Healthy and Active Lifestyles Are Not Always Environmentally Sustainable: A DietaryWater Footprint Analysis in Mexico
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Lares Michel, Mariana; Ezzahra Housni, Fatima; Rodríguez Lara, Avilene; López Salido, Sofía Cecilia; Castrejón Barajas, María Guadalupe; Ochoa, Nahid; Meza-Rodriguez, Dalila Betsabee; Rodríguez Huertas, Jesús FranciscoEditorial
MDPI
Materia
water footprint fitness diets protein intake
Date
2025-01-13Referencia bibliográfica
Lares Michel, M. et. al. Dietetics 2025, 4, 3. [https://doi.org/10.3390/10.3390/dietetics4010003]
Abstract
The environmental impact of unhealthy diets and the obese population is becoming
clearer. However, little is known about the impact of ‘healthy’ diets related to
‘fitness’ lifestyles, such as diets directed to gain muscle mass and lose body fat, or the
diets of the physically active population. This paper aims to evaluate the Dietary Water
Footprint (DWF) of a representative sample of the Guadalajara Metropolitan Area, Mexico,
identifying differences according to body composition (levels of fat and muscle) and
physical activity (type and intensity), with a focus on contrasting active, healthy lifestyles
(i.e., fitness) with sedentary and obesogenic patterns and examining protein consumption.
A validated and adapted Food Frequency Questionnaire (FFQ) was applied to 400 adults
(18–74 years) from the Guadalajara Metropolitan Area. The participants were grouped
according to their body fat and muscle mass levels and physical activity type and intensity.
DWF, food and nutrient intake, and adequacy were calculated. The DWF of the sample
with a low body fat, a high muscle mass, moderate to intense exercise, and anaerobic
exercise (i.e., ‘fitness’ lifestyle) was up to 800 L per person per day (L/p/d) higher than the
sedentary/obese populations. Risks of a high DWF were found as protein intake increases
(OR = 6; p < 0.0001). Although unhealthy diets linked to obesity are a major environmental
problem, ‘fitness’ lifestyles can have serious environmental implications.