Carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions and adherence to Mediterranean diet in an adult population: the Mediterranean diet index as a pollution level index
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
BMC
Materia
Greenhouse gas emissions Mediterranean diet Carbon dioxide Sustainability Sustainable diets Environment
Date
2023-01-05Referencia bibliográfica
García, S... [et al.]. Carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions and adherence to Mediterranean diet in an adult population: the Mediterranean diet index as a pollution level index. Environ Health 22, 1 (2023). [https://doi.org/10.1186/s12940-022-00956-7]
Sponsorship
official Spanish Institutions; CIBER Fisiopatologia de la Obesidad y Nutricion (CIBEROBN); Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII), through the Fondo de Investigacion para la Salud (FIS); European Commission PI13/00673 PI13/00492 PI13/00272 PI13/01123 PI13/00462 PI13/00233 PI13/02184 PI13/00728 PI19/01226 PI19/00781 PI19/01560 Especial Action Project European Research Council (ERC) European Commission 340918; La Caixa Foundation 2013ACUP00194; Junta de Andalucia PI0458/2013 PS0358/2016 PI0137/2018; Center for Forestry Research & Experimentation (CIEF); European Commission PROMETEO/2017/017; SEMERGEN grant; ICREA under the ICREA Academia programme; Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) MFE171207 PI16/00533 PI16/00381 PI16/00366 PI16/01522 PI16/01120 PI17/00764 PI17/01183 PI17/00855 PI17/01347 PI17/00525 PI17/01827 PI17/00532 PI17/00215 PI17/01441 PI17/00508 PI17/01732 PI17/00926 PI19/00957 PI19/00386 PI19/00309 PI19/01032 PI19/00576 PI19/00017 PI20/01532 PI20/00456 PI20/00339 PI20/00557 PI20/00886 PI20/01158 PI16/01873 PI16/01094 PI16/00501 PI13/01090 PI13/01056 PI14/01722 PI14/00636 PI14/00618 PI14/00696 PI14/01206 PI14/01919 PI14/00853 PI14/01374 PI14/00972 PI14/00728 PI14/01471 PI16/00473 PI16/00662 PI19/01332 PI20/01802 PI20/00138Abstract
Background Research related to sustainable diets is is highly relevant to provide better understanding of the impact
of dietary intake on the health and the environment.
Aim To assess the association between the adherence to an energy-restricted Mediterranean diet and the amount of
CO2
emitted in an older adult population.
Design and population Using a cross-sectional design, the association between the adherence to an energyreduced
Mediterranean Diet (erMedDiet) score and dietary CO2
emissions in 6646 participants was assessed.
Methods Food intake and adherence to the erMedDiet was assessed using validated food frequency questionnaire
and 17-item Mediterranean questionnaire. Sociodemographic characteristics were documented. Environmental
impact was calculated through greenhouse gas emissions estimations, specifically CO2
emissions of each participant
diet per day, using a European database. Participants were distributed in quartiles according to their estimated CO2
emissions expressed in kg/day: Q1 (≤2.01 kg CO2),
Q2 (2.02-2.34 kg CO2),
Q3 (2.35-2.79 kg CO2)
and Q4 (≥2.80 kg CO2).
Results More men than women induced higher dietary levels of CO2
emissions. Participants reporting higher consumption
of vegetables, fruits, legumes, nuts, whole cereals, preferring white meat, and having less consumption of red meat were mostly emitting less kg of CO2
through diet. Participants with higher adherence to the Mediterranean
Diet showed lower odds for dietary CO2
emissions: Q2 (OR 0.87; 95%CI: 0.76-1.00), Q3 (OR 0.69; 95%CI: 0.69-0.79) and
Q4 (OR 0.48; 95%CI: 0.42-0.55) vs Q1 (reference).
Conclusions The Mediterranean diet can be environmentally protective since the higher the adherence to the Mediterranean
diet, the lower total dietary CO2
emissions. Mediterranean Diet index may be used as a pollution level index.