Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11054/1983
Title: Nutrition transition in Europe: East-west dimensions in the last 30 years—A narrative review.
Author: Dokova, K.
Pancheva, R.
Usheva, N.
Haralanova, G.
Nikolova, S.
Kostadinova, T.
Rodrigues, C.
Singh, Jessica
Illner, A.
Aleksandrova, K.
Issue Date: 2022
Publication Title: Frontiers in Nutrition
Volume: 9
Start Page: 919112
Abstract: The current review aims to summarize published research on nutrition transition patterns (depicting changes in dietary consumption) in European populations over the last three decades (1990–2020), with a focus on East-West regional comparisons. Pubmed and Google-Scholar databases were searched for articles providing information on repeated dietary intakes in populations living in countries across Europe, published between January 1990 and July 2021. From the identified 18,031 articles, 62 were found eligible for review (17 from Eastern and 45 from Western European populations). Overall, both in Eastern and Western Europe, there have been pronounced changes in dietary consumption patterns over the last three decades characterized by reductions in average reported intakes of sugar, carbohydrates and saturated fats and increases in reported fruit and vegetable consumption. There has also been a tendency toward a reduction in traditional foods, such as fish, observed in some Mediterranean countries. Overall, these data suggests that European countries have undergone a nutrition transition toward adopting healthier dietary behaviors. These processes occurred already in the period 1990–2000 in many Western European, and in the last decades have been also spreading throughout Eastern European countries. Firm conclusions are hampered by the lack of standardized methodologies depicting changes in dietary intakes over time and the limited coverage of the full variety of European populations. Future studies based on standardized dietary assessment methods and representative for the whole range of populations across Europe are warranted to allow monitoring trends in nutrition transition within and among European countries.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11054/1983
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2022.919112
Internal ID Number: 01924
Health Subject: NUTRITION TRANSITION
EUROPE
EAST-WEST GAPS
DIETARY CHANGES
REVIEW
Type: Journal Article
Article
Appears in Collections:Research Output

Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.