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Mediterranean Diet and Health
Research conducted by: De
Longerill et al.
Case study prepared by: David
Lane and Emily Zitek Overview
Most doctors would probably agree that a Mediterranean diet,
rich in vegetables, fruits, and grains, is healthier than a high-saturated
fat diet. Indeed, previous research has found that the diet can
lower risk of heart disease. However, there is still considerable
uncertainty about whether the Mediterranean diet is superior to
a low-fat diet recommended by the American Heart Association.
This study is the first to compare these two diets.
The subjects, 605 survivors of a heart attack, were randomly assigned
follow either (1) a diet close to the "prudent diet step
1" of the American Heart Association (control group) or (2)
a Mediterranean-type diet consisting of more bread and cereals,
more fresh fruit and vegetables, more grains, more fish, fewer
delicatessen foods, less meat. An experimental canola-oil-based
margarine was used instead of butter or cream. The oils recommended
for salad and food preparation were canola and olive oils exclusively.
Moderate red wine consumption was allowed.
Over a four-year period, patients in the experimental condition
were initially seen by the dietician, two months later, and then
once a year. Compliance with the dietary intervention was checked
by a dietary survey and analyses of plasma fatty acids. Patients
in the control group were expected to follow the dietary advice
given by their physician.
The researchers collected information on number of deaths from
cardiovascular causes e.g., heart attack, strokes, as well as
number of nonfatal heart-related episodes. The occurrence of malignant
and nonmalignant tumors was also carefully monitored.
Questions to Answer Is the
Mediterranean diet superior to a low-fat diet recommended by the
American Heart Association?
Design Issues
The strength
of the design is that subjects were randomly assigned to conditions.
A possible weakness is that compliance rates depended on reports
rather than observation since observation is impractical in this
type of research.
Descriptions of Variables
Variable |
Description |
Type of diet |
AHA or Mediterranean |
Various outcome measures of health and disease |
does the patient have cancer, etc.? |
References |
De Longerill, M., Salen, P., Martin,
J., Monjaud, I., Boucher, P., Mamelle, N. (1998). Mediterranean
Dietary pattern in a Randomized Trial. Archives
of Internal Medicine, 158, 1181-1187.
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Links
More on the Mediterranean Diet
Exercises |
- What percentage of people on the AHA diet had some sort
of illness or death?
- What percentage of people on the Mediterranean diet
had some sort of illness or death?
- Conduct a Pearson Chi-Square test to determine if there
is any relationship between diet and outcome.
- Compute a 95% confidence interval on the proportion
of people who are healthy on the AHA diet.
Frequencies
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Cancers
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Deaths
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Nonfatal illness
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Healthy
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Total
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AHA
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15
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24
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25
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239
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303
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Mediterranean
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7
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14
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8
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273
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302
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Total
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22
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38
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33
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512
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605
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