Vegetarian diets are associated with
reduced death rates in a study of more than 70,000 Seventh-day
Adventists with more....
favorable results for men than women, according to a
report published Online First by JAMA Internal Medicine, a JAMA Network
publication.
The possible relationship between diet
and mortality is an important area of study. Vegetarian diets have been
associated with reductions in risk for several chronic diseases,
including hypertension, metabolic syndrome, diabetes mellitus and
ischemic heart disease (IHD), according to the study background.
Michael J. Orlich, M.D., of Loma Linda
University in California, and colleagues examined all-cause and
cause-specific mortality in a group of 73,308 men and women Seventh-day
Adventists. Researchers assessed dietary patients using a questionnaire
that categorized study participants into five groups: nonvegetarian,
semi-vegetarian, pesco-vegetarian (includes seafood),
lacto-ovo-vegetarian (includes dairy and egg products) and vegan
(excludes all animal products).
The study notes that vegetarian groups
tended to be older, more highly educated and more likely to be married,
to drink less alcohol, to smoke less, to exercise more and to be
thinner.
“Some evidence suggests vegetarian
dietary patterns may be associated with reduced mortality, but the
relationship is not well established,” the study notes.
There were 2,570 deaths among the study
participants during a mean (average) follow-up time of almost six years.
The overall mortality rate was six deaths per 1,000 person years. The
adjusted hazard ratio (HR) for all-cause mortality in all vegetarians
combined vs. nonvegetarians was 0.88, or 12 percent lower, according to
the study results. The association also appears to be better for men
with significant reduction in cardiovascular disease mortality and IHD
death in vegetarians vs. nonvegetarians. In women, there were no
significant reductions in these categories of mortality, the results
indicate.
“These results demonstrate an overall
association of vegetarian dietary patterns with lower mortality compared
with the nonvegetarian dietary pattern. They also demonstrate some
associations with lower mortality of the pesco-vegetarian, vegan and
lacto-ovo-vegetarian diets specifically compared with the nonvegetarian
diet,” the authors conclude.
-Science Daily
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