Seminar
on "Soy -- The Cow of China" |
|
| The
soya bean has been a key food in China, where it originated,
for thousands of years. It is frequently termed “the cow
of China” because it plays the role that milk does in
many Western societies. Evidence of its health-giving properties
are enabling it to become more important in Western diets, too,
while it also attracts interest of dieticians and nutritionists
around the globe. |
|
| Seminars
on the health benefits of soy were held recently in Hong Kong
and Guangzhou, the PRC. |
| One of the
foremost researchers into the health effects of soya is Dr Mark
Messina, a highly respected nutrition expert in the US. He was
in Hong Kong and Guangzhou to deliver information regarding
the most recent findings into the benefits of soya. Dr Messina
is the author of The Simple Soybean and Your Health
(1994). He has a master’s degree in nutrition from the
University of Michigan and a doctorate in nutrition from Michigan
State University. He formerly worked with the National Cancer
Institute, where he was responsible for allocating funding for
research into the effects of soya on cancer prevention. He also
organized and chaired five international symposia on the role
of soya in the prevention and treatment of chronic disease.
He is the editor of a soya newsletter for dietitians, has co-authored
several books on soya and plant-based diets, and has written
more than 50 professional articles on soya and soyabean components. |
| Dr Keyou Ge,
the Beijing-based President of the Chinese Nutrition Society
and Deputy Chief of the National Consultative Committee on Food
and Nutrition in Mainland China, explained at the same seminars
the promotion of soy in the PRC as an important part of a healthy
diet. Dr Ge has qualifications from the PRC and US, and is widely
published in respected journals in both Asia and the West. His
specialist interests include diet and nutrition among the Chinese
population, particularly children. |
| In the recent
soy seminar in Hong Kong, Professor Suzanne C. Ho, of the Chinese
University of Hong Kong, revealed the new research into the
effects of soy consumption on bone health among teenage girls
in Hong Kong. Her major research interests are in nutrition
and chronic diseases, and women’s health and aging, particularly
osteoporosis. She is one of the key investigators of the Centre
for Research in Nutritional Studies and has published 13 books/chapters
and more than 100 scientific papers in international refereed
journals. Dr Ho has been awarded a number of research grants
in the conduct of phytoestrogens intake and women’s health.
|
| Both seminars
on soy were well-received by the nutritional and medical fields. |
| |