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The researchers note in their paper that when they didn't get the numbers they wanted, they analyzed the data from the mashed potato, baked potato, boiled potato, and French fries questions all together. This gave them numbers they wanted.
- Eating four or more servings of French fries per week correlated to a 7 to 27 percent greater risk of being diagnosed with high blood pressure.
- Eating four or more servings of mashed, boiled, or baked potatoes per week actually could have been related to lower blood pressure or maybe higher blood pressure, that is, the confidence interval for the data was from 0.96 to 1.28, so the team just reported an average 11 percent increase in risk.
- Eating potato chips could have resulted in a 13 percent reduction in blood pressure, or maybe up to an 8 percent increase, so they left that one out. Men who ate potato chips actually had a lower risk of hypertension. Presumably, men eating too many potato chips could develop hypotension.

Why would researchers from these institutions look at this question in the first place?
The US school lunch program, the Health, Hunger-Free Act of 2010 initially banned payments for French fries to school cafeterias, but after protests by schools, French fries had been reinstated. The Institute of Medicine had issued a report in 2015 recommending the inclusion of potatoes in meals because they are a good source of potassium.
"Horrors! We can't have people eating potatoes!" the researchers may have thought, so they began combing through data sets for evidence against spuds. Even when they sliced and diced the data from tens of thousands of people in creative ways, they weren't able to find any statistically valid evidence that any form of potatoes might be associated with high blood pressure in large populations of people, and that was for French fries. To fudge the data so they could recommend against other kinds of potatoes, they reported a "trend" toward higher hypertension rates, but even then they were left lower rates of high blood pressure for men who eat potato chips.
READ Craving Pasta And Potato Chips On An Empty Stomach?
That doesn't make any sense. Fresh potatoes boiled and served without butter are bad. Potatoes fried in trans- fats (as most of them were for most of the years of this study) and left on the shelf to become dry and rancid except for the fact they are injected with preservatives and salt, those are good. It's a little like the study in North Carolina that found that high blood pressure during pregnancy was highest in women who consumed a diet emphasizing collard greens, coleslaw or cabbage, red meats, fried chicken and fish, processed meats, cornbread or hushpuppies, eggs or egg biscuits, gravy, whole milk, and vitamin C-rich drinks such as Kool-Aid and Hi-C. One conclusion is that collard greens cause high blood pressure. Another is that these are the foods favored by African-American women and maybe outreach to African-American women for pregnancy support would enhance their health.
Just because a study comes from Harvard doesn't mean it's valid. The bottom line from this study is, scientists haven't discovered anything other than "French fries aren't good for you." We already knew that. Moreover, the kind of data analysis in food studies never offers a prediction for individual health. It's more about deciding policy, what should go into a school lunch, what should be covered by the Women, Infants, and Children food program. You can eat potatoes without worry, but don't overdo the fries.
- Borgi L, Rimm EB, Willett WC, Forman JP. Potato intake and incidence of hypertension: results from three prospective US cohort studies. BMJ. 2016 May 17. 353:i2351. doi: 10.1136/bmj.i2351. PMID: 27189229.
- Martin CL, Sotres-Alvarez D, Siega-Riz AM. Maternal Dietary Patterns during the Second Trimester Are Associated with Preterm Birth. J Nutr. 2015 Aug
- 145(8):1857-64. doi: 10.3945/jn.115.212019. Epub 2015 Jun 17. PMID: 26084362.
- Photo courtesy of iamrenny: www.flickr.com/photos/100005244@N06/9462153836/
- Photo courtesy of taransa: www.flickr.com/photos/taransa/5499878925/
- Photo courtesy of iamrenny: www.flickr.com/photos/100005244@N06/9462153836/
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