“Healthy” Oats, Yoghurt, And Bananas Linked to Increased Risk of Diabetes in Susceptible Kids

Well, this sounds like bullshit to me.

Why are we reporting on this?

The Guardian:

Children who are susceptible to type 1 diabetes and eat bananas, oats and yoghurt are more likely to contract the disease, while consuming strawberries and blueberries lowers the risk, research has found.

Wheat also emerged from the study as a risk factor for the autoimmune form of diabetes, while vegetables such as broccoli, cauliflower and cabbage have a protective effect.

Well, that’s true.

Wheat is poison.

But no one will listen to that. People are fat and retarded, which is one reason why billions must die.

The professor behind the findings said the fact that some fruits contain traces of pesticides may explain why some of them heighten, but others cut, the risk of type 1 diabetes.

Suvi Virtanen and colleagues at the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare analysed the diet of 5,674 Finnish children who were genetically susceptible to the disease, following them from birth to the age of six. Ninety-four of the children had developed type 1 diabetes by that age and another 206 had developed islet autoimmunity, which meant they were at much higher risk of getting it.

Most “yoghurts” are poison.

The researchers analysed 34 different food groups and found that the more fruits such as bananas, oats or rye children ate, the greater their risk of getting the disease.

That finding may perplex parents because, Virtanen added, “many of the foods that we found to be associated with increased risk of type 1 diabetes and the disease process are considered part of a healthy diet”.

However, in contrast, eating strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, blackcurrants and other berries seemed to protect children from the condition. The more they ate, the lower their risk.

Yeah, hey – people should eat real food instead of processed poison.

Very true.

That tweet aged horribly. Vegan doctors want people to believe that the problem is animal foods.