Vegetable juice aids 'strive for five'

Published: Oct. 27, 2008 at 1:59 AM

DAVIS, Calif., Oct. 27 (UPI) -- University of California-Davis researchers say drinking vegetable juice is an effective way to help people increase their vegetable intake.

Study author Carl Keen says seven out of 10 adults fall short of the daily vegetable intake recommended by the U.S. Dietary Guidelines. The researchers studied whether drinking vegetable juice could be a simple behavior change to help boost the intake of vegetables to "strive for five," or eat five servings of fruits and vegetables a day.

Three groups of healthy men and women received dietary counseling on ways to get more vegetables but two of the groups were instructed to consume at least one serving of vegetable juice, in the form of V8.

Of those two groups, one drank one 8-ounce glass of vegetable juice every day and the other drank two 8-ounce glasses of vegetable juice every day as part of a balanced eating plan.

The finding, presented at the American Dietetic Association annual conference, found that those who received dietary counseling and consumed vegetable juice were far more likely than those who received counseling alone to meet the daily vegetable recommendations of five servings a day.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Northern Rock shareholders stiffed (4 min)
Pacers' Granger out 4-6 weeks (15 min)
Accounting board chair recommends changes (23 min)
Alabama's McClain wins Butkus Award (26 min)
Snow crystal water determines shape (52 min)
Low emissions diesel truck engine created (54 min)
Woods' mother-in-law hospitalized (58 min)
fark
The "best" of the um, aughts? (sponsored link)
100-year-old says you're only as old as the kiddies you feel
Swedish group wants change hymen to "vaginal corona." Won't the lime sting?
Taking advantage of a city gripped by football fever, thieves launch daring $6m raid. Somebody should...
Photoshop theme: unneeded movie sequels
Asking your dad if he has an old hat to donate to your school's fundraising auction works a little...