The Mail — It has long been used as a model of healthy eating to protect our hearts.
Now the ‘Mediterranean diet’ has been proven by scientists to also significantly protect us against type 2 diabetes.
Researchers from Harvard University followed the diets and medical histories of 200,000 health professionals in the US over a period of 20 years.
Plant and animal products were ranked in an index giving higher and lower scores respectively, in order to produce an overall ‘grade’ for their diet.
It was already known that there are some health benefits to a vegetarian diet, but this study, published in the journal PLOS One, highlighted the importance of the difference between ‘healthy’ and ‘less healthy’ versions of plant-based foods.
For example, grains should be consumed as the wholegrain variety, and not be refined.
A plant-based diet low in animal products was shown to reduce the risk by 20 per cent – rising to thirty four percent if the healthiest versions were consumed.
It’s thought the ‘healthy versions’ work against diabetes because of their high levels of fibre, antioxidants, unsaturated fatty acids and micronutrients such as magnesium
They can also help to boost healthy gut bacteria.
A study in 2013 by the Universities of Barcelona, Valencia, Malaga and Navarra showed that this plant based Mediterranean diet also helps to prevent against cardiovascular disease and stroke.
And another study showed the ‘good fats’ in Mediterranean olive oil are a more effective way of reducing weight than counting calories.
However this is the first time the diet has been shown to protect t against diabetes – another disease of increasing prevalence in Western society.
‘This study highlights even moderate dietary changes in the direction of a healthful plant based diet can play a significant role in the prevention of type 2 diabetes. These findings provide further evidence to support current dietary recommendations for chronic disease prevention,’ said nutritionist Dr Ambika Satija of Harvard University.
Co author Professor Frank Hu said: ‘A shift to a dietary pattern higher in healthful plant based foods such as vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes, nuts, and seeds, and lower in animal based foods, especially red and processed meats, can confer substantial health benefits in reducing risk of type 2 diabetes.’
Since the study cumulatively measured participants’ diet over a long time, it lowered possible errors in measurement from the data being self reported.