Super Educational and its trusted partners need your
permission to store and access cookies, unique identifiers, personal data, and information on your
browsing behaviour on this device. This only applies to Super Educational. You don’t have to accept, and
you
can change your preferences at any time via the Privacy Options link at the bottom of this screen. If
you don’t accept, you may will still see some personalised ads and content.
Cookies, device identifiers, or other information can be stored or accessed on
your device for the purposes presented to you.
Ads and content can be personalised based on a profile. More data can be added
to better personalise ads and content. Ad and content performance can be
measured. Insights about audiences who saw the ads and content can be derived.
Data can be used to build or improve user experience, systems and software.
Precise geolocation and information about device characteristics can be used.
If you don’t want to accept, please select Read More option below where you can also see how and
why your data may be used. You can also see where we or our partners claim a legitimate interest and
object to the processing of your data.
EATING a healthy veggie diet could slash your bowel cancer risk by a fifth, a study found – but only if you’re a man.
Around 43,000 Brits get the disease every year, making it one of the most common tumour types.
Half of cases could be avoided with better health, say experts, with swapping meat for vegetables and grains an easy win.
Scientists at Kyung Hee University in South Korea found colorectal cancer was 22 per cent less likely in men who ate the most fruit and veg, compared to those eating the least.
They studied 80,000 men in the US and 93,000 women – but women did not get the same benefit from a greener diet.
Study author Professor Jihye Kim said: “The antioxidants found in fruits, vegetables and whole grains could lower colorectal cancer risk by suppressing chronic inflammation.
“Men tend to have a higher risk of bowel cancer than women – this could help explain why eating greater amounts of healthy plant-based foods was associated with reduced risk in men but not women.”
Participants in the study kept track of what they ate and drank for a year and researchers classed their diets according to how healthy they were.
Results in the journal BMC Medicine showed the fewest cases of cancer over a 19-year period were in men eating the healthiest plant-based diets.
Healthy veggie foods include fresh fruit and vegetables and grains such as oats, wheat and brown rice.
Cancer Research UK estimates 54 per cent of bowel cancer cases – 23,000 per year – could be prevented by healthier lifestyles.
Sun writer Dame Deborah James urged readers to be aware of symptoms, which include changes to your poo and tummy pain, before sadly dying of the disease aged 40 in June.
Prof Kim added: “Our findings suggest that eating a healthy plant-based diet is associated with a reduced risk of colorectal cancer.”