Guest guest Posted October 14, 2005 Report Share Posted October 14, 2005 This was posted on another group - Although from 1994, we can still strike up another point for for vegetarians... Oran --------------- China Study Shows Need for Eating Plant-Based Diet By Susan Lang [Cornell Chronicle (12/01/94)] Americans will not reduce their rate of cancers, cardiovascular disease and other chronic, degenerative diseases until they shift their diets away from animal-based foods to plant-based foods, according to research findings emerging from the most comprehensive project on diet and disease ever done. Findings from the study suggest that even eating just small amounts of animal-based foods is linked to significantly higher rates of cancers and cardiovascular diseases typically found in the United States, said Cornell nutritional biochemist T. Colin Campbell, director of the Cornell-China-Oxford Project on Nutrition, Health and Environment. Further, he added, merely eating some low-fat foods or complying with current U.S. dietary recommendations is unlikely to prevent much disease. The dietary recommendations, Campbell said, do not go far enough in reducing the total fat content of the diet, or, more to the point, in advocating the exchange of foods of animal origin for foods of plant origin. " To get really significant changes in disease rates, it will be necessary to shift the American diet from its heavy reliance on animal-based foods to one that relies far more on plant-based foods, " said Campbell, who along with his colleagues has been analyzing the data from the the China project, a collaborative effort of Cornell, the Chinese Academy of Preventive Medicine and University of Oxford. The project, which just received $200,000 from the American Institute for Cancer Research to continue analyzing data, is a massive survey designed to study diet, lifestyle and disease across the far reaches of China; it includes almost 7,000 Chinese families. By investigating simultaneously more diseases and more dietary characteristics than any other study to date, the project has generated the most comprehensive database in the world on the multiple causes of disease. The diets of rural China are mostly plant based and are, therefore, much lower in fat and animal protein and much higher in fiber than American diets. Chinese diets also go beyond the dietary recommendations now being promoted for long-term health in the United States and other Western countries. As a result, researchers not only could investigate the relationship of diet with disease, but also the worthiness of American dietary recommendations. They have found, for example, that although chronic degenerative diseases are much more common in the United States than in China, the rates for these diseases are significantly higher in those areas of China where the intake of animal-based foods is higher. " Whereas current dietary guidelines recommend that no more than 30 percent of calories (from the present 35 to 38 percent) come from fat, data from the China study suggest that reducing fat to about 15 percent of total calories would prevent 80 to 90 percent of chronic degenerative diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular diseases and diabetes before about age 65, " said Campbell, also an author of the original 1982 dietary recommendations on cancer prevention by the National Academy of Sciences. " One of the most significant problems with the American diet is the excessive intake of animal-based foods and the inadequate intake of plant-based foods, " said Banoo Parpia, a senior research associate on the project. She said that study after study shows that a diet rich in a variety of high-quality fresh plant-based foods with a minimum of animal-based foods is optimal for long-term health. Such a diet not only would lower the risk of these Western diseases, but also would save an estimated $120 billion per year in health care costs while reducing the use of the Earth's resources needed for livestock, Campbell pointed out. In the past two years, Campbell and his colleagues have published more than three dozen studies on their findings, which are partially summarized in two chapters Campbell wrote for the recently published book, Western Diseases: Their Dietary Prevention and Reversibility edited by N. Temple and D. Burkkitt, (Totowa, N. J.: Humana Press, 1994). Among the new insights and relationships emerging from the Chinese data: * Breast cancer: Women who eat diets rich in animal foods reach menarche earlier, thereby producing more estrogen over their lifetimes and developing breast cancer at a significantly higher rate. In other words, " low-fat, high-fiber diets are linked with lower levels of female hormones and a lower risk for breast cancer, " Parpia said. * Osteoporosis: Women who eat diets rich in animal foods excrete more calcium in their urine, providing a negative calcium balance -- a high risk factor for osteoporosis. * Liver Cancer: A primary cause of this cancer is chronic infection with hepatitis B virus, but the mortality rate for this disease is significantly correlated with plasma cholesterol which is correlated, in turn, with the consumption of animal-based foods. * Esophageal cancer: Chinese who eat little fruit have a five to nine times greater risk of developing this cancer than those who eat more fruit (the lowest quartile compared with the highest quartile). * Other cancers: As the consumption of animal-based foods increases and levels of cholesterol in the blood increase accordingly, the risks for eight different cancers go up as well, including colon cancer. Vitamin C emerged as one of the most important factors for a wide range of cancers. " In the final analysis, we have strong evidence from this and other studies that nutrition becomes the controlling factor in the development of chronic degenerative diseases, " Campbell concludes. " Even small intakes of animal foods, which simultaneously alter the intake of countless nutrients and other constituents, is capable of significantly elevating plasma cholesterol and similar biomarkers, and thereby elevate the risk of degenerative diseases. " Mere tinkering with our diets by consumption of a few low-fat foods or special nutrient supplements, although possibly useful under some circumstances, will likely only have minimally useful effects and almost certainly will not be a panacea for disease prevention. " Rather, he stresses, Americans need to shift to a more plant-based diet. The typical American diet contains 10 times more animal protein (as percent of calories) than does the typical Chinese diet. The average dietary fat intake in China is 15 percent of calories compared with 38 to 40 percent in the United States. The average consumption of dietary fiber is 33 grams a day in China compared with 10 to 12 grams in the United States HEALTH MATTERS Oran Aviv http://www.5pillars.com/814205700/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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