Adherence to the Healthy Eating Guidelines in the MyPlanetDiet study is associated with healthier and more sustainable diets.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Katie P Davies, Eileen R Gibney, Ursula M Leonard, Leona Lindberg, Jayne V Woodside, Mairead E Kiely, Anne P Nugent, Elena Arranz, Marie C Conway, Sinead N McCarthy, Aifric M O'Sullivan
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Abstract

Environmental impacts of food systems have stimulated research to examine how to create healthy diets that will be more sustainable while meeting nutrient requirements. Increasing compliance with existing food-based dietary guidelines in most jurisdictions could be a first step to improve health and reduce environmental impact. MyPlanetDiet was an all-Ireland 12-week randomised controlled trial designed to inform sustainable healthy dietary guidelines. Healthy adults (n=355) aged 18-64 years with moderate-to-high greenhouse gas emitting (GHGE) diets were recruited from three study sites on the island of Ireland. The aim of this research is to assess the relationship between dietary intakes, diet-related environmental impacts, and metabolic health using baseline data collected during the MyPlanetDiet study. Dietary assessments collected using Foodbook24 were used to calculate diet-related GHGE, adherence to Healthy Eating Guidelines (HEG), and Healthy Eating Index (HEI) score. Anthropometrics and metabolic health markers (e.g. lipids, glucose and insulin) were included. Overall HEG adherence was low, with 43% meeting zero or one HEG food group recommendations. Adherence to 4+ HEG food group targets was associated with 31% lower diet-related GHGE compared to those with lowest adherence. Higher HEG adherence was associated with lower BMI and waist circumference and higher HEI scores. While our findings suggest HEG adherence is associated with positive health and environmental impacts, substantial behaviour change will be needed to meet existing HEGs. Further research is needed to assess response and acceptability to HEG. However, adherence to HEG may be an important first step to reducing the environmental impact of food consumption.

食品系统对环境的影响促使人们研究如何创造既能满足营养需求又更具可持续性的健康饮食。在大多数地区,提高对现有基于食物的膳食指南的遵从度可能是改善健康和减少环境影响的第一步。MyPlanetDiet 是一项为期 12 周的爱尔兰全境随机对照试验,旨在为可持续健康饮食指南提供信息。从爱尔兰岛上的三个研究地点招募了 18-64 岁的健康成年人(n=355),他们的饮食习惯属于中度至高度温室气体排放(GHGE)。这项研究的目的是利用 MyPlanetDiet 研究期间收集的基线数据,评估膳食摄入量、与膳食相关的环境影响和代谢健康之间的关系。使用 Foodbook24 收集的膳食评估用于计算与膳食相关的 GHGE、健康饮食指南(HEG)遵守情况和健康饮食指数(HEI)得分。人体测量和代谢健康指标(如血脂、血糖和胰岛素)也包括在内。对健康饮食指南的总体坚持率较低,43%的人只符合健康饮食指南中的零个或一个食物组推荐。与坚持率最低的人群相比,坚持4种以上HEG食物组目标的人群与饮食相关的GHGE降低了31%。较高的 HEG 坚持率与较低的 BMI 和腰围以及较高的 HEI 分数相关。虽然我们的研究结果表明,坚持健康EG 与积极的健康和环境影响有关,但要达到现有的健康EG 目标,还需要大量的行为改变。需要进一步开展研究,以评估对健康、教育和性别平等的反应和接受程度。不过,遵守 HEG 可能是减少食品消费对环境影响的重要第一步。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
British Journal of Nutrition
British Journal of Nutrition 医学-营养学
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
5.60%
发文量
740
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: British Journal of Nutrition is a leading international peer-reviewed journal covering research on human and clinical nutrition, animal nutrition and basic science as applied to nutrition. The Journal recognises the multidisciplinary nature of nutritional science and includes material from all of the specialities involved in nutrition research, including molecular and cell biology and nutritional genomics.
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