Bacon and other processed meats appear to increase the risk
of dying young, a study of half a million people across
Europe suggests.
Another study has found an association between eating
meat and premature death, this time linking the consumption of
bacon, sausage and other processed meats with cardiovascular
disease and cancer in a study of nearly a half-million
Europeans.
"Overall, we estimate that 3 percent of premature deaths each
year could be prevented if people ate less than 20 grams
processed meat per day," Sabine Rohrmann of the University of
Zurich, who led the study, said in a statement.
The research, which followed people in 10 European countries
in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and
Nutrition over one to two decades, was published Thursday in
Biomed Central's open-access journal BMC Medicine.
Researchers used questionnaires and food intake diaries for
448,568 men and women who were ages 35 to 69 when the study
began.
The researchers noted that it's difficult to measure the
effects of eating meat on health because of differences in
people's other behaviors, including smoking, exercise and
drinking alcohol. But they said the large sample size of
their study enabled them to isolate meat from other factors.
The researchers noted that a small amount of fresh red meat
appeared to be beneficial. That, they said, isprobably
because meat is an important source of protein, iron, zinc, B
vitamins and other nutrients. The drawback is cholesterol and
saturated fatty acids, as well as the potential for too much
iron.
In general, diets high in processed meat were linked to other
unhealthy choices, the researchers said. People who ate the
most processed meat ate the least produce and were more
likely to smoke. Men who ate a lot of meat also tended to
have a high alcohol consumption.
They did not find an association with eating poultry.
The European study cites another article published a year ago
in the Archives of Internal Medicine, which said that eating
any amount or type of red meat increased the chances of early
death among more than 110,000 adults tracked more than 20
years.
For instance, adding a 3-ounce serving of red meat - a piece
of steak about the size of a cassette tape - to your daily
diet was associated with a 13 percent greater chance of dying
during the course of the study. And an extra daily serving of
processed red meat was linked to a 20 percent higher risk of
death during the study.
That study came to somewhat different conclusions than the
European one.
"In contrast to the U.S. results, we observed a consistent
association between processed meat consumption and total
mortality, but not between red meat consumption and total
mortality," the researchers from the European study wrote.
They said that processed meats have higher levels of
saturated fats than fresh meat, with fat as high as 50
percent in sausages.
"Also, processed meat is treated by salting, curing or
smoking," they wrote. "These processes, however, lead to an
increased intake of carcinogens or their precursors."
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