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Ten
Reasons To Eat More Like
A Vegetarian
Text: Bonnie Liebman (Originally in English) |
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Evidence is mounting that the healthiest diets
are loaded with plant foods (vegetables, fruits and beans) and
short on animal foods (meat, fish, poultry and dairy products),
especially those with a high fat content.
"A diet rich in fruits and vegetables plays
a role in reducing the risk of all the major causes of illness
and death," says Walter Willet, Head of the Nutrition Department
at the Harvard School of Public Health.
To many people, vegetarian is a loaded word.
It typically refers to people who never eat meat, fish or poultry
for ethical, religious or health reasons. Vegans also avoid all
dairy products and eggs. But scientists are more interested in
how often - not whether - people eat animal foods. And much of
their research points to the same conclusion: people should eat
fewer animal foods and more plant foods, especially fruits and
vegetables. Why? Here are 10 reasons - some related to health,
some not.
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1. Cancer
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"The
scientific base is very strong suggesting that
fruits and vegetables are protective elements
for all gastrointestinal cancers and all smoking-related
cancers," says Tim Byers, professor
of Preventive Medicine at the University of
Colorado Health Sciences Center in Denver. That
includes cancers of the lung, colon, stomach,
mouth, larynx, esophagus and bladder. And a
recent study found that lycopene - a carotenoid
in tomatoes and tomato sauce - may protect against
prostate cancer.
It's not clear how fruits and vegetables may
reduce cancer risk. It could be their phytochemicals
- things like carotenoids, vitamins C and E,
selenium, indoles, flavonoids, phenols and limonene.
There is also evidence that high-fibre grains
like wheat bran can reduce cancer risk. "Fibre
has a beneficial effect in preventing colon
cancer," says David Jenkins, a fibre expert
at the University of Toronto. And pasta, rice
and other grains can replace the animal foods
- red meat, in particular - that may increase
the risks of some cancers.
"Men who eat red
meat as a main dish five or more times a week
have four times the risk of colon cancer of
men who eat red meats less than once a month,"
says Edward Giovannucci of Harvard Medical School.
Heavy red-meat eaters were also twice as likely
to get prostate cancer in his study of 50,000
male health professionals.
That's just one study. Looking at others, says
Lawrence Kushi of the University of Minnesota,
"the evidence is quite consistent that
red meat is associated with a higher risk of
colon - possibly prostate - cancer".
But even lean red meat seems to increase the
risk of colon cancer. "It could be the
carcinogens created when meat is cooked or meat's
highly available iron, or something else in
meat," speculates Willett.
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A plant-based
diet with lots of fruits and vegetables can
reduce the risk of heart disease. For the last
20 years, heart experts have emphasised cutting
saturated fat and cholesterol intake, but plants
may protect the heart in other ways. Among them:
* Soluble Fibre: "To
reduce your risk of heart disease, you may want
to eat more beans, peas, oats, and barley,"
says Jenkins, because their "sticky"
soluble fibre seems to help lower blood cholesterol.
* Folic Acid: "The
evidence that folic acid reduces the risk of
heart disease is pretty strong,"
says Willet. Folic acid, a B-vitamin, lowers
blood levels of a harmful amino acid called
homocysteine. "And fruits and vegetables
are a major source of folic acid," he adds.
* Antioxidants: a growing body
of evidence suggests that LDL ("bad")
cholesterol damages arteries only when it has
been oxidised (combined with oxygen). That's
why researchers believe that antioxidants like
vitamin E may protect the heart. And many of
the phytochemicals in fruits and vegetables
are antioxidants.
* Squeezing Out Saturates:
if you eat lots of plant foods, there's simply
less room for the saturated animal fats that
clog arteries.
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There's a lot of evidence
showing that fruits and vegetables are beneficial
for reducing the risk of stroke," says
Willet. For example, in a 20-year study of 832
middle-aged men, the risk of stroke was 22 per
cent lower for every three servings of fruits
and vegetables the men ate each day. Again,
no one's sure if it's the potassium, magnesium,
fibre or other components of fruits and vegetables
that prevent arteries from clogging in the brain.
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4.
Diverticulosis & Constipation
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High-fibre grains - especially
wheat bran - can help prevent constipation.
That's not trivial in a country like the US
that spends millions a year on laxatives.
Diverticulosis is also common. About 30 to 40
per cent of people over 50 have it, though most
have no symptoms. Others experience bleeding,
constipation, diarrhea, flatulence, pain, or
diverticulitis (that's when the pouches - or
diverticula - that form in the walls of the
colon get inflamed).
"In our studies,
it's clear that fibre both from bran and from
fruits and vegetables is protective,"
says Willet. Men who ate the least fibre (13
grams or less a day) were almost twice as likely
to get diverticulosis as men who ate the most
fibre (at least 32 grams of fibre a day).
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Plant-rich diets
may prevent other illnesses:
* Macular Degeneration: a carotenoid
called lutein - which is found mostly in leafy greens
- may help prevent the deterioration of the retina
that causes blindness in older people. "In
our study, people who ate spinach or collard greens
two to four times a week had half the estimated
risk of macular degeneration compared with those
who ate them less than once a month," says
Johanna Seddon of Harvard Medical School.
* Neural Tube Defects: folic acid supplements
can reduce the risk of spina bifida and other neural
tube birth defects. Folic acid from foods (mostly
fruits and vegetables) may also cut the risk.
* Diabetes: "We
found a lower risk of adult-onset diabetes in people
who ate more whole grains," says Willet.
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Some of the deadliest
food-borne illnesses enter the body via animal foods.
"Ground beef is the most
likely source of E. Coli 0157:H7. Poultry carry
Salmonella and Campylobacter, and the consumption
of raw shellfish has caused infection with Vibrio
vulnificus," says David Swerdlow of
the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta.
Any raw food - including fruits or vegetables -
can carry harmful bacteria. "For
example, recent outbreaks of Salmonella have been
associated with cantaloupe, tomatoes and alfalfa
sprouts," says Swerdlow. But meat, seafood
and poultry are the most likely culprits in food-borne
illness. |
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"Our
eating habits have a tremendous effect on the planet,"
says Jenkins. "Eating
animals wouldn't harm the environment if it were
done on a much smaller scale," explains
Alan Durning, Director of North-west Environment
Watch in Seattle.
"Modern meat production
involves intensive use - and often misuse - of grain,
water, energy and grazing areas," says
Durning. He cites the following examples:
* Water pollution: the manure and
sewage from stockyards, chicken factories, and other
feeding facilities can pollute water supplies.
* Air pollution: thirty million
tons of methane - a gas that contributes to global
warning - comes from manure in sewage ponds or heaps.
* Soil erosion: nearly 40 per cent
of the world's - and more than 70 per cent of US
- grain production is fed to livestock. For each
pound of meat, poultry, eggs and milk we produce,
farm fields lose about five pounds of topsoil.
* Water depletion: an estimated
half of the grain and hay that's fed to beef cattle
is grown on irrigated land. It takes about 390 gallons
of water to produce a pound of beef.
* Energy Use:
it takes almost ten times more energy to produce
and transport livestock than vegetables.
* Overgrazing: about 10 per cent
of the arid West of the US has been turned into
a desert by livestock. But some of that land couldn't
be used for much else. "That's
why my argument isn't for vegetarianism, but for
people to reduce the consumption of animal products,"
maintains Durning.
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Sure, you can spend
$7.99 a pound on mesclun or other gourmet foods.
But from squash to sweet potatoes, most plants are
a downright bargain. And the lower price of plants
shows up when you eat out. On Chinese, Indian, and
most other restaurant menus, the vegetarian selections
are usually cheaper than the meat, seafood and poultry.
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It's unpleasant
to think about, but before we slaughter them, the
animals we eat are often raised and transported
under inhumane conditions.
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10. Taste
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The number-one reason for eating
a plant-rich diet is that it tastes good. The five
vegetables that Americans eat most are French fries,
tomatoes (mostly as sauce or ketchup), onions, iceberg
lettuce, and other potatoes.
But if most Americans shrink the meat, seafood and
poultry on their dinner plates, they - or many of
their favourite restaurants - wouldn't know what
to replace them with. You have to go to ethnic restaurants
to get interesting plant-based dishes. It's no coincidence
that ethnic restaurants know how to make vegetable
dishes taste good. "Fortunately, there's a
wealth of experience around the world because almost
all traditional diets are plant-based," says
Willet.
Yet many Italian, Mexican and other ethnic restaurants
have become so Americanised that their vegetables
have been largely replaced by meat and cheese. And
that's a shame. In Asian and Mediterranean cuisines,
cooking fruits and vegetables is an art form. The
Italians don't put tremendous amounts of meat and
cheese on pizza, for example. I had a thin-crust
pizza at a traditional restaurant recently with
no cheese - just fresh basil, tomatoes and garlic.
It was totally wonderful.
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Copyright 1996 CSPI.
Reprinted/Adapted from
Nutrition Action Healthletter
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