Whanganui Chronicle

Studies to chew over benefits of meat

RESEARCH: Is pasture-raised beef and lamb healthier than the alternativ­es?

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Kiwis will be invited to take part in a major research programme to assess the health and wellbeing benefits of eating pasture-raised beef and lamb, compared with grain-finished beef and plant-based alternativ­es.

About 100 people will be monitored in two clinical studies, led by researcher­s from AgResearch, the Riddet Institute and the University of Auckland.

The projects will assess the physical effects on the body from eating the different foods for up to 10 weeks, as well as psychologi­cal elements, such as satisfacti­on, sleep and stress levels. The research team includes meat scientists, agricultur­al academics, dietitians, behavioura­l experts and social scientists.

AgResearch will develop nutritiona­l profiles and the Riddet Institute will undertake lab-based (or ‘in vitro’) digestive analysis of the products.

Results from these two studies will provide baseline data about pasturerai­sed beef and lamb and its consumptio­n in comparison to other foods.

University of Auckland researcher­s will then oversee the final two stages, investigat­ing both the shortand long-term wellbeing and health benefits of red-meat consumptio­n.

The highlight of the programme, a sustained clinical study, will see members of 40 households on a managed flexitaria­n dietary regime over 10 weeks.

The participan­ts will be monitored and changes in health status, behaviours and attitudes and perceptual wellbeing recorded.

“We will carry out an advanced analysis of red meat, looking at its unique components, such as bioactive lipids and minerals, that make red meat such a nutritious form of protein when included as part of a balanced healthy diet,” senior scientist Dr Emma Bermingham of AgResearch said.

Doctors Mike Boland and Lovedeep Kaur, both senior scientists at the Riddet Institute, will demonstrat­e how the human digestive system responds to the differing food compositio­ns to release the nutritious proteins and lipids for the body to use.

“We will examine how well these three contrastin­g foods are digested, using gastric simulation techniques.”

Dr Andrea Braakhuis, an academic director and research dietician at Auckland University, and her team will examine how the beneficial lipids and nutrients from a single meal are absorbed and utilised by the body, before moving to the longer 10-week study where health and wellbeing benefits of red meat as a part of a balanced diet will be the focus for the researcher­s.

The research is backed by Meat Industry Associatio­n Innovation Ltd.

MIA chief executive Sirma Karapeeva said much of the global research on the health, nutritiona­l and environmen­tal aspects of red meat was based on intensive grain-finished farming systems.

“However, New Zealand specialise­s in free-range livestock farming that is naturally pasture-raised, antibiotic-free and hormone-free.”

“We know there are myths and misinforma­tion about the production and benefits of eating red meat, so we have turned to research to help bring balance to what consumers are hearing.”

Consumers were choosing to make ideologica­l decisions about what they ate and Karapeeva believed, “in part, this is a backlash against broken food systems, such as factory farming and ‘ big food’ ”.

We know there are myths and misinforma­tion about the production and benefits of eating red meat, so we have turned to research to help bring

balance to what consumers are hearing.

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 ?? Photo / File ?? Two clinical studies will assess the effects of pasture-raised red meat on human health and wellbeing, compared with its alternativ­es.
Photo / File Two clinical studies will assess the effects of pasture-raised red meat on human health and wellbeing, compared with its alternativ­es.
 ??  ?? Sirma Karapeeva
Sirma Karapeeva

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