Theeraoat Pepper Thanaporn, Hackett Ruth A, Chilcot Joseph, Steptoe Andrew
Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK.
Department of Behavioural Science and Health, University College London, London, UK.
Br J Health Psychol. 2025 Sep;30(3):e70022. doi: 10.1111/bjhp.70022.
Research has linked diet to negative psychological states, but its influence on positive psychological well-being remains understudied. This study assessed the association between dietary intake of fruits and vegetables (F&V), polyunsaturated fats (PUFAs), and fish on three domains of positive well-being: eudemonic, happiness, and life satisfaction in middle-aged and older adults.
A cross-sectional analytical sample of 3013 participants from Wave 9 (2018/19) of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA).
Multivariate linear regression assessed the association between diet and positive psychological well-being, adjusted for covariates including total energy intake, age, gender, ethnicity, wealth, education, living alone, social isolation, limiting long-standing illness, and depressive symptoms.
In minimally adjusted models, F&V and fish intake were positively associated with all three domains of well-being, while PUFAs intake was positively associated with eudemonic well-being and happiness, but not life satisfaction. The positive associations between F&V intake and eudemonic well-being, and between fish intake and happiness, remained significant in all models (β = .043, 95% CI [.037, .212], p = .005; β = .033, 95% CI [.011, .243], p = .032, respectively), whereas others became non-significant after adjusting for certain covariates.
Diet may be associated with positive psychological well-being in middle-aged and older adults. Increasing dietary intake of F&V, PUFAs, and fish could support well-being and may be encouraged through public or private initiatives aimed at making healthy diets accessible and affordable. Longitudinal studies are needed to clarify the influence of diet on well-being over time.
研究已将饮食与负面心理状态联系起来,但其对积极心理健康的影响仍研究不足。本研究评估了水果和蔬菜(F&V)、多不饱和脂肪(PUFA)以及鱼类的饮食摄入量与积极幸福感三个方面的关联:即中年及老年成年人的自我实现幸福感、快乐感和生活满意度。
来自英国老龄化纵向研究(ELSA)第9波(2018/19年)的3013名参与者的横断面分析样本。
多变量线性回归评估饮食与积极心理健康之间的关联,并对协变量进行了调整,这些协变量包括总能量摄入、年龄、性别、种族、财富、教育程度、独居情况、社会隔离、长期慢性病以及抑郁症状。
在最小调整模型中,F&V和鱼类摄入量与幸福感的所有三个方面均呈正相关,而PUFA摄入量与自我实现幸福感和快乐感呈正相关,但与生活满意度无关。F&V摄入量与自我实现幸福感之间以及鱼类摄入量与快乐感之间的正相关在所有模型中均保持显著(β = 0.043,95%置信区间[0.037, 0.212],p = 0.005;β = 0.033,95%置信区间[0.011, 0.243],p = 0.032),而其他在调整某些协变量后变得不显著。
饮食可能与中年及老年成年人的积极心理健康有关。增加F&V、PUFA和鱼类的饮食摄入量可能有助于提升幸福感,可通过旨在使健康饮食变得可及且价格合理的公共或私人举措予以鼓励。需要进行纵向研究以阐明饮食随时间推移对幸福感的影响。