Title
Wheat flour versus rice consumption and vascular diseases: Evidence from the China study II data
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Cliodynamics
Abstract
Why does wheat flour consumption appear to be significantly associated with vascular diseases? To answer this question, we analyzed data on rice consumption, wheat flour consumption, total calorie consumption, and mortality from vascular diseases obtained from the China Study II dataset. This dataset covers the years of 1983, 1989 and 1993 and includes data related to biochemistry, diet, lifestyle, and mortality from various diseases in 69 counties in China. Our analyses point to a counterintuitive conclusion: it may not be wheat flour consumption that is the problem, but the culture associated with it, which is characterized by decreased levels of physical activity, decreased exposure to sunlight, increased consumption of processed foods, and increased social isolation. Wheat flour consumption may act as a proxy for the extent to which this culture is expressed in a population. The more this culture is expressed, the greater is the prevalence of vascular diseases.
First Page
130
Last Page
146
DOI
10.21237/C7CLIO6227969
Publication Date
1-1-2015
Recommended Citation
Kock, Ned, "Wheat flour versus rice consumption and vascular diseases: Evidence from the China study II data" (2015). Business Faculty Publications. 73.
https://rio.tamiu.edu/arssb_facpubs/73