Studies have been linking red meat consumption to health problems like heart disease, stroke, and cancer for years. But nestled in the recesses of those published papers are notable limitations.
Nearly all the research is observational, unable to tease out causation
convincingly. Most are plagued by confounding variables. For example,
perhaps meat eaters simply eat fewer vegetables, or tend to smoke more,
or exercise less? Moreover, many are based on self-reported consumption.
The simple fact is that people can't remember what they eat with any
accuracy. And lastly, the reported effect sizes in these scientific
papers are often small. Is a supposed 15% greater risk of cancer really
worth worrying about?
In a new, unprecedented effort, scientists
at the University of Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and
Evaluation (IHME) scrutinized decades of research on red meat
consumption and its links to various health outcomes, formulating a new
rating system to communicate health risks in the process. Their findings
mostly dispel any concerns about eating red meat.
"We found
weak evidence of association between unprocessed red meat consumption
and colorectal cancer, breast cancer, type 2 diabetes and ischemic heart
disease. Moreover, we found no evidence of an association between
unprocessed red meat and ischemic stroke or hemorrhagic stroke," they summarized.
The IHME scientists had been observing the shoddy nature of health
science for decades. Each year, hundreds of frankly lazy studies are
published that simply attempt to find an observational link between some
action — eating a food for example — and a health outcome, like death
or disease. In the end, owing to sloppy methods, varying subject
populations, and inconsistent statistical measures, everything,
especially different foods, seems to be both associated and not associated with cancer. How is the lay public supposed to interpret this mess? ...<<<Read More>>>...
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