Call & Times

Study: Red meat is OK after all

Latest nutrition report says meat is good for you

- By AMBY BURFOOT Amby Burfoot is a freelance writer and editor and a member of the Running Hall of Fame. His most recent book is “Run Forever: Your Complete Guide to Healthy Lifetime Running.”

These days, you never read social media posts or hear cocktail-party chatter in which people rave about their balanced, omnivorous diet. Instead, everyone seems to be following some sort of restrictiv­e diet, whether low-carb, intermitte­nt fasting or vegan/vegetarian. Red meat is about as popular as sugar. But that need not be the case, according to a recent, randomized, controlled trial.

The earliest studies finding health benefits in the Mediterran­ean-style diet – which is predominan­tly plant-based and uses olive oil as the main source of fat – had been conducted with coastal Greeks, who eat little red meat. Later positive Mediterran­ean diet studies from Spain, where red meat consumptio­n is higher, intrigued researcher­s at Purdue University and the University of Texas. They decided to focus on heart-risk outcomes of subjects consuming different amounts of lean, unprocesse­d red meat while otherwise following a healthy Mediterran­ean diet.

The paper was registered at ClinicalTr­ials.gov and published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

The Purdue-Texas team gathered 41 overweight or obese adults who were not following a Mediterran­ean diet and put them on such a diet that also included either 500 grams of lean red meat a week or 200 grams. The subjects followed each diet for five weeks, then switched to a fourweek “washout period” when they ate a self-selected diet and then switched to the other red-meat Mediterran­ean approach.

Both diets averaged about 2,600 calories per day, with 42 percent from carbohydra­tes, 18 percent from protein and 42 percent from fats. The researcher­s didn’t know who was on which diet when (that is, they were “blinded” to the subjects’ diets).

The two dietary approaches did not differ in their effect on high-density lipoprotei­ns, triglyceri­des, insulin or glucose. Contrary to what many may have expected, the results showed slightly greater weight loss during the higher redmeat phase, as well as greater lowering of harmful low-density lipoprotei­ns.

The researcher­s concluded: “Adults who are overweight or moderately obese may improve multiple cardiometa­bolic disease risk factors by adapting a Mediterran­ean-style eating pattern with red meats [that] are lean and unprocesse­d.”

No one’s arguing for fat-marbled meats, processed meats or meats chargrille­d to a crisp on the barbecue. These carry known health harms. But modest amounts of lean, unprocesse­d red meat don’t appear to have major health risks. At least not if consumed within a Mediterran­ean diet framework that includes lots of fruit, vegetables, whole grains, fish and olive oil.

“Our research supports previous evidence which shows that unprocesse­d and/ or lean red meat does not increase the risk of cardiovasc­ular disease,” the Purdue-Texas researcher­s conclude. Their work was partially funded by the beef and pork industries, which had no influence on the study design, analysis or reporting.

Many nutritioni­sts believe that balanced diets offer the optimal long-term potential. After all, restrictiv­e weightloss diets have been shown to produce results for roughly six months, but then the pounds begin creeping back. It may be smarter to practice portion-control with a full and varied range of foods.

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 ?? InDesign stock photo ?? Modest amounts of lean, unprocesse­d red meat don’t appear to have major health risks. At least not if consumed within a Mediterran­ean diet framework that includes lots of fruit, vegetables, whole grains, fish and olive oil.
InDesign stock photo Modest amounts of lean, unprocesse­d red meat don’t appear to have major health risks. At least not if consumed within a Mediterran­ean diet framework that includes lots of fruit, vegetables, whole grains, fish and olive oil.

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