Plain-English Summary
Vegetarian hip fracture risk. Vegetarian diet pattern was associated with higher hip fracture risk in the studied cohort.
VV Study Evidence Matrix v1.0
VV Evidence Utility Score
A bounded score for how useful this study is in public explanation, based on evidence tier, design, applicability, endpoint relevance, limitations, safety signals, and publication/source strength.
58/100
Limited Public Evidence
- Evidence tier
- 66/100, weight 18%
- Design strength
- 66/100, weight 18%
- Applicability
- 55/100, weight 16%
- Endpoint relevance
- 35/100, weight 16%
- Limitations transparency
- 50/100, weight 12%
- Safety signal usefulness
- 45/100, weight 10%
- Publication/source strength
- 91/100, weight 10%
Useful for context, but limited by endpoint relevance, safety signal usefulness, limitations transparency.
How the study framework works ->Key Findings
- Vegetarian diet pattern was associated with higher hip fracture risk in the studied cohort.
- Risk interpretation requires BMI, sex, age, nutrient intake, and lifestyle context.
Limitations
- Vegetarian, not strictly vegan, cohort context; observational design.
Why It Matters
Vegetarian diet pattern was associated with higher hip fracture risk in the studied cohort.
Viral Vitalism Verdict
Useful evidence, bounded by design: Vegetarian, not strictly vegan, cohort context; observational design.
Sources
Signal cards
Used in signals
Signal coverage connected to this study through explicit study links, canonical source refs, or evidence visualizations.
Vegan Diets Can Be Elite or Deficient
The online vegan war is a perfect nutrition trap: one side pretends plants automatically solve health, the other pretends excluding animal foods guarantees collapse. The evidence supports neither cartoon.
VV Signal Score
70
Promising signal
- Sources
- 14
- Studies
- 13
- Claims
- 10
Claim ledger
Relevant claims
Claim ledger records connected through this study's ID, topic tags, or source IDs.
vegan diet: Some cohorts report higher fracture risk in vegans or
Some cohorts report higher fracture risk in vegans or non-meat eaters, especially hip fracture signals, but the mechanism likely involves BMI, calcium, vitamin D, protein, and other confounders rather than veganism alone.
vegan diet: Vegan diets are not automatically healthier; outcomes depend on
Vegan diets are not automatically healthier; outcomes depend on food quality, adequacy, supplementation, energy intake, and what the vegan diet replaces.
alkaline diet: The claim that acid-forming foods directly destroy bones is
The claim that acid-forming foods directly destroy bones is overstated; bone health depends on many inputs beyond dietary acid load.
ultra processed food: Ultra-processed diets can increase spontaneous calorie intake and weight
Ultra-processed diets can increase spontaneous calorie intake and weight gain under controlled inpatient conditions, even when presented diets are broadly matched for macronutrients, sugar, sodium, and fiber.
vegan diet: Vegetarian and vegan diets can lower LDL-C and apoB
Vegetarian and vegan diets can lower LDL-C and apoB on average in randomized trials, especially when they improve saturated-fat and fiber patterns.
weight loss: Low-fat and low-carbohydrate patterns can both support weight loss,
Low-fat and low-carbohydrate patterns can both support weight loss, but group-average diet labels are less useful than adherence, food quality, calorie intake, and individual fit.
