quote:<HR>Originally posted by reboot:
Indeed, vegetarians frequently give "health reasons" as their reason for their selecting vegetarianism as a lifestyle.
A Google search in order to present verifiable facts is far better than the alternative. You should try it.
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I'd skip the Google search. Anyone can throw up a website that sounds like a good argument either for or against.
A better place to look is something like PubMed:
http://www.pubmed.com/[/URL" target="_blank">
If you take the time to learn how to search (i.e. using "vegan ti" instead of just "vegan") you can find tons of studies.
I've found there are literally dozens and dozens of studies that support the notion that a more plant and fruit based diet is healthful. However, nowhere do I see evidence that this means meat must be eliminated. Indeed, the studies that show negative effects typically relate to nutrients like iron and B12 that are deficient in those diets without supplementation. Ironically, even if someone does ascribe to the notion that beef causes horrible health issues, I'm sure anyone could agree that one steak is not going to do it, it would have to be loads of meat day in and day out. Yet, one piece of steak provides enough B12 to supply the body for several years.
So my philosophy has always been, why not practice the principle of eating a lot of plants and fruits because every day some new study shows how the nutrients found in plants and fruits can reduce the risk of this, that, and the other, and then eat lean proteins in moderation.
I agree that obsessing over something like fat content isn't looking in the right place. The issues with high cholesterol and health risk typically stem from the correlation with the diet and obesity. In other words, you can get high cholesterol overeating carbohydrates because the body can convert carbs to saturated fats and then manufacture cholesterol from those saturated fats. Someone who is maintaining weight or leaning down is more likely to burn that fat for fuel than have it contribute to some ghastly ill health condition.
I think we need more studies on the impact of nutrition on health, exercising individuals instead of the stuides on the general sedentary, overweight population because then the results are skewed and confused with the conditions related to be overweight and not exericsing.
Jeremy