Eating Red Meat Ups
Diabetes Risk in Older Women
Middle age and elderly women whose diets
include a lot of red meat appear to have an increased risk of
developing diabetes, according to a report in the medical journal
Diabetes Care.
Dr. Simin Liu, of Brigham and Women's
Hospital in Boston, and colleagues examined the association between
red meat consumption and the risk of type 2 diabetes, the type
that doesn't necessarily require insulin.
A total of 37,309 participants
in the Women's Health Study were followed for an average of 8.8
years. The subjects were at least 45 years of age, and had never
been diagnosed with heart disease, stroke, cancer, or diabetes
when the study began. Food questionnaires were used to determine
how much red meat the subjects ate.
During the study, 1558 women were
diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.
Women who at the highest amounts
of red meat were 28 percent more likely to develop diabetes than
their peers who ate the lowest amounts. In terms of specific meats
linked to diabetes, bacon and hot dogs were identified as two
of the worst offenders.
SOURCE: Diabetes Care, September
2004.
Reference
Source 89
September 10, 2004
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