Fast Food Intake Increases Risk of Diabetes and
Heart Disease in Singapore
ScienceDaily (July 2, 2012) — The
dangers of fast food are well documented; the portions are often larger and
the food is generally high in calories and low in nutrients. Now, University
of Minnesota School of Public Health researchers have examined the eating
habits of residents in Singapore and found new evidence that a diet heavy in
fast food increases the risk of developing Type 2 diabetes and coronary heart
disease.
The latest research, published online July 2 by the American Heart
Association's journal Circulation, found that people who consume fast
food even once a week increase their risk of dying from coronary heart disease
by 20 percent in comparison to people who avoid fast food. For people eating
fast food two-three times each week, the risk increases by 50 percent, and the
risk climbs to nearly 80 percent for people who consume fast food items four or
more times each week.
Eating fast food two or more times a week was also found to increase the risk
of developing Type 2 diabetes by 27 percent.
According to University of Minnesota researchers, the few existing studies on
the association of fast food and metabolic risk have looked almost exclusively
at Western-Caucasian populations from the United States.
"We wanted to examine the association of Western-style fast food with
cardio-metabolic risk in a Chinese population in Southeast Asia that has become
a hotbed for diabetes and heart disease," said the study's lead researcher,
University of Minnesota post-doctoral researcher Andrew Odegaard, Ph.D., M.P.H.
"What we found was a dramatic public health impact by fast food, a product
that is primarily a Western import into a completely new market."
To arrive at their results, School of Public Health researchers worked
alongside researchers from the National University of Singapore. Together, they
examined results of a study conducted over a period of 16 years beginning in
1993, which looked at the eating habits of 52,000 Chinese residents of Singapore
who have experienced a recent and sudden transition from traditional foods to
Western-style fast food.
"What's interesting about the results is that study participants who
reported eating fast food most frequently were younger, better educated, smoked
less and were more likely to be physically active," said Odegaard.
"This profile is normally associated with lower cardio-metabolic
risk."
According to the study's senior researcher, Mark Pereira, Ph.D., M.P.H., of
the School of Public Health's Division of Epidemiology and Community Health, the
new research provides an important perspective on global health and the
nutrition transfer when cultures developing in different parts of the world
start moving away from their traditional diet and mode of exercise.
"The big picture is that this [fast food] aspect of globalization and
exportation of U.S. and Western culture might not be the best thing to spread to
cultures around the world," he said. "Global public health efforts
should focus on maintaining the positive aspects of traditional cultures, while
preventing the spread of outside influences thought to be harmful based on the
scientific evidence."