Processed Meats Remain Healthy Part of Balanced Diet
Saturday, January 28, 2012
New Study Claiming Link to
Diabetes is Inconsistent With Federal Research
on Issue
Attribute the following
statement to AMI Foundation President James H.
Hodges
Washington, DC, January 28, 2012 –
“Processed meats are a safe and nutritious part
of a balanced diet. A new study alleging a link
between processed meats and diabetes is
problematic because it ignores some basic
science about the physiology of diabetes and
the ingredients in processed meats. The study’s
conclusions also appear inconsistent with
findings from a much larger Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) study.
Zeroing in on
a single category of food and then a single
branded product within that category does an
injustice to this complex issue. Consumers who
enjoy processed meats should continue to
consume them as part of a health balanced,
diet.
The CDC
completed a nearly decade long study http://1.usa.gov/x9S1u8
addressing the complex issue of diabetes among
American Indian populations. In its summary,
CDC does not reference processed meats or
nitrite as a factor among these populations.
Instead, CDC writes, ‘Most cases of diabetes
among Native Americans are type 2, the most
common form of the disease, and is associated
with modifiable risk factors such as obesity
and inactivity.’
The American
Diabetes Association’s Food & Fitness page
http://bit.ly/zO8fr0
acknowledges lean meats – including processed
meats – as part of a healthy balanced diet for
diabetics.
The new study
also makes a troubling speculation that perhaps
nitrite in some processed meats could be the
cause of the diabetes. This ignores the fact
that 93 percent of human nitrite intake comes
from vegetables and human saliva – not from
cured meats. If nitrite were the issue, then
one would think the vegetables would be the
cause of the diabetes, yet no one is suggesting
that association.
Finally, it is
noteworthy that the National Institutes of
Health, including National Institute on
Diabetes, has been conducting extensive
research on nitrite as a therapeutic agent for
many diseases. If there were legitimate concern
that nitrite could cause diabetes, it is
extremely unlikely that NIH scientists would be
administering it to patients.”
Additional
videos information from experts:
Meat
MythCrushers Video on Sources of Nitrite
featuring Dr. Jeff Sindelar of the University
of Wisconsin:
http://bit.ly/zLQa33
Meat
MythCrushers
Video on Nitrite
Safety and Health Benefits Featuring Dr. Nathan
Bryan of the University of Texas Houston Health
Sciences Center:
http://bit.ly/wqFkHR
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