GINTA: Food studies versus reality and common sense
YOU CAN SAFELY FILE IT under ‘Another day, another food study.’ Followed by… now what?
Case in point: the recent meat-centered study coming from Dalhousie and McMaster Universities, which concluded that the health benefits associated with reducing or eliminating red and processed meats are minimal, and the risks we thought existed are also quite small, hence the recommendation to eat meat without restrictions, if that’s how you feel like it.
“So what’s wrong with that?” some will say. The study eased the guilt and worry about red and processed meats. It’s good to not have guilt or fear as a side dish, right? Granted, the researchers admitted they had not taken into consideration any animal welfare and environmental issues, and they considered people’s attachment to their meat-based diets as one of the factors to base their recommendations on.
Food is not a black and white issue, and we do not need science to tell us that. From the oldest of times, people ate what they could catch or hunt, or grow (later on), and menus were hardly a matter of choice. Size was not either.