I followed the first link http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/27/9/2108.short and the abstract there had “After adjusting for age, BMI, total energy intake, exercise, alcohol intake, cigarette smoking, and family history of diabetes, we found positive associations between intakes of red meat and processed meat and risk of type 2 diabetes.”
And then later, “These results remained significant after further adjustment for intakes of dietary fiber, magnesium, glycemic load, and total fat.” though I’m not sure if the latter was separate because it was specifically about /processed/ meat.
So long as they keep the claim as modest as ‘eating red meat “may” increase your risk of type II diabetes.’ it seems reasonable. They could still be wrong of course, but the statement allows for that. I should note here that the study was on women over 45, not a general population of an area.
If there’s better evidence that the search is not finding, that is a problem.
I followed the first link http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/27/9/2108.short and the abstract there had “After adjusting for age, BMI, total energy intake, exercise, alcohol intake, cigarette smoking, and family history of diabetes, we found positive associations between intakes of red meat and processed meat and risk of type 2 diabetes.”
And then later, “These results remained significant after further adjustment for intakes of dietary fiber, magnesium, glycemic load, and total fat.” though I’m not sure if the latter was separate because it was specifically about /processed/ meat.
So long as they keep the claim as modest as ‘eating red meat “may” increase your risk of type II diabetes.’ it seems reasonable. They could still be wrong of course, but the statement allows for that. I should note here that the study was on women over 45, not a general population of an area.
If there’s better evidence that the search is not finding, that is a problem.