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Vegetarian Weight-loss
April 2, 2006WASHINGTON--A scientific review in
April's Nutrition Reviews shows
that a vegetarian diet is highly effective for weight loss. Vegetarian
populations tend to be slimmer than meat-eaters, and they experience
lower rates of heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, and other
life-threatening conditions linked to overweight and obesity. The new
review, compiling data from 87 previous studies, shows the weight-loss
effect does not depend on exercise or calorie-counting, and it occurs
at a rate of approximately 1 pound per week.
Rates of obesity in the general population are skyrocketing, while in
vegetarians, obesity prevalence ranges from 0 percent to 6 percent,
note study authors Susan E. Berkow, Ph.D., C.N.S., and Neal D.
Barnard, M.D., of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine
(PCRM).
The authors found that the body weight of both male and female
vegetarians is, on average, 3 percent to 20 percent lower than that of
meat-eaters. Vegetarian and vegan diets have also been put to the test
in clinical studies, as the review notes. The best of these clinical
studies isolated the effects of diet by keeping exercise constant. The
researchers found that a low-fat vegan diet leads to weight loss of
about 1 pound per week, even without additional exercise or limits on
portion sizes, calories, or carbohydrates.
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full story: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2006-04/pcfr-nsr033106.php
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