LACTOSE INTOLERANCE TO REDUCE.pdf
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OVERCOMING THE BARRIER OF
LACTOSE INTOLERANCE TO REDUCE
HEALTH DISPARITIES
Judith K. Jarvis, MS, RD, and Gregory D. Miller, PhD, FACN
Rosemont, Illinois
Federal health goals for the public have focused on reducing health disparities that exist
between whites and various racial and ethnic groups. Many of the chronic diseases for which
African Americans are at greater risk- hypertension, stroke, colon cancer, and obesity-may
be exacerbated by a low intake of calcium and/or other dairy-related nutrients. For example, a
low intake of dairy food nutrients, such as calcium, potassium, and magnesium, may contribute
to the high risk of hypertension seen in African Americans. The Dietary Approaches to Stop
Hypertension (DASH) study demonstrated that a low-fat diet rich in fruits and vegetables (8 to 10
servings) and low-fat dairy foods (3 servings) significantly reduced blood pressure-and was
twice as effective in African-American participants. Calcium and dairy food consumption is
particularly low among African-American, Hispanic. and Asian populations. Average intakes
are near the threshold of 600 to 700 mg/day, below which bone loss and hypertension can
result. Although lactose intolerance may be partly to blame for the low calcium intakes due to
reduced dairy food consumption by minority populations, culturally determined food preferences
and dietary practices learned early in life also play a role. The high incidence figures for primary
lactose maldigestion among minority groups grossly overestimates the number who will experi-
ence intolerance symptoms after drinking a glass of milk with a meal. Randomized, double-blind,
controlled clinical trials have demonstrated that by using a few simple dietary strategies, those
who maldigest lactose (have low levels of the lactase enzyme) can easily tolerate a dairy-rich diet
that meets calcium intake recommendations. Physicians and other health professionals can help
their minority patients and the general public understand how
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