low-carbohydrate food pyramid. At its base are foods once discouraged—meat, eggs, full-fat dairy, and healthy oils. Non-starchy vegetables and low-sugar fruits occupy the middle tier. At the top are starchy vegetables, higher-sugar fruits, and nuts, recommended only in limited amounts. Foods high in carbohydrates—such as grains, rice, beans, and added sugars—are excluded entirely.
The authors describe the model as both low-carbohydrate and ketogenic—terms they use interchangeably in the paper. A ketogenic diet typically restricts carbohydrate intake to between 20 and 50 grams per day, shifting the body into a fat-burning state called ketosis. A proposed low-carb food pyramid for the metabolically unwell places meat, dairy, and healthy fats at the base, removing grains and sugar entirely.Source: Teicholz et al., Nutrients 2025
But some experts caution against treating all carbohydrates as equal. 'Whole grains are associated with better health outcomes, while refined grains are the opposite,' said Alex Leaf, a nutrition writer with a master's degree.
Current guidelines, he noted, blur that line by suggesting only 'at least half' of grains be whole. 'This framing dilutes what could be a clearer public health message.'
Supporters of the new model argue that most Americans already show signs of metabolic dysfunction and need dietary guidance that reflects that reality.
'This pyramid is for the 88 percent of American adults with metabolic diseases,' Nina Teicholz, the study's lead author, told The Epoch Times. 'The USDA food pyramid was created based on flawed scientific evidence and, when tested in clinical trials, has never been shown to prevent any chronic disease.'
Teicholz and her co-authors assert that the low-carb model aligns more closely with today's science and better suits the nutritional needs of most Americans.
For its advocates, the low-carb approach isn't new—it's a revival of therapeutic diets with deep roots in medical history.
'We have a long tradition in Western medicine for neurological conditions such as epilepsy (and both type 1 and type 2 diabetes treatment since the late 1700s) to be successfully treated without medications with ketogenic diets,' wrote Dr. Anthony Chaffee, a physician and nutritional medicine expert, in an email to The Epoch Times.
He also cited a 2005 Institute of Medicine report, which found no minimum requirement for dietary carbohydrates as long as protein and fat needs are met.
Chaffee pointed to early human history, noting that Arctic populations during the last Ice Age survived entirely on meat and fish, with no access to plant-based carbohydrates. 'People live harm-free without carbohydrates generationally,' he said.
The paper references thousands of clinical trials suggesting that low-carb, high-fat diets can improve insulin sensitivity, reverse Type 2 diabetes, and reduce reliance on medication.
Major health organizations—including the American Diabetes Association, Diabetes Canada, and the European Association for the Study of Diabetes—now endorse low-carb diets as one option for managing Type 2 diabetes.
The American Heart Association has similarly acknowledged that very low-carb diets, compared with moderate-carb diets, 'yield a greater decrease in A1c, more weight loss and use of fewer diabetes medications in individuals with diabetes.'
Hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) is a blood test that reflects average blood sugar levels over the past two to three months and is commonly used to monitor diabetes control.
The underlying biology is well known: Cutting carbs shifts the body into burning fat for fuel, a process called ketosis. This metabolic state also supports weight loss, as fat and protein increase satiety and often reduce overall calorie intake.
The authors say low-carb diets supply all essential nutrients—often in more bioavailable forms than fortified grains. They also cite evidence that the body can generate glucose on its own through gluconeogenesis.
'Many studies have established that people with chronic diseases suffer from carbohydrate intolerance,' the paper states. 'Thus, in the same way that people with gluten intolerance avoid gluten, those with carbohydrate intolerance must limit carbohydrates.'
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