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Towards health-promoting and environmentally friendly regional diets – a Nordic example

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2009

Elling Bere*
Affiliation:
Faculty of Health and Sport, University of Agder, Serviceboks 422, 4604 Kristiansand, Norway
Johannes Brug
Affiliation:
EMGO Institute, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
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Abstract

Background

Because most of the top determinants of the worldwide burden of disease are diet-related, the promotion of healthful diets is important for population health across the world. Furthermore, changes in eating habits may contribute to preservation of the environment.

Objective

In the present paper it is argued that the translation of health-promoting dietary recommendations into practical recommendations for healthful eating should be more tailored to regional circumstances. This will promote population health as well as help preserve cultural diversity in eating habits and contribute to more environmentally friendly eating. A regional Nordic diet, mimicking the Mediterranean diet to some extent, is presented as an example.

Conclusion

A theoretically health-enhancing Nordic diet is possible including six evidence-based ingredients: (i) native berries; (ii) cabbage; (iii) native fish and other seafood; (iv) wild (and pasture-fed) land-based animals; (v) rapeseed oil; and (vi) oat/barley/rye.

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2008

Since most of the top determinants of the burden of disease are diet-related(Reference Ezzati, Lopez, Rodgers, Vander Hoorn and Murray1), healthy diet promotion is important for population health across the world. Promoting healthy diets is therefore an important aspect of prevention policies in many countries, and the recommendations for healthful eating are very similar across countries(Reference Brug and Oenema2). In the present paper we argue that the translation of health-promoting dietary recommendations into practical recommendations for healthful eating should be more tailored to regional circumstances. Such regional tailoring of recommendations may help to preserve cultural diversity in eating habits. Furthermore, since environmental preservation and sustainability may become a major public health challenge(Reference Mackenbach3), healthy diet promotion should also take environmental sustainability into account and regionally defined diets may contribute to more environmentally friendly eating, on top of promoting physical health. We propose a rational and possible content for a regional Nordic diet to build our case for such regionalization of recommendations.

Nutrients and foods

In the promotion of healthful eating, basically two different avenues are explored. The first is the nutrients way, with a focus on the identification of key nutrients and other food compounds that help prevent disease and promote health. This road leads to nutrient-specific recommendations (e.g. the Nordic nutrition recommendations(4)), the use of dietary supplements, nutrient enrichment or fortification of foods, and the development of functional foods. This avenue has been fruitful in the past where the identification of specific essential nutrients, nutrient requirements, and enrichment, fortification or supplementation schemes have helped to eradicate a number of deficiency diseases in large parts of the world.

However, this nutrient-oriented avenue in general appears to be less effective in addressing the most important present-day nutrition-related health problems, which are related to over-consumption rather than deficiencies and more strongly related to foods and eating patterns than to nutrients. For example, the main causes of morbidity and mortality in most countries are CVD and cancer. Although there is ample evidence that nutrition is directly or indirectly related to CVD and cancer risk, as well as a number of other chronic diseases(5), there is only very little evidence that specific nutrients contribute to the prevention of CVD or cancer. For example, two recent reviews reported no clear effect of supplementation with antioxidants(Reference Bjelakovic, Nikolova, Gluud, Simonetti and Gluud6) or n-3 fatty acids(Reference Hooper, Thompson and Harrison7) on mortality, and it is highly probable that it is whole foods (e.g. fruits, vegetables, fish) and dietary patterns, rather than specific nutrients, that are inversely related with disease risks.

The second avenue is therefore food- and food patterns-oriented. This avenue is more closely linked to what people eat – that is foods, not nutrients – and incorporates the fact that nutrients do not function in an isolated manner, but might interact with other nutrients and food compounds. Different food guide pyramids, food plates and other nutrition education tools build on this food-oriented avenue. Generally, in most countries four or five basic food groups are recognized that contribute to a balanced healthful diet: (i) bread, rice, cereals and other foods rich in starch; (ii) fruits and vegetables; (iii) dairy products; (iv) meat, fish and alternatives; and (v) oils and fats. Experts generally agree that some food groups, the fruit and vegetable group in particular, should be encouraged, and that within each food group some foods should be encouraged and others should be discouraged. For example, it is recommended to choose fibre-rich products such as wholemeal breads within the starch food group, to choose low-fat varieties in the dairy group, to prefer fish and poultry above red meat in the meat and fish group, and to prefer plant oils low in SFA above animal fats within the oils and fats group(Reference Brug and Oenema2).

From foods to meals and whole diets

Some attempts have been made to take this food-oriented avenue a few steps further, by describing meal patterns or diets that incorporate the foods for which the strongest evidence has been found for a health-enhancing effect. The best known and best researched example is what has been labelled the ‘Mediterranean diet’. Ancel Keys first reported the health benefits of the traditional Cretan diet in the 1950s(Reference Keys8); however, the Mediterranean diet failed to gain widespread recognition until the 1990s. Since then, its popularity among nutrition scientists has been increasing (PubMed finds 115 papers about the Mediterranean diet published in 2005 and 149 in 2006), and the 996 000 hits on www.google.com (accessed June 2007) indicates a strong interest also among the general population. Although across the Mediterranean a wide variety of diets is present, the health-enhancing Mediterranean diet is supposed to include olive oil, fruits, vegetables, grains (mostly unrefined), fish, diary in moderate amounts, low quantities of meat and meat products, and a regular but moderate intake of alcohol(Reference Trichopoulou, Costacou, Bamia and Trichopoulos9). Several recent review articles state that adherence to a Mediterranean-style diet is protective against lifestyle diseases such as CVD, obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus and certain cancers(Reference Schroder10Reference Colomer and Menendez12). Together with regular physical activity and not smoking, Willett has calculated that 80 % of CHD, 70 % of stroke and 90 % of type 2 diabetes can be avoided by healthy food choices that are consistent with the Mediterranean diet(Reference Willett13).

Attempts have been made to promote this Mediterranean diet outside the Mediterranean countries, for example in Scotland(Reference Papadaki and Scott14), The Netherlands(Reference Bemelmans, Broer, Feskens, Smit, Muskiet, Lefrandt, Bom, May and Meyboom-de Jong15) and the USA(Reference Toobert, Glasgow, Strycker, Barrera, Ritzwoller and Weidner16). However, it is questionable that such a specific, regionally defined diet is applicable and advisable all over the world(Reference Mackenbach17). Several of the ingredients of the Mediterranean diet do not grow well in many areas (e.g. in the Nordic countries), therefore requiring greenhouses or long-distance transportation. Other ingredients are not available in large enough quantities to be included in diets across the world. Furthermore, most countries or regions do have their own culturally and regionally appropriate foods that might be as health-enhancing as the ingredients for the Mediterranean diet. For example, Japan has today the highest life expectancy in the world(18), possibly in part due to their diet(Reference Willett19), which differs from the Mediterranean diet in some aspects (less fat and less fruits) but is similar in others (inclusion of local types of grains, legumes, vegetables and fish)(Reference Willett19).

Traditionally regionally available foods have been and still are being replaced by modern industrial and processed foods all over the world. Such processed foods often tend to be sweeter, fattier and saltier, as well as highly available, ready-to-eat and cheap(Reference Drenowski and Darmon20). This rapid change of our food environment has been suggested as an ultimate determinant for several of the lifestyle diseases we cope with at present(Reference Eaton, Strassman and Nesse21). Today, people tend to forget the traditional regional foods upon which their ancestors lived and survived for ages. It has been suggested that the health-promoting properties of the Mediterranean diet might be due to its closer reflection of the diet our hunter–gatherer ancestors ate than that attained by most other Western diets(Reference Mackenbach17). Regional diets also might provide climate-, soil- and culturally appropriate ingredients for health-enhancing eating in present-day societies.

Food in relation to the environment

In addition to impacting health, what we eat also strongly influences our environment. The way most of us feed ourselves in affluent societies is not sustainable. For example, the livestock sector, which produces our meat and milk products, is responsible for a total of 18 % of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions measured in CO2 equivalents(Reference Steinfeld, Gerber, Wassenaar, Castel, Rosales and de Haan22). This is a higher share than for transportation. A second example is that the biomass of high trophic level fishes (larger predatory fish, e.g. cod) in the North Atlantic has declined by a factor of nine over the last century because of over-fishing practices(Reference Christensen, Guenette, Heymans, Walters, Watson, Zeller and Pauly23). Other examples of the environmental effects of food production are plentiful: soil erosion, over-consumption of fresh water, monoculture (reduces both plant and animal biodiversity), and pesticides and fertilizers polluting soil, water and air(Reference Horrigan, Lawrence and Walker24). In addition, most foods eaten today travel long distances, demanding additional fossil fuel, before they reach the dinner table(Reference Pretty, Ball, Lang and Morison25).

A healthier and more environmentally friendly Nordic diet

It seems reasonable to explore if locally oriented and culturally appropriate dietary patterns can be identified in areas other than around the Mediterranean. As a first exploration, we present possibilities of a culturally and geographical approach for the Nordic countries, including locally appropriate ingredients for each of the different food groups. Foods available or potentially available in Norway are used as a main example.

Food production, import and export in Norway

Most meat, fish, eggs, milk and milk products consumed in Norway are produced domestically(26), traditionally at relatively small-scale farms. The main farm animals, sheep and cows, are predominantly pasture-fed, at least for the snow-free part of the year. However, there is a tendency towards a more industrialized production. The importation of some other foods to Norway is large; all sugar, about 93 % of fruits and berries, more than 80 % of oils/fats, 47 % of vegetables, 36 % of grains and about 20 % of potatoes eaten in Norway are imported(26). The relative contribution of imports to the intake of fruits (up from 57 % in the 1950s to 93 % in 2004) and vegetables (up from 7 % to 47 %) has increased drastically. At the same time, Norway is a major exporter of fish, both wild fish (e.g. cod) and farmed fish (e.g. salmon). Few other foods are exported.

Ingredients for a Nordic diet

In order to choose ingredients for a more health-enhancing and environmentally friendly Nordic diet, four criteria were set:

  1. 1. Ability to be produced locally over large areas within the Nordic countries without usage of external energy e.g. for the production of greenhouses.

  2. 2. A tradition as a food source within the Nordic countries.

  3. 3. Possessing a better potential for health-enhancing effects than similar foods within the same food group.

  4. 4. Ability to be eaten as foods, not only in small amounts as dietary supplements (e.g. spices).

Since man is an omnivore, both animal and plant foods were considered, and the ingredients together must provide the basic essential nutrients needed, including energy requirements.

Ingredient 1: Native berries

Several edible wild berries grow in large areas within the Nordic countries and several cultivated berries grow well in home gardens. Researchers at Bioforsk (Norwegian Institute for Agricultural and Environmental Research) have estimated that the annual blueberry and cowberry production in Norwegian productive forests is between 120 and 220 million kg(Reference Samuelsen27), which alone is almost the recommended 2-a-day of fruits for all Norwegians (the definition of one portion of berries is 1–2 dl(28)). In addition, there is considerable blueberry and cowberry production in non-productive forest and mountain areas, there are at least twenty-eight other edible wild berries in Norway(Reference Kardell29), and berries are grown in many private or semi-public gardens across Norway. However, the consumption of berries is low and figures from Norway show that it is declining (down from 7·0 to 3·7 kg/year from 1977 to 2000; L Johansson, Directorate for Social Affairs and Health, personal communication). In Sweden, it has been reported that only 5–6 % of wild blueberries, cowberries and raspberries were picked in 1977(Reference Kardell29).

In a Norwegian study assessing concentrations in 124 plant foods, berries were identified as the plant foods with some of the highest levels of total antioxidants(Reference Halvorsen, Holte and Myhrstad30). A recent study showed that three wild berries (blueberries, cloudberries, cowberries) also contain significant amounts of n-3 fatty acids; indeed, in the same amounts as found in fish, when measured per unit of energy, and more than fifteen times greater than levels found in the three most commonly eaten fruits in Norway(Reference Bere31). The same study showed that a higher consumption of these three berries would improve Norwegian diets also on a selection of nutrients not commonly associated with fruits or berries(Reference Bere31).

Ingredient 2: Cabbage

Cabbage, kale, kohlrabi, broccoli, cauliflower and Brussels sprouts are all varieties of the same species (wild cabbage, Brassica oleracea) and have been included in Nordic diets for a very long time. Cabbage thrives in cold climates(Reference Field32) and grows well in the Nordic countries. Production in Norway of cabbage (all types) in 2005 was 32·3 million kg(26), which corresponds to only about 0·1 portion daily per person (the definition of one portion of vegetables is 150 g(28)). A total of 76 % of all cabbage eaten in Norway is produced domestically and the production has been rather stable over the last 30 years(26).

Together with other close relatives, such as rutabaga, turnip, radish, rape and mustard, cabbage constitutes the group of cruciferous vegetables. Cruciferous vegetables are known for their probable cancer-preventing effect(Reference Murillo and Mehta33). Cabbage is also a very good source of vitamin K(Reference Bolton-Smith, Price, Fenton, Harrington and Shearer34) and contains ample amounts of n-3 fatty acids(Reference Ayaz, Glew, Millson, Huang, Chuang, Sanz and Hayirlioglu-Ayaz35). Some types (kale, red cabbage and Brussels sprouts) also contain more antioxidants than most other vegetables(Reference Halvorsen, Holte and Myhrstad30). Several of the cruciferous vegetables are also considered among the ‘dark green leafy vegetables’ which are known as excellent sources of fibre, folate and a wide range of carotenoids.

Ingredient 3: Native fish and other seafood

The Nordic countries have long coastlines, several fjords, rivers and lakes, and as such have great access to fish as well as other seafood such as shrimps, mussels and marine mammals. In Norway there is also a large production of cultivated fish. Catch of seafood by Norwegian fisheries registered in Norway has been between 2 500 000 and 3 000 000 tonnes per annum in recent years(36). Production of cultivated seafood (mainly salmon and trout) was 600000 tonnes in 2005(37), of which 95 % was exported(26). Cod-liver oil has a long tradition as a dietary supplement in Norway.

Seafood, and especially fatty fish, is regarded by many nutritionists as well as consumers as healthy food. This is mainly because of its content of essential fatty acids (especially long-chain n-3 fatty acids such as EPA and DHA) and because it is an important dietary source of vitamin D. In addition, seafood is also a great source of Se and I, as well as of protein and vitamin B12.

Ingredient 4: Wild and pasture-fed land-based animals

There are large areas within the Nordic countries that are not suitable for modern agricultural production, but where several wild animals thrive. Several species are hunted for their meat: moose, different deer species, hare, and birds like goose, duck and grouse. The total net weight of hunted moose, deer and reindeer in 2003 was 6700 tonnes(38). Because the Nordic countries possess large areas of land compared with the number of people, the potential for domesticated pasture-fed meat (and milk products from pasture-fed animals) is greater than in most countries across Europe. In addition to reindeer, several sheep, goats and cows are pasture-fed and in fact live rather similarly to wild animals with the possibility to roam freely across large areas, at least for part of their lives.

A special trait for domesticated animals is that they contain much subcutaneous adipose tissue (and for beef and mutton, also bands of fat through the muscles, i.e. marbling)(Reference Clutton-Brock39), which is made up mainly of SFA(Reference Cordain, Watkins, Florant, Kelher, Rogers and Li40). Meat from wild mammals diverges from meat from domesticated mammals in that it is leaner (fat is usually stored around organs such as kidneys and not around muscles) and, probably more important, the fatty acid composition is better (i.e. less SFA, more PUFA)(Reference Cordain, Watkins, Florant, Kelher, Rogers and Li40). Pasture-fed meat has a fat content and fatty acid profile in between wild and feedlot-fed meat(Reference Cordain, Watkins, Florant, Kelher, Rogers and Li40). All meat is an excellent source of protein, Fe and vitamin B12, as well as a number of other essential nutrients.

Ingredient 5: Rapeseed oil

Rape (Brassica napus) is a cruciferous vegetable. At present there is an increase in rapeseed oil production in the Nordic countries, both for production of edible rapeseed oil and for bio-fuel. Rapeseed oil is commonly used for cooking, in dressings and also in industrialized food products (from frozen pizzas to baby food).

In rapeseed oil (and also canola oil, a Canadian trademarked cultivar of rapeseed oil), as in olive oil, the majority of the fatty acids are monounsaturated. In addition, rapeseed oil contains more PUFA and especially more n-3 fatty acids than olive oil, and it has a more favourable n-6:n-3 ratio. Rapeseed oil therefore possesses a better fatty acid profile than most edible oils and fats (see e.g. www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/foodcomp/search/), and a substitution of some of our daily fat/oil intake with rapeseed oil could be beneficial for health. Rapeseed oil also appears to be a good source of vitamin E.

Ingredient 6: Oat/barley/rye

Today, about 85 % of all grains consumed in Norway is wheat(41). Oat, barley and rye all grow better in a cold climate than wheat, and a higher share of oat/barley/rye than wheat is produced domestically in Norway(41). Indeed, more area in Norway is used to produce oat/barley/rye (mostly oat and barley) than for wheat production(38), but most of the oat and barley is used to feed animals.

Wheat is usually eaten as white flour while oat/barley/rye more often is eaten as whole grains, and therefore oat/barley/rye products tend to have a lower glycaemic index than wheat products(Reference Foster-Powell, Holt and Brand-Miller42). The WHO states that whole grains are related to most preventable chronic diseases through their high content of NSP(5). Furthermore, compared with wheat, oat/barley/rye (especially oat and barley) contain more antioxidants(Reference Halvorsen, Holte and Myhrstad30), more β-glucans and less gluten. As Norwegians also eat a very large amount of wheat (about 20 % of the total energy we consume comes from wheat, the highest amount from any single species; calculated from data published by Sosial- og helsedirektoratet(26, 43)) but are recommended to eat a variety of foods, a substitution of some of the wheat with oat/barley/rye could not be anything than beneficial for health.

Challenges with the ‘new Nordic diet’

In the present paper a case has been made for a more regionally oriented approach to a health-promoting whole diet that may also contribute to environmental sustainability. Such regionally defined diets are similar to the approach of the traditional Mediterranean diet and it also links to ideas and practices promoted by the so-called ‘slow food movement’ (www.slowfood.com/), which also favours regional foods, but from a more food culture orientation next to sustainability. It is also much in line with the principles of the New Nutrition Science Project, a joint effort by several prominent nutrition scientists to assess not only personal and population health, but also planetary health(Reference Cannon and Leitzman44). In the present paper ingredients for a ‘new Nordic diet’ were introduced as an example of a regionally defined health-promoting diet. Preliminary existing evidence was summarized regarding the health-enhancing properties of these ingredients. However, the regionally appropriate Nordic diet is at present just a theoretically possible approach; putting this into practice comes with many challenges and more research is necessary before it can actually be promoted.

A first important challenge is associated with the inclusion of fish and meat from game. Today’s industrialized production of both meat and fish clearly has large ecological consequences(Reference Steinfeld, Gerber, Wassenaar, Castel, Rosales and de Haan22, Reference Horrigan, Lawrence and Walker24, Reference Diamond45). Wild game and wild fish pose a potential for meat and fish production with a much smaller ecological impact, as well as foods with a more favourable fatty acid profile. However, a major problem is over-hunting and -fishing. Populations of most large, wild, land-based mammals are now only fragments of what they were before the human population explosion, and several large land-based mammals and birds have been hunted to extinction throughout human history(Reference Naylor, Goldburg, Primavera, Kautsky, Beveridge, Clay, Folke, Lubchenco, Mooney and Troell46). Meat and poultry are good sources of protein and Fe. However, people can get protein from other sources, and a sufficient Fe intake is also possible without eating animal products. Animal products are also the only source of vitamin B12, but this can be obtained from other animal-based foods than meat. Meat from game and poultry is therefore not a necessary ingredient of a healthy diet, the Nordic diet included, especially when fish is available. Regarding land-based meat, the only long-term sustainable solution, as long as the human population is increasing worldwide, appears to be to eat much less than present-day average consumption levels, which also is in accordance with current nutrition recommendations. So, because of livestock meat’s high saturated fat content and its large ecological impact, meat should be eaten in modest amounts. For such small amounts of meat, meat from wild and pasture-raised animals is to be preferred.

Similarly to game, several of the oceans’ fish stocks have now collapsed, and the future harvest depends heavily on how the remaining stocks are and will be treated(Reference Pauly, Christensen, Guenette, Pitcher, Sumaila, Walters, Watson and Zeller47Reference Pauly and MacLean49). It is striking how much wild seafood is harvested in Norway, and this large seafood harvest is more than enough to provide Norwegians with good-quality animal food. However, Norway is a special country with few people and a very long coastline. Since on a global scale there certainly is not enough wild seafood to be harvested to enable people to eat the often recommended two servings of seafood per week(Reference Halweil50), the present-day ‘eat more seafood’ promotion may be ethically questionable. Fish is especially recommended because of its high levels of n-3 fatty acids. However, wild berries(Reference Bere31), cabbage(Reference Ayaz, Glew, Millson, Huang, Chuang, Sanz and Hayirlioglu-Ayaz35) and rapeseed oil contain n-3 fatty acids and have a low/favourable n-6:n-3 ratio, and eating such foods in higher quantities makes fish a less needed ingredient of the Nordic diet.

A second challenge is whether all the plant food we need can be produced and harvested locally. The production of wild berries varies between years due to growth factors such as temperature. However, the amounts of wild berries do appear large. Additionally, many people in Nordic countries have a private garden or have access to a community garden, where often berries are produced. Such gardens can also be used for the production of other plant foods, including cabbage and other cruciferous vegetables (e.g. rutabaga, turnip and radish). A lower consumption of animal food (as discussed above) will also free land areas that can be used for the production of oat/barley/rye, rapeseed, cabbage and berries for human consumption.

Identifying which foods could be included in a health-promoting regionally defined diet is only a first step. The next and much more complicated challenge is how to get people to indeed eat these foods instead of the foods they have grown accustomed to. In affluent countries, most people can generally choose what, when and how much they eat. Therefore, a major challenge is to get people to choose to eat in accordance with regional diets such as the Nordic example. To promote healthy food choices in a planned way, insight is necessary into why people choose to eat what they do(Reference Brug, Oenema and Ferreira51), i.e. the determinants of food choice. A framework proposed by Rothschild(Reference Rothschild52) provides a simple, integrative approach to categorize the large and diverse number of potential personal and environmental determinants from various more specific behaviour theories. In this framework three categories of determinants are distinguished: motivation, ability and opportunity. In order to effectively promote the Nordic diet ingredients, people should be motivated to eat these foods, should have or obtain the abilities to choose wisely from these ingredients and to prepare palatable entrees and meals, and the ingredients should be highly available and accessible so that they have plenty of easy opportunities to include these ingredients in their diets.

Concluding remarks

We suggest six ingredients for a new healthier and more environmental friendly Nordic diet: (i) native berries; (ii) cabbage; (iii) native fish and other seafood; (iv) wild (and pasture-fed) land-based animals; (v) rapeseed oil; and (vi) oat/barley/rye.

Acknowledgements

The authors declare that they have no competing interest. E.B. and J.B. wrote the paper together. The paper does not belong to any specific project, and has therefore no specific source of funding. No acknowledgements.

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