Fresh
vegetables cut diabetes risk
WASHINGTON: Researchers at Tulane School of Public
Health and Tropical Medicine and
the Harvard School of Public Health have found that
eating just
one serving of green leafy vegetables or three
servings of fruit a day reduces the risk of
developing Type II
diabetes.
They also found that one serving of fruit juice a
day increased the risk of Type II diabetes in women.
"Based on the results of our study, people who have
risk factors for diabetes may find it helpful to
fill up on leafy greens like lettuces, kale and
spinach and whole fruits, like
apples, bananas, oranges and watermelon rather than
drink fruit juices, which deliver a big sugar load
in a liquid form that gets absorbed rapidly," Tulane
epidemiologist Dr. Lydia Bazzano said.
For the study, Bazzano and her team analyzed 18
years worth of diet and health data from 71,346
nurses who participated in the Nurses' Health Study
from 1984 to 2002.
Apart from emphasizing the importance of eating
whole fruits and green leafy vegetables to prevent
diabetes, the researchers also recommend replacing
refined grains and white potatoes with whole fruit
or green leafy vegetable servings. White flours and
potatoes have been associated with an increased risk
of diabetes.