Highest Mortality Risk
Seen With High-Fat Dairy and High Sugar Intake
Daniel J. DeNoon
December 23, 2010 — Two
specific eating patterns increase the risk of death for older adults, a 10-year
study finds.
Compared to people who ate healthy foods, men
and women in their 70s had a 40% higher risk of death if they got most of their
calories from high-fat dairy foods or from sweets and desserts.
University of Maryland researcher Amy L.
Anderson, PhD, and colleagues monitored the eating patterns of 2,582 adults
aged 70 to 79. They found that these diets fell
into six patterns or clusters.
After adjusting for risk factors such as sex,
age, race, education, physical activing, smoking, and
total calories, "the High-Fat Dairy Products cluster and the Sweets and
Desserts cluster still showed significantly higher risk of mortality than the
Healthy Foods cluster," Anderson and colleagues found.
The six dietary patterns were:
Several of the groups got an unusually large
amount of their total calories from just one food group:
Healthy Eaters Live Longest
Overall, people in the healthy foods cluster had
more years of healthy life and a lower death rate than all other groups.
Moreover, their blood tests came back with significantly more indicators of
health than the other groups.
But not all of the study findings were so
predictable.
"Unexpectedly, in this and in several other
studies, a [dietary] pattern higher in red meat was not significantly
associated with increased risk of mortality," Anderson and colleagues
note.
It's also not entirely clear why the Meat, Fried
Food, and Alcohol cluster didn't have a significantly higher death risk, as
most diets warn people to limit or avoid such foods.
"In our study, the Meat, Fried Food, and
Alcohol cluster did have a slightly higher percentage of total energy from vegetables,
fruit, and whole grains than both the High-Fat Dairy Products and Sweets and
Desserts clusters, which showed higher risk of mortality," Anderson and
colleagues suggest.
This was by far the most common eating pattern
seen in the study: 27% of participants were in the meat, fried food, and
alcohol cluster. But Anderson and colleagues do not recommend such a diet.
Instead, they point to the fact that 14.5% of
study participants were in the healthy foods cluster.
"Adherence to such a diet appears a feasible
and realistic recommendation for potentially improved survival and quality of
life in the growing older adult population," Anderson and colleagues
conclude.
The study appears in the January 2011 issue of
the Journal of the American Dietetic Association.
SOURCE:
Anderson, A.L. Journal of the American Dietetic Association, January 2011; vol
111: pp 84-91.