Perspective: Food-based dietary guidelines in Europe - scientific concepts, current status, and perspectives

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Perspective: Food-based dietary guidelines in Europe - scientific concepts, current status, and perspectives. / Bechthold, Angela; Boeing, Heiner; Tetens, Inge; Schwingshackl, Lukas; Nöthlings, Ute.

I: Advances in Nutrition, Bind 9, 2018, s. 544-560.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Bechthold, A, Boeing, H, Tetens, I, Schwingshackl, L & Nöthlings, U 2018, 'Perspective: Food-based dietary guidelines in Europe - scientific concepts, current status, and perspectives', Advances in Nutrition, bind 9, s. 544-560. https://doi.org/10.1093/advances/nmy033

APA

Bechthold, A., Boeing, H., Tetens, I., Schwingshackl, L., & Nöthlings, U. (2018). Perspective: Food-based dietary guidelines in Europe - scientific concepts, current status, and perspectives. Advances in Nutrition, 9, 544-560. https://doi.org/10.1093/advances/nmy033

Vancouver

Bechthold A, Boeing H, Tetens I, Schwingshackl L, Nöthlings U. Perspective: Food-based dietary guidelines in Europe - scientific concepts, current status, and perspectives. Advances in Nutrition. 2018;9:544-560. https://doi.org/10.1093/advances/nmy033

Author

Bechthold, Angela ; Boeing, Heiner ; Tetens, Inge ; Schwingshackl, Lukas ; Nöthlings, Ute. / Perspective: Food-based dietary guidelines in Europe - scientific concepts, current status, and perspectives. I: Advances in Nutrition. 2018 ; Bind 9. s. 544-560.

Bibtex

@article{9f85140ed8eb4f2fb7773592d6654a92,
title = "Perspective: Food-based dietary guidelines in Europe - scientific concepts, current status, and perspectives",
abstract = "Food-based dietary guidelines (FBDGs) are important tools for nutrition policies and public health. FBDGs provide guidelines on healthy food consumption and are based on scientific evidence. In the past, disease prevention and nutrient recommendations dominated the process of establishing FBDGs. However, scientific advances and social developments such as changing lifestyles, interest in personalized health, and concerns about sustainability require a reorientation of the creation of FBDGs to include a wider range of aspects of dietary behavior. The present review evaluates current European FBDGs with regard to the concepts and aspects used in their derivation, and summarizes the major aspects currently discussed to be considered in future establishment or updates of FBDGs. We identified English information on official European FBDGs throughan Internet search (FAO, PubMed, Google) and analyzed the aspects used for their derivation. Furthermore, we searched literature databases (PubMed, Google Scholar) for conceptional considerations dealing with FBDGs. A total of 34 out of 53 European countries were identified as having official FBDGs, and for 15 of these, documents with information on the scientific basis could be identified and described. Subsequently, aspects underlying the derivation of current FBDGs and aspects considered in the literature as important for future FBDGs were discussed. Eight aspects were identified: diet-health relations, nutrient supply, energy supply, dietary habits, sustainability, food-borne contaminants, target group segmentation, and individualization. The first 4 have already been widely applied in existing FBDGs; the others have almost never been taken into account. It remains a future challenge to (re)conceptionalize the development of FBDGs, to operationalize the aspects to be incorporated in their derivation, and to convert concepts into systematic approaches. The current review may assist national expert groups and clarifies the options for future development of local FBDGs.",
keywords = "Faculty of Science, Diet-health relations, Dietary habits, Energy, Food-based dietary guidelines, Food-borne contaminants, Individualization, Nutrients, Nutrition policy, Sustainability, Target group segmentation",
author = "Angela Bechthold and Heiner Boeing and Inge Tetens and Lukas Schwingshackl and Ute N{\"o}thlings",
note = "CURIS 2018 NEXS 273",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1093/advances/nmy033",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "544--560",
journal = "Advances in Nutrition",
issn = "2161-8313",
publisher = "American Society for Nutrition",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Perspective: Food-based dietary guidelines in Europe - scientific concepts, current status, and perspectives

AU - Bechthold, Angela

AU - Boeing, Heiner

AU - Tetens, Inge

AU - Schwingshackl, Lukas

AU - Nöthlings, Ute

N1 - CURIS 2018 NEXS 273

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Food-based dietary guidelines (FBDGs) are important tools for nutrition policies and public health. FBDGs provide guidelines on healthy food consumption and are based on scientific evidence. In the past, disease prevention and nutrient recommendations dominated the process of establishing FBDGs. However, scientific advances and social developments such as changing lifestyles, interest in personalized health, and concerns about sustainability require a reorientation of the creation of FBDGs to include a wider range of aspects of dietary behavior. The present review evaluates current European FBDGs with regard to the concepts and aspects used in their derivation, and summarizes the major aspects currently discussed to be considered in future establishment or updates of FBDGs. We identified English information on official European FBDGs throughan Internet search (FAO, PubMed, Google) and analyzed the aspects used for their derivation. Furthermore, we searched literature databases (PubMed, Google Scholar) for conceptional considerations dealing with FBDGs. A total of 34 out of 53 European countries were identified as having official FBDGs, and for 15 of these, documents with information on the scientific basis could be identified and described. Subsequently, aspects underlying the derivation of current FBDGs and aspects considered in the literature as important for future FBDGs were discussed. Eight aspects were identified: diet-health relations, nutrient supply, energy supply, dietary habits, sustainability, food-borne contaminants, target group segmentation, and individualization. The first 4 have already been widely applied in existing FBDGs; the others have almost never been taken into account. It remains a future challenge to (re)conceptionalize the development of FBDGs, to operationalize the aspects to be incorporated in their derivation, and to convert concepts into systematic approaches. The current review may assist national expert groups and clarifies the options for future development of local FBDGs.

AB - Food-based dietary guidelines (FBDGs) are important tools for nutrition policies and public health. FBDGs provide guidelines on healthy food consumption and are based on scientific evidence. In the past, disease prevention and nutrient recommendations dominated the process of establishing FBDGs. However, scientific advances and social developments such as changing lifestyles, interest in personalized health, and concerns about sustainability require a reorientation of the creation of FBDGs to include a wider range of aspects of dietary behavior. The present review evaluates current European FBDGs with regard to the concepts and aspects used in their derivation, and summarizes the major aspects currently discussed to be considered in future establishment or updates of FBDGs. We identified English information on official European FBDGs throughan Internet search (FAO, PubMed, Google) and analyzed the aspects used for their derivation. Furthermore, we searched literature databases (PubMed, Google Scholar) for conceptional considerations dealing with FBDGs. A total of 34 out of 53 European countries were identified as having official FBDGs, and for 15 of these, documents with information on the scientific basis could be identified and described. Subsequently, aspects underlying the derivation of current FBDGs and aspects considered in the literature as important for future FBDGs were discussed. Eight aspects were identified: diet-health relations, nutrient supply, energy supply, dietary habits, sustainability, food-borne contaminants, target group segmentation, and individualization. The first 4 have already been widely applied in existing FBDGs; the others have almost never been taken into account. It remains a future challenge to (re)conceptionalize the development of FBDGs, to operationalize the aspects to be incorporated in their derivation, and to convert concepts into systematic approaches. The current review may assist national expert groups and clarifies the options for future development of local FBDGs.

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - Diet-health relations

KW - Dietary habits

KW - Energy

KW - Food-based dietary guidelines

KW - Food-borne contaminants

KW - Individualization

KW - Nutrients

KW - Nutrition policy

KW - Sustainability

KW - Target group segmentation

U2 - 10.1093/advances/nmy033

DO - 10.1093/advances/nmy033

M3 - Review

C2 - 30107475

VL - 9

SP - 544

EP - 560

JO - Advances in Nutrition

JF - Advances in Nutrition

SN - 2161-8313

ER -

ID: 201001086