Anthony Chaffee, MD

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Anthony Chaffee, MD

Anthony Chaffee, MD

@anthony_chaffee

Pro rugby player turned MD Refugee camp Dr in Bangladesh International speaker IG (370k) & YouTube (500k): AnthonyChaffeeMD Top 10 Podcast: The Plant Free MD

Katılım Nisan 2016
142 Takip Edilen36.1K Takipçiler
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
Dr Idz Apologizes to Me 🤝
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
Last Chance To Sign Up For February! I have a new 90 day Carnivore Challenge and VIP group on Mighty networks for those who need added support and information on how to optimize their health on a Carnivore diet and get long-term, lasting success. We only start groups on the first of each month, and sign up for the month ends at midnight Pacific time on February 5th! In this challenge I have over 70 new, never before seen videos that I have put together to walk you through all the different issues that might come up when getting started or going forward with a carnivore diet, as well as weekly calls and Q&A sessions with me for added support. If you want to stay on after the 90 days, but still get all the benefits of the challenge group, you can do this at a discounted rate for as long as you wish. There's also a VIP level that you can join to get all the benefits of the challenge group but also be able DM me directly on the Telegram app if you need more one-on-one support with me. If that's something that would interest you or someone you know, check out Dr Anthony Chaffee's 90 day Carnivore Challenge on Mighty Networks, use the link below: …ee-s-90-day-carnivore-challenge.mn.co/landing/ #carnivore #weightloss #nutrition #diet
Anthony Chaffee, MD tweet media
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‎ن nazarene ‎ن
‎ن nazarene ‎ن@goingoffline209·
Elite globalists know veganism harms people (depopulation). Note Epstein’s reply that PLANTS have a detrimental evolutionary process (oxalates, lectins etc?). Hence why the Carnivore diet heals people. @AlpacaAurelius @SBakerMD @anthony_chaffee
🎙️ Muhbir@ajansmuhbir1923

Norveç Veliaht Prensesi Mette-Marit’in, Jeffrey Epstein’e gönderdiği mail ortaya çıktı: “Yakında insanlar artık yeni insanlar yapamayacak… Onları laboratuvarda tasarlayabileceğiz.”

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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
Thank you very much! That level of fat and protein will probably be pretty good, but you'll likely do better with more fat. You're not going to get protein poisoning at that level most likely, but you might find that you feel and perform much better with higher levels of fat, like down to a 70-30 ground beef for instance. Even fattier than that can be helpful as well depending on your specific demands
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Graeme
Graeme@Graeme91eire·
@anthony_chaffee Love the new podcast doc with Mike. I see you talking about protein posion , im 6"2 , 34 and about 87kg . How much protein would be to much do you think. Im eating about 1.5kg of 80/20 ground beef daily. Does that sound about right or i should dial it back a bit, boxing and gym 2
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
I don't know who made the blinding error, just what was said originally. Dave is a nice guy and absolutely acts diplomatically to help save the face of others, but I have no rain not to take his word on this. However, the fact that they got 100% of the interpretations wrong for 100 subjects goes beyond the realm of statistical possibility, and then refusing to repeat the work when offered a second payment raises even more red flags about their integrity and honesty. Their own interpretation of 8 individuals from the study who separately submitted their scans a second time through their doctors all showed much better results. Why would they use a one protocol for this study and then completely separate protocols for every other scan they interpret? All of these things lining up by coincidence it's just absurd on its face.
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Marijn Raeven
Marijn Raeven@Marijn3D·
@anthony_chaffee So you think the actual error was made by Cleerly, and Dave is lying about the fact that his own PI and co-author Budoff made the error? To be diplomatic? And no, I don't think they made 100 separate mistakes. They just used one (potentially wrong) protocol for all 200 scans.
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
Just amazing how corrupt the academic system is, even in so-called independent testing facilities such as Cleerly, who fraudulently unblinded the lean mass hyperresponders study data and then altered it, making it appear as if there was an increase in cardiovascular plaque when in fact there was an overall reduction in the entire cohort. Just amazing as they were being paid to do an objective job, but for some reason they decided to corrupt the data for their own purposes. These people should be sued into oblivion, and hopefully will be. So again to everybody who thinks that ketogenic and ketogenic carnivore diets with so-called elevated LDL and total cholesterol but high HDL, low triglycerides, and massive improvement in every other biomarker and physical marker are somehow at risk for developing cardiovascular disease, the evidence is in: ketogenic diets, like a carnivore diet, reduce arterial plaque, even with elevated LDL and ApoB. And in fact, both data sets, even the corrupted one, show that there is NO association whatsoever between plaque progression and LDL or ApoB. None. Zip. Zilch. Nada. Sorry cholesterol bros, you're wrong again!
Nick Norwitz MD PhD@nicknorwitz

I feel like I can breathe again! Get ready for a rant I've been waiting to let loose for a year. 🔥 First, here are the core facts about the Keto-CTA study to date: 🚨PART 1: THE FACTS 👉From its inception, Dave, Adrian, and I, being associated via the funding body (the Citizen Science Foundation), were blinded to certain elements of the data. The purpose was to protect the integrity of the project. 👉The profound irony is this also meant that, prior to publication, we couldn’t perform certain ‘checks’ and had to trust others to do so. Speaking for myself, it’s now painfully clear that was a mistake. 👉However, after the April 7th paper was published, "anomalies" (if I’m being polite) were noted with the Cleerly scans. 👉 Cleerly refused to redo the scans, despite multiple requests and being offered payment. 👉Importantly, and to my dismay, the original Cleerly reads were UNBLINDED, introducing a major source of bias. 👉At additional expensive, the scans were rerun through HeartFlow in a properly blinded analysis, and via the pre-specified QAngio methodology. 👉HeartFlow and QAngio agreed with each other and were discordant with the Cleerly analysis. 🚨PART 2: THE NEW NEWS What happened next was brilliant! And, truth be told, I only found out about it yesterday. For my own legal security – and at the recommendation of my friend and colleague who was taking the worst of it on the back end – there was a lot I didn’t know until this point. This is what happened… 👉Several participants independently submitted their scans to Cleerly as a workaround to obtain a truly blinded Cleerly analysis. 👉Those results were highly discordant with the original Cleerly analysis and aligned with the HeartFlow and QAngio analyses. The difference between the original Cleerly scans and the repeated blinded scans was massive! The original unblinded analysis reported a +20.9 mm³ mean increase in non-calcified plaque volume, while the blinded repeats showed a -5.1 mm³ mean decrease. I mean, MY GOODNESS!!! I basically did a backflip when I found out (@realDaveFeldman can release the footage of the meeting at his discretion) If you’ve been following the KETO-CTA story up to this point, the consistency of the findings across HeartFlow, QAngio, and now Cleerly itself (based on the blinded reads) should bring much-needed clarity. The converging results fundamentally reshape the narrative and directly refute the claim that the study demonstrates massive, unprecedented plaque progression in LMHR and near-LMHR And, after all that, the fact remains that every single analysis found no association between ApoB levels or LDL exposure and plaque progression. LET ME REPEAT: And, after all that, the fact remains that every single analysis found no association between ApoB levels or LDL exposure and plaque progression. 🚨 PART 3: NEXT STEPS In terms of next steps, I’ll quote my colleague Dave: “we have already taken steps regarding last year’s paper that contained the original Cleerly analysis.” I’ll leave it at that for now so I don’t overstep. But let me say, that’s the highly polished and diplomatic version. I certainly have stronger words about this process, but perhaps now is not the time. Where I will speak more plainly is in regard to the behavior of some detractors over the past several months. In a few cases, I’ve reached out privately to individuals who should know better, gently suggesting that, in light of the new evidence (Heartflow and QAngio), it might be time to reassess or lighten the abuse. For anyone sincerely paying attention—and for anyone with even modest insight into how scientific bureaucracy works—I hope it is now clear why we were not more forthcoming earlier in the process. 👉And trust me when I say, it’s never been harder to keep my mouth shut about anything in my life. I've accumulated more cortisol AUC in the last 11 months then in the entirety of my life to age 29. 🚨PART 4: SPEAKING FOR MYSELF Speaking for myself, I have been beyond frustrated and disappointed. At multiple stages, it has become painfully—and increasingly—clear to me that our scientific system, which presents itself as purely meritocratic, is far more political than most would imagine. These are difficult words for me to say as someone who comes from a family of doctors and scientists and who has spent his entire career in academic institutions—multiple Ivy League universities @Harvard @dartmouth, two doctorates, and top-ranked institutions in both England @UniofOxford and the United States. I was groomed in conventional academic medicine. If I have any bias, it’s to see the best in conventional medicine and modern scientific process. Most of my loved ones have made their living within this ecosystem. But when you pull back the curtain, the reality can be sobering. To those detractors who have verbally abused or personally attacked my colleagues and me—perhaps out of naivete or ignorance—I will say this plainly: it’s time to check yourselves. Too many people have spoken out of turn, seemingly to score points rather than to engage thoughtfully with an evolving scientific story—one that has been evolving for quite some time. When the HeartFlow and QAngio analyses were released, that alone should have prompted serious reflection. At minimum, it should have raised questions. The subsequent silence from some of the loudest critics, after they believed they had “won” a round, is telling. Science deserves better than scorekeeping. It deserves intellectual honesty and the humility to update one’s position when new evidence emerges. At times over the last year, the lack of curiosity, sincerity, and intellectual honesty from people who I tried to give the benefit of the doubt has made me want to vomit. And trust me when I say, this isn’t a victory lap. This is a promise. We are now over a hurdle that I have been waiting for almost a year. And frankly, I am ready to run headfirst through brick walls with my colleagues and friends by my side — those whom I trust to pursue the hard questions and the honest answers — and do so indefinitely using the tools and resources at our disposal, even when, and especially when, the scales are improperly tilted against us. Lucky for us, the intellectual environment is expanding — the black box of academia beginning to crack open. So someone hand me a crowbar, because I’m committing myself fully and completely, over the coming years and decades, to prying it wide open. Not gently. Not quietly. But decisively. My final words of this verbose dissertation? LFG

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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
@lb_412 Great, provide a large scale human RCT that shows a cause and effect relationship between LDL and cvd then.
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
@naturalguy @ProfTimNoakes This issue has been settled for decades, it's just the propaganda keeping it alive. Every single large scale RCT in humans has shown that there is no connection whatsoever between LDL or Saturdays fat and CVD. This is just another nail on the coffin.
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
Every single RCT on the subject of LDL and cvd disagree with you. And the fact is that doing Ketogenic diets help prevent and reverse all of the other risk factors that you mentioned apart from smoking. So how is it that a diet that prevents the leading causes and risk factors for heart disease at the same time causes heart disease?
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Apparel Manufacturer Guy
Homozygous FH kills otherwise healthy individuals in their 30s and 40s. LDL is causal… it just takes 50-80 years to become an issue in most otherwise healthy people. Add in high blood pressure, insulin resistance, smoking, etc if you want to hit the lower band of that age range.
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
They says themselves that the data was unblinded when it wasn't supposed to be, Dave saying that now is a new amendment, and likely then just trying to be diplomatic. Regardless, they said otherwise originally. So you think that getting the measurements on all 100 scans was just a mistake and human error? Either you're assuming that entire company is so mentally handicapped to the point that they are completely incapable of getting even one measurement right, or you're mentally deficient yourself.
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Marijn Raeven
Marijn Raeven@Marijn3D·
@anthony_chaffee If that's true (do you have a source?), your claim that they altered the data is still pure speculation. Human error (e.g. using a different procedure than the one agreed upon) seems much more likely.
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
That's good to know about that clarification on blinding, however that doesn't explain how they completely botched the findings on all or nearly all 100 subject's scans though, and then refused to check their work. That is unacceptable for the type of research they are being paid to do, which greatly influences policy and medical guidelines. They have a lot to answer for here.
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Jeffry Gerber, MD
Jeffry Gerber, MD@JeffryGerberMD·
@anthony_chaffee @Cleerlyhealth @anthony_chaffee, @realDaveFeldman has provided clarification. Still it would be nice to hear directly from @Cleerlyhealth as to why they refused to do a reanalysis. x.com/realDaveFeldma…
Dave Feldman@realDaveFeldman

An important clarification, @anthony_chaffee -- To our knowledge, Cleerly did not unblind any scans, rather, Cleerly received scans that were not fully blinded. They contained metadata of the chronological order for the scans – which is normally blinded in longitudinal imaging studies (understandably). Jen Isenhart interviewed Dr. Budoff for the documentary on this study and he shared this was an error on the part of his lab, not on Cleerly. That said, aside from how this happened, it's why we've been interested in their performing a fully blinded analysis given 1️⃣ this is, and always has been, the original expectation of all longitudinal analyses, and 2️⃣ the anomaly of their dataset having not a single regressor, despite all other datasets in longitudinal imaging (both in and outside our study) containing regressors (even in placebo groups).

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Mike julian
Mike julian@Mikejulian26·
@realDaveFeldman @anthony_chaffee So the gripe is that the chronological order of the scans was unblinded? Isn’t that an absolute necessity in order to determine progression or regression over the given time period between scans for each subject?
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Dave Feldman
Dave Feldman@realDaveFeldman·
An important clarification, @anthony_chaffee -- To our knowledge, Cleerly did not unblind any scans, rather, Cleerly received scans that were not fully blinded. They contained metadata of the chronological order for the scans – which is normally blinded in longitudinal imaging studies (understandably). Jen Isenhart interviewed Dr. Budoff for the documentary on this study and he shared this was an error on the part of his lab, not on Cleerly. That said, aside from how this happened, it's why we've been interested in their performing a fully blinded analysis given 1️⃣ this is, and always has been, the original expectation of all longitudinal analyses, and 2️⃣ the anomaly of their dataset having not a single regressor, despite all other datasets in longitudinal imaging (both in and outside our study) containing regressors (even in placebo groups).
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee

Just amazing how corrupt the academic system is, even in so-called independent testing facilities such as Cleerly, who fraudulently unblinded the lean mass hyperresponders study data and then altered it, making it appear as if there was an increase in cardiovascular plaque when in fact there was an overall reduction in the entire cohort. Just amazing as they were being paid to do an objective job, but for some reason they decided to corrupt the data for their own purposes. These people should be sued into oblivion, and hopefully will be. So again to everybody who thinks that ketogenic and ketogenic carnivore diets with so-called elevated LDL and total cholesterol but high HDL, low triglycerides, and massive improvement in every other biomarker and physical marker are somehow at risk for developing cardiovascular disease, the evidence is in: ketogenic diets, like a carnivore diet, reduce arterial plaque, even with elevated LDL and ApoB. And in fact, both data sets, even the corrupted one, show that there is NO association whatsoever between plaque progression and LDL or ApoB. None. Zip. Zilch. Nada. Sorry cholesterol bros, you're wrong again!

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Marijn Raeven
Marijn Raeven@Marijn3D·
@realDaveFeldman @anthony_chaffee Did Budoff sign off on the unblinded analysis? Or did he specifically agree to do a blinded analysis? Because in that case, Cleerly seems contractually obligated to redo the work.
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
That's good to know about that clarification on blinding, however that doesn't explain how they completely botched the findings on all our nearly all 100 subject scans though, and then refused to check their work. That is unacceptable for the type of research they are being paid to do, which greatly influences policy and medical guidelines. They have a lot to account for here.
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
@Marijn3D Wrong. They agreed to keep the data blinded and they surreptitiously unblinded it without anyone's knowledge. The reevaluation was done completely blinded.
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Marijn Raeven
Marijn Raeven@Marijn3D·
@anthony_chaffee Pure speculation, and seems extremely unlikely. A more logical explanation is that they used an approach that has to be unblinded by design.
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
@KASimplyHuman That's funny that people are doing hit pieces on me on the first place 😂 What was she trying to say?
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Simply Human
Simply Human@KASimplyHuman·
@anthony_chaffee I recently got into a debate with a certain writer who did a hit piece on you regarding ancient people’s access to carbohydrates. She was very deceitful and is going to write another article on “Beyond Carnivore”. I think this is prep for a book. I am Carnivore 6 1/2 years
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Jeffrey T. Hare
Jeffrey T. Hare@jeffreythare·
@anthony_chaffee Another data point. I had Cleerly CTA Feb 2025 and Dec 2025 and my plaque went up supposedly. Was devastated when I got the follow up results. Is it just the AI analysis that is flawed? Could i have a reanalysis of the images and get decent data?
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
They unblinded a blinded study, pretended not to, and then gave false interpretations of the data for 100 people that they themselves showed was incorrect when individually tested later. They flat refused to rerun the data when blatant issues emerged, even when offered full payment. If a mistake happened in the data interpretation once or twice, that's still pretty poor when you are hiring them to give an accurate objective account of the data for a scientific study that may influence medical practice, but doing that 100 times "on accident"? Give me a break. As to academics in general: "The case against science is straightforward: much of the scientific literature, perhaps half, may simply be untrue. Afflicted by studies with small sample sizes, tiny effects, invalid exploratory analyses, and flagrant conflicts of interest, together with an obsession for pursuing fashionable trends of dubious importance, science has taken a turn towards darkness.” - Dr Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of the lancet “It is simply no longer possible to believe much of the clinical research that is published, or to rely on the judgment of trusted physicians or authoritative medical guidelines. I take no pleasure in this conclusion, which I reached slowly and reluctantly over my two decades as an editor of The New England Journal of Medicine.” - Marcia Angell (Former Editor‑in‑Chief, NEJM) So it's not just me saying this about academia, it's the heads of the top medical journals in the world.
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
They unblinded a blinded study, pretended not to, and then gave false interpretations of the data for 100 people that they themselves showed was incorrect when individually tested later. They flat refused to rerun the data when blatant issues emerged, even when offered full payment. If a mistake happened in the data interpretation once or twice, that's still pretty poor when you are hiring them to give an accurate objective account of the data, but doing that 100 times? Give me a break.
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
Do you need carbohydrates to thrive, or even survive? This really shouldn't be a debate anymore, the evidence is overwhelming against it. Humans have not only survived but thrived in much harsher and life-threatening conditions, such as the ice ages, for 99% of human existence without carbohydrates. So as far as survival, that's a non-starter to suggest that you need carbohydrates. As for thriving, again the evidence is overwhelming that carbohydrates cause direct harm, without any added benefit as long as you are getting adequate nutrition and energy from other sources, such as our primary diet of fatty meat. You can even see this in the genome, where humans didn't even have the genetic code to make amylase in any abundance prior to the agricultural revolution about 10,000 years ago. Amylase is the enzyme that breaks down starch, plant carbohydrates. So if we didn't even have the genetic ability to break down starch and carbohydrates from plants, we clearly weren't eating them or requiring them. The evidence goes on and on, as you will see in this video, so as you can see the evidence is thoroughly against carbohydrates being necessary or beneficial in the human diet. This is of course not an exhaustive list of evidence against eating carbohydrates. What are some other reasons and evidence that you can think of as well? #carnivore #keto #healthy #health #nutrition
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Anthony Chaffee, MD
Anthony Chaffee, MD@anthony_chaffee·
Raw vs Cooked meat on carnivore. The age old question. What are the facts and nuance? Is it risky to eat raw, or can it level up your carnivore diet experience? Let's look at the facts. #carnivore #raw #healthy #health #nutrition
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