The group’s tests showed, for example, that dark chocolate bars such as Sam’s Choice (Walmart) Dark Chocolate 85% Cocoa and Divine 70% Deliciously Smooth Dark Chocolate were relatively low in ...
A recent study from Harvard's T.H. Chan School of Public Health reveals that dark chocolate consumption may lower the risk of developing type 2 diabetes by 21%, while milk chocolate shows no similar ...
But the findings came with an important caveat. It was only dark chocolate that was associated with a lower risk of developing the disease, not milk chocolate. It’s not entirely clear why that is.
A study examining the data of three cohorts suggests that eating dark chocolate may decrease type 2 diabetes risk, but eating milk chocolate does not offer similar protection. The research ...
Eating dark chocolate five times a week may lower type 2 diabetes risk by 21%, according to a large U.S. study. Milk chocolate showed no benefit, and further research is needed to confirm the findings ...
The research, published Dec. 4 in the British Medical Journal, found that eating dark chocolate was associated with a lower risk of developing type 2 diabetes. That doesn't hold true for milk ...