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Appendix E-2.37 Evidence Portfolio

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Part D. Chapter 5: Food Sustainability and Safety

What is the relationship between population-level dietary patterns and food sustainability and related food security?

Conclusion Statement: Consistent evidence indicates that, in general, a dietary pattern that is higher in plant-based foods, such as vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes, nuts, and seeds, and lower in animal-based foods is more health promoting and is associated with lesser environmental impact (GHG emissions and energy, land, and water use) than is the current average U.S. diet. A diet that is more environmentally sustainable than the average U.S. diet can be achieved without excluding any food groups. The evidence consists primarily of Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) modeling studies or land-use studies from highly developed countries, including the United States.

DGAC Grade: Moderate

Key Findings

  • The studies were consistent in showing that higher consumption of animal-based foods was associated with a greater impact on the environment and higher consumption of plant-based foods was associated with lower impact.
  • The studies were consistent in showing that dietary patterns that promote health also promote sustainability.
  • The studies were consistent in showing that healthier dietary patterns that adhered to dietary guidelines were more environmentally sustainable than diets typically consumed by the respective populations.
  • The evidence supports that a sustainable diet can be achieved by following dietary guidance in the U.S. and national dietary guidance in other countries, without eliminating any food groups completely.
  • The evidence supports the consumption of current dietary guidelines by increasing consumption of plant-based foods and modestly decreasing animal-based foods.
  • Limited evidence showed that just lowering the snacks/sweets component of a dietary pattern benefits health and improves the environmental footprint.
  • Overall, there was agreement across the studies regarding environmental footprints of different dietary patterns, despite varied methods of assessing environmental impact and differences in components of environmental impact assessed, e.g. GHG emissions or land use.
  • There was limited and inconsistent evidence to indicate whether sustainable diets were more or less expensive than typically consumed diets in some locations.

Methodology

This topic is novel for a DGAC review and involves an emerging area of scientific investigation that is not readily addressed by study designs such as randomized controlled trials. The state-of-the-art of the literature related to sustainable diets and dietary patterns involves a unique combination of food pattern modeling, Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) methodology (examines all processes in the life cycle of each food component - from farm to plate to waste), and determination of the environmental outcomes of the full LCA inventory. Because of the unique nature of these studies, a modified NEL systematic review was conducted for the question on dietary patterns and sustainability. Databases included PubMed, Cochrane, Navigator, and Embase and the search covered from January 2000 to March 2014. For this topic and question, it was necessary to use different methods from those described in an original NEL protocol because not all methods in the protocol could be applied. This is sometimes necessary, according to the Cochrane Collaboration, but requires that methods from the original protocol that could not be implemented in the current review be summarized (Higgins 2011). In the standard NEL six-step protocol, step 3 to extract data and assess the risk of bias was modified. A new data extraction grid was developed with emphasis on modeling studies, LCA methodology, and environmental outcomes. The LCA is a standardized methodological framework for assessing the environmental impact (or load) attributable to the life cycle of a food product. The customized grid was then used by NEL abstractors to extract data from the included articles. In addition, NEL abstractors used a different tool to assess individual study quality or risk of bias, not the NEL Bias Assessment Tool (BAT). This alternative tool, the Critical Appraisal Checklist used by the British Medical Journal, was appropriate for studies that used a modeling design. This checklist assesses studies that use modeling to extrapolate progression of clinical outcomes, transform final outcomes from intermediate measures, examine relation between inputs and outputs to apportion resource use, and extrapolate findings from one clinical setting or population to another. To attain a high score, studies must report the variables that have been modeled rather than directly observed; what additional variables have been included or excluded; what statistical relations have been assumed; and what evidence supports these assumptions (Drummond 1996; Eddy 1985; Stevenson 2012). The checklist included key components of the British Medical Journal checklist for economic evaluations, together with the Eddy checklist on mathematical models. This Critical Appraisal Checklist was reviewed and tested for applicability by two sustainability experts who served as consultants to the DGAC.

Description of the Evidence

A total of 15 studies met the inclusion criteria for this systematic review. The body of evidence consisted primarily of dietary pattern modeling studies that assessed related environmental outcomes. These studies were conducted between the years 2003 and 2014 in the US (Pimentel & Pimental, 2003, Peters 2014), the UK (Aston 2012, Macdiarmid 2012, Scarborough 2012), Germany (Meier & Christen 2013), the Netherlands (van Doreen 2014), France (Vieux 2013), Spain (Sáez-Almendros 2013), Italy (Baroni 2007), Australia (Barosh 2014, Hendrie 2014), Brazil (de Carvalho 2013), New Zealand (Wilson 2013), and worldwide (Pradhan 2013). Dietary patterns that were examined included vegetarian, lacto-ovo vegetarian, and vegan dietary patterns; the average and dietary guidelines-related dietary patterns of respective countries examined; Mediterranean-style dietary patterns; and sustainable diets. The most frequent comparison diet was the average dietary pattern of the country, although numerous studies made additional comparisons across many of the above dietary patterns. Another approach was to examine diet “scenarios” that modeled different percentage replacements of meat and dairy foods with plant-based foods. The modeling studies used cross-sectional assessment of dietary intake from national nutrition surveys of representative adult populations; for example, the British National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS) from studies in the UK (Aston 2012; Macdiarmid 2012), the National Nutrition Surveys (NNS) in Germany (Meier & Christen 2013), or the Australian National Nutrition Survey (Hendrie 2014) were used to determine the observed average dietary patterns. The average dietary patterns were then compared with other modeled dietary patterns, such as vegetarian or Mediterranean- style patterns, as described in detail below. All of the countries were highly developed countries with dietary guidelines and, therefore, generalizable to the U.S. population. The study quality for the body of evidence ranged from scores of 7/12 to 12/12 (indicating the evidence was of high quality) using the modified critical appraisal checklist.

Health outcomes associated with the dietary patterns were most often documented based on adherence to dietary guidelines-related patterns, variations on vegetarian dietary patterns, or Mediterranean-style dietary patterns. Diet quality was assessed in some studies using an a priori index, such as the Healthy Eating Index (HEI) or the WHO Index. In some studies, health outcomes also were modeled. For example Scarborough et al. used the DIETRON model to estimate deaths delayed or averted for each diet pattern. One study assessed the synergy between health and sustainability scores using the WHO Index and the LCA sustainability score to assess combined nutritional and ecological value (van Dooren 2014).

The environmental impacts that were most commonly modeled were GHG emissions and use of resources such as agricultural land, energy, and water. In many studies, the environmental impact for each food/food category was obtained using the LCA method. The LCA is a standardized methodological framework for assessing the environmental impact (or load) attributable to the life cycle of a food product. The life cycle for a food typically includes agricultural production, processing and packaging, transportation, retail, use, and waste disposal. An inventory of all stages of the life cycle is determined for each food product and a “weight” or number of points is then attributed to each food or food category, based on environmental impacts such as resource extraction, land use, and relevant emissions. These environmental impact results can be translated into measures of damage done to human health, ecosystem quality, and energy resources using programs such as Eco-Indicator (Goedkoop 2000). In addition to the health assessment approaches listed above, some studies used LCA analysis with a standardized approach to determine damages from GHG emissions and use of resources; these damage outcomes included human health as an environmental damage component, such as the number and duration of diseases and life years lost due to premature death from environmental causes.

Few studies assessed food security. These studies assessed food security in terms of the cost difference between an average dietary pattern for the country studied and a sustainable dietary pattern for that population (Barosh 2014, Macdiarmid 2012, Wilson 2013). The basic food basket concept was used in some studies, representing household costs for a two-adult/two-child household.

Evidence Synthesis

Themes and Key Findings

Identified Dietary Patterns and Health and Sustainability Outcomes

Vegetarian and Meat-based Diets
Several studies examined variations on vegetarian diets, or a spectrum from vegan to omnivorous dietary patterns, and associated environmental outcomes (Aston 2012; Baroni 2007; de Carvalho 2013; Peters 2007). Peters et al. examined 42 different dietary patterns and land use in New York, with patterns ranging from low-fat, lacto-ovo vegetarian diets to high fat, meat-rich omnivorous diets; across this range, the diets met U.S. dietary guidelines when possible. They found that, overall, increasing meat in the diet increased per capita land requirements; however, increasing total dietary fat content of low-meat diets (i.e. vegetarian alternatives) increased the land requirements compared to high-meat diets. In other words, although meat increased land requirements, diets including meat could feed more people than some higher fat vegetarian-style diets. Aston et al. assessed a pattern that was modeled on a feasible UK population in which the proportion of vegetarians in the survey was doubled, and the remainder adopted a diet pattern consistent with the lowest category of red and processed meat (RPM) consumers. They found the combination of low RPM + vegetarian diet had health benefits of lowering the risk of diabetes and colorectal cancer, determined from risk relationships for RPM and CHD, diabetes, and colorectal cancer from published meta-analyses. Furthermore, the expected reduction in GHG for this diet was ~3 percent of current total carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions for agriculture. De Carvalho et al. also examined a high RPM dietary pattern with diet quality assessed using the Brazilian Healthy Eating Index. They found that excessive meat intake was associated not only with poorer diet quality but also with increased projected GHG emissions (~ 4 percent total CO2 emitted by agriculture). Taken together, the results on RPM intake indicate that reduced consumption is expected to improve some health outcomes and decrease GHG emissions, as well as land use compared to “current RPM consumption.” Baroni et al. examined vegan, vegetarian, and omnivorous diets, both organically and conventionally grown, and found that the organically grown vegan diet had the most potential health benefits; whereas, the conventionally grown average Italian diet had the least. The organically grown vegan diet also had the lowest estimated impact on resources and ecosystem quality, and the average Italian diet had the greatest projected impact. Beef was the single food with the greatest projected impact on the environment; other foods estimated to have high impact included cheese, milk, and fish.

Vegetarian diets, dietary guidelines-related diets, and Mediterranean-style diets were variously compared with the average dietary patterns in selected countries (Hendrie 2014; Meier & Christen 2013; Pimentel & Pimental 2003; van Dooren 2014). Overall, the estimated greater environmental benefits, including reduced projected GHG emissions and land use, resulted from vegan, lacto-ovo vegetarian, and pesco-vegetarian diets, as well as dietary guidelines-related and Mediterranean-style dietary patterns. These diets had higher overall predicted health scores than the average diet patterns. Moreover, for the most part, the high health scores of these dietary patterns were paralleled by high combined estimated sustainability scores. According to van Doreen et al., the synergy measured across vegetarian, Mediterranean-style, and dietary guidelines-related scores could be explained by a reduction in consumption of meat, dairy, extras (i.e., snacks and sweets), and beverages, as well as a reduction in overall food consumption.

Mediterranean-Style Dietary Patterns
The Mediterranean-style dietary pattern was examined in both Mediterranean and non-Mediterranean countries (Saez-Almendros 2013; van Dooren 2014). In all cases, adherence to a Mediterranean-style dietary pattern—compared to usual intake—reduced the environmental footprint, including improved GHG emissions, agricultural land use, and energy and water consumption. Both studies limited either red and processed meat (Saez-Almendros 2013) or meat and poultry (van Dooren 2014) to less than 1 serving per week, and increased fish intake. The authors concluded that adherence to a Mediterranean-style dietary pattern would make a significant contribution to increasing food sustainability, as well as increasing the health benefits that are well-documented for this type of diet.

Diet Scenarios
Other studies examined different diet “scenarios” that generally replaced animal foods in various ways with plant foods (Scarborough 2012; Pradham 2013; Vieux 2013). Scarborough et al. found that a diet with 50 percent reduced total meat and dairy replaced by fruit, vegetables, and cereals contributed the most to estimated reduced risk of total mortality and also had the largest potential positive environmental impact. This diet scenario increased fruit and vegetable consumption by 63 percent and decreased saturated fat and salt consumption; micronutrient intake was generally similar with the exception of a drop in vitamin B12.

Pradham et al. examined 16 global dietary patterns that differed by food and energy content, grouped into four categories with per capita intake of low, moderate, high, and very high kcal diets. They assessed the relationship of these patterns to GHG emissions. Low-energy diets had < 2,100 kcal/cap/day and were composed of more than 50 percent cereals or more than 70 percent starchy roots, cereals, and pulses. Animal products were minor in this group (<10 percent). Moderate, high, and very high energy diets had 2,100-2,400, 2,400-2,800, and > 2,800 kcal/cap/day, respectively. Very high calorie diets had high amounts of meat and alcoholic beverages. Overall, very high calorie diets, common in the developed world, exhibited high total per capita CO2eq emissions due to high carbon intensity and high intake of animal products; the low-energy diets, on the other hand, had the lowest total per capita CO2eq emissions.

Lastly, Vieux et al. examined dietary patterns with different indicators of nutritional quality and found that despite containing large amounts of plant foods, not all diets of the highest nutritional quality were those with the lowest GHG emissions. For this study, the diet pattern was assessed by using nutrient-based indicators; high quality diets had energy density below the median, mean adequacy ratio above the median, and a mean excess ratio (percentage of maximum recommended for nutrients that should be limited – saturated fat, sodium, and free sugars) below the median. Four diet patterns were identified based on compliance with these properties to generate one high quality diet, two intermediate quality diets, and one low quality diet. In this study, the high quality diets had higher GHG emissions than did the low quality diets. Regarding the food groups, a higher consumption of starches, sweets and salted snacks, and fats was associated with lower diet-related GHG emissions and an increased intake of fruit and vegetables, was associated with increased diet-related GHG emissions. However, the strongest positive association with GHG emissions was still for the ruminant meat group. Overall, this study used a different approach from the other studies in this review, as nutritional quality determined the formation of dietary pattern categories.

Sustainable Diets and Costs 
Three studies examined sustainable diets and related costs (Barosh 2014; Macdiarmid 2012; Wilson 2013). Barosh et al. examined food availability and cost of a health and sustainability (H&S) food basket, developed according to the principles of the Australian dietary guidelines as well as environmental impact. The food basket approach is a commonly used method for assessing and monitoring food availability and cost. The typical food basket was based on average weekly food purchases of a reference household made up of two adults and two children. For the H&S basket, food choices were based on health principles and environmental impact. The H&S basket was compared to the typical Australian basket and it was determined that the cost of the H&S basket was more than the typical basket in five socioeconomic areas; the most disadvantaged spent 30 percent more for the H&S basket. The authors concluded that the most disadvantaged groups at both neighborhood and household levels experienced the greatest inequality in accessing an affordable H&S basket. Macdiarmid et al. examined a sustainable diet (met all energy and nutrient needs and maximally decreased GHG emissions), a “sustainable with acceptability constraints” diet (added foods commonly consumed in the UK; met energy, nutrient, and fish recommendations as well as recommended minimum intakes for fruits and vegetables and did not exceed the maximum recommended for red and processed meat), and the average UK diet.They found that the sustainable diet that was generated would decrease GHG emissions from primary production (up to distribution) by 90 percent, but consisted of only seven foods. The acceptability constraints diet included 52 foods and was projected to reduce GHG emissions by 36 percent. This diet included meat and dairy but less than the average UK diet. The cost of the sustainable + acceptability diet was comparable to that of the average UK diet. These results showed that a sustainable diet that meets dietary requirements and has lower GHG can be achieved without eliminating meat or dairy products completely, or increasing the cost to the consumer. Lastly, Wilson et al. examined 16 dietary patterns modeled to determine which patterns would minimize estimated risk of chronic disease, cost, and GHG emissions. These patterns included low-cost and low-cost + low GHG diet patterns, as well as healthy patterns with high vegetable intakes including Mediterranean or Asian patterns, as well as the average New Zealand pattern. The authors found that diets that aimed to minimize cost and estimated GHG emissions also had health advantages, such as the simplified low-cost Mediterranean-style and simplified Asian-style diets, both of which would lower cardiovascular disease and cancer risk, compared to the average New Zealand diet. However, dietary variety was limited and further optimization to lower GHG emissions increased cost.

Overall, the studies were consistent in showing that higher consumption of animal-based foods was associated with higher estimated environmental impact, whereas consumption of more plant-based foods as part of a lower meat-based or vegetarian-style dietary pattern was associated with estimated lower environmental impact compared to higher meat or non-plant-based dietary patterns. Related to this, the total energy content of the diet was also associated with estimated environmental impact and higher energy diets had a larger estimated impact. For example, for fossil fuel alone, one calorie from beef or milk requires 40 or 14 calories of fuel, respectively, whereas one calorie from grains can be obtained from 2.2 calories of fuel (Pimental & Pimental 2003). Additionally, the evidence showed that dietary patterns that promote health also promote sustainability; dietary patterns that adhered to dietary guidelines were more environmentally sustainable than the population’s current average level of intake or pattern. Taken together, the studies agreed on the environmental impact of different dietary patterns, despite varied methods of assessing environmental impact and differences in components of environmental impact assessed (e.g. GHG emissions or land use). The evidence on whether sustainable diets were more or less expensive than typically consumed diets in some locations was limited and inconsistent.

Qualitative Assessment of the Collected Evidence:

Quality and Quantity
This was a reasonable body of consistent evidence with studies that directly addressed the question. The study quality for the body of evidence ranged from 7/12 to 12/12, using the critical appraisal checklist for economic evaluations (including key components of the British Medical Journal checklist for economic evaluations, together with the Eddy checklist on mathematical models (NIHR Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre (UK)External Link: You are leaving odphp.health.gov).

Consistency
There was remarkable agreement between the fifteen studies regarding environmental footprints of different dietary patterns, despite varied methods and designs to answer the question.

Impact
The evidence supports Americans consuming the current Dietary Guidelines by increasing consumption of plant-based foods, modestly decreasing animal-based foods and decreasing excessive snacks/sweets. Promoting sustainable diets will contribute to food security for present and future generations by conserving valuable resources. Moving forward, care and attention will be needed to be sure that Americans have access to and can afford a sustainable pattern of eating.

Generalizability/External Validity
Studies were conducted in the US, the UK, Germany, the Netherlands, France, Spain, Italy, Australia, Brazil, and New Zealand. These are all high HDI countries with systems of national dietary guidance similar to the US. Most of the studies based their modeling on assumed average adult diets with average caloric intake to meet energy needs, i.e. general populations of healthy adults. Taken together, the evidence from the general healthy populations in the U.S. and primarily European countries is highly generalizable to the U.S. population.

Limitations
A limitation that was common to most of the studies was that health outcomes were not assessed in the available study, but were based on earlier work on specific dietary patterns, e.g. vegetarian, Mediterranean, Western, etc. There are also known limitations to the complex process of assessing the environmental impact of foods using the Life Cycle Assessments method.

Research Recommendations

  1. Develop and test communication strategies to help motivate people of all ages to consume increasingly sustainable diets. This strategy will provide further rationale for the U.S. population to consume a dietary pattern closer to the Dietary Guidelines for Americans than is currently being consumed.
  2. Develop and test systems to ensure that sustainable diets are affordable and available to all sectors of the population.
  3. Develop more in-depth analysis of U.S. domestic dietary patterns and enhanced environmental sustainability with different production regimens for animal products, especially dairy and beef.
  4. Develop updated analysis of environmental sustainability of dietary patterns with respect to fish consumption, nutrient profiles, and different production regimens (e.g. wild caught versus farm raised).

Table 1. Summary of Studies on Dietary Patterns and Sustainability

Author, Year

Study Design, Location

Diet Exposure

Results

Health Outcomes

Results

Sustainability or Food Security

Results

Food Components

Summary of Findings

Aston et al., 2012

Modeling/Data Analysis

UK

  • Reduced red & processed meat (RPM) dietary pattern
  • Vegetarian
  • Counterfactual (combination of lowest RPM + Vegetarian)

RPM consumption from National Diet and Nutrition Survey of British Adults

Counterfactual UK diet was specified: vegetarians in the survey population doubled, and remainder adopted dietary pattern of lowest 5th of RPM consumers

Counterfactual diet: reduced risk from 3.2% (95% CI 1.9-4.7) for diabetes in women to 12.2% (6.4-18.0) for colorectal cancer in men

Diet-related GHG decreased by 0.47 kg CO2-e/person/day (12%) to 3.96 kg CO2-e/ person/ day in men and 3.02 kg CO2 -e/person/day in women

For 2009 UK population of 61,792,000, this amounts to a total GHG reduction of 27.8 million tonnes/year (3% of current total)

Red meat accounted for 31% of dietary CO2-e emissions in men and 27% in women

Processed meat accounted for an additional 10% and 8% in men and women, respectively

(Habitual RPM 2.5X higher in top compared w bottom 5th )

Reduced consumption of RPM would result in multiple benefits to health and the environment

Baroni et al., 2007

Modeling/Data Analysis

Italy

7 dietary patterns:

  • Omni-Conv (omnivorous, conventional farming)
  • Omni-Org (omnivorous, organic farming)
  • Veg-Conv (vegetarian, conventional)
  • Veg-Org (vegetarian, organic)
  • Vegan-Conv (vegan, conventional)
  • Vegan-Org (vegan, organic)
  • Average Italian-Conv (ave. Italian diet, conventional)

Ave impact (points): Health

Omni-Conv - 0.46;
Omni-Org - 0.20; 
Veg-Conv - 0.34; 
Veg-Org - 0.18; 
Vegan-Conv - 0.15;
Vegan-Org - 0.04;
Ave Italian - 1.06;

From omnivorous diets: 15-18% of impact due to damage to respiration from inorganic chemicals

Ave impact (points): Resources

Omni-Conv - 1.42;
Omni-Org - 0.80; 
Veg-Conv - 0.88; 
Veg-Org - 0.59; 
Vegan-Conv - 0.54;
Vegan-Org - 0.46;
Ave Italian - 3.70;

From omnivorous diets: 20-26% of impact due to fossil fuels

5-13% due to land use

41-46% due to water

Ave impact (points): Ecosystem

Omni-Conv - 0.27
Omni-Org - 0.27 
Veg-Conv - 0.17 
Veg-Org - 0.18 
Vegan-Conv - 0.11
Vegan-Org - 0.07
Ave Italian - 0.65

From omnivorous diets: 3-4% of impact due to eutrophication process

Beef is the single food w/ greatest impact on environment

Other high impacting foods were cheese, milk, and fish

Ave Italian-Conv diet had the greatest environmental impact

The Vegan-Org diet had the lowest environmental impact

Within the same method of production, a greater consumption of animal products translated to a greater impact on the environment

Within the same dietary pattern, conventional production methods had a greater environmental impact than organic methods

Barosh et al., 2014

Cross-sectional survey of food availability & cost

Australia

  • Health & Sustainability (H&S) basket
  • Typical basket

Two food baskets (typical and sustainable H&S basket) were developed for a 2-adult/2-child household and food outlets in 5 socio-economic districts were surveyed to estimate food cost, food availability and food accessibility in different household income quintile

H&S basket

1st - developed according to health principles of Australian Dietary Guidelines

2nd - food items chosen w lower environ impact

Cost of H&S basket more than typical basket in 5 socio- economic areas

Most disadvantaged spent more (30%) for H&S basket

NRMost disadvantaged groups in the region, both at the neighborhood and household levels, experienced the greatest inequality in affordability of the H&S diet

de Carvalho et al., 2013

Cross-sectional health survey

Brazil

  • Red & processed meat

Study measured RPM intake in San Paulo, Brazil and assessed impact on diet quality and environment

Diet quality assessed using the Brazilian Healthy Eating Index RevisedGHG emissions from meat were estimated at 18,071,988 tons of CO2 equivalents, or 4% of total emitted by agriculture

81% of men and 58% of women consumed more meat than recommended of red and processed meat

 

Diet quality was inversely associated with excessive meat intake in men

Excessive meat intake, associated with poorer diet quality, support initiatives and policies advising to reduce red and processed meat to recommended amounts as part of healthy and environmentally sustainable diet

Hendrie et al., 2014

Modeling/
Data Analysis/
Survey

Australia

4 dietary patterns:

  • Average diet (average Australian diet);
  • Average diet with minimal non-core foods (similar to average diet with minimal inclusion of energy-dense, processed non-core foods);
  • Total diet (recommended dietary pattern consistent with Australian Dietary Guidelines);
  • Foundation diet (recommended dietary pattern that meets the minimum nutrient and energy needs requirements for the population)

Health benefits of adhering to Australian Dietary Guidelines

Core foods = red meat, chicken, fish, eggs, breads & cereals, fruit, vegetables, dairy foods and unsat oils

Non-core foods = snacks, soft drinks, coffee/tea, desserts/ sweets, processed meats, SFA, and alcohol

Highest GHG:
Ave Australian diet -14.5 kg CO2/ person/d

Lowest GHG:
Foundation diet - 10.9 kg CO2/person/d

(~25% lower than ave diet)

GHG from diets assessed using the input-output model of Australian economy (Australian Multi Regional Input-Output (MRIO) model)

Food groups with greatest contribution to diet-related GHG were red meat (8.0 kg CO2 /person/d) and energy-dense, nutrient poor “non-core” foods (3.9 kg CO2)

Non-core foods accounted for 27% diet-related GHG

Reduction in non-core foods and consuming recommended servings of core foods are strategies to benefit population health and environment

Macdiarmid et al 2012

Modeling/Data Analysis

UK

3 dietary patterns:

  • Sustainable
  • Sustainalbe w/ Acceptability Constraints
  • Average UK

Iterative modeling to produce a diet that met dietary requirements while minimizing GHGEs

Acceptability constraints based on average UK diet

7-d sample diet was generated to ensure diet was realistic and acceptable

Benefits from dietary recommendations:

Modeled for nutrient intake based on UK diet recommendations for women 19-50y,

Constraints set for energy, macronutrients, and 6 micronutrients (iron, folate, B12, zinc, calcium, and sodium)

GHG: sustainable diet gave 90% reduction in GHG, but only 7 foods

Acceptability constraints gave 52 foods and reduced GHG

36%; diet included meat but less than average UK diet

Diet cost: cost of Sustainable + acceptability diet was comparable to average UK cost

Meat in sustainable w/ Acceptability diet was 60% of current intake for UK women and 48% of red meat intake

 

Proportion of dairy was similar to current intakes, but lower in fat

A sustainable diet that meets dietary requirements for health with lower GHG can be achieved without eliminating meat or dairy products or increasing the cost to the consumer

Meier & Christen, 2013

Modeling/Data Analysis

Germany

6 dietary patterns:

  • Ave German Diet 1985-89
  • Ave German Diet 2006
  • German Dietary Guidelines Diet (D-A-CH)
  • Alternative recommendations w/ less meat, more legumes & vegetables (UGB)
  • Lacto-ovo vegetarian
  • Vegan
Dietary guidelines and vegetarian/ vegan related health benefits

Environmental impacts per capita

CO2 emissions, t/y:

  • 1985-89 mean: 2.28;
  • 2006 mean: 2.05;
  • D-A-CH: 1.82;
  • UGB: 1.81;
  • vegetarian: 1.56;
  • vegan: 0.96

NH3 emissions, kg/y:

  • 1985-89 mean: 7.7;
  • 2006 mean: 6.5;
  • D-A-CH: 5.1;
  • UGB: 4.7;
  • vegetarian: 3.8;
  • vegan: 0.7

Land use, m2/y:

  • 1985-89 mean: 2,444;
  • 2006 mean: 2,098;
  • D-A-CH: 1,786;
  • UGB: 1,740;
  • vegetarian: 1,527;
  • vegan: 1,052

Blue water** use, m3/y:

  • 1985-89 mean: 24.9;
  • 2006 mean: 28.4;
  • D-A-CH: 20.9;
  • UGB: 20.8;
  • vegetarian: 52.5;
  • vegan: 58.8

Phosphorus use, kg/y:

  • 1985-89 mean: 7.7;
  • 2006 mean: 6.5;
  • D-A-CH: 5.7;
  • UGB: 5.6;
  • vegetarian: 4.5;
  • vegan: 2.4

Primary Energy use, GJ/y:

  • 1985-89 mean: 14.0;
  • 2006 mean: 13.5;
  • D-A-CH: 12.5;
  • UGB: 12.9;
  • vegetarian: 11.2;
  • vegan: 9.4

In comparison to the dietary guidelines and diets characterized by increasing legumes, nuts/seeds and vegetables, instead of meat, butter, egg and fish products (D-A-CH > UGB > vegetarian > vegan) could reduce impact of diet if more in line with guidelines

GHG emissions and phosphorus use related to dairy are increasing, while those related to meat are declining

Ammonia emissions and land use also largely driven by meat and dairy, and would be reduced w/ shift to vegan diet

Increased blue water use since 1985-89 is associated w/ higher fruits, nuts, and seeds

Highest environmental impact changes would be from the vegan and lacto-ovo vegetarian diets

The impact of recommendations of UGB and D-A-CH ranked 3rd and 4th

All four diets achieved significant reductions compared with the average intake in 2006

Changes since 1985-89 are largely due to changes in diet

Peters et al., 2007

Modeling/Data Analysis

New York State

42 dietary patterns varying in total fat and meat servings:

  • Range of food patterns—from low-fat, lacto-vegetarian to high fat, meat-rich omnivorous
  • 7 quantities of meat and eggs—0 to 381 g/d and 6 levels of fat—20 to 45% of energy
  • 2308 kcal/d
  • Excludes foods not produced in NY state
  • Assumes seasonal limitations on fruits & veg
All diets met USDA Food Guide Pyramid where possible

Annual per capita land requirements:

ranged from 0.18 ha (0g meat, 52g fat) to 0.86 ha (381g meat, 52g fat);

meat was the primary driver of increasing land use;

increasing dietary intake of fat increased land requirements for low-meat diets but reduced land requirements for high-meat diets;

97.2% of the variability between diets was attributable to the quantity of meat in the diet

Carrying capacity:

ranged from 6.08 million persons (0g meat, 52g fat) to 2.04 million persons (381g meat, 52g fat);

lower meat diets generally supported more people, but as fats increased, there was less difference between diets with different meat levels;

87.2% of the variability between diets was attributable to the quantity of meat in the diet

Meat was most land-intensive food, followed by eggs, dairy, fruits, oilseeds, vegetables, beans, then grains

(Ruminant meat and milk required less land devoted to annual crop production relative to other meats)

Increasing meat in the diet increased per capita land requirements, while increasing total dietary fat increased the land requirements of low meat diets but reduced the land needed for high meat diets

These results support the assertion that diet should be considered in its entirety when assessing environmental impact

Pimentel & Pimentel, 2003

Modeling/Data Analysis

US

2 energy-equivalent diets:

  • Lacto-ovo vegetarian
  • Average US (Meat based diet)

Meat-based diet based on food balance sheets for US from FAOSTAT

Composition of the lactoovovegetarian diet estimated by replacing meat and fish calories by proportionately increasing other foods consumed, except sugar and sweeteners, fats, and vegetable oils

Health benefits of lacto-ovo vegetarian diet

Cropland per capita needed for production: meat-based: 0.5 ha; vegetarian: 0.4 ha

Producing 1 kg of animal protein requires 100 times more water than producing 1 kg of grain protein

Fossil energy required to produce 1 kcal of animal protein, kcal:

lamb: 57; beef: 40; eggs: 39;swine:14; dairy (milk): 14; turkeys: 10; broilers: 4

Grain/forage required to produce 1 kg of animal product, kg:

lamb: 21/30; beef: 13/30; eggs: 11/0; swine: 5.9/0; turkeys: 3.8/0; broilers: 2.3/0; dairy (milk): 0.7/1

Red meat generally requires more resources to produce than non-meat animal proteins (eggs, milk)

Meat-based diet requires more energy, land, and water resources, making the lactoovovegetarian diet more sustainable than the current average US diet

Pradham et al., 2013

Modeling/Data Analysis

Global

16 dietary patterns, grouped according to energy content: low-calorie (patterns 1-3), moderate-calorie (patterns 4-8), high-calorie (patterns 9-11), and very high-calorie (patterns 12-16). Within each group, dietary patterns differed in the composition of food groups

Dietary patterns were characterized using global time series data on food consumption and composition per country from FAOSTAT during 1961-2007

Data included 11 food groups: animal products, cereals, pulses, starchy roots, oilcrops, vegetable oils, vegetables, fruits, sugar-sweeteners, sugarcrops, and alcoholic beverages

NR

High-calorie diets required high per-capita energy inputs (1,800-3,500 kcal/d)

Per-capita fossil-fuel related GHGEs ranged from 0.64 to 1.35 kg CO2 eq/d for very high-calorie diets, to between 0.03 and 0.05 kg CO2 eq/d for low-calorie diets

Non-CO2 GHGEs were generally high for low- and moderate-calorie diets, and resulted in high total GHGEs for those patterns

For high- and very high-calorie patterns, non-CO2 GHGE intensities for crop and livestock were smaller, indicating high-energy input and management strategies make agriculture more productive in developed countries, which were generally associated with higher-calorie patterns

Total GHGEs only slightly higher for high- and very high-calorie diets (2.48-6.10 kg CO2 eq/d) compared to low- and moderate-calorie diets (1.43-4.48 kg CO2 eq/d)

Non-CO2 GHGE intensities were higher for livestock (1.44-13.06 g CO2 eq/kcal) than for crops (0.31-1.81 g CO2 eq/kcal), indicating that a dietary shift towards consuming fewer animal products would help reduce GHGEs

Low-calorie diets showed a similar emission burden to moderate- and high-calorie diets, which could be explained by a less efficient calorie production per unit of GHGEs in developing countries, which were mainly associated with low-calorie diets

Very high-calorie diets were prevalent in developed countries and were associated with high total per-capita GHGEs due to high carbon intensity and high intake of animal products

Sáez-Almendros 2013

Model/
Data Analysis

Spain

4 Diets (comparable in energy content):

  • Mediterranean (MDP)
  • Current Spanish w/ food balance (SCP-FB)
  • Current Spanish w/ consumption surveys (SCP-CS)
  • Western (WDP)

Mediterranean DP was obtained from the new MDP pyramid

Spanish dietary pattern was estimated from the FAOSTAT food balance sheets for 2007, and also independently from the Household Consumption Surveys of the Spanish Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Environment

WDP was also obtained from FAOSTAT food balance sheets for 2007

Documented health benefits of Med Diet Pattern (MDP)

Agricultural land use, 103Ha/y:
MDP: 8,365; SCP-FB: 19,874; SCP-CS: 12,342; WDP: 33,162; 
Current real pressure: 15,400
Energy consumption, TJ/y
MDP: 239,042; SCP-FB: 493,829; SCP-CS: 285,968; WDP: 611,314; 
Current real pressure: 229,178
Water consumption, km3/y
MDP: 13.2; SCP-FB: 19.7; SCP-CS: 13.4; WDP: 22.0; 
Current real pressure: 19.4
GHG emissions, Gg CO2eq/y
MDP: 35,510; SCP-FB: 125,913; SCP-CS: 72,758; WDP: 217,128; 
Current real pressure: 62,389

Adherence to MDP: decrease GHG 72% 
land use 58%
energy 52%
water 33%
Adherence to a WDP:
increase all by 12-72%

Animal products contributed significantly to increasing diet pattern footprints

Energy consumption: dairy had highest contribution for all diets, followed by meat for WDP, fish for SCP, and vegetables for MDP

Water consumption: dairy and vegetable oils both had the highest contribution

GHG emissions: meat contributed most for WDP and SPC, while dairy most for MDP

For land use: cereals and vegetable oils most after dairy and meat.

The MDP in Spain would reduce GHG (72%), agricultural land use (58%) and energy consumption (52%), and water consumption (33%)

Adherence to a WDP would increase all of these between 12% - 72%

Adherence to a Mediterranean dietary pattern would make a significant contribution to increasing both food sustainability and the well-known benefits for public health

Scarborough et al., 2012

Modeling/Data Analysis

UK

Baseline diet, plus 3 dietary scenarios from the UK Committee on Climate Change (CCC):

  • Baseline (Current UK dietary intake based on food purchase data),
  • Scenario 1 (50% reduction in meat and dairy, replaced by fruit, vegetables, and cereals);
  • Scenario 2 (75% reduction in red meat, replaced by pigs and poultry);
  • Scenario 3 (50% reduction in pigs and poultry, replaced by fruits, vegetables, and cereals)

Total deaths delayed or averted per year compared with baseline diet [95% credible interval]:

  • Scenario 1 - 36,910 [30,192-43,592];
  • Scenario 2 - 1,999 [1,739-2,389];
  • Scenario 3 - 9,297 [7,288-11,301]

CHD, stroke, and cancer mortality

DIETRON model used to estimate deaths delayed or averted under each diet

Diet 1: 
19% decrease GHG
42% decrease LU

Diet 2: 
9% decrease GHG
39% decrease LU

Diet 3: 
3% decrease GHG
4% decrease LU

For Diet 1, increased fruits & vegetables was biggest contributor to deaths delayed

Reductions in salt or changes in FAs made smaller contribution

Diet 1 was largest contributor to deaths delayed or averted and largest environmental impact

van Doreen et al., 2014

Modeling/Data Analysis

The Netherlands

6 dietary patterns:

  • Average Dutch
  • Dutch DG
  • Semi-Veg
  • Vegetarian
  • Vegan
  • Mediterranean

Average Dutch diet based on Dutch National Food Consumption Survey 1998

DDG diet based on the 2006 Dutch Dietary Guidelines for adult women

Vegetarian diet replaced meat with eggs, pulses and nuts, and meat substitutes

Vegan diet substituted milk with calcium-enriched soy drinks and eggs with pulses

Semi-vegetarian, average of DDG + vegetarian diets

Mediterranean diet based on the Med pyramid, lower in meat and high in fish, fruits, vegetables, plant oils

Health scores:
Average Dutch: 75; 
DDG: 105; 
semi-vegetarian: 103; 
vegetarian: 100; 
vegan: 118; 
Mediterranean: 122

Omega-3 fish oils were lacking in the vegan and vegetarian diet

Compared with the average Dutch diet, all other diets had significant health benefits in terms of reducing chronic disease risk

Sustainability scores:
Average Dutch: 68; 
DDG: 90; 
semi-vegetarian: 98; 
vegetarian: 109; 
vegan: 130; 
Mediterranean: 102

GHG index:
Average Dutch: 80 (4.1 CO2 e/d); 
DDG: 90 (3.6 CO2 e/d); 
semi-vegetarian: 96; 
vegetarian: 102; 
vegan: 123; 
Mediterranean: 96

LU index:
Average Dutch: 56 (5.34 m^2*y/d); 
DDG: 89; 
semi-vegetarian: 100; 
vegetarian: 115; 
vegan: 137; 
Mediterranean: 107

Foods contributing most to GHG emission of the Dutch diet are:
meat products (32%), dairy (19%), extras (13%), and drinks (7%)

Foods contributing most to LU are:
meat (54%), extras (18%), dairy (11%), and drinks (9%)

Greatest reduction in GHG and LU can be obtained by reducing consumption of meat, dairy products, extras, and drinks (alcoholic, juices, soft drinks, coffee, and tea), in that order

Compared with the average Dutch diet, a healthy diet that is in compliance with the DDG is likely to result in a higher sustainability score

The Mediterranean diet, which had the highest health score, also had a higher sustainability score than the average dutch Diet

The diets with the optimal synergy between health and sustainability were those that were oriented in between a health focus and animal protein reduction (eg. semi-vegetarian or pesco-vegetarian)

Vieux et al., 2013

Modeling/Data Analysis

France

Self-selected diets of 1,918 French adults, classified into 4 patterns based on nutritional quality:
High, 
Intermediate+ (I+), 
Intermediate- (I-), 
Low

Based on indicators of nutritional quality:

  • MAR = Mean Adequacy Ratio
  • MER = Mean Excess Ratio
  • ED = Energy Density
Highest nutrition quality diets have MAR above median, MER and ED below median

Without adjustment, diet-related GHG were not significantly different between the 4 classes for men, but were significantly greater in the High class for women (p<0.0001)

After adjusting for diet weight, GHG no longer significantly different across classes for either sex

After adjusting for energy intake, high-quality diets were associated with higher GHG for both men and women (+9% and +22%, respectively; P<0.0001 for both)

Ruminant meat associated with the greatest GHG

GHG per 100 g, gCO2 e/d (in decreasing order): 
ruminant meat (1,627); 
fish (612); 
pork, poultry, and eggs (610); 
mixed dishes (369); 
fats (342); 
dairy (283); 
sweets and salted snacks (197); 
starches (114); 
fruit and vegetables (114)

GHGEs per 100 kcal, gCO2 e/d (in decreasing order): 
ruminant meat (857); 
fish (517); 
mixed dishes (312); 
pork, poultry, and eggs (308); 
fruit and vegetables (290); 
dairy (216); 
sweets and salted snacks (91); 
starches (61); 
fats (55)

More nutrient-dense diets were associated with higher levels of GHG, even though they contained more plant-based products

Food groups such as sweets and salted snacks were negatively associated with diet-related GHG, while fruits and vegetables were positively associated with diet-related GHG.

Wilson et al 2013

Modeling/Data Analysis

New Zealand

16 dietary patterns (4 groups: low-cost, minimize GHG emissions, "relatively healthy", and "more familiar meals") with equivalent in energy and met dietary requirements:

  • lowest-cost (C1);
  • low-cost, including porridge and rotis to ensure realistic preparation methods (C2);
  • low-cost, requiring minimal cooking skills (C3);
  • low-cost, with relatively high vegetable intake (C4);
  • lowest GHG emissions, low-cost (G1);
  • same as G1, with higher cost/day (G2);
  • same as G2, including porridge as standard meal (G3);
  • same as G2 but vegan;
  • Mediterranean style diet (MED);
  • Mediterranean style diet, but minimizing GHG emissions (MED-G);
  • Asian style diet (ASIAN);
  • Asian style diet, but minimizing GHG emissions (ASIAN-G);
  • More familiar NZ diet, main meal - mince (NZ-M);
  • More familiar NZ diet, main meal - sausages (NZ-S);
  • More familiar NZ diet, main meal - fish (NZ-T);
  • More familiar NZ diet, main meal - Pacific theme (NZ-P)

All diets likely to be healthier than current average NZ diet for preventing non-communicable diseases

Compared with the typical NZ dietary pattern, the low-cost and low-GHG optimized dietary patterns provide advantages for cardiovascular disease prevention

Benefits included higher PUFA/SFA ratio, less SFA from meat, lower sodium and higher potassium intake

High vegetable diets (C4, MED, ASIAN) also provided benefits against colon cancer due to higher fiber intake

GHG emissions, kg CO2 e/d (asterisk indicates that scenario minimized this variable):
C1: 2.72; C2: 2.63; C3: 2.2; C4: 4.33; G1*: 1.67; G1 with NZ GHG values*: 1.39; G2*: 1.31; G3*: 1.56; G4*: 1.9; ASIAN: 4.03; ASIAN-G*: 3.29; MED: 4.68; MED-G*: 2.17; NZ-M: 5.25; NZ-S: 4.54; NZ-T: 4.24; NZ-P: 5.98

Scenario G2 (low GHG, higher cost) associated with the lowest GHG emissions

Scenario G4 (low GHG, vegan) had slightly higher GHGs than the other GHG-reduction scenarios

"Healthier diets" scenarios, ASIAN-G (Asian diet, low GHG) and MED-G (Mediterranean diet, low GHG) associated with higher GHGs than those that aimed to reduce GHGs without following a healthier diet

Increasing dietary variety and acceptability increased the daily cost; however, only 2 scenarios cost more than $7/d, and all scenarios cost less than half the estimated cost of current average NZ diet

Compared with scenario C1 (low-cost), scenario G1 (low-cost, low-GHGs [NZ values]) resulted in:

  • increases in fruit and vegetable consumption (except carrots),
  • increases in pulse, seed, and nut consumption (except dry peas),
  • increases in oat and white flour consumption, but decreases in wholemeal flour and pasta consumption,
  • increase in whole milk consumption but decrease in milk powder consumption,
  • increases in vegetable oils including margarine and peanut butter, but decreases in egg and added sugar consumption

All diets that aimed to minimize cost or GHGs were both less expensive and more healthy than the current average NZ diet

Low-cost and low-GHG diets were generally complementary, with scenario G2 (low GHG, higher cost) being associated with the lowest GHG emissions

"Healthier diets" that minimized GHGs achieved smaller GHG reductions than scenarios that aimed to reduce GHGs without following a healthier diet

References

  1. Aston LM, Smith JN, Powles JW. Impact of a reduced red and processed meat dietary pattern on disease risks and greenhouse gas emissions in the UK: a modelling study. BMJ Open. 2012;2(5). PMID: 22964113. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22964113.
  2. Baroni L, Cenci L, Tettamanti M, Berati M. Evaluating the environmental impact of various dietary patterns combined with different food production systems. Eur J Clin Nutr. 2007;61(2):279-86. PMID: 17035955. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17035955.
  3. Barosh L, Friel S, Engelhardt K, Chan L. The cost of a healthy and sustainable diet--who can afford it? Aust N Z J Public Health. 2014;38(1):7-12. PMID: 24494938. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24494938.
  4. de Carvalho AM, Cesar CL, Fisberg RM, Marchioni DM. Excessive meat consumption in Brazil: diet quality and environmental impacts. Public Health Nutr. 2013;16(10):1893-9. PMID: 22894818. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22894818.
  5. Hendrie GA, Ridoutt BG, Wiedmann TO, Noakes M. Greenhouse gas emissions and the Australian diet--comparing dietary recommendations with average intakes. Nutrients. 2014;6(1):289-303. PMID: 24406846. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24406846.
  6. Macdiarmid JI, Kyle J, Horgan GW, Loe J, Fyfe C, Johnstone A, et al. Sustainable diets for the future: Can we contribute to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by eating a healthy diet? Am J Clin Nutr. 2012;96(3):632-9. PMID: 22854399. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22854399.
  7. Meier T, Christen O. Environmental impacts of dietary recommendations and dietary styles: Germany as an example. Environ Sci Technol. 2013;47(2):877-88. PMID: 23189920. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23189920.
  8. Peters CJ, Wilkins JL, Fick GW. Testing a complete-diet model for estimating the land resource requirements of food consumption and agricultural carrying capacity: The New York State example. Renewable agriculture and food systems. 2007;22(2):145-53. http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=1091328&fileId=S1742170507001767External Link: You are leaving odphp.health.gov.
  9. Pimentel D, Pimentel M. Sustainability of meat-based and plant-based diets and the environment. Am J Clin Nutr. 2003;78(3 Suppl):660S-3S. PMID: 12936963. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12936963.
  10. Pradhan P, Reusser DE, Kropp JP. Embodied greenhouse gas emissions in diets. PLoS One. 2013;8(5):e62228. PMID: 23700408. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23700408.
  11. Saez-Almendros S, Obrador B, Bach-Faig A, Serra-Majem L. Environmental footprints of Mediterranean versus Western dietary patterns: beyond the health benefits of the Mediterranean diet. Environ Health. 2013;12:118. PMID: 24378069. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24378069.
  12. Scarborough P, Allender S, Clarke D, Wickramasinghe K, Rayner M. Modelling the health impact of environmentally sustainable dietary scenarios in the UK. Eur J Clin Nutr. 2012;66(6):710-5. PMID: 22491494. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22491494.
  13. van Dooren C, Marinussen M, Blonk H, Aiking H, Vellinga P. Exploring dietary guidelines based on ecological and nutritional values: A comparison of six dietary patterns. Food Policy. 2014;44(0):36-46. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0306919213001620External Link: You are leaving odphp.health.gov.
  14. Vieux F, Soler LG, Touazi D, Darmon N. High nutritional quality is not associated with low greenhouse gas emissions in self-selected diets of French adults. Am J Clin Nutr. 2013;97(3):569-83. PMID: 23364012. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23364012.
  15. Wilson N, Nghiem N, Ni Mhurchu C, Eyles H, Baker MG, Blakely T. Foods and dietary patterns that are healthy, low-cost, and environmentally sustainable: a case study of optimization modeling for New Zealand. PLoS One. 2013;8(3):e59648. PMID: 23544082. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23544082

References not included in the review:

  1. Higgins JPT GSe. Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions Version 5.1.0: The Cochrane Collaboration; 2011. Available from: www.cochrane-handbook.orgExternal Link: You are leaving odphp.health.gov.
  2. Drummond MF, Jefferson TO. Guidelines for authors and peer reviewers of economic submissions to the BMJ. The BMJ Economic Evaluation Working Party. BMJ. 1996;313(7052):275-83. PMID: 8704542. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8704542.
  3. Eddy D. The role of mathematical modelling in Assessing medical technology,. Technology Assessment. 1985:144-54.
  4. Stevenson M, Lloyd-Jones M, Morgan MY, Wong R. Non-invasive diagnostic assessment tools for the detection of liver fibrosis in patients with suspected alcohol-related liver disease: a systematic review and economic evaluation. Health Technol Assess. 2012;16(4):1-174. PMID: 22333291. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22333291.
  5. Goedkoop M SR. The Eco-Indicator 99, A Damage Oriented Method for Life Cycle Assessment Methodology Report 2000. Available from: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/285641235_The_ecoindicator-99_A_damage_oriented_method_for_life_cycle_impact_assessment_Methodology_annexExternal Link: You are leaving odphp.health.gov.

Supplementary Material: Food Components/Individual Foods for Sustainability Studies

High vs Low Sustainable Diets
(Individual foods provided when reported)

Study

Dietary Patterns
(High vs Low Sustainable)

Vegetables

Fruits

Cereals/Grains

Legumes

Nuts/Seeds

Meat

Seafood

 

Beverages

Dairy/

Eggs

Fats/

Oils

Sweets/

Snacks

Aston 2012

UK

Counterfactual (combination of lowest RPM + Vegetarian) diet

vs current intake

British National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS)

Fruit and vegetables:

Vegetables (1) (Roots, onions, brassicas)

Vegetables (2)

(All other)

Tomato

Fruit and vegetables:

Fruit

Starchy staples:

Bread

Breakfast

Pasta

Rice

Unprocessed potato

Frozen potato

Other potato

Flour/other grains

Fruit and vegetables:

Pulses

Unprocessed Red meat:

Beef, veal, pork, lamb, other

White Meat

Processed meat:

Primarily beef

↓ Red & Processed Meat (RPM)

91 → 53 g/day (42%) in men

54 → 30 g/day (44%) in women

Fish:

Fresh fish

Shell fish

Frozen fish

Beverages:

Soft bev Mineral water

Alcoholic bev

Fruit juice

Coffee

Tea

Cocoa

Tap water

Dairy/Eggs:

Milk

Cheese

Ice Cream

Eggs

Fats:

Butter

Margarine

Cooking oil

Other:

Crispbread

Biscuits

Buns/cakes

Chocolate/

Sweets

Sugar/honey

Jam/

Marmalade

Baroni 2009

Italy

Vegan vs

Ave Italian diet

Ave Italian (Eurostat, Euromeat, FAO)

‘Vegan’ defined a plant only

diet, which excludes any food of animal origin, such as

meat, fish, milk, dairy products and eggs

Descending order of environmental impact:

Beef

Sole fish

Fresh cheese

Aged cheese

Milk

Yogurt

Vegetables

Tuna fish

Poultry

Rice

Whole bread

White bread

Pasta

Fruit

Crisp bread

Jam

Sugar

Descending order of environmental impact:

Beef

Sole fish

Fresh cheese

Aged cheese

Milk

Yogurt

Vegetables

Tuna fish

Poultry

Rice

Whole bread

White bread

Pasta

Fruit

Crisp bread

Jam

Sugar

Descending order of environmental impact:

Beef

Sole fish

Fresh cheese

Aged cheese

Milk

Yogurt

Vegetables

Tuna fish

Poultry

Rice

Whole bread

White bread

Pasta

Fruit

Crisp bread

Jam

Sugar

 

Vegan excluded any type of animal flesh, including meat and fish

↓ 0 g/day

Beef

Poultry

Vegan excluded any type of animal flesh, including meat and fish

↓ 0 g/day

Sole fish

Tuna fish

 

Vegan excluded any food of animal origin, such as

milk, dairy products and eggs

↓ 0 g/day

Fresh cheese

Aged cheese

Milk

Yogurt

 

Descending order of environmental impact:

Beef

Sole fish

Fresh cheese

Aged cheese

Milk

Yogurt

Vegetables

Tuna fish

Poultry

Rice

Whole bread

White bread

Pasta

Fruit

Crisp bread

Jam

Sugar

Barosh 2014

Australia

H&S basket§ (based on Australian DGs & environment) vs typical basket (hypothetical household purchases)

(weekly)

Food Group:

Vegetables:

Typical –zucchini

Sustainable – carrots

Food Group:

Fruit:

Typical –apples Sustainable - oranges

Food Group:

Grains (cereal):

Typical –white bread

Sustainable – whole meal

Food Group:

Meats & poultry, fish, eggs, tofu, nuts, and seeds, legumes/beans

No examples of typical vs sustainable choices for tofu, nuts, and seeds, legumes/beans

Food Group:

Meats & poultry, fish, eggs, tofu, nuts, and seeds, legumes/beans:

Typical –beef

Sustainable - kangaroo

Food Group:

Meats & poultry, fish

No examples of typical vs sustainable choices for fish

 

Food Group:

Milk, yogurt, cheese

Typical –cheese

Sustainable - yogurt

  

de Carvalho 2013

Brazil

Red and Processed Meat (RPM) pattern

ISA-Capital 2003 study

Health Survey for Sao Paulo

Multiple Source Method used to model

RPM intake

    

RPM:

Sum of red meat (beef and pork) and processed

meat (cured, salted, smoked or with chemical preservatives)

RPM intake = 106 g/d

73 g beef

8 g pork

25 g processed meat

(High intake = >500g/wk)

     

Hendrie 2014

Australia

Foundation diet: reduced energy Australian DG diet w/ only core foods

vs average Australian diet

Australian Nat Nutrition Survey

Core foods:

↑ Vegetables

331 → 432 g/d

Core foods:

↑ Fruit

210 → 300 g/d

Core foods:

↑ Breads/ cereals 244 → 324 g/d

 

Core foods:

↓ Red meat

73 → 65 g/d

↑ Poultry

35 → 50 g/d

Non-Core foods:

↓ Processed meats

27 → 0 g/d

Core foods:

↑ Fish

24 →30 g/d

Non-core foods:

↓ Soft drinks, coffee/tea

298 → 0

↓ Alcohol

254 → 0 g/d

Core foods:

↑ Dairy foods

263 → 408 g/d

↓ Eggs

14 → 8 g/d

Core foods:

↑ Unsat oils

16 → 26 g/d

Non-core foods:

↓ SFA 4 → 0 g/d

Non-core foods:

↓ Snacks, desserts/ sweets

172 →0 g/d

Macdiarmid 2012

UK

Sustainable w/ Acceptability Constraints

vs average UK diet

Diet modeled on UK dietary requirements for adult women

National Diet & Nutrition Survey

↑ Fruit & Vegetables:

330 → 555 g/d

Carrots, turnips (cooked)

Tomatoes

Peas

Brassicas

Cauliflower, broccoli, spinach

Sweet corn

Cucumber

Lettuce

Mushrooms (fried)

Onions (fried)

Peppers

↑ Fruit & Vegetables:

330 → 555 g/d

Apples, pears

Bananas

Grapes, kiwi, cherries

Peaches, nectarines, apricots

Raspberries, strawberries, blueberries

Fruit juice

↑ Starchy foods w/ potatoes:

2,936 g/wk

Pasta, noodles (cooked)

Rice (cooked)

White bread

Whole-grain bread

Whole-grain, high-fiber cereals

Other cereals

Porridge oats

Nonfried potato products

Potatoes (no added fat)

↑ Legumes:

385 g/wk

Beans

Baked beans

Lentils (cooked)

Nuts and seeds:

35 g/wk

Sesame seeds

Mixed nuts

Beans and

↓ Red Meat:

392 →190 g/wk

Beef

Pork

Lamb

Chicken 182 g/wk

↑ Fish:

161 → 223 g/wk

White fish

Shellfish

Oily fish

 

 

Dairy products:

2,366 g/wk

Skim milk

Other cheese (reduced fat)

Yogurt (low fat)

↓ Eggs 119 g/wk

 

↓ High-fat and sweet foods:

735 g/wk

Biscuits

Buns, cakes, pastries

Desserts

Low-fat spread

Fried, roasted potatoes

Crisps, savory snacks

Sugar

Chocolate

Preserves

Meier & Christen, 2013

Germany

Lacto-ovo or

Vegan

vs average German diet

National Nutrition Surveys (NNS) I & II

(NNS II shown)

Lacto-ovo or Vegan from USDA food patterns

↑ Vegetables:

231 → 245 g/d

↑ Potato products

80 → 107 g/d

↓ Fruit:

347 → 250 g/d

↑ Grains:

278 → 295 g/d

↑ Legumes:

124 or 128 g/d

↑ Nuts/Seeds

3 → 21 or 26 g/d

↓ Meat:

103 → 0 g/d

beef, veal

pork

poultry

other meat

↓ Fish:

25 → 0 g/d

 

↓ Butter

12→ 8 or 0 g/d

↑ Dairy

253→ 732 or 0 g/d

↑ Vegan milk products:

0 → 0 or 732 g/d

↓ Egg products:

18→ 16 or 0 g/

↑ Vegetable oils,margarine

15→ 27 or 34 g/d

↓ Sugar:

70 → 32 g/d

Peters 2007

US

42 diets from

0 - 381 g/d

meat and eggs and 20 - 45% fat calories

NE US Food Commodity Intake Database

Food Guide Pyramid recommended servings

Vegetables:

Meet or exceed recommendations (unless total kcal limit would be exceeded)

USDA Food Guide Pyramid

Fruit:

Meet or exceed recommendations (unless total kcal limit would be exceeded)

USDA Food Guide Pyramid

Grains:

Meet or exceed recommendations (unless total kcal limit would be exceeded)

USDA Food Guide Pyramid

Pulses:

Meets recommendation

↓ Meat:

7 different quantities of cooked meat and eggs, ranging from 0-381 g/d in 63.5 g/d increments

Beef, pork, chicken

Low fat – lean cuts

High fat – all cuts

Most Sustainable:

Lowest meat and eggs (0 g/d) at all 3 fat intake levels

  

Dairy:

Meets recommendation

Dairy:

Low fat - Milk, skim

High fat - Milk, whole

Fat:

6 different levels of fat, ranging from 20-45% total calories, in 5% increments

Sugar:

Limited to 10% of total kcal

Pimentel & Pimentel, 2003

US

Lacto-ovo vegetarian diet

vs meat-based

FAOSTAT

Lacto-ovo estimated

↑ Vegetables:

239 →286 kg/y

↑ Fruit:

109 →112 kg/y

↑ Food grain:

114 →152 kg/y

↑ Legumes:

4.3 →7.5 kg/y

↑ Nuts:

3.1 →4.0 kg/y

↓ Meat:

124 →0 kg/y

Lamb

Beef cattle

Swine

Turkeys

Broilers

↓ Fish:

20 →0 kg/y

 

↑ Dairy Products:

Dairy (milk)

256 →307kg/y

↑ Eggs:

14.5 →19.2 kg/y

↑ Vegetable oils:

24 →25 kg/y

Animal fats

6.7 →6.7 kg/y

↑ Oil crops:

6 → 8 kg/y

Sugars & sweeteners:

74 →74kg/y

Pradham 2013

Global

Low energy diet vs. Very high energy diet

(per capita intake 1870 - >3400 kcal/day (from 16 DP in 4 categories: low, mod, high, and very high kcal diets)

FAOSTAT

Low energy diet:

< 2,100 kcal/cap/day >50% cereals (pattern#1) or

> 70% starchy roots, cereals, and pulses (pattern #3)

<10% animal products

 

  

Very high energy diets‡‡: >2,800 kcal/cap/day,

high amount of meat and alcohol (pattern #14 & 15)

     

Sáez-Almendros 2013

Spain

Mediterranean Dietary Pattern (MDP) vs Western DP (WDP)

MDP: from Updated Mediterranean Diet Pyramid (2011)

WDP: from US food pattern & FAOSTAT

↑ Vegetables:

49 → 269 kg/y

MDP: ≥ 2 serv/ meal

Variety of colors/textures

↑ Fruit:

111 → 175 kg/y

MDP: 1-2 serv/ meal

Variety of colors/textures

↓ Cereals/Grain:

112 → 75 kg/y

MDP:

1-2 serv/meal

(Preferably whole grain)

Legumes:

MDP: >2 serv/wk

Nuts

Seeds

Olives:

MDP: 1-2 serv/d

↓ Meat:

133 → 16 kg/y

MDP:

Red meat

<1 serv/wk

Processed meat

<1 serv/wk

Fish:

54 → 14 kg/y

MDP:

>2 serv/wk

↓ Dairy:

254 → 71 kg/y

MDP:

2 serv/d

(lowfat)

Eggs:

MDP:

2-4 serv/wk

 

Vegetable oils and fats:

29 → 11 kg/y

MDP:

Olive oil

1-2 serv/meal

.

↓ Sweets:

68 → <1% kg/y

MDP:

<2 serv/wk

Scarborough 2012

UK

Diet Scenario

1 vs 3

(% 2005 levels ave UK diet)

Level of substitution based on food energy at the commodity level from UK food data

Scenario 1:

↓ Milk & eggs -60%

↓ All Meat - 36%

↓ Sugar - 70%

↑ Vegetables/ fruits -160%

↑ Cereals/ potatoes -133%

↑ Vegetable oils (not palm) -133%

Other groups -100%

   

Scenario 3:

Milk and eggs-100%

Cow & sheep-100%

↓ Pig & poultry-50%

↓ Sugar-90%

↑ Vegetable/ fruits -110%

↑ Cereals/ potatoes -110%

↑ Vegetable oils (not palm) -110%

Other groups -100%

     

van Doreen 2014

Netherlands

Vegan or

Mediterranean

vs average Dutch

(g/day)

Dutch National Food Consumption Survey

Vegan: ADA 2009

Mediterranean:

Updated Mediterranean Diet Pyramid (2011)

↑ Vegetables:

127 →400 or 300 g/d

Fresh

Other

↑ Fruit:

103→200 or 250 g/d

↑ Breads:

119 →210 g/d

↑ Grain products:

51 →53 or 100 g/d

Potatoes:

101 →105 or 25 g/d

↑ Pulses:

4 →21 or 75 g/d

↓ Meat, meat products, poultry:

102 →0 or 30 g/d

↑ Soy products & meat substitutes:

2 → 43 or 4 g/d

↑ Fish:

9 →0 or 37 g/d

Mediterranean Diet:

lower in meat, high in fish, fruits, and vegetables, w/ fewer extras, and plant oils instead of animal fats

↑ Drinks: Non-alcoholic:

1,487→ 1,500 ml/d

Alcoholic:

94 →150 g/d

↓ Dairy:

Milk & milk products

332 →0 or 300 g/d

Eggs:

13 → 0 or 29 g/d

Soy drink:

0 →450 or 0 g/d

Vegan diet: milk replaced by calcium-enriched soy drinks.

Protein similar to vegetarian, but eggs replaced by extra portion of pulses.

Vegetables increased 200 g w/ calcium rich

Oils & Fats:

46 →45 g/d

↓ Butter

3→0 g/d

↓ Other (extras)

859 →300 or 200g/d

Vieux 2013

France

Dietary patterns w/ indicators of nutritional quality

National Survey on Food Consumption

Fruit and vegetables (including

fruit juices and nuts)

Most sustainable on weight basis

Fruit and vegetables (including

fruit juices and nuts)

Most sustainable on weight basis

Starchy foods

(refined grains and unrefined starches such as whole grains, potatoes, and legumes)

Most sustainable on weight basis

 

Ruminant meat (beef and lamb):

Least sustainable on weight basis

Pork, poultry, and eggs (including pork meat and deli meat such as bacon/sausage):

Fish (including shellfish)

Drinks (including water, alcohol, and hot and light drinks)

Dairy products (milk, fresh dairy products, and cheese)

Fats

(animal and vegetable)

Sweets and salted snacks (including sweet drinks)

Wilson 2013

New Zealand

Scenario G2 – minimize GHG + achieve nutrient levels w/ low (not lowest) cost

vs

Average NZ diet

NZ Adult Nutrition Survey (NZANS) (men)

+ Diet scenarios∞

(16 DPs)

↓ Fruit and vegetables:

↓ Potatoes

255 →0 or 52 g/d

↓ Carrots

97 →52 g/d

↓ Brocolli

18 → 0 g/d

↓ Peas (frozen)

24 → 0 g.d

↓ Fruit and vegetables:

↓ Kiwifruit

29 →16 g/d

↓ Sultanas

2 →0 g/d

↓ Oranges

50 → 0 g/d

↑ Cereals and grains:

↑ Oats (wholegrain)

14 →81 g/d

↓ Flour (wholemeal)

3 →0 g/d

↓ White flour

6 → 0 g/d

↑ Pulses, seeds and nuts:

Sunflower seeds

210 g/d

Peanuts

180 g/d

↓ Meat:

↓ Beef:

35 →0 g/d

↓ Poultry:

61 →0 g/d

↓ Processed meat:

136 →0 g/d

↓ Fish:

65 →0 g/d

 

Dairy products:

↑ Milk powder

4 → 22 g/d

↓ Milk (whole, homogenized)

271 →0 g/d

↓ Eggs:

43 →0 g/d

↑ Veg oil:

60 g/d

↓ Margarine:

13 → 0 g/d

↓ Added sugars

22 → 0 g/d

Red meat as beef, veal, pork, lamb, mutton and goat, either fresh, minced (including hamburgers) or frozen, but unprocessed other than by cooking with heat. Although processed meats were primarily red meats, the term ‘red meat’ was used to refer to ‘unprocessed red meat’. White meat as meat from poultry, fresh, minced or frozen, but unprocessed other than by cooking with heat. Processed meat as meat preserved by smoking, curing, salting or addition of nitrates, nitrites or other preservatives. Under this definition, processed meats were primarily red, but included white meats, and included ham, bacon, pastrami, salami, sausages and processed deli or luncheon meats.

§ The H&S diet was based on three overarching principles: (i) any food that is consumed above a person's energy requirement represents an avoidable environmental burden in the form of greenhouse gas emissions, use of natural resources and pressure on biodiversity; (ii) reducing the consumption of discretionary food choices, which are energy-dense and highly processed and packaged, reduces both the risk of dietary imbalances and the use of environmental resources; and (iii) a diet comprising less animal- and more plant-derived foods delivers both health and ecological benefits.

Countries characterized by high calorie diets exhibit a production mode that needs high fossil energy inputs (1,800– 3,500 kcal/cap/day). In countries with low calorie diets, the energy input can be as low as 80–150 kcal/cap/day. But non-CO2 GHG emission intensities are relatively high for low and the moderate calorie diets. Therefore, total GHG emissions are only slightly higher for high and very high calorie diets (2.48–6.10 kg CO2 eq./cap/day) compared to low and moderate calorie diets (1.43–4.48 kg CO2 eq/cap/day).

Obtained data on a wide range of individual food items and optimized towards a diet meeting nutritional requirements ("bottom-up" approach).

Supplementary Material: Search Plan and Results—Dietary Patterns & Sustainability

Search Strategy

Dates Searched: 02/20/2014 – 02/21/2014

Databases: Pubmed, Embase, Cochrane, Navigator

Year Range: 01/2000 – 02/2014

Search Terms and Dates): Total: 1685 (+ 5 dupes = 1690)

PubMed 1449 hits; 2/20/2014
(environmental footprint* OR Carbon Footprint*[tiab] OR environmental impact* OR food security* OR food insecurity* OR "Conservation of Natural Resources"[Mesh] OR "Greenhouse Effect"[Mesh] OR "Carbon Footprint"[Mesh] OR "Environmental Monitoring"[Mesh] OR ((environment*[tiab] OR food[major:noexp] OR food[ti] OR diet[major]) AND sustainab*[tiab])) OR ("Conservation of Natural Resources"[major:noexp] OR "Greenhouse Effect"[major:noexp] OR "Carbon Footprint"[major:noexp] OR

"Environmental Monitoring"[major:noexp]) OR ("Ecosystem"[Mesh] OR ecological system*[tiab] OR greenhouse*[tiab] OR "Ecosystem"[major] OR ecological system*[tiab] OR greenhouse*[tiab] OR “land use”[tiab] OR “water use”[tiab])

Eng/hum AND ("Study Characteristics" [Publication Type] OR “clinical trial”[ptyp] OR "Epidemiologic Studies"[Mesh] OR "Support of Research"[ptyp]) NOT (editorial[ptyp] OR comment[ptyp] OR news[ptyp] OR letter[ptyp] OR review[ptyp]) 

Embase 170; 2/20/2014

(MedDietScore OR adequacy index* OR kidmed OR “healthy eating index”) OR

((index OR score OR scoring) NEAR/3 ('diet quality' OR dietary OR nutrient* OR eating OR food OR dieti)):ti,ab

OR

(‘diet quality’ OR 'eating habit'/exp OR 'Mediterranean diet'/exp OR nordiet:ti,ab OR ‘nordic diet’:ti,ab OR DASH:ti,ab OR ‘dietary approaches to stop hypertension’:ti,ab OR vegan*:ab,ti  OR vegetarian*:ab,ti  OR 'vegetarian diet'/exp OR  'vegetarian'/exp OR ‘prudent diet’:ti,ab OR ‘western diet’:ti,ab OR omniheart:ti,ab OR omni:ti OR ‘plant based diet’) OR ((dietary OR eating OR food OR diet) NEAR/2 (pattern? OR habit? OR profile? OR recommendation? OR guideline?))  OR (('ethnic, racial and religious groups'/exp  or Okinawa* OR ‘mediterranean') AND (diet/exp OR eating/exp OR 'food intake'/de)) 

AND

'environmental sustainability'/exp OR 'food security'/exp OR 'carbon footprint'/exp OR 'human impact (environment)'/exp OR 'greenhouse effect'/exp OR 'ecosystem'/de OR 'land use'/de OR 'plant water use'/exp OR (food NEAR/5 sustainab*) OR 'food insecurity'/exp OR ‘environmental impact’ OR (environment* NEAR/2 footprint) OR diet* NEAR/5 sustainab* AND [humans]/lim AND [english]/lim AND [embase]/lim

NOT [medline]/lim

Cochrane 8; 2/21/2014
(“diet quality” OR (dietary NEXT guideline*) OR (dietary NEXT recommendation*) OR ((food OR eating OR diet OR dietary) NEAR/3 (pattern OR profile OR habit)) OR (eating NEXT style*) OR (“dietary approaches to stop hypertension” OR vegan* OR vegetarian* OR “prudent diet” OR “western diet” OR nordiet OR “Nordic diet” OR omniheart OR "Optimal Macronutrient Intake Trial to Prevent Heart Disease" OR ((asia* OR western OR Okinawa* OR “plant based” OR Mediterranean OR DASH) AND (diet* OR food)))  OR ((Index OR score OR indices OR scoring) NEAR/3 (dietary OR diet OR food OR eating)) OR “adequacy index” OR kidmed OR MedDietScore)

AND

((Food OR environment* OR diet) NEAR/4 (sustainab*)) OR ((carbon OR environment*) NEAR/2 footprint) OR “food insecurity” OR “food security” OR (greenhouse NEAR/1 effect*) OR (“greenhouse gas” NEAR/1 emission*) OR “land use” OR “water use”

Navigator (FSTA/BIOSIS/CAB Abstracts) 63; 2/21/2014

(MedDietScore or "adequacy index" or kidmed or ((index or score) near/2 (("diet quality") or dietary or nutrient* or eating or food or diet)) or ((Diet or dietary or eating or food) near/2 (pattern* or profile* or habit* or guideline* or recommendation*) or "diet quality") or “dietary approaches to stop hypertension” or vegan* or vegetarian* or "prudent diet" or "western diet" or omniheart or "Optimal Macronutrient Intake Trial to Prevent Heart Disease" or nordiet  or “Nordic diet” OR  ((Okinawa* or asia* or Chinese or japan* or Hispanic* or ethnic or "plant based" or title:omni or title:Mediterranean or DASH) near/3 (title:diet* or abstract:diet*))) 

AND

((Food OR environment* OR diet) NEAR/4 sustainab*) OR ((carbon OR environment*) NEAR/2 footprint) OR “food insecurity” OR “food security” OR (greenhouse NEAR/1 effect*) OR (“greenhouse gas” NEAR/1 emission*) OR “land use” OR “water use”

Analytical Framework

Framework showing relationships between the population, dietary pattern exposure, health outcomes, and sustainability outcomes for dietary patterns and sustainability.

Inclusion Criteria

PubMed, Cochrane, Embase, and Navigator were searched for original research articles published in English in peer-reviewed journals. Studies published since January 2000 with subjects who were healthy or at elevated chronic disease risk from countries with high or very high human development were considered. Study designs included in the review were randomized and non-randomized controlled trials, prospective cohort studies, cross-sectional studies, before and after studies, and case-control studies. Only systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and narrative reviews were excluded. Trials were required to have ≥10 subjects per arm and a follow-up of ≥80%. Studies that examined low-calorie diets and other treatment diets were excluded. Finally, studies were required to include a description of the dietary pattern along with sustainability or food security outcomes.

Search Results

Flowchart of search results including abstract screening, full-text screening, and hand-searching with the final number of included studies.

 

Included Articles

The following articles have been determined to be relevant for inclusion in the body of evidence:

  1. Aston LM,Smith JN,Powles JW. Impact of a reduced red and processed meat dietary pattern on disease risks and greenhouse gas emissions in the UK: a modelling study. BMJ Open. 2012. 2:#pages#. PMID:22964113. Department of Public Health and Primary Care, Cambridge, Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
  1. Baroni L,Cenci L,Tettamanti M,Berati M. Evaluating the environmental impact of various dietary patterns combined with different food production systems. Eur J Clin Nutr. 2007. 61:279-86. PMID:17035955. Department of Neurorehabilitation, Villa Salus Hospital, Mestre-Venice, Italy.
  1. Barosh L,Friel S,Engelhardt K,Chan L. The cost of a healthy and sustainable diet - who can afford it?. Aust N Z J Public Health. 2014. 38:7-12. PMID:24494938. National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Australian National University, Australian Capital Territory.
  1. de Carvalho AM,Cesar CL,Fisberg RM,Marchioni DM. Excessive meat consumption in Brazil: diet quality and environmental impacts. Public Health Nutr. 2013. 16:1893-9. PMID:22894818. Department of Nutrition, School of Public Health, University of Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil.
  1. Hendrie GA,Ridoutt BG,Wiedmann TO,Noakes M. Greenhouse gas emissions and the Australian diet--comparing dietary recommendations with average intakes. Nutrients. 2014. 6:289-303. PMID:24406846. Animal, Food and Health Sciences, Commonwealth Scientific Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), P.O. BOX 10041, Adelaide 5000, Australia. gilly.hendrie@csiro.au. Animal, Food and Health Sciences, Commonwealth Scientific Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), P.O. BOX 10041, Adelaide 5000, Australia. brad.ridoutt@csiro.au. Animal, Food and Health Sciences, Commonwealth Scientific Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), P.O. BOX 10041, Adelaide 5000, Australia. t.wiedmann@unsw.edu.au. Animal, Food and Health Sciences, Commonwealth Scientific Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), P.O. BOX 10041, Adelaide 5000, Australia. manny.noakes@csiro.au.
  1. Macdiarmid JI,Kyle J,Horgan GW,Loe J,Fyfe C,Johnstone A,McNeill G. Sustainable diets for the future: Can we contribute to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by eating a healthy diet?. Am J Clin Nutr. 2012. 96:632-9. PMID:22854399. Rowett Institute of Nutrition and Health, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK. j.macdiarmid@abdn.ac.uk
  1. Meier T,Christen O. Environmental impacts of dietary recommendations and dietary styles: Germany as an example. Environ Sci Technol. 2013. 47:877-88. PMID:23189920. Institute of Agricultural and Nutritional Sciences, Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg, Betty-Heimann-Strasse 5, 06120 Halle (Saale), Germany. toni.meier@nutrition-impacts.org
  1. Peters CJ,Wilkins JL,Fick GW. Testing a complete-diet model for estimating the land resource requirements of food consumption and agricultural carrying capacity: The New York State example. Renewable agriculture and food systems. 2007. 22:145-153.
  1. Pimentel D,Pimentel M. Sustainability of meat-based and plant-based diets and the environment. Am J Clin Nutr. 2003. 78:660S-663S. PMID:12936963. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA. dp18@cornell.edu
  1. Pradhan P,Reusser DE,Kropp JP. Embodied greenhouse gas emissions in diets. PLoS One. 2013. 8:e62228. PMID:23700408. Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Potsdam, Germany. pradhan@pik-potsdam.de
  1. Saez-Almendros S,Obrador B,Bach-Faig A,Serra-Majem L. Environmental footprints of Mediterranean versus Western dietary patterns: beyond the health benefits of the Mediterranean diet. Environ Health. 2013. 12:118. PMID:24378069. Department of Clinical Sciences, University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Luis Pasteur s/n, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria 35016, Spain. lserra@dcc.ulpgc.es.
  1. Scarborough P,Allender S,Clarke D,Wickramasinghe K,Rayner M. Modelling the health impact of environmentally sustainable dietary scenarios in the UK. Eur J Clin Nutr. 2012. 66:710-5. PMID:22491494. British Heart Foundation Health Promotion Research Group, Department of Public Health, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK. peter.scarborough@dph.ox.ac.uk
  1. van Dooren, C.; Marinussen, Mari; Blonk, Hans; Aiking, Harry; Vellinga, Pier. Food Policy. Feb2014, Vol. 44, p36-46. 11p.
  1. Vieux F,Soler LG,Touazi D,Darmon N. High nutritional quality is not associated with low greenhouse gas emissions in self-selected diets of French adults. Am J Clin Nutr. 2013. 97:569-83. PMID:23364012. Institut National de Recherche Agronomique UR 1303, Ivry sur Seine, France.
  1. Wilson N,Nghiem N,Ni Mhurchu C,Eyles H,Baker MG,Blakely T. Foods and dietary patterns that are healthy, low-cost, and environmentally sustainable: a case study of optimization modeling for New Zealand. PLoS One. 2013. 8:e59648. PMID:23544082. Department of Public Health, University of Otago, Wellington, Wellington South, New Zealand. nick.wilson@otago.ac.nz

Excluded Articles

The table below lists the excluded articles with at least one reason for exclusion, but may not reflect all possible reasons.

Excluded CitationsStudy design excludedLow or medium HDI countryDoes not assess independent variable/exposure as definedOutcomes of interest not studied
  1. Beeton R. Sustainably managing food production resources to maximise human nutritional benefit. Asia Pac J Clin Nutr. 2003. 12:S50. PMID:15023667. #Author Address#
Review   
  1. Bere E,Brug J. Towards health-promoting and environmentally friendly regional diets - a Nordic example. Public Health Nutr. 2009. 12:91-6. PMID:18339225. Faculty of Health and Sport, University of Agder, Serviceboks 422, 4604 Kristiansand, Norway. elling.bere@uia.no
   X
  1. Boer JD,Schosler H,Aiking H. "Meatless days" or "less but better"? Exploring strategies to adapt Western meat consumption to health and sustainability challenges. Appetite. 2014. #volume#:#pages#. PMID:24530654. Institute for Environmental Studies, VU University, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Electronic address: joop.de.boer@vu.nl. Institute for Environmental Studies, VU University, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
X  X
  1. Burlingame B,Dernini S. Sustainable diets: the Mediterranean diet as an example. Public Health Nutr. 2011. 14:2285-7. PMID:22166185. Nutrition and Consumer Protection Division, FAO, Viale delle Terme di Caracalla, Rome, Italy.
Review   
  1. Buttriss J,Riley H. Sustainable diets: harnessing the nutrition agenda. Food Chem. 2013. 140:402-7. PMID:23601382. British Nutrition Foundation, 52-54 High Holborn, London WC1V 6RQ, UK. j.buttriss@nutrition.org.uk
X   
  1. Carlisle S,Hanlon P. Connecting food, well-being and environmental sustainability: towards an integrative public health nutrition. Critical Public Health. 2014. #volume#:#pages#. PMID:#accession number#. Carlisle, S., University of Aberdeen, Rowett Institute of Nutrition and Health, Greenburn Drive, Aberdeen, Aberdee
X   
  1. Carlsson-Kanyama A,Gonzalez AD. Potential contributions of food consumption patterns to climate change. Am J Clin Nutr. 2009. 89:1704S-1709S. PMID:19339402. Division of Industrial Ecology, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden, Bariloche, Argentina.
X   
  1. Caruso MG,Notarnicola M. Sustainable food and local development. J Gastrointest Cancer. 2012. 43:1-2. PMID:22083534. #Author Address#
X   
  1. Charrondiere UR. Link between food composition, nutrition, agriculture and better food supply to combat malnutrition through foodbased approaches. Annals of Nutrition and Metabolism. 2013. 63:146. PMID:#accession number#. Charrondiere, U.R., Nutrition Division, FAO, Rome, Italy
X   
  1. Cleveland DA,Radka CN,Muller NM,Watson TD,Rekstein NJ,Wright HV,Hollingshead SE. Effect of localizing fruit and vegetable consumption on greenhouse gas emissions and nutrition, Santa Barbara County. Environ Sci Technol. 2011. 45:4555-62. PMID:21513288. Environmental Studies Program, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106-4160, USA. cleveland@es.ucsb.edu
  X 
  1. Clonan A,Holdsworth M,Swift JA,Leibovici D,Wilson P. The dilemma of healthy eating and environmental sustainability: the case of fish. Public Health Nutr. 2012. 15:277-84. PMID:21619717. Division of Nutritional Sciences, School of Biosciences, University of Nottingham, Loughborough LE12 5RD, UK. angieclonandilley@gmail.com
  X 
  1. Coveney J. Food security and sustainability: Are we selling ourselves short?. Asia Pac J Clin Nutr. 2000. 9 Suppl 1:S97-S100. PMID:24398287. Department of Public Health, Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
X   
  1. de Carvalho A,Selem S,Mendes A,Pereira J,Fisberg R,Marchioni D. Excessive red and processed meat consumption in Sao Paulo, Brazil: Diet quality and environmental impact. Annals of Nutrition and Metabolism. 2013. 63:875. PMID:#accession number#. Carvalho, A., Department of Nutrition, Faculdade de Saude Publica, Universidade de Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil
X   
  1. Dowd K,Burke KJ. The influence of ethical values and food choice motivations on intentions to purchase sustainably sourced foods. Appetite. 2013. 69:137-44. PMID:23770118. Central Queensland University, School of Human, Health and Social Sciences, Institute for Health and Social Science Research, Higher Education Division, Rockhampton, Qld 4701, Australia.
  X 
  1. Edwards-Jones G. Does eating local food reduce the environmental impact of food production and enhance consumer health?. Proc Nutr Soc. 2010. 69:582-91. PMID:20696093. School of the Environment, Natural Resources and Geography, Bangor University, Bangor, Gwynedd, North Wales, LL57 2UW, UK. g.ejones@bangor.ac.uk
X   
  1. Engels SV,Hansmann R,Scholz RW. Toward a sustainability label for food products: an analysis of experts' and consumers' acceptance. Ecol Food Nutr. 2010. 49:30-60. PMID:21883088. Department of Environmental Sciences, Natural and Social Science Interface (NSSI), Zurich, Switzerland.
  X 
  1. Friel S,Barosh LJ,Lawrence M. Towards healthy and sustainable food consumption: an Australian case study. Public Health Nutr. 2013. #volume#:1-11. PMID:23759140. 1 National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia.
X   
  1. Forman J,Silverstein J,Committee on N,Council on Environmental H,American Academy of P. Organic foods: health and environmental advantages and disadvantages. Pediatrics. 2012. 130:e1406-15. PMID:23090335. #Author Address#
  X 
  1. Garnett T. Food sustainability: problems, perspectives and solutions. Proc Nutr Soc. 2013. 72:29-39. PMID:23336559. Food Climate Research Network, Environmental Change Institute, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK. taragarnett@fcrn.org.uk
X   
  1. Gerlach SC,Loring PA. Rebuilding northern foodsheds, sustainable food systems, community well-being, and food security. Int J Circumpolar Health. 2013. 72:#pages#. PMID:23967414. Center for Cross-Cultural Studies, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK 99712, USA. scgerlach@alaska.edu
X X 
  1. Godfray HC,Beddington JR,Crute IR,Haddad L,Lawrence D,Muir JF,Pretty J,Robinson S,Thomas SM,Toulmin C. Food security: the challenge of feeding 9 billion people. Science. 2010. 327:812-8. PMID:20110467. Department of Zoology and Institute of Biodiversity at the James Martin 21st Century School, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PS, UK. charles.godfray@zoo.ox.ac.uk
X   
  1. Godfray HC,Garnett T. Food security and sustainable intensification. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2014. 369:20120273. PMID:24535385. Oxford Martin Programme on the Future of Food, Oxford University, , South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PS, UK.
X   
  1. Graham RD,Humphries JM,Kitchen JL. Nutritionally enhanced cereals: A sustainable foundation for a balanced diet. Asia Pac J Clin Nutr. 2000. 9 Suppl 1:S91-6. PMID:24398286. Flinders Centre for Digestive Health, Flinders Medical Centre and Flinders University of South Australia, Bedford Park, South Australia, Australia.
  X 
  1. Griffin MK,Sobal J. Sustainable Food Activities Among Consumers: A Community Study. Journal of Hunger and Environmental Nutrition. 2013. 8:379-396. PMID:#accession number#. Sobal, J., Division of Nutritional Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, United States
  X 
  1. Haldeman LA,Gruber KJ,Ingram KP. Determinants of food security and diet among rural and urban latino/hispanic immigrants. Journal of Hunger and Environmental Nutrition. 2008. 2:67-84. PMID:#accession number#. Haldeman, L. A., Department of Nutrition, The University of North Carolina, Greensboro, NC 27402-6170, United States
  X 
  1. Harrison M,Lee A,Findlay M,Nicholls R,Leonard D,Martin C. The increasing cost of healthy food. Aust N Z J Public Health. 2010. 34:179-86. PMID:23331363. Queensland Health, Australia.
  X 
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