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Report
RP-8C6ABFHealth & Lifestyle

Only Half Are Vegetarian

47% of Adventist Health Study participants eat meat regularly. The health message reality is broader than the stereotype.

2 min
Headline finding
47.3%AHS-2 participants who are non-vegetarian

Report

The Adventist Health Study-2 enrolled approximately 96,000 participants. The dietary breakdown:

  • 7.8% vegan
  • 29.2% lacto-ovo vegetarian
  • 10.2% pesco-vegetarian
  • 5.5% semi-vegetarian
  • 47.3% non-vegetarian

Nearly half of Adventists in the study eat meat regularly.

This surprises outsiders who associate Adventism with vegetarianism. It may also surprise some Adventists.

The age gradient is clear: older members are more likely to be vegetarian. Among AHS-2 participants aged 80+, 52.7% were vegetarian. But general estimates place vegetarianism among North American Adventists at only 20-25%.

In Kenya, 94% of Adventist members understood the health message — but adherence rates were substantially lower. Economic factors and cultural food traditions create barriers that Western dietary ideals don't address.

The Church Manual does not list vegetarianism as a baptismal requirement. Ellen White herself counselled against making diet 'a test of fellowship.' Yet in some congregations, non-vegetarians feel judged at potlucks and social events.

The data reveals a denomination with far more dietary variation than the stereotype suggests. The question is whether local churches are presenting the health message as Ellen White intended — as an invitation, not a test of fellowship.

The health message was designed as the 'right arm' and 'entering wedge' of the gospel — a bridge to the community. When it becomes a wall instead, something has gone wrong.

47% of Adventists in the health study eat meat. Ellen White said diet should not be a test of fellowship. The data confirms reality matches her counsel.