My patients ask me about coconut oil all the time. They see talk shows and websites claiming that it helps with everything from losing weight to preventing diabetes, atherosclerosis, heart disease and a host of other ailments.
If only losing weight and avoiding disease were that easy.
Unfortunately, there just isn’t much credible research to support these claims — not yet anyway. Scientific knowledge is always evolving, and as a dietitian focused on preventing and treating heart disease, I will be watching this issue closely. But for now, here’s what the most current, science-based evidence tells us:
• Coconut oil is a fat, and like all fats, it is very high in calories; you’ll get 117 calories in just one tablespoon of it. Eat a lot of anything that’s high in calories, and you are more likely to gain weight than to lose it.
• Almost 90 percent of the fat in coconut oil is saturated fat — that’s more than twice the saturated fat in lard, which is about 39 percent saturated. The science to date tells us that eating saturated fat harms your heart and blood vessels, rather than helping them.