Just released by the World Health Organization (WHO), processed
meats are actually just as bad for you as smoking cigarettes. Eating
processed meat can lead to bowel cancel in humans while red meat is
likely cause of the disease, WHO experts released on today in findings
that could further enliven the debate over the merits of a meat-based
diet.
WHO put processed meats such as hot dogs and ham in its Group 1
list of carcinogens along with tobacco, asbestos, diesel fumes–all of
which is found to have strong links to causing cancer. In a statement
release by Dr. Kurt Straif of the IARC (International Agency for
Research on Cancer, a part of the WHO) said “For an individual, the risk
of developing colorectal cancer because of their consumption of
processed meats remains small, but this rise increase with the amount of
meat consumed.”
Red meat, under which the IARC includes beef, lamb and pork,
were classified as a “probable” carcinogen in its group 2A list that
also contains glyphosate, the active ingredient in many weedkillers. The
agency, whose findings on meat followed a meeting of health experts
earlier this month, estimated each 50 gram portion of processed meat
eaten daily increases the risk of colorectal cancer by 18 percent.
Colorectal cancer is actually the second most lethal form of cancer
in the U.S., causing nearly 50,000 deaths per year, and processed meat
was also linked to a higher incidence of stomach cancer.
While this study maybe good for the world to be aware of, it has the
Beef Industry up in arms. According to the Washington Post, the beef
industry has been preparing a rebuttal for months “We simply don’t think
the evidence supports any causal link between any red meat and any type
of cancer,” Shalene McNeill, executive director of human nutrition at
the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association.
So the question is should we put down red meats just as quickly as we put down cigarettes?
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