Towards healthier and more sustainable diets in the Australian context: comparison of current diets with the Australian Dietary Guidelines and the EAT-Lancet Planetary Health Diet

Oct 19, 2022BMC public health

Comparing Australian diets with national guidelines and a global healthy eating plan for sustainability

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Abstract

The average Australian diet contains two to almost four times the maximum recommended intake of discretionary choices according to dietary guidelines.

  • Compared to the Planetary Health Reference Diet, the Australian Dietary Guidelines include more servings of vegetables, dairy, fruit, and discretionary choices.
  • The average Australian diet provides inadequate amounts of vegetables, cereals, unsaturated fats, and plant-based alternatives.
  • Red meat and poultry make up 73% of total servings of meat and alternatives in the average Australian diet.
  • The modelled Australian Dietary Guidelines diet met nutrient reference values for all 22 nutrients examined, while the Planetary Health Reference Diet lacked adequate calcium.
  • Environmental impact scores for the Planetary Health Reference Diet and Australian Dietary Guidelines were 31% and 46% lower than the average Australian diet, respectively.

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Key numbers

374%
Discretionary Food Intake Increase
Average Australian diet vs. Australian Dietary Guidelines recommendation.
2.72 servings
Vegetable Intake Shortfall
Average Australian diet vs. Australian Dietary Guidelines recommendation of 5.50 servings.
73%
Red Meat Proportion
Proportion of total meat servings in the average Australian diet.

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What this is

  • This analysis compares the dietary patterns of Australian adults against the Australian Dietary Guidelines and the EAT-Lancet Planetary Health Diet.
  • It examines how well current Australian diets align with these guidelines, focusing on food group and nutrient composition.
  • The study highlights significant discrepancies in dietary intake, particularly regarding discretionary food consumption and plant-based alternatives.

Essence

  • Australian diets significantly exceed recommended intakes for and fall short in vegetables, dairy, and plant-based proteins compared to national and global guidelines.

Key takeaways

  • The average Australian diet contains 5.57 servings of , which is almost four times the recommended intake of 1.49 servings in the Australian Dietary Guidelines.
  • Compared to the Australian Dietary Guidelines, the average Australian diet has only 49% of the recommended vegetable servings, with 2.72 servings versus 5.50 servings.
  • The average Australian diet includes 73% of meat and alternatives as red meat and poultry, compared to 33% in the Australian Dietary Guidelines and 10% in the Planetary Health Reference Diet.

Caveats

  • The study relies on 24-hour dietary recall data, which may underreport actual intake, particularly for .
  • Nutritional adequacy was assessed only for adults aged 19-50 years, limiting the applicability of findings to other age groups.

Definitions

  • Discretionary foods: Foods and beverages high in added sugar, salt, saturated fat, and/or alcohol, often low in essential nutrients.

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