People who eat a vegetarian diet live longer than those who eat meat, according to research published this week.
Researchers from Loma Linda University in California followed 73,308
members of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, which encourages a
vegetarian diet, for almost six years. There were 12 percent fewer
deaths among vegetarians over that period compared to meat-eaters, the
researchers reported in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine.
Other studies have pointed toward similar connections, but this
research analyzed a larger group of people. Specifically, researchers
found that vegetarians were less likely to die from heart disease,
diabetes and kidney failure.
“We can’t tell from this current paper with certainty, but one of the
most plausible potential reasons contributing to this beneficial
association is perhaps the absence or reduction of meat intake,” lead
author Dr. Michael J. Orlich told TIME.
Or it could be that the consumption of certain plant foods has a
protective effect, he said. Vegetarians also tend to be thinner. The
total number of calories consumed in this study, however, didn’t appear
to be linked to living longer.
So should you trade in that hot dog for a tofu variety? Perhaps,
especially if you’re a man. The association between a vegetarian diet
and death risk was much stronger for men than women, the researchers
reported.
“People are confronted with all sorts of nutritional information, but the bottom line is, ‘How will your diet pattern affect your risk of dying?”‘ Orlich told The Wall Street Journal.
Source: discovery.com
“People are confronted with all sorts of nutritional information, but the bottom line is, ‘How will your diet pattern affect your risk of dying?”‘ Orlich told The Wall Street Journal.
Source: discovery.com
No comments:
Post a Comment