Five a Day

Eating two fruits and three veggies daily can help you live longer

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Eating two fruits and three veggies daily can help you live longer

A new study backs up the long-standing nutritional guideline that consuming five daily servings of a variety of fruits and vegetables, from apples to zucchini, is linked to longevity. But if you consider fruit juice or French fries among those servings, you may have to rethink your diet.

“People who eat five servings of vegetables and fruit daily have a 13 per cent lower risk of all-cause death compared to people who eat two servings of fruit and vegetables per day,” says Dong Wang, a faculty member at Harvard Medical School, and one of the study’s researchers. The study found that people who consumed five daily servings—specifically two fruits and three vegetables—had a 12 per cent lower risk of death from cardiovascular disease, a 10 per cent lower risk from cancer, and a 35 per cent lower risk from respiratory disease, compared with people who ate just two daily servings.

One ‘serving’ is 125 millilitres of any vegetables or fruits, or 250 millilitres of salad greens. You get the same beneficial vitamins, minerals and fibre in both, but vegetables are lower in calories and sugar, which is why the guidelines recommend slightly higher consumption levels for them.

The findings, published in the journal Circulation, included two studies of more than 1,00,000 American men and women who were followed for up to 30 years. Those studies were then added to 24 other studies from across the globe to conduct one large meta-analysis on more than 1.8 million participants.

Which Ones Are Best?

Variety is key, because different fruits and vegetables contain different beneficial nutrients and antioxidants. Wang’s study showed that almost all fruits and vegetables, including leafy greens, citrus fruits and berries, were associated with lower mortality, but there were some exceptions. Fruit juices and starchy vegetables such as peas, corn and potatoes were not associated with ...

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