News Release
August 2004
CONTACT: Jeanne Stuart McVey, 202-686-2210, ext. 316,
jeannem@pcrm.org
New Study Explodes Myth About Vegetarian Diet
Transition to Heart-Healthy, Plant-Based Diet Easily Achieved
WASHINGTON—In a new study appearing in the summer 2004 issue
of the Journal of Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation, Neal
D. Barnard, M.D., and his colleagues show that patients easily transition
from a standard omnivorous diet to a low-fat, vegetarian diet that
helps people lose weight, lower blood pressure, and otherwise improve
their health. Many doctors are aware that a low-fat vegetarian diet
can reverse heart disease and provide other benefits; however, they
mistakenly think that patients will not make the transition. Now,
there are at least four studies published in scientific journals
showing that patients can and do adapt to a “strict”
diet that dramatically improves their health. The new paper is titled,
“Acceptability of a low-fat, vegan diet compares favorably
to a Step II diet in a randomized, controlled trial.”
“For people battling overweight and heart disease, a vegetarian
diet can be a life-saving prescription,” says Neal D. Barnard,
M. D., lead author of the article and president of Physicians Committee
for Responsible Medicine. “This new study shows that patients
transition smoothly to a plant-based diet that allows them to eat
to satiety and yet still lose weight. Patients are willing to make
major changes in their eating patterns because they get major results
such as lower cholesterol and reduced hypertension.”
The study group was composed of well-educated, postmenopausal,
overweight women. They were divided into two groups: one was assigned
to the low-fat vegetarian diet, and the other group followed a control
diet. In addition to losing significantly more weight, 89 percent
of the women assigned to the low-fat vegetarian diet said they were
feeling mostly or completely used to the diet at 14 weeks and 86
percent said they could continue with the vegetarian diet at least
most of the time in the future.
A study published recently in the Journal of the American Medical
Association showed that a vegetarian diet emphasizing almonds,
soy, and other healthful foods was essentially as effective at lowering
cholesterol as a statin drug (Jenkins et al 2003; 290:502-510).
For a copy of the new paper, or an interview with one of the authors,
please contact Jeanne S. McVey at 202-686-2210, ext. 316, or jeannem@pcrm.org.
Founded in 1985, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine
is a nonprofit health organization that promotes preventive medicine,
especially good nutrition. PCRM also conducts clinical research
studies, opposes unethical human experimentation, and promotes alternatives
to animal research.
Media
Center | Health | Research
| About PCRM | Catalog
| Join Us | Search
| Site Index | Home
The site does
not provide medical or legal advice. This Web site is for information purposes
only.
Full Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
|