How to Go Pro-tein
When people talk about how they follow vegetarian diets so they can live longer, do you hear yourself saying, “Give up meat — nope, never gonna happen”?
But believe it or not, you don’t have to go full-on vegetarian or vegan to enjoy the potential health benefits. In fact, you may cut your chance of getting cancer in half if you replace just one meat meal per week with a vegetarian dish. Imagine that. If you substitute one veggie burger for one ham sandwich each week, you might stave off an early cancer diagnosis.
Here’s the research that supports that claim:
In Japan, researchers studied 71,000 people for nearly 20 years. Many of those Japanese participants replaced red meat and processed meat with plant-based protein during 4 percent of their weekly meals. That’s basically just one meal a week.
Those eaters who sometimes ate plant-based protein were half as likely to die of cancer compared with people who never replaced their beef, poultry, pork or seafood with a single vegetarian option.
What’s more, those occasional plant-based protein eaters were 46 percent less likely to die of a cause like cardiovascular disease.