Quality of Popular Diet Patterns in the United States: Evaluating the Effect of Substitutions for Foods High in Added Sugar, Sodium, Saturated Fat, and Refined Grains

Background: Many Americans have adopted popular diet patterns for general health improvement that restrict specific foods, macronutrients, or eating time. However, there is limited evidence to characterize the quality of these diet patterns. Objectives: This study 7) evaluated the quality of popular...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current developments in nutrition 2022-09, Vol.6 (9), p.1
Hauptverfasser: Conrad, Zach, Kowalski, Corina, Dustin, Dakota, Johnson, Luann K, Mcdowell, Acree, Salesses, Meredith, Nance, Julie, Belury, Martha A
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container_end_page
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1
container_title Current developments in nutrition
container_volume 6
creator Conrad, Zach
Kowalski, Corina
Dustin, Dakota
Johnson, Luann K
Mcdowell, Acree
Salesses, Meredith
Nance, Julie
Belury, Martha A
description Background: Many Americans have adopted popular diet patterns for general health improvement that restrict specific foods, macronutrients, or eating time. However, there is limited evidence to characterize the quality of these diet patterns. Objectives: This study 7) evaluated the quality of popular diet patterns in the United States and 2) modeled the effect of targeted food substitutions on diet quality. Methods: Dietary data from 34,411 adults [greater than or equal to]20 y old were acquired from the NHANES, 2005-2018. Dietary intake was assessed using the National Cancer Institute's usual intake methodology, and the Healthy Eating Index-201 5 was used to evaluate diet quality. A diet model was used to evaluate the effect of targeted food substitutions on diet quality. Results: A pescatarian diet pattern had the highest diet quality (65.2; 95% CI: 64.0, 66.4), followed by vegetarian (63.0; 95% CI; 62.0, 64.0), low-grain (62.0; 95% CI; 61.6, 62.4), restricted-carbohydrate (56.9; 95% CI: 56.6, 57.3), time-restricted (55.2; 95% CI: 54.8, 55.5), and high-protein (51.8; 95% CI: 51.0, 62.7) diet patterns. Modeled replacement of
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However, there is limited evidence to characterize the quality of these diet patterns. Objectives: This study 7) evaluated the quality of popular diet patterns in the United States and 2) modeled the effect of targeted food substitutions on diet quality. Methods: Dietary data from 34,411 adults [greater than or equal to]20 y old were acquired from the NHANES, 2005-2018. Dietary intake was assessed using the National Cancer Institute's usual intake methodology, and the Healthy Eating Index-201 5 was used to evaluate diet quality. A diet model was used to evaluate the effect of targeted food substitutions on diet quality. Results: A pescatarian diet pattern had the highest diet quality (65.2; 95% CI: 64.0, 66.4), followed by vegetarian (63.0; 95% CI; 62.0, 64.0), low-grain (62.0; 95% CI; 61.6, 62.4), restricted-carbohydrate (56.9; 95% CI: 56.6, 57.3), time-restricted (55.2; 95% CI: 54.8, 55.5), and high-protein (51.8; 95% CI: 51.0, 62.7) diet patterns. Modeled replacement of &lt;3 daily servings of foods highest in added sugar, sodium, saturated fat, and refined grains with alternative foods led to an increase in diet quality and a decrease in energy intake for most diet patterns. Conclusions: Low diet quality was observed for all popular diet patterns evaluated in this study. Modeled dietary shifts that align with recommendations to choose foods lower in added sugar, sodium, saturated fat, and refined grains led to modest improvements in diet quality and larger reductions of energy intake. Greater efforts are needed to encourage the adoption of dietary patterns that emphasize consumption of a variety of high-quality food groups. Curr Dev Nutr 2022;6:nzac119. 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However, there is limited evidence to characterize the quality of these diet patterns. Objectives: This study 7) evaluated the quality of popular diet patterns in the United States and 2) modeled the effect of targeted food substitutions on diet quality. Methods: Dietary data from 34,411 adults [greater than or equal to]20 y old were acquired from the NHANES, 2005-2018. Dietary intake was assessed using the National Cancer Institute's usual intake methodology, and the Healthy Eating Index-201 5 was used to evaluate diet quality. A diet model was used to evaluate the effect of targeted food substitutions on diet quality. Results: A pescatarian diet pattern had the highest diet quality (65.2; 95% CI: 64.0, 66.4), followed by vegetarian (63.0; 95% CI; 62.0, 64.0), low-grain (62.0; 95% CI; 61.6, 62.4), restricted-carbohydrate (56.9; 95% CI: 56.6, 57.3), time-restricted (55.2; 95% CI: 54.8, 55.5), and high-protein (51.8; 95% CI: 51.0, 62.7) diet patterns. Modeled replacement of &lt;3 daily servings of foods highest in added sugar, sodium, saturated fat, and refined grains with alternative foods led to an increase in diet quality and a decrease in energy intake for most diet patterns. Conclusions: Low diet quality was observed for all popular diet patterns evaluated in this study. Modeled dietary shifts that align with recommendations to choose foods lower in added sugar, sodium, saturated fat, and refined grains led to modest improvements in diet quality and larger reductions of energy intake. Greater efforts are needed to encourage the adoption of dietary patterns that emphasize consumption of a variety of high-quality food groups. Curr Dev Nutr 2022;6:nzac119. 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subjects Diet fads
Evaluation
Food substitutes
Health aspects
title Quality of Popular Diet Patterns in the United States: Evaluating the Effect of Substitutions for Foods High in Added Sugar, Sodium, Saturated Fat, and Refined Grains
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