Abstract
Aim: To evaluate the relationship of diet to incident diabetes among non-Black and Black participants in the Adventist Health Study-2. Methods and Results: Participants were 15,200 men and 26,187 women (17.3% Blacks) across the U.S. and Canada who were free of diabetes and who provided demographic, anthropometric, lifestyle and dietary data. Participants were grouped as vegan, lacto ovo vegetarian, pesco vegetarian, semi-vegetarian or non-vegetarian (reference group). A follow-up questionnaire after two years elicited information on the development of diabetes. Cases of diabetes developed in 0.54% of vegans, 1.08% of lacto ovo vegetarians, 1.29% of pesco vegetarians, 0.92% of semi-vegetarians and 2.12% of non-vegetarians. Blacks had an increased risk compared to non-Blacks (odds ratio [OR] 1.364; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.093-1.702). In multiple logistic regression analysis controlling for age, gender, education, income, television watching, physical activity, sleep, alcohol use, smoking and BMI, vegans (OR 0.381; 95% CI 0.236-0.617), lacto ovo vegetarians (OR 0.618; 95% CI 0.503-0.760) and semi-vegetarians (OR 0.486, 95% CI 0.312-0.755) had a lower risk of diabetes than non-vegetarians. In non-Blacks vegan, lacto ovo and semi-vegetarian diets were protective against diabetes (OR 0.429, 95% CI 0.249-0.740; OR 0.684, 95% CI 0.542-0.862; OR 0.501, 95% CI 0.303-0.827); among Blacks vegan and lacto ovo vegetarian diets were protective (OR 0.304, 95% CI 0.110-0.842; OR 0.472, 95% CI 0.270-0.825). These associations were strengthened when BMI was removed from the analyses. Conclusion: Vegetarian diets (vegan, lacto ovo, semi-) were associated with a substantial and independent reduction in diabetes incidence. In Blacks the dimension of the protection associated with vegetarian diets was as great as the excess risk associated with Black ethnicity. © 2011 Elsevier B.V.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 292-299 |
| Number of pages | 8 |
| Journal | Nutrition, Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases |
| Volume | 23 |
| Issue number | 4 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Apr 2013 |
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Medicine (miscellaneous)
- Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
- Nutrition and Dietetics
- Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Keywords
- African American
- Black
- Diabetes
- Diet
- Ethnicity
- Vegetarianism
- Life Style
- Prognosis
- Prospective Studies
- Humans
- Middle Aged
- Male
- Canada/epidemiology
- Asian
- Hispanic or Latino
- Incidence
- Nutritional Status/ethnology
- United States/epidemiology
- Time Factors
- Adult
- Female
- Protestantism
- Surveys and Questionnaires
- Odds Ratio
- Diabetes Mellitus/epidemiology
- Risk Assessment
- Risk Reduction Behavior
- Black or African American
- Risk Factors
- Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander
- White People
- Logistic Models
- Chi-Square Distribution
- Diet, Vegetarian/ethnology
- Aged
- Indians, North American
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