Department of Global Public Health & Bioethics, Julius Center for Health Sciences and Primary Care, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht University, 3508 GA Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Division of Human Nutrition and Health, Wageningen University & Research, 6708 WE Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Nutrients. 2024 Jul 11;16(14):2219. doi: 10.3390/nu16142219.
In 2019, the EAT-Lancet Commission proposed a Planetary Health Diet (PHD) to address challenges toward sustainable and healthy diets. However, its suitability within the Dutch context and a comparison with the Dutch Dietary Guidelines (DDG) needs investigation. Our study aimed to compare the PHD with DDG in terms of food groups, servings, nutritional content, and adequacy in adults. We modeled two theoretical diets, the PHD (PHD-NL) and another based on the DDG (DDG-NL), using the Dutch National Food Consumption Survey (FCS-2016) and Dutch Food Composition Database to calculate the nutritional content and compared it with the Dutch Dietary Reference Values (DRVs). The PHD included higher quantities of vegetables, fish, legumes, and nuts, while the DDG suggested more significant amounts of cereals, tubers, starchy vegetables, dairy, and red meat. We observed differences in macronutrient distribution; while both diets lacked sufficient vitamin D, calcium content was lower in the PHD-NL. The PHD-NL had higher levels of fiber, vegetable protein, unsaturated fats, and non-heme iron, while vitamins B2, B6, B12, and calcium were lower than the DDG-NL diet. The PHD-NL has nutritional adequacy in the Dutch context, except for vitamin D and calcium, although it is essential to be cautious with iron because of the bioavailability of non-heme iron in plant-based diets. These findings have implications for the adoption of a sustainable diet according to nutritional requirements, population health status, and sociocultural context, as well as compliance with specific dietary behaviors of populations.
2019 年,EAT-柳叶刀委员会提出了一种行星健康饮食(PHD)计划,以应对可持续和健康饮食面临的挑战。然而,它在荷兰背景下的适用性以及与荷兰饮食指南(DDG)的比较需要调查。我们的研究旨在比较 PHD 与 DDG 在食物组、份量、营养含量和成年人饮食充足性方面的差异。我们使用荷兰国家食品消费调查(FCS-2016)和荷兰食品成分数据库,为两种理论饮食建模,即 PHD(PHD-NL)和另一种基于 DDG 的饮食(DDG-NL),以计算营养含量,并将其与荷兰膳食参考值(DRVs)进行比较。PHD 包括更多的蔬菜、鱼类、豆类和坚果,而 DDG 则建议摄入更多的谷物、块茎、淀粉类蔬菜、乳制品和红肉。我们观察到宏量营养素分布的差异;虽然两种饮食都缺乏足够的维生素 D,但 PHD-NL 中的钙含量较低。PHD-NL 的纤维、植物蛋白、不饱和脂肪和非血红素铁含量较高,而维生素 B2、B6、B12 和钙的含量低于 DDG-NL 饮食。PHD-NL 在荷兰背景下具有营养充足性,但维生素 D 和钙除外,尽管由于植物性饮食中非血红素铁的生物利用度,铁的含量需要谨慎。这些发现对根据营养需求、人口健康状况和社会文化背景以及遵守特定人群的饮食行为来采用可持续饮食具有重要意义。