AI Article Synopsis

  • The Planetary Health Diet Index (PHDI) assesses how well diets meet health and sustainability goals, specifically looking at their impact on dietary greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) compared to other dietary recommendations like HEI-2015 and DASH.
  • The study analyzed dietary data from over 8,000 adults and found that better diet quality is associated with lower GHGE, with PHDI showing the strongest negative correlation.
  • Key dietary factors influencing GHGE included high intake of red and processed meats, suggesting that improving diet quality could significantly reduce the environmental impact of eating habits in the U.S.

Article Abstract

Background: The Planetary Health Diet Index (PHDI) measures adherence to the dietary pattern presented by the EAT-Lancet Commission, which aligns health and sustainability targets. There is a need to understand how PHDI scores correlate with dietary greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) and how this differs from the carbon footprints of scores on established dietary recommendations. The objectives of this study were to compare how the PHDI, Healthy Eating Index-2015 (HEI-2015) and Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) relate to (a) dietary GHGE and (b) to examine the influence of PHDI food components on dietary GHGE.

Methods: We used life cycle assessment data from the Database of Food Recall Impacts on the Environment for Nutrition and Dietary Studies to calculate the mean dietary GHGE of 8,128 adult participants in the 2015-2016 and 2017-2018 cycles of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). Poisson regression was used to estimate the association of (a) quintiles of diet score and (b) standardized dietary index Z-scores with dietary GHGE for PHDI, HEI-2015, and DASH scores. In secondary analyses, we used Poisson regression to assess the influence of individual PHDI component scores on dietary GHGE.

Results: We found that higher dietary quality on all three indices was correlated with lower dietary GHGE. The magnitude of the dietary quality-dietary GHGE relationship was larger for PHDI [-0.4, 95% CI (-0.5, -0.3) kg CO equivalents per one standard deviation change] and for DASH [-0.5, (-0.4, -0.6) kg CO-equivalents] than for HEI-2015 [-0.2, (-0.2, -0.3) kg CO-equivalents]. When examining PHDI component scores, we found that diet-related GHGE were driven largely by red and processed meat intake.

Conclusions: Improved dietary quality has the potential to lower the emissions impacts of US diets. Future efforts to promote healthy, sustainable diets could apply the recommendations of the established DASH guidelines as well as the new guidance provided by the PHDI to increase their environmental benefits.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10988877PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12966-024-01581-yDOI Listing

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