Eat Healthy to Live Healthy: Habits and Trends

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between physical activity and alcohol consumption and suggested alcohol-abuse prevention strategies based on other observations. The consumption of health foods can reduce costs and improve overall health and quality of life. In adulthood, workplaces with facilities that serve food to employees (staff canteens) for meals during their working hours can offer healthy, well-balanced food according to modern guidelines and increase the development of good eating habits.
A recent paper by Czarniecka-Skubina et al. [6] underlined the importance of workplace nutrition as a potential key intervention to reduce the incidence of chronic diseases in adult populations and improve public health via direct and indirect measures. The authors noted the importance of taking breaks, which plays a role in emotional exhaustion, job satisfaction, and organizational behavior. The authors conducted their research in five staff canteens in Warsaw that were similar in size, the number of seats for consumers, and the number of meals served daily. Their results have practical implications for owners or managers of staff canteens: customers follow trends regarding "healthy" diets and expect canteens to shift toward offering healthy meals, emphasizing the need to increase the variety of meals, including the availability of vegetarian, vegan, and health-promoting dishes.
Moreover, health food marketing strategies and interventions for high-risk populations need to be improved to promote public health behaviors.
In this context, the results of an interesting study by Lee et al. [7] can be used as a reference for health food marketing strategies. The authors targeted people who had purchased health food products to improve their gastrointestinal functions. The authors demonstrated that perceptions of susceptibility, severity, benefits of action, and behavioral control exerted a positive influence on repurchase intention.
For the development of health food marketing strategies, the rapidly expanding market for dietary supplements (soft capsules, hard capsules, tablets, granules, or liquids that contain functional physiological ingredients differing from those in regular food) is of notable interest, as demonstrated in the study by Sato et al. [8].
A food supplement, considered a form of self-medication with the potential to reduce the public health burden, is expected to contribute to promoting health and preventing disease in aging societies. Dietary supplements are positioned between food and medicine in the regulatory spectrum. Good manufacturing practice (GMP) is advocated and implemented as a standardized procedure for manufacturing dietary supplements. The Japanese study by Sato et al. reveals that pharmaceutical capability influences the quality level in the manufacturing of dietary supplements, accompanied by expertise in manufacturing a wide range of dietary supplement products.
Natural and dietary alternatives to the management of non-communicable chronic diseases have to be further explored. The consumption of health foods and the use of natural alternatives to drugs, such as nutraceuticals and functional foods, can reduce costs and improve overall health and quality of life [9]. In the review by Idrus et al., the available evidence showed that honey had a protective effect on cardiovascular disease, a major public health burden worldwide [10].
In a paper by Baldassarre et al., alginate-based formulations from brown algae were found to be effective as a first treatment option for persistent gastrointestinal distress related to gastroesophageal reflux (GER) in infants and may reduce the use of other treatments and tests [11].
Nutritional interventions and lifestyle have established their potential roles in the prevention of human disease at all stages of life. This Special Issue discusses different habits and trends to help physicians in their daily practices and assist governments in the promotion of preventive health measures.
Funding: This research received no external funding.

Conflicts of Interest:
The authors declare no conflict of interest.