Html code here! Replace this with any non empty raw html code and that's it.

High red meat intake associated with 49 percent increase in diabetes risk

Date:

Share this article:

Del denne artikel:

A major US study suggests that frequent red meat consumption may be linked to significantly higher odds of developing diabetes.

Red meat habit could raise diabetes risk by nearly 50 percent, major US analysis warns

A large national study suggests that people who eat the most red meat face significantly higher odds of diabetes, while swapping in beans, fish or nuts may help lower the risk.

Eating high amounts of red and processed meat may substantially increase the likelihood of diabetes, according to research published in the British Journal of Nutrition.

According to Medical News Today, which reported on the study, researchers analyzed data from 34,737 adults who participated in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, NHANES, between 2003 and 2016.

Also read: New weight-loss pill surpasses Novo in effectiveness, but more patients discontinue treatment

They compared reported meat intake with clinical indicators such as HbA1c levels, fasting glucose and diabetes medication use.

How much the risk increases

Participants with the highest red meat consumption had up to 49 percent greater odds of diabetes compared with those who ate the least.

Each additional daily serving was linked to a 10 percent to 16 percent increase in risk, depending on whether the meat was processed or unprocessed.

The association remained even after adjusting for body mass index. However, because the study was observational and based on short term dietary recall, it cannot prove cause and effect.

Also read: No need to lace up for a run - these alternatives are just as effective

What replacing red meat may change

Researchers also found that substituting red meat with legumes, nuts, poultry, fish, eggs, dairy or whole grains was associated with a 9 percent to 14 percent lower diabetes risk, with plant based proteins showing the strongest link.

The findings add to existing dietary advice encouraging a balanced eating pattern that limits processed meats and emphasizes varied protein sources.

Sources: Medical News Today and Cambridge Core

Also read: Study of 1.2 million children finds vegan infants grow at normal rates

Also read: GLP-1 drugs linked to reduced need for migraine treatment

Other articles

Study points to new ways of understanding Alzheimer’s disease

A quiet shift in Alzheimer’s research is raising a bigger question: what if we’ve been targeting the wrong problem all along?

This happens in the body if you eat avocado every day for two weeks

Eating avocado daily for two weeks can have several measurable effects on the body.A Harvard-trained gastroenterologist explains to...

New research points to lower ideal blood pressure

A major new study suggests pushing blood pressure lower than current norms could prevent more heart attacks and strokes—at a cost.

New study: Roommates can influence gut bacteria

Your daily relationships can affect your gut microbiome.

Study points to new ways of understanding Alzheimer’s disease

A quiet shift in Alzheimer’s research is raising a bigger question: what if we’ve been targeting the wrong problem all along?

This happens in the body if you eat avocado every day for two weeks

Eating avocado daily for two weeks can have several measurable effects on the body.A Harvard-trained gastroenterologist explains to...

New research points to lower ideal blood pressure

A major new study suggests pushing blood pressure lower than current norms could prevent more heart attacks and strokes—at a cost.