Bonaccio M, Bes-Rastrollo M, de Gaetano G, Iacoviello L
Department of Epidemiology and Prevention, IRCCS Istituto Neurologico Mediterraneo NEUROMED, Pozzilli (IS), Italy.
Dept. Preventive Medicine and Public Health, University of Navarra, Pamplona, Spain; CIBERobn, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Madrid, Spain; IdiSNA, Navarra Institute for Health Research, Pamplona, Spain.
Nutr Metab Cardiovasc Dis. 2016 Dec;26(12):1057-1063. doi: 10.1016/j.numecd.2016.07.005. Epub 2016 Jul 12.
The traditional Mediterranean diet (MD) is reportedly associated with lower risk of major chronic diseases and long considered to contribute to the reduced rates of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events and to the highest life expectancy in adults who lived near the Mediterranean Sea. But despite its widely documented health benefits, adherence to this dietary pattern has been rapidly declining over the last decades due to a clear socioeconomic influence. The present review provides an overview of the evidence on the current major determinants of adherence to the Mediterranean diet, with a particular emphasis on Mediterranean Countries at a time of economic crisis; second it explores emerging socioeconomic inequalities in other domains of healthy dietary behaviours such as dietary variety, access to organic foods and food purchasing behaviour.
According to ecological evidence, the Mediterranean Countries that used to have the highest adherence to the Mediterranean pattern in the Sixties, more recently experienced the greatest decrease, while Countries in Northern Europe and some other Countries around the world are currently embracing a Mediterranean-like dietary pattern. A potential cause of this downward trend could be the increasing prices of some food items of the Mediterranean diet pyramid. Recent evidence has shown a possible involvement of the economic crisis, material resources becoming strong determinants of the adherence to the MD just after the recession started in 2007-2008. Beyond intake, the MD also encourages increasing dietary diversity, while international dietary recommendations suggest replacing regular foods with healthier ones.
Socioeconomic factors appear to be major determinants of the adherence to MD and disparities also hold for other indices of diet quality closely related to this dietary pattern.
据报道,传统地中海饮食(MD)与较低的主要慢性病风险相关,长期以来被认为有助于降低心血管和脑血管事件的发生率,并使生活在地中海附近的成年人拥有最高的预期寿命。尽管其对健康的益处有大量文献记载,但由于明显的社会经济影响,在过去几十年中,坚持这种饮食模式的情况一直在迅速下降。本综述概述了目前影响坚持地中海饮食的主要决定因素的证据,特别强调经济危机时期的地中海国家;其次,探讨了健康饮食行为其他领域中出现的社会经济不平等现象,如饮食多样性、有机食品的获取和食品购买行为。
根据生态学证据,在60年代对地中海模式依从性最高的地中海国家,最近下降幅度最大,而北欧国家和世界其他一些国家目前正在接受类似地中海的饮食模式。这种下降趋势的一个潜在原因可能是地中海饮食金字塔中某些食品价格的上涨。最近的证据表明,经济危机可能起到了作用,自2007 - 2008年衰退开始后,物质资源成为影响坚持地中海饮食的重要决定因素。除了摄入量,地中海饮食还鼓励增加饮食多样性,而国际饮食建议则建议用更健康的食物取代常规食物。
社会经济因素似乎是坚持地中海饮食的主要决定因素,与这种饮食模式密切相关的其他饮食质量指标也存在差异。