Giessen Raw Food Study + Academy of Nutrition position 2016
Raw Vegan Diet: Benefits, Risks, and the B12 Problem
Raw veganism is the strictest mainstream plant-based diet, limiting cooking to around 40 to 46 degrees Celsius. The published evidence base is small but consistent: weight loss, low B12, low HDL, and meaningful fertility risk in women. This page presents the diet honestly, including where its theoretical underpinnings hold and where they do not.
The theoretical case for raw food
The raw food movement traces its modern roots to Maximilian Bircher-Benner's Zurich sanatorium in the early 20th century and Ann Wigmore's Hippocrates Health Institute work in the 1960s. The two central theoretical arguments are enzyme preservation (cooking denatures food enzymes which the proponents claim are useful for human digestion) and reduction of cooking byproducts (advanced glycation end-products, acrylamide, heterocyclic amines).
The enzyme argument is weak. Human digestion proceeds with our own pancreatic and intestinal enzymes; dietary plant enzymes are denatured by stomach acid (pH 1 to 2) and are not significant contributors to nutrient breakdown. Whatever survival of dietary enzymes into the small intestine exists, the evidence does not support a meaningful contribution to absorption.
The cooking-byproducts argument has some validity. Acrylamide is formed when starchy foods are heated above 120 C (browning of potatoes, bread); high intake has been linked to cancer risk in animal models, less clearly in humans. Heterocyclic amines and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons form on charred meat and to a lesser extent on charred plant foods. Advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) form during high-heat cooking of protein-rich foods and have been associated with inflammation. A moderate-heat plant-based diet (steaming, boiling, low-temperature roasting under 180 C) avoids most of these byproducts without going fully raw.
The Giessen Raw Food Study, in detail
The Giessen Raw Food Study (Koebnick C, Strassner C, Hoffmann I, Leitzmann C; published primarily in Annals of Nutrition and Metabolism 1999 and follow-up papers through 2005) recruited 297 long-term raw food eaters in Germany and Switzerland between 1996 and 1998. Average duration on the diet was 3.7 years. The sample comprised four sub-groups by strictness: people eating 70 to 100% raw, by percentage of food.
Findings: substantial weight loss with mean BMI of 20.1 for women and 21.4 for men, and about a third of participants in the underweight range (BMI under 18.5). Serum vitamin B12 was below the deficiency threshold (118 pmol/L) in 38% of participants. HDL cholesterol was low. Amenorrhoea (absence of menstrual cycles) affected approximately 30% of women under 40, compared to under 5% in age-matched general population. The amenorrhoea was strongly associated with low body weight rather than the raw diet per se, but raw veganism was the proximate cause of the underweight.
The strictly raw subset (95 to 100% raw) had the most consistent deficiencies. The 70 to 79% raw subset (which included some cooked food) had nutrient profiles much closer to standard vegan eaters. The take-away from the cohort is not that raw food is uniquely toxic, but that strict raw veganism is hard to sustain at adequate energy and nutrient intake.
Where cooking helps and where raw helps
| Nutrient or compound | Effect of cooking | Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Vitamin C | Lost (30 to 60% from boiling) | Eat some raw fruit and vegetables for vitamin C |
| Folate | Lost (30 to 50% from boiling) | Raw or steamed leafy greens preserve more |
| Lycopene (tomatoes) | Bioavailability rises 2 to 3x | Cooked tomatoes are better for lycopene |
| Beta-carotene (carrots) | Bioavailability rises 3 to 4x | Cooked carrots are better source |
| Sulforaphane precursors | Brief blanch preserves; long boil destroys | Light steam or brief blanch of broccoli |
| Protein digestibility (legumes) | Rises from 60 to 70% raw to 85 to 95% cooked | Cook beans for protein utilisation |
| Phytate | Reduced 20 to 40% by cooking | Cooked grains and legumes have better mineral availability |
| Lectins, antinutrients in beans | Destroyed by boiling | Raw or undercooked beans cause GI distress |
| Polyphenols and antioxidants | Mixed; some lost, some bioavailability up | Variety matters more than raw vs cooked |
| Acrylamide | Forms above 120 C in starchy food | Avoid charring; moderate-heat cooking is fine |
The optimal eating pattern from a pure nutrient-availability perspective is a mix: some raw (leafy greens, fruit, salads, sprouts) and some lightly cooked (steamed broccoli, boiled potatoes, simmered legumes). A diet that is exclusively one or the other loses ground in different places.
Clinical trials where raw food has shown benefit
The strongest published clinical data for raw or near-raw food is in rheumatoid arthritis. The Kjeldsen-Kragh trial (Lancet 1991) randomised RA patients to a one-year programme starting with seven days of fasting, then four months of vegan diet followed by lacto-vegetarian transition. The intervention group showed sustained improvement in joint tenderness, morning stiffness, and several inflammatory markers compared to controls. Subsequent trials by Hanninen and others using uncooked vegan diets in RA showed similar short-term improvements with high attrition rates.
The mechanism is thought to involve gut microbiome shifts away from inflammatory profiles, reduction in food-derived inflammatory triggers, and elimination of cooked-protein AGEs. The improvements in these trials are real but most patients return to standard diet after the trial because compliance is hard. As a treatment trial used under medical supervision, raw food has a place. As a long-term whole-life diet for healthy adults, the evidence does not support raw food over a varied cooked vegan diet.
If you decide to try it, do it safely
Despite the risks, raw food can be done safely for limited periods with care. Essential precautions: supplement B12 at 25 to 50 mcg daily; monitor body weight weekly and stop if you fall below BMI 18.5; ensure adequate calorie intake (raw diets are often inadvertently low-calorie because the food is bulky and filling); include sprouted legumes (sprouting partially activates antinutrient-reducing enzymes) and soaked nuts and seeds; supplement vitamin D and iodine; use a basic blood panel (B12, ferritin, vitamin D, lipid profile, full blood count) at 3 and 6 months.
Do not attempt raw veganism during pregnancy, lactation, childhood, adolescence, or if you are over 65 and have any baseline risk of sarcopenia. Stop if you develop amenorrhoea, frequent illness, persistent fatigue, hair thinning, or unintentional weight loss below your healthy range. Reintroduce cooked legumes and grains if you do.
Related diet-type pages
Keep reading
Frequently asked questions about raw veganism
What is a raw vegan diet?
Is the enzyme preservation argument scientifically valid?
What does the Giessen Raw Food Study say?
Can a raw vegan diet provide enough protein?
What are the documented health risks of long-term raw veganism?
Are there any documented benefits of raw veganism?
Sources cited. Koebnick C, Strassner C, Hoffmann I, Leitzmann C. Consequences of a long-term raw food diet on body weight and menstruation: results of a questionnaire survey, Ann Nutr Metab 1999; 43: 69-79; Koebnick C et al. Long-term consumption of a raw food diet is associated with favorable serum LDL cholesterol and triglycerides but also with elevated plasma homocysteine and low serum HDL cholesterol in humans, J Nutr 2005; 135: 2372-2378; Kjeldsen-Kragh J et al. Controlled trial of fasting and one-year vegetarian diet in rheumatoid arthritis, Lancet 1991; 338: 899-902; Hanninen O et al. Antioxidants in vegan diet and rheumatic disorders, Toxicology 2000; 155: 45-53; Melina V, Craig W, Levin S. Position of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics: vegetarian diets, J Acad Nutr Diet 2016; 116: 1970-1980; Bressani R. Antinutritional factors in beans and other legumes, J Am Oil Chem Soc 1973 and subsequent work. All values as of May 2026.