Easy on those pork chops, the British government advised on Friday.
The new recommendations comes as evidence mounts that eating 90 grams (a bit more than 3 ounces) of red and processed meats per day probably increase the risk of bowel cancer.
Easy on those pork chops, the British government advised on Friday.
The new recommendations comes as evidence mounts that eating 90 grams (a bit more than 3 ounces) of red and processed meats per day probably increase the risk of bowel cancer.
Among their recommendations: that people who eat 90 grams or more of meat a day should cut that back to 70. They even give helpful examples of a 70-gram serving. Observe:
- One medium portion shepherd's pie and a rasher of bacon
- Two standard beef burgers.
- One lamb chop.
Pray tell, what are the dimensions of a standard beef burger? Is a rasher one strip, or several strips, of bacon? Does it matter how petite or big-boned the unfortunate lamb was? And what, exactly, is a "medium" portion of shepherd's pie?
All snark aside, they make a good point. People don't know how much meat they're eating -- and how much more we eat than prior generations. The U.S. Department of Agriculture says Americans are eating a record amount of meat: 195 pounds a year, 57 pounds more than what we ate in the 1950s.
Keep in mind, a 2009 study in the Archives of Internal Medicine found that men and women who ate the most meat were, respectively, 31% and 36% more likely to die over a 10-period than those who didn't eat much meat at all.
Might be time to ditch that breakfast bacon for a side of fruit.
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