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Does a vegetarian diet reduce the occurrence of diabetes?
248
Citations
19
References
1985
Year
ObesityMetabolic SyndromeNutritionNutritional EpidemiologyDiabetes EpidemiologyMale Adventist PopulationGlobal HealthDiabetesUs WhitesDiabetes MellitusPublic HealthWestern Pattern DietMedicineVegetarian Diet
We propose the hypothesis that a vegetarian diet reduces the risk of developing diabetes. Findings that have generated this hypothesis are from a population of 25,698 adult White Seventh-day Adventists identified in 1960. During 21 years of follow-up, the risk of diabetes as an underlying cause of death in Adventists was approximately one-half the risk for all US Whites. Within the male Adventist population, vegetarians had a substantially lower risk than non-vegetarians of diabetes as an underlying or contributing cause of death. Within both the male and female Adventist populations, the prevalence of self-reported diabetes also was lower in vegetarians than in non-vegetarians. The associations observed between diabetes and meat consumption were apparently not due to confounding by over- or under-weight, other selected dietary factors, or physical activity. All of the associations between meat consumption and diabetes were stronger in males than in females.
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