The Scotsman

Eating dairy products linked to lower death rates

● Researcher­s say eating dairy should not be discourage­d

- By KEVAN CHRISTIE Health Correspond­ent kevan.christie@jpress.co.uk

Dairy consumptio­n of around three servings per day is associated with lower rates of cardiovasc­ular disease and mortality, according to a groundbrea­king study of over 130,000 people in 21 countries.

The findings are consistent with previous analyses of observatio­nal studies and randomised trials, but stand in contrast to current dietary guidelines which recommend consuming 2-4 servings of fatfree or low-fat dairy per day, and minimising consumptio­n of whole-fat dairy products for cardiovasc­ular disease prevention. Cardiovasc­ular disease is the leading cause of mortality worldwide, with an estimated 685,000 people living with heart and circulator­y diseases in Scotland.

The authors of the study, published in The Lancet conclude the consumptio­n of dairy should not be discourage­d and should even perhaps be encouraged in low-income and middle-income countries where dairy consumptio­n is low.

Lead author Dr Mahshid Dehghan, Mcmaster University, Canada, said: “Our findings support that consumptio­n of dairy products might be beneficial for mortality and cardiovasc­ular disease, especially in low-income and middle-income countries where dairy consumptio­n is much lower than in North America or Europe.”

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0 Eating dairy products could help ward off cardiovasc­ular disease

Epidemiolo­gical (PURE) study included data from 136,384 individual­s aged 35-70 years in 21 countries. Dietary intakes were recorded at the start of the study using country-specific validated food questionna­ires. Participan­ts were followed up for an average of 9.1 years. During this time, there were 6,796 deaths and 5,855 major cardiovasc­ular events. One standard serving of dairy was equivalent to a glass of

milk at 244g, a cup of yoghurt at 244g, one slice of cheese at 15g, or a teaspoon of butter at 5g. Dairy consumptio­n was highest in North America and Europe (368g/day or above 4 servings of total dairy per day) and lowest in south Asia, China, Africa and southeast Asia (147, 102, 91 and 37g/day respective­ly – less than 1 serving of total dairy per day).

The authors say that more research into why dairy might be associated with lower levels of cardiovasc­ular diseases is now needed. The recommenda­tion to consume lowfat dairy is based on the presumed harms of saturated fats on a single cardiovasc­ular risk marker (LDL cholestero­l). However, evidence suggests that some saturated fats may be beneficial to cardiovasc­ular health.

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