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The Peter Attia Drive

#368 ‒ The protein debate: optimal intake, limitations of the RDA, whether high-protein intake is harmful, and how to think about processed foods | David Allison, Ph.D.

The Peter Attia Drive

Peter Attia, MD

Health & Fitness, Medicine, Fitness

4.77.3K Ratings

🗓️ 13 October 2025

⏱️ 109 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

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David Allison is a world-renowned scientist and award-winning scientific writer who has spent more than two decades at the forefront of obesity research. In this episode, David joins for his third appearance on The Drive to bring clarity to one of the most contentious topics in modern nutrition—protein. He explores the historical pattern of demonizing macronutrients, the origins and limitations of the RDA for protein, and what the evidence really says about higher protein intake, muscle protein synthesis, and whether concerns about harm are supported by actual data. He also discusses the challenges of conducting rigorous nutrition studies, including the limits of epidemiology and crossover designs, as well as conflicts of interest in nutrition science and why transparency around data, methods, and logic matter more than funding sources. The episode closes with a discussion on processed and ultra-processed foods, the public health challenges of tackling obesity, and whether future solutions may depend more on drugs like GLP-1 agonists or broader societal changes. This is part one of a two-part deep dive on protein, setting the stage for next week's conversation with Rhonda Patrick.

We discuss:

  • The cyclical pattern of demonizing different macronutrients in nutrition and why protein has recently become the latest target of controversy [3:15];
  • The origin and limits of the protein RDA: from survival thresholds to modern optimization [6:30];
  • Trust vs. trustworthiness: why data, methods, and logic matter more than motives in science [13:30];
  • The challenges of nutrition science: methodological limits, emotional bias, and the path to honest progress [17:15];
  • Why the protein RDA is largely inadequate for most people, and the lack of human evidence that high protein intake is harmful [30:30];
  • Understanding the dose-response curve for muscle protein synthesis as protein intake increases [45:15];
  • Why nutrition trials are chronically underpowered due to weak economic incentives, and how this skews evidence quality and perceptions of conflict [48:15];
  • The limitations and biases of nutrition epidemiology, and the potential role of AI-assisted review to improve it [56:15];
  • The lack of compelling evidence of harm with higher protein intake, and why we should shift away from assuming danger [1:04:15];
  • Pragmatic targets for protein intake [1:09:30];
  • Defining processed and ultra-processed foods and whether they are inherently harmful [1:16:15];
  • The search for a guiding principle of what's healthy to eat: simple heuristics vs. judging foods by their molecular composition [1:25:00];
  • Why conventional public health interventions for obesity have largely failed [1:38:15];
  • Two ideas from David for addressing the metabolic health problem in society [1:42:30];
  • The potential of GLP-1 agonists to play a large role in public health [1:46:30]; and
  • More.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey everyone. Welcome to the Drive podcast. I'm your host, Peter Attia. This podcast, my website, and my weekly newsletter all focus on the goal of translating the science of longevity

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learn more about the benefits of our premium membership, head over to peteratia m.com forward slash

1:01.6

subscribe. My guest this week is David Allison. David, returning for his third conversation on the

1:09.1

drive, is a world-renowned scientist, an award-winning

1:13.3

scientific writer who has been at the forefront of obesity research for the last 20 years,

1:18.2

and is currently the director of the Children's Nutrition Research Center at Baylor College of

1:23.5

Medicine. I wanted to have David on because protein has become one of the most contentious

1:28.5

and confusing topics in nutrition today. What was once a fairly straightforward subject

1:32.7

has now turned into a debate full of conflicting claims, dogma, unnecessary controversy,

1:39.3

and a whole lot of name-calling. David brings both a deep understanding of the science and a clear-eyed perspective

1:45.9

on how to separate evidence from opinion. This is part one of a two-part deep dive on protein,

1:52.4

and next week I'll be joined by Rhonda Patrick for part two, after which we'll put this

1:56.6

protein discussion to rest once and for all. In this episode, we discuss the historical cycle of

2:02.9

demonizing macronutrients and why protein has recently become the focus. The origins and

2:08.5

limitations for the RDA for protein and what the evidence suggests about optimal intake for

...

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