Postgraduate Program in Public Health, Medical School, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Avenue Professor Alfredo Balena, 190, Santa Efigênia, Belo Horizonte, 30130-100, Brazil.
Sciensano, Brussels, Belgium.
Nutr J. 2024 Jul 9;23(1):71. doi: 10.1186/s12937-024-00973-x.
While healthy and sustainable diets benefit human and planetary health, their monetary cost has a direct impact on consumer food choices. This study aimed to identify the cost and environmental impact of the current Brazilian diet (CBD) and compare it with healthy and sustainable diets.
Data from the Brazilian Household Budget Survey 2017/18 and the Footprints of Foods and Culinary Preparations Consumed in Brazil database were used for a modeling study comparing the cost of healthy and sustainable diets (based on the Brazilian Dietary Guidelines (BDG) diet and the EAT-Lancet diet) versus the CBD. The DIETCOST program generated multiple food baskets for each scenario (Montecarlo simulations). Nutritional quality, cost, and environmental impact measures (carbon footprint (CF) and water footprint (WF)) were estimated for all diets and compared by ANOVA. Simple linear regressions used standardized environmental impacts measures to estimate differentials in costs and environmental impacts among diets scenarios.
We observed significant differences in costs/1000 kcal. The BDG diet was cheaper (BRL$4.9 (95%IC:4.8;4.9) ≈ USD$1.5) than the CBD (BRL$5.6 (95%IC:5.6;5.7) ≈ USD$1.8) and the EAT-Lancet diet (BRL$6.1 (95%IC:6.0;6.1) ≈ USD$1.9). Ultra-processed foods (UPF) and red meat contributed the most to the CBD cost/1000 kcal, while fruits and vegetables made the lowest contribution to CBD. Red meat, sugary drinks, and UPF were the main contributors to the environmental impacts of the CBD. The environmental impact/1000 kcal of the CBD was nearly double (CF:3.1 kg(95%IC: 3.0;3.1); WF:2,705 L 95%IC:2,671;2,739)) the cost of the BDG diet (CF:1.4 kg (95%IC:1.4;1.4); WF:1,542 L (95%IC:1,524;1,561)) and EAT-Lancet diet (CF:1.1 kg (95%IC:1.0;1.1); WF:1,448 L (95%IC:1,428;1,469)). A one standard deviation increase in standardized CF corresponded to an increase of BRL$0.48 in the cost of the CBD, similar to standardized WF (BRL$0.56). A similar relationship between the environmental impact and the cost of the BDG (CF: BRL$0.20; WF: BRL$0.33) and EAT-Lancet (CF: BRL$0.04; WF: BRL$0.18) was found, but with a less pronounced effect.
The BDG diet was cost-effective, while the EAT-Lancet diet was slightly pricier than the CBD. The CBD presented almost double the CF and WF compared to the BDG and EAT-Lancet diets. The lower cost in each diet was associated with lower environmental impact, particularly for the BDG and EAT-Lancet diets. Multisectoral public policies must be applied to guide individuals and societies towards healthier and more sustainable eating patterns.
健康和可持续的饮食有益于人类和地球的健康,但它们的货币成本会直接影响消费者的食物选择。本研究旨在确定当前巴西饮食(CBD)的成本和环境影响,并将其与健康和可持续的饮食进行比较。
使用 2017/18 年巴西家庭预算调查和巴西消费的食品足迹和烹饪准备数据库的数据进行建模研究,比较健康和可持续饮食(基于巴西饮食指南(BDG)饮食和 EAT-柳叶刀饮食)与 CBD 的成本。DIETCOST 程序为每个场景生成了多个食品篮(Montecarlo 模拟)。估计了所有饮食的营养质量、成本和环境影响措施(碳足迹(CF)和水足迹(WF)),并通过方差分析进行比较。简单线性回归使用标准化的环境影响措施来估计不同饮食方案之间的成本和环境影响差异。
我们观察到成本/1000 卡路里有显著差异。BDG 饮食比 CBD(BRL$5.6 (95%IC:5.6;5.7) 约等于 USD$1.8)和 EAT-柳叶刀饮食(BRL$6.1 (95%IC:6.0;6.1) 约等于 USD$1.9)更便宜(BRL$4.9 (95%IC:4.8;4.9) 约等于 USD$1.5)。超加工食品(UPF)和红肉对 CBD 成本/1000 卡路里的贡献最大,而水果和蔬菜对 CBD 的贡献最小。红肉、含糖饮料和 UPF 是 CBD 环境影响的主要贡献者。CBD 的环境影响/1000 卡路里几乎是 BDG 饮食的两倍(CF:3.1 公斤(95%IC:3.0;3.1);WF:2705 升 95%IC:2671;2739)。BDG 饮食(CF:1.4 公斤(95%IC:1.4;1.4);WF:1542 升(95%IC:1524;1561))和 EAT-柳叶刀饮食(CF:1.1 公斤(95%IC:1.0;1.1);WF:1448 升(95%IC:1428;1469))的成本。标准化 CF 的一个标准差增加对应于 CBD 成本增加 BRL$0.48,与标准化 WF 相似(BRL$0.56)。BDG(CF:BRL$0.20;WF:BRL$0.33)和 EAT-柳叶刀(CF:BRL$0.04;WF:BRL$0.18)饮食也发现了类似的环境影响与成本之间的关系,但影响较小。
BDG 饮食具有成本效益,而 EAT-柳叶刀饮食略高于 CBD。与 BDG 和 EAT-柳叶刀饮食相比,CBD 的 CF 和 WF 几乎是后者的两倍。每个饮食方案的较低成本与较低的环境影响有关,特别是对于 BDG 和 EAT-柳叶刀饮食方案。必须实施多部门公共政策,以引导个人和社会走向更健康和更可持续的饮食模式。