Association of Planetary Health Diet Indices with Diet Composition, Nutritional Quality and Environmental Impacts in Italian Adults
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Author
Publication date
2025-12-30ISSN
0939-4753
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS
Sustainable diets are increasingly recognized as a key strategy to promote human health while reducing environmental impacts. The Planetary Health Diet (PHD) provides a global framework for sustainable and healthy eating patterns, but evidence on its adherence and implications in specific populations is still limited. The aim of this study was to test the level of adherence, the environmental impact, and the nutritional quality of several scores assessing the level of adherence to the PHD in a cohort of Italian individuals.
METHODS AND RESULTS
Dietary habits were assessed through validated food frequency questionnaires while various scores have been applied to evaluate the level of adherence to PHD (ELD-I, EAT, PHDI-Cacau, NB-EAT, PHDI-Bui) in 1,936 Italian adults, using the Mediterranean diet (MEDI-LITE) as reference. The environmental impact was quantified as carbon and water footprints (CF and WF) using the SU-EATABLE LIFE database. Higher adherence to PHD-related indices generally corresponded to healthier nutrient profiles, higher fiber intake, and better concordance with Italian dietary recommendations, although some indices predicted lower intake of certain nutrients (e.g., vitamin B12, calcium). The MEDI-LITE index consistently predicted higher adequacy across dietary and nutrient recommendations. Absolute CF and WF showed mixed trends across indices, while energy-standardized values (per 1000 kcal) indicated lower impacts for all PHD-related scores, apart from the ELD-I. Adherence to the Mediterranean diet was also associated with favorable energy-adjusted environmental outcomes.
CONCLUSION
These findings reinforce the existing alignment between the Mediterranean diet’s intrinsic characteristics with both nutrition and sustainability objectives.
Keywords
dietsustainabilitynutritional qualityenvironmental impact
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
613 - Hygiene generally. Personal health and hygiene
Pages
10
Publisher
Elsevier
Is part of
Nutrition, Metabolism & Cardiovascular Diseases
Grant agreement number
FSE/ / /EU/ /
Program
Sostenibilitat en Biosistemes
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This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- ARTICLES CIENTÍFICS [3655]
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/


