This article examines the evidence-based health outcomes of vegetarian, non-vegetarian, and vegan dietary patterns without declaring any pattern superior, providing an impartial review of confirmed benefits, risks, and nutritional implications. Drawing on a 2024 umbrella review of 21 systematic reviews (UC Irvine, American Journal of Preventive Cardiology) confirming 15% CVD risk reduction; a Nature Microbiology January 2025 study of 21,561 individuals mapping gut microbiome signatures; IARC 2015 classification of processed meat (Group 1 carcinogen) and red meat (Group 2A); Warwick Medical School 2024 review of plant-based diet nutritional deficiencies; and Lancet 2024 Indian micronutrient data, the article documents five dimensions of each diet's physiological effects. India-specific data is examined in depth — 47% B12 deficiency among vegetarians, 53% anaemia in adult women, 70%+ vitamin D deficiency in urban adults, 73% protein deficiency. Evidence-based solutions for each diet's nutritional gaps are provided. The Taittiriya Upanishad's Annam Brahma, the Srimad Bhagavatam's Jiva Jivasya Jeevanam, and the Ayurvedic Sattvic-Rajasic-Tamasic food classification are presented as the ancient Indian frameworks that anticipated the science of food quality over food category. A dedicated section separates diet from religious identity through both the Upanishadic framework and the scientific principle that the body processes nutrients regardless of their cultural or religious context.
Narayan Rout (Wed,) studied this question.
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