Reprint

Healthy Eating in Relation to National Dietary Guidelines

Edited by
March 2024
258 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-9692-1 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-9693-8 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Healthy Eating in Relation to National Dietary Guidelines that was published in

Medicine & Pharmacology
Public Health & Healthcare
Summary

National dietary guidelines provide a set of principles to guide decisions about healthy diet and lifestyle. They should be informed by scientific evidence and country-specific public health and nutrition priorities, as well as sociocultural and contextual factors. Dietary guidelines commonly propose a set of recommendations related to the consumption of individual foods and/or food groups in sufficient quantities to meet nutrient intake requirements based on life stage and sex, for both health promotion and chronic disease prevention. More recently developed national dietary guidelines have included holistic contexts for eating, by addressing food combinations (meals), food safety considerations, lifestyle factors, sustainability, and other aspects of eating.

The scope of this Special Issue is to publish original research and systematic reviews that report findings on the assessment of healthy eating based on the development, implementation, evaluation, and impact of national dietary guidelines. The Special Issue brought together a selection of original research manuscripts and reviews to showcase the latest evidence on the use of dietary guidelines as a basis for the development of tools and methodologies to influence population eating patterns and promote healthy eating and diet quality at different life stages, as well as associations with health and disease.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
food-based dietary guidelines; diet quality; salt intake; fruit and vegetable consumption; rural; nutrition; community; dietary assessment; dietary guidelines; adherence; diet intake; high-income countries; low- and middle-income countries; fruit; vegetables; diet quality; health care costs; Medicare; women’s health; diet cost; diet affordability; low socioeconomic; low income; healthy eating; dietary guidelines; Australia; food-based dietary guidelines; national dietary recommendations; healthy eating; health promotion; public health; diet quality; dietary guidelines; university students; cross-sectional study; Australia; dietary guidelines; dietary guideline index; dietary intake; nutrients; reproductive age; women; nutrition survey; Australian dietary guidelines; Australian recommended food score; diet quality; diet variety; rural; adolescents; blood pressure; cardiometabolic risks; diet quality; energy-providing nutrients; fasting plasma glucose level; Japan Food Guide Spinning Top; Shokuiku; innovation; consumer behavior; fruit market; dietary patterns; diet; healthy; myocardial infarction; dietary modelling; simulation modelling; reproductive age; women; ultra-processed food; discretionary nutrients; Australian Health Survey; NOVA classification; food skills; cooking skills; education; culinary nutrition; energy drinks; caffeine; taurine; D-glucuronolactone; exposure assessment; risk characterization; risk management