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Poor Diet Ups Chronic Disease Risk, new study
Poor Diet Ups Chronic Disease Risk, new study

Poor Diet Ups Chronic Disease Risk, new study

A research by the University of Adelaide shows that eating unhealthy food results into chronic diseases.

Researchers conducted the study on 1,000 people in China who were followed for around five years. The analysis showed that proportion of people with at least one long-term health problem increased from 14 to 34 percent.

“Risk factors such as smoking, lack of physical activity and nutrition are already known to be linked to the development of chronic disease. But this is the first time research has shown that nutrition itself is directly associated with the development of multiple chronic diseases over time,” says study co-author Dr Zumin Shi, from the University of Adelaide’s School of Medicine.

“Those participants who ate more fresh fruit and vegetables, and more grains other than wheat and rice, had better health outcomes overall.

“Grains other than rice and wheat – such as oats, corn, sorghum, rye, barley, millet and quinoa – are less likely to be refined and are therefore likely to contain more dietary fibre. The benefits of whole grains are well known and include a reduction in cardiovascular disease, diabetes and colorectal cancer.

“Rice intake was significantly lower in the healthy group. This could be because rice is mainly refined and deprived of the benefits associated with fibres, and the kinds of phytochemicals that you find in whole grains,” Dr Shi says.

He says the study highlights the role of micronutrients in protecting against disease. “A higher daily intake of iron, magnesium, phosphorous, vitamin C, potassium and vitamin B1 was associated with healthier participants,” Dr Shi says.

“Based on our results, it seems that a higher intake of fruit helps to prevent against the onset of the first chronic disease, while a higher intake of vegetables helps to protect against developing more than one chronic disease.

“There is already a lot of general nutrition awareness among the population but this study reinforces the need for broad education programs about the benefits of healthy eating,” Dr Shi says.

This study was conducted with colleagues at the Institut national de santé publique du Québec, the Jiangsu Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention in Nanjing, China, Laval University, Université du Québec and Université de Montréal.

Agencies/Canadajournal




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