AI Article Synopsis

  • An urgent shift to sustainable diets is crucial for improving both human and planetary health, and the study assessed the potential impact of widely adopting certain sustainable dietary practices in Sweden.
  • Using a life table method, researchers estimated the changes in years of life lost (YLL) over 20 and 30 years if specific dietary modifications had been implemented starting in 2010-11, focusing on reduced intake of red and processed meat, milk, and sugar-sweetened beverages.
  • The findings suggested that a moderate adoption of these dietary changes could prevent over half a million YLL within 20 years and more than a million within 30 years, primarily benefiting heart health, especially in men, with a notable emphasis on reducing red and processed

Article Abstract

Background: An urgent transition to more sustainable diets is necessary for the improvement of human and planetary health. One way to achieve this is for sustainable practices to become mainstream. We estimated the potential health impact of wider adoption of dietary practices deemed by consumers, researchers and stakeholders in Sweden to be niche, sustainable and with the potential to be scaled up.

Methods: A life table method was used to estimate the impact - changes in years of life lost (YLL) - over periods of 20 and 30 years in the Swedish population had the practices been adopted in 2010-11, when the last national adult dietary survey was conducted. The practices modelled were reducing red and processed meat (by 25, 50 and 100%), and assuming, for each stage, replacement by an equal weight of poultry/fish and vegetables +/- legumes; reducing milk intake (by 25, 50 and 100%); and reducing sugar-sweetened beverage intake (by 25, 50 and 100%). Using population data together with data on cause-specific mortality and relative risks for diet-disease outcomes, impacts were estimated for each scenario separately and in combination, for the outcomes ischaemic heart disease (IHD), ischaemic stroke, diabetes type 2 and colorectal cancer.

Results: For a "moderate" combination of scenarios (changes at the 50% level), reductions of 513,200 YLL (lower-upper uncertainty estimate 59,400-797,900) could have been achieved over 20 years and 1,148,500 YLL (135,900-1,786,600) over 30 years. The majority (over 90%) of YLLs prevented were related to IHD, and the majority were in men. The singular practice that had the most impact was reducing the intake of red and processed meat and replacing it with a mixture of vegetables and legumes. Reducing milk intake resulted in an increase in YLL, but this was compensated for by other scenarios.

Conclusion: If these practices were more widely adopted, they would be expected to lead to improvements in public health in Sweden. Over the long term, this would translate to many premature deaths postponed or prevented from a number of chronic diseases, to the benefit of individuals, society, the climate and the economy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8261973PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-11256-zDOI Listing

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