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our health |
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As rates of obesity, heart disease, cancer, diabetes, hypertension, and other life - threatening conditions skyrocket, many researchers and medical experts come to the same conclusion: A vegetarian diet can help protect your health and even reverse some diseases, including the most common one - heart disease. “Appropriately planned vegan, lactovegetarian, and lacto-ovo-vegetarian diets satisfy nutrient needs of infants, children, and adolescents and promote normal growth. Vegetarian diets in childhood and adolescence can aid in the establishment of lifelong healthy eating patterns and can offer some important nutritional advantages. Vegetarian children and adolescents have lower intakes of cholesterol, saturated fat, and total fat and higher intakes of fruits, vegetables, and fiber than nonvegetarians. Vegetarian children have also been reported to be leaner and to have lower serum cholesterol levels.”
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Beating Heart Disease In the typical american and european diet, animal products are the main source of saturated fat and the only source of cholesterol.
By avoiding meat, eggs, and dairy, we can greatly reduce the amount of saturated fat and all the cholesterol that contribute to heart disease. In one study, a low-fat, highfiber, near-vegan diet combined with stress reduction techniques, smoking cessation, and exercise actually reversed atherosclerosis, the hardening of the arteries. Preventing Cancer Breast cancer rates are dramatically lower in countries that follow plant-based diets; but, when those same populations include more animal products in their diets, cancer rates increase. Typically, vegetarians have lower rates of colon cancer than non-vegetarians, and a recent study found that a low-fat, vegetarian diet with routine exercise can help stop and even reverse prostate cancer.Avoiding Obesity Strengthening Immunity Nearly 80 percent of all factory-farmed animals receive antibiotics to promote growth and minimize illnesses common in intensive confinement animal agribusiness practices. As a result, antibiotic-resistant bacteria strains, such as salmonella and E.coli, are increasingly found in animal products, jeopardizing the ability of antibiotics to treat human infections. The World Health Organization, the American Medical Association, and other health advocates are calling for the reduction or termination of this antibiotics use. |
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Vegetarians have been reported to have lower body mass indices than non-vegetarians, as well as lower rates of death from ischemic heart disease; vegetarians also show lower blood cholesterol levels; lower blood pressure; and lower rates of hypertension, type 2 diabetes, and prostate and colon cancer. * The American Dietetic Association, Journal of the ADA, June 2003, Vol. 103, No. 6 Is milk a natural? Our bodies have no natural need for cows’ milk. We weren’t designed with some odd flaw requiring us to drink the milk of other animals. Yet humans are the only animals who drink another species’ mother’s milk. Indeed, just as dogs’ milk is intended for puppies, rats’ milk for baby rats, and humans’ milk for human infants, cows’ milk is for calves. Our bodies treat cows’ milk as an invader, and including milk and other dairy products in our diets is linked to many health problems. |
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Milk is touted for building strong bones, yet some research shows otherwise. Harvard School of Public Health’s Nutrition chairman Walter Willet, M.D., M.P.H., Dr.P.H., writes: “Interestingly, many long-term studies have now examined milk consumption in relation to risk of fractures. With remarkable consistency, these studies do not show reduction in fractures with high dairy product consumption. The hype about milk is basically an effective marketing campaign by the American Dairy industry.”
essential omega-3 fatty acids: These fatty acids are important for a variety of reasons - including maintaining good heart and cardiovascular health - and it’s important to have a reliable source. Vegetarian foods with omega-3 fatty acids include walnuts, ground flax seeds, flax oil, hempseed oil, canola oil, and supplements vitamin B-12: When non-vegetarians consume animal products, they also ingest this vitamin that is made by bacteria in some animals’ bodies. Vegetarians can take a common multiple vitamin or B-12 supplement, or enjoy fortified cereals or soymilk to get a reliable source of B-12.vitamin D: Vitamin D may be more important than calcium for good bone health. Our bodies make the vitamin when we’re exposed to the sun. Spending some time outdoors everyday without sunscreen and, during the winter months, eating vitamin D-fortified foods or taking a supplement is a good idea for all, vegetarian or not. |
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good sources of protein, iron, and calcium |
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protein:
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iron:
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calcium:
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14.04.2009 12:49
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