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Home » Doctor Tim Spector: The Shocking New Truth About Weight Loss, Calories & Diets (Transcript)

Doctor Tim Spector: The Shocking New Truth About Weight Loss, Calories & Diets (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of British epidemiologist and medical doctor Tim Spector’s interview on The Diary Of A CEO with host Steven Bartlett on “The Shocking New Truth About Weight Loss, Calories & Diets”, January 2, 2023.

Tim Spector’s Professional Background

STEVEN BARTLETT: Tim, many consider you to be the leading expert on topics relating to gut health and diet and food, etc. But how would you describe your own professional, academic bio. What is that bio in your own words?

TIM SPECTOR: It’s complicated. So I’ve changed form over the years quite a lot. And I’m quite unusual in terms of academic medics who usually stick very strictly to one specialty, all their career and fear to go anywhere else. So I was at medical school, did the usual stuff, then wanted to be a physician, then did rheumatology.

STEVEN BARTLETT: What’s rheumatology?

TIM SPECTOR: Arthritis and bones and joints.

STEVEN BARTLETT: Okay.

TIM SPECTOR: So that was my sub specialty, if you like. But I got interested in epidemiology, which is the study of risk factors in populations where you just look at thousands of people rather than one patient. Really, I switched again to study because I got really interested in the idea that identical twins should be the same. They’re clones, they lived all their life together. All their genes are identical. What makes them different?

Counter to what everyone thought, identical twins often die at different times. They get different diseases, one gets depression, one’s fine. It’s all these differences. So what – that was my sort of conundrum. What makes identical twins different when they have the same – they’ve lived the same lives?

It was only through this sort of search to find this out that I looked at the gut microbes in twins and found they were different. And that really scientifically took me onto this whole new path. From there, I made this sort of leap into nutrition to say, well, now we’ve discovered this whole new science, all this stuff we got wrong about nutrition suddenly makes sense.

So now I would say I’m an epidemiologist who’s really specializing in nutrition and gut health and trying to change the way people think about food.

Understanding Epidemiology

STEVEN BARTLETT: That was a brilliant summary of your career and academic background as a muggle like me. That’s really, you know, new to many of these topics. What I understand is the study of epidemiology is the study of the, like, genetic root causes of disease.

TIM SPECTOR: Not just genetic. So any…

STEVEN BARTLETT: Any cause of disease. Right.

TIM SPECTOR: So the people studying Covid were all epidemiologists tracking a disease, trying to work out who’s getting it, when it’s coming back, how common it is.

STEVEN BARTLETT: Right.

TIM SPECTOR: All these basic things in populations at a big population level.

Personal Drive and Motivation

STEVEN BARTLETT: Right, got you. You’ve also written 800 articles, more than 800 articles on this subject matter. In 2014, you set up the British Gut Microbiome Project, and you’ve written five books on these subject matters. I mean, I’ve read two of them that are sat in front of me here.

I’m really intrigued by the personal story as well, because writing these books and doing all the work you’ve done is a lot. It’s a lot of work. It requires a lot of drive. I mean, this particular book, you said it took almost six years to finish. What is the personal drive behind that? What is driving you to pursue this subject matter?

TIM SPECTOR: You know, I just love getting into a new area, finding out that something that everyone’s been quoting for decades is total BS and was based on some tiny study of nine people. It’s like I’m a detective. And so I’ve always had this obsessional detective. I think going into these areas and at the same time, it’s – that’s coincided with, you know, various events in my life as well that have probably pushed me in certain directions more than other, you know, that I wouldn’t have gone otherwise.

STEVEN BARTLETT: What were those events in your life?

Life-Changing Events

TIM SPECTOR: I guess, you know, I was a pretty lazy student at school. That might surprise some people. We always assume if you’re a professor and you’ve made it, you were a swat at school. But I did the absolute minimum. So I scraped into medical school. Scraped through the first few years of medical school. I spent one year proving you didn’t have to go to any lectures and could still pass, which was a lot of work, actually. At the end, I realized it was harder.

Then, of course, age 21, my father died suddenly overnight with a heart attack. No warning at all. I was off on a skiing holiday with some friends. And I think in retrospect, that event changed me and perhaps gave me, you know, a bit more direction and drive than I would have had. I’m not quite sure, you know, how it would have turned out if he hadn’t died, but to me, him dying at 57 suddenly like that made me think, I need to make more of my life. I could die early, too.

This was something that I think spurred me on to do all this kind of stuff that I didn’t need to do, but I felt perhaps more compulsion to do and maybe also got me interested in this whole idea of genetics to say, well, did he have rotten genes? Have I got the same genes? Am I going to die in my 50s? So I think that looking back now, I think that’s – it’s hard to be absolutely sure, but that seems a reasonable scenario.

STEVEN BARTLETT: I’ve read, and I’ve heard from members of your team that that left you with a feeling, as you’ve kind of said there, that you might also die young. If it is a genetic thing, definitely yes.

TIM SPECTOR: No, I was always telling my kids, you know, this is it, you know, many – how many?