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A Minority Of One

Food & Drink > Brown Rice Cuts Diabetes Risk ...
 

Brown Rice Cuts Diabetes Risk ...

Replacing white rice with brown rice and wholemeal bread could cut the risk of diabetes by a third, US experts say.

White rice poses a diabetes threat because it causes steep rises in blood sugar, say Harvard researchers in Archives of Internal Medicine.

Brown rice and other wholegrain foods are a healthier option as they release glucose more gradually, they say.

The study is based on questionnaires; some say the data is not robust enough to base firm conclusions on.

It may be that people who eat less white rice tend to live healthier lifestyles, for example.
'Brown is better'

In the study of nearly 200,000 US people, white rice consumption was linked to type 2 diabetes.

After adjusting for age and other diabetes risk factors, those who ate five or more 150g servings of white rice per week had a 17% increased risk of diabetes compared with people who consumed less than one serving - about a cup of rice - per month.

Although few people - only 2% - in the study ate this much white rice, the finding was significant.
Continue reading the main story

The best way to prevent type 2 diabetes is by keeping active and eating a healthy balanced diet that is low in fat, salt and sugar with plenty of fruit and vegetables

Dr Victoria King Diabetes UK

Yet eating brown rice appeared to have the opposite effect, cutting the risk of type 2 diabetes.

People who ate two or more servings of brown rice per week had an 11% reduced risk of developing the condition compared with those who ate less than one serving a month.

Based on the results, the researchers estimate that replacing 50g or one-third of a typical serving of white rice with the same amount of brown rice would lead to a 16% lower risk of type 2 diabetes.

And replacing the white rice with wholegrains, including brown rice and pasta, wholemeal bread and rolled oats, could cut the risk by more than a third.
Food composition

Dr Qi Sun and other researchers say the explanation lies in the composition of the food.

Like other wholegrain foods, brown rice is high in fibre and releases its energy slowly.

In contrast, white rice has had all the bran and some of the germ removed during milling.

This gives white rice a higher glycaemic index (GI) - a measure of how much a food raises blood sugar levels compared with the same amount of glucose or white bread.

"From a public health point of view, replacing refined grains such as white rice by whole grains, including brown rice, should be recommended to facilitate the prevention of type 2 diabetes," according to the researchers.

Experts generally recommend that at least half of carbohydrate intake should come from whole grains like brown rice.

More than 70% of the rice consumed in developed countries such as the US and UK is white.

Dr Victoria King of Diabetes UK said that, since the results were from self-reported food diaries and questionnaires, it was not possible to make conclusive recommendations on how much of certain foods, such as brown rice, might protect against type 2 diabetes at this stage.

"The best way to prevent type 2 diabetes is by keeping active and eating a healthy balanced diet that is low in fat, salt and sugar with plenty of fruit and vegetables," she said.

(BBC America)

posted on June 14, 2010 6:34 PM ()

Comments:

Whole grains just taste better. White bread ...yuk.
comment by elderjane on June 16, 2010 5:53 AM ()
I have heard that white stuff is not the best for us, like white bread, white pasta, white rice... interesting post!
comment by kristilyn3 on June 15, 2010 5:13 PM ()
I can eat all the salt I want, no problems. My check-ups show no signs of the illnesses that are worsened by salt. Ed's doctor told him to use more salt to increase his blood volume. The "no salt" caveat isn't for everyone. We don't eat rice except with Chinese food. It's always white. We only order Chinese once a month. I think we can tolerate white rice once a month. I love Spanish/Mediterranean rice. When I cook a box of pre-seasoned rice of this kind, I will take a week to eat it (Ed won't eat any rice but Chinese) and then I won't do that again for six months. I don't think brown rice is all that important if you are not eating a lot of rice to start with.
comment by tealstar on June 15, 2010 7:19 AM ()
your right.Brown rice is much better than white.Been having this for years and loved it.
comment by fredo on June 15, 2010 4:09 AM ()
My birds love brown rice--I serve them some every day--and, of course, some for me.
comment by greatmartin on June 14, 2010 7:55 PM ()

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