Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Death link to too much red meat
#1
By CARLA K. JOHNSON, AP Medical Writer
Tue Mar 24, 12:15 am ET

CHICAGO – The largest study of its kind finds that older Americans who eat large amounts of red meat and processed meats face a greater risk of death from heart disease and cancer. The federal study of more than half a million men and women bolsters prior evidence of the health risks of diets laden with red meat like hamburger and processed meats like hot dogs, bacon and cold cuts.

Calling the increased risk modest, lead author Rashmi Sinha of the National Cancer Institute said the findings support the advice of several health groups to limit red and processed meat intake to decrease cancer risk.

The findings appear in Monday's Archives of Internal Medicine.

Over 10 years, eating the equivalent of a quarter-pound hamburger daily gave men in the study a 22 percent higher risk of dying of cancer and a 27 percent higher risk of dying of heart disease. That's compared to those who ate the least red meat, just 5 ounces per week.

Women who ate large amounts of red meat had a 20 percent higher risk of dying of cancer and a 50 percent higher risk of dying of heart disease than women who ate less.

For processed meats, the increased risks for large quantities were slightly lower overall than for red meat. The researchers compared deaths in the people with the highest intakes to deaths in people with the lowest to calculate the increased risk.

People whose diets contained more white meat like chicken and fish had lower risks of death.

The researchers surveyed more than 545,000 people, ages 50 to 71 years old, on their eating habits, then followed them for 10 years. There were more than 70,000 deaths during that time.

Study subjects were recruited from AARP members, a group that's healthier than other similarly aged Americans. That means the findings may not apply to all groups, Sinha said. The study relied on people's memory of what they ate, which can be faulty.

In the analysis, the researchers took into account other risk factors such as smoking, family history of cancer and high body mass index.

In an accompanying editorial, Barry Popkin, director of the Interdisciplinary Obesity Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, wrote that reducing meat intake would have benefits beyond improved health.

Livestock increase greenhouse gas emissions, contributing to global warming, he wrote, and nations should reevaluate farm subsidies that distort prices and encourage meat-based diets.

"We've promoted a diet that has added excessively to global warming," Popkin said in an interview.

Successfully shifting away from red meat can be as easy as increasing fruits and vegetables in the diet, said Elisabetta Politi of the Duke Diet and Fitness Center in Durham, N.C.

"I'm not saying everybody should turn into vegetarians," Politi said. "Meat should be a supporting actor on the plate, not the main character."

The National Pork Board and National Cattlemen's Beef Association questioned the findings.

Dietitian Ceci Snyder said in a statement for the pork board that the study "attempts to indict all red meat consumption by looking at extremes in meat consumption, as opposed to what most Americans eat."

Lean meat as part of a balanced diet can prevent chronic disease, along with exercise and avoiding smoking, said Shalene McNeill, dietitian for the beef group.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090324/ap_o...H80l7VJRIF
Reply

#2
If this is true Richard...then you should be dead by now.
Reply

#3
My guess is it is all the chemicals and hormones in beef that are causing the cancer.
Reply

#4
I was talking to my mother earlier and the subject of reindeer meat came up, she said she had read an article saying it was unhealthy because of the fear they go through during the final process. I'm not sure but I think it comes from the indigenous people here. I might be wrong though, as it would seem a little to perfect:) As far as I know it is the only wild meat we have here.

I love it, and I feel a strong difference from that and other meats. It is quite expensive though. I think they are trying to get people away from the real stuff.

Reply

#5
This is very true headspace, the way an animal is slaughtered is a great contribution to how it is ingested, this is why pork is unhealthy, they are the only animal I know that are truly aware they are about to die.

To the rest, I believe that ‘good quality’ red meat is essential to the body, and this will always be a debatable topic, and everyone should learn the cuts of meat that are the best and also how butchers/supermarkets rip you off and sell you dirty old animals pumped up with gas and preservatives, and this is what causes the cancer.
Reply

#6
I was thinking about buying more from private farms around here, I do not know if they are any better than the big ones but I guess they are more humane.

I do not eat pork, since I learned it contains human genetics. I think that vibe came before I learned it too. I did love it as a child though. I was overweight and ate very much. Not very overweight, but I was not as I wanted to be and I was told I had to much.

Reply

#7
If you can buy your meat from private farms it is generally better, all animals are frequency and vibration, so the meat that we eat contains this vibration of when they were living, so any product that has been treated harshly absorbs this energy into their body, I would personally not buy eggs from a supermarket, or meat from a random butcher. We are lucky here, Australia has excellent produce and our lamb is known around the world.
Reply



Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
Video Human Meat Found In McDonald's Meat Factory Breaking News 0 1,087 10-22-2016, 04:58 PM
Last Post: Breaking News

Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread:
1 Guest(s)

Powered By MyBB, © 2002-2025 Melroy van den Berg.