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Red Meat Increases Risk
of Colorectal Cancer
(HealthScoutNews)
-- An increase in colorectal cancer among Chinese people living
in Singapore can be linked to a diet high in red meat and low
in vegetables.
That's the claim of a study in the
Dec. 1 issue of Cancer, which is available online today.
The study also suggests colorectal
cancer risk is slightly reduced when a high red meat diet also
includes a diet high in vegetables. A diet low in vegetables by
itself raises the risk of colorectal cancer.
The risk of colorectal cancer was
not significantly affected by other meats like pork or chicken
or by seafood, the study says.
The study included 121 Chinese people
with a history of colorectal cancer and 222 healthy Chinese control
subjects. Researchers used questionnaires to collect data on food
intake over the previous three years, including how often and
how much the people ate of common food groups such as meats, fruits
and vegetables.
After adjusting for age, smoking,
gender and family history, the study found people with a high
intake of red meat had 2.2 times the risk of colorectal cancer.
Since 1968, colorectal cancer rates
in Singapore have doubled and are now the highest in Asia. Chinese
people represent 77 per cent of the Singapore population and account
for 91 per cent of colorectal cancer cases in the country.
Over the years, the diet of many Chinese
people in Singapore has shifted from eating many vegetables and
moderate amounts of meat to eating more red meat and fewer vegetables.
More information
The U.S. National Cancer Institute
has more about colorectal
cancer.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
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