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. 2019 Apr 16;11(4):856.
doi: 10.3390/nu11040856.

Dietary Change Scenarios and Implications for Environmental, Nutrition, Human Health and Economic Dimensions of Food Sustainability

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Dietary Change Scenarios and Implications for Environmental, Nutrition, Human Health and Economic Dimensions of Food Sustainability

Canxi Chen et al. Nutrients. .

Abstract

Demand side interventions, such as dietary change, can significantly contribute towards the achievement of 2030 national sustainable development goals. However, most previous studies analysing the consequences of dietary change focus on a single dimension of sustainability (e.g., environment) using a limited number of indicators and dietary scenarios. A multi-dimension and multi-indicator analysis can identify the potential trade-offs. Here, starting from the current food consumption data (year 2011), we first designed nine alternative dietary scenarios (healthy Swiss diet, healthy global diet, vegetarian, vegan, pescatarian, flexitarian, protein-oriented and meat-oriented diets and a food greenhouse gas tax diet). Next we calculated three nutritional quality (nutrient balance score, disqualifying nutrient score, percent population with adequate nutrition), five environmental (greenhouse gas, water, land, nitrogen and phosphorus use), one economic (daily food expenditure) and one human health indicator (DALYs) for current and alternative diets. We found that transition towards a healthy diet following the guidelines of Swiss society of nutrition is the most sustainable option and is projected to result in 36% lesser environmental footprint, 33% lesser expenditure and 2.67% lower adverse health outcome (DALYs) compared with the current diet. On the other extreme, transition towards a meat or protein oriented diet can lead to large increases in diet related adverse health outcomes, environmental footprint, daily food expenditure and a reduction in intakes of essential nutrients (for Vitamin C, Fibre, Potassium and Calcium). We found that shifting to the vegetarian and vegan diet scenarios might lead to a reduction in intakes of certain micronutrients currently supplied primarily by animal-sourced foods (Vitamin B12, Choline and Calcium). Results show that achieving a sustainable diet would entail a high reduction in the intake of meat and vegetable oils and a moderate reduction in cereals, roots and fish products and at the same time increased intake of legumes, nuts, seeds, fruits and vegetables. We identify several current data and research gaps that need to be filled in order to get more accurate results. Overall, our analysis underscores the need to consider multiple indicators while assessing the dietary sustainability and provides a template to conduct such studies in other countries and settings. Future efforts should focus on assessing the potential of different interventions and policies that can help transition the population from current to sustainable dietary patterns.

Keywords: dietary changes; environmental impacts; health impact; nutrition quality; sustainability.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript and in the decision to publish the results.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
The human health consequences of shifting to an alternative diet. Negative numbers indicate human health benefit and positive numbers indicate an increase in adverse health outcomes. Four disease states used in the health impact model are ischemic or coronary heart disease (CHD), stroke, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D) and total cancer. Abbreviations: Healthy Global Diet (HGD), diet following the recommendation of Swiss Society in Nutrition (RSN), Vegan diet (VGN), lacto-ovo Vegetarian diet (VGT), lacto-ovo Pescatarian diet (PST), Flexitarian diet (FXT), protein-oriented diet (PTO), meat-oriented diet (MTO) and food greenhouse gas tax diet (TAX).
Figure 2
Figure 2
The modelled health impact associated with six dietary factors and the weight related factors (overweight & obesity combined shown as calories) are shown for all nine alternative scenarios. Negative numbers indicate human health benefit and positive numbers indicate an increase in adverse health outcomes.
Figure 3
Figure 3
The environmental footprint of the nine alternative diets relative to the current diet. It can be seen that shifting from current to the meat oriented (MTO) and protein oriented (PTO) diets will increase the environmental footprint across all five domains (GHG, water, land, nitrogen and phosphorus) while a shift to the RSN diet (recommended by Swiss society of nutrition) will lead to maximum reduction in footprints. See Supplementary Table S5 for contribution of different food groups to the total environmental footprint.
Figure 4
Figure 4
Cost of nine alternative diets relative to the current diet (REF = 100%). It can be seen that shifting from current to the meat oriented (MTO) and protein oriented (PTO) diets will increase the cost by 10–20% while adopting a diet based on global (HGD) or Swiss nutrition guidelines (RSN) will decrease the cost by ~35%. See Supplementary Table S6 for cost due to intake of individual food group.

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