The Cornell China Project: Authoritative Proof, or Misinterpretation by Dietary Advocates? |
The ecological data from 1983-1984 were aggregated on a county level, and supplemented with county data from a nationwide mortality survey in 1973-1975 as well as select demographic information from the Population Atlas of China.
The size and scope of the China Study are impressive. As a result, some dietary advocates have aggressively promoted the China Study as "proof" that vegan diets are optimal or best. However, a closer look at the study reveals important limitations that impact the reliability, usefulness, and interpretation of the study results. Many dietary advocates are quick to cite the China Study without discussing the limitations inherent in such
Side note: (statistical, can skip if you wish) Even a simple technique like some of the regression methods based on splines may be seriously limited on a data set of only 65 points. Spline methods are becoming increasingly important, because unlike traditional regression techniques they do not assume the functional form of a relationship between variables. (That is, they do not assume ahead of time what particular mathematical relationship may exist between one variable and another.)
Although uniquely comprehensive... it is not yet clear how satisfactory the analysis of multiple factor effects will be upon disease risk, given the limited number of survey counties (65). More complete evaluations of the virtually unlimited interactions between different disease causes may have to await the addition of still more dietary and lifestyle studies of disease mortality rates.
Although geographic variation in particular disease rates can provide clear evidence that, in areas where those rates are high, that disease is largely avoidable, they may provide frustratingly unclear evidence as to exactly how it can be avoided...Peto and Doll [1981], as cited by Peto in JunshiAn even more striking example of the limitations of geographic correlations is that oesophageal cancer in China has no clear geographic association with smoking, and has a significantly
(P < 0.01) negative association with daily alcohol intake.
Thus, the direct evidence of the study is hardly the condemnation of meat consumption that veg*n dietary advocates may claim it to be. It should be noted here that correlation is a measure only of linear relationships, and other analytical methods may yield different results. Despite the possibility of the existence of more complicated statistical relationships, it seems quite odd, given the interpretations of the study made by veg*n dietary advocates, that meat intake generally did not correlate with disease mortality. (See table 5033, pp. 634-635 of Junshi
First, this study is ecological and includes 6,500 individuals residing in 130 villages. Thus according to widely held assumptions, any inferences concerning cause-Thus we note that the China Study requires backup clinical studies before making inferences or drawing conclusions. The main hypothesis of the China Study is whether diets that are predominantly plant foods reduce chronic diseases. However, some veg*n advocates go far beyond the main hypothesis of the study, and claim it proves that veg*n diets are "better" than all omnivore diets. Further, such claims may be made without supporting clinical studies, and without regard for the actual range of diets included in the study. (The latter point is discussed later herein.)and- effect relationships should be considered to be hypothetical only, with validation to be provided only by intervention or prospective analytic studies on individuals.
In 19th century Europe, suicide rates were higher in countries that were more heavily Protestant, the inference being that suicide was promoted by the social conditions of Protestantism (Durkheim 1897). A contemporary example is provided by Carroll (1975): death rates from breast cancer are higher in countries where fat is a larger component of the diet, the idea being that fat intake causes breast cancer. These are "ecological inferences," that is, inferences about individual behavior drawn from data about groups...Eliminating group-The ecological fallacy consists in thinking that relationships observed for groups necessarily hold for individuals: if countries with more Protestants have higher suicide rates, then Protestants must be more likely to commit suicide; if countries with more fat in the diet have higher rates of breast cancer, then women who eat fatty foods must be more likely to get breast cancer. These inferences may be correct, but are only weakly supported by the aggregate data.
...However, it is all too easy to draw incorrect conclusions from aggregate data.... For example, recent studies of individual-
level data cast serious doubt on the link between breast cancer and fat intake (Holmes et al. 1999).
They also discuss how the techniques commonly used for "adjusting" ecological data for covariates (other variables) might not reflect the true underlying conditions due to non-
Averaging at the aggregate level prevents assessment of individual-
I encourage epidemiologists to understand the deficiencies of group-
Wenxun
It is impossible to study ecologic analyses very carefully and come away with much confidence in them. Averaging is a process that necessitates some loss of information... When analyzing such aggregated data, we not only lose all ability to extend inferences reliably to less aggregated data but we even lose the ability to estimate the direction and magnitude
Readers with some knowledge of statistics will find the above papers, plus the related papers of Greenland and Robins [1994b] and Cohen [1994] to be of interest, and to provide a good introduction to the statistical limitations (and problems) that are relevant when one tries to make ecological inferences. This underscores the earlier point (above) that the China Study merely generates hypotheses, it does not
A second general comment on comparing residents of rural China with residents of highly industrialized societies is that it may not be appropriate to extrapolate diet-
Campbell and Junshi [1994] then go on to briefly discuss the linkage between diet and health, and how the incidence of chronic disease changes when groups change diets. In that regard, the discussion in the previous section of chronic health problems among the Aborigines of Australia, after adopting high-
An examination of the correlations among CVD (cardiovascular disease) mortality rates, erythrocyte [red blood cell] fatty acids, blood lipid indices, and selected environmental factors indicates that some relationships reported for Western populations were absent in China whereas other relationships were observed. For example, there was no correlation between county means [averages] of plasma cholesterol and county mortality rates for any of three CVD types. Thus, factors other than total dietary lipid or plasma cholesterol may be important in explaining the geographic distribution of CVD mortality rates within China.
One probably will not find a consensus on the reasons why extrapolation of study results from one culture to another is unreliable. However, a number of probable factors include: differences in income and lifestyle, differences in level of industrialization causing differences in exercise levels and exposure to chemicals, minor but significant differences in genetics, differences in food preparation practices,
The national mean [average] percentage energy intake obtained from animal foods was observed to be 5.7%, with a range of 0.1-59.4%.
Thus we observe that extrapolation to strict vegan or evolutionary diets (or even the SAD diet) go beyond the range of the China Study data, and hence such projections are less reliable statistically. Also, as none of the China Study diets were evolutionary diets, and the meat consumed came from domesticated rather than wild animals, the results from such (Chinese) diets cannot be extrapolated to evolutionary diets (i.e., yet another logical fallacy).
These results suggest that consumption of high-As the above reflects results of only one study, the usual cautions on interpretation apply.starch diet alone is insufficient to reduce the risk of developing colon cancer.
Note: In the five studies analyzed by Key
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