An unbiased, sustainable, evidence-informed Universal Food Guide: a timely template for national food guides.

IF 4.4 2区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS Nutrition Journal Pub Date : 2024-10-18 DOI:10.1186/s12937-024-01018-z
Elizabeth Dean, Jia Xu, Alice Yee-Men Jones, Mantana Vongsirinavarat, Constantina Lomi, Pintu Kumar, Etienne Ngeh, Maximilian A Storz
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Although national food guides are designed, ostensibly, to translate scientific evidence with respect to food, dietary patterns, and health, their development has increasingly become a corporate/political process as well as scientific one; often with corporate/political influences overriding science. Our aim was to construct an unbiased, sustainable, evidence-informed Universal Food Guide to serve as a template for countries to develop their unique guides, thereby, provide a valid resource for health professionals, health authorities, and the public.

Methods: To address our aim, we conducted an integrative review of multiple evidence-informed sources (e.g., established databases, evidence syntheses, scholarly treatises, and policy documents) related to four areas: 1. Food guides' utility and conflicts of interest; 2. The evidence-based healthiest diet; 3. Constituents of the Universal Food Guide template; and 4. Implications for population health; regulation/governance; environment/climate/planetary health; and ethics.

Results: The eating pattern that is healthiest for humans (i.e., most natural, and associated with maximal health across the life cycle; reduced non-communicable disease (NCD) risk; and minimal end-of-life illness) is whole food, low fat, plant-based, especially vegan, with the absence of ultra-processed food. Disparities in national food guide recommendations can be explained by factors other than science, specifically, corporate/political interests reflected in heavily government-subsidized, animal-sourced products; and trends toward dominance of daily consumption of processed/ultra-processed foods. Both trends have well-documented adverse consequences, i.e., NCDs and endangered environmental/planetary health. Commitment to an evidence-informed plant-based eating pattern, particularly vegan, will reduce risks/manifestations of NCDs; inform healthy food and nutrition policy regulation/governance; support sustainable environment/climate and planetary health; and is ethical with respect to 'best' evidence-based practice, and human and animal welfare.

Conclusion: The Universal Food Guide that serves as a template for national food guides is both urgent and timely given the well-documented health-harming influences that corporate stakeholders/politicians and advisory committees with conflicts of interest, exert on national food guides. Such influence contributes to the largely-preventable NCDs and environmental issues. Policy makers, health professionals, and the public need unbiased, scientific evidence as informed by the Universal Food Guide, to inform their recommendations and choices.

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无偏见、可持续、有实证依据的《通用食品指南》:国家食品指南的及时模板。
背景:尽管国家食品指南的设计表面上是为了转化有关食品、膳食模式和健康的科学证据,但其制定已日益成为一个企业/政治过程,而非科学过程;企业/政治的影响往往凌驾于科学之上。我们的目标是构建一个公正、可持续、有实证依据的《世界食品指南》,作为各国制定其独特指南的模板,从而为卫生专业人员、卫生当局和公众提供有效的资源:为了实现我们的目标,我们对与四个领域相关的多种循证资料来源(如已建立的数据库、证据综述、学术论文和政策文件)进行了综合审查:1.食物指南的效用和利益冲突;2.循证的最健康饮食;3.通用食物指南模板的组成;以及 4.对人口健康、监管/治理、环境/气候/行星健康和伦理的影响:结果:对人类最健康的饮食模式(即最自然,并与整个生命周期的最大健康、非传染性疾病(NCD)风险降低和临终疾病最少相关联)是全食物、低脂肪、植物性,尤其是素食,没有超加工食品。国家食品指南建议中的差异可以用科学以外的因素来解释,具体来说,政府大量补贴的动物源性产品所反映的企业/政治利益,以及加工/超加工食品的日常消费占主导地位的趋势。这两种趋势都带来了有据可查的不良后果,即非传染性疾病和濒危的环境/地球健康。致力于以证据为基础的植物性饮食模式,特别是素食,将降低非传染性疾病的风险/发病率;为健康食品和营养政策的监管/治理提供信息;支持可持续的环境/气候和地球健康;在 "最佳 "证据为基础的做法以及人类和动物福利方面是合乎道德的:作为国家食品指南模板的《世界食品指南》既紧迫又及时,因为有充分证据表明,企业利益相关者/政治家和存在利益冲突的咨询委员会对国家食品指南施加了有害健康的影响。这种影响导致了在很大程度上可以预防的非传染性疾病和环境问题。决策者、卫生专业人员和公众需要《世界食品指南》提供的公正、科学的证据,为他们的建议和选择提供依据。
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来源期刊
Nutrition Journal
Nutrition Journal NUTRITION & DIETETICS-
CiteScore
9.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
68
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Nutrition Journal publishes surveillance, epidemiologic, and intervention research that sheds light on i) influences (e.g., familial, environmental) on eating patterns; ii) associations between eating patterns and health, and iii) strategies to improve eating patterns among populations. The journal also welcomes manuscripts reporting on the psychometric properties (e.g., validity, reliability) and feasibility of methods (e.g., for assessing dietary intake) for human nutrition research. In addition, study protocols for controlled trials and cohort studies, with an emphasis on methods for assessing dietary exposures and outcomes as well as intervention components, will be considered. Manuscripts that consider eating patterns holistically, as opposed to solely reductionist approaches that focus on specific dietary components in isolation, are encouraged. Also encouraged are papers that take a holistic or systems perspective in attempting to understand possible compensatory and differential effects of nutrition interventions. The journal does not consider animal studies. In addition to the influence of eating patterns for human health, we also invite research providing insights into the environmental sustainability of dietary practices. Again, a holistic perspective is encouraged, for example, through the consideration of how eating patterns might maximize both human and planetary health.
期刊最新文献
Lower prognostic nutritional index is associated with a greater decline in long-term kidney function in general population. Body composition as a prognostic factor in cholangiocarcinoma: a meta-analysis. Correction: An unbiased, sustainable, evidence-informed Universal Food Guide: a timely template for national food guides. Local food procurement behavior and overall diet quality among adults in Québec: results from the NutriQuébec project. Consuming spicy food and type 2 diabetes incidence in Southwestern Chinese aged 30-79: a prospective cohort study.
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