Vegetarian Diet Vs. Cancer

You might have a general idea that eating a vegetarian diet is more healthy for you. But do you really know how much less the incidence is of certain types of cancers among vegetarians?

Vegetarian diets-naturally low in saturated fat, high in fiber, and replete with cancer-protective phytochemicals-help to prevent cancer. Large studies in England and Germany have shown that vegetarians are about 40 percent less likely to develop cancer compared to meat-eaters.

In the U.S., studies of Seventh-Day Adventists, who are largely lacto-ovo vegetarians, have shown significant reductions in cancer risk among those who avoided meat. Similarly, breast cancer rates are dramatically lower in nations, such as China, that follow plant-based diets. Interestingly, Japanese women who follow Western-style, meat-based diets are eight times more likely to develop breast cancer than women who follow a more traditional plant-based diet. Meat and dairy products contribute to many forms of cancer, including cancer of the colon, breast, ovaries, and prostate.

Harvard studies that included tens of thousands of women and men have shown that regular meat consumption increases colon cancer risk by roughly 300 percent. High-fat diets also encourage the body’s production of estrogens. Increased levels of this sex hormone have been linked to breast cancer.

A recent report noted that the rate of breast cancer among pre-menopausal women who ate the most animal (but not vegetable) fat was one-third higher than that of women who ate the least animal fat. A separate study from Cambridge University also linked diets high in saturated fat to breast cancer.

One study linked dairy products to an increased risk of ovarian cancer. The process of breaking down the lactose (milk sugar) evidently damages the ovaries. Daily meat consumption triples the risk of prostate enlargement. Regular milk consumption doubles the risk and failure to consume vegetables regularly nearly quadruples the risk.

Vegetarians avoid the animal fat linked to cancer and get abundant fiber, vitamins, and phytochemicals that help to prevent cancer. In addition, blood analysis of vegetarians reveals a higher level of “natural killer cells,” specialized white blood cells that attack cancer cells.

When you eat a diet that’s higher in dietary fiber, that’s primarily if not totally vegetarian, you’re naturally healthier. You’re feeding your body and getting it the nutrition it needs to run efficiently.

You have more energy and stamina; you wake up more easily and more refreshed. It’s easier to exercise, because you’re not so weighed down by digesting the high fat and excessive protein that comes from eating a carnivorous diet.

Try eating vegetarian for a week or a month. See if you don’t feel different, more mentally acute and more physically fit and energized. At least reverse the portion sizes you’ve been eating, and make meat more of a side dish, if you can’t stop eating meat altogether. Even that change can make a big difference in your overall health and well-being.

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This article is presented with the sole purpose to inform the reader of the vegetarian (vegan) lifestyle and of dietary choices that the reader may wish to make.

Copyright © Anne-Marie Ronsen
Publishers are free to use this article on an ezine or website, provided the article is reprinted in its entirety, including copyright and disclaimer, and ALL links remain intact and active.

Anne-Marie RONSEN
http://www.articlesbase.com/health-articles/vegetarian-diet-vs-cancer-742225.html

5 Comments

h0mgrtsMarch 9th, 2010 at 2:16 pm

I'm trying to find video – reversed cancer on vegetarian diet.?
I’m trying to find video story about group of people who had cancer and reversed it on vegetarian diet. I believe it was on Google Video but I’m not sure. Please help to find. Thanks.

moockieMarch 9th, 2010 at 7:18 pm

just google "hockispokis" as it sounds crazy to me!!!
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Lucy FurMarch 9th, 2010 at 7:20 pm

I know that Dr. Dean Ornish has done research proving that heart disease can be reversed on a vegetarian diet. I’ve never heard of the cancer video.
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HalaMarch 9th, 2010 at 7:22 pm

A vegetarian diet can be very healthy. But it is no guarantee against diseases, illness, or cancer. A veg or vegan diet may help health wise, but it can’t reverse cancer. Sorry.
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lo_mcgMarch 9th, 2010 at 7:24 pm

If there is such a video story, treat it with extreme caution.

There are no foods that have been proven to affect the course of cancer in any way.

Please be wary of unsubstantiated testimonials on the internet or elsewhere – you have no way of knowing that the person ever had cancer in the first place, much less that they were cured. The plural of anecdote is not data.

If all it took to reverse cancer was a vegetarian diet, then presumably all it would take to prevent it would be a vegetarian diet too. And that’s demonstrably not the case as vegetarians and vegans get cancer too.

I had been a vegetarian for most of my life and a vegan for 8 years when I was diagnosed with an aggressive cancer. My diet didn’t stop me getting cancer, it didn’t cure me and I’d be very foolish to rely on it to prevent recurrence or metastasis in the future.

Through support networks I have met three other vegans with cancer – one of them a lifelong vegan – and dozens of vegetarians with cancer.

If you’re looking for this information because you or someone you know has cancer, then I urge you not to delay treatment looking for ‘alternative’ ways to treat cancer; in this context alternative means unproven. If you are tempted by an ‘alternative’ treatment, including diet, please do a search on this site http://www.quackwatch.com/ before investing hope, money and – most dangerous of all – time on something unproven and almost certainly ineffective.
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