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全球对健康可持续饮食的依从性及过早死亡潜在减少情况。

Global adherence to a healthy and sustainable diet and potential reduction in premature death.

作者信息

Gu Xiao, Bui Linh P, Wang Fenglei, Wang Dong D, Springmann Marco, Willett Walter C

机构信息

Department of Nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115.

Research Advancement Consortium in Health, Hanoi 100000, Vietnam.

出版信息

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Dec 10;121(50):e2319008121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2319008121. Epub 2024 Dec 2.

Abstract

The Planetary Health Diet (PHD), also known as the EAT-Lancet reference diet, was developed to optimize global dietary quality while keeping the environmental impacts of food production within sustainable planetary boundaries. We calculated current national and global adherence to the PHD using the Planetary Health Dietary Index (PHDI). In addition, we used data on diet and mortality from three large US cohorts (n = 206,404 men and women, 54,536 deaths) to estimate the total and cause-specific mortality among adults 20 y of age and older that could be prevented by shifting from current diets to the reference PHD. The PHDI varied substantially across countries, although adherence was universally far from optimal (mean PHDI = 85 out of 140). By improving the global PHDI to 120, approximately 15 million deaths (27% of total deaths) could be prevented annually. Estimates of preventable deaths due to this shift ranged from 2.5 million for cardiovascular diseases to 0.7 million for neurodegenerative diseases. Our analysis suggests that adopting healthy and sustainable diets would have major direct health benefits by reducing mortality due to multiple diseases and could contribute substantially to achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. These numbers of preventable deaths are based on evidence that human biology is similar across racial and ethnic groups, but the exact numerical estimates should be interpreted with caution because some assumptions used for the calculations build on limited data. Refinement of these estimates will be possible when additional regional data on diet and mortality become available.

摘要

行星健康饮食(PHD),也被称为EAT-柳叶刀参考饮食,其制定目的是在将食品生产对环境的影响控制在地球可持续边界范围内的同时,优化全球饮食质量。我们使用行星健康饮食指数(PHDI)来计算当前各国及全球对PHD的遵循情况。此外,我们利用来自美国三个大型队列(共206,404名男性和女性,54,536例死亡)的饮食和死亡率数据,来估计20岁及以上成年人从当前饮食转向参考PHD可预防的总死亡率和特定病因死亡率。各国的PHDI差异很大,尽管普遍远未达到最佳水平(平均PHDI为140分中的85分)。将全球PHDI提高到120,每年大约可预防1500万例死亡(占总死亡人数的27%)。这种转变可预防的死亡估计数从心血管疾病的250万例到神经退行性疾病的70万例不等。我们的分析表明,采用健康且可持续的饮食将通过降低多种疾病导致的死亡率带来重大直接健康益处,并可为实现联合国可持续发展目标做出重大贡献。这些可预防死亡人数是基于不同种族和族裔群体的人类生物学相似性的证据得出的,但由于计算中使用的一些假设基于有限的数据,应谨慎解读确切的数值估计。当有更多关于饮食和死亡率的区域数据可用时,将有可能进一步完善这些估计。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/f4c6/11648617/b62bb4a42e17/pnas.2319008121fig01.jpg

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