Hawkes’ Health Forum  

Go Back   Hawkes’ Health Forum > Nutrition > Diet Plans
Register FAQ Members List Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

Diet Plans Low-carb, low-fat, vegetarian, raw etc.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old 07-17-09   #1
Islander
Administrator
 
Islander's Avatar
 
Join Date: 16th September 2007
Location: Maine, USA. As we go, so goes the nation.
Posts: 4,188
Default Vegetarian diet protects against some cancers

Wednesday, Jul. 15, 2009

If you favour meat over vegetarian fare, you might want to reconsider your menu. According to a study published this week in the British Journal of Cancer, vegetarians are less likely than meat eaters to develop cancer.
The most striking difference was in cancers of the blood – leukemia, multiple myeloma and non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
It's estimated that 4 per cent of Canadians follow a vegetarian diet, a number that's expected to rise over the next decade. More people are embracing a meat-free lifestyle for ethical reasons: not wanting to be cruel to animals or to harm the environment. Others go the vegetarian route because they view it as healthier.
It seems that the notion of a vegetarian diet being better for you does, in fact, have strong scientific backing.
The most recent study compared the risks of 20 different types of cancer among 61,556 meat eaters and vegetarians living in Britain who were followed for more than 12 years.
The researchers found that vegetarians were 12 per cent less likely to be diagnosed with cancer than the meat eaters – even after accounting for other risk factors including smoking, alcohol intake and obesity.
When the researchers compared the risk for specific cancers, the vegetarian diet offered significant protection for some. Compared to meat eaters, vegetarians' risk of stomach cancer was reduced by 64 per cent, bladder cancer by 53 per cent, multiple myeloma (cancer of the bone marrow) by 75 per cent and non-Hodgkin lymphoma by 43 per cent.
This isn't the first time research has suggested a meatless diet as an effective measure for fighting a myriad of diseases and health conditions. Previous studies have linked vegetarian diets with lower blood cholesterol and blood pressure, lower body weights and a reduced risk of cancer.
The current study comes days after the American Dietetic Association published an evidence-based review showing a vegetarian diet is associated with numerous health advantages, including a lower risk of dying from heart disease. In the report, the association concluded that well-planned vegetarian diets – including the totally vegetarian vegan diet –are healthful not only for adults, but also for infants, children, teenagers, athletes and pregnant women.
There are several ways in which a meat-based diet might contribute to cancer. Compounds in cooked meat called heterocyclic amines (HCAs) have been shown to promote tumours in animals. Preliminary research also suggests HCAs can trigger the growth of precancerous colon polyps in humans.
Processed meats including ham, bacon, corned beef, bologna and wieners also contain sodium nitrite, a preservative added to prevent botulism food poisoning and to give cured meats their characteristic red colour. During cooking, nitrites are transformed into N-nitroso compounds, several of which have been associated with certain cancers in humans and animals.
While giving up red meat may improve the health outcomes of vegetarians, it's not the whole story. A steady diet of whole grains, nuts, vegetables, fruit, beans and soy foods is also low in fat and offers plenty of protective plant chemicals, antioxidants and fibre.
Vegetarian diets range from those that avoid all animal foods to others that include a few. Vegans shun all animal products. Semi-vegetarians avoid only red meat. Pesco-vegetarians eat fish, dairy products and eggs but avoid meat and poultry. Lacto-vegetarians eat dairy products, but avoid meat, poultry, fish and eggs. Lacto-ovo-vegetarians include dairy and eggs, but no meat, poultry or fish.
If you're a vegetarian, or would-be vegetarian, planning and variety can ensure a meatless diet is balanced and nutritionally adequate.

Protein
Vegetarians get protein from five main food groups: dairy and eggs, beans and lentils, soy and soy products, nuts and seeds, and grains and cereals. Aim to include a source of protein at every meal.
Include a variety of protein foods in your diet to meet daily requirements for essential amino acids, the building blocks of protein that your body can't make on its own.
(While animal foods contain large amounts of all essential amino acids, plant proteins are low in or missing some. Eating a variety of grains, nuts, seeds and legumes throughout the day will make up for this deficit.)

Calcium
Lacto- and lacto-ovo vegetarians can meet their daily calcium requirements by including three to four servings of milk, yogurt or cheese in their diet. Vegetarian calcium sources include fortified soy beverages, fortified fruit juice, almonds, soybeans, tofu prepared with calcium, bok choy, broccoli, kale and figs.
If you're concerned you're not meeting your daily calcium requirements, take a supplement. (Teenagers require 1,300 milligrams of calcium per day, adults aged 19 to 50 need 1,000 milligrams and older adults 1,500 milligrams.)

Vitamin D
Vegetarian diets often lack vitamin D because milk, oily fish and fortified soy beverages are the main food sources. Based on the fact that few foods contain vitamin D – and our skin produces little from sunshine in the fall and win-ter months – the Canadian Cancer Society advises taking a 1,000 IU vitamin D supplement in the fall and winter, and all year round if you are over 50, have dark-coloured skin, or do not expose your skin to sunshine in the summer months.

Iron
Vegetarians require almost twice as much iron as meat-eaters because the body absorbs iron from plant foods less efficiently. Good sources of iron include beans, lentils, nuts, leafy green vegetables, whole grains, breakfast cereals and dried fruit.
Iron absorption can be increased by eating vitamin-C-rich foods such as citrus fruit, strawberries, red peppers and tomato juice.

Vitamin B12
It's only found in animal and fortified foods, so vegetarians should include three servings of B12-rich foods n their daily diet: milk, yogurt, eggs, fortified soy beverage, nutritional yeast, fortified breakfast cereal or fortified soy “meat.” Vegans should choose fortified foods and take a B12 supplement.

Omega-3 fats
Vegetarians who don't eat fish need a daily helping of alpha-linolenic acid, the omega-3 fatty acid plentiful in walnuts, ground flax, chia, and flaxseed and canola oils. Supplements of flax oil or docosahexaenoic acid, an omega-3 fat derived from algae instead of fish, are other sources.

Leslie Beck, a Toronto-based dietitian at the Medcan Clinic, is on CTV's Canada AM every Wednesday. Her website is lesliebeck.com.

http://tinyurl.com/ne4mhp
Islander is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-18-09   #2
mellowsong
Veteran Member
 
mellowsong's Avatar
 
Join Date: 24th September 2007
Location: South Carolina
Posts: 1,880
Default Re: Vegetarian diet protects against some cancers

Just once I'd like to see a comparison study that only includes people who eat hormone/antibiotic/nitrite free meats. If that showed increased risk, I might be convinced.
mellowsong is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-11-09   #3
kathiejamisoncote
New Member
 
Join Date: 9th January 2008
Location: Hancock, ME
Posts: 7
Default Re: Vegetarian diet protects against some cancers

I like this article Islander

Dear Mellowsong - Just a thought for your day -

Meat is meat
(additives, nitrites, antibiotics are certainly terrible for us, but irregardless)

Dead is dead
and meat from the moment the animal is killed, starts decaying.

Why would anyone want decaying meat in their body?

Plants are life giving
Meat is life taking (in more ways than one)
__________________
Pray for Peace Seek Enlightenment Practice Kindness
Dance Lightly on the Earth
Kathie

kathiejamisoncote is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-11-09   #4
EmmaPeel
Veteran Member
 
EmmaPeel's Avatar
 
Join Date: 30th April 2009
Location: Canadian prairies in reality...A log cabin in the Rockies with Brad Pitt in my mind
Posts: 731
Default Re: Vegetarian diet protects against some cancers

I dunno...my parents, grandparents, and great grandparents ate meat, albeit not huge amounts....probably 1/4 of what the average person consumes now...(I'm guessing folks now eat 12-16oz/day?) and the beef, pork and chickens were all from a country farm. They never ate tons of meat because no one could afford it. It was used more as a flavoring in soups, stews, pies, etc...

I have known some individuals who are vegans, vegetarians, lacto-ovo and I gotta say...I can't see any difference in them enjoying any greater health. In fact, the one's I know of actually look like you could blow them over with a puff...and their skin looks trout-belly translucent. Not sure why. Lack of collagen?

I am a meat eater, but I am very careful about where I get my meat, and how much meat I eat each week. (I just feel so much better when I eat protein in the form of beef, bison, chicken and fish...)

Lastly, IMHO, I believe that if you honor your kill and give thanks for it giving up its life to nourish you, it becomes a sacred act for those who eat meat.

...besides ...Emma needs meat protein to be able to keep up her strength to walk in those darn boots...! hee hee
EmmaPeel is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-18-10   #5
MissHealthy
Member
 
Join Date: 12th March 2010
Posts: 53
Default Re: Vegetarian diet protects against some cancers

Hey Islander
Thanks for sharing this research article. i am the one who will have to rethink about here diet plan for sure then I could not believe my life without meat, but i will have to take care of it now
MissHealthy is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-18-10   #6
Islander
Administrator
 
Islander's Avatar
 
Join Date: 16th September 2007
Location: Maine, USA. As we go, so goes the nation.
Posts: 4,188
Default Re: Vegetarian diet protects against some cancers

Miss Healthy, long-time members know that the meat I don't raise myself, I get locally as pastured pork & ground beef. Any meat I consume (and I don't eat a lot, but my body wants some) has no additives, and I cure and smoke my own bacon without nitrites. I think most of the meat eaters on this site follow similar patterns. Wild meat is great when we can get it! We are all individuals and you have to find the diet plan that works for your body.
Islander is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Diet Soda Linked to Higher Health Risks Islander Diabetes 1 11-13-09 02:37 AM
Mediterranean Diet Could Eliminate Prescriptions for New Type II Diabetics Islander Diabetes 0 09-04-09 08:59 AM
ADA releases updated position paper on vegetarian diets Aaltrude Diet Plans 2 07-02-09 03:02 PM
Type 2 Diabetes Linked to Diet Soda Islander Diabetes 2 02-17-09 10:59 AM
Diet Sodas Linked to Type 2 Diabetes mellowsong Diabetes 3 02-13-09 09:39 PM


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 06:32 AM.


Powered by vBulletin Version 3.0.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2007 - 2010, Hawkes� Health Forum. All rights reserved.