Is whole grain intake associated with reduced total and cause-specific death rates in older women? The Iowa Women's Health Study.
D R Jacobs, Jr,
K A Meyer,
L H Kushi and
A R Folsom
Division of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55454, USA. jacobs@epivax.epi.umn.edu
OBJECTIVES: This study sought to determine whether nutrient-richwhole grains reduce mortality risk. METHODS: The study included38,740 Iowa women, aged 55 to 69 years. A food frequency questionnairewas used to obtain data on grain intake. RESULTS: Median wholegrain intake quintiles ranged from a median of 0.2 to more than3 servings per day. Women with higher intakes had healthierlifestyles and less baseline disease. The total death rate decreasedin increasing quintiles, and the pattern repeated for cancer,cardiovascular disease, and other causes combined. Adjustedfor lifestyle and baseline disease, the relative hazard rateratio for total death was about 0.85 in daily consumers of wholegrain. Findings persisted in strata of baseline healthy anddiseased and were not explained by dietary fiber. Rates of totalmortality, but not cardiovascular disease mortality, were higheramong frequent consumers of refined grain. CONCLUSIONS: Totalmortality risk was inversely associated with whole grain intakeand positively associated with refined grain intake. Refinedgrains contributed more than 20% of energy intake, and wholegrains contributed 1%. Substitution of whole for refined grainmay reduce chronic disease risk in the United States.
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