<p>Myth busted! An apple a day may not keep the doctor away, according to a new research which found that daily apple eaters had just as many doctor visits as those who did not regularly eat the fruit.<br /><br /></p>.<p>However, the study also found that daily apple eaters are less likely to use prescription medications.<br />Researchers compared daily apple eaters (those who consumed at least 1 small apple per day or 149 grams of raw apple) with non-apple eaters.<br /><br />The authors analysed data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (2007-2008 and 2009-2010).<br /><br />Of the 8,399 survey participants who completed a dietary recall questionnaire, 753 (9 per cent) were apple eaters and 7,646 (91 per cent) were non-apple eaters.<br /><br />Researchers at the University of Michigan School of Nursing, Ann Arbor, and colleagues measured "keeping the doctor away" as no more than one self-reported visit to a physician during the past year.<br /><br />There was no statistically significant difference between apple eaters and non-apple eaters when it came to keeping the doctor away when sociodemographic and health-related characteristics were taken into account.<br /><br />However, apple eaters had marginally higher odds of avoiding prescription medications, according to the results.<br /><br />Researchers found no difference between apple eaters and non-apple eaters when measuring the likelihood of avoiding an overnight hospital stay or a visit to a mental health professional.<br /><br />"Our findings suggest that the promotion of apple consumption may have limited benefit in reducing national health care spending. In the age of evidence-based assertions, however, there may be merit to saying 'An apple a day keeps the pharmacist away,'" the study concluded.<br />The study was published in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine</p>
<p>Myth busted! An apple a day may not keep the doctor away, according to a new research which found that daily apple eaters had just as many doctor visits as those who did not regularly eat the fruit.<br /><br /></p>.<p>However, the study also found that daily apple eaters are less likely to use prescription medications.<br />Researchers compared daily apple eaters (those who consumed at least 1 small apple per day or 149 grams of raw apple) with non-apple eaters.<br /><br />The authors analysed data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (2007-2008 and 2009-2010).<br /><br />Of the 8,399 survey participants who completed a dietary recall questionnaire, 753 (9 per cent) were apple eaters and 7,646 (91 per cent) were non-apple eaters.<br /><br />Researchers at the University of Michigan School of Nursing, Ann Arbor, and colleagues measured "keeping the doctor away" as no more than one self-reported visit to a physician during the past year.<br /><br />There was no statistically significant difference between apple eaters and non-apple eaters when it came to keeping the doctor away when sociodemographic and health-related characteristics were taken into account.<br /><br />However, apple eaters had marginally higher odds of avoiding prescription medications, according to the results.<br /><br />Researchers found no difference between apple eaters and non-apple eaters when measuring the likelihood of avoiding an overnight hospital stay or a visit to a mental health professional.<br /><br />"Our findings suggest that the promotion of apple consumption may have limited benefit in reducing national health care spending. In the age of evidence-based assertions, however, there may be merit to saying 'An apple a day keeps the pharmacist away,'" the study concluded.<br />The study was published in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine</p>