Why Vegetarianism Is Good For You And The Planet
Fruit is your Friend |
Even
the Utah Beef Council admits, “Several epidemiological studies indicate that
vegetarians have lower morbidity and mortality from chronic degenerative diseases.”
Today, vegetarians only make up about two percent of the population, but
everyday more and more people give up eating red meat or try their first bite
of tofu. Aside from ethics, what are the main reasons people are turning away
from meat? Health and the ecology.
Lower
rates of disease amongst vegetarians
Hundreds
of different studies concur, showing that vegetarians who eat balanced diets
have lower rates of coronary artery disease, hypertension, obesity, and certain
cancers. Registered Dietician Winston Craig says that meat eating costs
Americans somewhere between $30-$60 billion per year in medical expenses for
hypertension, heart disease, cancer, diabetes, gallstones, obesity, and
food-borne illnesses associated with meat. Craig says that a vegetarian diet is
associated with lower cholesterol, lower blood pressure, and less obesity.
In
1997, the World Cancer Research Fund recommended a vegetarian diet for reducing
the risk of cancer. Lifelong vegetarians have 24% less heart disease, while vegans
have an astounding 57% less. A comprehensive study of a vegetarian religious
group, the Seventh Day Adventists, found that they had half the rate of high
blood pressure and diabetes, half the rate of colon cancer, and two-thirds the
rate of arthritis and prostate cancer as other groups (2001). Furthermore,
Cornell University reported that eating less meat did more to reduce
osteoporosis than supplementing your diet with calcium.
Do
you have to be completely vegetarian to benefit?
In
1999, a meta-analysis of several vegetarian and vegan mortality studies was
conducted. The results of these studies were compared together and re-analyzed.
The researchers concluded that even reducing meat in your diet had a
significant effect on lowering your rate of disease. People who ate meat just
once a week had a 20% lower rate of dying from heart disease, and their
over-all mortality rate was reduced by 10%.
Those
who ate only fish saw as much as a 34% reduction in heart disease death, while
their over-all mortality was lowered by 18%.
In
the same sense, the more you reduce consumption of animal products, the more
you appear to benefit. Only 7% of the vegans studied died of cancer (lung,
stomach, and colorectal). Alarmingly, 19% of over-all deaths in the US are from
cancer.
Vegetarian
diets are good for the planet
Every
year, meat eaters contribute to the cattle farming industry. This industry uses
farm lands that could be producing human food to make grain for cows. As most
people know, cows produce large amounts of environmentally-toxic methane gas.
Raising cows also uses precious water resources.
Vegetarianism
and the rain forrest
What
you may not know though is that eating meat also contributes to the destruction
of the rain forests. In an effort to make a cheaper Big Mac and Whopper,
companies are growing cattle in Central America, where labor and other costs
are lower. Eager Central Americans are slashing and burning their native rain
forests to make room for the beef industry.
Vegetarianism
and carbon dioxide emission
Estimates
show that a vegetarian diet saves 1.5 tons of greenhouse gas per person per
year. The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition reports that producing one
calorie of animal protein requires ten times the fossil fuel as producing one
calorie of plant protein. Wow! Furthermore, eating a vegan diet reduces more
carbon dioxide emissions than driving a hybrid car, according to the New
Scientist.
Vegetarianism
and water reserves
What’s
more disturbing is that every hamburger that originated from a rain forest cow
required the destruction of roughly 55 square feet of rain forest. Furthermore,
studies show that one pound of beef requires 2,500 gallons of water. The water
used to produce one hamburger patty is enough for two-week’s worth of daily
showers.
Fruit+Vegetables=اhealth |
No comments:
Post a Comment