The Australian cancer expert who chaired the World Health Organisation (WHO) committee which says processed meat can give you cancer says he will continue to eat salami, bacon and ham.
Professor Bernard Stewart, chief scientific advisor for the Cancer Council Australia, chaired the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) committee which looked at 800 studies from around the world and concluded there was “sufficient evidence in humans that the consumption of processed meat causes colorectal cancer”.
Professor Stewart said the findings should not cause a complete boycott of the processed meats, rather that moderation should be applied.
“My personal recommendation is to acknowledge that I too like ham and salami and bacon. I also like a steak occasionally,” he told ABC News 24.
“The recommendation is not to abandon any of these foods, it is to reduce the intake.
“For those who are eating these foods on a very regular basis, let’s say more than five days a week, possibly every day, it is those people who will probably be the focus of dietary guidelines suggesting that they replace some of that red and processed meat by a higher intake of poultry, fish and possibly even, dare I say it, a vegetarian meal every now and then.”
Professor Stewart said experts were still not sure what element of processed meat led to an increased cancer risk.
“So far as we know it is not so much an agent that is used in the processing, it is the very nature of the meat giving rise to chemicals in the cause of digestion,” he said.