Dr. Rhonda Patrick on omega-3: what the evidence says · JRE #1701
SUBJECT: OMEGA-3
Not a true/false call. Every claim is logged with its sources; read the exhibits below.
they were 17% likely to die prematurely of all causes, including accidents
What the evidence says 01 / RECORD
The claim describes a cohort study finding that people with a high omega-3 index (red blood cell EPA+DHA levels) were 17% more likely to die prematurely from all causes, including accidents, than those with a low omega-3 index. The best-known relevant research, the 2018 Framingham Heart Study analysis of the omega-3 index (Harris et al., Journal of Clinical Lipidology), found the opposite direction: participants in the highest omega-3 index quintile (>6.8%) had a 34% lower risk of all-cause mortality compared to those in the lowest quintile (<4.2%), after adjusting for 18 covariates. Numerous other cohort studies and the broader nutrition literature likewise associate a higher omega-3 index with reduced, not increased, all-cause and cardiovascular mortality risk. No published cohort study was identified showing a 17% increased all-cause mortality risk, including from accidents, for people with a high omega-3 index. As stated, the claim appears to invert the direction of the well-established association between omega-3 index and mortality risk, making it misleading. Note: elsewhere in the same conversation the speaker describes the high-versus-low omega-3 comparison as 21% lower cardiovascular mortality risk and roughly five years' longer life expectancy, consistent with the protective (lower risk) direction found in the literature; this suggests the quoted line likely dropped the word 'less' rather than describing a genuinely inverted finding, but as literally stated it misrepresents the direction of the association.