Table_1_Dietary Transitions and Health Outcomes in Four Populations – Systematic Review.docx

Importance Non-communicable chronic diseases (NCDs) such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and cancer were rare among non-western populations with traditional diets and lifestyles. As populations transitioned toward industrialized diets and lifestyles, NCDs developed. Objective We performe...

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Main Authors: Mariel Pressler, Julie Devinsky, Miranda Duster, Joyce H. Lee, Courtney S. Glick, Samson Wiener, Juliana Laze, Daniel Friedman, Timothy Roberts, Orrin Devinsky
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2022.748305.s005
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_Dietary_Transitions_and_Health_Outcomes_in_Four_Populations_Systematic_Review_docx/19188773
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spelling ftfrontimediafig:oai:figshare.com:article/19188773 2023-05-15T16:55:20+02:00 Table_1_Dietary Transitions and Health Outcomes in Four Populations – Systematic Review.docx Mariel Pressler Julie Devinsky Miranda Duster Joyce H. Lee Courtney S. Glick Samson Wiener Juliana Laze Daniel Friedman Timothy Roberts Orrin Devinsky 2022-02-17T13:27:08Z https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2022.748305.s005 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_Dietary_Transitions_and_Health_Outcomes_in_Four_Populations_Systematic_Review_docx/19188773 unknown doi:10.3389/fnut.2022.748305.s005 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_Dietary_Transitions_and_Health_Outcomes_in_Four_Populations_Systematic_Review_docx/19188773 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Clinical and Sports Nutrition Dietetics and Nutrigenomics Nutritional Physiology Public Nutrition Intervention Nutrition and Dietetics not elsewhere classified Food Chemistry and Molecular Gastronomy (excl. Wine) Food Nutritional Balance Animal Nutrition Crop and Pasture Nutrition obesity diabetes western diseases refined carbohydrates nutrition transition Dataset 2022 ftfrontimediafig https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2022.748305.s005 2022-02-24T00:07:55Z Importance Non-communicable chronic diseases (NCDs) such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and cancer were rare among non-western populations with traditional diets and lifestyles. As populations transitioned toward industrialized diets and lifestyles, NCDs developed. Objective We performed a systematic literature review to examine the effects of diet and lifestyle transitions on NCDs. Evidence Review We identified 22 populations that underwent a nutrition transition, eleven of which had sufficient data. Of these, we chose four populations with diverse geographies, diets and lifestyles who underwent a dietary and lifestyle transition and explored the relationship between dietary changes and health outcomes. We excluded populations with features overlapping with selected populations or with complicating factors such as inadequate data, subgroups, and different study methodologies over different periods. The selected populations were Yemenite Jews, Tokelauans, Tanushimaru Japanese, and Maasai. We also review transition data from seven excluded populations (Pima, Navajo, Aboriginal Australians, South African Natal Indians and Zulu speakers, Inuit, and Hadza) to assess for bias. Findings The three groups that replaced saturated fats (SFA) from animal (Yemenite Jews, Maasai) or plants (Tokelau) with refined carbohydrates had negative health outcomes (e.g., increased obesity, diabetes, heart disease). Yemenites reduced SFA consumption by >40% post-transition but men's BMI increased 19% and diabetes increased ~40-fold. Tokelauans reduced fat, dramatically reduced SFA, and increased sugar intake: obesity and diabetes rose. The Tanushimaruans transitioned to more fats and less carbohydrates and used more anti-hypertensive medications; stroke and breast cancer declined while heart disease was stable. The Maasai transitioned to lower fat, SFA and higher carbohydrates and had increased BMI and diabetes. Similar patterns were observed in the seven other populations. Conclusion The nutrient category most strongly ... Dataset inuit Frontiers: Figshare
institution Open Polar
collection Frontiers: Figshare
op_collection_id ftfrontimediafig
language unknown
topic Clinical and Sports Nutrition
Dietetics and Nutrigenomics
Nutritional Physiology
Public Nutrition Intervention
Nutrition and Dietetics not elsewhere classified
Food Chemistry and Molecular Gastronomy (excl. Wine)
Food Nutritional Balance
Animal Nutrition
Crop and Pasture Nutrition
obesity
diabetes
western diseases
refined carbohydrates
nutrition transition
spellingShingle Clinical and Sports Nutrition
Dietetics and Nutrigenomics
Nutritional Physiology
Public Nutrition Intervention
Nutrition and Dietetics not elsewhere classified
Food Chemistry and Molecular Gastronomy (excl. Wine)
Food Nutritional Balance
Animal Nutrition
Crop and Pasture Nutrition
obesity
diabetes
western diseases
refined carbohydrates
nutrition transition
Mariel Pressler
Julie Devinsky
Miranda Duster
Joyce H. Lee
Courtney S. Glick
Samson Wiener
Juliana Laze
Daniel Friedman
Timothy Roberts
Orrin Devinsky
Table_1_Dietary Transitions and Health Outcomes in Four Populations – Systematic Review.docx
topic_facet Clinical and Sports Nutrition
Dietetics and Nutrigenomics
Nutritional Physiology
Public Nutrition Intervention
Nutrition and Dietetics not elsewhere classified
Food Chemistry and Molecular Gastronomy (excl. Wine)
Food Nutritional Balance
Animal Nutrition
Crop and Pasture Nutrition
obesity
diabetes
western diseases
refined carbohydrates
nutrition transition
description Importance Non-communicable chronic diseases (NCDs) such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and cancer were rare among non-western populations with traditional diets and lifestyles. As populations transitioned toward industrialized diets and lifestyles, NCDs developed. Objective We performed a systematic literature review to examine the effects of diet and lifestyle transitions on NCDs. Evidence Review We identified 22 populations that underwent a nutrition transition, eleven of which had sufficient data. Of these, we chose four populations with diverse geographies, diets and lifestyles who underwent a dietary and lifestyle transition and explored the relationship between dietary changes and health outcomes. We excluded populations with features overlapping with selected populations or with complicating factors such as inadequate data, subgroups, and different study methodologies over different periods. The selected populations were Yemenite Jews, Tokelauans, Tanushimaru Japanese, and Maasai. We also review transition data from seven excluded populations (Pima, Navajo, Aboriginal Australians, South African Natal Indians and Zulu speakers, Inuit, and Hadza) to assess for bias. Findings The three groups that replaced saturated fats (SFA) from animal (Yemenite Jews, Maasai) or plants (Tokelau) with refined carbohydrates had negative health outcomes (e.g., increased obesity, diabetes, heart disease). Yemenites reduced SFA consumption by >40% post-transition but men's BMI increased 19% and diabetes increased ~40-fold. Tokelauans reduced fat, dramatically reduced SFA, and increased sugar intake: obesity and diabetes rose. The Tanushimaruans transitioned to more fats and less carbohydrates and used more anti-hypertensive medications; stroke and breast cancer declined while heart disease was stable. The Maasai transitioned to lower fat, SFA and higher carbohydrates and had increased BMI and diabetes. Similar patterns were observed in the seven other populations. Conclusion The nutrient category most strongly ...
format Dataset
author Mariel Pressler
Julie Devinsky
Miranda Duster
Joyce H. Lee
Courtney S. Glick
Samson Wiener
Juliana Laze
Daniel Friedman
Timothy Roberts
Orrin Devinsky
author_facet Mariel Pressler
Julie Devinsky
Miranda Duster
Joyce H. Lee
Courtney S. Glick
Samson Wiener
Juliana Laze
Daniel Friedman
Timothy Roberts
Orrin Devinsky
author_sort Mariel Pressler
title Table_1_Dietary Transitions and Health Outcomes in Four Populations – Systematic Review.docx
title_short Table_1_Dietary Transitions and Health Outcomes in Four Populations – Systematic Review.docx
title_full Table_1_Dietary Transitions and Health Outcomes in Four Populations – Systematic Review.docx
title_fullStr Table_1_Dietary Transitions and Health Outcomes in Four Populations – Systematic Review.docx
title_full_unstemmed Table_1_Dietary Transitions and Health Outcomes in Four Populations – Systematic Review.docx
title_sort table_1_dietary transitions and health outcomes in four populations – systematic review.docx
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2022.748305.s005
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_Dietary_Transitions_and_Health_Outcomes_in_Four_Populations_Systematic_Review_docx/19188773
genre inuit
genre_facet inuit
op_relation doi:10.3389/fnut.2022.748305.s005
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_Dietary_Transitions_and_Health_Outcomes_in_Four_Populations_Systematic_Review_docx/19188773
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2022.748305.s005
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