The study: Andrew Mente and others, Diet, cardiovascular disease, and mortality in 80 countries, European Heart Journal, 2023; ehad269, https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehad269
The Yolk
What does studying 80 countries tell us about what we should eat?
- 245,000 total people aged 35-70 in 80 varying countries
- Analyzed data from the PURE study (Prospective Urban Rural Epidemiology)
- PURE diet score was compared with rate of mortality and cardiovascular disease
- The PURE diet score included 6 food categories known to already decrease mortality –
- Fish, fruits, vegetables, legumes, grains, nuts, dairy
- Multiple risk score data for rate of disease included known risks for cardiovascular disease
- A higher healthy diet score was associated with higher income countries
- The least healthy diet score included the lowest amounts from each of the 6 food groups included
- Related to a diet high in carbohydrates, lower fat, lower protein and lower red meat and poultry
- Higher PURE diet score associated with lower risk of cardiovascular disease, stroke, and mortality
- Each food group contributes to the score – removing one type results in somewhat less of an association
What is the healthiest diet for heart health according to this study?
- Fish
- Fruits
- Vegetables
- Legumes (beans)
- Whole grains
- Nuts
- Dairy (mostly whole fat)
- Unprocessed meat
Perspective
- A huge study over many years has credibility – but it is still self reported and many resources should be considered
- Grains and unprocessed meats can be part of a healthy diet
- But only 1 serving per day was part of the healthiest score
- Whole fat dairy can be part of a healthy diet – research still conflicts for what type of dairy is best
- Unfortunately nutrition guidelines still recommend low fat diets and less meat (which may lead to higher carbohydrate and lower protein intake, associated with the least healthy diet score)
- Heart disease is the number one cause of death in the US and it’s preventable (besides genetic conditions) – take it seriously
Research & Resources