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American Journal of Public Health logoLink to American Journal of Public Health
. 1985 May;75(5):507–512. doi: 10.2105/ajph.75.5.507

Does a vegetarian diet reduce the occurrence of diabetes?

D A Snowdon, R L Phillips
PMCID: PMC1646264  PMID: 3985239

Abstract

We propose the hypothesis that a vegetarian diet reduces the risk of developing diabetes. Findings that have generated this hypothesis are from a population of 25,698 adult White Seventh-day Adventists identified in 1960. During 21 years of follow-up, the risk of diabetes as an underlying cause of death in Adventists was approximately one-half the risk for all US Whites. Within the male Adventist population, vegetarians had a substantially lower risk than non-vegetarians of diabetes as an underlying or contributing cause of death. Within both the male and female Adventist populations, the prevalence of self-reported diabetes also was lower in vegetarians than in non-vegetarians. The associations observed between diabetes and meat consumption were apparently not due to confounding by over- or under-weight, other selected dietary factors, or physical activity. All of the associations between meat consumption and diabetes were stronger in males than in females.

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Selected References

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